"The International Jew" Study Hour - Episode 62
August 29, 2013
Hadding Scott and Carolyn Yeager read and comment on Chapter 57, “Jewish Idea in American Monetary Affairs.”
The great Jewish banking houses of the U.S. in 1921 were foreign importations led by four men – Belmont, Schiff, Warburg and Kahn – all “German” Jews. The focus of the chapter is on Paul Moritz Warburg (right) whose banker brothers Max and Felix remained in Hamburg. Among the highlights:
- Interesting story about doubt cast on the citizenship of Otto Herman Kahn;
- Warburg’s testimony before the Committee on Banking and Currency of the U.S. Senate in executive session is dramatized here;
- Warburg studied banking all over the world, including Asia, before settling down in Hamburg; then came to the U.S. to stay in 1902;
- In 1906, he became active in promoting the monetary “reforms” that he thought were necessary, and was a consultant for Sen. Nelson Aldrich of the Monetary Commission;
- The highly secret meeting at Jekyll Island off the coast of Georgia in 1910 between Aldrich, Warburg, Asst. Sec. of the Treasury Andrew and 4 other financiers is described.
Note: We are using the Noontide Press publication of The International Jew — The World’s Foremost Problem which can be found online here as a pdf file.



French Revisionist
