FINAL WARNING: Setting the Stage for World War II
was The Collected Works of Nietzche.
In the fall of 1919, Hitler joined the German Workers’ Party, and soon
became one of its leaders. In the summer of 1920, it was renamed the
National Socialist German Workers’ Party, and then in 1923, it became
known as the Nazi Party.
Because of Hitler’s failed November revolt, he was jailed on April 1,
1924 , sentenced to five years, but was released after eight months, so
he could be built up to national prominence. Though Mein Kampf was
published as a work of Adolf Hitler while he was in prison, it was
discovered later that it was actually written by Nazi politicians Rudolf
Hess and Hermann Wilhelm Goering (and possibly Haushofer), as a
follow-up to the Karl Marx book A World Without Jews. The Illuminati
made sure the book was well circulated, and it became the
springboard for Hitler’s political career.
In 1925, Dr. Carl Duisberg, I. G. Farben’s first Chairman, and founder of
the Bayer Co. in the United States, said: “Be united, united, united.
This should be the uninterrupted call to the parties of the Reichstag.
We hope that our words of today will work, and will find the strong
man who will finally bring everyone under one umbrella ... for he is
always necessary for us Germans, as we have seen in the case of
Bismarck.” The depressive economic situation in Germany at the time,
created by the Versailles Treaty, made it possible for Hitler’s
leadership to take root, and he became Chancellor in January, 1933.
Since 1924, the Dawes Plan flooded Germany with a tremendous
amount of American capital, which enabled Germany to build its war
machine. The three largest loans went into the development of
industries, such as I. G. Farben Co. (the German company which
became the largest corporation in Europe, and the largest chemical
company in the world, after a $30 million loan from the Rockefeller’s
National City Bank after World War I, and who created a process of
making high grade fuel from low quality coals) and Vereinigte
Stahlwerke (who produced about 95% of Germany’s explosives). In
1939, Standard Oil of New Jersey sold I. G. Farben $20,000 worth of
high quality aviation fuel. I. G. Farben’s assets in the United States
were controlled by a holding company called American I. G. Farben
Chemical Corp. On the Board of Directors of this corporation was