Summary
âž¡ This text discusses the controversial actions of Eisenhower during World War II. It highlights his treatment of Patton, a visionary who was sidelined and humiliated. The text also criticizes Eisenhower’s handling of German prisoners, who were classified as enemy combatants and left to suffer in harsh conditions, leading to the death of up to 1.5 million people. The authors argue that these actions were not just negligence, but deliberate policy.
âž¡ The text discusses the harsh conditions faced by prisoners during the war, with instances of cruelty from soldiers fueled by propaganda. It also mentions the story of a man who was disgusted by the treatment of the German people and planned to become political after the war, but was killed in suspicious circumstances. The text also talks about a museum dedicated to this man, General Patton, and his popularity among the public. Lastly, it discusses the unusual situation where people followed a retreating army, indicating their dissatisfaction with the conquering force.
âž¡ After World War II, Germans thought they’d be protected by the Allies, but instead, they were forcefully rounded up and sent back to Stalin. This event, known as Operation Keel Hall, resulted in many deaths. Later, Eisenhower, despite being a low-ranking officer, became the first Supreme Allied Commander of NATO and the president of Columbia University, largely due to political maneuvering. The Republican party was divided, with Robert Taft representing the traditional, conservative wing, but Eisenhower won the nomination and presidency, with Taft’s sudden death removing a major obstacle for him.
âž¡ The speaker discusses various political figures from the past, suggesting that some may have been murdered due to their political stances. They mention President Eisenhower, Senator Taft, and Chief Justice Fred Vinson, among others, and speculate about the circumstances of their deaths. The speaker also criticizes the shift from conservative to liberal leadership in the Supreme Court and expresses suspicion about the role of hospitals in these alleged murders.
âž¡ The text discusses the controversial actions and legacy of President Eisenhower, focusing on his role in the development of the CIA. It suggests that Eisenhower indirectly contributed to the deaths of several political figures and the assassination of JFK due to his support of the CIA. The text also touches on the political climate of the time, including the tension between different political groups. Lastly, it briefly discusses the upcoming World Series and the authors’ personal opinions on various teams.
Transcript
Um, you know, those, those two pieces of those works were just, that completely transformed my opinion of this guy. Yeah. And I don’t know if you, I use, I don’t know if you saw the, the thumbnail that I made, but I tried to do my best to make him look kind of evil, so. But anyway, um, well, uh, um, what do you say we jump into this? Okay. I sent you some exhibits, a PDF exhibit. Yep. And I have it ready to rock and roll here. So let’s, let’s do that here. I gotta do this. That wouldn’t be the first one, though.
Oh yeah. There we go. These are some select excerpts from my book. I don’t like Ike, which is available at Amazon, by the way. Maybe you could post a link to it or you could go to Amazon. Mike King. Search for Mike king or Mike s king. And that’s one of the books that I was able to get back on Amazon. I don’t like Ike. And it’s just, I think, I think you covered that on your show some time ago. I went through it. I was probably like in the, in the springtime. It’s just chock full of damning information about this man who was so adored by the american public, both as a military leader and then later on as president.
And to this day he remains one of our most esteemed presidents. And a lot of conservatives have latched on to him just because of that comment. Or a lot of right wing conspiracy theorists. They, uh, they’re under the mistaken impression that towards the end of his presidency, that was actually his farewell address, that he was somehow trying to give us a warning. No, but we can get into that in another show. What, what he really meant by that speech. Uh, I would like to say, yeah, no, you’re good. Uh, I’d like to say, you know, you talk about what you did with, uh, with that book.
Actually, I totally forgot what I was going to say, so never mind getting too old. Cr’s. You’re catching up to me. Cr’s. Well, I mean, there’s so much in that book. But I wanted to focus tonight on what I call the Eisenhower body count. We’ve heard of the Clinton body count. Well, there’s an Eisenhower body count. I did remember what I was going to say, and that was, it was actually relevant. This is a, because you talked how the, how the conservatives latch on to him, because we are taught to revere this man. And what I have learned is that the more we are taught to revere somebody, the more we likely should probably revile them.
And the more, the more that we are taught to revile somebody, the more we probably should revere them. Yeah, I mean, that’s a good standard, you know, particularly in the last hundred years and especially anything having to do with World War two or anybody closely related to it, because that’s such a defining event. And another shortcut for assessing someone is look who endorses them. Eisenhower was endorsed both in 52 and 56 by both the New York Times and the Washington Post. And that should have been enough right then and there to alert people as to what’s going on.
But a lot of Republicans at that time, they were so, they just went Gaga. They’re like, oh, Eisenhower is a Republican. We didn’t know. We never knew his politics. This is great. The war hero, because they want to win. They wanted to hitch their wagon to his star. But they’re being very superficial, because if you look closely, the indicators were there that this was a man of the far left who they repackaged and turned them into the incident. Republican. Yep. But he was a killer. I mean, there’s so much in the book. I want to be careful not to digress.
I could go on and on about this scoundrel, but let’s just focus on people that he killed. Or in some cases, we can only speculate. But the deaths were very suspicious and very beneficial to him. Because that’s the thing. When, you know, sometimes when important people just drop dead, you. You can speculate because poison happens. Right, right. But there’s always that plausible deniability thing. And I believe some of the people who just suddenly died were murdered by Eisenhower and his sidekick Alan Dulles, headed to CIA. But let’s. Let’s start with the war, okay? 1945. This, this is really a sad story.
