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LAST DITCH OF DEMOCRACY - Majority Rights

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the general American really KNOWS it. What the public knows is your<br />

propaganda. I quote: “Too many foreigners in Washington, natives are<br />

run by them and know it.” Letter dated October 27, 1940 from the fine<br />

old American stock, south of Mason and Dixon line, roaring democrat,<br />

of the era that took party line seriously. “Japanese are our biggest<br />

headache.” That from a senatorial family, six weeks before Pearl Harbor.<br />

You might remember that during the last year of my broadcasts I was<br />

guided from inside America. I mean by personal and quite reliable notes<br />

sent me from most competent private observers, NOT in the pay of<br />

Jewry, NOT writing for Hollywood and Mr. Roosevelt’s owners. It was<br />

my intention and endeavor to speak in KEY with the opinion of<br />

enlighted Americans.<br />

At no time have I intended to use the radio to present personal<br />

idiosyncrasies, but to speak a true record. The U.S.A. will be no use to<br />

itself or to anyone else until it gets rid of the kikes AND Mr. Roosevelt. I<br />

don’t mean the small kikes. I mean the LARGE kikes. Often YOUR<br />

castoffs and exports. When I say the Americans don’t like being<br />

humbugged, I give you instances; to an American a Times correspondent<br />

means a drummer for Vickers, drummer, a traveling salesman, a<br />

bagman. He, the American, don’t try to wrap that up. He LIKES to<br />

debunk, to drag the sham into the open, and to mock at himself for<br />

having been a sucker the day before yesterday or half hour ago in having<br />

been humbugged. That is at variance with the British theatrical<br />

temperament, which WANTS to maintain the sham.<br />

I state these things to illustrate one source of misunderstanding: 50 or<br />

more years ago the Americans invented the word Anglo-maniac. That<br />

meant a “dude” or a man who wore a high collar. It certainly meant the<br />

Astors and people who exported American money to England (capital, or<br />

pocket money), who married into English society. That was called<br />

“buying a duke.” You probably don’t consider me an Anglo-maniac.<br />

When I lived in England, I was an “expatriate”; when I went to Paris I

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