Welcome back to the untold History Channel. My name is Ron Partain and we are joined by Mr. King himself. And you guys probably know by now that I'm not doing the greatest. My mind is elsewhere, but I'm here and we're going to do the best we can. But just cut me a little bit of. A little bit of slack today if. If I'm not playing with a full deck. But where were we? Where did we talk about last week, Mike? What was the last thing that we ended on? We covered the rigged election of 1912, correct? I think that's right. And I'm looking for the book. I forgot to open it up here. Let's see the crash course. That's what I'm looking at here as I have it in. Is it nwo? Crash course. There it is. Crash course nwo. That's what I got it as. Let's see here. We took the civil war, 1912. Did we talk about the income tax and the central bank? I think we did. And World War. Yeah, I think we need to talk about. We left off at the bank. Yes, that's right. We left off at the bank. So the next thing on the list is the United States is manipulated into know. It's. That was one piece of the puzzle that had to be put in place first was the establishment of a central bank and the income tax, because those are the funding mechanisms for big government and war. So that's in place. The war is triggered in Europe. It's imposed upon Germany and Austria Hungary. They did not want war. So what happened early on? Germany gains an advantage and then the war breaks down into a stalemate. However, Germany remains in an advantageous position. There's not 1 territory that's been occupied. Okay. France has suffered horrific losses. The german U boats emerge and create big problems for the british shipping. And the war is not going so well for Russia in the east either. So even though it's a stalemate, Germany is in superior position. And in this position, they continue as they did in the days leading up to the war. And even after it broke out to offer peace, to let's go back to the way things were. Right. And Britain and France, they had good reason to consider such an offer because Germany didn't want anything from them. They just wanted peace. But there's still one card left to play, and this was a big part of the plan all along, is to bring the young powerhouse country, the United States, into the war. Okay. And the way that was achieved now, the anglophiles in Britain and even here in America, people like Teddy Roosevelt and such, right from the get go, they were scheming on how we can get America into the war. But there was a resistance. The brakes were put on that movement even after Lusitania was sunk. And the reason for the delay was twofold. One, the jewish moguls wanted Russia out of the war and defeated and overthrown first, because if we went to war on the side of Britain and France, we would automatically be allied with Russia. They didn't want that. They wanted a twofer. That's the way they were maneuvering the war. Get the internal revolution going in Russia to get rid of the tsar. And then once that was achieved, take out Germany. And that's exactly how it went down. And then along the way, they made a little extortion of the British. They wanted America in the war right away. So they went, the zionist, a zionist delegation went to the British. They said, we can get the United States into the war on your side, okay? Because they controlled Wilson. He was their puppet. The deal is you've got to take Palestine away from Turkey, because Turkey was part of that central alliance with Germany and Austria Hungary. So the British made the dirty deal. They say, ok, you get America in and we'll take Turkey. We'll take Palestine from Turkey. And out of that came the Balfour declaration. They wanted something in writing. Lord Balfour, who's one of the key men tasked with bringing the United States into the war, writes a letter. Who does he write the letter to? This is very revealing. Not to design his leaders like Heim Weitzman and Rabbi Wise, who are influential in their own right. No, the letter is to Lord Walter Rothschilds, who at that time would have been the patriarch of the Rothschild family. And that's the Balfour Declaration. Israel's got postage stamps with Balfour on it. On it. They have a boulevard named after Balfour, and that's what it means. And the declaration was short and sweet. All it said is that Britain supports the establishment of a homeland for the Jews in. Okay, the rest is obviously inferred. How are you going to get Palestine? Well, obviously we're going to defeat Turkey and take it from them. Correct. And that deal was made. The election of 19 6016 had to happen, too. That was Wilson's reelection. He ran on the slogan, I can show you the campaign buttons. He kept us out of war. That was the big slogan. So he got reelected. And then as soon as he's reinaugurated and back in those days that took place the following March, weeks later, boom, he asked for a war declaration from Congress, and he gets it. So he broke his promise. It was a lie all along because they had the Balfour declaration in hand, but they just want to get the reelection out of the way. This way, nobody could say, oh, he got us into war. No, his slogan was, he kept us out of war. And that's how the United States was manipulated into war. And overnight, the Germans were transformed by jewish led propaganda into bloodthirsty killers and brutes and Huns. And I have some of the propaganda posters in my book, the Bad War. Even though the bad war is about World War II, I talk extensively about World War I because that's really the lead up. You can't understand two if you don't understand one. But the Germans were horribly vilified. It got so bad that Germans in America, who made up a huge block of the population at that time, the Schmidt's, became the Smiths. Still hooters became the Millers. And the Drumf family, born in Germany, became the Trump family. They changed their name in fear. And German Americans, they were given a really hard time. The normies were whipped up into a frenzy, and all of a sudden, everybody had loved the Germans. Flick of a switch, the jewish propaganda. Everybody hates the Germans. Well, all you got to do is listen to Benjamin Friedman's speech that he gave at the Willard hotel in 61 when he talks about it. And you're right. The german people or the immigration into the United States, even today, the vast majority of the people who populated the United States that were caucasian came from Germany. Even to this day, that is the highest number of people that came here came from the. A lot of the people in the United States were on, even though they were neutral, they were actually on german side. And you listen to Benjamin Friedman, and