Wellesley and the War

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The Novel

Wellesley

 

September 8, 1938  8:16 A.M.

Karen Fisher loves her MG roadster, but yesterday the muffler developed a bad leak, so today she’s riding east on a train out of Lenox Massachusetts. On Monday she’ll be starting classes as a journalism major at Wellesley College, with a double minor in history and psychology.

 

During the freshman year she’ll have to take courses required for a well-rounded education that will mostly not address her main interests, except of course, Western Civ. In her spare time she will get a head start on her later studies with private reading.

 

Karen is excited by intelligent young men and is pleased that Wellesley has frequent social mixers with nearby men’s colleges like Babson and Harvard.

 

As the beautiful early autumn Berkshire scenery rolls past the train window, she recalls how her interest in journalism began when she was fourteen years old and a friend asked,

 

“Why is there so much trouble and killing in the world? Does adulthood go hand in hand with being stupid and self-destructive?”

 

Karen replied,

 

“I was thinking recently that politicians always promise liberty, prosperity, and peace, but don’t deliver it. My conclusion is that we don’t have these things because powerful people make money from our not having them.”

 

That night after dinner when Karen was doing her homework, she began to realize an exciting career that can also make the world a better place would be to find out how things really work in politics and educate the voting public about it with writing. Then she thought

to herself,

 

“… and to avoid law suits or pre-arranged accidents, I won’t target people individually whenever possible. Better to simply mention bad activity in a general sense briefly, then after careful research, suggest superior alternatives.”

 

2:36 P.M. The train arrives in Wellesley and Karen, who has no interest in sororities, takes a cab to her dormitory on campus.

 

 

Roommate

 

 

The dormitory monitor is a pleasant woman and points Karen to her room. She goes down the hall, around the corner, knocks, and her new roommate bids her enter. Karen says,

 

“Hello, I’m your roomie, Karen Fisher.”

 

The tall, attractive, arrogant looking girl gets up from her little desk, looks Karen up and down like chattel, and replies coldly,

 

“Fisher… an honest profession, I suppose. I hope there won’t be any tarpon monoxide, of course. My name is Glenda von Tappen. Your bed is the one on the left.”

 

Karen shivers, but tries to break the ice with practical small talk, 

 

“Did you see the bulletin board downstairs? We’re having a mixer with the guys from Babson in two weeks.”

 

Glenda replies cryptically,

 

“Great, if that’s what you’re looking for.”

 

Karen understands, and won’t let it pass,

 

“Yes, of course, what else?”

 

Glenda affects a yawn,

 

“You’d be surprised.”

 

Karen unpacks then goes out to explore

the college library before dinner. 

 

 

New Friends

 

 

Only a few of the girls have arrived, so there are plenty of seats in the dining hall. As Karen walks in, she sees Glenda with friends at a far table, but instinct tells her not to join them, so she sits alone next to a window.

 

Soon, two wholesome looking girls join Karen. One of them says,

 

“Hi, I’m Teddy, this is Paula. What are you majoring in?”

 

“Hi. I’m Karen, here for journalism with two minors, history and psych.”

 

Paula smiles,

 

“Excellent choices. My major is journalism. Teddy’s is psychology. We’re both minoring in history. We’ll have plenty to talk about.”

 

Usually Karen is fairly reserved, but she likes these girls. The talk soon turns to the upcoming mixer. Both of them plan to go,

but what will they wear? Finally Karen says,

 

I’ll ask my advisor. If she doesn’t know I’ll ask one of the older girls.

 

When Karen gets back to her room, she enters without knocking. Glenda and one of her friends from dinner are sitting very close on the bed. It somehow seems like they had been surprised while kissing. Glenda looks very angry and barks,

 

“Knock in future! Were you raised by pigs?”

 

Karen answers,

 

“Sorry. I didn’t realize you were back yet. I will always knock from now on… and no, I was not raised by pigs, were you?”

 

Glenda replies only with a fierce glare, then says to her friend,

 

“Let’s go to your room.”

