Anonymous
05/13/2024 (Mon) 01:50
Id: 1d2868
[Preview]
No. 93666
del
Reality Behind the Myths After this small digression on race, let’s get back to the main subject of this article: the financing of National Socialism. As conclusively shown by Henry Ashby Turner, big American or German banks and corporations such as J.P. Morgan, I.G. Farben, Flick, Krupp, and Siemens did not, on the whole, support Hitler and his political rise to power: If the role of big business in the disintegration of the Republic has been exaggerated, such is even more true of its role in the rise of Hitler. While a significant part of the business community contributed materially — if less than wholly voluntarily — to the consolidation of Hitler’s regime after he had become chancellor, he and his party had previously received relatively little support from that quarter. The early growth of the NSDAP took place without any significant aid from the circles of large-scale enterprise.[22] Big firms and organizations, notes Turner, bestowed the bulk of their funding upon Hitler’s opponents , the bourgeois parties who supported President Hindenburg, the hard-left faction of the National Socialist Party itself, and the Jewish-led German Communist Party.[23]Who then Financed Hitler and the National Socialist Rise to Power? Emil Kirdof and Fritz Thyssen were the only German captains of big industry who supported the NSDAP. Most of the party’s money came from the German masses. The American writer on economics and business, Peter Drucker, who agrees with Turner, is quoted as follows by journalist Ivor Benson: The really decisive backing came from sections of the lower middle classes, the farmers and working class, who were hardest hit; as far as the Nazi Party is concerned, there is good reason to believe that at least three quarters of its funds, even after 1930, came from the weekly dues and from the entrance fees to the mass meetings from which members of the upper classes were always conspicuously absent.[24] In the final analysis, Hitler was an honest man who wanted the best for his people.Notes [1] Henry Ashby Turner, German Big Business and the Rise of Hitler, Oxford University Press, 1985, p. 346. [2] “Hitler wins his libel suit,” Jewish Telegraphic Agency, September 4 1923. [3] Dieter Ruggeberg (for Henry Makow), Adolf Hitler – Agent of Zionism and Freemasonry, HenryMAKOW.com, November 15, 2019. [4] Christopher Bjerknes, Adolf Hitler Bolshevik and Zionist Volume I, Lulu.com, October 30, 2020. [5] Jim Marrs, The Rise of the Fourth Reich. The Secret Societies That Threaten to Take Over America, HarperCollins, June 23, 2009. [6] Anthony Cyril Sutton, Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler: The Astonishing True Story of the American Financiers Who Bankrolled the Nazis, Claireview Books, 1976 (reprinted in 2022). [7] Richard Tedor, Hitler’s Revolution, Castle Hill Publishers, 2021. [8] Was Adolf Hitler of Jewish or Rothschild Origin? Karl’s Substack. Everything about Jews and Judaism, Feb. 26, 2024. [9] David L. Hoggan, The Forced War. When Peaceful Revision Failed, Institute for Historical Review, 2023. [10] Richard Tedor, book cited. [11] William L. Patch of Washington and Lee University cited in Andrew Hamilton, “Funding a Movement: German Big Business and the Rise of Hitler,” National Vanguard [12] Henry Ashby Turner, work cited, p. 358. [13] Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf, Hurst and Blackett LTD, non-censored edition, 1939, p. 127. [14] Ben Stein, “In Class Warfare, Guess Which Class Is winning,” New York Times , November 26, 2006. [15] Michael Collins Piper, “The New Establishment-JEWISH,” The New Babylon. Those Who Reign Supreme. The Rothchild Empire: The Modern-Day Pharisees and the Historical and Economic Origins of the New World Order, American Free Press, 2011, pp. 183 to 191. [16] Laurent Guyénot, work cited, p. 197. [17] Ivor Benson, The Zionist Factor. A Study of the Jewish Presence in 20th Century History, Veritas Publishing Company Pty. Ltd. Australia, 1986, p. 158. [18] Charles Murray, Human Diversity: The Biology of Gender, Race, and Class, Twelve, 2020.