Summary
➡ The text discusses the economic policies and events from the 1920s to the 1930s, including the Great Depression. It suggests that the Federal Reserve intentionally manipulated the money supply, leading to the stock market crash of 1929. The text also criticizes the introduction of Social Security, calling it a pyramid scheme, and the decision to confiscate gold from citizens. It implies that these actions were part of a larger plan to control the economy and create dependency on the government.
➡ The text discusses the impact of President Roosevelt’s New Deal program, arguing that it was a failure by design, intended to make people more dependent on the government. It highlights controversial aspects of the program, such as forcing businesses to raise prices and ordering farmers to kill livestock to increase prices. The text also criticizes Roosevelt’s attempt to add more justices to the Supreme Court, viewing it as a power grab. Despite these criticisms, it acknowledges that Roosevelt maintained his popularity through his persuasive speaking skills and frequent press conferences.
➡ The text discusses the impact of World War II on the economy and society, highlighting how resources were rationed and used for the war effort. It also suggests that President Franklin D. Roosevelt played a significant role in instigating and prolonging the war, despite public opposition. The text further claims that Roosevelt manipulated the public to win his third term by promising not to send American troops to war, a promise he later broke.
➡ The speaker discusses Roosevelt’s election wins, the Real Roosevelts book, and a potential rift between Musk and Trump over H1B visas. They suggest that the visa issue might be a tactical maneuver by Trump, and express trust in Trump’s decisions. The speaker also mentions plans for future discussions and wishes everyone a Happy New Year.
Transcript
Well, no, we’re putting that year behind us, but that’s okay. I’m primarily a Met fan, so. No, no, I just, I just thought it was ironic that Aaron Judge is going to be in Times Square dropping the ball when he dropped the ball in the fifth inning. Oh, really? Yeah. So anyway, I just, I was just poking a little fun at you, you know, just a little LA New York humor. Yeah. So. Well, because we, because we’re running on a, on a, on a really tight schedule tonight. Let’s just jump right into this here and we are talking tonight.
I didn’t even have a chance to go through this and, and set up the thing, so it’s. But it’s okay. We’ll just, we’ll run through it here. So, yeah, there’s not much text in this. It’s just images that’ll I’ll speak off of. Okay. And this is going to be a two parter because this is a big subject. You know, this, this fiend presided over the country for talk about his wife years in one month. Just, just, just humor me and talk about his wife. Oh, you know, I don’t have her in this presentation. That inbred donkey face communist lesbian.
Love to hear you say that. You know, she’s actually a Roosevelt. She’s Teddy Roosevelt. Yeah, I know. Yeah, they were like cousins or something. Exactly. Her full name would be Eleanor Roosevelt Roosevelt. Yeah. So, yeah, we’ll do a show on her too one day. I don’t, I don’t, I don’t know. Would be, would we be able to get away with doing it? No picture. No, no pictures. Yeah. Okay. Don’t want to break our computer screens. All right, so we, Here we are. This is, this is FDR and smoking that freaking lame ass cigarette pipe or whatever the filter thing is that he was famous for.
And I’m guessing probably at least, you know, according to the Historians, this is the greatest president of the 20th century. But you know, there’s a, there’s a reason why from their perspective, this was, this is the man who really got the new world order off the ground. I mean, well, I should say will under the Wilson presidency, that, that really happened, but this is where it got turbocharged. But just to give a little background on this character, he, following in the footsteps of his, I think was his third cousin, Theodore Roosevelt. He was also assistant secretary of the U.
S. Navy under Wilson. This is during 1913, 1920. He was part of that whole cabal that wanted to drive us into war in Europe. And it’s interesting because he was secretary of the navy while Winston Churchill was lord of the admiralty. Yep. And we know Churchill’s role in setting up the Lusitania to be sunk. And this with all the armaments on there, I suspect this character from the American side out of hand in that. I, I, I don’t think so. You agree? Yes, but after the event, he’s pushed very hard and then Wilson gave him the authority start building up the navy and he’s like considered the father of the, the naval reserve.
So that’s his early, easy, he’s a young man here. But that, that’s his connection. He’s clearly plugged in already at this young age to the cabal. 111, 98 passengers dead, including 128Americans on the Lusitania. Yeah, that was the first year of the war. And contrary to what many people think, it did not drive us into the war, not immediately. It would still be another two years because Wilson and the Jews controlling him still had some things to line up. The British wanted us in the war right away in the Anglophiles, and Roosevelt was part of that click.
