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CHAPTER FOUR<br />

DOMESTIC TAMPERING<br />

THE ILLUMINATI CREATES RACIAL TENSION<br />

In the book A Racial Program for the Twentieth Century, published in 1913 by Israel Cohen<br />

of the Fabian Society (a follow-up to Zangwill’s Melting Pot), he wrote:<br />

“We must realize that our Party’s most powerful weapon is racial tension. By<br />

propounding into the consciousness of the dark races, that for centuries have been<br />

oppressed by the Whites, we can mold them to the program of the Communist Party ... In<br />

America, we will aim for subtle victory. While enflaming the Negro minority against the<br />

Whites, we will instill in the Whites, a guilt complex for the exploitation of the Negroes.<br />

We will aid the Negroes to rise to prominence in every walk of life, in the professions,<br />

and in the world of sports and entertainment. With this prestige, the Negroes will be able<br />

to intermarry with the Whites, and begin a process which will deliver America to our<br />

cause.”<br />

On June 17, 1957, this passage was read into the Congressional Record by Rep. Thomas G.<br />

Abernathy.<br />

In 1922, the Russian Comintern provided $300,000 for the spreading of communist<br />

propaganda among Negroes. In 1925, the Communist Party, U.S.A., told its members:<br />

“The aim of our Party in our work among the Negro masses is to create a powerful<br />

proletarian movement which will fight and lead the struggle of the Negro race against the<br />

exploitation and oppression in every form and which will be a militant part of the<br />

revolutionary movement of the whole American working class ... and connect them with<br />

the struggles of national minorities and colonial peoples of all the world and thereby the<br />

cause of world revolution and the dictatorship of the proletariat.”<br />

In 1925, a dozen Blacks were recruited for propaganda training in Russia. That same year,<br />

the American Negro Labor Congress was established. In 1930, they changed their name to the<br />

League of Struggle for Negro Rights. They merged with the United Negro Congress when it was<br />

founded in 1936, in Washington, D.C. By 1940, communists made up two-thirds of its<br />

membership. In 1947, they united with the Civil Rights Congress, a communist front group.<br />

In a 1928 pamphlet by John Pepper (alias for Joseph Pogany) called American Negro<br />

Problems, a move was being made by Stalin to ferment revolution and stir the Blacks into<br />

creating a separate Republic for the Negro. Another pamphlet put out by the New York<br />

Communist Party in 1935, called The Negroes in a Soviet America, urged the Blacks to rise up<br />

and form a Soviet State in the South by applying for admission to the Comintern. It contained a<br />

firm pledge that a revolt would be supported by all American communists and liberals. On page<br />

48, it said that the Soviet Government would give the Blacks more benefits than they would give<br />

to the Whites, and “any act of discrimination or prejudice against the Negro would become a<br />

crime under the revolutionary law.”<br />

In The Communist Party: A Manual On Organization by J. Peters, he writes:

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