 

They leave.

  

 

Decision

 

September 9, 1938

Karen gets up early and after breakfast visits the Student Housing Office and is directed down a hall to a door on the right. As she enters, a very young, severe looking woman, pretty but slightly mannish in grooming, says,

 

“Hello, my name is Miss Whittenberger. How may I help you?”

 

Karen decides that specificity in this case might be counterproductive and says only,

 

“Hello, I’m Karen Fisher. I wonder if I could be assigned a new roommate. My current one seems to be going through personal difficulties… unwarranted emotional outbursts, snappish insulting remarks.

 

Miss Whittenberger looks at her list of who is rooming with who, and gives Karen a very unsympathetic look, so Karen adds,

 

“I just don’t want to waste energy. I’m here to study, not fight.”

 

Miss Whittenberger now gives Karen a peculiar, slightly scornful look, and says, 

 

“We can’t do that, Karen. Coping with other people is something you must learn at college even if you haven’t yet learned it elsewhere. If I allowed such impromptu changes it would be like a game of musical chairs around here.”

 

Karen can see the point, but is adamant. Finally Whittenberger says,

 

“I suggest you look for a room off campus, but it may be difficult this time of year. And please be advised that we can’t credit you for the room. It’s part of your tuition. If you leave, a new girl will be assigned immediately, so

don’t plan on changing your mind.”

 

Karen feels slightly annoyed, but a sense of adventure mitigates this, and she says,

 

“Okay. I’ll find something somehow and let you know the minute I do.”

 

“Fine. Is there anything else you need?”

 

As she leaves Karen says,

 

“No, and thank you for the advice.”

 

Karen buys a newspaper and finds what she needs immediately. It’s actually a small apartment, unexpectedly vacated by a young couple. She calls a cab and visits. It’s  almost two miles from the campus, but she’ll have the

MG back with a new muffler this weekend. The owners like her, she signs a one year lease, and they drive her back to the college in time for a nice pot-roast dinner.

 

After the customary cleaning and repairs, Karen will take possession next weekend. She will only tell Glenda and Whittenberger once her stuff is packed and in the car. 

 

 

Classes Begin 

 

 

September 12, 1938

Karen goes to her three Monday / Wednesday classes and is pleased with the professors.

 

September 13, 1938

Karen goes to her two Tuesday / Thursday classes and is equally pleased. She makes a new friend Gathie (Ghat-hee), a history major from Switzerland, and is impressed to find that she is fluent in five languages: German, Swiss, French, English, and Italian. Gathie shrugs,

 

“I’m not a linguist or anything. Most people in Europe are multilingual. We need to be.”

 

The syllabi for all Karen’s courses look interesting, but the amount of reading will be horrendous. There will not be as much spare time for extracurricular study as she had hoped for previously.

 

Happily there is a succinct current events newsletter distributed free in the lobbies of three buildings on campus. Also a news film shown every Friday in the auditorium. Since the film information is one week behind the newsletter, Karen soon experiences a reduction in the difference between her initial visualizations and how things actually look overseas.

 

September 16, 1938  Early morning.

Karen’s parents drive the MG to the campus, visit briefly, then take a train to Boston for shopping, dinner, and a show.

 

September 17, 1038

The apartment is ready for occupancy. Glenda went out earlier and Whittenberger has weekends off, so Karen packs her stuff quickly and leaves a short note for each.

 

Karen loads her stuff into the car, and as she drives off, sees Glenda approaching on foot. She waves, hoping the adversarial roommate will be thoughtful about why she expected Karen to be a daily punching bag. 

 

 

Anger

 

When Glenda returns she reads the note:

 

“Dear Glenda,

 

I found a place off campus. My replacement

will hopefully be more to your liking. Good luck with your studies this Fall.

 

Very truly,

 

Karen Fisher”

 

For some reason, Glenda is angry as a hornet’s nest. She broods the entire rest of the weekend.

 

September 19, 1938  8:03 A.M.