he actually talks about that. He said it wasn't until they needed to get the United States into the war that all of a sudden they hit the gas pedal on the propaganda to make Germans the bad guys. And that was where you get the babies on bayonets and all this other stuff. It's horrible. And this is all because they wanted Palestine. You can basically funnel down the entire World War I and all of the people that died into the zionist movement to get Palestine for their own. Yeah, well, that was a key element. It was too many elements. That's certainly one. And then the other, just as important, if not more so, was out of the war to further propagandize the people and say what a horrible event that was. Boy, we can never let that happen again. We're going to need a world body. The League of Nations. League of nations. It was for globalism and zionism. The two went hand in hand. Yes. And that's what world War I was all about. And once the United States finally got its troops trained and deployed and sent to Europe in large numbers, the first thing the British did is they start diverting south towards Turkey, okay? And they left the Americans to take the casualties against the Germans so they could go fulfill their end of the bargain and dedicate a significant portion of their forces towards defeating the Turks and grabbing. Go. Go watch Lawrence of Arabia. Now, there's a lot of Hollywood ism in that, but that was a true story. Lawrence went down there and he whipped up the Arabs to fight the Turks, and the Turks were. There was kind of the end of the line of the Otoman Empire. Anyway. They had to get Palestine away from them so that they could. And then when the Sykes Pico agreement came out, right after that, that's when they carved up all the lines in what is modern day the Middle east with. Mean, Iraq never even existed until after. So. Yeah, because they also did the Arabs very dirty, because nobody knew about these deals, okay? They didn't know about the Balfour declaration. You think the Arabs would have fought for the British? They knew that was coming, right? They didn't know about Sykes Pico. They thought they were going to get their united arab great nation. Right? Okay? But Sykes Pico was also secretive. It would basically, whatever was taken from the turkish empire, all the arab sub countries, not countries, regions, were going to be split between the british and french colonializers. Arabs didn't know anything about this. And Lawrence of Arabia didn't know anything about us. And he was disgusted because he was used to whip up the Arabs. Okay? You're going to break free the turkish empire. You get your own country, and in the end, what do they get? They don't get anything. And to boot, the Jews get Palestine. And he was very upset with that. And there's a lot of people who think that Lawrence. That there was possibly foul play in Lawrence's death. Yeah. Because that was like, as we were approaching World War II, right? And given that they had made him into a superhero, such a stature, Lawrence of Arabia, a voice like his, would needed to be silenced in advance. There were quite a few influential individuals in Europe who wanted good relations with Germany, would not have got along with World War II, and their opposition would have been problematic. One by one, they took care of these people. They either died suddenly or they were removed from the offices they had. So, yeah, it was very mysterious the way he died. What was it, a motorcycle accident? Yeah, motorcycle accident. Yeah, something like. Know, it's interesting. This is a little bit of a side note. You'll appreciate this, Mike. I actually got a hold of Phil, the guy. He's the president of the USS Liberty Veterans Survivors association. Oh, sure. I talked to him yesterday, and I'm going to have him on, as I'm trying to get him and as many of his shipmates on to do a show. And he knew a lot about Israel that he never would have known, but he was impressed with my understanding and knowledge of Israel as he. It's. He knew because they were the sacrificial lambs for what could have potentially been world war three. But anyway, that's a whole nother, just a little side trick side trip there. So anyway, that was the United States manipulated into the war, and then the next thing is the Bolshevik revolution. Yeah. If I may, I don't think I really touch upon this too much in crash course just to wrap up the war kind of quickly. The tide of the war began to turn, but still, Germany never came under occupation. There was no need to surrender. But they trusted in Woodrow Wilson's offer of peace without victory. Just lay down your arms, let's call the war off, and we'll make a nice, happy deal. There won't be any retribution or anything. And the Germans, who at that time were being internally subverted by the jewish Zionists because they wanted Germany to lose, to get Israel, also by the jewish Marxists, for the obvious reasons. So the german home front collapsed, partly due to treason and partly due to the fact that some of them were deluded to believing Woodrow Wilson's promises. So when they did lay down their arms and surrender unconditionally, they were now helpless and they were brutally raped. Economically. Their territory was chopped up, their colonies were stolen. Heavy reparations, even private gun ownership was banned. All treaty of Versailles. But that was induced by a lie by Wilson and Wilson's handlers. Just lay down your arms and we'll have peace without victory. And it's interesting that you say that thing about the arms and the Treaty of Versailles. The Treaty of Versailles is what stripped Germans of their gun ownership. It wasn't Adolf Hitler. When Adolf Hitler came to power in 1934, he actually relaxed the gun ownership laws so that they could actually own guns. You know, and a lot of these conservative Inc. Types. Inc. I call. Oh, Hitler was for gun control. No, he wasn't. Repealed the gun control laws. He gave the Germans their guns. Uh, so that's how World War I wrapped. And the thing that I don't understand is why, how they allowed, if you had the Bolsheviks or you had the Zionists in Germany, they would have made it okay. They would have done something to make sure that the train loads of gold that were going to the eastern front were able to go through Germany unmolested, because that's when Trotsky and all those guys, I think some of the german leadership were a little bit short sighted. It's kind of understandable because they're facing a deadly two front war. So it's like, hey, anything we can do to get the Russians out of the war, free up the. Even if, even if it meant that they would fall to these revolutionaries, was in the