"The International Jew" Study Hour - Episode 32
Jan. 31, 2013
Hadding Scott and Carolyn Yeager read and comment on Chapter 27: Jewish Copper Kings Reap Rich War-Profits.
This chapter uses the example of the copper cartel during “Wilson’s War” to show us in some detail how Jews manage to take over whole areas of government-industry. TIJ asks as a final question: How can such power be explained? … to which Carolyn and Hadding offer an answer. Other issues raised:
- Bernard Baruch went to the Peace Conference as an “economic adviser” and stayed til the end;
- Called the Kosher Conference by Frenchmen who were astounded to see the number of Jews there;
- Two Jewish companies, the Lewisohn and the Guggenheim, with the help of Baruch, divided between themselves the huge war-related copper sales to the U.S. and the Allies.
Pictured above right: Jew Daniel Guggenheim, one of seven sons of Meyer who immigrated to the U.S. from Switzerland in 1847. The family won a lead-silver price war with ASARCO in 1900 and took over the company. When war broke out in 1914, Daniel was ready to ramp up copper production worldwide to aid the Allied war effort—and the Guggenheim profits. He was a member of the National Security League, founded by Solomon ‘Stanwood’ Menken and Gen. Leonard Wood, a driving force for moving the then-neutral USA into the war.
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.
Category
International Jew Study podcast, Jews, World War II- 700 reads
Comments
Original comments to this program
2 Responses
Hadding
January 31, 2013 at 11:27 pm
Here’s E.J. Dillon’s book: The Inside Story of the Peace Conference
Diavola
February 14, 2013 at 10:23 pm
…and NYC shamefully commemorates the lives of Simon “KKK & Confed. Soldier” Baruch and Bernard “War Profiteer” Baruch by respectively naming Middle School and College after them. I find it particularly hilarious about naming public middle school after Simon, given the liberal nature of the city. I wonder if he owned slaves?
Great podcast series!