It’s so unnecessary and so unjust. There was a private named Eddie Slovak who, towards the end of the war, really, the very. In December of 1944, he’s in a unit, they’re advancing westward on Germany, and there’s heavy shelling at the front, and he just can’t take it. And, yes, his officer. Can I get reassigned to the back? Well, of course, commanding officer is not going to do this, you know, so he’s got to go back to the front. But eventually, that’s what he does. He’s deserter. He deserves. He can’t. He can’t take the shelling. Now, I should point out there were 21,000 convicted deserters, american deserters.
I did not know that number. Yeah, that’s a lot. Is a lot. I mean, you know, Vietnam, they say a lot of gunshot wounds. We’re in the ass. Right. You know, a lot of guys can’t take the shelling. And it’s like they got. They gotta get out of 21,000 deserted, all of them received some sort of punishment, all court martialed, of course, some of them did, you know, prison sentences. But nobody was executed. Not one. And in fact, no one has been acts had been executed in any war. You’d have to go back to the us civil war.
After that, it, like, ended. Even World War one, there were deserters. They were. They weren’t executed. You got your court martial, dishonorable discharge. Probably do some time in the brig. You know, it’s a punishment. But they didn’t execute. He is the only one out of 21,000. And it was towards the end of the war, when the game was already decided, but his sentence was handed out by a panel. I suppose at some point they wanted to make example. And he wrote a letter to Eisenhower to appeal his sentence. And Eisenhower personally confirmed his execution. And he was executed by firing squad January 31, 1945.
And, you know, as he was being led to, the policy says, they’re just doing this to make an example of me. And it’s true. I mean, if the other 21,000. You do nothing about them. You’re just picking on this guy. And I was totally in Eisenhower’s power, but he wanted to make his statement. But it’s particularly hypocritical, because if you’ll recall, after George Patton slapped that soldier who’s also essentially deserter. Yep. He’s in the hospital. All these guys are wounded, banged up. Patton sees them. Well, that happened twice. It’s like, yeah, yeah, cool. And Bennett. Yeah, both of them.
Cough. Cough. It’s just like George G. Scott in the movie. Yeah. He says, I’ll not have you disgrace this place a lot. He slapped him with his gloves. That was in Italy. Communist journalist Drew Pearson, real scumbag. Communist, straight up communist. But he was one of the most popular, well, or well known, widely distributed syndicated columnists in the United States picked up on that story. It was another communist in the OSS who leaked it to him, and it blasted across the media. And Eisenhower removed him from his command in Italy, the Third army. And he humiliated Patton.
He. He made him apologize to his men. Big speech, just like in the movie with George C. Scott, just for slapping the guy. And, you know, the Germans couldn’t believe it. They thought, oh, this has got to be some kind of strategic ploy. They’re not going to sideline Patton, right? It’s like taking your best general running back out of the game. Now, the reason was because Patton was going too fast. And it had already been agreed upon by these conspirators that Stalin was gonna. They were gonna hand them eastern Germany and all of eastern Europe. But in order to do that, you had to do a slow advance.
So that was the whole strategy. In the west, we want to take the pressure off the Soviet Union, give them the second front, but we don’t want to go too fast either, because Stalin wants the east. That deal was made in 1942. So that’s why they had the sideline patent when they needed him for a victory and a morale boost. They took him off the bench and he delivered in North Africa, you know, going up through Italy. But then they found this pretext to sideline them. And then later on in the war, they took away his gas.
Then they had to bring him back after battle of the bulge to turn that tight around. But then they took his gasoline away, and it was. He was so frustrated. We all know that story. Yes, but you publicly humiliated Patton, wrote him a nasty ladder, saying his actions were, like, despicable. I mean, Patton was deeply hurt because he was. He was a lifelong friend. Eisenhower always supported Eisenhower. They go way back, actually. And he defended him. Didn’t he. Didn’t he, like, he. Didn’t he get him out of trouble, like, once or a couple of times? Well, in the war, he belly.
He pulled his chestnuts out of the fire. But at West Point, he always stood by him. They went through West Point together. But Patton was the visionary genius who, even as a cadet at West Point, was envisioning that the tank, which was just kind of an auxiliary weapon in world War one, would become the main focus, you know, of your land, ground forces. Yeah, a lot of people, they laughed at him, but it turned out he was visionary. Eisenhower piggybacked off of that and he would write his own papers about all the future is tanks. But Eisenhower was a mediocrity and Patton was a visionary.
But Patton always stood by him. But, you know, they have to sideline them. So I digress to that story. Well, it’s not really a digression because it shows the utter hypocrisy. So Patton, you humiliate and you take his command away over a slap of a deserter. I don’t even think it was a slap. I think he was just with his gloves, right, helmet. But then this guy you order in front of a firing squad because he’s just some poor nobody, and 21 other thousand got nothing happened to. I mean, they got punished. I mean, you know, that the guy can’t take it.
We shouldn’t even have been in this war. You know, court martial him, give him a prison sentence, dishonorable discharge, you know, but they killed him, left his wife a widow, and Eisenhower added completely in his power to just kind of reduce the sentence. You want to give him a stiff sentence, punish him, that’s fine, like he did the other 121 thousand, but how do you kill him and not the other 21,000? And this is something that stopped after the civil war. Okay. Didn’t happen in world war one, and I don’t think it’s ever happened since. But Eisenhower gave the final order to execute Eddie Slovak, and I don’t think it was justice.
Yeah, that’s. Yeah. Especially after the way he treated Patton. Right. And we’re going to be touching on that here in a minute, too, I think. But the next one is the Ryan Meadows death camps. Yeah, here’s the big one here. Well, there’s another big one. There’s another big one. This is where you get into genocide. Yeah. Okay. Not just one on one killing. There’s no doubt about this one. And some of this had leaked out. And that’s the Saturday night Post. This was a major american magazine. They actually broke a story on this for a while.