interest of Germany at the time, because as soon as the tsar was overthrown, first it was overthrown by a socialist government, then the Bolsheviks took over, pulled Russia out of the war. That enabled the Germans to take all those eastern front troops. Correct. And make a huge spring 1918 offensive in the west. They almost won the war right then and there. That's correct. You guys have heard the term stormtrooper. Well, the term stormtrooper really was originated by the german army in World War I, and that was what they did with these special units that the german army had. They were able to penetrate deep into the trenches, into the trench lines. How the trench lines worked in World War I is you had the main trench, and then behind the main trench, you had basically an auxiliary trench, like a fallback trench, and then you had a third line of trench. So there was like three lines of trenches that were basically fallback positions. If one of them fell. Well, the stormtroopers of the german stormtroopers were actually so good at what they did, they penetrated deep into the british lines, but they were so good that when they penetrated so deep into the lines, they didn't have the logistics to bring in behind them and keep everybody armed and fed so that they could hold the territory. And ultimately, they were victims of their own success. Anyway, just giving you my understanding of World War I, because I've actually done a little bit of study on World War I. It was really brutal warfare. Yeah, it sure was. Poison gas all over the place. Just all these men thrown into a meat grinder, not having the slightest idea of what it was they're actually fighting for. Right. Yeah. Well, then they did. They figured it out. They figured it out after the fact. Well, yeah, naturally. And this goes to the question which nobody ever asks the most obvious questions people seem to miss. How was it that you had a 40, 50 year period of this nice, cordial, naily relationship amongst the Jews of Germany and their german hosts? No problem. Okay. Right. The Jews were thriving. Anti semitism, so called, was something that only existed, like, on the margins of know. There were people who had those attitudes were, like, laughed at. They're like, well, what's your problem with the Jews? They're not bothering anybody. We're fine. And then all of a sudden, after the war, so called anti Semitism just explodes. So you've got to ask yourself, what happened? What did they do? Or what were they perceived to have done? Either way, that question is never asked. But we just answered it with what we talked about. Exactly. Yeah, exactly. Well, then the Bolshevik revolution. So did you get everything out that you wanted to about war one? Yeah. Given the basic structure of crash course nwo, we're providing a skeletal structure. If people want more meat, go to my website, realnewsandhistory. com. Read the planet Rothschild book. But you can start with crash course nwo. So that's good enough. We've established the framework. Indeed, indeed. Covering 250 years. If we really get into every nook and cranny, we'll be old men by the time we're done, right? Yeah, exactly. But, yeah, the Bolshevik revolution now. So what happens? Well, I think we touched upon in the previous show how in 1905, you had the russo japanese war, which Theodore Roosevelt was propping up the Japanese, and it didn't go so well for the Russians. And there is a pattern, historical pattern, many precedents of this. The globalists will bring about a war which so many opportunities a war brings. You could take out an enemy and at the same time weaken the country that wins. So they become vulnerable to an internal revolution. And that's what happened. World War. When Russia lost the war in 1905, they were almost overthrown by the Bolsheviks. They were able to suppress that revolution. And rather than round everybody up and kill them, the tsar, some of them are jailed, some of them are exiled, and some of the ones in jail actually escape, like Trotsky, I think, was an escapee. And then they come back in 1917, you got to get the cancer. You got to get every last cancer cell. They did it again. They used the dissatisfaction with the war that went badly for Russia, and they corrupted a bunch of the troops, and they overthrew the tsar. And then the civil war followed. Another thing is, the people who were exiled and the people who escaped, they all went to Germany. Yeah, a lot of them went to. Yeah. Trotsky and his crowd were in Brooklyn, right? That's right. But a lot of them went to Germany, and Germany accepted them with open welcome. That's part of the german character. They're very hospitable people, and they prey on that. They prey on that. They see that as weakness. They don't see that as a virtue. And then it proved to be Germany's undoing. Indeed. And then the earlier wave was after they murdered Tsar Alexander in 1881. There was a bunch of them came to Germany, and then this happened again after the revolution. So Germany imported the know, sadly. And then we witnessed probably the most horrific genocide in world history, maybe with the exception of Genghis Khan and the Mongols, is the russian civil war. They won that by terror. Eventually, they just broke the spirit of their opposition. Just horrific. Mass murder and torture. Just brutal stuff. And they consolidated, and that's how the Soviet Union was born. Lenin. And just, you know, I'm sure you'll probably come to this, but I'll touch on it just for a second. The United States did not recognize the Soviet Union. It wasn't until FDR in 1934 when he became president. And it was one of the first things that he did. He rushed to do it. He recognized the Soviet Union as a country. But prior to that, the United States did not recognize the communist russian government. Yeah, it was a murderous, bandit regime. And it's interesting, when Eugene Meyer took over to Washington Post, this was the first year Roosevelt's presidency, he stepped down from the Federal Reserve. He was chairman of Federal reserve, bought the Washington Post, was losing money, but he didn't care. He bought it for influence. That would be the father of Catherine Graham, by the way, who died, like, what, 20 years ago. They owned the Washington Post for, like, 60 years, that family. But one of the first things he did is he fired the editor of the Washington Post because he was opposed to recognition and good relations with the Soviet Union. So that was big for them. They wanted to stabilize the Soviet Union and then ultimately partner up with them and form their new world order. Correct. Things got a little bit off track off of World War II, because, know, he wanted to go