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Summary
➡ The text discusses complex alliances and treaties that led to war, with Germany being compelled to join due to intricate treaties. The text also suggests that the ultimate motivation for the war was the Zionist interest in Palestine, with Britain and France wanting to take down Germany, a rising power. The text further discusses the role of the United States and the British strategy to involve them in the war. Lastly, it mentions a deal made by Zionists with British leadership to get the U.S. involved in the war in exchange for Palestine.
➡ The text discusses the complex political maneuvers during World War I, focusing on the U.S. entry into the war and the fall of the Russian Tsar. It suggests that the U.S. delayed joining the war due to a deal with Britain and a desire to see the Tsar toppled. The text also highlights the role of propaganda in changing public sentiment towards Germany, leading to the U.S. joining the war. Lastly, it mentions the influence of key figures like Trotsky and Bernays during this period.
➡ This text discusses the use of propaganda during World War I, particularly against Germany, and how it influenced public opinion in Western Europe and the United States. It also covers the political changes in Russia, including the overthrow of the Tsar and the rise of communism. The text further explores the role of the Rothschilds and the Balfour Declaration in the U.S. joining the war. Lastly, it questions the power and influence of monarchs during this period, suggesting that political and parliamentary forces played a larger role in causing the war.
➡ The text discusses the events of World War I, focusing on the Spring Offensive of 1918 by Germany. The Germans made a successful push westward, but their advance was too fast, causing them to outrun their supply chains and eventually retreat. The text also mentions subversion and labor strikes in Germany, which complicated the war effort. Finally, it touches on the arrival of the Americans and the murder of the Tsar and his family in July 1918.
➡ The text discusses the end of World War I, focusing on Germany’s struggles and the role of key figures like Herbert Hoover. It highlights the harsh conditions of Germany’s surrender, internal betrayals, and the impact of food shortages. The text also mentions the controversial Treaty of Versailles, which stripped Germany of territories, setting the stage for World War II. Lastly, it discusses the failed attempt to include the U.S. in the League of Nations, suggesting this failure led to the inevitability of another war.
➡ The discussion revolves around the brutality of World War I and II, highlighting how the advancement of weapons outpaced the development of tactics. The term “shell shock” originated from the constant bombardment experienced by soldiers in the trenches. The conversation also emphasizes the importance of understanding World War I to fully comprehend World War II, as the latter is a sequel to the former. The discussion ends with a critique of how Hitler is constantly vilified in modern society.
➡ The speaker questions why certain topics are repeatedly brought up, causing them to resist these ideas more. They mention historical figures like Stalin and Mao who did worse things. They appreciate the listener’s work and look forward to their next meeting.
Transcript
It’s not as forbidden as it used to be in recent years, which is a good sign. This is true. You know, with the passage of time, truth tends to come out more and. And just the times we’re living in are a little less politically correct. But when I first wrote this book, it was was. It was a hard sell. It was on Amazon and actually was selling very well. We talked about last week and then after my David Duke interview, it got banned. So I actually have one of his books signed by him. I have a signed copy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. So, you know, it’s funny because David Duke got. In my. In my opinion, David Duke got a raw deal. You know, he. He was. He’s not this monster that everybody on the left claims he is. But you know, hey. Because the ADL or the Southern Poverty Law center says that he’s a wacko and an anti Semite and all this other stuff, you know, now we can’t listen to him. So, you know, you know, just. Just a thought. It might be an interesting. It might be an interesting topic to discuss the whole thing about anti Semite and how they utilize that topic.
Yeah. To. To stifle, you know, meaningful dialogue because that’s. Because that’s exactly what it’s designed to do. So I. I could think of. Maybe that would be a good thing for. For us to do with you and me and. And other Mike. But we can talk about that later. Anyhow, so the bad War, Part 2, the condensed version. And we are here now at June of 2014. Yeah, well, last week we set this up. We covered the main events of the 30 to 40 years prior and we showed how the. The pieces were putting. Were being put in place for this great war to reshape humanity and every.
So you had the two competing alliances. Well, actually they weren’t competing. The. The one alliance was purely defensive. Germany, Austria, Hungary. And the other alliance was. Had the intention of. Everybody was out to gain something. Russia wanted to get another crack at Turkey. And England and France wanted to wage war against Germany. But on this date in 1914, the Archduke Francis Ferdinand is assassinated in Sarajevo. At this time in Bosnia Herzegovina, there was a, a Serbian enclave that should have been assigned to Serbia at the, at the Berlin Congress, but they, they made it part of the Austro Hungarian Empire for the purpose of creating a rift between Russia and the Austrian garrison empire and having this trigger point.
So they, they do these things deliberately. So they had this ultra nationalist fanatics, they essentially were hunting down this is, this would be the heir to the Austrian throne. They threw a bomb at him which he knocked away with his arm. Then he went to the hospital to visit the bystanders who were hurt by the bomb. And then upon leaving the hospital, gunman knew where he was going and evidently the driver probably knew he was going to because he took them right to where the gunman was. But he was murdered. And this right, right away it was feared, you can see by the headline here, assassination may lead to war, because it was thought that Austria Hungary was going to lean on Serbia, saying, you incited these Serbian nationalists and, and that the danger there was Serbia is backed up with alliance by Russia and then that would trigger everything else because Russia is aligned with France and Great Britain, Austria Hungary is aligned with Germany.
So it’s sort of like the Article 5 of NATO. So they set it all up perfectly and this, this was their, their triggering event which was also set up and we’ll see how that started World War I. Yep, thousand percent. You know, I, I’ll, I’ll wait until the proper point to bring it up. So, right, right off the bat, it’s, it’s obvious that there’s a great danger of, well, not a world war yet, but a general European war, the whole continent blowing up. And people were obviously concerned about this and the only way to avert it would be if, if, if Austria Hungary could be restrained from going after Serbia and triggering this alliance.
But at this point, Churchill was ready to go. He’s the Admiral of the British. He’s the, he’s the Lord of the British Admiralty. I guess the equivalent of the Secretary of the Navy. Correct. But in Britain, it’s particularly important position because of Britain’s famous navy. Right. So there he is, the soldier boy with all his medals. He never fought in a war, but he’s, he’s Lord of the Admiralty. And it’s always, it’s always the guys that don’t fight with most medals. Right? Yeah, yeah, yeah. They’re given, they’re bestowed like knighthood and all this other crap, you know.
Yeah. So he’s banging the war drums from day one. And I have a couple quotes here which really tell you a lot. One is from Lord Churchill. It’s. This is actually something he wrote a letter to I think was an old friend. Or was it his wife? I’ll have to check on it, but that the receipts are in my book. Churchill writes, everything tends toward catastrophe. I am interested, geared up and happy. Is it not horrible to be built like that? The preparations have a hideous fascination for me. I pray to God to forgive me for such fearful moods of levity.
And there’s other things he wrote at this time. He was so juiced up and happy at the prospect of this unfolding tragedy in Europe. And on the other extent, you have the Prime Minister of Britain at the time, Herbert Aswith, who doesn’t want war. But again, you know, this trap was set with all of the alliances. It’s difficult even for a prime minister to resist. But he, he, he writes in his own journal. Winston was very bellicose in demanding immediate mobilization. Winston has got on all of his war paint. He’s longing for a sea fight in the early hours of the morning to result in the sinking of the Goblin in German ship.
The whole thing fills me with sadness. And this is how you get into the minds of historical personages. Not so much their public pronouncements, because a lot of that could be for optics and politics. The that they write to their friends and their family or record in their journals that tells you what they’re thinking. So those two quotes there set off against each other, tell you a lot. And so, you know, we all know this, this greasy bastard for his, his role in bringing about World War II. Lesser known is his role in. Early on in, in pushing for World War I.
And, and to get these, these alliances triggered. So this is like the, the very, the very next day or two after the assassination. Yeah, it’s, it’s just. I’ll just, I’ll shut up because I don’t want to go down that road. So here’s the, the chain reaction. Yeah. So England is going to declare war on Germany this evening. Germany. Yeah. Germany invaded by French army. But, but Germany was the last army to like mobilize. Everybody else mobilized except for the right, because. Well, first of all, the whole alliances going back to what we spoke about last week, they were set in place for opposite purposes.
Bismarck put together the central alliance for the purpose of boarding British and French ambitions. But in England and France are the eternal warmongers. But that map shows you what they had set up in the beginning in the 1890s. They’re building this. You, they knew in order to prevail that they would need a two front war, so they sucked the Russians in. Now Russia has never historically had a problem with Germany. Their, the, they were lured into this trap, this alliance by the, the promise of another shot at Turkey. They dangled Constantinople before them. Okay. That’s what Russia wanted.
They wanted another crack at Turkey. Interesting. Yeah. And, and to, and being aligned with the great powers of England and France, that was almost a guarantee they could even take Jerusalem. Right. So I have a question here because I, I have for the longest time believed, and this is just me using logic, that the, the primary, one of the, one of the main reasons that Germany was brought in was because of their connection to, I mean obviously they were, they didn’t like Germany, but the same time by wanting to get at, at the, at Palestine, they knew that they needed to bring one of the countries in.
And with the, with the, with all of the treaties that they had, they were essentially like, it was like it was a very convoluted NATO. Like with NATO it’s just you have, like you said, it was Article 5 where if one country gets attacked, then they all get attacked. Well, in this particular scenario it was like having four or five different NATO’s all at one time. And, and it was like. So because of the intricate treaties that were in that were involved here by Germany getting into the war, it, it brought the, the Ottoman Turks into the war.
And by playing Russia against Germany, which is not Russian’s intent, but given that they’re allied with England and France, it would bring Russia to war against Germany. Germany now is compelled to reach out to Turkey which joins the alliance right around this time. They weren’t part of the original alliance. So Turkey sees the threat coming from Russia. Germany 3 sees the threat coming from Russia indirectly because Russia is aligned itself with France and England. So it’s like this, this, this knot of intrigue and everybody linked together with different interests and everybody’s got an interest here except, except Germany.
Germany doesn’t want anything but peace. Right. So my, my question is, is that I think, I think the, if you had to do a hierarchy of wants or desires rather or interests, as you put it. My feeling is, is that it’s the Zionist interest to have Palestine. And that is the ultimate, that is, that is the ultimate motivation for this whole thing. Now by doing that, what the British and the French get to do is they get to take down Germany because they’re kind of pissed off that Germany is this up and coming rising power and they don’t want to have to deal with them.
Right. So you have nationalistic motives on the part of England and France. They were straight up jealous of Germany. Germany was already at this time economically, they could outproduce and undersell and make the best products worldwide. They were. There was a nationalistic jealousy. Yeah. Then you have the Zionist angle. They need this war. Herzl even said in 1897 they intended to take Palestine. And then of course, probably the, the main one, even more significant than the Zionist angle would be blow up the world and then present your, your nascent world government in the form of the League of Nations.
Right. So you got one worldism, Zionism in this English, French, ultra nationalism, all combined for this. But above it all, above all of it, the ultimate winners, though the ones who already were destined to be the ultimate winners would be the globalists. Correct. Because. Because ultimately they had, they had the English and French empires in their crosshairs as well later on. So yeah, be careful who you get in bed with. Same enemy we’re fighting today. Tragic error. Getting in bed with the Jewish money men. They thought that they could make a good partnership. We, we got the, the went the empire.
We got the muscle, they got the money. But I don’t think they, I think they underestimated their treachery. Was ultimately, especially after the Second World War, the, the globalist Jewish new world order emerged supreme over all the empires, including the British. Right. All right, so the war is rocking and rolling and you know, early on, you know, Germany makes a stunning advance in both directions. Once it became obvious that, and I should mention that the, the Kaiser did everything he could to avert the alliances being triggered. He tried to restrain Russia, the Czar was his first cousin, tried to restrain him from going to war on, on Austria Hungary, if he’s also trying to restrain Austria Hungary from going to war in Serbia.
So he’s trying to hold all these factions together. And he even reached out to the French, the Kaiser did, and, and they asked them, they asked the French what happens if, if we can’t restrain Russia and war breaks out between Serbia and Austria? Hungary and French made just a very blunt reply. We intend to fulfill our obligations to Russia. Okay, so that means once Russia moves, it’s over. And, and that’s what happened. Austria, Hungary, the, the, the Jewish press of Vienna and Austria was whipping up war fever they made a move against Serbia that brought in Russia.
At that point, it’s over. So Germany struck out in both directions and they were very successful. And then the lines solidified and just, you just broke down into an eternal stalemate with the trenches and the poison gas. Horrible, horrible. Yeah, it really was. It really, really, really was. And, and you know, and another sad thing is, is that, you know, if history has not been kind to the Kaiser, they make him to be this weak, pestilent little, you know, man who. It’s just, it’s. And it’s not true. All. A lot of the things that they said about the Kaiser were not, uh, were not accurate.
Yeah, yeah, well, no, they, they, they vilified him. He, they made him the Hitler of the day. They pinned the war on him when he was the, the one man who, who, who, who did not want the war. So. Okay, so it be. It’s, it’s already clear by the spring of 1915 that the, the only way that the British would ultimately prevail is, or the Allies, I should say, is they’re going to need help from the United States because otherwise this will just be a bloody stalemate forever. German, German lines are not being pushed back, neither in the east nor in the, in the West.
And the Turks can fight too. So this was the primary aim of, of British foreign policy or foreign intrigue was, was to embroil the United States into the war. And the key point man there giving that assignment was Lord Cecil Rice, who happens to be or had been the best man at Theodore Roosevelt’s second wedding. Okay, Teddy Roosevelt was married in London. He was, he was essentially a British agent. And as ex president, Teddy Roosevelt was banging award drums hard from day one as well. It was like America’s version of Churchill. And he started. He was really critical of Woodrow Wilson because Wilson was dragging his feet.
But I’ll explain later on why, why Wilson took so long. But that was British foreign policy. We’ve got to get the Americans in. Yeah, the 100. Well, and, and the, you know, they, in Germany, they talked a lot about the, during the Treaty of, after the Treaty of Versailles, they talked about being stabbed in the back. And we are about to witness how they got stabbed in the back. Yeah, the. How Germany got stabbed in the back. Yeah, absolutely. But he set up the Lusitania affair. Right. Churchill did. Lord of British Admiralty definitive book on that is Colin Simpson’s final secret at Lusitania.
And then even in more recent years, when the. I forget the name of that explorer who discovered The Titanic, you know, they made the movie based on that. But he also took a cruise and was checking out the Lusitania. You don’t hear about that as much. And while he’s on there, these. You could hear him say, be careful, there’s explosives down there. It was loaded up with munitions. The US Was supplying the British to keep them in a war, and the Germans knew that. But Churchill ordered their escorts withdrawn and the Lusitania was attacked. And there were the voices calling for war, us to enter the war, but we did not get into the war.
Wilson restrained the, the warmongering voices, and I’ll explain why. But that was May 1915, December 1916. And again at this time, there’s. There’s no chance whatsoever of the Allies winning the. The war. And, and Germany has standing peace offer on the table, which essentially is just, everybody pack up our stuff and let’s just go home and call it off, okay? And, you know, this, this was being considered. I mean, what else can you. You can’t fight forever. You’re clearly not going to defeat the Germans. And it was right at this point that the, the Zionists made their move.
This grease ball right here, fading Weissman, early leader design this movement, one of the founding fathers of Israel. Okay, did I pronounce that right? Every time, every time you do that, I always think of the. I always think of the, the video that you did. Which one? Oh, the one where you’re wearing the goofy glasses and type on the computer. Yeah, the secret agent. I forget his name. Yeah, Hysterical, Hysterical. So this, this gang, they approached the British leadership with an offer which is essentially this. So, you know, we. We’ve got Woodrow Wilson by the balls over in the States.
We can get the United States in the war on your side, and you still win. Here’s the deal. We want Palestine. You have to bust up the Turkey, the Ottoman Empire, and take Palestine and allow us to begin immigrating there. We want a national homeland. And that deal was made unofficially at this time, but it was made at this time, December 1916. And it’s interesting, Jacob Rothschild himself. There’s a video out there, tells us, essentially tells the story, okay, about how they were involved in this and they had to coach Wiseman. They coached them and how to.
How to approach the British and speak to them and play on their ego and stuff. You know, they just don’t want to go there. Like, like he’s doing a blackmail thing. But this was the offer, an offer they couldn’t refuse. And in return, designers wanted to See the Turkish empire busted up. So now the war is what’s going on. Two years old. It’s a bloody stalemate. It should have ended at this point, but this is what keeps it going. Yeah. Oh, sorry, next one. Here we go to the 17th. Now that was one of the reasons why US entry into the war was delayed because they had to set up this little tip for tat.
Quid pro chrome, quid pro quo maneuver U. S entry and you give us Palestine. So they had to set that up first. Another reason was they did not want the United States joining the war while Russia was still in it because that would mean you’d have Russia, the UK and the French in the west and that would take enormous pressure off of Russia in the East. They don’t want that because they want to topple the czar. Understand? Yes. Oh, I know you need the internal red revolutionaries inciting the people against the Tsar because the war is going so badly.
Because when wars go drag on, you don’t win. That’s the worst thing for a ruler. He gets very shaky on his throne. They tried this in 1905 with the Russo Japanese War. They made their first, which was a humiliation for Russia, and they made their first attempt at a revolution based on dissatisfaction with that war. Now that failed. It was very destructive. Now, 12 years later, same scenario. So the Reds are stirring, the Tsar is getting shaky on his throne. That’s the last thing that the globalist and Zionists want is to bring the US in too soon.
And then the war ends and Russia will be on the winning side. And God knows they could go into Turkey and take Palestine. So you understand so well. And you know, this is why Wilson played this game of. He was being told, right, this is why the U. S didn’t get in right away. Correct. And you know, you, you got to understand that Trotsky was in New York and he was being given, he was living high on the hog and then he ultimately got sent over to Europe with a bunch of gold and the, and Germany actually obliged and allowed the train to go through and it went into Russia where they, they utilized that gold to fund the Bolshevik invasion of Christian Russia.
Yeah, but, but, but, but you, but, but to your point, the, you know, the Russian army, the Russian army was really, they, they weren’t very good. And you know, it was, it was pretty much a stalemate, but the Russian army was getting their butts kicked. And essentially the Russian army did what the French army did was they, they revolted. They were, they basically, they mutinied if I understand, if I remember correctly, the Russian army, they are the Reds, had penetrated the military and they. They spread the demoralizing sentiment throughout the ranks. But there were a lot of officers in Russian military had been contaminated in 1905.
There’s a whole story. There they were when they were prisoners of war to Japanese, Jacob Schiff was financing commie propaganda. And it was really. So they. They went after the military. And then later on, when the Russian Civil War breaks out, the military splits in toe. But you had a lot of commie. A lot of military men became Marxists, essentially. So. Right. That was a problem for them. And it’s kind of analogous to today’s Q operation. Very much so, because there was a great danger if they. Hillary Clinton had been elected according to the Q Post, the military was ready to act and overthrow the government.
But that would have been disastrous for everybody because not only is society split in half, there’s a lot of people in the military, including officers in general, who are. Either they’re Democrats or they would not have supported such a thing. So Spanish Civil War, same thing. So military isn’t always monolithic. But yeah, you had Reds in the military and. And this would contribute to the collapse of the. I mean, without. Without the men in the military, the Russian revolution would not have succeeded. You know, we talk about all the Jews. They were the leadership, the intellectual leaders of the Bolshevik movement.
