"Ø" <Ø@set.null> wrote in message
news:Xns9A0B7525...@140.99.99.130...
> The following is an excerpt from J. Lina, Architects of Deception.
> This is taken from Ch7: How the Freemasons Helped Hitler to Power
>
> Ø
> Merry Christmas
> ---------------
> Hitler's meetings with his Financial Backers
>
> The meeting between Hitler and "Sidney Warburg" took place in Munich in
> June 1929, and was arranged by the mayor of Munich Deutzberg. Hitler
> demanded 100 million marks (24 million dollars) from the Americans. On
> 25 October 1929, another meeting was arranged, which included major
> bankers and representatives from the large trusts. Among the
> participants were Henry Deterding, the director of Royal Dutch-Shell and
> a high-ranking freemason. Georg Bell, one of the SA leaders, was his
> agent within the Nazi movement. The SA (Sturmabteilung) was made up of
> the infamous brownshirts. The SA symbol consisted of large five-pointed
> stars. The New York bankers regarded the amount demanded by Hitler as
> far too large, and gave him a mere 10 million dollars. This money was
> transferred to the Mendelsohn's Bank in Amsterdam, controlled by the
> Warburg brothers, who were high-ranking freemasons and Illuminati. They
> were part of the Rothschild financial empire. Ten of the top Nazi
> leaders had the right to withdraw the money by cheque in ten diffe- rent
> German cities.
>
> At a later stage, Schroder Bank of Frankfurt am Main also took part.
> Baron Kurt Schroder was Hitler's personal banker and SS- Gruppenfiihrer
> (equivalent to army lieutenant general). From 1938, Schroder Bank
> represented the Nazi financial interests in Britain. In the United
> States, Schroder and Rockefeller merged some of their business
> interests. Avery Rockefeller, son of Percy Rockefeller, was vice
> president of the Schroder Banking Corporation of New York (Antony
> Sutton, "Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler", Sudbury, 1976,p. 81).
>
> Henry Deterding promised to send 500 000 pounds to Hitler, who in
> addition would receive 20 per cent of the Germany profit made by the
> Shell subsidiary Rhenania-Ossag. According to the historian Oswald
> Dutch, Deterding and Yahudi Samuel (Royal Dutch Shell) gave Hitler 30
> million pounds in 1931.
>
> Even the falsifier of history William L. Shirer claimed that Hitler had
> been freed of his debts in 1929 ("The Rise and Fall of the Third
> Reich"). Suddenly, he had plenty of money, a car with a chauffeur, a
> villa in Ober-Salzburg, and a luxury apartment in the Printzregent-
> strasse in Munich. According to Shirer, it has never been established
> how much money the German bankers and industrial magnates gave to the
> National Socialist Party prior to January 1933. The figures are known,
> however, just as the financial contributions from the Ameri- can
> freemasons are known. But the information is extremely unpleasant for
> these obscure figures.
>
> Soon after the agreement between Hitler and the international bankers,
> the American press mogul William Randolph Hearst (18631951) began to
> show great interest in the Nazi Party and its leader Adolf Hitler. Even
> The New York Times covered Hitler's speeches. The Harvard University
> Magazine published a lengthy survey of nazism.
>
> The British press magnate Harold Sidney Rothermere (1868-1940) added his
> voice to the Nazi propagandists.
>
> According to information acquired by Stalin after the end of the war, 40
> 000 Jewish-owned companies kept financing the strengthe- ning the German
> war machine even after 1938.
>
> Advertising for Hitler
>
> John D. Rockefeller Jr was particularly interested in Hitler's anti-
> communist statements, which were quoted in the press.
>
> During the 1920s, Rockefeller had used the well-known advertising agency
> Ivy Lee & T. J. Ross of New York to give the bolsheviks a positive
> image. They were to be regarded as confused idealists and charitable
> humanitarians. Lee claimed that the communists were "all right", and
> that no communist problem existed. It was simply a question of a
> psychological misunderstanding. A statement by Frank Vanderlip,
> comparing Lenin to George Washington, was eagerly publicised. The same
> agency also compiled the insidious propaganda pamphlet "The USSR - an
> Enigma". The mass murderer Stalin was in a familiar manner nicknamed
> "Uncle Joe".
>
> In May 1927, Ivy Lee travelled to the Soviet Union summoned by Stalin
> and Radek to discuss communist propaganda in the West. At the same time,
> he took the opportunity to refine the manipulative methods of the Soviet
> ideologists.
>
> In 1939, Joseph Stalin was elected Man of the Year by Time Magazine
> (after the extensive exterminations of 1937-38). The same honour was
> granted to Mikhail Gorbachov in 1987, after his promise to exterminate
> the Afghan people.
>
> After Hitler's assumption of power in January 1933, the advertising
> agency Ivy Lee & Ross was again called in to pacify the American public.
> Ivy Lee was given the task of polishing the propaganda methods of Hitler
> and Goebbels. Their services were paid for by American IG Farben, headed
> by the Warburg family. On 13 March
>
> 1933, Time Magazine published an article paying tribute to Hitler, who
> was called the German Messiah. The magazine carried his picture on the
> cover. For reasons of propaganda, Adolf Hitler was chosen Man of the
> Year by Time Magazine in December 1938, for "keeping the world peace".