his own way. His mentality was, yeah, I'll be heading the world order from Moscow, not you guys from London. He had that internal rivalry, but, yeah, they definitely wanted to stabilize and then further empower the Soviet Union of that day. So, yeah, it wasn't until FDR, that United States even recognized the Soviet Union. And it was just known throughout the world what they had done throughout the 20s, just the genocide, the mass arrests, the gulag, the torture. Total orwellian society. Brutal, brutal. Everybody talks about how bad Lenin was or how bad Stalin was. Well, Stalin learned everything from Lenin. I mean, Stalin and Trotsky, and Lenin was just the guy out front who might have had some jewish blood. He did speak Yiddish, by the way, but the whole leadership, like, three quarters of the Bolsheviks were jewish. Okay? There was Derjinsky, there was Stratsky, and they were just brutal cutthroats, and they just murder, murder, murder. It was just an orgy of blood. They just let loose on the russian people and terrorized them into total submission. So that was the Soviet Union of the then the Communist International was established at that time. So, like, almost every country in the west had a communist party, and they belonged to the communist international, including the United States. Yes, exactly. Founded in and in every country, including the United States, you go to the United States or France or Poland or Hungary. The leadership was always disproportionately jewish. There's no question. The early communist Bolshevik international movement was totally jewish. Totally jewish run. And the people who enabled it were the capitalists, who are supposed to be the opposite, the communists in the west with their money. Jacob Schiff, Bernard Baruch, the Rothschilds, Warburg, et cetera. And that's always been how this international cabal has worked. It's got its finance arm, like the Wall street capitalists, and it's got its revolutionary arm, which people think are opposite. You think of the capitalist and then you think of a communist. No, they work together, two ends of the same street, because it's all about monopoly, right? And the superior ones were the financiers, the jewish financiers who really controlled the communists. Sometimes they would lose a little bit of control of them. But certainly someone like Trotsky took his orders from Schiff for sure. There's no way they could have rounded up the tsar's family, Tsar Nicholas and his wife and his children as servants and shot them dead, okay? Like diseased animals. They couldn't never have done something like that. No. Unless somebody in New York or London is signing off on it, that's for sure. That's right. We're led to believe that just some local jewish red revolutionaries did this. There's just some things are so big, like murdering an entire royal family, someone's got to sign off on it. Absolutely. The corporate structure to this thing, one thing that we are taught even to this day, that we're a capitalist country, capitalism. And if you really want to go back and look at what capitalism is, essentially the opposite of communism. And I mean, a lot of people in Russia, after the wall came down, they basically were. Marx was proven correct in the sense that capitalism was just as bad as communism. In fact, in many cases worse. The real, true system that made the United States great was really more of mercantilism than it was true capitalism. And there's some fine lines there and some distinctions and whatnot, but true capitalism is extraordinarily monopolistic. And the people on the left that are griping about the big corporations and whatnot, I got to say they're right. They're right about that. And that's the true capitalist system that only cares about profits and that doesn't really care about people. So whereas mercantilism is much more of, I guess you would call it more of an honest, ethical, capitalistic type of system. Anyway, moving on. I think you kind of talked about the. Germany is subverted and tricked into surrender, unless you want to delve into that a little bit more. I think we touched on that. And then there's the League of nations. So take your pick. Well, okay. Well, Germany is ruined, humiliated, degradated, divvied up, occupied. The occupation would last for ten years. They demanded all these reparations. And then when the german currency just lost all its value and you had your hyperinflation, the French came back in with the Belgians, and at that point, they're taking resources. It was just horrible what was done to Germany, and it's just something that even the liberal establishment historians concede was just unjust and horrible. So that's what's going on in Germany. Early 20s, League of Nations was established. I think we covered it in your first show that maybe within the United States, membership was shot down. Correct. You needed two thirds of the senate. They made the Senate vote three times. They couldn't get it done. Came very close. And it was one of the leaders of the Senate bloc that shot down League of Nations was Warren Harding, who would go on to be elected president in 1920. He takes office in 21. The United States is in a depression, a post World War I depression that he inherited from Woodrow Wilson. The taxes were so high, the spending was so high, and immediately cuts taxes dramatically, like more than half. Also the size of government. More than half. It was a radical downsizing of the government, and everything started to devolve back into the smaller economy, and an economic boom was triggered. And he was immensely popular. Warren Harding. In fact, he was elected the largest margin in history, two to one on a popular vote, okay? Total landslide. And his slogan was America first. And another slogan was return to normalcy. And that's what we did. And what was the normalcy before Wilson and before Teddy Roosevelt? Normalcy was republican, conservative, peaceful candidates who have just won every election since the civil war, with the exception of Grover Cleveland. Right? And they went right back to that. Two to one Republican, okay? A year and a half in office, he dies suddenly, no autopsy, no explanation. Young man, 53, and there's. Conspiracy theories are raging throughout the country. 