Lew offers a 50,000 ft. view of America’s disastrous wars: WWI, WWII, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan. He looks at the lies told by President Wilson, Roosevelt, and Johnson about staying out of foreign wars in their election campaigns before they sent America headlong into them. (he omits mentioning George W. Bush who talked about a humble foreign policy with no nation-building the year before he launched TWO wars of that type).
Internationalist objectives like the formation of the League of Nations and later the United Nations were achieved but nothing was there for middle class Americans. The communist state in Russia was a result of the first WWI and conquest of almost half the globe by communists was a result of WWII, The disruption of the 3rd World resulting eventually in mass immigration into Europe and the U.S. and Marxist dictatorships around the globe was another result.
There was no gain and much death from Korea and Vietnam, as well as severe cultural dislocation in the later case. The Iraq and Afghanistan interventions were also total strategic failures but served to kill and maim many more Americans. America was saddled with $8T in debt from those and other Mideast interventions that have appeared to only serve the national interest of Israel, not our own nation.
You can watch Hour of Decision on Rumble at NewsForAmerica.
00:00:01
Look around you.
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Wrong rules the land while waiting justice sleeps.
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I saw in the congress
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and crossing the country,
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campaigning with Ron Paul.
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Tyranny
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rising,
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unspeakable
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evil,
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manifesting,
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devils lying about our heritage who want to
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enslave and replace us.
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But we are Americans
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with a manifest
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destiny to bring the new Jerusalem
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of endless
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possibilities.
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But first, this fight
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for freedom.
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Be a part of it. But don't delay
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because this is the Hour of Decision.
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Hour of Decision with Lou Moore starts now.
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Welcome to the one hundred and thirteenth episode
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of Hour of Decision.
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My name is Lou Moore.
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Today, we are gonna talk about
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America's
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disastrous
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wars,
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globalist
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and Zionist. And, specifically, we're gonna talk about
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World War one, World War two, Korea, Vietnam,
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Iraq, and Afghanistan.
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That's not all the conflicts we've been in,
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but I think that's a pretty fair representation
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of the big ones
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to talk about
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their impact.
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What were in fact the costs?
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What were the pluses
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of being involved in these conflicts?
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Why were we involved in these conflicts? And
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who
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really not so much the pluses and minuses,
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but quie bono.
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That's more of the analysis here, folks.
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Who benefits? Who benefited
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from each
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of those wars?
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So I mentioned,
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when I talked about,
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this current war, when it first got started
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a few episodes back,
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I said three sayings came to mind immediately.
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When I started thinking about what I was
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going to say
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about president Trump's decision to attack
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Iran.
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And those three sayings are, number one, truth
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is the first
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casualty of war.
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And that certainly is true, folks,
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because the, incentives are so high.
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When you're in the middle of a war
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to just use information is part of the
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war.
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So it's just a tactic.
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It's not an informational
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function with the public.
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It's just a tactic to keep the public
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supporting you.
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The incentives are just overwhelming
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in that area.
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And,
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you know, I don't know.
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I I don't know the morale
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of the Iranian,
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guard at this point.
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I don't know how close we are to
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running out
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of our most precision
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interceptor
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missiles.
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I don't have the I don't have all
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these answers,
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and I don't necessarily believe what I hear.
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But, anyway, you know, so it's a problem.
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It's just immediately
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a problem
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for a public
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who's supposed to have some kind of input
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and who's supposed to have the latest information
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so they can be diligent citizens
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to get it when we're in a war.
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So that's number one.
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Number two
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is, again, I've mentioned it a couple of
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times, Ron Paul's
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favorite expression
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about war
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that comes from a man by the name
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of Randolph Born.
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War is the health
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of the state.
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And it certainly is, folks, particularly if you
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have the orientation
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of a Fabian socialist.
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If you have the orientation
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of
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a bureaucrat in the administrative
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state,
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war immediately
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grants more powers
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to that state
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and allows for and justifies
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limiting
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information
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and allows for and justifies
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more government spending
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and allows for and justifies
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all kinds
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of immediate actions taken
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by the state,
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many of them in secret. So war indeed.
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The state of war
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strengthens,
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invigorates
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the state.
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And number three,
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and I think about this one.
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When I think about some of the comments
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that have been made recently about Joe Kent,
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patriotism
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is the last refuge
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of a scoundrel, and I'm not talking about
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Joe Kent
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as a being a scoundrel,
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an understated individual with an incredible
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career,
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serving our country in combat, in dangerous
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zones, doing the most important work
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of the state
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in the roles that he played.
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I'm talking about the people attacking him,
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and you
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name calling him
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and accusing him of of the just the
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worst
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behavior and the worst character
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all in the name of patriotism, all in
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the name of the war.
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So we see that in spades, folks, just
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recently without getting into every detail about this
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war. That's not the purpose of this episode.
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The purpose of this episode
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is to pull back
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and take a look at some of the
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long lines of history
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to help inform us
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as we
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endure
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the situation that we are in today.
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So
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just briefly before I mention World War one,
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I wanna mention the Spanish American War
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because that was probably and almost certainly started
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by a false flag
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by the sinking of the Maine,
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an American battle,
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an American warship,
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a sinking that was blamed on the Spanish
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even though it's prob it probably was not
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caused by the Spanish
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who were desperately trying to cling onto their
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fairly tiny empire,
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a weakened nation
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who would have no reason to be poking
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us,
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at that period of time around the turn
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of the century,
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but there were a lot of people already
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wanting to build that American empire.
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Looking at Cuba,
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looking at Puerto Rico,
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looking at The Philippines, the three biggest holdings
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that the Spanish had at that time
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that all ended up either in the hands
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of The United States or in the case
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of Cuba, arguably,
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to a degree under the control of The
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United States after we prosecuted a fairly short
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war against a very
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or at least fairly incompetent and totally overmatched
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former,
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colonizing state, that would be Spain.
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But the the ability that that was used
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it was used primarily by the newspapers.
