November 24, 2004 journal,
Heir to the Holocaust 3, driving up the N.C. coast today.
For 3 generations
the secret was kept of the B+u+s+h family connection
to the Holocaust.
Clamor Magazine
issue 14 May/June 2002 printed it but no major media will report it. Kitty Kelley's book on the B-u-s-h-es also tells the same-story of facts concerning the
Holocaust.
“Soon Heinrich Thyssen switched his name to Baron Thyssen
Bornemisza de Kaszon. Near
the end of World War I, August Thyssen opened the
Bank Voor Handel en Scheepvaart
in Rotterdam. The neutral Holland was the perfect
location outside of Germany to launder assets from the August Thyssen Bank in Berlin when the financial demands of the
Allied forces surfaced. But the war ended much sooner than even Thyssen calculated and what developed caught the
"Rockefeller of the Ruhr" off guard. On November 10, 1918, German
socialists took over Berlin. The following morning at 5 a.m., what was left of
Germany surrendered to the Allies, officially ending World War I. "At the
time of the Armistice and the signing of the Treaty of Versailles, my Father
and I were deeply saddened by the spect-acle of
Germany's abject humiliation," Thyssen recalled
later in his autobiography, I Paid Hitler.
After the war, chaos descended on Germany as food ran short. Winter was
looming over a starving nation when on Dec. 7, 1918, the socialist Spartacists
League came knock-ing on the Thyssen
Villa with armed militia. August and Fritz were arrested and dragged from jail
to jail across Germany for four days. Along the way, they were lined up in
staged executions designed to terrorize them. It worked. When released, the two
Thyssens were horrified at the new political climate
in their beloved Germany. They could not accept that Germany was responsible
for its own demise. All Germany's problems, the Thyssens
felt, "have almost always been due to foreigners." It was the Jews,
he and many others believ-ed, who were secretly
behind the socialist movement across the globe. Meanwhile Fritz's younger brother
Baron Thyssen Bornemisza de
Kaszon moved to Rotterdam and became the principal
owner of the Bank voor Handel en Scheepvaart.
All the Thyssens needed now was an American branch.
1920s: The Business Ties That Bind - Railroad baron E.H. Harri-man's
son Averell wanted nothing to do with railroads, so
his father gave him an invest-ment firm, W.A.
Harriman & Company in New York City. E.H. hired the most qualified per-son
in the country to run the operation, George Herbert Walker. Averell
hired his little bro-ther Edward Roland
"Bunny" Harriman as a vice president. By 1920, George Herbert Walker had already
built a fortune in Missouri. Walker, a charismatic former heavyweight boxing
champion, was a human pit bull. He lived life to the fullest, owning mansions
around the east coast and one of the most extravagant apartments in Manhattan.
His hobbies were golf, hunting, drinking scotch and beating his sons to a pulp.
Elsie Walker, one of Walker's grandchildren described Walker as a "tough
old bastard" whose children had no love "for their father." He
was also a religious bigot who hated Catholics, although his parents raised him
to be one. According to other sources, he also did not like Jews. In 1922, Averell Harri-man traveled to
Germany to set up a W.A. Harriman & Co. branch in Berlin. The Berlin branch
was also run by Walker. While in
Germany, he met with the Thyssen family for the first
time. Harriman agreed to help the Thyssens with their plan for an American bank. The
following year, a wounded Germany was growing sicker. The government had no
solution and froze while Germany rotted from within. With widespread strikes
and production at a near standstill, Fritz Thyssen
later recalled, "We were at the worst time of the inflation. In Berlin the
government was in distress. It was ruined financially. Authority was crumbling.
In Saxony a communist government had been formed and the Red terror, organized
by Max Hoelz, reigned through the countryside. The
German Reich ... was now about to crumble."
In October, 1923, an
emotionally desperate Fritz Thyssen went to visit one
of his and Germany's great military heroes, General Erich Ludendorff. During the 1918 socialist rule in Berlin, Ludendorff organized a military resistance against the
socialists and the industrialists were in great debt to him. When Thyssen met with Ludendorff, they
discussed Germany's”