EXPOSED (as fictitious): Alice Bailey’s “Ten Point Plan to Destroy Christianity” – PLUS: What is the “Either-Or Fallacy”?

The widely shared “Ten Point Plan to Destroy Christianity” seems to be fake, or possibly written by someone attempting, inaccurately, to distill main points of Bailey’s New Age agenda. Its effect has likely been to prevent people from discovering the true religio-political agenda of the New World Order.

TWO PLUS TWO EQUALS FOUR – Mar 26 2024

If you search for information about “Alice Bailey” you will encounter many versions of a written piece entitled “Alice Bailey’s Ten Point Plan to Destroy Christianity”. It is sometimes referred to as a “Ten Point Plan to Destroy America”, or even as a “Ten Point Charter Adopted by the UN”.

This “Ten Point Plan” is nowhere to be found in Bailey’s writings, which can be read and searched at the Lucis Trust web site.

Below is a typical presentation of the fictitious “Ten Point Plan”:

There are many YouTube videos showcasing this Ten Point Plan.

Maybe someone read all of Bailey’s writings and formed the opinion that she effectively supported the “Ten Point Plan”. But after a review of her best known writings, this seems unlikely.

One caveat regarding point #9, “Create an interfaith movement”: Bailey’s New Age is certainly an interfaith or ecumenical movement meant to unite humanity under a one-world religion and government. The movement doesn’t seem to care what you call yourself – Christian, New Age, Freemason, etc., as long as you buy into its doctrines and political movement. And it doesn’t care what you call the coming New Age “Great One” or “Great Teacher” – Jesus, The Christ, Maitreya, etc. As long as people accept, knowingly or unknowingly, the doctrines and principles of Bailey’s New Age, “The Plan” is furthered.

The doctrines can be accepted and practised unknowingly in this, the exoteric, popular form of the esoteric mystery religions. The movement is more like a political organizing movement for the masses than it is a religious movement. Bailey absolutely describes it as a top-down movement to organize and align masses of people who are incapable of understanding what it is really about.

Perhaps the Ten Points meme was created by someone who legitimately wished to make a list of complaints about the state of Western society and pin the blame on a secret Satanic plan adopted by the United Nations. Perhaps this was seen as the best way to warn Christians about the dangers, to them, of New Age religion.

In reality, however, the “Ten Points” meme has probably had the opposite effect, by preventing researchers including Christians, New Agers, or others, from reading what Alice Bailey actually wrote.

Certain self-identifying Christians would benefit from reading everything Bailey wrote about the role of the Christian Church in the New Age (as well as other New Age teachers’ writings about “the Christ” in the New Age). They may be surprised to find that their own “novel” doctrines were taught by Bailey to groups above her “New Group of World Servers” who were then infiltrating the Church (or creating a parallel “Church” through the “Church growth movement”.) But if a researcher reads only the “Ten Points” meme, they will get a simplistic, false caricature of Bailey’s agenda, which may tend to foreclose further inquiry. They may also fear reading her material, expecting it to contain dangerous Satanic incantations or horrifying descriptions of blood drinking rituals.

This follower of William Branham was tricked into reading an Alice Bailey book. Now look at him:

Certain New Agers or spiritual people, many of whom apparently oppose the idea of an authoritarian world government and depopulation agenda, would also benefit from a review of Bailey’s and other New Age channelers’ writings. They may be surprised to learn of New Age doctrines that clearly call for a mass culling (recycling?) of “uncooperative” populations. (And, do the Dominion theology folks have their own version of this fantasy..? Is this a rhetorical question?) But if all one sees is the “Ten Points” meme, they’re able to write it off as a looney right wing Evangelical conspiracy theory about the usual social-political obsessions. Further reading seems unnecessary.

Thus, the “Ten Point Plan to Destroy Christianity” meme may actually be intended to deflect attention from the true agenda, which may be considered more insidious, depending on one’s perspective. Opposing an agenda without understanding it is like fighting blindfolded.

Once a person discovers, by fearlessly doing their own research no matter what they may find (LOL), that the doctrines or agendas they hold dear were in fact encouraged by the New World Order they thought they opposed, what can they do?

Because of these subtleties, many people involved on the fringes of the New Age movement are not aware of the fact that they are embracing occult concepts. They do, eventually, discover that they are practising occultism; however, by then they have become so hooked on their new beliefs and practices that they are often unwilling to turn around and go back. The occult is seductive and incredibly addictive, possibly as much as, or more than, mind-altering drugs.”

– Gary Kah, En Route To Global Occupation (1992), pp. 70-71

What Is the Either-Or Fallacy?

Scribbr.com – July 23, 2023 by Kassiani Nikolopoulou.

An either-or fallacy occurs when someone claims there are only two possible options or sides in an argument when there are actually more. This is a manipulative method that forces others to accept the speaker’s viewpoint as legitimate, feasible, or ethical. This type of black-and-white thinking often appears in political speeches, advertising, and everyday conversations.

Either-or fallacy example: “You can either go with me to the party tonight or sit at home alone and be bored all night.”

The either-or fallacy is also known as the false dilemma fallacy, false dichotomy, or false binary.

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