But you still had to. You had to incite the mobs and you needed military men. But anyway, February 1917, he’s toppled, and that’s the end of the Romanov dynasty. The Tsar and his family is taken into. They’re arrested, okay, and they’re exiled within Russia itself. I don’t know, it was Siberia or something. And the new government is a democratic socialist government. So the czar is up. And that was a major objective of all of this. Well, had many different objectives, but one of them was to use the war to then trigger events within Russia itself to topple the czar.
Correct. And look at this timing. Okay? So they made their deal with the British to steal Palestine. The Tsar is gone, and boom, right away, just. Just weeks later, Wilson breaks his promise and brings the US into the war. Everything just changed, like the flick of a switch. Because right up until this time, the. The country was, you know, not all that different like it was before Pearl harbor was against the idea of war. You had a very large Irish American population. They don’t want to fight with the British after what the British have done to them all these centuries.
You had a large German American population. They don’t want to fight their German brothers. The ancestors, where their ancestors came from. And then even just regular Americans understood at this time. The British has always been on Nemesis as well. The revolution war of 1812, the, the attempted interference in the Civil War and there were other incidents. So there was no love for Great Britain in this country. And yet through the use of propaganda and fake news, all of a sudden the Germans are monsters. You see that poster there? It’s an iconic poster by Fred Rothman. Jill.
And this, this is it. Just matter of fact, Wilson recruited Edward Bernays, the nephew. Oh, I am shocked. Yeah. Considered the father of American advertising PR man. Yeah. Of the, this program to propagandize the American people. Yep. Well, and he wrote a book. The, his, the name of one of his books is called propaganda. Yeah. And if you just really are, you know, if you guys want to know where bacon and eggs comes from in terms of breakfast, think Bernays. Because bacon and eggs was a, that, that was, that was Bernays all the way. Bernays made bacon and eggs famous for breakfast.
And he got all the chicks smoking cigarettes because his ad campaign associated the women’s suffrage movement, the right to vote mistake. That was. But I digress. Smoking cigarettes. So now all the chicks wanted to smoke cigarettes because we’re free. Okay. You, you can get bad breath, throw your money away and get cancer just like the men. Proud of yourselves. But that’s how he did. But he was a master. And, and his book talks about the tactics, manipulation. Absolutely. He played on the American public. And all of a sudden everybody’s hating Germans. German, German Americans are living in fear.
They’re changing their last names. The Schmidts became the Smiths, Millers became the Muellers. Drums became the Trumps. It was really intense. And there was even violent incidents against German Americans. Well, and, and, and, and interestingly, prior to the switch, the, basically the, in the, the entire sentiment in the United States was pro German. Yeah, it absolutely was. And ironically, even most American Jews were pro German at this time. Yeah. Because they were fighting the Russians. Okay. But now that the Tsar is out, it’s like, okay, let’s get rid of Kaiser too. And there it is, U.
S at war. And then they resurrected the memory of the Lusitania. So even though two years has passed, there’s still this common misconception that they sank to Lusitania. We got an award now two years later. But what they did is they brought back the memory to Lusitania. He made up this nonsense Called the Zimmerman Note that German Germany was plotting with Mexico. Yeah, Mexico. To attack the United States came from British black propaganda intelligence. But it’s intense. So now everybody hated the Germans and off the war we go. Yeah. And guys, if you have any, if you have any questions or cure or you’re curious about this story, you have any interest in this story, I invite you to go listen to the speech given by what the guy’s name? Benjamin Friedman.
Benjamin Friedman. Thank you. Benjamin Friedman. There’s a speech, I, I, I posted it on my channel before, but just go do a search for Benjamin Friedman and a speech that he gave in, in, in 1961 at the Willard Hotel. And he, because before the Germans acquiesced, not one, as, as he, he states it so eloquently, not one shot had been fired on German soil and yet they surrendered. Yeah, but anyway, I’m getting a little ahead and I apologize. So this is the kind of stuff that’s being spread throughout Western Europe and the United States. A big theme was babies and bayonets.
It’s always the baby. They always. With the babies. Always the babies. The kids, the kids, the children. There’s a jerk. There’s a German soldier sticking a bayonet in the heart of a little blonde haired Belgian baby. The Germans went into Belgium, by the way. Belgium was not neutral like people think. It was a subsidiary of France essentially. So you see all this horrific propaganda also crucifixion propaganda. And this stuff would be reported and disseminated and normies didn’t question it. They said the Germans were going into Belgian homes. There’s an image there. They killed the husband, they raped the wife, and then they crucified her.
People believe this. It’s amazing. No, it’s not amazing. I mean, we see it today. You know, I’m, I still see people walking around with freaking masks on. Destroy the mad brute. So there’s a, there’s an ape with the German helmet on carrying away a woman. And these are the propaganda posters that were used to encourage American men to volunteer to stop the crucifixions and, and the baby killings. And this is important. There’s another reason this is important because when we get to World War II, okay, and we talk about the Holo hoax, this here is a big element of it because it establishes a pre precedent of what the propaganda spin meisters in Britain and America are capable of.
Okay? So it’s important to understand this because they done, they did it before and, and after, by the way, even establishment historians today and Even shortly after the war, all of this stuff was discredited. So even establishment historian will say, oh, that was all nonsense. You know, the bayonets, the babies, the crucifixions, okay? But at this point in time, it was believed by many people, okay, so the Tsar’s overthrown. You’ve got the Social Democrat government takes its place. Kerensky, that’s the. As the guy on the far right. And all of the exiled communists start returning to Russia.
Trotsky and his gang come back from Brooklyn, okay, landing, they come in from Germany and they’re, they’re loaded up with cash and gold by the likes of Jacob Schiff, etc. And the war burns and the Rothchilds. So they’re, they’re going in there. They’re not satisfied with a democrat socialist government. They want hardcore Bolshevism. So Kensky’s regime is not going to last long. But this is how they were able to return because of the overthrow of the TSAR. So now, November 1917, now this is like what, nine months have passed since the U. S. Declaration of war.
We’re still not over there. What’s going on? The British and the French are getting a little frustrated. They say, when are you guys coming over to help us? And Wilson told them that, well, we want them on the US Command. We haven’t had them all trained yet. The British and the French wanted to start incorporating units into their own militaries, but the pretext was, well, no, it’s got to be under unified command. We’re not ready yet. Right, because they still did not have anything in writing. What, what we talked about from the prior year, December 1916.