The Jews were like, no, no, not, not until Russia’s knocked out. We’re not going to fight in the same side as Russia. And they also, they were angling to get that balor declaration. Right. So we did not go to war immediately after this event, but it was kind of resurrected two years later, three years later when Wilson did get us into war, you know, and, and I don’t want to, I don’t want to go down a big rabbit hole, but it was something that I kind of discovered not too recently that Herbert Hoover was a, he was in the military at the time and he, he was a graduate of, of Stanford and he was in charge of, of, of something that was going on in Belgium to make sure that the German army had had more than enough supply of food to prolong the.
The war. And when. When the war was over, he went. He and a group of people from the. From the Allies went all through Europe finding every document they could possibly find that would show that Britain actually was the one who started that war. Yeah. And he helped save a lot of lives during the hunger blockade and afterwards. Yeah, but that, but that was. That was Churchill. He imposed the naval blockade. Right, right. He. Well, he was saving. He saved lives, but it was. It was. It was being saved lives from the. It was the banker side that was pushing that to prolong the war and make sure that the war would go on and longer.
So it wasn’t. They weren’t saving lives on because of. Of. From altruistic perspective. It was because they were. They wanted the war to continue. Yeah. So anyway, whatever. That’s a rabbit hole. I just. It was just something that. It just made me think about this. So globalism versus American. Next slide. Yeah. This defines the election of 1920. So the war has ended. There’s a very nasty economic downturn in the country. Big taxes, big spending, all from the war. The first red scare manifests in 1818. 18. 19. 19. 19 19. These Communists and anarchists are mailing bombs.
They blew up the home of the Attorney General. It was a very tumultuous time, this period right after the end of the war. And people began reconsidering our involvement in World War I. What was it? What was that all about? So unlike World War II, which retains this mythological stink for the last 80 years. Right. Not so with World War I. Right. And the people really wanted what Republican presidential candidate Harding described as a return to normalcy. That was his slogan and that. And America first was his slogan. You can see his old campaign posters. America First.
And they ran against the ticket of Cox and Roosevelt. Progressives. Franklin D. Roosevelt. So that was his. You know, you could tell that this young man is being groomed now. He’s again following in the footsteps of Theodore. Yeah. And the Vice President. But it was a landslide. We talked about Harding. Right. Well, the. The Americans. The American people were sick and tired of the progressive movement. They were done. They were done with the Progressives. And that’s why, you know, that’s why they brought in Harding and Coolidge. So. And then ultimately Hoover. So they thought. Yeah. And they won by 2 to 1 margin.
So this is a period of setback for the globalist. They were not able to get the United States into the League of Nations. And now you have to deal with. Conservative Republicans are back in power. But they had a plan. Always do. They always do. So they were. They were set back, but they were by no means defeated. So that was the problem. They make Franklin D. Roosevelt governor of New York State again, just like his distant cousin Theodore Roosevelt. And this will be his launching pad. And look at the poster there. Reelect Governor. He was elected twice for progressive government.
There’s that buzzword again. Yeah. Okay. And this is the, the period, a conservative period of the 1920s. You had three really good presidents. Harding, who died very mysteriously in his third year in office, and he was replaced by Coolidge. And Coolidge is reelected in 1924. 1924. That was really interesting because the Democrat candidate, I forget his name now, but he was also a conservative constitutionalist. America Firster, because this is. The Democrat party had not been totally corrupted. You know, they always, they had their hooks in it for many years, decades really. But, you know, you had factions.
So they had to go out and get a third party guy to run this progressive party. And I forget his name, but he didn’t even register. So these were the glory days of America first ism. You had a Republican American first turn and Democrat America Firster in 1924. But Coolidge wins. And after Coolidge comes Herbert Hoover. This is a period of deep tax cuts, pro business policies. Well, and the family recovered from the, from the, from the depression. The 1921 depression that lasted like about a year. Yeah. Now to undermine, to put an end to this, because there’s no end to this.
These guys are winning by landslides. The Fed had a plan. Mid-1920s, they started jacking up the money supply. And that just feeds the boom. I mean, you’re going to have economic recovery just from the pro business policies, but now there’s like pumping all the currency into the system. The classic boom bust cycle. But they knew what they were doing because at the opportune moment, 1929, they popped the bubble. They contract the money supply. Wall street starts calling in all of its margin loans. Epic stock market crash in 1929 that leads into the Depression. Eugene Meyer is made the chairman of the Fed in 1930.
