The High Cost of Vengance
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At the end of the First World War, the U.S. had inherited Britain’s former role as the world’s dominant economic and financial power. However, it had also inherited the stewardship of the desolate financial situation created by the victors during and after the War. Thus, when the financial market finally collapsed in October 1929, the entire world was tossed into a major economic crisis. The U.S. attempts to get out of this impasse during the subsequent decade proved futile. It was only the prospect of war that finally ended the crisis in the U.S. (which proves once more that economic reasons are behind most wars).
By Freda Utley ∙ July 24, 1949
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By Institute For Historical Review ∙ April 1, 1992
American military officials drew up a secret plan in 1930 for war against Britain in which Canada would be the main battleground. “Joint Plan Red,” as it was known, envisaged the elimination of Britain as a trading rival. Professor Floyd Rudmin of Queens University in Ontario, Canada, charges that the plan was a blueprint for…
By Francis Parker Yockey ∙ July 1, 1990
Far more important to Europe than the propaganda about domestic affairs in America is that about foreign affairs. The numen “democracy” is used also in this realm as the essence of reality. A foreign development sought to be brought about is called “spreading democracy”; a development sought to be hindered is “against democracy,” or “fascistic.”…
By Peter H. Peel ∙ December 1, 1986
A note on the title: Liberal-Establishment historians have an all too effective propaganda device to promote approved ideologies. They invent labels which, in due course, are thoughtlessly parroted and tend to set the desired concepts in concrete, obviating any further need for argument. Thus the raids carried out by Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer on…
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