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But newspapers in league with our powers that
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be who made advertisements in these newspapers,
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like the Hearst papers.
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This cry, oh, we remember the Maine.
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We've gotta defend our honor. And a lot
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of
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patriotism
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was built up
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built up over the incident of the sinking
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of the Maine,
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a harbor sinking.
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And a war ensued, and the public was
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all excited. And Teddy Roosevelt charged up San
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Juan Hill, and he was a patriot. And
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and then we won, and then we got
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these goodies
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like The Philippines, like the like Puerto Rico
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and,
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again, as I said, more control,
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much more control over Cuba.
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That all the way until Castro came in
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in 1958.
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So that's kind of a precursor, but let's
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get to World War one.
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So in World War one,
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the empires of Europe,
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all of them atrophying,
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all of them spending too much money, all
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of them over,
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particularly the Brits,
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probably overextended
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would be a a minimum
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statement to make about their empire. The sun
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never set on the British Empire at up
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to that time.
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And, of course, a lot of financial interests
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were tied up in what the Brits were
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doing, like the House of Rothschild as an
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example.
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And, like their agents in The United States,
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JPMorgan
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and Company,
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a very consequential,
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and I would argue the most consequential
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of our corporate masters
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at that period of time. And we're talking
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about,
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right after
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Woodrow Wilson was elected, and most people agree
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elected by the house of Morgan
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after they put in a third candidate in
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the 1912 race. That would be Teddy Roosevelt.
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I've talked about some of this stuff in
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my election of nineteen twelve episode.
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But, anyway,
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Wilson comes in. Wilson,
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enacts the income tax, which is a financial
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engine for war,
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and he enacts the Federal Reserve,
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a huge financial engine
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for war, the ability to print money.
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And, of course, the Federal Reserve was put
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together
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behind the scenes by Edward Mandel House,
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a figure we talked about, the fellow that
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dreamed of socialism
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as conceived of by Karl Marx according to
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his book Philip Drew, administrator, the classic
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baby and socialist operator. We've talked about House
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in a few episodes, but House was also
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the big schemer behind the scenes to get
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the Senate in line
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and get the Congress in line for us
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to go into World War one.
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In Europe,
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there was only one problem though, folks. There
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was a couple of problems. One,
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the public in general didn't wanna have anything
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to do with this war
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overseas.
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And in fact, there were there was a
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fairly large German minority, the largest white
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minority in The United States
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at that time were German Americans, mostly in
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the Midwest, mostly in agriculture.
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People like Charles Lindbergh senior,
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as an example,
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who warned about the money power, who warned
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about many of these things.
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And,
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so that was a problem.
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And then, of course, the other problem wasn't
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people didn't wanna go to you know, we
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were protected, blessed by God
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to have two massive oceans on either side
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of us to protect us from all the
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craziness that had gone on historically in Europe
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and protect us from all the craziness
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that had gone on,
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for many, many centuries for in Asia.
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We were protected from these things.
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The public wasn't for it.
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And the biggest proof of this is is
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they start plotting for war, the house of
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Morgan with Edward Mandel House with Woodrow Wilson.
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But when Woodrow Wilson ran for reelection in
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1916,
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folks, what do you think his campaign slogan
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was?
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It was,
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he kept us
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out of war
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because that was a winner because nobody wanted
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to go into this war. But after the
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sinking of the Lusitania, which happened the year
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before,
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which was a vessel that was secretly carrying
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munitions,
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over to Britain from The United States,
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which the Germans knew this, and the Germans
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warned
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passengers in The United States and took out
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massive advertisement saying, please don't go on this
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ship because we may have to sink it
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because it's going to be full of munitions
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that will be used against us,
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which it was.
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But the,
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people got on the Lusitania,
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and in 1915,
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it was sunk.
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And so people were not ready to go
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to war over this by any means. As
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I said, it was still not popular, but
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the
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massive
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social engineering project,
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ironic for our Fabian socialist masters, was a
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massive patriotic
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project.
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Patriotic
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parades
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where states all over the country.
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There's a book about the Mormon culture, one
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I'm very familiar with, where Mormons were
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outcast.
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They were out there in Utah. They were
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actually invaded by an,
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American army at one point.
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And, they had, all kind of issues. They
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finally got statehood, but still not trusted.
00:13:11
This was the first period of time where
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the Mormon leadership really wanted everybody to be
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super patriotic and fly the flag and so
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they could just kinda blend in
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with the rest of America as super patriot.
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There's a couple of academic works on this
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just in Mormon culture, but this is what
00:13:29
was going on all over the country.
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So whip whipping up patriotism,
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whipping up animosity toward the Germans,
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this is the this is the media of
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the time
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controlled by our corporate masters.
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And, then as soon as the election is
00:13:48
over, the election where president Wilson says he
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kept us out of war,
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he gets us into war. And so we
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enter World War one.
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What the hell are we doing there?
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I I I never have understood the rationales
00:14:01
for this war for us being involved. I
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still don't,
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but that's okay. 116
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American
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boys, almost entirely at that point, killed.
00:14:14
Two hundred and four thousand wounded,
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and the budget
00:14:21
increased from 2.0
00:14:24
to 5.0.
00:14:25
And that doesn't sound like a lot of
00:14:26
money, but folks, in 1917
00:14:29
money, that's a huge amount of money.
00:14:32
And
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it doubled
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the size
00:14:35
of our federal budget.
00:14:37
War is the health of the state, but
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that's not the only thing that went on
00:14:40
in World War one, folks.
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They launched a massive
00:14:45
propaganda campaign,
00:14:47
and this is the first real use of,
00:14:49
information warfare and social engineering against American public
00:14:53
at large. The Germans eat babies,
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the classic.
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They're using their bayoneting babies or eating babies.
00:15:00
They're the most vicious creature, the Huns. They
00:15:03
called them the Huns.
00:15:06
And they, German Americans persecuted all over the
00:15:09
country.