And even Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke say that the Fed caused and exacerbated the Great Depression. Yep. They don’t say it was deliberate, of course, but they do say that happened. But of course it was deliberate. They had to maximize the pain. And in time, the fake news, working hand in hand with the Fed, began the mantra of Hoover bad. Herbert Hoover did this. And so we go from Quadrennial Republican landslides that date way back. Even though Wilson was a Democrat, the only reason he got in is because they, they rigged the election in 1912 with a third party run by Teddy.
Right. So this was the only way they were going to bust up that Republican dynasty. And they did that for good. And Eugene Meyer engineered it. And then when Roosevelt was elected, he steps down from the Fed, he buys the Washington Post, which just another one of countless examples of the incestuous relationship among the press and, and the, and the Fed and the government in academia all interlocked. So that’s how the Republican dynasty was killed. And you go to your next panel. We get this. In 1932, Roosevelt landslide, something that would have been considered impossible. But now here it is.
All of a sudden everybody turned against the Republican Party because they blamed the Republicans for the crash, the stock market crash in the Great Depression when it was the Fed or all along by design. They get their boy in there. Are you familiar with the work of Wayne Jett when the book that he wrote called Fruits of Graft. Grapes of Wrath. No, no, the Fruits of Graft. Oh, graft. No, graft. Yeah. So it’s. So Wayne Jett is a, he was a lawyer and he wrote a book all, basically detailing all of the, the garbage that FDR did and to, to prolong, deliberately prolong the, the Great Depression.
Oh yeah, it was horrible. It was, it was. We’re getting it from both ends on the fiscal policy with his taxes and his spending, wasteful spending, and also on the monetary policy end. But that was the idea to prolong it, bring the American people to their knees. And just like Wilson, he’s besties with Bernard Baruch. You remember our old friend Bernard Baruch. He’s still in business. The man who rigged, engineered the 1912 election which gave us Wilson and the Fed in World War I. He was, he was one of FDR’s bosses. There he is on the COVID of Time magazine.
So this is not going to end well. No. Baruch is an absolute just piece of garbage. Yeah. I should point out that During World War I, Wilson had made him the director of the War Industries Board. Right. For a while he was like the economic czar of American industry when he held that position for World War II as well. Yeah, World War II, they brought him back in and he was involved with not only the political end, but, you know, the industrial end. So yeah, so he’s in there very early on. I mean, presidents were inaugurated in March back then.
So this is May. He’s in Office, maybe six weeks or so. Right. Greatest robbery perhaps in world history. Executive Order 6102, quote, forbidding the hoarding of gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates within the continental United States. They let. They were gracious enough to let you keep your jewelry. Okay. But going bullions certificates, turn them in or go to jail. There a lot of people who buried this stuff in their backyard, and you have to turn it in. And here’s the order right there. To a Federal Reserve bank branch or agency or to any member bank of the Federal Reserve System.
And they gave you a nominal fee per ounce. And meanwhile, they got the hard asset. God knows how much is worth to this day. They got all the gold. It’s gold. It was robbery, but it’s an emergency that, by and large, the normies went along with it. Well, yeah. Some kind of rebellion. Well, because money back then. So everybody had gold coin or bullion to some extent at that point. They actually. People trusted the government. They had no reason not to. Yeah, but that’s when somebody asked you to turn over your gold. Oh, well, I mean, there, there.
Okay, so there were a lot of people who were mistrusting and said that. Yeah, yeah, right. When hell freezes over. Yeah. There’s people who buried it. Okay. But if you were found out, you know, you opened your mouth and a neighbor could rat you out, you would be in trouble. Ah, it seems like nothing new under the sun that’s going on now. Yeah, yeah. Turn your turn, your turn in and go or go to jail. And then here, then, then the Social Security pyramid scheme. Yes. They brought that in early. This is a big scam. It’s a big pyramid scheme.
I. I’m sure there’s some seniors watching saying, oh, Mike, but I rely on my Social Security. But that’s the problem. If it had never been instituted in the first place, you wouldn’t have to, because you’re. You’re robbed from a lifetime of substantial earnings. Plus your employer has to match it. You add up all that money and imagine like a conservative rate of return, whatever inequities or. Or gold, you’d be getting a lot more than you would with this pyramid scheme. And it’s exactly a pyramid scheme because it’s money in, money out. Absolutely. And Roosevelt once in a shoe, in a speech, he made reference to a shoebox.