57. That was it. That was the end of Harding. And they went after him just like they went after Trump. It cooked up all these scandals. They said he was involved in a teapot dome, some kind of oil scandal linked to his interior treasury. None of it stuck. He remained immensely popular. They couldn't get to him with the scandals now, nothing. And then he dies. I'm willing to bet shekels on that one that he was poisoned. What a shocker. What a well. And then shortly thereafter, then there was Coolidge, and Coolidge was just as Coolidge was. That was the heyday of America first conservatism. Coolidge turned out to be just as good. And then when the election of 1924, the Democrat candidate for president. I can't recall his name. He's an America firster. So they had to put up a third party, progressive party, I think, who got like 20% of the vote. So the good guys had won both parties by then. And you had the roaring twenty s, and you had a revisitation of World War I. It came under criticism. That was a big mistake. So those were great times. How much of the roaring 20s were as a result of the Federal Reserve pumping in a whole bunch of liquidity into the market? Well, that was the one problem with the 20s, okay? Even though we did everything right, you had that bloody Federal Reserve was in place from 1913, right? And the initial recovery. Yeah, the tax cuts, the reduction in government, but then they kept fueling it with phony money. And I don't think people understood this dynamic too well back then. They should have, because it's happened so many times before. But they were jacking up the money supply. Easy money. It got to the point. People were borrowing money so they could put it in the market, drive the market up, okay, and then paying back their loans with their profits. So it got out of hand. Not because of any fiscal policy. The fiscal policy, meaning the taxing and the spending and the attitude towards business. The fiscal policy of Harding, of Coolidge, of Hoover, it was sound. What they could not control was this explosion in the money supply, which really fueled the boom, these incredible heights. Then when the moment came, they radically went the opposite direction and they cut off the money supply. And that's your boom bus cycle, triggering the massive stock market crash of 1929. Scientifically engineered exactly as Papa Lindbergh said. That was his quote. He said, booms and crashes and booms will be scientifically engineered. And that's what they did to do that. That was the only way to end the conservative republican dynasty. And then that's how they got their boy FDR in there. Well, as I understand, as long as they had that weapon, even the 1920s, as bad as it was for them and as many, it stalled the globalist agenda in many ways, but it couldn't reverse it because they had this card to play and they had the press by that time. Yes, that's key, because then when the crash came, they could give the official explanation. They weren't going to say, oh, the Fed did it. No, Hoover did it. Right. Poor Herbert Hoover. They demonized them. They vilified them. And he was another guy elected in a landslide in 28. They did such a job on him with this. It was like two con men working opposite sides of the same mark. You had the Fed crashing the economy, and then you had the establishment newspapers, New York Times, Washington Post, et cetera, saying that the cause of it was Hoover and his tariffs and things like that, nonsense like that. It was the Fed, 100%. And it's interesting, Alan Greenspan, before he sold his soul, wrote about this, very scholarly, passionately. He didn't say it was deliberate, but he says it was the folly of the Federal Reserve that caused a depression and stock market crash. This is Greenspan in the 60s. Well, it was. Milton Friedman talked about it, and it was Bernacki, too. Bernacki actually admitted, he says, yeah, you're right, we did it. Yeah, he's actually said that. I think it was Milton Friedman's nintieth birthday party or something like that. They were giving him some sort of an award. But it wasn't just the fact that they turned the money supply off. What they did was they shrunk the money supply, very similar to what's happening right now. They reduced the money supply. They removed liquidity from. They had liquidity just out there everywhere. Money was just flowing. And then they called in all that stuff. And the whole point of that was to get control of the smaller banks. And that was the bigger banks took control of all the smaller banks. It's big a mess. Big mess. Okay, so that's the stock market crash. And we kind of covered the stock market crash and FDR. But now we've got. Hitler comes to power in 1933. Okay? So this is a global crash, because even then everything is, like, interconnected with the central banks. Germany is hit particularly hard because the only reason they're surviving is because they're plugged into the western system of credit. And it's worse for them because, remember, they were wiped out by hyperinflation in the 20s. So your average German doesn't have any. He just started replenishing his savings. 1920 619 27. Okay. Whereas at least in America, people used to save money back then. They used to save money in the shoeboxes even back then. So a lot of people that had the savings, it was not an inflationary depression. To the contrary, it was deflationary. So if you had some money saved, you could weather the storm for a number of years. Germans didn't have that, of course. So they just, like America, had 33% unemployment, and they were in a very bad shape. They never recovered from the begin with. So it's an interesting parallel because FDR and Hitler both come into power at the exact same time, or we'll call it both come into authoritarian power. Right. March 1933, FDR, because he had the Senate, he had the Congress, he had the desperate american people say, do whatever you need to do. He was essentially an economic dictator. Okay? And then Hitler, after the communists tried to overthrow him, and he suppressed the early attempt at a civil war, he emerged through the enabling act as a quote unquote dictator. So there's your parallel. Both of them come into absolute power. March of 1933. Okay, well, by 1936, Germany is booming, whereas the United States, with all of our resources and population and farms, I mean, we should have been way ahead of the Germans, but it lingered and it really continued all the way through. World War II did not pull us out of the depression. That is a bullshit. Yeah, that's a fallacy. World War II did not pull us out of the depression. In fact, if you go back and you look at all of the people who were in the depression that were starving in the depression, they were starving even that much more during World War II because all the resources were sent overseas to the troops. Yeah, that's. Know, these fake economists, they measure everything by GDP. Okay? Yeah, World War II GDP is going through the roof, or they used to call the GNP back then, gross national product but who's benefiting from this productivity? Who's getting it? It's not new