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The Ruling Elite




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  © Copyright 2014 Deanna Spingola.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the written prior permission of the author.

  isbn: 978-1-4907-3474-3 (sc)

  isbn: 978-1-4907-3475-0 (hc)

  isbn: 978-1-4907-3476-7 (e)

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2014908718

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  Trafford rev. 05/23/2014

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  CONTENTS

  Abbreviations

  Hitler And The Rebirth Of Germany

  The Advent of Adolf Hitler

  Hitler’s Assumption of Power

  The Worldwide Masonic Brotherhood

  The Official History of Adolf Hitler

  The Dictator, Adolf Hitler

  “We Are Going to Lick that Fellow Hitler”

  Prewar Maneuvers

  Birobidjan, a Jewish Sanctuary

  The Ha’avara Agreement

  FDR, a Red in the White House

  The Genesis of Factory Farming

  Reporting the “News” from Europe

  World War Ii In Europe

  Ukraine: Assault against the Middle Class

  Economic Assault against Germany, 1933

  Apprehending Dangerous Aliens

  Kristallnacht, a False Flag

  Dangling the Czechoslovakian Carrot

  Winston Churchill, the Warmonger

  Immigration, Not Extermination

  Stage-Managing Perceptions to Create Victimization

  The Deceptions behind the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact

  Establishing Guilt: The Gleiwitz Incident

  The Resumption of World Revolution

  The Creation of Poland

  The Germans Shoot Back

  The Peace Mission of Rudolf Hess

  The Duke of Kent, Royal Peacemaker

  Churchill and Roosevelt, Longtime Cohorts

  Lend-Lease: Warfare Welfare

  Operation Barbarossa

  Stalin’s Forced Labor Camps

  Soviet Scorched-Earth Warfare: Facts and Consequences

  Germany’s Elite Traitors

  Marketing Mass Murder

  Jewish Claims of Genocide

  Manipulating the Numbers for Maximum Exploitation

  Bomber Command: Victory through Air Power

  Warfare by Firestorm, Germany

  Famine and Genocide

  POST-WORLD WAR II

  Women: Prize Plunder for the Allies

  The Holocaust: Central to the New World Order

  The Morgenthau Extermination Plan

  Publicizing the German Camps

  Eisenhower, Baruch’s Man in Europe

  General Patton, a Credible Witness

  Raphael Lemkin and the Etymology of “Genocide”

  Preparing for Nuremberg

  Nuremberg, the Victors’ Vengeance

  Obedience, a Psychological Mechanism

  Slave Laborers Working for the Allies

  The London Cage and the Germans

  Torturing the Germans for Revenge

  One Man Fighting, Two Men Looting, Three Men Painting Rainbows

  The Allies’ Ethnic Cleansing in Europe

  End Notes

  ABBREVIATIONS

  AAA:

  Agriculture Adjustment Administration

  ACNP:

  merican Commission to Negotiate Peace to investigate Jewish matters in Poland

  ADL:

  Anti-Defamation League

  AGNA:

  Anglo-German Naval Agreement

  AIC:

  American International Corporation

  AJC:

  American Jewish Congress

  AJCm:

  American Jewish Committee

  AMG:

  American Military Government

  BBC:

  British Broadcasting Corporation

  BEF:

  British Expeditionary Force

  BUF:

  British Union of Fascists

  CIO:

  Congress of Industrial Organizations

  Comintern:

  Communist International

  DAP:

  Domestic Allotment Plan

  DEF:

  Disarmed Enemy Forces

  DOD:

  Department of Defense

  DOJ:

  Department of Justice

  DPR:

  Defence Policy and Requirements Committee

  DRVH:

  Days of Remembrance of Victims of the Holocaust

  ECA:

  Economic Cooperation Administration

  ESE:

  Economic Staff East

  FEA:

  Foreign Economic Administration

  GPU:

  State Political Directorate

  HMM:

  Holocaust Memorial Museum

  ICD:

  Information Control Division

  ICRC:

  International Committee of the Red Cross

  IHR:

  Institute for Historical Review

  IJA:

  Institute of Jewish Affairs

  IMT:

  International Military Tribunal

  IRC:

  Intergovernmental Refugee Committee

  JDC:

  American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee

  JOINT:

  American Joint Distribution Committee


  JTA:

  Jewish Telegraphic Agency

  JWV:

  Jewish War Veterans

  LICA:

  Ligue International Centre l’Antisémitisme

  MI:

  Military Intelligence

  MOI:

  British Ministry of Information

  MP:

  Member of Parliament

  NAACP:

  National Association for the Advancement of Colored People

  NIRA:

  National Industrial Recovery Act

  NRA:

  National Recovery Administration

  NS:

  National Socialist, National Socialism

  NSDAP:

  National Socialist German Workers’ Party

  NWO:

  New World Order

  OKH:

  Supreme High Command of the German Army

  OKW:

  Oberkommando der Wehrmacht

  OSS:

  Office of Strategic Services

  OWI:

  Office of War Information

  PAC:

  Political Action Committee

  PM:

  Prime Minister

  PWD:

  Psychological Warfare Division

  PWE:

  Political Warfare Executive

  RAF:

  Royal Air Force

  SCU:

  Share Croppers Union

  SD:

  German Security Service

  SPD:

  Social Democratic Party

  SHAEF:

  Supreme Allied Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force

  UNRRA:

  United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration

  UPA:

  United Palestine Appeal

  USAID:

  United States Agency for International Development

  USDA:

  United States Department of Agriculture

  USHMM:

  United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

  WJC:

  World Jewish Congress

  WRB:

  War Refugee Board

  WZO:

  World Zionist Organization

  HITLER AND THE REBIRTH OF GERMANY

  The Advent of Adolf Hitler

  Adolf Hitler

  On October 14, 1918, in Flanders, the British military, using mustard gas as the First World War drew to a close, assaulted German soldiers in Regiment Sixteen of the Bavarian Reserve Infantry, including Adolf Hitler. He was a message courier who had spent four years dodging bullets in France and Belgium. In addition to the First Battle of Ypres, he took part in the battles of the Somme, the Arras, and Passchendaele. He was decorated twice for bravery, with the Iron Cross, Second Class, in 1914 and with the Iron Cross, First Class, in 1918, a medal rarely awarded to enlisted men.1 After the Kaiser’s abdication, Germany was led by a new coalition government that included Friedrich Ebert; Philipp Scheidemann, a Freemason; and other top members of the Social Democratic Party (SPD). While recovering in a military hospital in Pomerania from the effects of gassing, Hitler learned of the armistice signed on November 11, 1918.

  William L. Shirer reports that with more than two million Germans dead, Hitler, burned and temporarily blinded, said, “Did all this happen only so that a gang of wretched criminals could lay hands on the Fatherland?”2 In December 1918, Hitler volunteered for guard duty at a POW camp at Traunstein where Germany held more than a thousand civil and regular prisoners. By the end of January 1919, authorities released them and closed the camp. Then Hitler went to Munich.3

  In April and May 1919, Hitler was with List Regiment, part of the Bavarian Reserve Infantry, domiciled on Munich’s outskirts in the Maximillian II Barracks. The communists seized power in Bavaria on April 12. A few of the disgruntled men in his regiment joined them, while others, including Hitler, refused to join Germany’s real enemy.4 The communists sent men to arrest him, but he managed to avoid them.5 In seizing power, the communists did not disturb one Jewish house, perhaps following a pattern, as in Paris in 1871, where they destroyed a huge amount of property, except Rothschild homes, which remained completely intact.6 Because many Jews embraced communism, anti-Semitism became more prevalent in Germany.