He said, it’s gonna be like a shoebox. We put the money away for you. People could identify with that because people used to hoard cash and coins and shoeboxes back in the day if they didn’t trust the banks. There’s no shoebox. It’s an income tax. They move money around, a Social Security trust fund and the so called surplus, they, they buy federal bonds with it. And that’s, that’s considered your Social Security reserves. It’s, it’s, it’s pyramid scheme. And, and you look at that graphic there. 1950, 16 workers for every one beneficiary today. And actually this is about 10 years old, 3.3 workers right now.
It’s probably about one and a half worker to one recipient. Yeah. Maybe the rest is just borrowed money. And that’s why we have inflation primarily because of this and Medicare and other stuff. But it’s classic pyramid scheme because in the early days it’s like, oh, this is wonderful. And what’s really insidious about this, is, insidious about this is that let’s just say you’re sincere. There’s some old people out there, you want to help them. Now, back then, most people had families. They need this stuff. Okay, you can live with your kids, or your kids came to live with you.
You had strong families, extended families, but you may have had some people who are in trouble. Why not just limit it to them? No, everybody 62, you get a check. So that was the idea. Create a big dependency and then later on expand it to disability. Now all you got to do is say, I’m depressed. You can get on Social Security disability. And it’s killing us now. It’s killing us. Okay, you go to the grocery store, you get your receipt, you complain. It’s this, it’s not. Absolutely. To support this, the money has to be created out of thin air, printed in essence as.
Okay. And every dollar you just print out of thin air dilutes the value of your existing dollars. So you’re paying, you’re paying Social Security taxes, income taxes, and the inflation tax to support this colossal fraud that is imploding as we speak. Thank you, fdr. Yeah, you know, it’s, it’s, it’s interesting. This isn’t really a good rule of thumb, but it is in my mind. It’s a, it is, it is a litmus test of sorts. And that is that all of the politicians or political figures in our history that we have been taught to revere, we should very likely revile.
And all the ones that we have been taught to revile, we should very likely revere. And that’s not just American, but that’s worldwide. Yeah, well, they, they reward, The Cabal rewards its loyal Agents, right. With eternal fame and legend status. Okay. And then they put, they punish those who go against them. And, and this is why he’s so revered. I mean this, this turned the course of history like, like nothing else. I mean, Wilson was the first of the one, two punch. But the, the Roosevelt years, as we get into this, just this and also the war, you see how it totally shake the modern world.
So. And his New Deal program was actually a colossal failure by design. It was intended to prolong the suffering, keep, make, make people more and more dependent and fundamentally alter the mindset of people from self reliance, Trusting God, trust yourself, trust your family, extended family, church community. Get away from that and look to Uncle Sam. And these are just two examples of the madness which was the New Deal. On the left, there’s a picture of a criminal in quotes. He’s Taylor. Jack Magine was arrested, fined, and he was forced to raise his prices. So because they were contracting the money supply, it’s the reverse of a hyperinflation.
The money’s becoming more, more valuable. And, and the convoluted way of thinking actually wasn’t thinking was destruction. They would punish you for charging too low of a price. Okay, right, we got, you got to increase prices. And he was also made to put an NRA National Recovery act poster in his window. All right. Like a scarlet letter. On the right you see the farmers, they were ordered to kill livestock. Killed cattle, cows, pigs. Again, diminish the supply to raise prices so people could get more money for their product. But it’s convoluted. You’re creating shortages. People are going hungry and you’re, and you’re wasting all this meat.
Yeah, sounds like, again, sounds like things are going on right now. Yeah. And you know, a lot of this came out of the Labor Department, which was absolutely infested with communists. We know that now for a fact. Yes. So this is, this isn’t just. This is not pointy headed intellectuals coming up with a stupid idea that they think is smart. No, this is deliberate subversion. Prolong the suffering. Do not allow any type of market forces to act as a corrective. Just keep, just keep doubling down on this madness. We do stuff like this and it just makes me, it makes me angry, but I just.
Because I cannot, I cannot stand fdr. Yeah. You know, it’s really funny, a little anecdotal story. I went to the USS Iowa, which is a museum, one of the, it’s one of the four Iowa class battleships. It’s, it’s a museum down in La. Harbor. And when he went, when FDR made his first trip overseas, I don’t know, I don’t remember where it was, if it was the Yalta or wherever it was. He, he went on, he, he went on the Iowa. And so the, the, at the museum they actually have a, a suite state, you know, a stateroom.