cars. It's new tanks. You understand the food's going over there. The bumpers on the cars manufactured in the United States during those years were made out of wood. Everything was inferior quality. And you had shortages. You had a job, Rosie de Riveter, working at slave wages in the factory, making bombs. But the wealth of the nation was going towards the war effort, right? So it wasn't until finally, after the war, you had all these factories. Now they were retooled, and now they cut the taxes. That's when the post war boom came. But FDR never got us out of the depression. No, not at all, ever. Not once. And when you think about the economy of World War II, the things that we were making in World War II were being made to be destroyed. We weren't making things to last. We were making things to basically replenish the things that were being destroyed that were just made last month. Yeah, it's just make work. The purpose of work is to make stuff. Produce manufactured goods or grow food or provide services, and we benefit from everybody's stuff, but this stuff is being destroyed. So you're just slaving away, and you look at the propaganda posters of World War II. They're really dehumanizing. They're like, when you drive alone, you drive with Hitler. There's a propaganda poster, and the guy is driving, and it's like a ghost figure of Hitler in a passenger. Oh, some of the most insulting, stupid stuff. And you were told that you weren't patriotic if you didn't have your garden and grow some of your own food, stuff like that. But they really whipped the american people into a wartime production economy. So it wasn't just the soldiers. We lost 450,000 Americans, countless hundreds of thousands wounded and amputated. And that's only a fraction of what european countries suffered. But then on the home front, there was deprivation. So, I mean, just look at all this suffering going through World War I, and then the depression and World War II. It's a bolshevik genocide. And the wars in Europe. This cabal has really tortured humanity. It's so freaking evil. And only when you take a historical perspective of it, you really begin to grasp the scope of it. This is truly a spiritual war we're in, and may God destroy these people once and for all, and soon. Amen to that. Amen to that. We could really delve into World War II if we wanted to. But I just got done reading your. Well, a couple of weeks ago, I got done going through the bad war, and if you guys really want to hear some stuff about the World War II, go listen to those eight episodes of the bad war, and that will really give you a much better understanding of what World War II was, at least from Mike's perspective, because basically, I read his. Just. Just suffice it to say that World War II was one of the seminal events in history in terms of the new world order and what we're fighting. And I'll let you wrap that one up, because, well, that's why it is so glorified as this holy war. To this day, they're still making World War II movies, but in the. Even in the 80s, it's like a new world War II movie came out every month, just constantly glorification and the Dday commemoration. In poker parlance, that's the tell right there. Okay? When Hollywood fake news and fake academia, whenever they sell something a little too hard, you just reverse what you're being told. They call it the good war. Okay? That's why I call my book the Bad War, because I'm mocking them. But that's their nickname for it. The good war. It was good for them. That's the inside joke. It was very good for them. It really gave us the world we live in today. It established everything came out of the aftermath of that war, right? And one thing that was really interesting about that that I didn't even know until I was reading that, was how Eisenhower. Eisenhower, when the war started, was a lieutenant colonel. Now, for you guys who weren't in the military and don't understand that in the officer ranks or in the enlisted, an officer, you have, like, e one through e nine. And then in the officer ranks, you have one through nine. Well, three is like a captain in the army, four is a major, and five is a lieutenant colonel. Okay? Now, Eisenhower was five, and then the. The general of the army or whatever, he was a four star general is an nine. So he went up four spots in a span of, like, three years, which is unheard of even in that period of time. He was almost kicked out of for, uh. For, you know, when you become hunting buddies with Bernard Baruch, good things happen. And it's the same with. I mean, Marshall is a little bit of a sharper tool in the shed than Eisenhower was, but he also was leapfrogged. But Eisenhower was just skyrocketed from was. MacArthur once referred to him as, like, the best clerk he ever had or something. MacArthur didn't like they hated each know, because MacArthur was an anti communist and Eisenhower was as left wing as you could get. He was a lifelong Democrat. A lot of people suspected his older brother, who he admits was a confidant of his and a mentor. Milton Eisenhower is in the labor department, the Communist infested Labor department. FDR. A lot of people suspected he was a communist. Eisenhower himself, you couldn't touch. Okay, but Milton Eisenhower came under criticism for that. But that's his deal. His ties to Bernard Baruch go back to the 1920s when he was a nobody. And Baruch, who was chairman of the war industries board, he was essentially, during World War I, he was the absolute tsar of the US economy. And after World War I, he already started plotting for the next war, getting his pieces in place. Eisenhower was one of them. George Marshall was another one. Churchill. He's got his hooks into Churchill. Yeah. Baruch was George Soros on steroids for 40, 50 years. So that explains Eisenhower's success. It certainly wasn't based on talent and ability. It was based on ambition, cunning, and knowing who's asked to kiss. Knowing he was buddies with Baruch. And I didn't know that until I read your book. And I was like, whoa. It illuminated so many things for me. I don't like to. I need to go through that one. Know, Mike's writing style is very easy to you. If you watched me go through the bad war, you could see it. It's very easy. The text is big, so it's not a big strain on your eyes. And there's a lot of pictures in there to affirm what he's saying. Definitely, you can't do wrong. If you just spend the $30 and get all of the books, it's definitely worth the money. Definitely worth the money. Well, let's see here. So we've got World War II, and then we've got 45, the president with the cabal. Let's go ahead and end on that, and then we'll start next week with the post war