International Strife Part IV
by Greg Farber | December 26, 2009
Steps Toward British Union, a World State, and
International Strife—Part IV
REMARKS
of
HON. J. THORKELSON
OF MONTANA
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Monday, August 19, 1940
Mr. THORKELSON. Mr. Speaker, under leave to extend
my own remarks in the RECORD, I include a short article
entitled, “Undermining America.”
UNDERMINING AMERICA
The beginning of the undermining of America was brought by
Cecil Rhodes, who, in 1877. left money to establish scholarships at
Oxford for the purpose of training diplomats to foster the reunion
of Britain and America. In the first draft of his will, which is
quoted in the book Cecil Rhodes, by Basil Williams, or the book
Cecil Rhodes, by Sarah Gertrude Millen, he stated:
“Directed that a secret society should be endowed with the following
objects: ‘The extension of British rule throughout the
world; the colonization by British subjects of all lands where the
means of livelihood are attainable by energy, labor, and enterprise;
and especially the occupation by British settlers of the entire
continent of Africa, the Holy Land, the Valley of the Euphrates,
the Islands of Cyprus and Candia, the whole of South America, the
islands of the Pacific not heretofore possessed by Great Britain,
the whole of the Malay Archipelago, the seaboard of China and
Japan, the ultimate recovery of the United States of America as
an integral part of the British Empire,’ ” “The foundation of so
great a power as to hereafter render wars impossible, and promote
the best interests of humanity.”
A new will was made:
“He substituted English-speaking peoples for actual Britons; he
came to realize his limitations and reduced his scheme to a mere
beginning of it, the scholarships; but yet the thought behind each
successive will remained the same—the world for England, England
for the world.” See page 145, Cecil Rhodes, by Sarah Gertrude
Millen
Other quotations:
Page 377: “But the essence of the will, as the world knows, is the
Scholarship Foundation. In the end all that Rhodes can do toward
extending British rule throughout the world and restoring Anglo-
Saxon unity and founding a guardian power for the whole of
humanity is to arrange for a number of young men from the United
States, the British colonies, and Germany to go to Oxford. • • •
There are, accordingly, rather more Rhodes scholars from America
than from all the British Dominions put together.”
Page 378: “If the Union of South Africa could be made under the
shadow of Table Mountain, why not an Anglo-Saxon Union under
the spires of Oxford?”
In 1893 Andrew Carnegie wrote his book, Triumphant Democracy,
the last chapter of which is “The Reunion of Britain and America.”
(The 1931 edition of this book is devoid of this last chapter.) The
following is a quotation from the original book:
“Regarding those I should like Britons to consider what the proposed
reunion means. Not the most sanguine advocate of “Imperial
federation” dares to intimate that the federation that he dreams of
would free the markets of all its members to each other. This question
cannot even be discussed when imperial conferences meet; if it
be introduced, it is judiciously shelved. But an Anglo-American reunion
brings free entry here of all British productions as a matter
of course. The richest market in the world is opened to Britain
free of all duty by a stroke of the pen. No tax revenue, although
under free trade such taxes might still exist. What would not
trade with the Republic, duty free, mean to the linen, woolen, iron,
and steel industries of Scotland, to the tin-plate manufacturers of
England. It would mean prosperity to every industry in the United
Kingdom, and thus in turn would mean renewed prosperity to the
agricultural Interests, now so sorely depressed.”
Another quotation:
“In the event of reunion, the American manufacturers would
supply the interior of the country, but the great population skirting
the Atlantic seaboard and the Pacific coast would receive their
manufactured a r t i c l e s chiefly from Great Britain.”
And still another quotation:
“Time may dispel many pleasing illusions and destroy many noble
dreams, but it shall never shake my belief that the wound caused
by the wholly unlooked-for and undesired separation of the mother
from her child is not to bleed forever. Let men say what they will,
therefore, I say, t h a t as surely as the sun in the heavens once shone
upon Britain and America united, so surely is it one morning to rise,
shine upon, and greet again the reunited state, the British-American
Union.”
