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The year 1913
brought bad publicity for Rockefeller Junior because of his role in what is now known as the Ludlow Massacre.
The Ludlow Massacre occurred at a coal mine in Colorado where many striking miners had already been killed in this
long strike. It got national attention when 20 women and children were killed in a strike
related explosion. It was believed that the victims had been killed by strikebreakers, allegedly hired
by Junior to end the long running strike. Since Junior owned the mines and sat on the board of directors and knew what was
happening, he got blamed. In addition to the strike breakers being involved in this tragic event, it seems
that the National Guard had also been called out to protect the financial interest of the owners of the mines. The women and
children had been blown up, with many of the victims dying from burns. This tragedy caused the public to be very angry and
people demanded an investigation. According to reports I have read of this tragedy, this experience supposedly
had a great impact on Junior. He said he was a changed man and he promised to do nothing but good work from then on out, after
having gone through such a terrible experience. He was allegedly a changed man, showing apparent contriteness.
But as time would prove years later down the road, Junior might talk the good talk, but he sure did not walk the good walk.
Junior would demonstrate in later years that resorting to the use of violence was his favorite tactic to get his way.
By 1914 the Rockefellers
pretty much controlled the political process in the United States. They pushed for control of narcotics and got the Harrison
Narcotic Act passed, which was the first of many laws concerning the control of opium and narcotics. The Rockefellers, with
the help of their so called medical experts doing their bidding, waged a scare campaign against the use of opium/narcotics.
They portrayed people who used narcotics as sinners and bad people who should be punished. The Rockefellers also brought the
prohibitionist minded and intolerant missionaries into his propaganda campaign against narcotics. These were the same missionaries
that later sat on his international narcotic commission and would later become part of the League of Nations. The laws that
were passed by Rockefeller allies greatly helped the Rockefellers secure their medical monopoly and put the control of narcotics
squarely in their hands. They created federal agencies like the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which was just one among
the many government agencies they controlled. They financed politicians to run for office and had a lot of money to spread
around. Although the Rockefellers are more associated with the Republican Party, they also funded other political parties
and candidates too. Many Democrats were Rockefeller allies also. There is much information about this subject on the Internet.
Using a search engine, look for (pharmaceutical companies, Rockefeller) or (drug companies, Rockefeller). You will be amazed
at all the information. The fact that prior to 1914 before the passage of the Harrison Narcotic Act, people could purchase
narcotics (opiates) without a doctor's prescription which gave the population the freedom to treat their own aches and pains.
Once this law was passed, people would be forced to seek a doctor (the Pharma distribution system) before finding pain relief. Patients
often found that doctors were reluctant to give narcotics, but freely prescribed Pharma drugs instead. People had to pay the
doctor for his time, and many could not afford to pay, and thus suffered in silence. The creation of the League
of Nations in 1919 was the result of the Rockefeller efforts with the help of some of their wealthy allies. I do not want
to focus too much on detail about its creation, because an entire book could be written about just this subject alone. However,
it is important to know some information about the League of Nations, because it is so crucial in understanding the planning
and implementation of the global war on drugs. The war on drugs, which has brought so much misery and bloodshed throughout
the world, is waged to protect the profits of the chemically based pharmaceutical companies which are owned by the Rockefellers.
Furthermore, the war on drugs helps the Rockefellers maintain their monopolistic control on the United States medical system
as well as the medical systems of other countries throughout the world. Around 1915 a group
of wealthy New York state tycoons, led by the Rockefellers, got together to create a worldwide organization designed to protect
the Rockefeller financial global empire. This organization would become the League of Nations. Woodrow Wilson, who happened
to be the President during this time, was to be the Rockefeller pitch man for their scheme. Wilson presented to the public
his famous Fourteen Points speech, which basically explained to the public what a good idea this concept of a League of Nations
was. The Fourteen Points Speech was to be an introduction to the public about the concept of the League of Nations. Nowhere
in the Wilson Fourteen Points is there ever any mention of drug prohibition. I know this because I looked
specifically for any reference to drugs and could not find any. Not a word about drugs. Yet as soon as the League of
Nations was formed a narcotics commission was immediately created concerning this very matter of drug prohibition. Remember
the missionaries mentioned previously who sat on the International Narcotic Commission meetings back in 1909 and 1912 in Shanghai,
China. This was the so called missionary group chosen by Rockefeller and these meetings were sponsored by the U.S. State Department.