That dirty deal. You still, you steal Palestine and we get us in the war. That was just a verbal, that was a meeting. I mean, that’s confirmed. It’s real history. But there was nothing tangible here. The British put it in writing. This is known as the B for declaration. Short, sweet. It doesn’t say specifically. Okay, you get the Americans. No, it just says her Majesty’s government views with favor the establishment of a Palestinian of a. A Jewish homeland. That’s all it says, but it’s understood and it’s issue two, Lord Rothschild. They’re all lords and barons, like they’re real Englishmen, you know, but this is the biggest Rothschild of the day.
And he writes this letter to him, so that’s as good. That’s a contract right there. You’re not going to play with the Rothschilds. So that, and to this day, Israel celebrates the Balfour Declaration while The Arab nations mourn that date. But now it’s official, you’ve got it. So the Tsar is gone and you’ve got your Balfour Declaration in writing. Now the Americans are ready to join and finally deploy. And right around this time, the Kerensky regime, the democratic socialist regime that replaced the Tsar, they’re overthrown. This is the second revolution in the same year, 1917, by the communist Lenin, Trotsky, that whole bunch, Stalin.
And that triggers, that triggers a civil war that’s between the Reds and the whites within Russia. And because there’s a civil war, they can’t simultaneously fight the anti communist counter revolution and stay in World War I at the same time. So they pull out, okay, and here, here’s a quote that is, I mean, we know this stuff already, but this is particularly powerful becomes, because it’s coming from a contemporary, somebody who’s right there, U.S. ambassador to Russia, David R. Francis. He writes in 1918, the Bolshevik leaders here, meaning in Russia, most of whom are Jews and 90 of whom are returned exiles, care little for Russia or any other country, but are internationalists.
And they are trying to start a worldwide social revolution. So that’s, that’s the story of the Red Revolution and how it succeeded. So excuse me, somebody in the comments was, we asked you, do you, do you think that King George V was on board with all this or did he secretly despise the Rothschilds? I, I believe, well, he’s another cousin, by the way. Right. There are three of them were all first cousins, grandsons of Queen Victoria, King George of England, Kaiser Wilhelm, Germany and Tsar Nicholas. But you understand, all of these countries by this time, because of what happened, the revolutionary movements and the concessions that were made in the 19th century, they’re not true monarchies anymore.
The monarch is almost analogous to a U.S. president, right? You have their, their parliaments or Bundestag and Russia is Duma, that’s their congress. So it’s like a joint leadership. I often wonder the same question. Personally, I doubt that if it was solely up to King George and solely up to the Tsar Nicholas and solely up to Kaiser Wilhelm, I don’t think there would have been a war because these royal families, they were all cousins, they intermarried each other. You know, you get a princess from Spain marrying a duke out in Russia, whatever this was, it was like a, almost a cohesive unit, almost like the Holy Roman Empire surviving.
Okay. But this started to come apart when you introduce the parliamentary systems. So you know, it, it’s, it’s a mistake or gross oversimplification to say the Kaiser did this, the did this, the king did this, because he’s. They don’t. They’re not total. They don’t have total authoritarian monarchy power like in centuries past. I would. I would suspect they probably secretly didn’t care for some of these characters. Right. You know, but, yeah, very likely. I would say that they probably didn’t like that because they saw it as a challenge against their authority, and they watched as their authority was ripped from their hands.
So many of them were murdered in the 19th century. So. And they had. So they had to deal with the. With the. With the press, which is owned by the Cabal. They got to deal with all these crazy red assassins or killing kings and queens left and right. So, yeah, they don’t. They didn’t have that kind of power back then. I. I think this war was more caused by political forces and parliamentary forces than it was by their respective kings. Agreed. Here’s your forbidden history quote. Yeah. The Bolshevik leaders here in Russia, most of whom who are Jews and 90% who are returned exiles, care care little for Russia or any other country, but are internationalists, and they are trying to start a worldwide social revolution.
Interesting. Yeah. January 19, 1918. And I have a PDF on this. It’s. It’s also available in booklet form. It’s part of my package at Real News and History dot com. It’s an analysis of the speech that Woodrow Wilson gave just before the troops finally were deployed. Okay. It’s been almost one full year. They’re ready to go. And, you know, he had laid out his 14 points for peace. The final one being the real payoff would be the League of Nations. And just before the US Is ready to arrive, that Germany and Austria, Hungary declared there. They.
They’ve read Wilson’s proposal and they think it’s. It’s workable. Let’s talk. Okay. And. And in his speech, Wilson basically says, well, they’re not really sincere. We’re going to war anyway. It’s really. It’s really amazing. He issues all of these conditions and ultimatums, and the Germans essentially say, yeah, we could talk. That sounds reasonable. And it caught him off guard. But that’s what’s so interesting about this. This speech here, if you read it, he basically says, well, screw it. We’re going to war anyway because they have to go to war because they. He wants that League of Nations.
Okay? Right. He doesn’t. His handlers want it because that’s the framework for the one World Government, the New World Order, exactly like the the first, essentially it was the first iteration of the United Nations. Yeah. Spring of 1918. Okay. The, the Americans are on their way. Russia’s out. Germany makes a last ditch effort. It’s called the spring Offensive of 1918. Because they’ve got that opportunity now, very small window. They could take all of those troops off of the Eastern front and make a, a, a massive push westward. It was very successful. So much so that they, it was declared the, the Kaiser declared a day of celebration in Germany.
It, it looked like they were going to just roll and go to Paris and finish the whole thing. They didn’t quite make it, but. Yeah. And actually, I’ll say this, actually what happened is it was too successful with their Stormtroopers. That’s, that’s where the term Stormtrooper came from because it was the Stormtroopers. They basically were the, the special forces of the day. And what they did was they outran and, and put themselves into a position where they outran their supply chains. And so they had to wait for their supply chains to catch up. And by the time their supply chains caught up, then they let they.
All of the, all the territory that they had taken was they had, they had, they basically had to retreat. That sucks. And also working against them. And I don’t know if that’s directly possibly related to this issue with the supply chains during this whole period. And this came to be understood more after the war. There’s all kinds of stabbing in the back and that’s where the expression comes from, subversion going on back home, including labor strikes in the German factories. So that also complicated matters. But they came up short. And that’s interesting about their, they went too fast and their supply, supply lines couldn’t keep up.
