Ben Rubin: Conspiracy in Plain Sight | The Delingpod
Globalist Empire
Ben Rubin: Conspiracy in Plain Sight – Sept 2023 | The Delingpod
There are people coordinating with each other to implement a single system of global governance. James Delingpole talks to Ben Rubin about his research into the demons puling the strings in the formation of the globalist empire.
Ben Rubin is a former management consultant, turned political and cultural dissident.
“The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.”
– Plato
After 17 years helping international businesses transform themselves using advanced technology, Ben realised the global corporate system is fundamentally rigged against humanity and needs to be replaced. He is fighting systemic corruption at riseuk.substack.com
He is building the Future of Great Britain at pattern18.substack.com
The Kalergi Plan
The Kalergi Plan is presented as a far-right, antisemitic, white genocide conspiracy theory. The theory claims that Austrian-Japanese politician Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi concocted a plot to mix white races out of existence. The conspiracy theory stems from a section of Kalergi's 1925 book Praktischer Idealismus (“Practical Idealism”), in which he predicted that a mixed race of the future would arise. However, there is no evidence that Kalergi ever proposed a plan to mix races. The idea that it exists lies in distortions of Kalergi's writings and fabrications by Nazis and neo-Nazis. The Southern Poverty Law Center describes the Kalergi plan as a distinctly European way of pushing the white genocide conspiracy theory on the continent. White nationalists have quoted Coudenhove-Kalergi's writings out of context in order to assert that the European Union's immigration policies were insidious plots that were hatched decades ago in order to destroy white people. However, there is no evidence to support this claim. EU leaders continue to receive the Coudenhove-Kalergi European prize, which was inspired by Count Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi's theories.

The Kalergi Prize
The Kalergi Prize is awarded every two years to individuals who have made significant contributions to the project of European integration and the promotion of European values. The prize is named after Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi, the founder of the Pan-European Movement, who was the first recipient of the Charlemagne Prize in 1950. The Kalergi Prize is awarded by the Coudenhove-Kalergi Foundation, which was established in 1978 by the Paneuropean Union to promote the vision of European unification. The prize has been awarded to various European leaders, including Angela Merkel, who received the prize in 2010. The most recent recipient of the Kalergi Prize was Klaus Iohannis, the President of Romania, who received the award in 2020. Other recipients of the Kalergi Prize include:
- 2023 Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the Ukrainian people
- 2022 Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, Maria Kalesnikava, Veronika Tsepkalo
- 2020/2021 Klaus Iohannis[3]
- 2019 António Guterres
- 2018 Emmanuel Macron
- 2017 Timothy Garton Ash
- 2016 / Pope Francis
- 2015 Martin Schulz[2]
- 2014 Herman Van Rompuy
- 2013 Dalia Grybauskaitė
- 2012 Wolfgang Schäuble
- 2011 Jean-Claude Trichet
- 2010 Donald Tusk
- 2009 Andrea Riccardi
- 2008 Angela Merkel
- 2007 Javier Solana
- 2006 Jean-Claude Juncker
- 2005 Carlo Azeglio Ciampi
- 2004 Pat Cox
- 2004 / Pope John Paul II (extraordinary prize)
- 2003 Valéry Giscard d'Estaing
- 2002 The Euro
- 2001 György Konrád
- 2000 Bill Clinton
- 1999 Tony Blair
- 1998 Bronisław Geremek
- 1997 Roman Herzog
- 1996 Beatrix of the Netherlands
- 1995 Franz Vranitzky
- 1994 Gro Harlem Brundtland
- 1993 Felipe González
- 1992 Jacques Delors
- 1991 Václav Havel
- 1990 Gyula Horn
- 1989 Frère Roger
- 1988 Helmut Kohl and François Mitterrand
- 1987 Henry Kissinger
- 1986 The People of Luxembourg
- 1984 Karl Carstens
- 1982 Juan Carlos of Spain
- 1981 Simone Veil
- 1979 Emilio Colombo
- 1978 Konstantinos Karamanlis
- 1977 Walter Scheel
- 1976 Leo Tindemans
- 1973 Salvador de Madariaga
- 1972 Roy Jenkins
- 1970 François Seydoux de Clausonne
- 1969 European Commission
- 1967 Joseph Luns
- 1966 Jens Otto Krag
- 1964 Antonio Segni
- 1963 Edward Heath
- 1961 Walter Hallstein
- 1960 Joseph Bech
- 1959 George C. Marshall
- 1958 Robert Schuman
- 1957 Paul Henri Spaak
- 1956 Winston Churchill
- 1954 Konrad Adenauer
- 1953 Jean Monnet
- 1952 Alcide de Gasperi
- 1951 Hendrik Brugmans
- 1950 Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi
Sources and links
Tony Blair Institute for Global Change
Source: Ben Rubin
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