Rolling Stones profile of Alex Jones is a largely positive and accurate exploration of Jones personal history and the factors that continue to drive and motivate his work today. However, in attempting to denigrate Jones political stance, the piece oversimplifies several issues in an effort to dismiss his concerns as paranoid exaggerations.
One such example is where the author, Alexander Zaitchik, confines the whole subject of population control and eugenics into his personal interpretation of a Henry Kissinger memo, presumably referring to National Security Memorandum 200, in which Kissinger outlines the plan to use food scarcity as a weapon in order to achieve population reduction in lesser-developed countries.
Despite the fact that the memo directly states Kissingers goal to use food as a weapon in the interests of curbing the numbers of LDC people, (lesser-developed countries), Zaitchik defines this as little more than government officials beginning to grapple with the strategic implications of runaway population growth.
In actual fact, as we have exhaustively proven, the population reduction agenda is deeply rooted in the eugenics movement which began amongst the aristocracy in 19th century Britain and later manifested itself under the banner of Hitlers Third Reich. As is documented in Alex Jones seminal film Endgame, Rockefellers father, John D. Rockefeller, exported eugenics to Germany from its origins in Britain by bankrolling the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute which later would form a central pillar in the Third Reichs ideology of the Nazi super race.