Yeah, that’s, that’s basically, that’s basically what, what killed, what killed their offensive in the spring was. I I want, I wonder if there’s any. Because I know there was subversion going on. I, I wonder because that doesn’t sound typically German to me, you know. Well, I, I, well I think, I wonder if somebody sabotaged the, the advances supply liner or maybe that would be interesting to find out. I’ll do a little, I’ll do a little digging on that. I mean I took, I took a, I took an entire class on World War I and there was, I mean there was a lot of stuff about what happened in the spring offensive and what they did and the tactics that they used.
It was completely new tactics and, but you know, typically what you had with, with trench warfare was you had the main trench and then you had a secondary trench and then you had a third trench. Well, the, the third trench was where they would go if you had, you know, like if you were, you know, injured or you needed a little bit of a rest or whatever. And the second trench was like a secondary defensive trench. Well, they overran all three trenches and got into wide open French territory and there was nothing to stop them because there was nobody in the way.
And you know, back then it was all horse, horse carriages and stuff like that. So I mean it’s, it’s, it’s, it’s entirely plausible to consider that they did outrun their supply chains because the supply chains were so cumbersome to get to them. So. And they could only carry so much because they were on foot. But you know, I mean, back then, things they didn’t have. It’s not like they had a rail car that, where they get thrown stuff on and, and you know, sent a rail car out. Oh, yeah, yeah. Probably not many paved roads either.
No, but that was their, their final push and it came up short. It did, but, you know, now the line stabilize again and the Americans are coming, so. Right. And it did come up short, you’re right. But at the same time they were still, they were still in French or Belgium territory. Yeah, yeah, they, I mean their, their, their lines. The, the, the, the German trenches were in French territory. So, you know, I mean the, the, the is essentially what you, you even though you couldn’t do it, the, the joke, but the saying was is that you literally could walk through a trench from the Pyrenees all the way up to the Channel because that’s how, because the lines literally extended.
So. But you know, did you ever see the movie 1917? No. So it was very interesting because it was actually, it was actually fairly accurate what the, the Germans, what they had in their trenches that, where they were, it was like soft limestone and they were able to like carve out like underground barracks and all kinds of stuff, whereas the, the French and the British troops and theirs, the, they didn’t have that type of, that wasn’t what, what their ground was. And that’s why they were all, you know, in the mud and everything. But you know, another, another interesting thing here and it’s, it’s going back to the first, you know, the first, the first Christmas in The war in 1914 was when there was, there was a ceasefire.
And I think you know what I’m talking about, where the, there was the Christmas ceasefire and the German troops came out of their Trenches and the British and the French troops came out of their trenches. And all along these guys, they, they stopped firing and they were playing, they were playing soccer in the middle of the freaking no man’s land. Yeah. During Christmas they stopped it. And it’s like the, the higher, the high command was like no, we can’t have that again. But that just goes to show you what the attitudes were of the common guys that were actually fighting versus the men who wanted to rule the world.
Right. Are we done with this slide? Yeah. Okay. All right. And the arrival of the Americans turn, begins to turn the tide of the war. But again, even after the Americans successes and it was very brutal, I mean America is only physically engaged for like 8, 9 months and lost150, 000 men, a lot more injured. But even, even still, there’s not one inch of German territory that, that’s occupied. Not one. Yep. And, and what’s building up now. And this was all timed perfectly. And it’s, it’s, it’s permeating throughout the, the Jewish owned newspapers in Germany is, is the pessimism and the black billing.
And, and, and Wilson is offering the slogan was peace without victory. Everybody just laid on their arms. Go home. We’ll make a peace. There won’t be any punishment. And that was all part of the trick as well. So this was, this was the combination. It was all calibrated perfectly. The Americans arrived and then the red black coming begins and, and the strikes and the communist agitation within Germany. They’re doing within Germany what they had just done in Russia. Massive rug pull. Yeah. And, and when they got over there, if I remember correctly, the, the, the, the, the Americans didn’t really have a rifle of their own and so they ended up using like the French rifle.
And they all complained about it. That’s interesting. Yeah, they, there, it sucked. They couldn’t, it couldn’t get into fire and it was just, it was just, it was a heap of junk. And that’s what essentially led to, you know, the, the arms manufacturers in the United States coming up with, you know, the Thompson and, and you know, all those. And anyway, so next panel here. Okay. July 1918. The Tsar and his entire family are brutally murdered. And this is while the civil war is raging. So these were Jewish Bolsheviks. They gathered up the family in the middle of the night.
It said that they were told that they were going to have their pictures taken for something and they’re put in the room and then the assassins came out and there’s no way you can commit an act of this significance, historical importance without the green light of higher ups. You know, I, I would suspect the order came from Rothschild or Schiff or one of those guys. I mean, this was, this was generational, this was historic hatred. This goes back to 1840s. They wanted the Romanovs murdered almost 100 years, if not longer. Be. I mean, the, the, you know, the, if you want to get back into the Kazarians, I mean, it was the Russian king back, back then that came down and essentially said, enough of this crap, you guys are gonna, you stop doing all this stuff and you know, the name stealers and all this other stuff that they were, you know, all this thing, all these things that they were engaged in.
I mean, it’s so, yeah, just. Yeah, so there it is. I mean everything is, went, went downhill after that spring offensive. Everything just happened so quickly. You had the betrayal going on in Germany, the arrival of the Americans, the Spanish flu was taking its toll. That was probably some sort of bioweapon. And, and yet in spite of it all back remains, there’s no way that the, even with the Americans there, they’re not going to make it to Berlin on the ground. Okay? There’s, there’s no air force at the time. They weren’t bombing civilians at that time.
The only way to really get into Germany and occupy it is ground troops. Can you imagine ground troops going into Germany itself? So my point is there’s, there’s no reason to surrender like this because this was not a negotiated conditional surrender. This was lay your weapons down, go home, we’ll make a deal. So it was essentially unconditional surrender, and it’s just insane. The Germans agreed to that mainly because of the treason going on within, within Germany. I mean, who the hell, who the hell does that? Imagine, put your gun down, go home. Trust us. I don’t know if you know this, but there’s, you know, you know, back then, back during World War I, the, the, one of the main things that Germany struggled with was, was food.
Because Germany was never really an agrarian society. So they had to do importation of food and with blockades and whatnot, keeping it. They could, they could, they couldn’t supply themselves with food. But do you know who was put in charge of making sure that Germany had enough food to keep the fight going? Herbert Hoover. Yeah, Herbert Hoover was assigned with that task. And then when the Russians or when the Germans capitulated, Herbert Hoover was responsible for, and in charge of going through all of everywhere to find any sort of document that showed that The Allies were the ones that, that tried to start this whole thing.
