20-12-2018, 05:03 PM
James Lateer Wrote:Two of the more important facts not mentioned above (as set forth in The Three Barons):
1. The General Analine and Film legal case was on JFK's and RFK's desks on 11-22-63. In the following week, LJB talked by phone to Don Cook. This was probably the same Don Cook who led the committee to privatize GAF. By mid-December, 1963, LBJ approved the sale of GAF (formerly owned by I G Farben) to private ownership.
2. Blogger Thomas H. Purvis posted information to the effect that Clay Shaw files were discovered in the I G Farben case boxes.
3. General Julius Klein, the bagman for the JFK assassination bribery money was attacked in a Florida op-ed piece, in a 1963 letter by Florida Senator George Smathers (a "friend" of JFK). Smathers alleged that Klein (the West German "shadow ambassador" and p.r.man) was representing I G Farben.
4. JFK's brother-in-law Prince Stanislas Radziwill was employed by Hermann Schmitz of I G Farben to "represent" the I G Farben interests in the General Analine and Film case in 1963 which LBJ quickly decided and ended.
Maybe somebody on this site can answer my biggest unknown information for which I would greatly appreciate and answer:
"When the last of the WWII Nazi's died, to whom did the money and organization that they had going (at least until the 1980's0 pass on to?"
That, to me, is the multimillion dollar question.
James Lateer
Your question is answered by Paul manning in his book: Martin Bormann: Nazi in Exile.
In Latin America Bormann founded an investment entity of second generation (younger) businessmen Nazis - a board of directors if you will - to carry the ambitions of the Fourth Reich plans forward using all these funds.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14