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The Committee of 300’s vision for global depopulation resurfaces amid rising Middle East tensions
By willowt // 2025-06-27
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  • The Committee of 300's depopulation blueprint and the Middle East crisis.
  • Dr. John Coleman’s "Conspirators’ Hierarchy" details global genocide plans.
  • Global 2000 Report targets U.S. population reduction by 2050.
  • Trump says: Middle East "countries don’t know what the f-ck they’re doing."
  • H.G. Wells linked to conspiracy group’s overt revolution plan.
In his 1991 book Conspirators’ Hierarchy: The Story of the Committee of 300, former MI6 intelligence officer Dr. John Coleman alleged that a shadowy elite group — the Committee of 300 — has sought to depopulate the world through wars, famine and disease as part of a centuries-old plan for global control. Coleman’s claims, including a stated goal of eliminating 4 billion “useless eaters” by 2050 and reducing the U.S. population by 100 million by 2050, have resurfaced amid heightened violence in the Middle East and U.S. President Donald Trump’s recent warning that escalating tensions there reflect a dangerous lack of clarity.

Origins: The committee’s visionary link to H.G. Wells and global revolution

Coleman’s research traces the Committee of 300 to early 20th-century British writer H.G. Wells, whom he identifies as an early member. In The Open Conspiracy: Plans for a World Revolution, Coleman claims Wells outlined a blueprint for a “One World Government” to depopulate nations and enforce strict population controls. Coleman asserts the Committee’s goals were both radical and secular: eliminating billions deemed surplus to a new world order, eradicating sovereign nations and subjugating populations through centralized regulation. Wells’ works, while publicly accessible and centered on progressive global governance, lack overt references to genocide, per Project Gutenberg. Yet Coleman argues an unreleased version of the text aligns with his book’s alarming assertions, including a hierarchy that views the majority of humanity as expendable.

The Global 2000 Report: Depopulation policy baked into U.S. policy?

Coleman points to the Carter-era Global 2000 Report to the President (1980), which he claims was commissioned by the Committee to curb population growth. While the report focuses on environmental sustainability, Coleman insists its recommendations synchronized with elite depopulation aims. According to Coleman’s account: “Cause by means of limited wars in the advanced countries, and by means of starvation and diseases in Third World countries, the death of 3 billion people by the year 2000… the population of Canada, Western Europe and the United States will be decimated more rapidly…” (pg. 14–15). The report’s language, Coleman argues, revealed the Committee’s influence over U.S. institutions and its vision of a “manageable” global population of 1 billion by 2050, prioritizing Asian populations deemed more “regimented.”

Current crisis: Middle East escalation as "limited war" fulfilling projections?

Coleman’s theories have gained renewed attention as Israel and Iran unleash unprecedented strikes. Trump’s frustration over the conflict—a “stab-in-the-back” to ceasefire efforts — echoes Coleman’s premise that state actors are manipulated by shadow forces. “We basically have two countries that have been fighting so long and so hard that they don’t know what the f--- they are doing,” Trump declared on June 24, 2025, citing Israeli raids on Tehran and Iranian missile flares. Analysts note parallels to historical theories: in 1871, Confederate veteran Albert Pike allegedly drafted Illuminati plans targeting the Middle East, envisioning Islamic-Jewish warfare as a third world war catalyst.

Debating the facts: Conspiracy theory or call to accountability?

Coleman’s work remains contentious. Critics dismiss the Committee’s existence as fringe pseudohistory, noting a lack of verifiable connections between the group, the Global 2000 Report and Carter administration policies. Yet researchers like Leuren More and Gary Wayne posit that secret elites—from Vatican-connected bloodline dynasties to UN agencies—maintain hidden agendas to destabilize geopolitical stability. Coleman’s claims, though provocative, highlight a broader anxiety: the tension between clandestine influence and democratic governance. As warfare and ideological clashes escalate, his warnings underscore debates over transparency in global institutions, especially as the UN pursues “sustainable development” amid population control advocacy.

Democracy, autonomy and the fear of control

The stakes are existential. For millions, the Committee’s alleged goals — mass depopulation, erasure of national identity and elite dominion — reflect fears of lost autonomy. For others, Coleman’s account is a prism through which to scrutinize unelected global bodies like the UN and quantify risks of unchecked state centralization. Religious groups further frame such plans as apocalyptic prophecy: Some Christians view the Committee’s vision of crowning an Antichrist ruler in Jerusalem as a fulfillment of biblical end-times narratives. As wars purportedly “weaken” populations, the stage may be set for what theologians and theorists alike label a Satanic dominion.

A future of "useless eaters" or human agency?

Dr. Coleman’s claims, however disputed, demand scrutiny. The Middle East’s volatility, the UN’s expanding authority and debates over climate-driven depopulation tools — from geoengineering to chemical weapons — evoke his descriptions of a managed extinction. Whether conspiracy or cautionary tale, the Committee of 300 hypothesis challenges societies to rigorously investigate the roots of their unraveling democratic principles, lest history confirm Coleman’s most dire predictions. Sources for this article include: TheExpose.com MarketScreener.com
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