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Study of the Hegemony of Parasitism - michaeljgoodnight.com

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and lawyers who function as front men for <strong>the</strong> World<br />

Order.<br />

James T. Shotwell ably represented <strong>the</strong> goals <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

World Order for more than sixty years. Born in Canada in<br />

1874, he joined <strong>the</strong> staff <strong>of</strong> Columbia University in 1900<br />

as a pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> history. In 1916 he was invited by Col.<br />

House to set up a study group, <strong>the</strong> Inquiry, with Walter<br />

Lippmnann, to "study postwar political economic<br />

historical and legal developments," although we were not<br />

even in <strong>the</strong> war! This was <strong>the</strong> core <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> American<br />

Commission to Negotiate Peace (ACNP) at Versailles<br />

which wrote <strong>the</strong> Peace Treaty.<br />

In 1917, Shotwell became personal adviser to President<br />

Woodrow Wilson. He was appointed <strong>of</strong>ficial historian <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> ACNP, and actually wrote <strong>the</strong> social security clauses<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Versailles Treaty. He wrote a 150-volume history<br />

<strong>of</strong> World War I, published by Columbia. He had be<strong>com</strong>e<br />

a close friend <strong>of</strong> Herbert Hoover during <strong>the</strong> war, and<br />

advised him on setting up <strong>the</strong> Hoover Institution.<br />

Shotwell organized <strong>the</strong> International Labor Conference,<br />

and joined <strong>the</strong> Carnegie Endowment in 1924. In 1941,<br />

Shotwell led a Committee which demanded <strong>the</strong> release<br />

<strong>of</strong> Communist Party leader Earl Browder.<br />

Shotwell joined <strong>the</strong> State Dept. in 1940, serving until<br />

1944. When Franklin D. Roosevelt asked him to join <strong>the</strong><br />

State Dept. team <strong>of</strong> Alger Hiss, Henry Wallace and<br />

Sumner Welles to organize <strong>the</strong> United Nations, Shotwell<br />

was already Chairman <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Commission to <strong>Study</strong> <strong>the</strong>

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