1914: Andrew Carnegie took over the controlling group of the
Federal Council of Churches by subsidizing what is known as the
Church Peace Union with (2,000,000, and the Church Peace Union
or the board of trustees has always exercised a dominating influence
263553-19504
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD 11
in the Federal Council. This endowment has provided sufficient
annual income to run the budget of the Federal Council and its
cooperating organizations Among the associated groups are the
World’s Alliance of International Friendship Through the Churches,
Commission on International Friendship and Good Will, National
Council for Prevention of War. and American Civil Liberties Union.
(Bee Pastors, Pacifists, and Politicians, pp. 5 and 6, published by the
Constructive Educational Publishing Co . Chicago.)
1917-18: Witnessed the promise of England to give Palestine to
the Zionist Jews, if they would throw America into the war on her
side. This was reported in the New York Times March 8, 1930. Sunday
editorial. It was this that caused Otto Kahn to come to
America and become an American citizen. (See New York Sun,
June 19, 1936—Pledged Jews National Home—p. 19.)
1917: At the annual meeting of the trustees for the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace, held at the Headquarters Building,
No. 2. Jackson Place, Washington, D. C, on April 20, 1917, the
following resolutions were adopted by the board:
“PEACE THROUGH TRIUMPH OF DEMOCRACY
“Resolved, That the trustees of the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace, assembled for their annual meeting, declare
hereby their belief that the most effectual means of promoting
durable International peace is to prosecute the war against the
Imperial Government of Germany to final victory for democracy,
in accordance with the policy declared by the President of the
United States.
“SERVICES TENDERED TO THE GOVERNMENT
“Resolved, That the endowment offers to the Government the
services of its division of international law. its personnel and equipment,
for dealing with the pressure of International business incident
to the war.” (See pp. 181-183 of the C. E. for I. P. Year
Book, 1917.)
In connection with the adoption of this resolution, the following
quotation from a letter written to Hon. Robert Lansing, Secretary
of State, dated April 21, 1917, by the secretary of the board, Dr.
James Brown Scott:
“Of course, a general offer to the Government should be Interpreted
as an offer to the particular department of the Government
to which the division of international law may be of more appropriate
service, and, since the nature of the work of the division is
in line with, and many of its officers and employees are former
officers and employees of the Department of State, I feel that the
services and equipment of the division should be offered to that
Department, which offer I hereby convey as the representative of
the endowment in carrying out the above resolution of the board of
trustees.”
In June 1918: Woodrow Wilson sent two men to England: Mr.
Charles Moore, of Detroit. Mich., and Prof. Andrew McLaughlin, of
Chicago University, and an agreement was made to leave the carrying
trade of the Atlantic to Great Britain, which was embodied in
our version of the peace treaty, as written by Col. Edward M.
House, at Beverly Farms, Mass.
1918: Witnessed the American Historical Association, Carnegie
endowed, meeting in London, and the agreement was made to
rewrite American history to please England. (See American Historical
Year Book, 1918.)
1919: When Lord Northcliffe had completed his propaganda organization
in this country during the recent World War, and was
returning home it was announced that he was leaving behind him
$ 150.000,000 (our own money, of course) and 10,000 trained agents
to carry on the work. His own London Times in the issue of July
4, 1919. rendered account of the “efficient propaganda” which he
had inaugurated here and was being carried out by those trained
in the arts of creating public good will and of swaying public
opinion toward a definite purpose. (See Report on Investigation
of American History, City of New York. May 25, 1923.)
Among the methods, stated by the London Times, to be then in
operation or in prospect in this country were:
“Efficiently organized propaganda to mobilize the press, the
church, the stage, and the cinema, to press into active service the
whole educational system, the universities, public and high schools
and primary schools. Histories and textbooks on literature should
be revised. New books should be added, particularly in the primary
school. Hundreds of exchange university scholarships should
be provided. Local societies should be formed In every center to
foster British-American good will, in close cooperation with an
administrative committee.” (See Report on Investigation of American
History, City of New York, May 25. 1923.)
This same Fourth of July issue of the London Times contained
a signed article by Owen Wister, American born, in which we
said: “A movement to correct the schoolbooks of the United States
has been started and it will go on.” (See p. 62 of Report on
Investigation of American History, city of New York, May 25. 1923.)