I hit the newspapers for like a day or something that disappeared was spiked. Late forties, it started coming out early fifties. But they had, they made it disappear real quick because this, this guy was being puffed up to be the next president. But at the end of the war, the, a lot of the german prisoners, they couldn’t wait to surrender to the Americans because they were terrified, because they knew if they surrendered to the Soviets, they’re going to end up in a gulags, right in Siberia. So they surrendered. And this was another point of conflict between Eisenhower and Patton because for the.
For months, Patton, he would. He was released. He was releasing prisoners and he was holding other principal. Stalin wanted them. And so anybody in the east, they wanted to turn them over to Stalin or keep them as prisoners indefinitely. Patton was releasing people on his own after the war ended, saying, right, war is over. Good luck to you. And so he was defying Eisenhower on this. But meanwhile, in the west, these german soldiers, just like that picture shows, they were, first of all, they were classified as enemy combatants. Yes. And that’s a huge distinction. That’s how he did it, quote, unquote, legally.
Because an enemy combined, that’s someone you capture to heat a battle. The battle still going on. You know, you’re not. Obviously, you can’t give them three hots and a cots right there. Maybe tie them up in the back of a truck or something. Just can’t abuse them. And it’s understood that in due time, you’re going to get them to a camp where he will. So that they get the. And the dis. The difference here is the distinction between a disarmed enemy combatant and a prisoner of war. Yeah. And. And if I remember correctly, what it was happened was a prisoner of war is somebody who was.
Who is. Who is an enemy combatant but was actually in the army. What Eisenhower requested permission from the chairman of Joint Chiefs was to classify even civilians as enemy combatants or disarmed enemy combatants. Yeah, because, I mean, that’s what. That was what the Ryan Meadow camps were. I mean, it was everybody. It wasn’t just military. It was. There was everybody. Well, they were going after, like, local party officials so you could be, like, a mayor, you know, low level, quote unquote nazi party. That. That’s how you get to those people, you know, because they wanted more than just the soldiers.
They wanted the political apparatus as well. Right. And by classifying them in such as such indefinitely, technically they’re not entitled to a cop or shelter or good meals. So they were just left to rot in the field, packed like sardines. The picture speaks for itself. And then the disease and the dysentery and the hunger. They were dropping like flies. And the book, written by an establishment historian, no less, James Bakke, makes the compelling case. As many as 1.5 million Germans were murdered. It would have been far more humane to put a bullet to the back of each one of their heads.
Than to have them die like this. This was the Ryan Meadows death camps and the killing. It wasn’t just carelessness or negligence. This was deliberate policy. We want to eliminate as many german veterans as we can. Yeah, here’s. We don’t have a repeat of the post war, world War one years where these guys all become political and start a movement. This is the. I just did a search for other law, which is the title of the book by James Becky. But you can see that there’s a lot of. There’s a lot of stuff. This is the COVID There’s multiple covers of the book.
Of the book. But, you know, here’s. Here’s a picture, a really big picture of this. That’s all you need to see. And of course, there’s testimony now from some of the american guards that came out after the years, but really, just that image alone is all you need to see. Yeah, that’s. That’s. How do you survive that? A certain percentage of those people crowded together, exposed? Or are they going to die? That’s. They. Where do they shit? Where did they piss? Nothing. Yeah. What do they do when they’re cold or hot or thirsty or hungry? And the soldiers were given orders to anybody came to the fence, local population to help them, give them some bread, fire once in a year to come back again, shoot at them.
And american soldiers gave testimony to this. The very first one was the basis of that magazine article. So this isn’t any kind of embellished conspiracy theory. This is now. This is fact. One to 1.5 million, at least, murdered by Eisenhower. Deliberate policy. And in the east, the Soviets weren’t doing wholesale genocide like that. They were just shipping them off to work them to death, slower death in a gulag. I think it was like 5% of the german prisoners were released, like, later on in the fifties, after Stalin died. Yeah. So just. Just to re emphasize that number, one to 1.5 million Germans, german civilians or.
Or army whatever after the war were. Were killed or by. Basically by the. The elements. I mean, there’s others. There’s a whole lot of negative, really bad stories about this. I don’t. This is like, this is hard. This is dark, but, yeah, I mean, you know, we want. You want to talk about a holocaust, huh? Yeah. So. A real one. Yeah. So, yeah, I mean, just. It’s just. I mean, people. People were buried alive in the mud when. If it was really. If it rained really hard, they would be buried alive. Yeah. Because just to kind of keep warm, they would dig body trenches for themselves.
Yeah. And then if the earth collapsed, that’s where they were driven to. Digging holes with your hands so you can get a little warmth inside the earth. The earth. Minimal food rations. Just. Just horrible. And they would load these bodies up on the trucks, pull them out of there, and then I’m sure they snap pictures of the bodies because now you have propaganda. You can put it out there, say, look what the Germans did to their prisoners. Look what they did to the Jews. Yeah. So, yeah, I mean, the bar and. Well, and then there are stories of, you know, these.
A lot of most. These people were hungry, starving, and. And there was so much food there for the. For the soldiers of the US army that. But they literally would like. They, like, throw it away or burn it or toy with the people that were starving. I mean, they. I mean, taunting them. It was. It was disgusting. Yeah, yeah. I mean, you know, by that time, so much hatred and propaganda had been ginned up against the Germans that, you know, a lot of soldiers became cruel who might not ordinarily be so in such circumstances, but that.
