Committee of 300, Club of Rome, 13 Bloodlines

Club of Rome, the Committee of 300, and the 13 Bloodlines — A Conversation with Grok

Posted: · Format: conversation

You:

When I asked Grok to tell me about the Club of Rome, the Committee of 300, and the 13 bloodlines, Grok replied. Can you show that response in a clear conversation format?

Grok:

Here’s a clear breakdown of the three things you mentioned, separating documented facts from conspiracy-theory claims:

1. The Club of Rome

What it actually is: A real, publicly operating think tank founded in 1968 by Italian industrialist Aurelio Peccei and Scottish scientist Alexander King. It is a non-profit NGO based in Switzerland.

Most famous for: Publishing the 1972 report The Limits to Growth (written by MIT researchers using system-dynamics modeling). The report warned that exponential economic and population growth on a finite planet would lead to overshoot and collapse in the 21st century if trends continued.

Membership: About 100 prominent scientists, economists, businessmen, former heads of state, etc. (e.g., Mikhail Gorbachev, Al Gore, and various European royals and billionaires have been members or associates at different times).

Current activities: Still active. Focuses on climate change, circular economy, planetary boundaries, and “regenerative” civilization models.

Conspiracy angle: In some circles it is portrayed as a secretive elite group that wants to deliberately crash population and impose a technocratic world government (“depopulation agenda,” “Great Reset,” etc.). Critics point to quotes taken out of context from The First Global Revolution (1991) where the authors say “In searching for a common enemy… we came up with the idea that pollution, the threat of global warming… would fit the bill” — often misquoted to claim they “invented” climate change as a pretext for control.


2. The “300 Club” or Committee of 300

Origin: Comes almost entirely from the writings of Dr. John Coleman, a former British intelligence officer (disputed) who self-published the book Conspirators’ Hierarchy: The Committee of 300 in 1992.

Claim: An ultra-secret group of 300 people (royalty, bankers, politicians, intelligence heads) who allegedly control the world through drugs, wars, me

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