That was FDR stateroom when he was on the ship. And you know, they all talk in glowing terms of, of fdr and I just, I’m like, I, I just moved right on. I was like, yeah, this guy know I can’t deal with it. So he just, just. Well, Mr. Menken would agree with you. H.L. menken, very well known, famous, admired columnist, essayist, satirist of the day. He had FDR pegged. Here’s a couple of quotes I found very interesting, compelling. The Republic proceeds towards hell at a rapidly accelerating tempo. With the debt burden already crushing everyone, Roosevelt now proposes to relieve us by spending 5 or 6 billion more.
I am advocating making him king in order that we may behead him. And that’s what he just kept spending, spending, spending. That doesn’t do anything. Okay, you can’t spend your way. You’re just creating a tax burden and a future debt burden. But that was the whole point. Make government bigger and powerful. So it’s the reverse of what Harding did. Harding cut spending in half and taxes in half. Right. FDR is going exact opposite route. And we see the difference in results. The most, the most dangerous man to any government is the man was able to think things out without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos.
Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane and intolerable. Smart guy. Yeah. Unfortunately, most of normiedom didn’t see it that way. They were captivated by that. So, so he, this, this guy was a conspiracy theorist in the 1930s. Yeah, yeah, I guess you could call him in the non of the day. It’s in every age, right? You know, in Teddy Roosevelt’s day was Mark Twain. You ought to read what he had to say about Teddy Roosevelt. So there’s always people who are able to see through these demagogic characters and their antics.
But you know, in this day and age now, radios coming online. Roosevelt was very, very convincing and persuasive. He had that golden voice and the patrician diction almost like English. Really captivated the normies hearing him on the, on the radio almost every freaking day. By 1935, nothing’s getting better. I mean, it’s Somewhat better. They did loosen up on the money supply somewhat, but you’re still talking like 18, 20% unemployment rate throughout the whole period of time. And Huey Long, who was Democrat governor and later senator from Louisiana, he was a true populist. And he was a supporter of Roosevelt in 32 because he thought he was going to help the country for the people and bought into all that rhetoric.
But he quickly started to figure things out and he started saying that, you know, Roosevelt’s in cahoots with the Rockefellers. Bernard Baruch, my name. He called out Bernard Baruch. He starts his own political movement. He’s going to run against FDR as a Democrat in 1936. He will surely have swept the South. Okay. And FDR referred to him and Douglas MacArthur, who broke up the communist Bonus Army March in 1932, as the most dangerous men in America. Huey Long. So what do you do with a dangerous man like that? Oh, how convenient. Huey Long is dead. Lone gunman.
Take him out. He’s not gonna be able to run for president after all. What a shock. Shocker. Now, just in his first term alone with the country in this crisis, 1932 to 1936, FDR held 300 press conferences. Any oval. Oval offices. There he is. Got the microphones, the reporters. As the Great Depression dragged on, FDR dazzled the mob with his golden voice and goofy platitudes. So he had some good spin masters. And they created this illusion of there’s this perpetual crisis out there. But FDR is on the job every day and, and people misinterpret this as positive action or something.
But no, he’s prolonging it. This is all show biz. So in a way, he was the pioneer of this, this constant media circus that we get out of The White House. 300 press conferences. Wow. And always. Excuse me. Got you. He’s. He’s fighting these dark forces of capitalists, you know, and he’s holding and he’s doing his best. So he’s. The country’s not improving and yet he’s maintaining his popularity. So it’s a really bizarre contrast, but because it’s all because of the, the shell biz. He’s elected in 19. Re. Elected in 1936. In February of 1937, he proposes what came to be known as the court packing scheme.
You see, what had happened is the Supreme Court had been shooting down a number of his New Deal initiatives. So what, what to do? Well, comes up with an idea to appoint six new justices. Problem solved. Put all his lackeys on the court. And he has his lackeys in Congress actually introduced his bill. It doesn’t go anywhere. It backfired. A lot of people were not happy with this. So even some normies saw this and say, well, what do you mean? You get stacked the cord and there’s a cartoon there. He’s. He’s got all these puppet justices and he wants to put on the bench.
