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The Soon Coming Judgment Of God Upon America and How To Escape It                281
American Owned Plants Spared During Bombing
During the Allied bombing of Germany, I.G. Farben and A.E.G.’s plants were largely
spared. There is no military explanation that would justify this favoritism; Farben and A.E.G.
were aiding the German war effort through their manufacturing chemicals, oil, electrical
components and other vital war supplies. Bombers consistently targeted other manufacturers but
spared Farben and A.E.G. “[B]y the war’s end, twenty-five to thirty of its [I.G. Farben's]
refineries were still operating with only about fifteen percent damaged.”
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Sherman H. Skolnick, a court reformer and Producer of a very popular local cable access
T.V. Program in Chicago, says that “I.G. Farben had a secret arrangement with the top US
Military brass, not to bomb any of Farben's facilities during the war. At the close of the conflict,
Farben's facilities were 93 per cent untouched and intact. A US Military officer wrote a heavily
documented account of Farben being not bombed.” (See: the book “I.G. Farben” by Richard
Sasuly, Boni & Gaer Publ., N.Y. N.Y, 1947.)
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A German friend of mine who lived through the war in Germany told me that after the
war ended it became public knowledge that Americans worked in many of Germany’s factories
throughout the war. While the factories of A.E.G. and I.G. Farben were spared, the German
civilians were not. Approximately 640,000 German civilians died in Allied bombing.
Aid To Mussolini
American aid wasn’t restricted to the Russian and Chinese Communists and the German
Nazi’s; it also included Italian Fascism. John P. Diggins, in Mussolini and Fascism: The View
from America, notes that Thomas Lamont “secured a $100 million loan for Mussolini in 1926 at
a particularly crucial time for the Italian dictator”. Lamont of Guaranty Trust was head of the J.
P. Morgan banking network and “served as something of a business consultant for the
government of Fascist Italy”.
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A Failed Nazi Coup d'etat In America
In 1933 the McCormack-Dickstein Committee investigated a Fascist plot backed by
American bankers and businessmen to overthrow the presidency of Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
The committee called retired Marine Corps General Smedley Butler to testify regarding his
knowledge of the plot. General Butler explained to the committee that he had been contacted by
Gerald C. MacGuire who represented business and banking interests. MacGuire had
requested Butler to speak before the American Legion convention in support of a resolution
calling for America to return to the gold standard; Butler refused.
Butler believed that their was something more that MacGuire and the people he
represented wanted from him. He kept the channels of communication opened so that whatever
they were planning could be exposed. MacGuire had numerous contacts with Butler and
eventually revealed that the men whom he represented wanted Butler to lead an army of 500,000
veterans on Washington to overthrow the presidency.
The plotters had been investigating Fascism and apparently wanted FDR to become a
puppet President or to eliminate him altogether and install their own man.
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