2011/09/13

Steven Goodson. Hitler and the Banksters: The Abolition of Interest-Servitude!

The author of this article is a young South African banker: At the end of November 1918, Adolf Hitler returned to Munich, before going to a military camp in south-eastern Bavaria. When the camp was disbanded in April 1919, Hitler was summoned to Munich, which was still ruled by a Soviet Jew Kurt Eisner. At the beginning of May, a few days after the the communist revolution had been terminated by the Bavarian Freikorps, Hitler was summoned as a member of the 2nd Infantry Regiment to attend a course on political instruction, to provide the soldiers with a background on politics, to monitor the the many revolutionary and political movements in Munich. One of the lecturers was Dr. Gottfried Feder, who dealt with "The Abolition of the Interest - Servitude". Hitler was apparently enthralled by what he heard, and this was the beginning of his political career: "For the first time in my life, I heard a discussion which dealt with the principles of stock exchange capital, and capital which was used for loan activities. After hearing the first lecture delivered by Feder, the idea immediately came into my head that I had found a way to one of the most essential prerequisites for the founding of a new party.
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