00:15:10
Riots burned out of places. Charles Lindbergh senior
00:15:13
was running for governor of Minnesota.
00:15:16
He was damn near lynched at one of
00:15:17
his political rallies.
00:15:21
Vigilante groups starting up all over.
00:15:24
Looking for people who were not loyal to
00:15:27
the war. This is World War one, folks.
00:15:29
People don't know this history.
00:15:33
A grange master in Washington state, George Balck,
00:15:37
arrested,
00:15:38
put on trial be not even for opposing
00:15:40
the war,
00:15:41
but just for saying he did not believe
00:15:44
that America should get into the bonded indebtedness,
00:15:47
the huge amount of bonded indebtedness through Liberty
00:15:50
Bonds
00:15:52
that was going on
00:15:53
because he sought advantaging
00:15:56
our corporate masters and the international
00:15:59
bankers.
00:16:00
He was arrested, folks. He was the head
00:16:02
of the grains, the largest farmers group
00:16:05
in Washington state, and he wasn't the only
00:16:07
one.
00:16:09
They set up committees
00:16:11
literally block by block across the entire United
00:16:14
States of surveillance.
00:16:16
They didn't have the technology. They had human
00:16:19
intelligence, human, I guess we'd call it now,
00:16:22
looking for traders.
00:16:24
This is America, folks, and this is World
00:16:27
War one nineteen
00:16:29
seventeen
00:16:31
and 1918.
00:16:33
So
00:16:35
that's World War one.
00:16:38
So blood and treasure spilt,
00:16:40
a huge amount of money spent,
00:16:43
experiments in propagandizing
00:16:45
the public, experiments in surveilling the public.
00:16:49
Bernard Baruch sets up the War Industries Board
00:16:53
and has complete control over our economy for
00:16:56
two years.
00:16:58
The Fabian socialists were just on fire.
00:17:02
Total government was almost within their grasp except
00:17:04
the public rebelled against it after the war,
00:17:07
and they rebelled
00:17:08
against us going into the League of Nations,
00:17:12
another goal of this war.
00:17:14
But yet one more goal of this war
00:17:16
that was achieved
00:17:17
was pushing
00:17:19
at least part of Britain's elite
00:17:22
through the pressure from the Rothschild family
00:17:25
to guarantee at some point a state of
00:17:29
Israel, the Balfour
00:17:30
declaration.
00:17:32
That was also fruit
00:17:34
of this war, World War one.
00:17:38
So that's what we got out of it,
00:17:40
folks. Fortunately, we didn't get into the League
00:17:42
of Nations, but the whole internationalist
00:17:44
apparatus was really revved up. The council on
00:17:47
foreign relations was started.
00:17:50
And so that's World War one. Wasn't that
00:17:53
fantastic?
00:17:54
Wasn't that great?
00:17:58
So World War two.
00:18:00
So World War two, as every historian will
00:18:03
tell you,
00:18:04
started with World War one,
00:18:07
started with the Versailles Treaty that was stupid,
00:18:10
that was extremely punitive
00:18:13
against Germany,
00:18:15
who arguably had no more to do with
00:18:17
the start of the war than Britain.
00:18:21
And, I just wanna make sure you understand
00:18:23
the communist state of Russia
00:18:26
was also
00:18:27
a fruit
00:18:28
of this war.
00:18:30
The seal train with Warburg money, international
00:18:33
Jewish banking money coming from Germany,
00:18:36
money's coming across on a ship with Trotsky
00:18:39
from Jacob Schiff
00:18:41
from element from, the I think, Luft Soul
00:18:44
Soap Company. Anyway, there's several
00:18:46
backers in The United States as well.
00:18:50
A ship full of individuals that they were
00:18:52
shocked in Canada when it when land was
00:18:54
landed that almost every one of these individuals
00:18:56
were of Jewish ancestry
00:18:58
and were all headed to create a revolution
00:19:01
in Russia.
00:19:03
And they let the ship they let that
00:19:05
ship go through along with what Lenin came
00:19:07
across, from Germany in the seal train.
00:19:11
So one of the big,
00:19:12
our
00:19:13
not not not not exactly
00:19:15
what the combatants wanted. I mean, maybe you
00:19:17
could argue the nation of Germany was happy
00:19:19
to see Russia who was on the other
00:19:21
side
00:19:22
taken out of the, war this way.
00:19:26
But our corporate masters on both sides of
00:19:28
the Atlantic,
00:19:29
and fighting extensively are involved on all sides
00:19:32
of this conflict.
00:19:35
We're involved with bankrolling
00:19:38
and financing the Bolshevik
00:19:40
revolution
00:19:41
in Russia.
00:19:43
That's a huge topic unto itself,
00:19:45
but it is a fact.
00:19:47
Okay. Wanna make sure we cover that too.
00:19:49
So now we're gonna get to World War
00:19:50
two Versailles treaty.
00:19:52
The they got out the map, and they
00:19:53
created all kinds of strange countries like Iraq,
00:19:57
which is really made up of three different
00:19:59
peoples,
00:19:59
and and then a ton of small minorities.
00:20:02
Czechoslovakia,
00:20:04
that's that isn't a real thing.
00:20:07
That was a misbegotten thing. They threw Germans
00:20:09
in there. They took Germans, put some in
00:20:11
Poland. They put Germans in Austria. They put
00:20:13
Germans in Czechoslovakia.
00:20:15
They, they distributed Germans all over,
00:20:19
so they weren't in Germany any longer.
00:20:21
They had huge punitive,
00:20:25
punishment
00:20:27
against Germany, financial punishment.
00:20:31
Germany was already weakened because they lost the
00:20:33
war.
00:20:35
A communist revolution went on because Germany was
00:20:38
the second target. The first target
00:20:41
was Russia
00:20:43
for the Bolsheviks and for other elements of
00:20:45
the international revolutionary
00:20:47
movement.