1919: Witnessed the rewriting of American history to please England.
Protests were made by the Sons of the American Revolution
and other patriotic societies. (See Report on Pro-British Histories,
held at City Hall. May 25. 1923.)
1919: Mr. Edward Filene, of Boston, an internationalist, set up
the Twentieth Century Fund. Inc., and by interlocking directorates
has control over 124 trust funds, together totaling nearly a billion
dollars. Included in this control are the Carnegie, Rockefeller, the
Duke and Russell Sage Foundations from which funds go subsidies
to subversive communistic, socialistic, and all peace movements, as
well as the cooperative movements. Among activities of Twentieth
263553—19504
Century Fund, Inc., are the following: N. R. A., S. E. C, Wagner
Labor Act. International Labor Office (affiliated with League of
Nations), Foreign Policy Association, credit unions, cooperatives,
League of Women Voters. (See Red Network, published by Elizabeth
Dilling. 53 West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, Ill., for communistic
activities of these groups. Also see Year Books and American
Foundations and Their Fields, published by Twentieth Century
Fund, Inc., 330 West Forty-second Street, New York.)
1920: From the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,
Year Book, 1920—Division of International Law—report of the
director, James Brown Scott, page 111.
THE FUTURE OF INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION
“The director believes that the road to progress runs from the
Hague Conferences to a distant and ever receding horizon. He
believes that nations are only willing to try on an international
scale those things which have been tried within national lines and
which have been successful. He believes in an infinite series of
little steps, not in any one leap, however attractive the prospect
may be.”
“During the Conference of Paris, the director dally passed
through the Place de la Concorde in going to and from the Hotel
de Crillon to the Quai d’Orsay. He has often stood before the
obelisk marking the site where the head of Louis XVI fell, and with
it the old regime. The men of that day dreamed of a newer and
better future. All that has been was wrong and the wrong must
be righted. They abolished the old calendar based upon the
birth of the Man of Nazareth, and brushing it aside, they began
their new era with the year 1. But it all ended with the final
entry of Louis XVIII, the brother of Louis XVI, into the Tuileries
in the year of Our Lord 1815.
“The statesmen of the future, if not of the present day, are
bound to recur to the past, and in International organization, the
past is, in the opinion of the director, the Hague Peace
Conferences.”
RECOMMENDATIONS ON INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION
(Quotations from p. 110, Year Book 1920)
“It Is not necessary for a workable program of International
organization that the world should be federated; it is, however,
essential that the nations of the civilized world should cooperate.”
1921-25: Witnessed the battle for the suppression of the Star-
Spangled Banner and the desire to replace it with America the
Beautiful. Nine years were consumed in getting the bill out of
the pigeonhole of the Judiciary, legalizing the national anthem
against such attacks. In spite of this, the official national anthem
is rarely heard.
Mrs. Augusta Stetson put paid advertisements in newspapers
around the country, including the New York Times (August 5,
1925), and admitted under oath when subpenaed to city hall,
March 5, 1924, for an investigation that she had spent $169,000
in one fund and $17,000 in another to destroy and delete the
Star-Spangled Banner because it was not pleasing to England.
Franklin Ford, her secretary, in 1931, admitted at his office that
he was financed by the English-Speaking Union and the British
Commonwealth Club. Inc. (Refer to hearing before Deputy Commissioner
Lowden, March 5, 1924, New York City.)
1925: A March issue of Saturday Evening Post carries an article
by Owen D. Young, the originator of the Young plan bonds for
the reparation of Germany, in which he stated that American
labor would have to be reduced to the status of European labor.
1929: Witnessed the visit of Ramsay MacDonald with Hoover on
the Rapidan. (See World-Telegram, October 10, 1929.) “The result
of those representations, both Washington and London will hold
to be of vital significance to the future of organized society.”
See also New York Times, October 10, 1929, Ramsay MacDonald
said: “I have achieved more than I hoped.”