>
> As early as 1936, the former British Prime Minister and masonic Grand
> Master David Lloyd George (actually David Levi-Lowit), on returning from
> Germany, had called out: "Heil Hitler!" In his opinion, Hitler was a
> great man, and the Germans were the happiest of people.
>
> On 4 October 1938, Winston Churchill said the same. Churchill's mother
> Jennie was an American Jewess, whose maiden name was Jerome. Jennie's
> mother Clara Hall was one quarter Iroquois ( Jerusa- lem Post, 18
> January 1993). Winston's father Randolph died as a result of syphilis at
> the age of 47.
>
> In 1956, Churchill told President Eisenhower: "I am, of course, a
> Zionist, and have been ever since the Balfour Declaration." (Herbert
> Mitgang, "The Official Churchill in One Volume", The New York Times, 6
> November 1991)
>
> The Bonnier Popular Encyclopaedia ("Konversationslexikon",
> Stockholm, 1926, Vol. 8, p. 634) has the following to say about national
> socialism: "A movement aimed at society's intervention for the benefit
> of the poorer classes, and the extension of state control of the social
> economy, strongly emphasizing national solidarity between classes.
> N. is hereby in sharp contrast to international socialism based on class
> struggle. N. is primarily represented in Germany, where Hitler in 1920
> founded a National Socialist Party, which co-operates with the right
> wing. The Nationalsozialer Verein, which was active in 1896-1909, is
> regarded as its predecessor."
>
> The same encyclopaedia called Hitler a social democratic worker, who
> distinguished himself in the World War (Vol. 5, p. 779). The
> Nationalsozialer Verein originally represented Christian socialism.
>
> "Sidney Warburg", together with the representatives of James Warburg and
> several executives of American oil companies, went to Berlin, where at
> the Hotel Adlon, they met with Hitler, Gregor Strasser, Hermann Goring,
> "von Heydt" (Thyssen), and a German lawyer. The Americans expressed
> their wish that Germany no longer should be obliged to pay war damages
> to France. Germany had already paid close to 10 billion dollars in
> damages to the United States alone.
>
> In October 1931, Hitler sent a letter to the international masonic
> bankers, which led to a new meeting at the Guaranty Trust Company. Some
> of the financiers (Montagu Norman, Royal Dutch Shell, and Glean) did not
> consider Hitler able to act. On the other hand, Rockefeller, J. H.
> Carter and McBean believed their investment in Hitler to be wise. All
> agreed on a continued support for Hitler.
>
> "Sidney Warburg" once more went to Germany, where he met the banker von
> Heydt (Thyssen), who explained to him that the SS troops were in need of
> good quality machine guns, revolvers and rifles.
>
> Warburg again met Hitler, who told him of his plans to seize power. He
> had two options - a revolution or a coup d'etat, which would take three
> months at a cost of 500 million marks. He also had another plan, which
> involved legal assumption of power. This was expected to take three
> years and cost some 200 million marks. Hitler suggested that the bankers
> themselves decide, which plan to use.
>
> In the opinion of the New York bankers, these amounts were far too
> large, however. A week later, they sent Hitler a mere 15 million
> dollars, demanding aggressive initiatives on the neighbouring countries.
>
> Hitler agreed to use the 15 million dollars for his election propaganda.
> The money was transferred to three banks: Mendelsohn & Co. in Amsterdam,
> Rotterdamsche Bank in Rotterdam and Banca Italiana in Rome. Each bank
> received 5 million dollars.
>
> In total, Hitler received at least 32 million dollars from the American
> financiers (Morgan, Lamont, Rockefeller, Kuhn, Loeb & Company, General
> Electric Company, National City Bank and others) between 1929 and 1932
> (Antony Sutton, op. cit., p. 134). Further contributions came from other
> American, British and German sources.
>
> Attempts to Investigate Hitler's Secret Income
>
> After this, the German socialist Minister of the Interior Carl Severing,
> discovered that Adolf Hitler's national socialists were receiving vast
> sums of money from abroad. He immediately informed the Chan- cellor,
> Heinrich Bruning, who much later gave orders to stop Hitler's speech to
> the Americans on 11 December 1931.
>
> Carl Severing ordered his assistant Dr Abegg, to find out everything he
> could concerning Hitler and those providing him with money, intending to
> take Hitler to court. Hitler in addition lacked German citizenship. The
> government arranged a meeting, where according to secret minutes, Major
> General Kurt von Schleicher said that the amounts received by Hitler
> from within the country were much lower than claimed. Schleicher became
> chancellor on 2 December 1932. The party was in need of 80-100 million
> marks. This information came from the SA leader Ernst Rohm, who later
> became infamous as a pederast. The SA received money from the secret
> Reichswehr fund, but the amount was very modest. The election campaign
> had already started, and the authorities did not have enough time to
> investigate the secret sources of Hitler's finances. It was commonly
> known, however, that Hitler had access to enormous amounts to cover his
> propaganda costs.
>
> As early as 20 December 1922, The New York Times stated that the
> automobile manufacturer Henry Ford financed Adolf Hitler's national
> socialist, anti-Semitic movement in Munich. The Berliner Tageblatt
> published a protest against Ford's involvement in German politics.
> Hitler later thanked Ford in a letter for his generous contributions to
> the Nazis. Henry Ford was also a freemason (Palestine Lodge No. 357,
> Detroit, Michigan, 1894).
>
> [to be continued]
>