All the German crimes, the crimes that were committed by Stalin and those committed by the US and Britain in fire bombing entire German and Japanese cities, happened during the world war that was made possible by the enthusiastic rearming of Germany for a singular purpose.
The Second World War, Wall Street made possible, ended with the Wall Street owned United States of America having become the mega wealthy first ever world's single super power, while its socialist nemesis, the Soviet Union lay devastated, its major cities half destroyed and 28 million of its citizens dead.
What might have been different all these subsequent years? if the world had been aware that investments and joint venturing by America's large corporations had made the Second World War and the Holocaust possible?
END NOTES
1. In Mein Kampf , Hitler unequivocally stated a German necessity to invade Eastward , and several passages in Mein Kampf regarding Germany's Jewish citizens are undeniably of a genocidal nature. Mein Kampf was published in July of 1926 and sold a quarter million copies before Hitler came to power. In it, Hitler announced his hatred of what he believed to be the world's two evils:Communism and Judaism.
2. Ford and GM Scrutinized for Alleged Nazi Collaboration, By Michael Dobbs Washington Post, November 30, 1998
3 [Ford 'used slave labour' in Nazi German plants, By Simon English, The Telegraph, 11/3/2019 1,200 Russian slaves .
4. The Coca-cola Company Under the Nazis, University of Virginia xroads.virginia.edu
5. "But it was largely British and US money that provided Hitler with the parts. ... General Motors' collaboration with both the Nazi-controlled chemicals giant", ... As author Rodney Atkinson points out in his book, Europe's Full Circle
6. 1997 titled The Windsor File, Written by Paul Sweet, a former U.S. Foreign Service officer and historian involved in the eventual publication of the papers, details the duke's Nazi associations and the long, ultimately unsuccessful effort at suppression.
7. Hitler's Willing Business Partners, 4/2001, Jack Beatty, a senior editor at The Atlantic Monthly
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