This is the same group of missionaries that now would sit on the narcotic commission of the newly formed League of Nations.
So
the questions to be asked about President Woodrow Wilson are these: When he presented his Fourteen Points speech to the
public, was he trying to deliberately mislead the public by lying by omission, or did he honestly not know what the Rockefellers
were really doing and he was not aware of the deception. In either case, the public was deceived about the real agenda of
the League of Nations. During the few years following the decision to start the League of Nations,
much political maneuvering went on and there was much controversy on the matter. Some people believed that if the United States
joined the League of Nations, that the United States would lose its autonomy. If you research this subject, you will discover
that the terms agreed to by those countries that did join the League of Nations show that they did have to give up a lot of
their own sovereign rights to the organization. Remember the old fake South Improvement Company that Rockefeller Senior often
used in the early days of building the Standard Oil monopoly. Rockefeller used this fake company in order to hide his identity
and true intentions in order to ensnare and bilk his fellow competitors out of their businesses. Senior had used this fake
company to get people to sign away their business rights to him. A country signing on to the League of Nations pretty much
agreed to sign away much of their autonomy, just like the competitors used to do when they would sign away their rights to
the South Improvement Company without realizing what they were doing.
The League of Nations officially came into existence
with the signing of the Versailles Peace Treaty in 1919, but the date of 1920 is the year given when the League of Nations
began its operations from Geneva, Switzerland. The Treaty of Versailles officially ended World War I. The Rockefeller original
plan was that once the Peace Treaty was signed, which authorized the creation of the League of Nations to begin with, the
United States would automatically become a member of the League of Nations, subject to its rules. However the original provision
that automatically made the United States a member of the League of Nations upon signing of the treaty was changed. The reason
the provision got changed was when Andrew Mellon (1855 to 1937), a Pittsburgh banker, industrialist, and an honorable man
along with some of his wealthy friends insisted that the Senate first approve or ratify the entry of the United States into
the League of Nations before it would be allowed to happen. This requirement for Senate approval foiled the original Rockefeller
plans for the United States automatic entry into the League. To make matters worse for the Rockefellers, the Senate refused
to approve the U.S. entry into the League, and it would be years before the U.S. would be officially admitted to the organization.
I do not know if the Rockefellers actually knew that it was Andrew Mellon and his friends who prevented the automatic entry
of the U S into the League, but I believe the Rockefellers must have known, but just could not stop Mellon and his friends
from throwing up this particular obstacle. It should be noted that Mellon, who owned the Gulf Oil Company was a rival of the
Rockefellers, both in business and politics, despite the fact they were both Republicans. Andrew Mellon would later also serve
his country as The Secretary of the Treasury. During the Andrew Mellon years in government, and even after he retired from
government service, the Rockefeller allies persecuted Mellon. This information about Andrew Mellon can be found in an Andrew
Mellon biography written by David Cannadine.
Though the United States at that time (1920), did not officially
join the League of Nations, that did not stop the Rockefellers. Unofficially the Rockefellers acted as if the U.S. entry
into the League was already a done deal. The U.S. government acted the same way and cooperated fully with the new Rockefeller
organization. The reason the Rockefellers and the government acted this way is because the Rockefellers by now controlled
most of the U.S. government. During
the time from 1917 through about 1919 when all this drama and publicity was going on with the League of Nations, another issue
was looming on the horizon. This is when alcohol prohibition started to rear its ugly head. The Rockefellers were the biggest
instigators of alcohol prohibition of anyone. They spread huge sums of money to various temperance groups and churches to
stir the waters of prohibition fever. Without the Rockefellers pushing for prohibition of alcohol, there would have never
been prohibition in the first place. Neither Senior nor Junior drank alcohol. So why
did the Rockefellers do it? That is the big question, why did they do it and why did they choose that particular time
in history to do it? Senior must have taught Junior by now that you do not embark on a campaign like
this without a good business reason to do it. By making Alcohol prohibition a moral issue the Rockefellers could hide their
true intentions.