And Uncle Sam there is just horrified. And there’s another cartoon based on Oliver Twist. He’s got a bowl asking for more, please. The mul is marked power. So this was a very bold power grab in 1937. It’s part of the reason why in 1938 the Democrats lost a lot of seats. I mean, they had such an unnatural majority to begin with. So they’re kind of vulnerable. But people are beginning to get a little tired now going into. Deep into your second term. And the country is still in a depression. That’s a fact. So don’t let anyone teach you particularly high school history books, that the New Deal pulled us out of the depression.
No, it absolutely did not. The Depression continued not only up until the war. The second fallacy is when they say the war pulled us out of the. They’re both wrong. New Deal didn’t get us out of depression, nor did World War II get us out of depression. Correct. Just measure things by GDP. Then technically you could say, oh, World War II GDP through the roof. But where did all that productivity go? Not to the American citizen. It went all overseas. Right. That was a time of hardship as well. All of the war years. It’s really not till the late 40s that you can say we got out of depression.
Well, yeah, you, you, you. In many ways, the. It was worse during the war because you actually had supplies, but they were rationed to a point where you couldn’t get anything anymore. Yeah, the automobiles in those days were manufactured with wooden bumpers with a demand for metal. The war effort was just devouring all of the metal. You know, even food. People. People were urged that propaganda posters. Plant your own garden. I mean, the, the war effort, the. The army feeding, clothing, equipping. The military just sucked up all the pro productivity. So, yeah, technically at full employment at home because everybody’s working in a war munitions factory, but you’re working like a dog.
And all the fruits of your labor, they’re not being distributed through society. There’s no increase in abundance of goods and all going overseas. September 1939, as we know, that’s when World War II begins. Poland picked the fight with Germany, 100% Poland started that war. And we now know that FDR had a hand in this. The British and the Roosevelt administration in communication with the polls saying don’t worry, we got your back. You start the war in the East, Britain and France will come in from the west and you’ll get your old Polish empire, all that territory back from the 1700s.
FDR was involved in that. Yeah. And also he was inciting China to not make peace with Japan. Japan didn’t want to fight China. They had an offer on the table again. FDR through his emissaries kept supplying China. He kept telling them hang in there. So he not only he helped to incite and engineer these wars, he kept them going until such time as he could drag the United States into war. And there’s some images there. That’s the Ambassador Pataki leaving the White House, Polish ambassador after meeting with fdr. In his own diary he confirms the Jewish influence in America and around Roosevelt and they really want war.
That’s in his own diary. And you see the situation. They were Poland, those yellow areas were taken away from Germany after World War I. So that was the ideal spots to instigate insight the next war. And that’s exactly what is happening. And there’s the Polish military dictator Smigly, the guy that they essentially, they played him like a fool, right. They just used them, got the party started. They never came to Poland’s aid. And then the Soviets came in and they’re begging for help. The polls, they just ignored him. They didn’t care about Poland, they just needed to get the war started.
They dropped his ass like a used up lemon rind. And this is fdr, absolutely engineer. What’s the powers above him of course, but in terms of, you know, acting as an operative. He was the true architect and engineer of World War II in both Europe and in Asia. Agree. So November 39, he repeals the, the Neutrality Act. Yeah. So now the German war with Poland is all is over already. It lasted like five, six weeks that ended in October. And Britain and France had declared war with Germany, but the fighting had had not yet started in earnest in the West.
And FDR under orders from Bernard Baro, this was Baro’s idea, he wrote about it repealed the Neutrality act which had been enacted after World War I. The thinking being, you know, we got into that war, it all started with shipping weapons and then that led to our actual entry. So never again. If Europe goes to war, we’re out, no weapons, total neutrality. But they repealed The Neutrality Act. And here’s your first indicator. Well, there are many indicators, but in terms of like public awareness or where public awareness should have been, this should have been the first indicator.
But you know, normies are going to norm. They miss this. Amen to that. You act. Wait a minute. What are you doing? Did we just go through this exact same scenario 20 years ago, but now it’s like, nah, we just want to be the arsenal of democracy, just going to help British out. We’re not getting into the war. But that’s, that’s a sure sign. And then had it not been for the repeal the Neutrality Act, Britain would not have been able to have continued later on in 40, 41. No way. They would have been forced to make Germany.
