05-11-2008, 07:08 PM
Treason in America: From Aaron Burr to Averell Harriman is a book students and researchers of the deep political structures will most definitely want to read, if they haven’t already. The excerpt linked to in the initial post from Terry Mauro is from the first part of the first 1984 edition.
Since the United States became a colony again in the early part of the twentieth century, real United States history written by real citizens of the Republic, especially history of this quality, has been hard to come by. Lloyd Miller in his Project journal had this to say in 1985:
[COLOR="Blue"]Treason in America by Anton Chaitkin
Thesis: Everything evil in America, From Aaron Burr to Henry Kissinger, is a product of America’s Oligarchical “First Families.” Chaitkin grabs the Eastern Establishment by the tail and uses the traitor’s own writings and other original source materials to tell you the story—for the first time! …Ever!! (The Project, August-Sept 1985, Vol II Nos. 6 & 7, p. 10)[/COLOR]
Interested readers will also want to consult the eloquent autobiographical sketch that the author contributed when he joined the Education Forum a few years ago.
If one were to think of an inquiry into the deep political structures as a college level course of study, Treason in American would surely be one of the necessary prerequisites, as would two other works from the Lyndon LaRouche organization that Anton Chaitkin pays tribute to in the preface to the latest edition of his book, Graham Lowery’s book How the Nation was Won: America’s Untold Story 1630-1754, and the Nancy Spannaus essay “Uncovering the Treason School of American History” from the 1977 book The Political Economy of the American Revolution.
Here is part of the author’s description of his work from the preface:
[COLOR="Blue"]The Treason in America story was conceived as a kind of family biography of the Anglophile U.S. Eastern Establishment, seen in their conflict with the republican patriots from the American Revolution into the present era, …Using mainly primary sources, so as to go beyond mere gossip, an attempt has been made in this work to reconstruct the pivotal political wars in U.S. history from the 1780s to the mid-20th century… It is believed that this work is the first serious chronicle of the anti-nationalist side of American history yet written.
But, a complete picture requires the other side of the story, a thorough-going account of the republican nationalists. H. Graham Lowery’s 1987 How the Nation Was Won: America’s Untold Story, Volume I, 1630-1754, and several articles since 1988 by the present author, have documented the tradition of Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, John Quincy Adams, Henry Clay, Lincoln, (Henry) Carey and their allies, who created modern times and spread civilization despite the British Empire-centered enemy.[/COLOR]
Since the United States became a colony again in the early part of the twentieth century, real United States history written by real citizens of the Republic, especially history of this quality, has been hard to come by. Lloyd Miller in his Project journal had this to say in 1985:
[COLOR="Blue"]Treason in America by Anton Chaitkin
Thesis: Everything evil in America, From Aaron Burr to Henry Kissinger, is a product of America’s Oligarchical “First Families.” Chaitkin grabs the Eastern Establishment by the tail and uses the traitor’s own writings and other original source materials to tell you the story—for the first time! …Ever!! (The Project, August-Sept 1985, Vol II Nos. 6 & 7, p. 10)[/COLOR]
Interested readers will also want to consult the eloquent autobiographical sketch that the author contributed when he joined the Education Forum a few years ago.
If one were to think of an inquiry into the deep political structures as a college level course of study, Treason in American would surely be one of the necessary prerequisites, as would two other works from the Lyndon LaRouche organization that Anton Chaitkin pays tribute to in the preface to the latest edition of his book, Graham Lowery’s book How the Nation was Won: America’s Untold Story 1630-1754, and the Nancy Spannaus essay “Uncovering the Treason School of American History” from the 1977 book The Political Economy of the American Revolution.
Here is part of the author’s description of his work from the preface:
[COLOR="Blue"]The Treason in America story was conceived as a kind of family biography of the Anglophile U.S. Eastern Establishment, seen in their conflict with the republican patriots from the American Revolution into the present era, …Using mainly primary sources, so as to go beyond mere gossip, an attempt has been made in this work to reconstruct the pivotal political wars in U.S. history from the 1780s to the mid-20th century… It is believed that this work is the first serious chronicle of the anti-nationalist side of American history yet written.
But, a complete picture requires the other side of the story, a thorough-going account of the republican nationalists. H. Graham Lowery’s 1987 How the Nation Was Won: America’s Untold Story, Volume I, 1630-1754, and several articles since 1988 by the present author, have documented the tradition of Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, John Quincy Adams, Henry Clay, Lincoln, (Henry) Carey and their allies, who created modern times and spread civilization despite the British Empire-centered enemy.[/COLOR]