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Karl Ernst Haushofer (who created the Vril Society, which made up the inner circle of the<br />

Nazi Party), also of the Thule Society, was the University professor who schooled Hitler on<br />

geopolitics. Hitler was also influenced by the writings of Friedrich Nietzsche, from whose name<br />

came the word Nazi. In 1943, Hitler’s birthday gift to Mussolini, was The Collected Works of<br />

Nietzche.<br />

In the fall of 1919, Hitler joined the German Workers’ Party, and soon became one of its<br />

leaders. In the summer of 1920, it was renamed the National Socialist German Workers’ Party,<br />

and then in 1923, it became known as the Nazi Party.<br />

Because of Hitler’s failed November revolt, he was jailed on April 1, 1924, sentenced to five<br />

years, but was released after eight months, so he could be built up to national prominence.<br />

Though Mein Kampf was published as a work of Adolf Hitler while he was in prison, it was<br />

discovered later that it was actually written by Nazi politicians Rudolf Hess and Hermann<br />

Wilhelm Goering (and possibly Haushofer), as a follow-up to the Karl Marx book A World<br />

Without Jews. The Illuminati made sure the book was well circulated, and it became the<br />

springboard for Hitler’s political career.<br />

In 1925, Dr. Carl Duisberg, I. G. Farben’s first Chairman, and founder of the Bayer Co. in<br />

the United States, said: “Be united, united, united. This should be the uninterrupted call to the<br />

parties of the Reichstag. We hope that our words of today will work, and will find the strong man<br />

who will finally bring everyone under one umbrella ... for he is always necessary for us<br />

Germans, as we have seen in the case of Bismarck.” The depressive economic situation in<br />

Germany at the time, created by the Versailles Treaty, made it possible for Hitler’s leadership to<br />

take root, and he became Chancellor in January, 1933.<br />

Since 1924, the Dawes Plan flooded Germany with a tremendous amount of American<br />

capital, which enabled Germany to build its war machine. The three largest loans went into the<br />

development of industries, such as I. G. Farben Co. (the German company which became the<br />

largest corporation in Europe, and the largest chemical company in the world, after a $30 million<br />

loan from the Rockefeller’s National City Bank after World War I, and who created a process of<br />

making high grade fuel from low quality coals) and Vereinigte Stahlwerke (who produced about<br />

95% of Germany’s explosives). In 1939, Standard Oil of New Jersey sold I. G. Farben $20,000<br />

worth of high quality aviation fuel. I. G. Farben’s assets in the United States were controlled by a<br />

holding company called American I. G. Farben Chemical Corp. On the Board of Directors of this<br />

corporation was Edsel Ford (President of the Ford Motor Co.), Charles E. Mitchell (President of<br />

National City Bank in New York City), Walter C. Teagle (President of Standard Oil of New<br />

York), Paul Warburg (Chairman of the Federal Reserve), and Herman Metz (Director of the<br />

Warburg’s Bank of Manhattan). Several Germans on this Board were found guilty of war crimes<br />

at Nuremburg. A U.S. War Department investigation revealed that without Farben’s support,<br />

“Germany’s prosecution of the war would have been unthinkable and impossible.”<br />

Hitler received support and financing from the aristocracy and elite of Germany, including<br />

Gustav Krupp (industrialist), Carl Duisberg (founder of I.G. Farben), Ernst Tengelmann (director<br />

of the Ruhr coal mining operation), Dr. Hjalmar Schacht (prominent banker), and Fritz Thyssen<br />

(Chairman of the Board of United Steel Works, Germany’s largest company). Hitler maintained<br />

that the Nazi Party would continue “only until the German people had been freed from the threat<br />

of Marxism and could reach a decision as to whether the final form of government would be a<br />

republic or a monarchy.” Thyssen told the Kaiser that Hitler was made Chancellor only as “a<br />

transitional stage leading to the reintroduction of the German monarchy.”<br />

America’s Ambassador to Germany, William Dodd, reported to President Roosevelt in

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