00:20:47
And the second target, it's well known, it
00:20:50
is a stone fact, Germany. And there was
00:20:52
a Spartacus
00:20:53
rebellion,
00:20:54
Rosa Luxemburg, in 1918, the year the war
00:20:57
ended.
00:20:58
And there was open warfare on the streets
00:21:00
of Germany
00:21:02
even before the dreaded National Socialist came on
00:21:05
the scene
00:21:06
between patriotic Germans and communists.
00:21:11
Things are going nuts
00:21:13
in Germany,
00:21:14
and a lot of this has to do
00:21:15
with the
00:21:18
Forsyth Treaty and the elements, the articles,
00:21:21
the,
00:21:22
element elements in that treaty.
00:21:25
So
00:21:27
Forsyth Treaty sets up a bad situation.
00:21:30
All the powers are weakened, both the the
00:21:33
served on on our side, the British side,
00:21:35
the Americans,
00:21:37
the French, the Russians, that was one side.
00:21:39
The other side, the Turks,
00:21:41
the Austro Hungarian Empire,
00:21:44
and the Germans.
00:21:46
Everybody was weakened except The United States because
00:21:48
we didn't get our country bombed out during
00:21:51
that war.
00:21:52
And the communist started running wild across the
00:21:55
entire continent,
00:21:58
including Italy as well.
00:22:00
And the reaction
00:22:03
in this situation in this situation
00:22:06
where,
00:22:07
authority had broken down,
00:22:09
where economies are breaking down,
00:22:12
was the rise of these very staunch nationalistic
00:22:16
movements in Italy, in Germany, and we talked
00:22:18
about
00:22:19
in an earlier episode in Spain,
00:22:22
came a little bit later,
00:22:25
and,
00:22:26
ferment all across Europe,
00:22:29
setting up
00:22:30
for another conflict in World War two.
00:22:33
So in The United States,
00:22:35
the public here said we will have nothing
00:22:37
more to do with these wars overseas because
00:22:40
they could see what a zero
00:22:42
for us
00:22:44
World War one was.
00:22:46
And Franklin Roosevelt very well knew that's how
00:22:48
they felt even though he told his closest
00:22:50
cabinet members
00:22:52
or his closest brain trust around him, Thomas
00:22:54
Fleming talks about this, the historian Thomas Fleming,
00:22:57
as early as 1933.
00:23:00
He immediately recognized the Bolshevik revolution in Russia,
00:23:03
and he also said he wanted to go
00:23:05
to war
00:23:06
against Japan.
00:23:08
And it was pretty obvious, not very long
00:23:11
farther down the road, he definitely wanted
00:23:14
to take out National Socialist Germany,
00:23:17
but he couldn't make any kind of a
00:23:19
move this way because the public did not
00:23:22
want
00:23:23
to hear about it. Just a fact.
00:23:25
And so we're in the depression,
00:23:28
but the fighting the depression with Fabian socialism
00:23:31
wasn't going too well.
00:23:33
And by the worst year of the depression,
00:23:35
1938,
00:23:37
it was over with for Roosevelt. He lost
00:23:39
a lot of the Democrat support
00:23:41
he had in the Congress, and he really
00:23:43
couldn't pass any more new deal legislation.
00:23:46
And so as I said in an earlier
00:23:48
episode,
00:23:49
he pivots
00:23:50
to war, and he starts intriguing
00:23:53
with the Brits. And particularly once Churchill
00:23:57
gets onboard,
00:23:58
he starts intriguing with the Brits
00:24:01
to get into war and be and,
00:24:05
and this is why the public is against
00:24:06
it, but people are not stupid. They see
00:24:09
what's happening, and so there's the formation of
00:24:11
the America First Committee
00:24:14
to stop this from happening,
00:24:16
to prevent us from getting into another war
00:24:20
overseas. And there were many people on the
00:24:22
left and the right
00:24:24
in support of the America First Committee,
00:24:27
including,
00:24:28
Charles Lindbergh junior, probably the most revered
00:24:31
American
00:24:32
at that time.
00:24:34
You're listening to Hour of Decision on Liberty
00:24:37
News Radio, and we'll be right back
00:24:39
after the news. Welcome back to Hour of
00:24:42
Decision. My name is Lou Moore. We're talking
00:24:44
about disastrous
00:24:46
wars that America has found itself in,
00:24:49
And I'm talking about several of them, folks.
00:24:51
World War one, World War two. We're taking
00:24:54
the kind of the 50 foot view
00:24:57
of the wars that America has found itself
00:25:00
in. Korea,
00:25:02
Vietnam,
00:25:04
the Iraq War.
00:25:06
Not gonna really talk about the,
00:25:08
Desert Shield, but Desert Storm and enduring freedom
00:25:13
over there in Afghanistan.
00:25:16
So we were talking about World War two
00:25:19
and, storm clouds gathering both in Europe and
00:25:22
in Asia.
00:25:24
America is not wanting anything to do with
00:25:26
it,
00:25:28
but three groups were really
00:25:30
excited about getting America into another war, and
00:25:32
Charles Lindbergh,
00:25:35
you might argue Charles Lindbergh junior, the most
00:25:37
respected
00:25:39
person in America. I think at the time
00:25:41
he uttered,
00:25:43
the statement I'm about ready to,
00:25:45
bring on the put on the table here
00:25:48
at a rally for America First, a committee
00:25:51
that had been put together
00:25:53
for people who wanted to keep us out
00:25:56
of another
00:25:57
European, and in this case, a European and
00:26:00
an Asian
00:26:01
war,
00:26:02
both two fronts,
00:26:05
they were gathering steam at huge rallies all
00:26:08
over the country. I think there was a
00:26:10
100
00:26:11
people at the rally where Lindbergh makes a
00:26:13
statement I'm about ready to
00:26:15
briefly discuss, but he says there's three groups
00:26:18
in the country that want war.
00:26:20
He says the people don't want war. It's
00:26:22
overwhelming, and it was overwhelming, folks. I mean,
00:26:25
overwhelming
00:26:26
opposition
00:26:28
to America getting tangled up in war
00:26:31
even though Roosevelt's
00:26:33
moving us toward that,
00:26:36
you know,
00:26:37
said,
00:26:39
selling supposedly selling
00:26:42
munitions to Britain and then the lend lease
00:26:44
starts and everything. But, anyway,
00:26:48
Lindbergh said the three groups that want war
00:26:51
are
00:26:52
the British, which read that to be it's
00:26:54
not the British public.
00:26:56
They were not, very keen on war either,
00:26:58
and and a lot of their
00:27:00
noted, officials and a lot of the people
00:27:03
in royalty and whatnot, including the king,
00:27:06
were totally against going to war,
00:27:09
against National Socialist Germany. They had the same
00:27:12
view
00:27:13
that Herbert Hoover had, that Joseph p Kennedy
00:27:16
had,
00:27:17
that,
00:27:20
we should let Germany
00:27:21
and The USSR,
00:27:23
communist Russia,
00:27:25
fight it out and
00:27:27
and try to stay out of a war
00:27:30
in Europe, even in Western Europe, much less
00:27:32
The United States getting involved in it.
00:27:34
But,
00:27:36
Lindbergh identified
00:27:37
the British,
00:27:39
read that British finance in the House of
00:27:41
Rothschild
00:27:43
principally,
00:27:45
the Roosevelt administration, which was obvious by this
00:27:48
time that Roosevelt was maneuvering to get us
00:27:51
into war,
00:27:53
and organized Jewry.
00:27:55
It was that third, and that was a
00:27:57
fact, folks.
00:27:59
The Jew Jewish community launched a official boycott,
00:28:03
nationwide boycott,
00:28:05
every Jewish organization virtually in the country participating
00:28:09
in it starting in 1933
00:28:12
against National Socialist Germany. This is even though
00:28:16
the Zionist movement got a huge boost
00:28:20
from National Socialist Germany
00:28:22
because,
00:28:23
they,
00:28:25
Hitler was cooperating
00:28:26
and getting hundreds of thousands of Jews,
00:28:30
freaking them out about staying in Germany and
00:28:32
getting them to come to Israel, which was
00:28:34
the second big
00:28:35
wave of immigrants
00:28:37
that came to Israel. Remember, I've told you
00:28:39
in previous episodes, there were virtually no Jews
00:28:42
in Palestine
00:28:43
as it was known then
00:28:45
at the turn of
00:28:46
the, twentieth century
00:28:48
at 1900, but there were two big waves
00:28:51
of them that came in after that. And
00:28:54
the second one of these waves is a
00:28:55
result of what's going on in Germany and
00:28:58
the cooperation
00:29:00
of the National Socialist with the World Zionist
00:29:03
Movement. That is a fact, folks, not an
00:29:05
opinion.
00:29:07
So, anyway, but these three groups Lindbergh identifies
00:29:10
is what's pushing us into war. The whole
00:29:12
country's against this, folks, but yet we keep
00:29:15
drifting in toward
00:29:17
war. It's obvious.
00:29:19
But then there's an election in 1940,
00:29:21
and just as,
00:29:23
Wilson did in the election in 1916
00:29:26
before the entry of America into World War
00:29:28
one,
00:29:29
What do you think FDR
00:29:31
was going around the country
00:29:33
saying?
00:29:34
I won't let your boys go overseas and
00:29:37
get into that war. I won't allow it.
00:29:40
I won't allow it. I'm Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
00:29:43
You trust me.
00:29:44
You know me. I'm popular.
00:29:46
You know, I'm a man of the people,
00:29:49
and I will not allow this to happen.
00:29:51
He went all over The United States, folks,
00:29:54
lying
00:29:55
his head off just as Wilson was. He
00:29:58
was plotting feverishly
00:30:00
to get us into war and then before
00:30:03
too long, we, America, are chasing u boats
00:30:06
around
00:30:07
the North Atlantic hoping
00:30:10
hoping
00:30:12
that the that Germany
00:30:14
would attack
00:30:15
because we're hounding them and chasing them all
00:30:17
over to create an incident to allow us
00:30:19
to get into war against Germany, which was
00:30:21
Roosevelt's
00:30:24
principal objective
00:30:27
despite
00:30:28
the strenuous,
00:30:30
objections of his ambassador to Britain, Joseph p
00:30:33
Kennedy, John f Kennedy's father and Bobby's father.
00:30:40
So then we get up toward,
00:30:42
into 1941,
00:30:43
and, then there's Japan.
00:30:46
Japan is
00:30:47
doing a few imperial things, and they're fighting
00:30:50
China,
00:30:51
and they're expanding their influence, their co prosperity
00:30:54
sphere, as they called it,
00:30:56
over in Asia.
00:30:58
But Japan,
00:30:59
just like now, just like today, folks, is
00:31:02
they are in a jam
00:31:04
because of what's going on in the Strait
00:31:05
Of Hormuz today.
00:31:08
Back then, they did not have the oil
00:31:10
they needed
00:31:12
for their empire, for their nation, and particularly
00:31:14
for the expanding empire.
00:31:17
They were trying to build,
00:31:19
and they were dependent to a degree on
00:31:21
us
00:31:22
for oil.
00:31:24
And so we inaugurated a boy
00:31:28
not a boycott, a,
00:31:30
embargo
00:31:32
preventing the Japanese from getting more oil from
00:31:34
us,
00:31:36
which caused a tremendous amount of tension with
00:31:39
Japan.
00:31:41
And there were factions in Japan that wanted
00:31:43
to attack us just right there. There definitely
00:31:46
was. And there were other factions that wanted
00:31:48
to try to figure a way out of
00:31:49
this. There was also factions in our state
00:31:51
department.
00:31:52
They wanted to try to figure a way
00:31:54
out of this because like Charles Lindbergh
00:31:56
and like most Americans,
00:31:58
they did not want us to get into
00:32:00
a war
00:32:01
across the Pacific.
00:32:06
But there was a spy ring.
00:32:09
And I've talked about different spies like Alger
00:32:11
Hiss, all the penetration
00:32:13
at Los Alamos,
00:32:15
under Robert Oppenheimer's
00:32:16
nose supposedly.
00:32:19
But there was also a spy ring,
00:32:22
led by a man named Richard Sorge.
00:32:25
And the unique aspect to this communist
00:32:29
Russian
00:32:30
driven
00:32:31
spy ring
00:32:32
was that he had agents
00:32:34
close to Roosevelt
00:32:36
and agents close to the emperor and to
00:32:39
the,
00:32:40
ruling class in Japan.
00:32:43
And he's got people over in Japan whispering
00:32:46
in their ears,
00:32:48
trying to stir up a war with us
00:32:51
as he has people over here stirring, you
00:32:55
know, this is the agent of influencing. And,
00:32:56
of course, they're also getting intelligence.
00:32:58
They're talking to each other, and they're using
00:33:00
ways to manipulate the situation by the intelligence
00:33:03
they get from both of these countries. This
00:33:05
is the communist,
00:33:09
in some ways, in the driver's seat. And
00:33:11
this is before the war even starts, and
00:33:12
the communist really,
00:33:14
really,
00:33:15
really
00:33:16
want us
00:33:18
to go to war with Japan. They would
00:33:19
like to expand over in Asia. They would
00:33:22
like us to get into the war in
00:33:24
Europe
00:33:25
because they are at war
00:33:27
ever since Hitler's operation Barbarossa,
00:33:30
and they're under
00:33:32
feverish,
00:33:33
fervent attack
00:33:35
from the Germans
00:33:37
who are, at this point, cleaning their clocks.
00:33:40
And the Germans are being welcomed as liberators
00:33:43
all over Europe, Eastern Europe, and into Russia.
00:33:49
And so
00:33:51
next thing you know, there's an attack on
00:33:53
Pearl Harbor, and it's kind of funny,
00:33:56
but it seems like Roosevelt's people might have
00:33:58
known this attack was coming.
00:34:01
And general Marshall,
00:34:03
who was the head of our army at
00:34:05
that time, a buddy of Dwight David Eisenhower,
00:34:07
we've talked all about Marshall.
00:34:09
Marshall elects to send a telegram by Western
00:34:13
Europe with a kid literally on a bicycle
00:34:17
coming up to the command there
00:34:19
at Pearl Harbor
00:34:20
to warn them that there might be an
00:34:22
attack. And the kid's still pedaling when the
00:34:25
bombs are starting to go,
00:34:27
the zeros are flying over his head and
00:34:29
the bombs are falling
00:34:31
on our ships
00:34:32
and our, personnel, 4 of them who died
00:34:36
at Pearl Harbor.
00:34:39
And the war begins, and Hitler has a
00:34:41
secret agreement with Japan.
00:34:43
And he knows that Roosevelt wants to go
00:34:45
to war with him anyway,
00:34:47
and not gonna get into Hitler's decision making
00:34:49
and whether he screwed up or not. But
00:34:50
he declares war on us,
00:34:52
saving Roosevelt to figure out how am I
00:34:55
gonna get into this war in Europe that
00:34:57
I really want
00:34:58
now that I've maybe helped maneuver just a
00:35:01
little bit
00:35:02
to get into the war in Asia
00:35:05
that was the easier one to get into.
00:35:08
So then, of course, public opinion totally swings,
00:35:10
and we're in a war. We're in an
00:35:11
all out war.
00:35:16
So what are the results of this war?
00:35:20
They said World War one was the war
00:35:22
to end all wars. Well, that didn't work
00:35:24
out very well. And this war was for
00:35:26
the four freedoms for
00:35:28
freedom, freedom, freedom.
00:35:31
And, Roosevelt is telling Churchill he wants a
00:35:34
new order. He tells him on the ship
00:35:36
out at Atlantic,
00:35:37
you gotta get rid of your empire, and
00:35:39
I want a new order in the world,
00:35:42
an international
00:35:43
order.
00:35:45
And, folks, that was the purpose of this
00:35:47
war.
00:35:48
Let me assure you of that. The primary
00:35:51
purpose
00:35:52
and the secondary purpose evidently because it was
00:35:55
so successful was to strengthen the communist
00:35:57
unbelievably.
00:35:59
We sent so much material to Stalin way
00:36:02
more than he even needed.
00:36:04
We let them steal our atomic secrets.
00:36:07
In fact, it's,
00:36:08
likely that Harry Hopkins, who worked for FDR,
00:36:11
actually was loading atomic materials on planes
00:36:15
in Montana
00:36:16
as part of the lend lease program sent
00:36:18
over to
00:36:20
The USSR during the war according to major
00:36:23
Raycey Jordan who was in charge
00:36:25
of lend lease at one of these bases
00:36:27
in Montana,
00:36:28
where they were sending these
00:36:30
things out,
00:36:32
these shipments out.
00:36:36
Churchill makes a deal.
00:36:37
We've talked about this many times.
00:36:41
Excuse me. Not church oh, Churchill is involved,
00:36:43
but Roosevelt makes a deal.
00:36:45
Churchill is kind of a third,
00:36:48
you know, he's kind of a third wheel
00:36:50
at this point. But,
00:36:51
Stalin and Roosevelt, big deal made at Yalta
00:36:58
where Russia gets to keep all of Eastern
00:37:00
Europe. And this causes things like Eisenhower
00:37:03
telling Patton to stop and cutting off Patton's
00:37:07
gasoline
00:37:08
because he's going all the way to Berlin
00:37:10
with his tanks, and he's beating the Russians.
00:37:13
He wasn't supposed to do that. We were
00:37:15
supposed to let the Russians come far across
00:37:17
to the West as possible.
00:37:20
This is also a fact, not an opinion.