And Hitler had a peace offer on the table the whole time. Yep, absolutely. I wish, you know, how many times did, how many times did Britain drop bombs on Berlin before Hitler ultimately retaliated? Nine, according to David Irving. Eight times. Document. Was it eight times? Yeah, I thought it was. Yeah, okay, eight times. Whatever. Eight. Eight or nine times. Whatever. That’s a, that’s a tremendous amount of restraint. Yeah, yeah, here we go. This is. Now we go to September 1940. And by this time, the British had been chased off of the continent, the French had made peace with Germany, and the Soviet Union is not in a war.
There’s a non aggression pact. I mean, that’s not going to last. But at this time, essentially the war is over. It’s just, there’s battles at sea and at air, but there’s no real war in the West. And again, Hitler’s pleading for peace. What does FDR do? He institutes the first peacetime draft in history. Oh, we just want to be prepared. Yeah, I just want to be ready. Yeah, yeah. You know, it’s coming and you see there, you know, they’re picking the lottery. The guy’s got the blindfold on. And that third image there, that’s the Union eight from the Union Theological Seminary in New York.
They defied the draft. They refused the draft. They were put in prison for a year. So that’s interesting. So what’s going on here, Franklin? Seems like you’re trying to get us into war just like your boy Woody Wilson did. So people are starting to wake up and be concerned about this. And it got to the. But now this is an election year he’s up for. He’s going for his third election. Now, there was no law against multiple terms back then, but it was just a tradition. He didn’t do more than two, well, he decides he’s going for a third term in 1940, but he has to address this growing buzz that’s out there that he’s plotting to take us into war.
American people did not want war if they knew what he was really up to, if they weren’t so naive and gullible, he would have been voted out by an epic margin if they knew he’s going to take us to war. That’s how anti war the public was. So he had to address it. So just about a week or so before the election of 1940, he gives this speech and I’ve got a link in there. I don’t know if you can link directly or maybe you could copy paste it here. Link right below fdr. Listen to what he says.
This is, this is what’s known as gaslighting. Let’s see here. Oh, you can’t just click on it. Yeah, no, I have to. If I want to share the, the, the file I have to share it from. That’s not what I want. Here we go. Yep. This before, but I shall say it again and again and again. Your boys are not going to be sent into any foreign war. Yeah, thanks. We saw how, we saw how well that aged. Yeah, yeah. People bought it. They bought it and he was reelected. Let’s see here. There we go. And just to make sure the, the globalist put up this patsy Wendell Wilkie in 1940 is totally one worlder.
Matter of fact, afterwards he writes a book. There’s the title One World. And you know, Republicans across the, the country outside of the Northeast were complaining that this guy’s being forced upon Republican party. Who the hell is he? There’s nothing behind them other than the media hype. Yeah. So if he, he was there to throw the, throw the game. He was there to, you know the role of Bob Dole, the Bill Clinton. Yeah. He was the Adlai Stevenson of another one. Yep. So that was his role. But just in case, you know, Roosevelt loses, you know, they would have had one of their boys there anyway, but Roosevelt was the man they wanted because he was the man with the, the golden voice and the charisma.
He was already a legend in the making. But he wins in 1940. Just. And, and just like Woodrow Wilson in 1916 after promising passionately, unequivocally, we’re not going to war. Well, let’s see how that ends. Here’s some. Somebody asked an interesting question and I think it is, is bears on the conversation. Did our votes really count back in that, back then in the 1920s and 30s in, in places like New York City, Tammany hall, there was always fraud. But generally speaking, a vote was a vote. I mean you didn’t have the computer switching was wallpaper ballots, you marked your name.
You know, you didn’t have all of this technological stuff that enables this massive cheating. So they were, they were legit elections back there were, there were stone elections still. Right. Not on a wholesale level. So yeah, I’m quite confident that Roosevelt really did win all those elections. So it was different back then. Yeah, well that’s, Guys, we’re going to cut it off at that point tonight. This is going to be, we will do a part two and probably maybe go and do a little bit more depth. But this is just going to be kind of a, a quick hit and run just to do something again.
This was, this was not planned. I got the idea, I saw the email from, from Mike this morning and I’m like, okay, cool. So, yeah, so but we will, we’ll come back next week and we’ll finish up on fdr. Well part two and maybe have a few extra little, little trinkets to, to share. A guy is a guy. By the way, I have, I have a book on the subject, small book. It’s called the Real Roosevelts. A third of it deals with Franklin, another portion deals with Theodore and I even got some stuff on Eleanor that’s available at my Amazon page, which is Mike King or Mike S.