Before class, Glenda visits Miss Whittenberger, a former friend at Dana Hall.

 

They kiss, Glenda sits down,

 

“My roommate moved out. Can she do that?”

 

Whittenberger replies,

 

“Yes. She came and asked about changing roommates. I said no, and suggested she look for something off campus. As I came in this morning, there was a note under the door, saying she found a place.”

 

Glenda looks deeply wounded,

 

“Did she say why?”

 

She said you were overly emotional and found it necessary to insult her.”

 

Glenda says,

 

“Just the usual dormitory stuff… It didn’t mean anything by it. I hope you can match me up with someone who isn’t so sensitive.”

 

Says Whittenberger,

 

“I have someone in mind, but I suggest you take it easy on her. Try to focus more on studies and less on social hierarchy.”

 

Glenda conceals her anger, rises, and says,

 

“Okay. Sorry to take up your time.”

 

She gives Whittenberger a pale smile as she leaves, but immediately begins to plan her complex revenge against Karen.

 

The ethical non-viability of her feelings does not even suggest itself slightly to Glenda. She has been a constitutional psychopath since birth and has found complicit aberration in studied depression for getting her own way.

 

She placates her parents with weekly visits to
a psychiatrist who has given her a prescription for anti-depressant tablets. These give her a pleasant glow and virtually guarantee that her problems will never be addressed.

 

Her anger is fueled by jealousy of Karen’s uncomplicated normalcy and personal freedom. Glenda’s parents have plenty of money, but because of her problematical behavior keep her on a short leash. They will not allow her either a car or an apartment off campus. 

 

 

Mixer

 

September 22, 1938  7:58 P.M.

Three busloads of chaps arrive from Babson. They enter the social compound with happy smiles of eager anticipation. The musicians start on que and soon there are small groups talking and couples dancing everywhere.

 

Karen has a wonderful time. She dances with four different young men during the evening and has a date on for tomorrow with a fellow named Freddie for a skeet shooting event at his family estate in Dover.

 

September 24, 1938  10:16 A.M.

The shooting is fast paced and impressive. Karen is introduced to friends and gets talking with Freddie’s uncle Victor, a newspaperman from Boston. She has been following the news lately about events in Europe and asks,

 

“Why are these National Socialists in Germany so angry with Jews?”

 

Victor answers,

 

“Let me first say that what I’m going tell you is not for dunner table conversation. It’s about international bankers who, via mainstream media ownership and control, have clever stereotypes already in place to seemingly discredit anyone who criticizes their policies.

 

“As a journalist, it’s better to mention banker involvement in world affairs only casually in context as simple truth  without much editorial comment. They are not very apt to initiate rebuttal that will unnecessarily draw attention to their activities. Never mention any specific individual, and remember that most of the top ones are Jews, but not all.

 

“Here’s what we know… Germany was blamed wrongly for starting the 1914-1918 World War. There were many factors. The bankers saw that Germany was prosperous, like a plum ripe for picking, so they lobbied for war, lent money to both sides through different branches so not to be charged with treason, then later pushed the blame narrative against Germany.

 

“At Versailles, besides unwarranted adjustment of national borders, it was decided that Germany should pay the entire cost of the war as reparations to all the other counties involved. The banker motivation was that they would lend the money to Germany to do this.

 

“They also knew that the massive inflation caused by the creation of so much new currency would ruin Germany economically, and along with the unjust border changes, pave the way for a second major war that they could finance as they did the first. 

 

“Last year Hitler nationalized the Reichsbank and issued a national currency so Germany would not have to borrow from the bankers. This greatly inflamed their desire for war.”

 

Karen is breathless, but asks,

 

“But don’t the bankers know that another war will be very bad for their own people?”

 

Victor nods affirmatively and replies,

 

“Yes, but although Jews are cohesive culturally and all vote the same way, the big ones worry very little about the little ones. This has long been a trait of Semitic, or even of Eastern peoples in general. The Islamists are well known for it. So are the Chinese.”

