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The Invisible Government

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"The Dartmouth conference last fall and the scheduled Crimean conference originated from a suggestion made by Norman Cousins, editor of The Saturday Review and co-chairman of the American group going to the Crimea, when he visited the Soviet Union a year and a half ago.... "Mr. Cousins and Dr. Mosely formed a small American group early last year to organize the conferences. It received financial support from the Ford Foundation for the Dartmouth conference and for travel costs to the Crimean meeting. This group selected the American representatives for the two meetings. "Among those who participated in the Dartmouth conference were several who have since taken high posts in the Kennedy Administration, including Dr. Walt W. Rostow, now an assistant to President Kennedy, and George F. Kennan; now United States Ambassador to Yugoslavia...." The head of the Soviet delegation to the meeting in the Soviet Union, May 22, 1961, was Alekesander Y. Korneichuk, a close personal friend of Khrushchev.

228 pages, Paperback

First published June 1, 1977

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About the author

Dan Smoot

48 books6 followers
FBI agent and a conservative political activist.

From 1957 to 1971, he published The Dan Smoot Report, which chronicled alleged communist infiltration in various sectors of American government and society.

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5 stars
11 (30%)
4 stars
10 (27%)
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4 (11%)
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1 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Melissa.
270 reviews
August 3, 2022
I have to give it 5 stars just based on what he reveals. Published in 1962 and reading this in 2022 helps to understand all that is going on all these years later. We have fallen and I don’t think there is any way to return. Thank the Lord he is the end of this story.
95 reviews
January 15, 2021
More information, albeit historical, about the men, women and organizations that have sold out the United States and our past allies, to the internationalists, the communists and the socialists, all in their long term goal of making America a cog in the grand socialist, one world government.

If you are not aware of the history, it is difficult to address the present, and if we do not address the present, and soon, I am not sure we will enjot the future.
7 reviews
January 21, 2023
Read This Book Now

This book is now over 60-years old, but it is full of wise insights and advice for a struggling nation. Dan Smoot was a true patriot who loved his nation and its constitution and freedom.
Profile Image for Joelle Tambuatco.
8 reviews
February 19, 2026
This book is about a group of organizations, the most powerful of which is the Council on Foreign Relations that promote international socialist ideas and that have a high level of influence in government, business, media, and philanthropic circles. These groups are heavily interlocked, meaning they get their funding from the same sources, promote similar internationalist ideas, and have a lot of members in common. They are not formally affiliated--probably for plausible deniability that they have anything to do with each other in case one gets into trouble.

The book does get tedious to read sometimes because it's a description of one organization after another, what each does, and lists of some of the well known people who are members, but the information it conveys is very important, so I thought it was worth the trouble.

The author, Dan Smoot, was an FBI agent for ten years, 3 1/2 of which were spent working on Communist investigations in the industrial midwestern states. After retiring from the FBI, he became an independent publisher and commentator on radio and TV.

Summary and review
1 review
March 19, 2018
Truth

This book is probably very accurate, but you would want to do your own research. Everything in it makes total sense.
Profile Image for Jordan.
108 reviews
February 16, 2022
An interesting read that identifies a familiar pattern of influence, albeit with some archaic descriptors. The chapter on the Ad Council is a pertinent highlight.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews