Speaker 0: Look around you. Wrong rules the land while waiting justice sleeps. I saw in the congress and crossing the country, campaigning with Ron Paul. Tyranny rising, unspeakable evil, manifesting, devils lying about our heritage who want to enslave and replace us. But we are Americans with because this is the hour of decision.
Hour of decision with Lou Moore starts now. Welcome to the hour of decision. My name is Lou Moore, and this afternoon, we're gonna continue with our fourth our fourth episode of FDR about his presidency, of the presidency of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. We're gonna continue with more about his administration. The characteristic of his administration that he promises one thing, but he's actually planning on delivering you something else.
In the case of the depression, he promised that he was gonna be a small government Democrat, and he promised that he would provide recovery. Recovery meaning that the twenty two percent of the public that was unemployed at the beginning of the depression would be able to find jobs. But that's not what happened. Instead of recovery, reform became the prime, the, primary goal once he got in office, and that's what brought us things like the Blue Eagle, the triple a for agriculture, social security, and many of his other programs. They were about reform, which meant they were about changing the form of our government and changing not just the priorities, but changing the ability of the federal government to get into a lot more aspects of our economy, of our society, and of your life.
Socialism was raging on the campuses when, when, FDR took office, and socialists began filling the ranks of government employees, a huge number of government employees that were hired by FDR because he greatly expanded the size of the government. And some of these socialists really were communists and members of the Communist Party USA. The Popular Front was raging as a, strategy on the left in America. Popular Front organizations cropping up everywhere, hundreds of them, thousands of people joining them, organizations that were actually controlled by the communist party, but on on the surface just look like good liberal organizations. And at the same time, the Democrats were, harboring a growing left wing in their own party because it was the left, youth on the left that were attracted to Roosevelt, many of them coming out of these popular front organizations.
New Deal corruption added to the power of the Democrats, particularly in the larger cities. Ed Kelly in Chicago, the Ed Kelly machine, basically, just assumed that he was going to stuff the ballot boxes for any race, any political race that occurred in that city to get the outcome that he wanted to get. He was a big part of what FDR was doing nationwide. And then, later in the decade of the nineteen thirties, when unemployment was, by 1938 only down four or five points because there was actually another recession in late nineteen, '37, early '19 '30 '8. FDR pivots to a war footing and pivots to a focus on foreign policy.
And, of course, things are heating up both in Europe and in Asia, with the Japanese, invading the Chinese, seeking to become a dominant empire in Asia. And then there were the national socialist in Germany that first wanted to reconstitute the former Germany, the Germany before World War one, but then they started adding a little bit more real estate after that, making people very nervous in parts of the world, including in Roosevelt's White House. It was obvious for FDR that, like the depression, being more interested in reform than in recovery, that with a war overseas looming, he was much more interested in reordering the world than protecting The US or preventing tyranny anywhere where in the world. Much less, than achieving peace. The peace was not his highest priority.
Protecting The US was not his highest priority. The US wasn't endangered by the wars in either Asia or in Europe, not in any short term analysis of the situation. But Roosevelt shocked The staffers around him in a meeting in 1933 when he said that he wanted to have war with Japan. People are like, where did that come from? They just took office.
The biggest challenge by far in front of him was the depression. The public was drastically drastically against any more overseas adventurism. No more sending the doughboys over to fight in France, as an example, like they did in World War one. The public was totally against that. But Roosevelt said this privately to his staff, and they kept it under the rug at that point because the public was hell hell bent to stay out of wars overseas.
But this whole business of reordering the world, Roosevelt hated empires. He hated imperialists. He hated colonies. So he, therefore, was not really very happy with the British or the French, who were supposed to be our two closest allies in World War two. Churchill stated after his first meeting with Roosevelt that Roosevelt wanted to destroy the British Empire.
It shocked him. So Roosevelt was willing to come and help Churchill against his immediate problem, which were the National Socialists in Germany, but the price was going to be pretty high. Churchill could see that after his first meeting with Roosevelt, where Roosevelt essentially forced Churchill to sign this Atlantic Charter, which is the first emergence of this reordering the world, this world governance idea, which would be the basis for the UN charter, which was actually written out the following year. And then from there, that was the basis, the second document, of the the final UN charter that, was used to start that organization when the formal organization began a few years later. So the other nation in the picture that constantly talked about the evil imperialists was the Soviet Union.
And leftists of all stripes, including Fabian socialists, not to mention the communists, they seem to be completely oblivious to the idea that any of Russia's military activity, any of Russia's police activities in their fellow Soviet socialist republics, the ones that weren't Russia, that this in any way was imperialism or in any way resembled, the colonialism practiced for some time now by France and Britain. Their activities didn't seem to count on this scorecard of who was an imperialist, and it certainly did not count with Roosevelt. Roosevelt, in particular, had a tremendous animist against the newly nationalist Germany. So FDR wanted war. He had so much desire with Germany to have a war with Germany.
He had naval vessels after his election in 1940. By 1941, Roosevelt is literally using naval vessels to chase German submarines around the North Atlantic, hoping that there could be a violent incident that would justify us declaring war on Germany and coming into, the war in Europe. But Hitler, he was doing all he could to avoid conflict with The US. Then there was Japan. Japan, in fact, was dependent on oil from The US as well as from colonies like Indonesia, which at, this time, before the beginning of World War two, or at the beginning of it in the case of Asia, I guess, was a Dutch colony.
So the Japanese wanted to negotiate with us. They didn't want hostilities with The US, but Washington, among other things, had the advantage. Roosevelt had the advantage that we were reading Japan's secret code. And there were factions in Japan just like there are in most governments, and there was one very warlike faction as part of the government as well as one that was much more desirous to have peace with The US. But by this time, because of his failures and creating any incident in the North Atlantic, Roosevelt began looking for what they called a backdoor to war.
He wanted to go to war. His primary target was Germany. But if he could get into a war with Germany through getting into one with Japan First, he was all for it. And so in 1941, we enacted what can only be called a stealth embargo of oil products that the Japanese needed. It wasn't an official embargo, but suddenly, they just weren't getting any more oil from us.
And in addition to Roosevelt's wishes, there were the Russian there was the Russians who certainly wanted The US to get into the war both in Europe, but also in Asia because they wanted us to attack Japan while they stayed out of it. Russia didn't have the wherewithal to fight a two front war, particularly across that huge landmass of the Soviet Union all the way over to the Siberian region to be fighting, Japan when they were also fighting, in on the western steps in the in the western part of their own, nation, the nation of Russia with Germany. So they wanted us to go at it with Japan, keep Japan busy. And, there was a spy ring, a lot of spy rings connected to the Russians, but this spy ring, the Sorge spy ring, was possibly the most successful literal spy ring that the USSR, managed against us and against the Japanese, it turns out, because Sorge had agents close to Roosevelt whispering, oh, boy. We really gotta go to war with Japan.
That's the way to go. Let's start this war with Japan. While they also had agents, talking in cabinet level, ministerial level in Tokyo convincing the Japanese leadership that they should be going to war against us. So they were very much for that, but this embargo, Roosevelt was told that if we enacted this embargo, whether it was official or not against Japan, this oil embargo, that that was would cause a war. It was so critical to Japan to have that flow of oil.
And in fact, that's what happened, folks. So, and this is the first example I'm mentioning here now, The Sergei spy ring of there's spies that steal stuff that, take pictures. They have microfilm, and they leave stuff in a, you know, under a park bench or whatever for somebody else to take, to the embassy or however they're operating that kind of espionage. But then there's a kind of espionage where you are convincing. You are either providing a lack of information, you're providing selective information to decision makers to help sway their decision in the direction of your nation, or you are just literally persuading them with your own credibility that you may have developed despite the fact you are a spy.
And, you are involved in the decision making process and you move decisions to be in the direction of the interest of the nation you are an agent for. And we're gonna see a whole lot of that went on in the Roosevelt administration, but you have to ask, particularly when you go through this part of Roosevelt's term in the White House, you know, how difficult was it to persuade Roosevelt to do something Stalin wanted? It really doesn't seem like it took much of anything at all to persuade him to do what Stalin wanted. So back to Germany, Germany's of trying to avoid war with us. Roosevelt's highest priority is to get into a war with Germany.
And so a very curious event happened just prior to Pearl Harbor. There was a leak a leak of, FDR's war plans, and they're primarily aimed at Germany, his war plans, and the isolationist press as they were called, the Chicago Tribune. The anti Roosevelt news media made a huge deal out of the details in these war plans because Roosevelt's telling the public, if you remember, oh, I don't wanna get into a war. I am totally against that. I don't wanna get into any kind of a war, but, yet he has war plans.
And, but then, the Japanese, attack Pearl Harbor. We declare war on Japan within a day or two, but then right at that moment, Adolf Hitler excuse me. Boy, this is such an exciting presentation. I'm falling asleep here. Adolf Hitler declares war on us.
Bizarre. After he would try to avoid our battleships, our new our naval vessels up in the North Atlantic, but now he declares war on us. And many people believe he declared war on The US because of the contents of these war plans. And, of course, many people believe these war plans were actually leaked to the public by Franklin Delano Roosevelt. He's slippery, folks.
He is really slippery. But whether that's true or not, he gets his wish, If you can believe this is his wish, he is now at war with both Germany and with Imperial Japan. So the US military is woefully unprepared to fight any kind of a war, and now we have to fight two wars. And, the US military had some good generals. General Patton was there, Douglas MacArthur was there.
But Ike brings in two colonels two colonels, not at the same time exactly, but he brings in his administration two colonels, each of them having less than a successful career and makes them the head of the army and the head of all of our forces in Europe. The head of the army became George Catlett Marshall, and the head of our forces in Europe, the supreme commander of the allies in Europe became Dwight David Eisenhower, who would later become a conservative Republican President of The United States, but that's a little bit down the road. And both of these men, in their actions and in their behavior, over the next few years during the prosecution of the war, pretty obviously were very, very pro Soviet. But in their defense, you could argue that they were so pro Soviet because their boss was so pro Soviet. Because Franklin Roosevelt, folks, he pretty much couldn't see any proposition coming from the Russians that he didn't like.
Pretty amazing. And this was also true, not just of these two generals, but it was also true of his alter ego. His roommate there in the White House, Harry Hopkins, who was the head of FERA early in the depression, later on became the head of the WPA. We talked about that, the Works Progress Administration, the largest employer in The United States. And then he became the head of all relief, giving during the new deal, all of that, all the administrating the relief, and then he became in charge of administrating the relief in the form of lend lease to first Britain and then to, once, the Germans attacked Russia to Russia.
So Harry Hopkins, his role just keeps becoming more central to what's going on. Still handing out the money. And The US were The US became indeed an incredible arsenal of democracy because we were supplying everybody. The Chinese, the French, what was left to them, the British, and then our own forces, our own 15,000,000 men, if I have that number right, and 1,000,000 women who in some fashion were involved with the war effort in World War two. And as the war gets going, Hopkins makes it very plain, speaking publicly, that the goal of this war was not just to have a simple defeat of two potential enemies across the water.
Well, one was an enemy. Japan attacked us. You know, the idea was Germany might attack us someday after they took over Europe if we weren't careful. But in fact, the goal according to Hopkins was to build a new order of world democracy patterned after the new deal, something he was very familiar with. So Hopkins lets the cat out of the bag.
And, again, this is all about reordering the world, this war. It was not about the immediate needs and interests of The United States or even the immediate needs and interests of our European allies and our ally in China. That wasn't what it was about. And to get this world democracy patterned after the New Deal, all empires would have to be smashed. And that includes the British Empire and the French Empire, the Dutch Empire, as well as the Empire of Japan and the, National Socialist State in Germany.
So during the once a war gets going, there were some standards in the military and other places in the military, particularly, where there were jobs so sensitive that a member of the communist party, USA, would not be allowed to have this job. But once, once we were at war with Germany, as was Russia, all bets were off. So for example, people in the navy signal, signal people in the navy sending out codes that that somebody at that desk on a ship could not be a communist, but then they could be. And then because these standards were relaxed, so that, just increased the communist penetration of our government. So I alluded to it a moment ago, but the behavior towards Stalin, not considered an empire, was pretty much we're always doing what he wants.
But why? The Soviets were very, very dependent on The US. We weren't dependent on the Soviet Union for anything, but they were desperately dependent on the material that was now flowing to them through the, lend lease program to have any chance of beating this tremendously ferocious force coming out of Germany through operation Barbarossa, to take over the motherland, the mothership of communism in danger, threatened. So we had the leverage, but it was obvious that FDR and Hopkins were catering to Stalin to keep him on board for building that future new order that Hopkins mentioned, which, of course, is what we now know as the rules based international community or just the UN. And so we caved, into Stalin in a number of ways, And we're gonna take up that topic and many others related to those commies right after the news.
You're listening to hour of decision on Liberty News Radio. We'll be right back after the news. Against tyranny and corruption for Christ and The Hour of Decision with Lou Moore starts now. Welcome back to hour of decision. Before we broke for the news, we were just getting into the topic of all of the caving in Roosevelt and Hopkins did toward the Russians when we were the ones that had leverage over them.
A very, very strange situation. So how did we cave into the to Stalin? And there were so many small ways that we did that I won't have time to go over. I didn't even assemble all of them preparing for this show. But first, it is just the incredible amount of aid through lend lease that we sent to Stalin.
You know, the there was a narrative that, oh, Hitler attacked Stalin. He was so unprepared. The military was no good, and, Germany rolled across, the steps and heading toward Moscow, heading towards Stalingrad and Leningrad, the three principal urban areas of the communist state, Because they were so ill prepared and their military wasn't in good shape, Stalin had, as he did frequently, killed a bunch of his generals, and said they were traitors not too long before the war started. But actually, Stalin was exceedingly well prepared for the war. A lot of, scholarship has come out in the last few years on that.
There's a book called Ice Breaker by Viktor Suvov, and there's another book of his, and the name escapes me right now. A couple of books out by Russian scholars showing that, actually, that Hitler may have attacked Stalin because he had the tremendous fear that Stalin would attack first and might roll up on Berlin. Stalin was actually pretty well prepared for a war, but nonetheless, we poured the material to him of every different kind as we're going to find out here shortly. And so that's the first way that we did things the way Stalin wanted. The second was this issue of having a second front in France.
The the first front was the one that, was the war between Russia and Germany fought in Russia until later in the war when they and they pushed their way back into Eastern Europe. But Stalin was after our folks right away. That boy, you we have got to. You've got to invade over there in the coast of France and come across. But that was very dangerous.
And, we ended up doing it, and it ended up costing us a hell of a lot of our military personnel to launch the d day landing in '44. But this conversation started in '42, and at some point, George Patton and, and Churchill both determined that it would made, it would have made a lot more sense to come up through Italy and wind around the Alps to Germany, which would also cut off the Russians from Eastern Europe, which is why, in my opinion, and the opinion of many others, that Stalin was so insistent on our second front, on the on the front that we were gonna fight, in Europe against Germany, that it'd be in France as far over, and away from Stalin's troops coming across, from the East as possible so he could swallow as much territory as humanly possible, which he did. So the next big issue big issue in the war was the question of unconditional surrender. There were it was starting in 1942, '1 in treaty after another from well put together Germans, generals, admirals, other prominent people in German society, clandestine communications to the allies saying, boy, we just need a little help.
We'll take out Hitler. We'll immediately declare an armistice. That'll be it. That'll be the end of the war, which why wouldn't we wanna do that in 1942 or 1943? Save the lives of millions of troops, of civilians.
And also, if we had one brain in our head, it would keep the Russians from having a whole phalanx of troops pouring across Eastern Europe and into Germany, which is what we ended up have happening. But Stalin was totally against this. He saw the advantage of having this war go on. We are supplying him incredibly. He's not going to run out of supplies now.
That's just not gonna happen. And, we are just beating the hell, out of the at this time now, the Germans, one anti communist threat to Stalin, and then all of the all of, Germany's allies in many countries who were anti communist, a lot of people don't know. 1,000,000. One million troops fought, in the German uniform from various countries who, you know, they had all different political views, but a lot of them were just militant anti communist that had no other way to fight with what they knew, which our team should have known, but what what they knew was the most satanic force on the earth, which was world communism. So all of these forces that are all enemies, of Stalin are just getting the hell beat out of them.
And plus, he's gonna be positioned now to take a lot of territory. So he was totally against, following up on any of these entreaties from Germans, German citizens, and we we did it his way. Unconditional surrender. Roosevelt laid out the policy. Then there was the Morgenthau plan.
The Morgenthau plan, named after the Secretary of the Treasury, whose assistant, Harry Dexter White, we will talk about in a minute because he was a communist agent. And, the Morgenthau plan called for extreme retribution against Germany. Stalin called for 50,000 German army officers to be shot. This is after the war is over, folks. The the this plan is for after the war is over.
And Roosevelt, in his humanity and infinite wisdom, laughed and said he was totally against that, that he only wanted to shoot 49,000 German officers. At which point, the third member of the of the big three there, Churchill, who was in that meeting, got up and stormed out because of the genocidal conversation going on between Roosevelt and Stalin in just the most chummiest fashion, discussing all this carnage. But this Morgenthau plan called for that, And it called for essentially turning turning Germany into one big wasteland or at most one big farm, and it called for removing all males from the age of 20 to the age of 50 overseas to become slaves. Slaves, folks, probably for Stalin. And that was a plan that was seriously being floated in our government, although people denied it because this came out before the end of the war as did the unconditional surrender doctrine came out before the end of the war.
And Goebbels, Hitler's, propagandist made a lot of hay out of both of these things because he was telling their their own people. Look. You can't surrender. You gotta fight to the death. These people, they're they're not gonna it's unconditional surrender.
They're not gonna give you any special treatment if you surrender early. And then if this Morgenthau plan comes in, you see what's gonna happen there. You gotta fight to the death. And without question, it contributed to the fact that basically Germans did fight to the death, a large number of them. So that was another area where we saw it Stalin's way even though it just didn't seem completely at odds for how we do things.
But now in the case of the Morgenthau plan, just to be clear, we didn't adopt that because the news media I mean, there were a lot of people, god bless them, were saying, man, this is the opposite of why we're fighting this war. Not to do this to a civilian population. And, so that didn't become the plan at the end of the war. But, and then there was the Yalta agreement. There were other meetings at, Quebec, a big meeting in Quebec, huge meeting at Tehran, but just gonna talk about the Yalta agreement, the agreement that was arrived at with Stalin, and, Roosevelt and Churchill, which called for, among other things, a complete surrender.
I don't know what the right word to use is a a complete concession to Stalin of Eastern Europe. Here, Stalin, have Eastern Europe. We don't want it. And that and that caused very bizarre things like patent charging, heading for Prague, heading for heading for Berlin, with his tanks rolling, the Germans falling back, and Eisenhower would stop him. Stop.
Don't go any farther. Because he wanted to let the Russians catch up from the other side. Terrible. Ridiculous. But the the Alter Agreement call for that.
So all Eastern European countries, Yugoslavia, Romania, Bulgaria, Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, all those countries, the, Baltic States, all of them fall behind the iron curtain as they started to call it after the war. And all of this, a result of the war and a result of our policies. We were we were supplying this army that conquered all this land. We were facilitating this bloodthirsty dictator ruthlessly subjugating all these people when the public was being told we're fighting this war to prevent these kind of things. So that was Europe.
Then in Asia, Stalin agreed to come into the war to fight Japan, which he did not do, and we gave him a ton more money and material, scheduled for targeted for Asia, which was a tremendous help primarily for Mao Zedong and his gorillas who had been run up into the mountains in China and were just waiting for their doom. One Chiang Kai shek, the nationalist Chinese leader, could finish off the Japanese. Once we finished off the Japanese and the Chinese, nationalist Chinese were not fighting the Japanese anymore. They could turn their attention to Mao and make sure work of him. But now there's this whole infusion of support coming from the alt agreement.
Support also went to a little rocket man's family who from, you know, the the they're kind of a dynasty over there in North Korea, so they've been around forever. His grandfather, I think, received a a certain amount of largesse, make sure Korea became communist. And, of course, this leads to a communist China and the Korean War. These are big things, folks. These are very, very consequential decisions that were made by a very compromised team around a very compromised president, increasingly a physically compromised president.
His health was failing, but, talking of course about FDR. None of these things were in the interest of none of these decisions were in the interest of The United States. All of these decisions were in the interest of Joseph Stalin and the communist movement. The, FDR administration also supported communists in other countries at every turn over non communist. So in other words, you got the Germans in Yugoslavia, and they're fighting it out.
And and there's one partisan group, under a guy named Mihailovic. They're nationalists. They're patriotic Yugoslavians trying to boot out the Germans, and then trying to keep out the communist. Can you imagine him being in this situation? Well, you have another group of communists led by Tito under the discipline at that time of Joseph Stalin and the communist movement, and we are supporting, guess who, Tito.
Mahanliuk ended up getting shot up against the wall for religious, patriotic, non national socialist, non communist, partisan groups all through Europe. Terrible. And even in Western Europe, the, French underground, all, you know, all the advantage, all the communications, all the material went to the communist. And so that's why, folks, at the end of World War two, we had to come up with the Marshall Plan because, half of Western Europe I'm not saying we had to. We shouldn't have we never should have come up with a Marshall Plan.
I'm not going to get into that right now, but I will tell you the rationale for the Marshall plan was to keep Western Europe from going communist. And the reason Western Europe was under such a threat of going communist is because we had provided so much support, excuse me, to organize communist movements in Italy, in France, and some of these other countries in Western Europe. And then there was Asia. This is where Ho Chi Minh gets armed. There's there's 25 anti communist militias in Vietnam, maybe more.
No. No. We don't arm them against the Japanese. We arm Ho Chi Minh. These are the kind of decisions being made in the state department, in the treasury department, in the defense department be with communist whispering in the ears of our leaders.
So let's talk about these folks. Let's talk about these agents. So there are two functions essentially of these communist agents that got into our government. And by the way, the estimate, estimate provided by Thomas Fleming, who's a famous historian. There's different opinions, but his estimate was there was 329 spies.
Spies. Not just communists, people who like communists and wanted to vote for communists that were in the Roosevelt administration, but 329, at least that many spies identified in the Roosevelt administration spying for the Union of Soviet Socialist Republic. And we'd already said there's lots of communists around everywhere. Everywhere FDR is, there are a lot of communists around, and that's been for a long time, but now it's getting real serious with this war. So, they either stole records or they were agents of influence.
Agents of influence, the most important of the two. So how do we know these people were around? How do we know this isn't some fabrication? We know that folks because, we know that because from FBI reports, from internal secur internal agency reports, or the state department had a defense group in it, a counterintelligence group in it, excuse me, and some of the other agencies, although they were almost universally very poor at their job. The Soviet archives, they were open just for a couple of years in the early nineties.
