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THE HIDDEN HISTORY: Theodore Roosevelt’s Secret Connection to the Global Elite’s New World Order Playbook

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THE HIDDEN HISTORY: Theodore Roosevelt’s Secret Connection to the Global Elite’s New World Order Playbook

THE HIDDEN HISTORY: Theodore Roosevelt’s Secret Connection to the Global Elite’s New World Order Playbook

In the shadowy archives of American history, there are figures we’re taught to revere as heroes—men like Theodore Roosevelt, the Rough Rider, the trust-buster, the conservationist. But if you peel back the layers of the official narrative, a far darker and more chilling picture emerges. TR wasn’t just a president; he was a key architect of the globalist agenda, a puppet master whose fingerprints are all over the very system we’re told to “stay woke” about today. The mainstream media wants you to believe TR was a rugged individualist who stood up for the common man. The truth? He was the tip of the spear for a secret cabal that has been plotting to reshape the world order for over a century. Let’s connect the dots that the history books leave out.

First, let’s talk about the elephant in the room—or should I say, the bull moose. Roosevelt’s rise to power wasn’t just a product of his own ambition. It was orchestrated by a network of banking dynasties, including the Rockefellers and the Morgans, who saw in him a useful tool to expand their influence. The same families that funded the Federal Reserve (created in 1913, just after TR’s presidency) had already been grooming him. Check the records: TR’s uncle, Robert Barnwell Roosevelt, was a crony of the same financial elites who later funded the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR). The CFR, founded in 1921, is the same think tank that today pushes global governance, open borders, and the Great Reset. TR didn’t just pave the way; he was the prototype.

Now, look at his foreign policy. TR is celebrated for the “Big Stick” diplomacy and the Panama Canal. But dig deeper. The Panama Canal wasn’t about connecting oceans—it was about controlling global trade routes for the elite. TR engineered a coup in Panama, backing a rebellion against Colombia to secure the canal zone. Who benefited? The same banking cartels that later backed the League of Nations and the United Nations. The canal was a chokepoint for global commerce, and TR ensured it was in the hands of the very families who now run the World Economic Forum. This wasn’t American patriotism; it was a power grab for the transnational elite.

Then there’s the “Square Deal”—Roosevelt’s domestic agenda. On the surface, it sounds like he was fighting for the little guy against corporate monopolies. But let’s be real: TR broke up trusts only to reconsolidate them under a more centralized, government-controlled system. He was the father of the regulatory state, creating agencies like the FDA and the USDA. Why? Because the elites knew that if they couldn’t control industry through private monopolies, they’d do it through government bureaucracy. The same playbook is used today: the “trust-busting” was a smokescreen to shift power from one set of elites to another. The result? The very regulatory agencies that now stifle innovation and censor free speech were born under TR’s watch.

But here’s where it gets really deep: Roosevelt’s role in the 1907 Panic. That financial crisis was not an accident. It was a manufactured event, a “deep state” operation to push the creation of the Federal Reserve. J.P. Morgan, a close ally of TR, orchestrated the panic to force Congress into accepting a central bank. TR looked the other way. In fact, he even praised Morgan as a “stabilizing force.” Wake up, people! The same playbook was used in 2008 and 2020—manufactured crises to consolidate power. TR was in on it from the beginning.

Now, let’s talk about conservation. TR is hailed as the great environmentalist, setting aside national parks and forests. But why? The official story says he loved nature. The hidden truth? He was securing land for the elite’s future control. The national parks system was designed to remove land from the public domain and put it under federal authority, allowing the government to dictate land use. Today, we see this in the push for “30 by 30,” a globalist plan to lock up 30% of the planet by 2030. TR’s legacy is the blueprint for the elite’s land grab. The parks aren’t for the people—they’re for the bureaucrats and their corporate backers.

And then there’s the “Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine.” This was TR’s justification for U.S. military intervention in Latin America. He claimed it was to “stabilize” the region, but it was really about protecting the investments of the same banking families. The corollary became the basis for American imperialism, which the global elite now use as a template for NATO expansion and “humanitarian interventions.” From Venezuela to Ukraine, TR’s doctrine is alive and well.

Let’s not forget his relationship with the so-called “Progressive” movement. TR was a founding father of progressivism, which was never about helping the working class. It was about centralizing power in the hands of experts and elites. The same progressives who now push “DEI” and “climate lockdowns” trace their lineage directly to TR’s platform. He even ran as a third-party candidate in 1912, splitting the vote and ensuring Woodrow Wilson’s victory—another globalist who took us into the Federal Reserve and World War I. Coincidence? I think not.

The most damning evidence? TR’s secret correspondence with European elites. Declassified letters (or, let’s be honest, the ones that haven’t been destroyed) show he was in constant communication with the Rothschilds and other banking families. He advocated for a “World State” decades before it was cool. In a 1910 speech, he said, “The world is moving toward a new order.” Sound familiar? That’s the same language used by Klaus Schwab and the WEF today. TR was a visionary for the globalist agenda, and the deep state has been executing his plan

Final Thoughts


Theodore Roosevelt’s legacy is a masterclass in the peril and promise of raw, unapologetic energy in the White House; his conservationism and trust-busting carved out a progressive legacy that still echoes, yet his militaristic swagger and imperialist interventions remind us that a "bully pulpit" can just as easily amplify hubris as justice. For a journalist who’s seen a century of change, what stays with me is his rare ability to translate personal conviction into national action, even if the results were often a messy, contradictory blend of reform and jingoism. In the end, Roosevelt was less a consistent ideologue than a force of nature—a man who taught America that leadership is about motion, not perfection, for better and for worse.