Hitler Rothschild Conspiracy| Hitler's Life| Chase Manhattan Club Card
Egyptian Book of the Dead
"Why England Slept," By John F. Kennedy, New York, Wilfred Funk, Inc. 1961.
"This unilateral disarmament, that is, the fact that England had been the only country to make any reductions at all, had a dual effect on Great Britain. With some people the fact that they had made their great effort in the Twenties, was an excuse for rearming in the Thirties."(19)
"British industry disliked cracking down on a good customer...then too, many English leaders, with their fear of Russia and the spread of communisim, desired to see Russia with a militant Japan on her border. Others felt that China was Backward and in a state of disorder, and with England's history she would be hypocritical to deny Japan's expansion. THese factors combined to result in a 'do nothing' policy."(34)
Pg.55: "Indeed, during this period, the fear of Communisim, not of Nazisim, was the great British Bogey. Germany under Hitler, with its early program of vigourous opposition to communisim, was already looked on as a bulwark against the spread of the doctrine through Europe. Sir Arthur Balfour, [Creator of the Balfour Declaration, which created the present day boundaries of the middle east] In speeking of the Russian danger, said, "One of the greatest menaces to peace today is the totally unarmed condition of Germany." Today that is strangely ironic."(55)
"The feeling was very similar to that in the United States during 1937 and 1938 when most of our opposition to Nazisim was based on its injustices to its own people rather than on any potential menace which it might be to us. Like England's, ours was a detached criticisim of a form of government, rather than a realistic grasp of the implications of that form of government on the welfare of the world. And this is not the sort of feeling that calls for building up armaments for defense, but rather for speeches pointing out how fortunate we are not living in Germany."(108)
This was the great advantage Hitler had over England. He could build his war machine and plan to have it ready to strike in a definite period of time. In the meantime he cared little what happened to the country's internal economy. He doubled, tripled and quadrupled the internal debt but, due to the totalitarian nature of his regime, he was able to keep prices to a reasonable level."(138)
"Englishman, with their emphasis on balanced budgets and sound economy, had watched the German financial hocus pocus with amazement. Accustomed to the automatic laws of capitalisim, they yearly prophesised inflation of the mark and the ruin of Germany's credit system..These ideas made them confident that a few months after the war began, especially if there was a deadlock, and the dictator could not keep adding easy triumphs, the people would rise and revolt."(171-172)
"It is extremely dubious whether, in May 1938, Chamberlain could have obtained support for measures that would have meant practically govenmental control of industry. The recent insistence in America that men from industry handle the job of building up our own defenses, illustrates the opposition that an idea like this will recieve in a country that is opposed to bureacratic control. It is only when war is looked upon as inevitable, or when war begins, that such control will be accepted."(177)
Also see the Munich Conference, 1939
"Hitler's strength was naturally not as great as it was to be in the next year. For example, his stock of oil in 1938 was extremly limited. And in 1939, Russia was to be on his side."(191) ALso see Treaty of Nonaggression Between Germany and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
"The vitality and the vigor, for example, with which labor in England has tackled the problem during the last months in an effort to rebuild British equipment is possible only because of the vitality and vigor which have existed deep in the Trade Unions system."(201-202)
I believe it is one of democracy's failings that it seeks to make scapegoats for its own weaknesses."(216)
It will be neccessary for us to ascertain how much of the responsibility for what has befallen England can be attributed to factors peculiarly England's and how much may be attributed to the more general weakness of democracy and capitalisim."(218)
"There was the closeness to the Government of the English aristocracy which was opposed so strongly to war: some because they had strong 'rightists' sympathies with Germany, some because they realize it would mean the end of their particular position, and some because they had a clear conception of what it would mean to England as a whole..These are..the factors that contributed to England's tardiness in rearming..On the other hand, we can attribute our failure to rearm in part to factors that have no English counterpart, such as the strong feeling of isolation which exists in the Middle West, and the reaction of many people tom the failure of European countries to pay their World War debts to the United States, which was one of determining to have no further share in European troubles."
.."In regard to capitalisim, we observe first that it was obediance to its principles that contributed so largely to England's failure. It has been estimated in authoritative circles that Hitler has spent anywhere from, $50,000,000,000 to $100,000,000,000 in building up Germany's armaments. He ran Germany's debt to skyrocket heights and saved Germany from suffering violent inflation only be rigid state control."(220-221)
"In the first place, democracy is essentially peace-loving; the people don't want to go to war. When the do go, it is with a very firm conviction, because they must believe deeply and strongly in their cause before they consent. THis gives them an advantage over a totalitarian system, where the people may find themselves in a war in which they only half believe."(222)
"For the long run, then, democracy is superior. But for the short run, democracy has great weaknesses. When it competes with a system of government which cares nothing for permanency, a system built primarily for war, democracy, which is built primarily for peace, is at a disadvantage. An democracy must recognize its weaknesses; it must learn to safeguard its institutions if it hopes to survive."(224)
"..The great advantage a democracy is presumed to have over a dictatorship is that ability and not brute force is the qualification for leadership."(225)
Also see this Pullitzer Prize winning book written also by JFK, "Profiles in Courage," by John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy (Foreword)
The OSS's profile of Adolph Hitler
The Rise and Fall of Hitler's Reich
Supporting material: National Socialisim in Brief WALL STREET AND THE RISE OF HITLER Read this book online The Secret War Against the Jews, by John Loftus and Mark Aarons, St. Martin's Press
Trading with the Enemy by Charles Higham, 1983 excerpts
The Splendid Blond Beast: Money Law and Genocide in the Twentieth Century by Christopher Simpson, 1993
Hitler praises Ford in Mein Kampf..Nazi Ford Alliance
Blowback, by Christopher Simpson, Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1988
Old Nazis, The New Right, And The Republican Party by Russ Bellant.
Also See this book: The Crime and Punishment of IG Farben
The Mind OF Adolph Hitler," by Walter Charles Langer
Ford's anti-semetic book, "The International Jew,"..
Lord Mountbatten (last viceroy of India) & Satanisim