So. Yeah. Herbert Hoover. Yes, the same guy. Herbert Hoover, the president during 1929. Yes, that guy. Well, the Germans were dying in large numbers because of Churchill’s when he. Churchill initiated it, the naval blockade. Yeah. You know, so here’s a headline. Armistice signed, end of war. Berlin seized by revolutionists. Yeah, that didn’t last long, but it. Berlin was overthrown by the Communist. Jewish Communist Rosa Luxembourg, Carl Lech. It didn’t last long. You know, that was overthrown. But they were, they were. That was the idea to use the same template which has succeeded in Russia. Take over Berlin, then take over other major cities, and then you, you turn one element of the military against itself.
But it didn’t work in, in Germany, but that was the plan. But nonetheless, internally, these are the people who were selling out Germany in that last year of the war. It took many forms. Hitler goes over it very well. And Minecamp, what the Jews did within Germany to pull the rug out because a. They wanted a. A Marxist government. But then you also had the Zionist. Zionist element. Germany’s allied with Turkey. They know if Turkey loses, they get their homeland over there. So. And there’s the. There, the date is 1111 18. And there’s the, the car that the Archduke Francis Ferdinand, his wife were murdered in.
The license plate is a 1111 18. That’s a hell of a coincidence. But I don’t think it’s coincidence at all. It just shows the degree of the subversion within Germany itself to be able to engineer it, to get. To get these dates the way they wanted it to go. Yeah. And. And you know, 11. The 11th hour of the 11th month. Of the 11th or the 11th day of the 11th month is 33, which is very, you know. Yeah, 11. 11, 11s. Yeah, triple, you know, 33, which is, you know, that’s all Masonic symbolism like that.
Yeah. Just like Kennedy, you know, November 22, 1122. Yep. Invasion of Normandy. 666. Yep. This is real. These people worship the devil. And, you know, Hitler at this time is a war hero. Decorated two Iron Crosses for conspicuous bravery in a battlefield. Badly injured twice, got his leg torn off and he was also. Poison gas. Lost his eyesight for a bit. You know what, you know, Mike, it’s, it’s, it’s really sad because that doesn’t really get a lot of gloss. I mean, he, the fact that he had two Iron Crosses is a big deal. I mean, that’s, that’s.
It may not be like the, the Medal of Honor, but it’s like a Bronze Star or a Silver Star or something like that equivalent. I mean, it’s a high honor, you know, doing, for doing what he did. So, I mean, you don’t get those. They just don’t hand those out on a, you know, to every, you know, down the line. You had to earn that. And so, I mean, the fact that he had two, two, two of those crosses was a big deal. I mean, that just showed that. Showed how brave he was. Yeah, yeah. Conspicuous bravery in a battlefield.
Had a very dangerous job, running missions across no man’s land, delivering messages. He was absolutely dauntless and fearless. And he later wrote about how when he heard the news of the surrender, how bitter it was for him and a lot of troops, he thought, what did we just fight for? How many. What, what did he lose? A couple, several million men for? For what? For nothing. Right. And on top of that, wasn’t even a negotiate surrender. It’s just come right into Germany, take our guns and we’ll get into it in the next episode how they just dictated the Versailles Treaty at gunpoint.
But this was the moment in time where he became political. Right. We wanted answers, you know, what went on. Okay. And, and this is the treaty, you know, had the economic reparations and the damage they did that really impacted in the early 20s. We’ll get into that in the next episode. But it’s also important to understand what they did in terms of stripping territory from Germany, because this would be the trigger point 20 years hence for World War II. But you look at the maps on the bottom, these crazy rewrites of the border. Clearly they had the intention of using these areas as, as future trigger points for a war if they needed to.
You see Germany and brown. Then you see another, smaller piece of brown separated by what’s referred to as the Polish Corridor. They reconstituted. Poland was not a state at that time. It had been 150 years earlier. They made it a state and they gave it a chunk of Germany. So East Prussia is totally disconnected from the rest of Germany. And there were 5 million Germans living in that, in that territory. And most of them were evicted. They Basically get a 24 hours notice, pack your stuff, get out. It’s brutal. And then in the other image there, you see that long, scraggly bit of brown territory that came to be known as a Sudetenland, the Southland.
That’s all German. It’s 90 German. And they, they assigned it to the newly formed state of Czechoslovakia. This is at the Treaty of Versailles. But why, why not make it part of Germany in that other part that ought to be part of Austria? There’s all German people. Instead they’re put under the, the Czechoslovakian regime. So they did this on purpose in case they needed to stir up in the future. And that’s exactly how it played out in 1938. 39. Absolutely. Now this was the major objective. I mean they achieved so much for World War I. They got a lot out of it.
Absolutely. They got rid of the Kaiser, they’re rid of the Habsburgs in Austria. They put in all of these parliamentary libtard governments. Right. Major accomplishments. However, the big one, they came up short. That was the League of Nations. They did establish a League of nations, but the United States was not in it. So it’s not much of a League of nations without the United States. And what kept us out of the League of Nations was just a handful of senators you needed. He needed 75% to approve the treaty. So you just needed like 20 something senators.
They got a 96 back then they could block this and thwart it. There’s one of the senators, Senator Bora, Senator Harding, who later became president, Henry Cabot Lodge. So they fought like heck and it was, it was tight. I mean they, the vote was majority in favor of entering the League League. But they couldn’t quite get the three quarters because of these holdouts. And Woodrow Wilson, he’s barnstorming across the country on train and they’re really riding them hard. His masters like, you got to get this done. And he pushed so hard. It was a big, it was a big deal.
It’s a big, big struggle. And I think they ended up voting like three times. They did and they couldn’t get it, they couldn’t get it done. And the United States stayed out of the League of Nations. Which only can mean one thing. From the globalist point of view. As disappointed as they were, they never give up. They knew already we’re gonna have to have another war to get it done. And they had left their treat, their triggering points for that. Yeah, it’s this and, and you know, I mean, you know we talk about how brutal the fighting was in World War II and it was, it was absolutely brutal.
But you know, the fighting in World War I was almost more brutal because the tactics were, or the weapons were so far ahead of the tactics. And there was a little bit of an element of truth to that in World War II, but not as much. The tactics changed much more fluidly in World War II commensurate to the weapons that they were using, but that never really happened in World War I. And the weapons kept getting bigger and stronger, but the tactics kept stay. Or the weapons getting bigger and stronger, but the tactics stayed the same.