1929: Witnessed the stock-market crash. See National Message,
official organ British-Israel World Federation, New York Public
Library, October 12, 1935, page 679:
“It was told to me by a heavyweight American financier before
the crash came that the crash was coming, that it would be permitted
to run to the danger point, and that when the danger
point was passed it would be reversed by measures carefully prepared
in advance to meet the situation. I carefully noted what
he said and left it for events to prove the value of his statement.”
1934: John L. Lewis, organizer of the Committee for industrial
Organization, attended the June conference of the International
Labor Organization. (See New York Times, October 11, 1934.)
1935: See CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, August 26, page 15051, Mr. Huey
Long: “A newspaperman whom I know to be reliable telephoned
me tonight and said: ‘I have found out for you that the Secretary
of the Treasury, Mr. Morgenthau, has given out a statement in confidence
* * * that this 9-cent plan was devised by Mr. Oscar
Johnson, of Mississippi.’ I said, ‘If it is the Oscar Johnson, of
Mississippi, that I know about, he was the manager of a chain of
British plantations.’ The newspaperman said, ‘That Is the same
man.’ I knew this idea could not have been given birth in the
brain of an American cotton owner nor an American cotton planter,
nor any American who understood the situation. I knew that the
idea had foreign parentage; and, lo and behold, the gentleman who
was formerly a manager of a number of British plantations, and
has lately returned from London, has given birth to this plan, and
his brain child has become the adopted child of the A. A. A. of the
12 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD
good old United States. * * * And he thought the cotton
farmer was doing well if he made $100 a year.”
1935: September 25, New York Sun, Food From Overseas:
“Twenty-two million pounds of butter came into this country from
foreign countries. In the first 8 months of 1934 imported oats, for
example, totaled scarcely 200,000 bushels, but this year in the same
period imports exceeded 10,000,000 bushels. Imports of corn in
the same period of this year exceeded 31,800,000 bushels compared
with 371,700 in 1934. American wheat exports dropped from 16.-
600,000 bushels in the first 8 months of 1934 to 142,000 in 1935.”
(While crops to this country were being burned and ploughed
under.)
1935: Witnessed a secret national peace conference financed by a.
grant from the Carnegie Endowment for Peace, see New York
American. December 19, 1935: “Meeting behind closed doors at the
Westchester Country Club at Harrison, N. Y., the conference, composed
of 29 organizations, adopted the following six-point program:
1. A Nation-wide radio campaign to commit the United States
to a policy of internationalism.
2. Crippling of the Army and Navy billion-dollar appropriation
bill by attaching a billion-dollar housing project clause as a rider.
3. Abolition of the Army and Navy sedition bill, which would
punish anyone attempting to incite enlisted men to insubordination
or mutiny.
4. Abolition of the R. O. T. C. in colleges.
5. A vigorous campaign against those who oppose this country’s
entrance into the League of Nations and to prevent the United
States from obstructing the League in applying sanctions.
6. Adoption of the drastic neutrality bill.
Andrew Carnegie left hundreds of millions of dollars to carry
out his plan.
1935-36: American Association for Adult Education, 60 East
Forty-second Street, New York City, Carnegie endowed, lists the
following activities that are financed by the Carnegie Corporation,
and the Rockefeller General Education Board: Forum Experimentation
(public forums), Federal Emergency Program (cooperates with
U. S. Office of Education), C. C. C. camps, community organization,
workers’ education, International relations, commonwealth
college. (See p. 5701, CONGRESSIONAL RECORD, April 14, 1936, also
see Annual Report of the Directors, above address).
1936: Witnesses Nicholas Murray Butler sailing on the Queen
Mary June 5, for the most important Carnegie Endowment for Peace
Conference in London, England, that has ever been held. It is at
this meeting that the question of gold being used on an International
basis is to be discussed.
1936—Herald Tribune, June 19, 1936, page 22: “Supply Held
Adequate for World Gold Basis.” There even may be too much,
Brookings Institution says. Brookings Institution (Carnegieendowed)
study of the adequacy of the gold supply, written by
Dr. Charles O’Hardy, held that no existing or prospective deficiency
in the world gold supply stood in the way of restoration
of an international gold standard, whenever such a step was
considered advantageous. * * * Two officials of the Federal
Reserve System: Dr. E. A. Goldenweiser, chief economist, and
Adolph C. Miller, former governor and special member, recently
made speeches heralding return to the gold standard in modified
form. Henry Mongenthau, Jr., Secretary of the Treasury, has said
that the United States will cooperate in such a movement as
soon as the rest of the world is ready.