The constant brainwashing of the german monsters. You have to dehumanize people like that in order to get your rank and file to go along with this and carry it out. But a lot of. A lot of the Americans were deeply bothered by this. Some of it. Some of them spoke years later. But that’s a mass killer right there. No doubt about that one. And now, now we come to. Now we come to his nemesis, the friend that he betrayed, the man who spoke out against what was he was already seeing as the abuse being meted out, the vindictiveness against the german people.
I mean, you read the excerpts of the letters. He wrote back to his wife, how disgusted he was with what happened in Berlin. And he could have taken Berlin, but he was slowed down repeatedly and they cut his gas off and they diverted. That was Eisenhower, because Eisenhower was carrying out the directive. The Bolsheviks get the east. So he’s speaking out. He’s speaking out to reporters. He may. He made that one comment. The fake news went nuts. They said, there’s rumors that you’ve got Nazis, you’ve brought them back in the administration, in these territories. He said, well, you know, that’s.
They were nazi party members. Is no different than Americans who become Republicans or Democrats. They went nuts with that. And then he would. He released prisoners of war. And, you know, it was clear that when he came, and I bet they opened up his letters when he sent letters back home to his wife, I’m sure the OSS got a hold of it, surgically opened the envelope, read it, and you read those letters. It says right there, when I come back and I’m out of the military, I’m buying my time, I’m going to start my counteroffensive. So he was going to become political.
This is a big problem. He was really, truly disgusted. And this is an anti communist patriot who’s going to cause trouble. So he has a little fender bendere. The war has been over now. The war in Europe’s been over eight, nine months. He has a little fender bender, total oss deal. They get him in the hospital, they kill him in the hospital. And certainly Eisenhower would have had to have gone along with this. So, yeah, I blame Eisenhower totally for the murder of Patton. Eisenhower and the OSS. I can’t disagree with that. You know, did I ever tell you that the patent.
Well, the patent. The general Patton’s museum is out here in southern California because he used it. He used the Mojave desert to train his tanks for warfare in North Africa. And. Yeah. So the, his, his, the museum of his museum is like an hour from my house. Yeah. How about that? Interesting. You’ve been there? Yeah, yeah, just one. You see a museum in his honor, and this just gives an indication of how larger than life he was, because they used to build up the war heroes, but especially Patton, because of his victories. Let me, let me, let me show you something that will, that will illuminate that, too.
So here, let me do this. I’ll show you where the museum is, and then you’ll be like, oh, my gosh. Okay, so the museum is right here. General Patton Memorial Museum. It really is in the desert, out in the middle of nowhere right here. There’s not really. They haven’t developed that area. No. So, and just, just, this is Coachella. This was where Trump was last week on Saturday. And this is, this is about a 20, 2025 miles trip out to here. But there’s nothing out here. Nothing but General Patton’s museum. Wow. So they don’t want, it’s like they, they want it way out in the middle of nowhere.
So he has a museum, but not very many people go there. Well, it’s, it’s like gladiator. They had to kill his name. Right, exactly. And he is very analogous to our friend Maximus in that sense, a general who’s going to become political. Right? Oh, they had, they had to nip him in the buddha. So that would have been a big problem, because when you build up a war hero, like this. Now he’s like a Frankenstein monster. How are you going to tear him down when he turns on you? Right? And he, there were only two men who had that capability.
Patton and MacArthur. Yeah. Because the Eisenhower. Yeah. He was the supreme commander, but he did not command, command that type of respect and adoration from the american public because he’s not the one actually winning the battles. The guy out there in the field is Patton and MacArthur. So they were, both of them were really larger than life. So, I mean, look at the middle image there. That’s him in a parade. He came back to United States and look at this. The parade he got. Yeah. So you really is, you can’t imagine how exalted he was because of the war propaganda.
And that’s, that would not be so easy to reverse because what, are you gonna have the fake news now all of a sudden turn on them and attack them? Well, then the people turn on the fake news. I mean, again, it’s like, maximus, remember when he says in the movie, she’s all. The chick says, oh, but the, that, this, the legions have new commanders now. Yeah, they’re all loyal. Maximus is like, yeah, let them see me alive. We’ll see what their lawyers. We’ll see where their loyalties lie. So it was like, it was like that. If Patton came home and became political, and he would have, or started a movement.
Oh, big, big problems. Big problems. Then it becomes hard to kill again, analogous to gladiator. How do you kill them now? Don’t think of me. Right? Remember, Joaquin Phoenix is like, oh, they love Maximus. I can’t kill him. Clearly. I love that movie. That’s one of my faves. That and the godfather. So, but that’s, that’s the situation. They had to take him out in that fender bender because they anticipated this guy’s gonna cause problems. I bet you that he read those letters to his wife. Well, yeah. And I mean, he’s, he openly acknowledges, like, we fought the wrong enemy, we fought the wrong enemy, where we’re gonna replace what could have been the best race in Europe with mongolian savages.
This is all jewish summit. This is semitic. Yeah, this, this, this revenge. And he starts talking about all the Jews around Roosevelt. Oh, I I’m, I’m sure wherever he, whatever he said, colleagues, it just takes one rat. He made all the right enemies. Yeah, he did. He had to go. So Eisenhower, Eisenhower murdered him, or he was at least part of that cabal, intimate cabal that set it up because he was supreme commander. I agree with that. I’ll bet money on that one. That’s not even speculative. All right, well, let’s move on to the. Now, this is another biggie.
This is a biggie. And the body count here might even be greater. Yes. Then Ryan Meadows. Yes. Operation Keel hole. And this happens quite a bit of time after the war is over. 46 and 47. What happened was, as the Germans began to retreat from the east, so many people in those areas, in Russia itself, followed them. And Solzhenitsyn wrote the only known time in history that a retreating army was followed by the people in the country that had conquered. Right. Everything you need to know. Yeah, I should tell you everything you need to know that the country that conquered them, the.
