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Eustace-Mullins/442pg-the-sydicate-excellent-must-read - JokeBook

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The Nature of <strong>the</strong> Syndicate 29<br />

The League of Nations<br />

Collective security.<br />

President Woodrow Wilson to <strong>the</strong> Senate, 1917<br />

The armistice that ended <strong>the</strong> First World War had been based on Woodrow<br />

Wilson's 14-point proposals for a post-war peace settlement, and this<br />

was included in <strong>the</strong> Treaty of Versailles. The clauses of <strong>the</strong> treaty were<br />

worked out at an international Grand Orient Masonic Congress held at<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir headquarters in Rue Cadet, Paris, in June 1917. 19 They had <strong>the</strong> idea<br />

for <strong>the</strong> League of Nations and worked out <strong>the</strong> clauses of <strong>the</strong> constitution.<br />

The minutes for a preliminary planning meeting in January 1917 speak<br />

of "elaborating <strong>the</strong> Constitution of <strong>the</strong> League of Nations." "Rothschilds'"<br />

representative Col. House (a 33rd-degree Grand-Lodge Mason) was in<br />

charge. President Wilson took <strong>the</strong> idea from Col. House, 20 and represented<br />

<strong>the</strong> US at <strong>the</strong> Peace Conference. Bernard Baruch, who had made $20om for<br />

himself while head of <strong>the</strong> War Industries Board, 21 was also in <strong>the</strong> American<br />

delegation to <strong>the</strong> Paris Peace Conference. The English delegation included<br />

Sir Philip Sassoon, a direct descendent of Mayer Amschel Rothschild; and<br />

<strong>the</strong> French delegation included Georges Mandel (who was also known as<br />

Jereboam Rothschild). 22<br />

The stated aim of <strong>the</strong> League was to solve international disputes<br />

and reduce arms. But <strong>the</strong> Grand Orient wanted <strong>the</strong> Treaty of Versailles<br />

between <strong>the</strong> Allies and Germany (1919) to transfer <strong>the</strong> wealth of <strong>the</strong> fallen<br />

monarchies to <strong>the</strong> Grand Orient nations in <strong>the</strong> form of war reparations. 23<br />

War reparations would cripple Germany, and <strong>the</strong> Treaty of Versailles<br />

included a 20-year truce, which split up Europe. As Lloyd George pointed<br />

out: "We have written a document that guarantees war in 20 years ....<br />

When you place conditions on a people (Germany) that it cannot possibly<br />

keep, you force it to ei<strong>the</strong>r breach <strong>the</strong> agreement or to war." 24 Lloyd George<br />

was prescient, almost to <strong>the</strong> year.<br />

The US Senate, however, <strong>the</strong>n rejected <strong>the</strong> League, and in 1921 made<br />

a separate peace treaty with Germany and Austria. 25 Maybe for oil<br />

and money interests peace was not such a good idea. Maybe a public<br />

organization like this, in <strong>the</strong> media spotlight, wasn't what <strong>the</strong>y really<br />

Wanted and needed.

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