The Rockefeller File By Gary Allen Direct
The book’s most famous claim is that the family sought to create a global monopoly. Allen describes a "pincer strategy":
Allen moves quickly past the family's wealth, arguing that for the Rockefellers, money was never the end goal—it was the fuel for political leverage. He asserts that through a vast network of tax-free foundations, they successfully "subsidized" their way into the heart of the American government, effectively making the U.S. Treasury an extension of their private interests. 2. The Monopoly of Power
Supporting revolutionary movements to destabilize existing structures, eventually allowing for a centralized global authority to "restore order." 3. The "Shadow Government" The Rockefeller File by Gary Allen
Allen’s writing is punchy, alarmist, and relentlessly focused on the idea that "nothing happens by accident" in global politics.
In , Gary Allen crafts a high-stakes narrative that reads less like a history book and more like an urgent whistle-blower’s manifesto. His central argument is bold: the Rockefeller family didn't just build a business empire; they engineered a "New World Order." 1. Money as a Means of Control The book’s most famous claim is that the
Decades later, The Rockefeller File remains a cornerstone of anti-establishment literature. Whether you view it as a prophetic warning or a collection of "Deep State" archetypes, Allen’s work tapped into a deep-seated American distrust of concentrated power. He masterfully turned the Rockefeller name from a symbol of the American Dream into a symbol of a corporate-managed nightmare.
Using high-level appointments in the State Department and international banking. Treasury an extension of their private interests
Allen was one of the first to popularize the idea that organizations like the and the Trilateral Commission were not just "think tanks," but the steering committees for this globalist agenda. He paints a picture of a world where elected officials are merely actors following a script written by unelected financiers. 4. Why It Persists