Harvard’s Role in Elevating China to Global Hegemon

Betraying its Puritan roots, Harvard University helped build up Communist China to eventually overtake the United States as global hegemon, in line with a plan developed and executed over centuries from within the financial district of the City of London, with a view to corralling the world’s wealth into the hands of the few.
There is nothing intrinsically wrong with participating in academic exchange programs, but Harvard has apparently participated in a conspiracy against the United States and indeed humanity itself to further the kleptocratic ambitions of an international banking cartel in service of private greed and an unqualified entitlement to rule.
The horrors of the 20th century, including the Communist Revolutions that genocided tens of millions, if not hundreds of millions of people, were not random occurrences perpetrated by isolated psychopaths but rather an expression of a centuries-old strategy conceived within the City of London that traces back to China itself.
Communism and Marxism were inspired by Asian logic and Confucianism which supported the centralization of power in the hands of a parasitic elite that extracted its wealth, power, and privilege from the toiling masses. In order to amass the power of the coveted few, one need only point out the disparity of privilege between the rulers and ruled, mobilize the masses to revolt against the privileged, and then seize the power and wealth of the privileged class once its privileged have been overthrown, and then claim the privileges for oneself, Confucius opined.
Chinese rulers believed they held a mandate from Heaven to rule but were largely indifferent to material wealth, and by Western standards, decidedly docile and passive. In Chinese society, merchants were considered on par with bandits and far beneath the status of Confucian scholars, bureaucrats, mandarins, and the gentry who constituted the ruling elite.
While presiding over the largest untapped market in the world, the Chinese had adopted a strategy to consolidate wealth and power that enabled them to rule virtually unchallenged over docile masses.
Western concepts like freedom and human rights were nonexistent within Chinese society, which valued clan affiliations, duty, order, and a rigid hierarchy in which everyone knew his place and performed his role in service to the state.
Through feedback gleaned from missionaries, merchants, and ambassadors, the Vatican was privy to the opportunities for great wealth that awaited through the conquest of Asia. The Vatican worked through secret societies, like the White Lotus, to manufacture rebellions to replace incalcitrant rulers with puppet leaders while gradually conceding power to the Vatican and its Crown rulers.
Mercenaries were enlisted in rebellions that genocided entire communities of people and trafficked the survivors. These revolutions provided a template for the bloody Communist revolutions that would follow.
China was perceived as the “Great Game” among aristocrats, European Royals, and the Black Nobility. Whoever established a monopoly on the Chinese markets would dominate commerce throughout the world and become unspeakably wealthy. International bankers and merchants aligned with the City of London and East India Company were willing to commit genocide and disrupt an entire civilization and culture to claim wealth for themselves.
Origins of Harvard
The Massachusetts Bay Colony established Harvard in 1636 through a British charter extended by King James I. The colony was founded by the Massachusetts Bay Company, the first colonists to settle in New England in 1630. These colonists were Puritans who valued education that elevated the mind and informed character based upon beliefs promulgated by the original Israelites.
The company traded with the East India Company. As the Crown attempted to impose strict controls upon the colonies, the Puritans rebelled. These were a people who were devout in their obeisance to God, who vigorously defended their freedom of conscience, and who resisted the financial and political meddling of the Crown in the internal affairs of their colony.
In the decades that followed, Harvard trained Puritan ministers and then established itself as one of the most prestigious and distinguished universities within the United States and the world. At its core, Harvard was patriotic, and its instructors were God-fearing and principled. As honest, salt-of-the-earth people, the founding colonists pursued commerce and governed within a moral, religious framework. All of this changed after the Civil War when the federal government was transformed into a British corporation.
Harvard in China
Harvard’s engagement with China began in 1879 when a scholar from Ningbo by the name of Ge Kunhua became the university’s first Chinese language instructor. Ge was recruited by Francis Knight, a merchant from Boston who worked in Nuihuang on matters pertaining to Chinese treaty ports. Ningbo was a key Rothschild banking district.
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(c) 2025 Susan Bradford
www.susanbradford.org