And I mean that’s, and this is where the term shell shock comes from. Shell shock actually comes from these guys that were in the trenches that were just bombarded, you know, day in and day out. Yeah, shelling, I understand, is accounts for the majority of casualties in modern warfare. Adorable. Yeah, well, that’s, you know, in our next episode we’ll talk about the, the interim period between the two wars because that’s, that’s important. That leads to the rise of Hitler and economic destruction of Germany and, etc and you know, the whole time the US they’re out of the League of Nations, but they’re still engaged in the affairs of Europe, particularly by the time Roosevelt comes around.
Yeah, and, and guys, it’s, it’s, it’s really, really important to understand, you know, you, you can’t just go talk about World War I or. Excuse me, you can’t just talk about World War II without laying the foundation of what happened in World War I, because World War II wouldn’t make any sense if it’s, it’s, it’s, it is a sequel and you have to see, you have to see the first movie to understand the second. You just can’t. It’s not a standalone. And because all the foundation for why World War II was fought, you know, and you know, you may, may or may not talk about it, but you know, the revisionist part of, of history they went back through and they, they started to, they, they were correcting a lot of things in the, in the 1920s and 30s about what happened to World War I.
And by the, by the time the, the war broke out in, in, in again In Europe in 1939, the Americans wanted nothing to do with it. They’re like, nah, we’re not, we’re done. We don’t want nothing to do with that. And that was the whole point of why they had to get a hold of the, of the educational system. And that’s where, you know, the American Historical Society is, was birthed essentially out of World War I. And that was specifically to get a hold of the education system to brainwash the children. But that didn’t happen. But that attitude really didn’t start to resonate until the 40s and 50s.
And then of course, that’s what carried us into the 60s and 70s and where we are today. Yeah. So, but anyway, Mike, fantastic presentation. And I know it’s, it’s a little bit dry, guys. It’s because, well, it’s not dry to me. I find this stuff fascinating, but it’s, it’s, it’s, it’s, it’s, you know, I know you guys are here to hear about World War II, but again, without this context, this, this, this is like, this would be like watching. You know, you have, you have a, you have a, you have a two, you have the choice of doing it in a two hour movie or the choice of doing it in a 10, like a 10 episode series on Netflix.
And we’re doing the 10 episode series on Netflix. Actually what we’re doing is we’re doing about a four series episode on Netflix. But if you really want to get the whole 10 series, 10 episodes, you need to get the book and read it. Yeah, yeah, the book that was banned from Amazon. It’s a shame because a lot of normies were stumbling across it, believe it or not, back in the old days, you know, because I, I have a following. I can always generate initial sales for my books. So Amazon used to pick up on that, say, oh, we got a winner here.
And automatically their systems would begin promoting it. And it was just so unique because all of the other World War II books are like, you know, once upon a time, Hitler went into Poland. I’m saying that this is, that’s a false story. But yeah, that’s a shame that they knocked it off. I was actually listed as on, on one of their, I guess their right wing crazy list, the Southern Poverty Law Center. Oh, you were? Yeah, that’s like, oh, that’s a feather in your cap. But then Amazon did their book bannings. Yeah, the list came from the adl, so evidently I was on their radar as well.
Oh, that’s awesome. Yeah, there’s a, there’s a comment here. It says that the, this episode or that destroys James Colbert’s three videos on it. And I’m gonna respectfully disagree. I think that James Colbert is right on the money with a lot of the stuff that he did. And what you’re talking about there is the World War I conspiracy that was done by James Colbert. And that’s actually a very, that is an excellent, excellent series. And I think that what we did only just, we scratched the surface of it. And, and James really dives in deep to a lot of things.
But, you know, I, I, I absolutely believe that what we’ve done here is complementary to what James did, but, but, but James did a very good job. James is like minded, you know, he, he, I think he thinks just like us. So. And by the way, I wanted to compliment you on your camera. Did you get a new camera or something? A new webcam? Yeah, you’re. I think the lighting might be better. I don’t know, maybe, I don’t know. Well, the camera, you’re very, very clear tonight and, and yeah, you are in a different room, but it’s, it’s very clear and, and yeah, very sharp.
Yeah, it’s better lighting here. So. But anyway, well, you know, I don’t know. I’m gonna have to get with you because a week from tonight is. I’m actually, I have plans to go to the Dodger game because it’s Jackie Robinson night and if you know me, you know why I’m going to Jackie Robinson night. So. But that’s a week from tonight and so if, I don’t know if you want to get together and record or if you have the ability to do maybe a Wednesday or Thursday after, you know, to, you know, to keep. Yeah. So.
Yeah, let me, let me see what I got going on next week. Unless we could do it earlier in the day. I don’t know. No way. Well, yeah, we could do it during the day but I’m, I’m basically going to be out of pocket all day on that Tuesday, so. Okay. Unless it’s early in the morning, so. Okay. So. But, but in any event, or, or if you want to do it on Monday, record on record early on Monday and then just upload it later that we can do that too. So I’ll make myself available if you’re available.
Okay. I’ll be in touch. Okay. Alrighty guys. Well, hey, thanks a lot for, for tuning in tonight and look forward to, we’ll look forward to, to doing something for next week. I do want to keep this series going as much as possible, so. But even though I may not be here live, I will be here the following week with, with Mike. So everybody have a fantastic evening. Oh, and do you want to give out where people can find your books and stuff? Oh yeah, because you just. The good news is you can still get the book.
And this is the ultimate red pill. It’s Mind Blown. The Bad boy endorsed by Ron Partain and David Duke. Exactly. Remember Tex Mars? Oh yeah. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. But that’s real news in History dot com. And you’ll see like the little three line menu. You click on that and you’ll see a page for World War II, you get the bad war in PDF format or physical format. And also another book called the Song that Never Ends about the, the so called Holocaust. Yes, you can still get it at the website. It’s interesting. I, I was, I mean, I’ll end with this.
The, you know, I was on, I was on a Twitter space the other night and they, you know, everybody’s. Nobody ever wants to give Hitler any credit or, or anything, you know, and it’s not. I, I, I, I, I have to behave in a very, you know, diplomatic way when I say it, but I say, you know, it’s interesting to me how he has to be constantly vilified in modern society. Yeah. It’s like, it’s like there’s a new, there’s a new Hitler documentary or movie or something that comes out, like every year. There’s always something new that comes out vilifying him.
And why is that? Is it. Why do they constantly just keep regurgitating that and putting it in our face? And is the, the more they push me in that direction, the more resistant I am to go in that direction? Because it’s like you, you’re pushing way too hard, especially when you got guys like Stalin and Mao who did, like, far worse things. So anyway, but anyway, my great work as always, sir, and we’ll be in touch. Look forward to seeing you next week. Okay. All righty. Have a good night, everybody.
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