  Hitler was a perceptive student of history but had not yet developed his political ideas. His avid reading probably made him more knowledgeable than many university graduates. While living in Vienna, he observed the communist expansion.7 From 1919 to 1921, he borrowed and read books from Krohn’s library at the National Socialist Institute, along with works by German writers and philosophers, many of which he would cite in Mein Kampf.8 He attended a political instruction course designed for the troops and was then given the job of “inoculating the men” against the propaganda disseminated by socialists, pacifists, and other destructive groups. During this period, he recognized that he had some political ability and interest.9

  Hitler obtained a job in the Press and News Bureau of the Army Political Department, where he met Major-General Franz Ritter von Epp and his adjutant, Captain Ernst Röhm. In April 1919, von Epp created a volunteer military group, the Freikorps, which ultimately quashed the Red Republic in Munich and brought down its revolutionary Councils Republic in April/May 1919. Röhm and many other discouraged soldiers joined the German Workers’ Party that Anton Drexler had established on March 7, 1918, for the working class and nationalists.

  When German troops recaptured Munich, Hitler began working for the military Commission of Inquiry, an agency that tried those soldiers who had joined the communists. He testified against these men, and firing squads soon began executing the traitors. His superiors considered him an “exemplary soldier” who had proven his readiness to support the government against the Marxists. In early June 1919, Captain Karl Mayr, part of an army intelligence division, recruited Hitler as an undercover agent, a job that required him to attend anti-Bolshevik lectures and later, with the knowledge acquired in those lectures, to act as an “anti-Bolshevik educational speaker,” instructing soldiers in the Munich barracks.10

  In those classes, Professor Karl Alexander von Muller, a lecturer, observed Hitler’s rhetorical skills in his animated discussion with other students and told Captain Mayr that he was “a natural-born speaker.” In June 1919, the same month that the Versailles Treaty was imposed, Muller presented his historical ideas and claimed that Germans were a “master race,” as opposed to the Jews. This echoed what Hitler had heard in the Austrian schools that he had attended. Europe, at the time, promoted nationalism over internationalism. Muller’s negative ideas about the Jews offended a fellow student. When it was Hitler’s turn to participate, he passionately defended the professor’s theories, and most of the other students supported him.

&nbs
p; Scheidemann proclaimed the Weimar Republic (1919-33) to replace the imperial form of government. German nationalists referred to Ebert, Matthias Erzberger, and Walther Rathenau as the “November criminals,” and now they were leading the newly formed Weimar Republic. Its first president, Ebert, signed the Weimar constitution into law on August 11, 1919. Captain Mayr instructed Hitler to attend a meeting of Drexler’s German Workers’ Party, which the military feared might be promoting a Marxist revolution. On September 12, he attended his first party meeting in a Munich beer cellar with about twenty-five other people.11 He recognized that this party’s political philosophies—nationalism and anti-Semitism—were compatible with his own but felt that the party was ineffectively organized.

  One attendee suggested that Bavaria secede from Germany and become a part of Austria. Hitler denounced the proposal and in doing so favorably impressed Drexler, who gave him a copy of his autobiographical pamphlet and invited him to join the fifty-three-member party, something that Captain Mayr encouraged him to do. Drexler sent Hitler an invitation to attend the party’s next committee meeting. After considering the matter for two days, Hitler accepted Drexler’s invitation to serve on the executive committee. Drexler then appointed Hitler as the party’s propaganda manager. On April 1, 1920, Hitler would leave the army and dedicate his full time and energy to the party.12

  At a party meeting, Gottfried Feder presented his monetary views. Hitler later wrote, “For the first time in my life I heard a discussion which dealt with the principles of stock-exchange capital and capital which was used for loan activities… When I heard Gottfried Feder’s first lecture on The Abolition of the Interest-Servitude, I understood immediately that here was a truth of transcendental importance for the future of the German people. The absolute separation of stock-exchange capital from the economic life of the nation would make it possible to oppose the process of internationalization in German business without at the same time attacking capital as such, for to do this would jeopardize the foundations of our national independence.”13 He perceived how international financiers had enslaved entire populations by controlling a nation’s currency and credit.14