Posted by Socrates in "Civil War", history, History for newbies, Japan, jewed culture, jewed finance, jewed foreign policy, jewed politics, Jewish warmongering, Lincoln, New Deal, revisionism, Roosevelt, Socrates, war, war as a racket, World War II at 12:51 am | Permanent Link
A man who waged war on his own people when he didn’t have to (Lincoln) and a man who dragged America into World War II (F. D. Roosevelt) were our best presidents? If so, then it’s hard to imagine our worst presidents. Of course, Lincoln and FDR had lots of special help with their war-waging. In both the “Civil War” and WWII, Jews played critical roles. For example, Jews financed both sides of the Civil War, e.g., the bankers August Belmont and Joseph Seligman aided the North, while Emile Erlanger aided the South, with extra help from Judah Benjamin, who was not a banker but was Jefferson Davis’ Jewish secretary of war/secretary of state. Another example: the Jewish government official Henry Morgenthau, Jr. was the head cheerleader in the Roosevelt cabal for the “strangling” or embargoing of Japan, which of course caused Japan to attack Pearl Harbor in 1941, which officially pushed America into war [1]. Morgenthau was also in charge of financing the war. Furthermore, two other powerful Jews, Benjamin V. Cohen and Felix Frankfurter, also played critical roles in getting the U.S. into WWII by ending America’s “isolationism,” i.e., by creating the destroyers-for-bases deal in 1940 and its offspring, Lend-Lease, in 1941. Then, there was the Jewish tycoon Bernard Baruch and his “cash and carry” idea for Lend-Lease. Without the vital efforts of a handful of Jews, history would have turned out much differently and those two presidents wouldn’t be so “great” in the eyes of the court historians.
[1] re: Morgenthau/Japan: see the book “Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace,” edited by Harry Elmer Barnes, 1953/1993