5/18/2008

Truman’s Private Thoughts about the Jewish Extremists

Posted under: — @ 4:15 am
Email This Post Print This Post

trumanwriting.jpgThe President who officially recognized Israel had Secret Thoughts about Jewish Cruelty

harrytruman.jpgOn the 6oth anniversary of the murderous and terroristic creation of the Israeli State it is interesting to learn of the private sentiments of the U.S. President who recognized Israel and thus facilitated it’s brutal cruelty and mistreatment of the Palestinians.  A recently discovered diary of President Harry S. Truman indicates that the former president may have had a strongly negative opinion of Jews. In the diary, which includes 42 entries written in 1947, Truman recounts a conversation he had with Henry Morgenthau, the Secretary of the Treasury, who had phoned to discuss the fate of Jewish refugees. In criticizing the approach of Morgenthau, who was Jewish, Truman wrote in a July 21 passage,

“The Jews, I find are very, very selfish. They care not how many Estonians, Latvians, Finns, Poles, Yugoslavs or Greeks get murdered or mistreated as D[isplaced] P[ersons] as long as the Jews get special treatment. Yet when they have power, physical, financial or political neither Hitler nor Stalin has anything on them for cruelty or mistreatment to the under dog.”

The Jewish extremist Morgenthau and his infamous Morgenthau Plan which was instituted during the first year of allied occupation of defeated Germany, purposefully caused the starvation, sickness and death of hundreds of thousands of German civilians, mostly women and children. Many leaders of the Western World had knowledge of the dangers of Jewish extremism. An example can be seen in President Richard Nixon and the most famous American Evangelist of the 20th century, Billy Graham, in a conversation recorded in the White House.

“This [Jewish] stranglehold has got to be broken or this country’s going down the drain,” Graham said, agreeing with Nixon’s comments earlier in the conversation.

“You believe that?” Nixon says in response.

“Yes, sir,” says Graham.

“Oh boy. So do I,” Nixon agrees, then says: “I can’t ever say that, but I believe it.” (From the Associated Press)

Truman and Nixon and many others in power have seen the obvious truth of the dangers of Jewish extremism, the threat of the most powerful racist movement on earth: Jewish supremacism. They knew of its association with the most murderous movement in the history of mankind, Bolshevism, and they saw its incomparable ruthlessness and cruelty expressed in the Israeli State. But, they were so fettered by the incredible power of the Jewish supremacists in media and in political fundraising that they supinely bent over and gave themselves over to the Jewish agenda. There is no question that many in high positions of government are also aware of this threat to peace and justice. We urge those who know the truth to act on it, to be courageous and honorable. — staff


0.259 || Powered by Duke site