King and a bunch of other books too. But the Roosevelt stuff is really, it’s really eye opening because all three of those characters are like Revere Reveres by the left. They’ve been shoved down our throats for so year, but one’s worse than the other. If you go down into the, if you go into the show links, you’ll see that Mike’s website and his Amazon store are both linked there so that you can, you know, you can do that. You can, you can get his uh, get his stuff. If you want to go to uh, if you want to just buy all of his PDFs all at one time, you can go to realnewsinhistory.com and then you do backslash Ron and you’ll get a little bit of an extra deal on that.
But, but if you want to buy hard copies of his books, then definitely go get, go get that in his new one or his, one of his more recent ones. Is the Secret and to Save Humanity. That’s what you want to stock up on. Because I’m telling you, once we get through this, we’re in the dash right now. 45, 47. So even though he’s still president and Commander in Chief, it’s the dash for obvious purposes, he can’t really come down with the policies until the inauguration, which is just three weeks away. And I, I really believe things are going to rock and roll.
Well, let me, let me, let me ask you a quick question because I know some, some people probably going to be curious as to your thought on the, the quote unquote rift with Vivek Musk and Trump. Yeah. That’s rigged. Yeah. With the H1B visa thing. Personally, I think it’s not, it’s, it’s not a, it’s not a. This is, this is, this is something totally fake. It’s not. I would not take it too seriously. It’s a difficult conversation. It’s engineered. Trump does this all the time. Remember we did the show on the two faces of Trump. Yep.
And today I got, I suspected that, but now I’m absolutely certain of it. Because just today, Elon Musk is changing his position, saying that he wants to mandate much higher salaries for the H1. So it’s got to be expensive, plus he wants the companies to pay a fee. So in other words, they got this conversation out there in the public. Right. Okay. Trump comes off like he’s an anti racist. Now he’s on the side of all the Asians. And you remember what happened when Trump said he was going to bomb Rocket Man. Right. It really meant he was going to make peace with Korea.
So now he’s saying he likes H1B. It means he’s going to kill it. Yeah. It’s so funny. But Musk is already, he’s already elaborated on the position that too many of these jobs, they go to common jobs. It’s not like it’s that they can’t find somebody to do them. Okay. There’s some people are really outstanding and there’s a shortage. That’s a tiny percentage. So the proposal now is we’re going to mandate that they have to pay a higher salary because now you take away the incentive of these tech companies, it’s like, well, wow, now we got to pay a higher salary plus a fee.
Might as well hire an American. So Musk has said. So there’s going to be fundamental changes. This was all a game. Right. But people lose their every time they play these tactical maneuvers. Oh, Trump’s betraying us. When you see something like this, well, and they say, oh, well, I don’t. Well, and they say, I don’t trust Rhyme, I don’t trust Vivek, and I don’t trust Mosque, and. Okay, I get it, but, you know, I mean, I trust Trump. I trust Trump. You know, 99 of the time, I trust Trump. I, there’s, you know what? There’s a few things that I just.
I, I can’t give him 100% because I just have to leave open the possibility that, hey, maybe there’s something there. But it’s, I mean, it’s, It’s. It’s a, it’s actually more like 99.9. So that’s like a 0.1% of a sliver of things that I don’t trust. But, and that’s, that’s only to say that I’m, you know, I’m not 100% in, you know, on board. I have to leave just a sliver of doubt there. But it is, but it is an extreme sliver. So I, I, but, you know, if, if Trump trusts Vivek and Ramaswamy or, or Vivek and Musk, I trust him.
Yeah. So on that note, guys, I’m gonna let. Gonna let Mike get out of here a little bit early tonight so that he can go enjoy the new year, the ringing into the new year on the East Coast. Go watch, Go watch the ball drop or whatever it is that you’re gonna go do. So thanks for, thanks for doing this. It was, that was, it was a nice surprise to get your email, so I’m glad we got to do this. And this is the last show of the year on the Untold History Channel, so I believe I will be back tomorrow.
I’m gonna do. I found a very interesting article on Jimmy Carter that I’m gonna read tomorrow, so. Yeah, interesting. So, but on that note, guys, everybody have a happy, Happy New Year. Don’t get too intoxicated tonight so that you wake up with a headache in the morning. You know, most of, most of my audience is a little bit older, so they, you know, they’re probably going to be asleep by the time that the fireworks and everything go off. All right, Happy New Year, everyone. Happy New Year, everybody. Good night. Thank you.
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