Prohibition
of alcohol (1920 to 1933), known as the Volstead Act, really did not ban all alcohol, just alcohol made from using a
distillation process. According to my research on this subject, during prohibition people were actually
allowed to make up to 200 gallons of homemade wine (which is fermented, not distilled) per person per year. That is a lot
of wine, and wine can get you just as drunk as distilled liquor can. So why was only distilled liquor, including beer, which
is also distilled, banned? According to the law back then, a person could make up to 200 gallons of wine every year, yet were
not allowed to have a back yard still to make even a drop of alcohol. It seems very contradictory
and I have a theory about alcohol prohibition. My theory is that implementing the
Volstead Act was the only way that The Rockefellers could prevent Henry Ford from starting his ethanol/hemp fuel industries,
which Henry was determined to do. Rockefeller Senior had always disliked any kind of competition from anyone at anytime. Senior
had a great aversion to any kind of competition and always believed that anyone competing with his businesses had to be defeated.
He hated anyone making money on his petroleum products and believed all profits should go to him and took over many
other businesses because of this attitude. For example if a chemical company, which depends on petroleum products, was making
a product such as drugs, Senior would be driven to take over their business and make the product himself. Senior was obsessed
with creating vast monopolies and was a man driven to own everything he could get his hands on. Old Rockefeller Senior just
could not stand any other businesses that would take away from his vast oil profits, which ethanol would have done. That is
why I have concluded that Rockefeller Senior was the one who pushed for alcohol prohibition. Junior helped
his father to implement prohibition, but I think the plan for alcohol prohibition was an old Rockefeller Senior idea from
the very beginning. In my opinion, Junior was not smart enough to figure this scheme out on his own, but his father,
old Senior, was certainly capable of getting this accomplished. Henry Ford built his early automobiles
to run on hemp/marijuana fuel. Hemp was the plant of choice for Henry because the Hemp plant makes
far more fuel than any plant known at that time. Henry made Hemp fuel (ethanol) from his own distillery
located on his property and sold it to local customers living near his auto plant. Henry also taught people
how to make hemp fuel to run their cars, using a simple backyard still or even a car radiator to make the fuel. Henry was
especially happy to teach farmers how to make fuel to run their tractors and other farm equipment. Hemp
fuel, like other plant fuels burns clean and has no harmful additives. Modern race car drivers use ethanol in their high
performance cars because ethanol is a high performance fuel. Ethanol can be mixed with regular gasoline
to improve the octane rating of the gasoline which also helps stops engine pinging. In the early days when Ford cars were
starting to roll off the assembly line, there were no gas stations around. Henry had to be able to tell
people about hemp fuel so they could run their cars. Eventually, when enough cars were being driven on
the road, the gas stations started to appear and these early gas stations began to make a lot of money selling gasoline for
all the additional cars. Henry wanted to start an industrial business making hemp fuel for cars.
He wanted to build distilleries all around the country and turn hemp into fuel. Every time Henry
would try to get his business off the ground, the government would stop him with some excuse or another. During alcohol prohibition,
Henry asked the government if he could re open some of the closed beer breweries to make hemp fuel, and each time the
government turned him down. Eventually Henry Ford grew old
and his idea for a hemp fuel industry faded from the scene. Once that happened there was no longer a need
for alcohol prohibition, because the Ford ethanol industry was no longer a threat to the Rockefeller gasoline sales,
so prohibition finally ended.
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