NOTE: What guaranty have the people of the United States
that the currency which they would hold would be redeemable
in gold?
1936: Witnesses the United States Government largely influenced
or controlled by organized financial interests cooperating
with or under the control of the 20th Century Fund, Inc., or
American Foundations and their Fields. Some of these with their
officers and trustees are listed herein:
OFFICERS AND TRUSTEES
Carnegie Corporation, New York, Andrew Carnegie, donor; Elihu
Root, Robertson D. Ward, Fred P. Keppel, Robert M. Lester, John
M. Russel, Samuel S. Hall, Jr., Barent Lefferts, Ernest A. Farintosh.
Thomas S. Arbuthnot, Newton D. Baker, Nicholas Murray
Butler, Samuel Harden Church, Lotus D. Coffman, Henry James,
Walter A. Jessup, Nicholas Kelley, Russell Leffingwell, John C.
Merriam, Margaret Carnegie Miller, Fred Osborn, Arthur W. Page,
Carnegie Corporation, Washington, D. C: John C. Merriam,
Elihu Root, Henry S. Pritchett, Fred A. Delano, Thomas Barbour,
W W. Campbell. Homer L. Ferguson, W. Cameron Forbes, Walter
S. Gifford, Fred H. Gillett, Herbert Hoover, Frank B. Jewett, Alfred
L. Loomis, Andrew W. Mellon, Roswell Miller, Andrew J. Montague,
Stewart Paton, John J. Pershing, William Benson Storey,
Richard P. Strong, James W. Wadsworth, Fred C. Walcott, George
W. Wickerson.
Church Peace Union: Donor: Andrew Carnegie, William P. Merrill,
George A. Plimpton, Henry A. Atkinson, Linley V. Gordon, G. S.
Barker, Rev. Arthur Judson Brown, Bishop James Cannon. Jr., Rev.
Francis J. Haas, Rev. Frank Oliver Hall, Prof. Hamilton Holt, Hon.
Morton D. Hull. Prof. William I. Hull, Rev. Charles E. Jefferson, Dr.
James R. Joy, Rev. Miles H. Krumbine, Dr. Henry Goddard Leach.
Bishop Francis J. McConnell. Rev. Charles S. MacFarland, Rabbi
Louis L. Mann, Dean Shaller Mathews. Rev. William Pierson Merrill,
Hon. Henry Morgenthau, Dr. John R. Mott. Rev. Roger T, Noon. Rev.
Howard C. Robbins Monsignor John A. Ryan, Rt. Rev. Henry K.
Sherrill, Dr. Robert E Speer. Charles P. Taft II, Rev. Charles D.
Trexler. Dr. James J. Walsh.
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Washington, D. C:
Nicholas Murray Butler, Andrew J. Montague, James Brown Scott,
263553—19504
George A. Finch, Frederic A. Delano (uncle of F. D. R.), Charles 8.
Hamlin, Wallace McK. Alexander, David P. Barrows, William Marshall
Bullitt, Daniel K. Catlin, John W. Davis, Norman H. Davis,
Autsen G. Fox, Robert A. Franks, Francis Pendleton Gaines, Charles
Hamlin, Howard Heinz, Alanson B. Houghton, Frank O. Lowden,
Peter Molyneaux. Roland S. Morris, Henry S. Pritchett, Elihu Root,
Edward L. Ryerson, James R. Sheffield, Maurice S. Sherman, James T.
Shotwell, Silas H. Strawn, Robert A. Taft. Thomas J. Watson.
Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, New
York City: Walter A. Jessup, Henry S. Pritchett. Robert A. Franks,
Howard J. Savage, William S. Learned, Alfred Z. Reed, Samuel S.
