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of Rockefeller's monopolistic practices was heard, and his effort to insulate his profits
from taxation or takeover was seen for what it was. The charter was finally pushed
through in 1913 (the significant Masonic numeral 13 -- 1913 was also the year of the
progressive income tax and of the enactment of the Federal Reserve Act). Senator
Robert F. Wagner of New York, another Senator from Standard Oil (there were quite
a few), ramrodded the Congressional approval of the charter. The charter was then
signed by John D. Rockefeller, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., Henry Pratt Judson, president
of the Rockefeller established University of Chicago, Simon Flexner, director of the
Rockefeller Institute, Starr Jameson, described in "Who's Who" as "personal counsel
to John D. Rockefeller in his benevolences", and Charles W. Eliot, president of
Harvard University.
The Rockefeller Oil Monopoly is now 127 years old, yet in 1911, the Supreme Court,
bowing to public outrage, had ruled that it had to be broken up. The resulting
companies proved to be no problem for the Rockefeller interests. The family
retained a two per cent holding in each of the "new" companies, while the
Rockefeller foundations took a three per cent holding in each company. This gave
them a five per cent stock interest in each company; a one per cent holding in a
corporation is usually sufficient to maintain working control.
The involvement of the Rockefellers in promoting the World Communist Revolution
also developed from their business interests. There was never any commitment to
the Marxist ideology; like anything else, it was there to be used. At the turn of the
century, Standard Oil was competing fiercely with Royal Dutch Shell for control of
the lucrative European market. Congressional testimony revealed that Rockefeller
had sent large sums of money to Lenin and Trotsky to instigate the Communist
Revolution in 1905. His banker, Jacob Schiff had previously financed the Japanese in
their war against Russia and had sent a personal emissary, George Kennan to Russia
to spend some twenty years in promoting revolutionary activity against the Czar.
When the 1905 revolution failed, Lenin was placed "in storage" in Switzerland until
1907. Trotsky was brought to the U.S., where he lived rent free on the Standard Oil
property at Bayonne, New Jersey, its tank field. When the Czar abdicated, Trotsky
was placed on a ship with three hundred Communist revolutionaries from the Lower
East Side of New York. Rockefeller obtained a special passport for Trotsky from
Woodrow Wilson and sent Lincoln Steffens with him to make sure he was returned
safely to Russia. For traveling expenses, Rockefeller placed a purse containing
$10,000 in Trotsky's pocket.
On April 13,1917, when the ship stopped in Halifax, Canadian Secret Service officers
immediately arrested Trotsky and interred him in Nova Scotia. The case became an
international cause celebre, as leading government officials from several nations
frantically demanded Trotsky's release. The Secret Service had been tipped off that
Trotsky was on his way to take Russia out of the war, freeing more German armies
to attack Canadian troups on the Western Front.
Prime Minister Lloyd George hurriedly cabled orders from London to the Canadian
Secret Service to free Trotsky at once - they ignored him. Trotsky was finally freed
by the intervention of one of Rockefeller's most faithful stooges, Canadian Minister
Mackenzie King, who had long been a "labor specialist" for the Rockefellers. King
personally obtained Trotsky's release and sent him on his way as the emissary of the
Rockefellers, commissioned to win the Bolshevik Revolution. Thus, Dr. Armand
Hammer, who loudly proclaimed his influence in Russia as the friend of Lenin, has an
insignificant claim compared to the role of the Rockefellers in backing world
Communism.
Although Communism, like other "isms", had origined with Marx's association with
the House of Rothschild, it enlisted the reverent support of John D. Rockefeller
because he saw Communism for what it is, the ultimate monopoly, not only
controlling the government, the monetary system and all property, but also a
monopoly which, like the corporations it emulates, is self-perpetuating and eternal.
It was the logical progression from his Standard Oil monopoly.
An important step on the road to world monopoly was the most far-reaching
corporation invented by the Rothschilds. This was the international drug and
chemical cartel, I. G. Farben. Called "a state within a state" , it was created in 1925
as Interessen Gemeinschaft Farbeinindustrie Aktien Gesellschaft, usually known
simply as I. G. Farben, which simply meant "The Cartel". It had originated in 1904,
when the six major chemical companies in Germany began negotiations to form the
ultimate cartel, merging Badische Anilin, Bayer, Agfa, Hoechst, Weiler-ter-Meer, and
Greisheim-Electron. The guiding spirit, as well as the financing, came from the
Rothschilds, who were represented by their German banker, Max Warburg of M. M.
Warburg Company, Hamburg. He later headed the German Secret Service during
World War I and was personal financial advisor to the Kaiser.
When the Kaiser was overthrown, after losing the war, Max Warburg was not exiled
with him to Holland; instead he became the financial advisor to the new
government.
Monarchs may come and go, but the real power remains with the bankers. While
representing Germany at the Paris Peace Conference, Max Warburg spent pleasant
hours renewing family ties with his brother, Paul Warburg, who, after drafting the
Federal Reserve Act at Jekyll Island, had headed the U.S. banking system during the
war. He was in Paris as Woodrow Wilson's financial advisor.
I. G. Farben soon had a net worth of six billion marks, controlling some five hundred
firms. Its first president was Professor Carl Bosch. During the period of the Weimar
Republic, I.G. Farben officials, seeing the handwriting, began a close association
with one called Adolf Hitler, supplying much needed funds and political influence.
The success of the I.G. Farben cartel had aroused the interest of other industrialists.
Henry Ford was favorably impressed and set up a German branch of Ford Motor
Company. Forty percent of the stock was purchased by I.G. Farben. I.G. Farben then
established an American subsidiary called American I.G., in cooperation with
Standard Oil of New Jersey. Its directors included Walter Teagle, President of
Standard Oil, Paul Warburg of Kuhn, Loeb Company and Edsel Ford, representing
the Ford interests. John Foster Dulles, for the law firm, Sullivan and Cromwell,
became the attorney for I.G., frequently traveling between New York and Berlin on
cartel business. His law partner, Arthur Dean, is now director of the $40 million
Teagle Foundation which was set up before Teagle's death. Like other fortunes, it
had become part of the network.
Tavistock + Esalen = "New Age"
Rothschild + Rockefeller = FED
UN + Maitreya = "Twilight Zone"
"A democracy cannot be both ignorant and free" - Thomas Jefferson [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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