There's one possible problem: it was written by a top British intelligence agent by the name of John Robison.
The immiediate origin of this conspiracy, the Essex Junto, had been the organizing activities of a topmost British Intelligence operative, Sir John Robison, during the years 1796-1797. Robison, long a British spy and diplomat, in the Russian part of SIS's service, had been promoted to high rank at the Edinburgh officie of SIS, from whence he had been deployed to conduct operations on the ground inside the United States.
...The state of mind reflected in this correspondence, most notably the features of the George Cabot item whose key apssages are noted above, for that reason, is best appreciated by reference to Sir John Robison's Proofs of a Conspiracy, 1797, later republished with enthusiastic endorsement by the John Birch Society in the 1960's.
[source : Treason in America, Anton Chaitkin
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