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Joshua Norman Haldeman (November 25, 1902 – January 13, 1974) was an American-born Canadian-South African chiropractor, aviator, and politician. [1] He became involved in Canadian politics, backing the Technocracy movement , before moving to South Africa in 1950.
Maye Haldeman was born on April 19, 1948, in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada, a twin [6] and one of five children. [3] Her family moved to Pretoria, South Africa, in 1950.Her parents, Winnifred Josephine "Wyn" (Fletcher) and Dr. Joshua Norman Haldeman, a former director of Technocracy Incorporated, a former Regina chiropractor and amateur archaeologist, [7] [8] [9] were adventurous and flew the ...
Joshua Haldeman was a former director of Technocracy Incorporated and a political activist who ran for the Canadian Parliament on the Social Credit Party ticket, and headed the Canadian branch of the Technocracy movement. [5] [6] Haldeman's mother Almeda Jane (Norman) Haldeman was the first recorded chiropractor in Canada. [7]
Official symbol of the Technocracy movement (Technocracy Inc.). The Monad emblem signifies balance between consumption and production. The technocracy movement was a social movement active in the United States and Canada in the 1930s which favored technocracy as a system of government over representative democracy and concomitant partisan politics.
The following is a list of prominent persons who are known to have attended one or more conferences organized by the Bilderberg meeting.The list is currently organized by category.
The Saskatchewan Socreds, led by Joshua Haldeman, recovered somewhat in the 1948 provincial election, nominating 36 candidates and winning 8.1% of the popular vote, though no candidates were elected. The party surged in the 1956 provincial election , earning 21.5% of the popular vote and having three of its candidates elected.
In 1952, Canadian Joshua Haldeman and his wife Winifred flew their 14-13-2 from Pretoria, South Africa to Oslo, Norway and back. In 1954, the Haldemans flew their 14-13-2 from South Africa to Australia and back. Over many years, the Haldemans also explored the Kalahari Desert with the 14-13-2. [7]
In 1885, the Canadian Guillermo Farini (pseudonym of William Leonard Hunt) was one of the first Westerners to cross the unexplored portion of the Kalahari.On his return to Europe, he published a book detailing his experiences which included descriptions of unusual rock formations that he believed to be ruins of hitherto unknown buildings.