When they were being forced out, the people were following the conquerors. Yeah. That should tell you everything you need to know. And these were people now what’s basically revealed themselves as anti communist, okay? Because while the Bolsheviks were in charge, you know, you had to shut up. But what happens when the Germans came in? Everybody got to show their true colors, throwing flowers at the Germans and giving them food. And they were so happy that they were liberated. So now. But now when the Bolsheviks come back, these people are screwed. So they. They go westward, and I follow the Germans after the end of the war.
Now they come under the protection of the Allies, or they thought that they would be protected. Right? Stalin wanted them back. He wanted them back bad. Okay? And they delivered. They delivered. I. Eisenhower served them right. Right up the stone, round about. Yep. Supreme Court round. Round them up. Didn’t even buck the system at all. He just eagerly rounded them up. And as that painting shows, they’re rounded up by force. American and british. They would just beat them into submission, shove them into railway cars. Okay? And the book there by Julius Epstein. Operation Keel Hall. I read that many years ago.
It’s another heartbreaker, another one that’s hard to get through, you know? I mean, just imagine that painting. Really. The painting is titled the betrayal of the Cossacks. Uh, and, boy, and that’s what it was. There’s the British with big sticks just beating them into submission. Everybody get on a train. And they were delivered. We have testimony from american troops that they would drop off a truckload, and they saw the previous truckload already hanging from the trees. So a lot of these people were being killed on the spot, a lot of them being shipped to Siberia. What a betrayal.
Can you imagine the terror these people experienced? That’s Eisenhower. Okay. Mass killer, exterminator. Yeah. Just chill out. Words. Yeah. Yeah. I didn’t have the words. So the war is over. He becomes the first supreme allied commander of NATO. The newly formed NATO. They’re building up his resume. Uh, even though he was like bottom third, bottom quarter of his class at West Point, uh, there’s nothing really about him that you would call, you know, academic superstar. They made him the president of Columbia University. What’s up with that? But that was to embellish his resume. Yep. Okay, add a little veneer of gravitas, intellectualism to him.
But that was all being built up because they knew that 1952 was going to be a republican year. Democrats had held the presidency now for like six terms. Truman was so unpopular, probably the least popular president in american history, he was eligible to run for another term because his first term was only three years and eleven months. FDR died really early in his fourth term, so Truman was eligible, but he couldn’t run. So they put up Adley Stevenson for the Democrats, but the country had tired of the Democrats. And then you had the debacle of the korean war.
You had the communist penetration and the McCarthy hearings. China had fallen to communism. Democrats were out that year. And the presumptive republican nominee, nicknamed Mister Republican, was Robert Taft, the son of William Howard Taft, who got cheated out of re election when they put up Teddy Roosevelt in order to get Woodrow Wilson elected. This was his son. This guy was pure MAGA. I guess he was. He’s like the Ron Paul of his day. Just principled, voted against NATO membership, just solid, small government, constitutional, traditional, original republican type. A real Republican, not a rhino. Right, right. Because even at this time, I would say up until this point in time, the, the real Republican, I guess what you would call the MAGA wing in a republican party, was the dominant faction.
The rhinos were still in the minority faction, but they had gained a lot of power and influence themselves. But this was the guy. Okay, so what? But what they did is they stole the nomination from him at the 1952 convention that was decided at the convention, that they spread all this propaganda that Taft can’t win. Eisenhower’s the war hero. He, he’s our guy. And a lot of the delegates went that way because, you know, they’re short sighted. They’re thinking, who’s going to give us the best chance of victory? But Taft would have won anyway. There was no way.
There was no way Adlai Stevenson was going to win. It was not going to be a Democrat year. So that was a lie. And there were all these dirty deals made, and it was a lot of resentment. It was like a civil war in the republican party, and they nicknamed it the big steal. What went on at that convention? A lot of dirty deals, including the governor of California, Earl Warren, and keep that name in your memory bank. I know you. I know you know who he is, but he put all his chips at the end on Eisenhower, and that was huge because the governor of California, and he emerged from this bitter, contentious convention, Eisenhower emerged as the candidate.
And the tough people, boy, were they were, they were livid. So now, how much of that was Baruch? Yeah, I’m sure he had a hand in that. Baruch was Baruch and Eisenhower, they were friends and hunting buddies going back to the 1920s. Right? If you wonder how a nobody, a no name, low level officer, graduated at the tail end of his class at West Point, was almost expelled from the army. It’s a whole story there for, like, a little funny. That’s the story. I thought that Patton came to his rescue, support in. When he was in trouble.
I was. I’m almost certain that Patton came to his aid when the army was trying to, you know, do you get rid of him? So, yeah, Patton stuck up for him and saved his career. Stuck up for him. And he was very supportive of him when he lost a young son, Eisenhower. Patton was just a loyal guy. So imagine how hurtful it must have been to be treated like shit the way he was by Eisenhower. But that’s how psychopaths are. They’ll just use you. They’ll be your friend when they use you. But if later on it behooves them to just throw you away like a used up lineman, they’ll do that.
But now Eisenhower gets the nomination, and Taft throws the support behind them. But it wasn’t just, okay, I’m going to line up. Got to be loyal to Republican Party. Now. There were concessions made. They had meaning. And so Taft was the majority leader, the republican majority leader in the Senate. And so he was really that. And in the hearts and minds of most Republicans, he was truly the leader of the party. So he remained an obstacle and arrival for Eisenhower, even though they stayed on cordial terms. But the concession that Taft extracted from Eisenhower, I’ll throw my support behind you and all the conservative wing of the party, but you have to agree to this, this and that principle.
