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lend-lease, and of bureaucratic government. They are all consis-
tent with the communist program and with the program of the
Third International and with the protocols of the "Learned Elders
of Zion."
We can save this republic without revolution, but we can't do
it by travelling the communist route. We can't do it through the
Bretton Woods and San Francisco schemes. We can't do it
through internationalism and deflation. We can't do it through
high taxes, unpayable debts, and the slavery of the people. We
can't do it through either the republican or democratic parties
as they are now constituted and financed.
50
See Report of the House Military Affairs Committee, June 30, 1945, p.
A3419.
 52 
We must reverse the whole Roosevelt communist program.
We must get rid of bureaus and bureaucracy and their rules and
regimentation. We must establish a price and wage level that
will enable us to pay our debts, or else repudiate them, for repu-
diation is better than slavery of the people. We must disfranchise
Asiatics and Africans and banish the communists, and establish
an incorruptible Christian white-man's government and restore
constitutional government.
Roosevelt fully measured up to the requirements of a "Ruler"
as prescribed in the text. He always had recourse to "cunning and
make believe" and he was never "frank and honest". He was an
artistic and a colossal liar. He was elected President in 1932 on
his solemn promise to abolish government bureaus and to reduce
taxes 25%; he never made an effort to do either, but proceeded
immediately after his election to increase both. He promised
"again, again and again" in 1940 when he sought his third
term that he would not involve the country in war. He was an
ideal Zionist "Ruler," and he has the "dark undiscovered stain" in
his Jewish blood.
His wife and two of his boys, James and Elliot, profited enor-
mously through his office as President of the United States. His
wife through her advertisement of cosmetics and newspaper
work, and Colonel James through his insurance fees, and Gen-
eral Elliot as a result of the Hartford loan of $200,000 which he
solicited from an officer of an indicted firm through the President
and which was settled through Secretary of Commerce Jesse
Jones for $4,000 by the President's direction. The titles and per-
quisites of General and Colonel were not earned. They were be-
stowed because they were sons of the President. It is to the credit
of the illustrious Presidents of the United States that no one
prior to F.D.R. ever sought to commercialize the Presidency.
It was disclosed at President Roosevelt's death that he had an
estate of $2,000,000 from which he received an annual income of
$150,000 and that this estate was invested largely in stocks and
industrial bonds and that he had only two $50 war bonds. This
is consistent with the President's character; he wanted others
to do the fighting and not his boys, and others to pay for the war
and not himself.
Westbrook Pegler is authority for the statement that the
Roosevelt fortune was established by their Jewish ancestor in
the opium trade. Despite wars and panics and depressions and
taxes, it is still a sizable fortune. The family were evidently very
thrifty and knew how to hoard it and preserve it; and Mr.
Roosevelt was no exception.
President Roosevelt was elected to his first term upon a plat-
 53 
form that declared for constitutional government and for econ-
omy in government. Soon thereafter he set about to undermine
and destroy the constitution. He declared one emergency after
another and asked for and obtained legislation unwarranted by
the constitution. He sought to remove the Supreme Court as a
body on the pretended ground of age to enable him to appoint
successors who would sustain his emergency legislation. He ap-
pointed communists as executive officers to the cabinet and even
to the Supreme Court.
His purpose from the very beginning was to communize our
government; but he could not accomplish it without war. He had
declared more than sixty emergencies and Congress and the
people were fed up on them. He had travelled that route as far as
he could go. Congress and the people did not want war and they
must be betrayed into it.
 54 
XIII
BUREAUCRACY
"No method of procedure has ever been devised by
which liberty could be divorced from local self-govern-
ment. No plan of centralization has ever been adopted [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]

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