- Christine Forrest: But what was really shocking to me, was the complete cynicism of the plan. Each of the groups was simply to be used until its usefulness was exhausted. Hates were to be played against hates. If one group threatened to get too powerful, it would be killed off by another group. And in the end, those poor little people who never knew to what purpose they were lending themselves would be in the same chains, cowed and enslaved.
- Steven O'Malley: We don't want to be slaves, do we?
- Jeb Rickards: Slaves?
- Steven O'Malley: That's what they're fighting for.
- Jeb Rickards: Well, that was the Civil War, 1861-1865. There aren't any slaves now.
- Steven O'Malley: Not here, maybe. But Europe is full of them. It might be our turn next.
- Jeb Rickards: How?
- Steven O'Malley: Well, there are so many ways, it'd take me the rest of the day to explain it to you. But general idea is that they try to get us all confused and scared and, uh, sore at each other and then before you know it, clamp the handcuffs on us.
- Jeb Rickards: hmmm. Would they put handcuffs on me?
- Steven O'Malley: Not on your hands they wouldn't. Because you would have to work for them. The chains would be on your mind and on your tongue.
- Jeb Rickards: Wow!
- Doctor Fielding: Hero fever, I call it. Very modern. Ever since we've been getting out of touch with God, we've been pushovers for it. And the young get it the worst of all.