So he essentially kind of gave himself veto power over a lot of stuff. So Eisenhower knew when he became president, inaugurated in March of 1953, they did the inaugurations later back then that he was. He was still going to have to contend with Taft and the conservative wing of the republican party. Okay, so he wasn’t going away. July 1953, he’s on a golfing trip with Eisenhower, and he starts not feeling well. He starts having pains. He goes to the hospital, and they’re doing tests. And this not saying they think he has pancreatic cancer. Goes in for surgery.
He dies in the hospital. They get him in the hospital. It was just very odd. I mean, here he is. He was just about to be president, United States. Uh, Eisenhower’s in office only a few months, and now he’s dead. How could he rise? He doesn’t, he doesn’t have to make deals with the conservative wing anymore. They’re, they’re their, their leader, their beloved, charismatic leader is gone, out of the picture. It was a huge loss and a devastating blow for the conservative, true conservative win, the republican party. Let me, let me inject something here that would be, that would, okay, so Taft would be akin to Trump.
And let’s see, Eisenhower would be akin to, I don’t know, I want to say deSantis, but maybe somebody like, more of like a. Yeah. Chris Christie. Yeah, that’s actually a really good example. Chris Christie, you know, because Chris Christie wasn’t really republican or even Nikki Haley or something like that. Romney. Romney’s probably the best. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So, yeah, I guess it would be like Romney’s president, but Trump gives him his support. But I, you know, here’s the deal. And then Trump just mysteriously dies. I guess that would be a good analogy. So do I have receipts for this? No, but, you know, these kind of things happen so often in history.
There’s, there’s just, just so many convenient sudden deaths of people. You know, the ideal way to knock somebody off is not with a bullet to the head by a long gunman, because then you got a selling, oh, the guy was crazy. You know, if you could poison somebody. But now, in the fifties, they had the capability. They have heart attack guns. They can get you, they can give you cancer. It’s child’s play. They can do these things. And if they can do it, they will do it if it suits their agenda. And getting rid of this guy so early in Eisenhower’s term, I’m telling you, if Taft had been around, Eisenhower would not have been able to get away with the bloody murder that he got away with.
Yeah. Eight years as president, all the left wing shit that he did. And that’s all in my book. I don’t like Ike, so this does not pass the smell test. I’ll put it this way. There’s enough here to warrant an investigation and even exhume his body just to see what happened. I agree. It just stinks. And in the. The far right image there, that’s from the church hearings of the 1970s. Senator church and Senator John Tower. He’s. He’s holding up a CIA poison dart gun that leaves no trace of bodily entry while injecting deadly toxins in the target and targeted.
They can inject you with targets. They can absolutely inject you with cancer. But even with the so called diagnosis, he was still going to work. He was feeling better. He looked like was going to pull through, goes into the hospital for surgery, and they get him in hospital. I don’t know. My money on this is that he was murdered. That’s my gut instinct. I think it’s a very sound hypothesis. I wish we could exhume Senator Taft. I think we’d find something interesting there. Yeah, just too convenient. Fred Vinson. All right, well, this is the chief justice, the United States Supreme Court.
You can call me Antonin Scalia of his day, only he was the chief justice, okay? The guy was solid. Solid constitutional conservative, anti communist when they appealed the Rosenberg’s death sentence. And that was the big call celeb in those days. Oh, free to Rosenberg. Spare the Rosenbergs. There are communist spies. They facilitated the transfer of secrets from Los Alamos to stalin, but they were made scapegoats. They’re low level. The real villain of Los Alamos is Robert Oppenheimer, but he’s one of those untouchable types. But the Rosenbergs, they got what was coming to him. And in spite of all the public pressure that the left was making back then, Vincent held firm and upheld their death sentence.
He also upheld a lot of other sentences against communists. They were handed out. I mean, back in those. I mean, it was not illegal to be a communist, but. But some of these fellows would lie about their affiliation and so on. There were convictions in that respect. Well, you got to realize they were coming right off of McCarthy hearings. Well, yeah, this is Pete McCarthy right here, 52, 53. Right. Okay. And now, um, I. You’ve got Robert Taft, the leader of Republicans. He’s totally pro McCarthy. And now you got a supreme court justice who’s not just on the communist issue, but just on the rulings in general.
Solid. So what happens to Fred Vinson? He gets heart attack. Dead. Bye bye. And, and just, just so we’re clear here, if you look at this, this is Majority Leader Robert Taft, July of 53. Yep. Chief Justice Fred Vincent, September of 53. So, yeah, that is you know when you have two. Really? I think it turned out to be six weeks. Boom boom. Conspicuous deaths here as this is. This is. I mean that, that’s. Yeah. Well, I think what wasn’t. It didn’t, it wasn’t FDR. The one who said like there’s nothing happens in. By coincidence in politics.
Yeah. No, not that I’m a fan. Turns out a certain way it’s always like that. A key bono. Who benefits? Giants, man gone. Boom boom. And Patton. And Patton. Remember the old church lady from Saturday Night Live? How convenient. How convenient. I forgot that one. I special, but I forgot that. Convenient. Isn’t that special? Might that be Satan? That was hilarious. I know I was when Saturday night was actually funny. Yeah. Yeah. In the seventies, early eighties. Yeah, but there it is. But it gets better or worse, I should say. Scroll back up. I wasn’t. My apologies to point out who takes his place not on the bench, but right to Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren, governor of California, who less than a year earlier had just thrown the election.