reconstruction. What was the final point you wanted to talk about? Let's see here. It says, well, we've got 45 to present the cabal. Fake history of World War II. Okay, talking about that. Yeah. Well, what happened is immediately after World War II, they didn't waste any time. They were not going to allow a revision of the war. Propaganda has happened after World War I. Okay, you go back to serious academics and historians and Journalists of that day. Right away they started questioning World War I. It wasn't something that they looked back on with any kind of pride. It was kind of looked at like, what was that all about? That was a mistake. World War II, this was too important. And they murdered too many people, committed too many. They had to kind of COVID that up. So they started right away with reinforcement of the wartime atrocity propaganda, and they amplified it, and it still going strong after 80 something years. Why? Because Hitler put the fair God into them. Right. To be quite frank with you, Mike, I want to address something that's in the. There's a gentleman in the chat who. Very smart guy. He didn't like MacArthur because he said MacArthur wasn't much better. He talked about how that. And I asked him for some clarification, and he said, because after the war, Eisenhower and MacArthur both led armed soldiers against the returning soldiers who were trying to get their promised pay. But I think he's conflating that. I think that's. That was 1932. Yeah, that was in World War I. That was World War one. Okay, he's talking about the bonus army march. Yes, that's what I thought it was. 1932. Depths of depression, the communists organized the bonus army march. Okay? That's not to speak ill. Of all the world War I veterans who participated in it, they don't know, but the communists organized this march. They went to Washington, and it was basically building an insurrection that they wanted to build nationwide. And at one point, this mob grew to, like, 40,000 people, and they're shaking down the government. They're like, we want our bonus. It wasn't due for another 20 years, okay? This is a government, a law and order. You just don't march and ask for your money. But it wasn't about that. It was a communist led insurrection. Hoover brought in MacArthur. Eisenhower was his aide, but he was not involved in the decision making of this MacArthur, knowing what it was. He cracked down. They burned down the sheds. They tore down the tents, said, everybody go home. And that's what he did. He cracked down hard. And in the fake news, they spun that to make MacArthur look bad, but especially to make Hoover look bad. And the crackdown on the bonus army march was the end of Hoover. He lost the election three, four months later, and that was the intention. But let's put those World War I vets aside and not mistake what that bonus army march was. That was a communist movement that MacArthur was right to put down, and I don't think anybody was even killed. But he did play a heavy hand. But not Eisenhower. That was MacArthur. And Patton was also involved with that, too. But research that that was a communist mob. Yeah, we have actually talked about that in the past because post World War II, MacArthur was still over. He was still over kind of in the far east, and he was the one who led all the stuff that was going against the korean war, and he wanted to go fight all the. He wanted to fight the Chinese, go in and take care of the chinese communists. Well, he wanted to win the korean war, which he's not responsible for. That was Truman's doing. FDR's doing at Yalta created that situation, so it should never have come about, but once it did, it was winnable. And one of the other things MacArthur wanted to do is free up Shanghai shek, who had been exiled to Taiwan, arm them, and let the chinese nationalists beat the chinese company. He was stopped from doing that. So he was ultimately fired by Truman. But this bonus army march is way before that. It's 1932. One thing that I'll just kind of tack onto that there was a lot of munitions that were from the european theater that were on a ship heading over towards the east. They were going to Burma, and the State Department ordered them to be thrown overboard because they did not want those munitions to get into the hands of the Chinese, the Shanghai shek faction of the Chinese, to fight the communists. And that came straight from. So that, that's. That's his. This is the Tuesdays with Mike and Ron. What we like to do is we're going through the crash course of the nWO, but we always like to leave with a positive spin because what we just do. And so we like to talk about something that's coming with the Q group and whatnot. And both Mike and I are heavily on board in terms of the queue operation and that we're going to win this. So, Mike, take it away. I'll let you kind of take the lead on this. Well, here's something positive that I just learned about 30 minutes ago, just before I came on your show. Colorado has just kicked Trump off the ballot. Have you heard? I did hear that, yes. Okay. Why is that positive? Trust the plan. This is all being engineered because it's playing right into Trump's hands. They kicked him off the ballot because they say Trump promoted violence and insurrection with his fake claims of voter fraud. Trump, I'm certain, orchestrated himself getting kicked off the ballot because this is just more ammunition. This trial is coming up, and he's baiting them. He's controlling the whole scenario. The more they say insurrection, the big lie. There's no voter fraud. You're a liar. Blah, blah, blah, blah. He's got him right where he's positioning himself to drop the trump card, pun intended. Yes. And I think that's going to be huge. They've got the space force data. I believe the ballots may have been. He's, he, he doubled down again today on true social. He's boasting about what he's about to prove in court. So stay tuned. I think that's what you guys, I just want to, just want to touch on this again. And I want to have Mike here to kind of back me up on this week. The names aren't important, but I kind of got tossed into a little bit of a battle of whatnot, kind of just between the patriots and, you know, one thing you guys got to realize is that nobody out there has a monopoly on the truth. And there are people out there who are saying things and they're saying, well, this guy's dirty. And I think this guy's dirty because he did this and this guy didn't do that. We don't know. We do not have a clue about who knows what when. And you have to allow Trump and whoever is there, they know what they're doing. They know what they're doing. And just because something doesn't go