The New World Order by Peter Boge
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I picked up The New World Order expecting a typical political thriller. What I got instead was a mind‑bending journey into the hidden machinery of power that left me questioning almost everything I thought I knew about modern history.

What fascinated me most were the so‑called “conspiracy theories” that the book weaves into its plot – except they don’t feel like theories anymore by the time you finish. The 1795 contract granting the DuPernes family a 20‑mile radius around every railroad track, telegraph line, and power line? That alone rewires your brain. And then the book connects that to real‑world mining operations in Utah (the copper mine visible from space), to the rise of surveillance states, to implanted chips, to “Auffanglager” that were never really meant for refugees. Every chapter drops another incredible connection between corporate power, secret societies, and the quiet takeover of our daily lives.

But the part that stunned me most was the upheaval of the 1990s. According to the story, the 200‑year lease expired on December 31, 1993. That means the entire legal foundation of private property – mortgages, deeds, land titles – could have collapsed overnight. The book argues that the 1990s were not just the end of the Cold War, but a decade where everything was quietly turned upside down: financial systems were restructured, surveillance tech was normalised, and the public was kept distracted while the real power players scrambled to re‑write the rules. Reading this, I suddenly saw the 1990s in a completely new light – from the Oklahoma City bombing to the rise of the digital economy, it all feels connected.

This is not light reading. It’s dense, sometimes terrifying, and will make you suspicious of your own bank card. But if you’re ready to have your worldview flipped inside out, The New World Order is a must‑read.

Highly recommended – just don’t blame me when you start checking your neck for implants.


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