Eisenhower at the convention, the stolen convention that cheated taft. Okay, so there’s, there’s your payback. So it wasn’t like another justice was promoted and then we got to fill in the spot. No, they took Earl Warren, ma’am, the chief justice. So you went from the Vincent court, hardcore right wing, conservative, anti communist, to the Warren court. We all know about the Warren court. What a disaster that was. Back in the sixties. John Birch society. They were taking out billboards all over the country. Impeach Earl Warren. Yeah, he was a nightmare. He was a republican rhino. Eisenhower made him chief justice.
So. Boy, you talk about a flip. You didn’t go from conservative chief justice to even like a moderate. I mean, you went far right, the far left, just like that. Instantly. Yeah. Under, under the auspices of a republican. Right. Republican president. Quite the Eisenhower. And then later, just to cover his ass, years later, I think even after he left the presidency, Earl Warren. The name was so toxic among Republicans. Eisenhower once said, the biggest mistake I made was putting Warren. Yeah, sure, ike. Yeah, yeah, right. Yeah. Spare me. He had to maintain his own credibility. He put him there after, after he helped rig.
I think it’s interesting that Taft wasn’t around to can, to, to like say, hey, what the heck is going on here? Yeah, exactly. Boom boom. Taft is gone. Vincent got, I mean, this is the equivalent. Imagine if like Antonin Scalia or Clarence Thomas was the chief justice and it went in an instant to Ruth Bader Ginsburg. That’s a great analogy. Yeah. And this is what Eisenhower did to us. So again, my money’s on murder just based on the way things are. How, how old was Taft when he died? Taft was 64. How old was. I think both of these guys were late fifties, early sixties.
Okay. No prior indication any illness or anything and just stricken down. Well then the next one we have is mister. St. Joseph. St. Joseph of Wisconsin. You really want to get a handle on this period of history. I got the $2. I don’t like Ike and St. Joseph of Wisconsin, both available at Amazon on their Mike S. King. But we know about John McCarthy and the McCarthy hearings and what a threat it really posed to the establishment because it became clear as this developed that it’s not just about these low level communists and mid level communists who in the hierarchy of things is allowing this and protecting them.
Now you start to get to the real elite and the cabal. So you have to be destroyed. But it wasn’t the left that destroyed McCarthy. It was behind the scenes white, D. Eisenhower. And this is all known now. It’s known. It’s written about. The scholarly books have been written about the subject. The game was Eisenhower could not confront McCarthy directly. Couldn’t do that because you would alienate 75% of republican party. They love McCarthy. And a good chunk of the Democrat voters in this country admired McCarthy because back then the Democrat party also had its factions. They weren’t all commies and lip tarts.
Nope. So what do you do about McCarthy? They would already killed his hearings. There’s a whole story about how they set up the censure. And then Eisenhower basically threw the Senate elections to the Democrats. He would not endorse conservatives, he would leave them twisting in the wind. So the Democrats got the majority. LBJ became the majority leader of the Senate and working hand to hand, they derailed. That was the end of the McCarthy’s committee. This would be 54, but he’s still a senator. He’s still immensely popular amongst Republicans. He’s very young. Some people thought that, you know, he could make a run for the president, maybe challenge.
Well, Eisenhower had been elected in 56, but maybe, you know, later on in 60, maybe he could team up with his buddy John F. Kennedy, who knows? But he was still a threat. Make no mistake about it. Um, he dies and he was only 48, suddenly 48 years old. That’s young. They got him in the hospital too, I think. Bethesda. That’s how they get you create some illness once you’re in the hospital under their control. McCarthy, Forrestal, taft. Yeah, they get you in that hospital, man. We saw that in Covid. It’s the ideal place to kill somebody.
And the deep state, the CIA, they got doctors on the payroll. You kidding me? Absolutely. All right, Joan Rivers, Michael Jackson, killed by doctors. You know, there’s a statistic out there. And this, this is. There are more people. More people die every year from properly prescribed and properly taken medications than they die from, like drug overdoses. Oh, yeah, I believe it. Sure. And now you’ve got the incentivization to put people on ventilators that existed even before COVID Covid, they upped it to $48,000, pop. You put it, put on the ventilator to remdesivir. You kill them. You get paid to.
So now it’s affecting everybody. But back then, these were targeted kills. And, you know, again, you asked me for medical forensic evidence on this. I can’t give it to you, but I’d be willing to bet some shackles if you exhume the body of Joe McCarthy, you’ll find something. Okay. And speaking of his body, that’s his gravesite. This is what libtards do. The despicable communists. Oh, are they? Is he pissing on it? He’s taking a piss on McCarthy’s. I did not see that. I actually posted it out of social media. This guy’s got a name to have to look it up.
So there’s several of these in the sixties, a group of hippies, they did an exorcism on his grave, the dance on his grass. The local con, they’re in the area. So let’s go to McCarthy’s grave and desecrate it. But this was very convenient for Eisenhower because now he’s out of the way because he’s still a very powerful senator. Okay, next one. So what do we got next? Last one. Last one. Well, that was. That’s the last one. That’s the end of the Eisenhower body count. But, and that last image is very important because it speaks to the.
How. How would he be able to do this? We have to understand the CIA. That’s. That’s the hitman of the deep state. It was established 47 or 48 under Truman, 40 things. 48. It did not get its teeth until Eisenhower was president. And this excerpt beneath the picture, which I’m going to read is, comes from CIA Dot Gov. This is them saying it, not me. The 1950s and especially the Dwight D. Eisenhower administration, 53 to 61 were foundational in CIA’s development. Although created in 1947, not until the night early 1950s did the CIA begin to develop its place in the national security policy making.