Hall, Jr., Raymond L. Mattocks, Walter C. Murray, Thomas William,
Lamont, Fred. Carlos Ferry, Frank Aydelotte, William Lowe
Bryan, Nicholas M. Butler, Lotus Dolta Coffman, James Bryant
Conant, George Hutcheson Denny, Albert Bledsoe Dinwiddle, Edward
Charles Elliott, Livingston Farrand. Frank Porter Graham. Albert
Ross Hill, James Hampton Kirkland, Ernest Hiram Lindley, William
Allan Neilson, George Norlin, Josiah Harmar Penniman, Rush
Rhees, Kenneth Charles Morton Sills, Frank Arthur Vanderlip,
Henry Merritt Wriston.
General Education Board, New York City: Donor: John D.
Rockefeller, Raymond B. Fosdick, Trevor Arnett, David H. .Stevens,
Wm. W. Brierly, Lefferts M. Dashiell, Edward Robinson, George A.
Beal, Arthur G. Askey, James R. Angell, Trevor Arnett. Harry W.
Chase, Jerome D. Greene, Ernest M. Hopkins, Max Mason, Edwin
Mims, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., John D. Rockefeller, 3d, Walter
W. Stewart, Harold H. Swift, Ray Lyman Wilbur, Arthur Woods,
Owen D- Young.
Twentieth Century Fund, New York City: Donor: Edward A.
Filene, Evans Clark, Edward A. Filene, Oswald W. Knauth, Newton
D. Baker, A. A. Berle, Jr., Bruce Bliven, Henry Dennison, John
H. Fahey, Morris E. Leeds, James G. McDonald, Roscoe Pound.
Religious Education Foundation, New York City: O. H. Cheney,
Hugh S. Magill, Russell Colgate, Paul D. Eddy. Newton D. Baker,
S. B. Chapin, Robert Garrett, James C. Penney, Charles H. Tuttle,
Thomas J. Watson.
Spelman Fund of New York: Donor: Laura S. Rockefeller, Arthur
Woods, Guy Moffett, L. M. Dashiell, Edward Robinson, Kenneth
Chorley, Cleveland Dodge, Raymond B. Fosdick, Thomas W. Lamont,
John D. Rockefeller 3d, Beardsley Ruml.
Textile Foundation. Washington, D. C: Franklin W. Hobbs,
Stuart W. Cramer, Frank D. Cheney, Daniel C. Roper, Henry A.
Wallace.
(The above-mentioned organizations and the men connected
with them are from American Foundations and Their Fields, published
by the Twentieth Century Fund, Inc., 330 West 42d Street,
New York City.)
The Carnegie Fund Joined with the (Rockefeller Fund) General
Education Board because they found themselves doing the same
work. Above quotation from the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace Year Book, 1934.
The Carnegie, Rockefeller, and Twentieth Century Funds have
through subsidies control over our press, churches, schools, the
stage, cinema, colleges, and our Government, and America has not
had a President entirely free from this control, particularly since
the war.
1776: Hark ye to the warnings of the men of the “horse and
buggy days”!
In his Farewell Address, George Washington bequeathed to the
American people, as he said the “counsels of an old and affectionate
friend.” And he did so in the hope that his advice and
admonition would, in the years to come, serve the following useful
purpose:
1. “Moderate the fury of party spirit.”
2. “Warn against the mischiefs of foreign Intrigue.” (This includes
Britain.)
3. “Guard against the impostures of pretended patriotism.”
George Washington also said:
“I never have heard, and I hope I never shall hear any serious
mention of a paper emission in this State; yet such a thing may be
in agitation. Ignorance and design are productive of much mischief.
The former (ignorance) is the tool of the latter (design),
and is often set at work suddenly and unexpectedly.”
Daniel Webster warned you, in 1832, while in Congress:
“Of all the contrivances for cheating the laboring classes of mankind,
none have been more effectual than that which deludes them
with paper money. This is the most effectual of inventions to fertilize
t h e rich man’s field by the sweat of the poor man’s brow. Ordinary
tyranny, oppression, excessive taxation—these bear lightly on
the happiness of the mass of the community, compared with fraudulent
currencies and the robberies committed by depreciated paper.
