16-12-2009, 09:02 PM
(This post was last modified: 17-12-2009, 07:48 AM by John Bevilaqua.)
David Guyatt Wrote:Speaking of Warburg's there is the curious little book published in 1933 by an author using the name of Sidney Warburg that went into considerable detail about how leading figures in the US financed Hitler's rise to power. The late Tony Sutton tackled the claims and counter-claims that the book was a forgery in his book "Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler". The Chapter dealing with this can be read here by anyone interested. The whole book is available online here. It's a real corker and well worth taking the time to read.
See Michael Kellogg: The Russian Roots of Nazism.... (2005) verrrrrrry interrrresting. About the White Emigre's and their role in funding Hitler.
It studies the role of Rosenberg, one of Vonsiatsky's confirmed correspondents and trusted fiends and a few others in the use of the Czar's riches to actually directly fund Hitler's rise to power. They also mention the contributions of American businessmen, (Wall Streeters) and others in the USA involved with "White Supremacy", i.e. Eugenics, Racism and National Socialism. You should also read "The Nazi Connection" by Stephan Kuhl subtitled: "Eugenics, Racism and National Socialism." Has a few choice comments about Wickliffe Draper and K. Otto Reche from Intl Assoc of Eugenics and Ethnology another Draper project. and their roles in the whole conundrum. Reche ran the Racial Hygiene programs for Hitler.
My promotion of this book in 1994 and the Grace Lichtenstein article on Draper from 1977 was it, in the NY Times, led to the publication of a new edition, too. It is done by the Oxford University Press and is very well documented and done by a very serious academician, too. A bit perfunctory since it was written in German and translated, but it is MOST REVEALING. Almost every major book on the topic since then quotes extensively from this title. Without this title, Wickliffe Draper would still be a relative unknown.
I feel a am personally responsible for the introduction of Wickliffe Draper to the rest of the world beyond about 2-3 little known researchers at the time.