00:37:24
So this war,
00:37:26
much of it
00:37:27
was to advantage
00:37:29
communism,
00:37:30
to advantage the USSR who gets all of
00:37:33
Eastern Europe,
00:37:35
and then they get
00:37:36
monies and material
00:37:39
for Asia
00:37:41
where their agent, Mao Zedong, is sitting up
00:37:43
in the mountains and he's not fighting the
00:37:45
Japanese.
00:37:46
He's letting Chiang Kai shek get his ass
00:37:48
kicked
00:37:49
by the Japanese, the nationalist Chinese leader.
00:37:53
But then after the war's over with, then
00:37:55
he comes down out of the mountains with
00:37:57
a ton of larges from the Soviet Union
00:37:59
that came from us, from your
00:38:01
ancestors'
00:38:02
tax money
00:38:04
to win
00:38:05
China.
00:38:07
So the communist movement gets China.
00:38:10
World War two empowered,
00:38:12
other,
00:38:13
and, you know, the whole anti colonialist thing.
00:38:16
Roosevelt tells Churchill, no more empire.
00:38:18
That's how that's the that's how they treat
00:38:20
them. That's how they treat the French.
00:38:22
And, of course, in the case of the
00:38:24
French, you have French Indochina.
00:38:26
And we empower of all the different groups
00:38:28
and all the militias and all the people
00:38:30
that we could use to fight the Japanese,
00:38:32
which was supposed to be what the reason
00:38:35
for this empowerment
00:38:37
was we empower and arm Ho Chi Minh
00:38:40
who is trained in Moscow
00:38:42
by Stalin.
00:38:45
And and this is a pattern.
00:38:48
The French underground, communist,
00:38:50
A lot of these re, resistance groups that
00:38:53
we are empowering
00:38:54
are communist.
00:38:55
And so we're strengthening
00:38:57
the the war and what we did strengthened
00:38:59
them.
00:39:00
They got Eastern Europe, but their, Western Europe
00:39:03
was teetering at the end of World War
00:39:05
two because of this. And now we have
00:39:07
new problems in Asia, and Russia sweeps into
00:39:10
the Korean Peninsula.
00:39:14
And pretty soon,
00:39:16
we have a problem in Korea.
00:39:20
So World War two costs
00:39:23
407
00:39:25
American debt. 407.
00:39:29
Six hundred and seventy one thousand Americans were
00:39:32
wounded
00:39:34
in World War two.
00:39:36
In 1939,
00:39:38
the budget debt,
00:39:41
and this is now after all the new
00:39:42
deal spending and everything, is $40.
00:39:45
But at the end of World War two,
00:39:47
it's $269,
00:39:53
and it that would be trillions
00:39:56
in our money today, folks.
00:39:59
It was 100%
00:40:00
of GDP. Our debt
00:40:03
at the end of World War two was
00:40:04
100%
00:40:06
of GDP.
00:40:09
That's what happened in World War two.
00:40:12
The communist
00:40:13
empowered
00:40:14
everywhere.
00:40:20
Korea.
00:40:22
Korea, as I said, we let the we
00:40:24
gave the Russians a ton of material.
00:40:26
We let them come down and take over
00:40:28
all kinds of land because they said they
00:40:29
were gonna fight the Japanese, but they didn't
00:40:31
come in until we're dropping atomic bombs on
00:40:33
Japan. That's when they come in.
00:40:37
And they take over half of Korea and
00:40:39
leave it with the North Korean communist who
00:40:41
then decide
00:40:43
in 1950
00:40:44
after an idiot by the name of Dean
00:40:47
Acheson, who was Harry Truman, another idiot,
00:40:50
his secretary of state,
00:40:52
makes a speech in San Francisco and says
00:40:54
that core the Korean per peninsula
00:40:56
is not within our defense perimeter.
00:41:01
And then they attack.
00:41:03
And then MacArthur comes in and pushes them
00:41:05
all all the way up to the to
00:41:07
China to, and then
00:41:09
China starts coming in, millions and millions of
00:41:12
people, and and Truman fires MacArthur. We talked
00:41:15
about that already.
00:41:17
But we get nothing.
00:41:19
We got nothing out of World War two.
00:41:21
We could talk about the reserve currency and
00:41:24
the Bretton Woods agreement and all this, but
00:41:25
I would argue folks for what it cost
00:41:29
from every angle
00:41:31
and for what it did for the world
00:41:32
communist movement, we got nothing
00:41:36
out of World War two.
00:41:38
And in Korea,
00:41:42
the spending wasn't that much
00:41:45
because there was such a boom,
00:41:47
a post war boom
00:41:49
after World War two that that soaked up.
00:41:51
I've that they, taxes went way up, and
00:41:54
I don't have that information. But a lot
00:41:55
of the money was paid for by taxes
00:41:58
rather than debt for the Korean War.
00:42:01
But there were 36
00:42:03
dead in three years
00:42:05
and a hundred and three thousand,
00:42:08
injured
00:42:09
and a bunch of POWs
00:42:10
that we never saw again. Just as there
00:42:12
was in World War two, I talked about
00:42:14
this in one of my Eisenhower
00:42:16
episodes. Thousands and thousands
00:42:18
of American troops we allowed to go into
00:42:20
the hands of the communists
00:42:23
at the end of World War two. Just
00:42:24
one more wonderful thing about that war.
00:42:28
So Korea, I'm starting to run out of
00:42:30
time here. Vietnam, I have a whole episode
00:42:32
about Vietnam. I've talked about it again in
00:42:34
my Eisenhower episodes as I did Korea.
00:42:38
But I, were, Vietnam
00:42:40
was a complete disaster.
00:42:42
We made
00:42:43
sure that all the best anti communist in,
00:42:46
South Vietnam were rounded up
00:42:50
by the guy that the CFR and Eisenhower
00:42:52
and all these internationalists
00:42:54
back to was a maniac.
00:42:56
They finally had to kill him. The CIA
00:42:58
had to kill him. He was just out
00:43:00
of hand by 1963.