somebody's way doesn't mean that this individual is dirty or that that individual is dirty. And you can't take sides. What we need to be is we need to be unified in this. And even though we don't have an understanding of what's going on, you cannot pick a side because everybody thinks that they have the answer looking at their corner of the world or just their little piece of information and they think that they have the ticket that's going to win it all. But we are dealing with such a huge operation and you have to allow the things to play out the way that the people who are running it that are seeing the full picture, you have to let those things play out the way they want them to play out. And you just have to trust. It's sickening, I know, because you want to have control and you want to think that you know what's right. But we don't know everything. We just don't. But there are people out there who do know more than we do. So you just kind of don't pick sides. Don't pick sides out there and don't allow patriots to talk shit about each other and stir trouble up because that's what literally the deep state wants us to be pissed at each other. That's what they want. They want us to be fighting amongst each other. Yeah. And I'll tell you what. I wouldn't even attempt to name names on something like this because it's so hard to tell. But in a general sense, I will say this. There's no doubt we've been infiltrated because some of the stuff that people say who claim to be patriots, it's so ignorant that maybe they are ignorant, but we also know they told us, Cass Sunstein wrote it years ago. He talked about cognitive infiltration of patriot groups online for the purposes of getting them confused and riled. Know you want to avoid saying, oh, is he a rat? Is he a rat? You go down that road, but just know that they know what they're doing. The white hats know what they're doing. Look at the point that they brought us to. And they did say, there is a cute post that said it was going to be an eight year plan. So people need to be patient. This had to play out the way it did. And I think one of the positive things of this discussion and this whole topic of reviewing the 250 years is you begin to. A lot of people who don't have that grasp of knowledge, that base of knowledge, begin to appreciate just how deeply rooted this cabal is. A quarter of a millennium, they have had to build and grow and take root both in terms of depth and horizontally. Right? Vertical integration, never the kind of thing you're just going to get. Oh, Trump is in there. Let's pull the plug. Game over. This morning I did a really short video on this, and I played the JFK speech, the clip that he did when he suck. Talk about we are opposed around the world by a monolithic conspiracy. He tried to do something about it and he was taken out. And then when he was taken out, then they actually grew in power. So you can't just go through and just arrest people. It's not that easy. It's not that easy. And that's what I think a lot of some of the conflict and the adversarial stuff going on within our movement comes from. I mean, some of it's disinfo agents, but a lot of it is just people not having the patience, which is understandable, but very understandable. You've got to appreciate what this entailed. And it's more than just eight years. I think they started cooking this thing up probably back in the 70s, or I was on with Nino the other day, Rodriguez and I blew his mind. We were talking about how none of the progress we've made could have been possible without the Internet because back in the day was just the big three networks just controlling everything. Okay? The opposing voice was people handing out flyers. And I said, but where did the Internet come from? Military technology. They released it. Could they have released it? Could they have had the foresight in the early 1990s to release the technology for this very purpose? Something to think about. The Internet. For you guys who do not know, the Internet was created by DARPA to survive a nuclear attack so that the military could maintain communications through after a nuclear attack. That's what it was designed. And they never saw us coming once it was opened up to the public. By that time, they were so arrogant, the deep state. They never even thought people would start communicating, sharing information. And by the time they brought down the censorship hammer in 2018 with the YouTube and the Amazon, the Facebook, it was very too late. They can't shut us up. They never saw this coming, this awakening. There is no great awakening without the Internet. There is no Internet without the military. The military is the only way. Absolutely. All right, guys, well, that's going to be it for tonight. And just remain positive. Try not to allow yourself to get too bogged down and sucked into disagreements. And this guy, I know this, and this guy knows this, and don't allow yourself to get dragged into that stuff. It's not productive. We haven't even really seen some of the hard road yet. Wait till the economy starts to go, and then it's going to be brutal. And we need to stay together. We need to stay together. I know it's hard when I say trust a plan, and I know a lot of people want to push back on that, but you got to have faith that if you believe in God, and everybody says God's going to win, and there's a lot of people in here who are christians. You know what? If you have faith that God's in control, then you've got to have faith that he has the right people in the right places to do the right things at the right time. You just have to have confidence in that and faith in that. You just got to trust. Amen. Amen, brother. All right, guys, well, hey, thanks for everything. And we will see you next Tuesday night. How close are we to Christmas? When is Christmas? Christmas is Monday. Is Christmas Monday. Next Tuesday would be the 26th. So will it be the day after Christmas? Are you good for that day? Yeah, I'm good. Well, then we will see you next Tuesday. And if I may, I'd like again remind your listeners, if they want to get a free report, how to respond to an anti conspiracy theorist, go to realnewsandhistory. com. At the very least, get the free report and then check out the books and pdf section where all the books are available, including what we're talking about here tonight. Crash course nwo. Absolutely. And I promise, you cannot go wrong by getting that. You cannot. It is fantastic advice. So thank you, Mike, for your time. Merry, merry Christmas, everybody. If we don't see you then merry Christmas, and we'll see you the day after Christmas next week. So merry Christmas, everybody. All right, bye. .