This book is conspiracy theory 101. Its premise is that Satan does not just tempt individuals, but tries to use people to gain power over massive numbers of others, taking away their freedoms and leading them to live degenerate lives. The grand plan of Satan is to create a one-world government without basic freedoms of speech, religion, bearing arms, etc. Each chapter focuses on a specific aspect of the plan: economy/banking, military, foreign policy, religion, etc. The style is rather objective, and is not always thoroughly cited. The references, though multitudinous, are not properly linked to the text of the book, so finding each one is very tiresome (they should just be numbered and referred to in square brackets). It would be a useful project for the author to compile the citations properly and link everything on a web page.
I found this book inspirational in some ways; it helped me find statements of political philosophy that I could really relate to, mostly having to do with the value of individual freedom and the need for personal or local initiative over monolithic/micromanagement practices of government. It really goes hand-in-hand with what I've learned from software engineering and general management. I think it's also somehow good to know all of the conspiracies (or conspiracy theories) out there. Mostly the discourse here is not professional enough to accept as a strong witness, but the list of other witnesses gathered is still enough that the contents cannot (all) be simply dismissed.