That’s true. I mean, what was the first. What was the first government they overthrew was Mosaddegh in Iraq. In Iran. And I think that was 1954 Ajax, wasn’t it? Yeah, they did that early on. They did Iran. They did something in Guatemala. Yeah, but the first one they did was with Kermit Washington. Kermit Washington. Or, I’m sorry, Kermit Roosevelt in Iran. And they. That was the template that they used. It was so successful that they used it over and over and over and still use it to say, and that’s Eisenhower. Eisenhower made the CIA what it was.
The Dallas brothers. Alan Dulles ran CIA. John falls through Dulles, the State Department. And those are like sister agencies, all chummy. All chummy with Baruch. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah. In fact, Baruch was at the Treaty of Versailles after World War one. And so the Dulles brothers, they were young men. That’s right there. Baruch’s boys, too. Yes. So this is the guy supposedly warning us about the military industrial. Look what he created, the CIA. And that. That is a gangster right there, Alan Dulles. And I. He’d be number one on my suspect list. If you want to look into the strange, sudden deaths of McCarthy, of Taft and of Vincent, you could maybe even take it back to Patton because he was also in osseous Dulles.
Okay, so there’s your hitman right there. And on that other image, if you could put that up. Yeah, here, let me put it after the. The Bay of pigs fiasco in Cuba, when JFK threatened to split the CIA into a thousand pieces. Cast it to the wind. Right? He fired him. He fired Allen Dallas. But at that level, this is the way you do it. He fired him. A couple months later, he awarded him a medal for service. Okay, now, he may have fired CIA from the visual part, fired Dulles from the tangible part of the CIA, or the identifiable part, but in some way, believe me, he remained the head of the CIA with the real dark elements of it.
Absolutely. And the following year, after getting fired, Kennedy’s killed. And who serves on the Warren commission? What, we go back to Earl Warren? They put his name at the top of the commission, and Dulles is on that commission as well. Okay, so this is the legacy. The assassination of JFK is also part of Eisenhower’s legacy. It’s an extension of it. So in some respects, we have to name him as an accomplice, JFK, don’t we? Yes, I would. Well, I don’t know if you would call him an accomplice because I don’t think. I don’t think he actually set out to do that.
He would not have had direct involved. The monster. The monster that did that was response, you know, that was partially responsible because I also think that there was, there were other entities involved. This way. He let a rabbit, his rabid pit bull, wander without a leash. Yeah. And the pit bull that killed JFK. So that’s, you know, mister, you know, beware military industrial complex. What he’s really saying is beware of somebody like Trump hooking up with military patriots and overthrowing the new world order. That’s what. Yeah, I agree with that. He’s a gangster, he’s a killer.
I agree with that. Yeah, well, well, that’s kind of. That’s it, guys. That’s it for the, for the body count. You know, the. I’ll back up Mike on this. And so, yeah, you know, the ones with, let’s see here with McCarthy and Taft and Vincente kind of have to, we’re. I want to say you have to do mental gymnastics because it doesn’t really take. Meant that that significant of flexibility to, to come to the conclusion that all three of those guys were basically murdered, but. And that Eisenhower had just happened to be, you know, kind of.
Is he was personally responsible for that? No, but is that as an hour responsible for the. All of the german civilians and all of the civilians are military that were sent back to Russia? Yes. And those numbers pale income they make. They make Hitler numbers look small. Well, Hitler’s number is actually zero. That’s my. Well, my point. Well, I don’t think it’s zero, but it’s certainly not nearly the. The, you know, it’s not the. Well, zero. Zero innocent people. Right. Not, it’s not the. The 6 million that they, you know, that they want us shoved down our throats.
So. But anyway, well, that is, that’s it for tonight. And this time next week, Mike and I will know who’s going to represent the national League in the World Series, if. Is it the Mets or the Dodgers? So probably the Dodgers, but we’ll see. Well, I got to tell you, I’m nervous it’s going to be the Mets. Well, they have a history. They have a history of when they get a mediocre team to sneak them into the playoffs. Well, either, either way you’re going to have. Either way you’re going to have a, you know, it’s going to be.
We’ve got four legitimately good teams this time. Yeah. So it’s going to be a good World Series. Yeah. Yeah. All major cities, too. Well, the, pretty much two New York’s, one la, you know. Yeah. And then Cleveland. But, you know, the Guardians, just for that alone, I will never, I will never. Out of the g word. They’re always going to be the Indians to me, just like the Redskins. So I’m sorry, I can’t go with the c word or the, or the, or the g word. Just, I refuse. But anyway. All right, everybody, thank you for, for your support tonight.
Go check out mike realnewsandhistory.com. and if you go to realnewsandhistory.com, backslash Ron, there’s a special deal for you. And check out his books on Amazon. I’ve got all of his links in the description below. So, yeah, I, I don’t like Ike is at Amazon, and actually, most of my stuff’s back at Amazon as well, just not the world war two stuff or the Hitler stuff. Okay. And that’s, and that, and believe it or not, that’s not a huge portion of his work, that the vast majority of your work is not Hitler and World War two. It’s just so happens that you cover some of that stuff.
But I would say 90% of your stuff, if not more, is, you know, doesn’t touch on that. So. Yeah. Anyway. But, yes, definitely check out Mike’s work. He’s doing, he’s doing God’s work out here. So I’m very happy to be able to bring him to you every Tuesday. So we share our knowledge together. So thank you, Mike. Appreciate you and your time and look forward to seeing you again next week. All right, Ron. All righty. Have a good night, everybody. See you tomorrow.
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