00:43:03
Lyndon Johnson
00:43:06
in 1964
00:43:07
there's a pattern here, folks.
00:43:10
I won't let your boys
00:43:12
go over to Asia and do what Asian
00:43:14
boys should be doing. I won't allow that.
00:43:17
You can trust me on this.
00:43:19
And then they have the fabrication of the
00:43:21
Gulf Of Tonkin, that incident, and then we
00:43:23
have 500
00:43:24
troops in Vietnam, but we are still allowing
00:43:27
the communist, the Russians to supply
00:43:29
them through Haiphong Harbor, limitless supplies to our
00:43:32
enemy.
00:43:34
And once again, the stupidity
00:43:36
of containment
00:43:37
and limited war,
00:43:40
Some stupidity we're seeing right now
00:43:43
since since we're facilitating the Chinese getting
00:43:46
oil through the, Gulf of,
00:43:49
the Straits Of Hormuz, and we're facilitating
00:43:52
the whole
00:43:53
world system of oil to now be going
00:43:55
on the yuan rather than the petrodollar.
00:43:57
That's another story. We're not gonna talk about
00:43:59
all that today. But, anyway, Vietnam.
00:44:03
Vietnam,
00:44:04
fifty eight thousand dead.
00:44:06
Fifty eight thousand dead. A hundred and fifty
00:44:08
three thousand wounded.
00:44:10
One in ten that served in Vietnam were
00:44:12
either killed or were wounded.
00:44:15
The the national debt in 1964
00:44:18
was 318.
00:44:20
It was 493
00:44:23
ten years later
00:44:25
at the end of the Vietnam War,
00:44:27
and inflation was rampant.
00:44:29
And the whole seventies was a disaster economically
00:44:32
all the way around.
00:44:34
Some of you might remember that.
00:44:37
And we got nothing. We left with our
00:44:39
tail between our legs. We got nothing in
00:44:41
Korea. We ended up right where we started
00:44:44
at the thirty six thousand dead.
00:44:49
Iraq.
00:44:52
Well, we spent 3.
00:44:55
In Iraq, 3.
00:44:58
What did we get out of that, folks?
00:45:00
We empowered the Shiites
00:45:02
who answered to Tehran.
00:45:04
They're the ones that won that election finally
00:45:06
after all was said and done.
00:45:15
Forty four hundred dead,
00:45:17
thirty two thousand wounded,
00:45:20
$3
00:45:21
flushed down the toilet. $8
00:45:25
flushed down the big toilet, which is the
00:45:28
Mid East.
00:45:29
And who wanted this, folks?
00:45:31
Don't have a lot of time to get
00:45:33
into, fast start and to get into all
00:45:35
of the plotting that went on, but it
00:45:37
was the, neo cons
00:45:39
and Israel and Benjamin Netanyahu
00:45:42
and people like that
00:45:46
who got us into Iraq. And, also, let's
00:45:49
not forget Afghanistan,
00:45:50
00:45:52
dead,
00:45:54
twenty one thousand
00:45:55
injured.
00:45:56
And of that 8 we have wasted in
00:45:59
the Mid East
00:46:00
since 09/11,
00:46:04
2.0
00:46:06
for Afghanistan.
00:46:09
We got nothing.
00:46:10
A set of humiliation
00:46:12
and a big bill
00:46:14
that your grandchildren
00:46:15
will pay if our economy does not go
00:46:18
bankrupt
00:46:19
and America isn't flushed down the toilet.
00:46:23
While they're flooding us with immigrants,
00:46:26
while these big business bastards are cheating us
00:46:30
every different way they can,
00:46:34
and they've been enabled by every single presidential
00:46:36
administration
00:46:37
since that time,
00:46:39
unfortunately, including the one we have now.
00:46:45
So, folks,
00:46:49
running out of time here, but
00:46:52
World War one. President said we wouldn't go
00:46:54
into war. We immediately did. Created a huge
00:46:57
debt. Killed a lot of Americans. What did
00:46:59
we get out of it?
00:47:01
The League of Nations, which we didn't even
00:47:03
join. We got nothing out of World War
00:47:05
one, and they set up World War two.
00:47:09
And then World War two.
00:47:11
The biggest beneficiaries I mean, some people say,
00:47:13
well, America was the big dog on the
00:47:14
block. Yeah. America had to become the policeman
00:47:17
of the world because everybody else was too
00:47:18
weak to do
00:47:20
made any to maintain any kind of international
00:47:23
order. We had the destruction of the British
00:47:25
and French colonial systems that brought the whole
00:47:27
third world
00:47:29
immigration to us and brought the whole third
00:47:31
world wave of communism and Marxism to them.
00:47:35
Just a pattern, folks.
00:47:37
A pattern
00:47:39
of disaster.
00:47:41
World War two, a disaster, but not for
00:47:44
communism,
00:47:46
not for red China,
00:47:48
not for the USSR.
00:47:51
That is still run by the KGB, and
00:47:53
don't kid yourselves. It is.
00:47:55
That's a whole another topic.
00:47:58
Folks,
00:47:59
we can't keep going into these internationalists,
00:48:03
Zionist or globalist and or globalist wars.
00:48:07
They have all been a loser
00:48:09
for middle class Americans.
00:48:15
And I pray to God we can get
00:48:16
out of this current conflict as soon as
00:48:18
humanly possible.
00:48:23
My name is Lou Moore, and you are
00:48:25
listening to the hour of decision
00:48:28
on Liberty News Radio.
00:48:32
I wanna remind you,
00:48:34
they're also cheating us
00:48:36
left and right when we go to vote.
00:48:39
It's still happening, folks. It's still unabated. And
00:48:42
even if the same act were to pass
00:48:43
and it won't ever pass, it won't let
00:48:45
that pass.
00:48:46
It's still a case. Go to securevote.news
00:48:48
to learn a whole lot more about that.
00:48:51
Again, my name is Lou Moore, and I
00:48:52
will talk to you again
00:48:54
next week.