They were a rich source of information about who was communicating clandestinely with the, communist movement from over in The United States, over in the Soviet archives, and then there was the infamous Vonona intercepts, a program started by the Army Signal Corps in 1943. It actually was handed over to the NSA and went till 1980, but it primarily operated. Its heyday was just three years, nineteen forty three through 1946, the last part of World War two, and they were decrypting messages from the KGB, the GRU, which is, Soviet Army intelligence, and the NKVD, which is their secret police. This whole program maintained its secrecy. We didn't know about it till 1995.
And, we're told that FDR and Truman were not aware of this project because if they were aware, folks, which I'm skeptical of that, then they would have been aware of a large number of communists in the government. The fact that the USR was supposedly an ally during the war, was a secondary factor or maybe as more of an excuse. So an excuse as to why these people were spying. Oh, no. They weren't spying.
All these people in the government, they were just really wanting to help our allies. A sample now of these, some of the most influential communist agents and their impact. Let's talk about Alger Hiss, the, a guy named Whitaker Chambers, who was a senior editor of Time Magazine. He went to the FBI and then went to, actually, to one of Roosevelt's top people, Adal Burrow, had direct access to Roosevelt in the nineteen thirties and said, hey. I was leading an espionage group, full of spies, including Alger Hiss, who's now very prominent in the state department.
They didn't want anything to do with him. He was a senior editor at Time Magazine. They wouldn't even give him the time of day. This is the attitude they had in the New Deal folks, and this is the real reason why they had so much penetration was just their attitude about the communist and communism. Hess ended up to be high up in the state department.
He was central to the first hires, the planning for the first hires for the future United Nations. He was an adviser to Roosevelt at Yalta, this agreement I just talked about. He left the state department to become the president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and then he served as the first secretary general of the UN. He was convicted, folks, of lying about being a spy. Then there was Robert Oppenheimer.
He was in charge of our nuclear program at Los Alamos. His brother was a communist. His sister was a communist. And FBI agents, undercover agents said, they took his name off the party list when he started getting so high up in this nuclear program, but that he had always been and was still a communist. He also had a whole nest of spies under him.
He was never accused of actually spying, but the Rosenbergs who were executed in the fifties, a whole bunch of convicted spies were right there with him under his nose at Los Alamos during the development of the atomic bomb. The USSR announced they too had the bomb in 1949. Then there was Harry Dexter White, the top economist at the Department of the Treasury, and I thought I said he was involved with this Morgothau plan. He was also central to the Bretton Woods agreement, which created the financial system, the world financial system that we are still under today. Unbelievable, but true.
And, so there you go. And then biggest of all biggest of all, Harry Hopkins. His Winona intercept code 19. He was source 19. He was a liaison to Britain and The Soviet Union the entire war.
Major Lazerace Jordan, who, filled airplanes full of lend lease materials to send over to Russia, for Jordan claims that he personally handled atomic materials, that had a, little h h on them, a little, for each box. They had a little signature on them, and and the signature on there was h h. Atomic material sent to The USSR during the war. So Franklin Roosevelt lied to get in the White House. He said he was small government.
Then he lied to the public, said he was gonna solve the depression when his biggest desire was just to reform our former government. He then lied to say he would keep us out of war and do everything he could to keep us out of war when he plotted to get us into war. He lied, folks, all through because he had two objectives, the two Fabian objectives, making the government much, much bigger at home and creating world, governmental structures overseas, which they did, starting with the Atlantic Charter, then the UN Charter, and they built from there. A lot of this happened after he died, but he was the one pushing it and was the one responsible for the growth of these elements of the Fabian Fabian project. And this is why Franklin Roosevelt is so important for us, folks, to study.
As we now look at Donald Trump trying to take down this infrastructure and how much resistance is he getting, folks, They thought this big government deal was gonna be permanent, that they just keep giving the public enough money that they would never have to worry about these programs being dismantled. But today is another day. My name is Lou Moore, and this is the hour of decision. Thank you very much. See you later.