Our own history has recorded for our instruction enough, and more
than enough, of the demoralizing tendency, the injustice, and the
intolerable oppression, on the virtuous and well disposed, of a degraded
paper currency, authorized by law, or in any way countenanced
by government.” (See CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. January 24,
1934. Speech by Hon. Louis T. McFadden. of Pennsylvania.)
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Washington, D. C.
New York, N. Y., trustees: Arthur A. Ballantine, New York; David
P. Barrows, California: James F. Bell, Minnesota; William Marshall
Bullitt, Kentucky; Nicholas Murray Butler, New York: Daniel
K. Catlin, Missouri; William Wallace Chapin, California; John W.
Davis, New York; Norman H. Davis. New York; Frederic A. Delano,
District of Columbia; Leon Fraser. New York; Douglas S.
Freeman, Virginia; Francis P. Gaines, Virginia; Howard Heinz,
Pennsylvania; Alanson B. Houghton, New York: Philip C. Jessup,
Connecticut; Frank O. Lowden, Illinois; Peter Molyneaux, Texas;
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD 13
Roland S. Morris. Pennsylvania; Edward Lamed Ryerson, Jr.,
Illinois; James Brown Scott. District of Columbia; Maurice 8.
Sherman, Connecticut; James T. Shotwell, New York; Harper Sibley.
New York; Silas H. Strawn, Illinois; Eliot Wadsworth. Massachusetts;
Thomas John Watson, New York.
Division of Intercourse and Education: Director, Nicholas Murray
Butler, office, 405 West One Hundred and Seventeenth Street,
New York, N. Y. Telephone, University 4-1850—Cable, Interpax,
New York.
Le Centre Europeen: Directeur-Adjoint. Malcolm W. Davis. Bureau,
173. Boulevard 8te-Germaln, Paris, France. Telephone, Littre
88.60. Adresse Telegraphique, Interpax, Paris.
Advisory Council in Great Britain: Sir Alan Anderson, Ernest
Barker, Viscount Cecil of Chelwood, William P. Crozier, Mrs. Mary
Agnes Hamilton, Sir Frank Heath, Francis W. Hirst, Herbert S.
Morrison, Gilbert Murray, J. A. Spender; Honorary Secretary, Mrs.
Neville Lawrence.
London Office: Representative in the United Kingdom, Hubert J.
Howard; address. 336 Abbey House, Victoria Street, SW. 1. Telephone,
Abbey 7228; cable, Carintpax, London.
Mr. Speaker, the information contained in this booklet is
important at this time, particularly in view of the fact that
the pro-English groups in the United States are now working
in close cooperation with world internationalist organizations.
Before 1917, foreign influence came mainly from Anglo-
American groups. Since the World War, these groups have
been fortified by the international financiers and the internationalists,
or the so-called minority group. The pressure
is therefore more than double, for combined, these groups
control all avenues of communication and are now using
them to further their plan of British domination to establish
a world federation of states.
Let me call your attention to the fact that on the reverse
of the great seal of the United States, which appears on our
dollar bills, you will find the exact symbol of the British-
Israel world federation movement. This symbol is also carried
on literature of other organizations promoting a world
government and a world religion. At the bottom of the
circle surrounding the pyramid, you will find the wording:
“Novus Ordo Seclorum.” It was this new order that was
advocated by Clinton Roosevelt several hundred years ago;
recently in Philip Dru, and now followed by the Executive.
Do you not think, as good American people, that the administration
has gone far from constitutional government, when
there is inscribed a symbol on the reverse of our great seal,
that advocates a new order? Yes, an order which means the
destruction of our Republic as formulated in the Constitution
of the United States.
It may also interest you to know that this contemplated
“Union Now,” as advocated by Clarence Streit, will be under
the control of Great Britain, and is a movement to return the
United States as a colony in the British Empire. Should we
become a part of this union, our traditional rights and liberties
will be lost, and we will have no greater status than an
English possession. This was the dream of Cecil Rhodes and
Andrew Carnegie, when the latter wrote his book, Triumphant
Democracy, in 1893.




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