(Online)
Israel: Jewish Supremacy in Action
By David Duke
Page10 of 19
The Jewish influence in USA´s participation in
the First World War and Balfour Declaration
Some of President Woodrow Wilson´s top advisers during the period were the Jewish Supreme Court justice Louis Brandeis, Rabbi Stephen Wise, and the powerful banker and international financier of New York City, Bernard Baruch. Although Wilson had campaigned for president on the slogan "He kept us out of the war," once the Balfour Declaration was proposed, Jewish influence quickly pushed him to an interventionist path. When Balfour came to the United States in May 1917 in hopes of pulling America into the war, he ignored the U.S. State Department (which created much resentment) and met with Brandeis, who had no authority to speak on foreign relations.1The Jewish protagonists for war were also aided in their jingoism by a number of American magnates who saw American participation in the European conflict as writing a blank check for the military-industrial complex. The press that was Jewish-owned or Jewish-influenced agitated unashamedly for war, running lurid tales of German atrocities, and promoting stories that Germany planned to invade the United States through Mexico - even though, in four years of war, it had been unable to even take Paris.
In short order, the Germans - although racially and morally no different from the British and Americans - were labeled "Huns" and "baby-killers." The Allies, despite Britain´s and France´s non-democratic foreign empires, were said to be fighting for "democracy." Even though Germany had electoral institutions similar to those of the Allies, it was called tyrannical.
The two prominent slogans of the greatest and bloodiest war in all of history up to that time were, "The War to Make the World Safe for Democracy" and, incredibly, "The War to End All War!" If those were truly the Allied objectives of the First World War, it is easy to see the fruits of their victory. As the 20th century rumbles to a close, democracy around the world still seems to be in precious short supply, and war since 1918 has done a thriving business.
Most historians now agree that the First World War was not the result of aggression or dictatorship or any sinister force other than entangling alliances structured to preserve the balance of power. Essentially, it was prompted by nothing but national fears and bravado. For most of that internecine conflict, America sensibly stayed out of the war's insanity, but finally, Jewish power, whose concern, as always, was only its own interests - tipped the scales for war. After all, what were the lives of a few hundred thousand young Americans compared to the interests of the Chosen?
The media kept Americans blind to the Jewish influence in our participation in the First World War, just as they had cloaked the pivotal Jewish involvement in the Russian Revolution. To this day, few Americans are aware of the Jewish influence in America´s joining the First World War.
The Balfour Declaration was innocuous-sounding enough, and it took pains to state,
...that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country. 2The Zionists, though, did not want a homeland containing a significant non-Jewish community. From the outset, they were determined not to set up a multicultural, pluralistic democracy that they were so busy planning for America and the rest of the European world. They wanted a chauvinistic, ethno-religious, purely Jewish state, but they could not reveal this until they had attained power. Among themselves, though, they made clear their intentions to create an ethnic state - one amazingly similar to the nation they most hated: Nazi Germany.
- Grose, P. (1984). Israel In The Mind Of America. New York: Knopf. p.64.
- Encarta. Balfour Declaration.