 

“The big Jews are pushing for war. The Germans are trying to get all the Jews out of Germany before this can happen. They see it as a preventive measure. That’s why the SS

officer, Adolf Eichmann, created the Office of Jewish Emigration in August to speed up forced emigration.”

 

Karen is impressed,

 

“Amazing. When this is all over I see a fascinating book in your future.”

 

Victor chuckles,

 

“Fascinating, but short. There are a good many correspondents in the thick of it overseas who could flesh out the details far better than I.

 

“Also there’s the danger. It’s generally conceded among informed historians that speaking the truth about the international bankers and advocating the issuing of a national currency, is the one thing held in common by every American president who has been assassinated or the victim of attempted assassination.”

 

This sends a chill up Karen’s spine, but also fills her with rage. She asks.

 

“What can we do?”

 

Victor shrugs,

 

“Get the facts to the voters without being killed. The trouble is, people don’t trust anonymous information and usually avoid reading complex information in general. Most people are more interested in beer drinking and ballgames than active participation in determining the future of the world.”

  

 

Research

 

On the way home Karen goes to the college library and checks out four history books. She wants to learn more about what Victor told her. She reads for nearly three hours and finds a good many related facts:

 

Isaiah 60, 61 Covenant promise

of Jehovah to the Israelites:

 

“Therefore, thy gates shall be open…

that men may bring unto thee the wealth of the Gentiles...For the nation and kingdom that will not serve thee shall perish...Thou shalt also suck the milk

of the Gentiles... Ye shall eat the riches

of the Gentiles, and in their glory shall

ye boast yourselves."

 

1773

Mayer Rothschild assembles twelve influential friends, and convinces them that if they pool resources, they can rule the world. The meeting takes place in Frankfurt, Germany. Rothschild says that he has found the perfect candidate, an individual of intellect and ingenuity, to lead the organization, Adam Weishaupt.

 

May 1, 1776

Adam (Spartacus) Weishaupt establishes a secret society, Order of the Illuminati. Weishaupt is Professor of Canon Law

at the University of Ingolstadt in Bavaria. The Illuminati seek to establish a New World Order. Their objective is the abolition of:

 

1. all ordered governments

2. private property

3. inheritance

4. patriotism

5. the family

6. religion

7. Creation of a one world government

 

1797

John Robison, Professor of Natural History at Edinburgh University, publishes Proofs of a Conspiracy in which he reveals that Weishaupt had attempted to recruit him. He exposes the diabolical aims of the Illuminati to the world.

 

1821

George W. F. Hegel formulates the Hegelian dialectic, the process by which Illuminati objectives are to be achieved. Accordingly, thesis plus antithesis equals synthesis. First you foment a crisis. Then there is an enormous public outcry that something must be done about the problem. So you offer a solution that brings about the changes you really wanted all along, but which people would have been unwilling to accept initially.

 

1828

Mayer Rothschild, who finances the Illuminati, expresses utter contempt for national governments which attempt to regulate International Bankers like him:

 

“Allow me to issue and control the money of a nation, and I care not who writes the laws.”

 

1832

In America, concern for the nation continued as Congress extended a twenty-year charter with the

Bank of the United States, a private central bank, established in 1816. Andrew Jackson vigorously opposed efforts to strengthen the grasp of a

central bank over the U.S. He called private banks a “den of vipers …” and in 1832 vetoed a bill to renew the charter.

 

Thomas Jefferson warned,

“If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation and then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all property until their children wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered.

 

1848

Moses Mordecai Marx Levy, alias Karl Marx, writes “The Communist Manifesto.” Marx is a member of an Illuminati front organization, League of the Just. He not only advocates economic and political changes; but moral and spiritual ones as well. He believes the family should be abolished, and that all children should be raised by a central authority.

 

1912

Colonel Edward Mandell House advisor to President Woodrow Wilson, publishes “Phillip Dru: Administrator” in which he promotes "socialism as dreamed of by Karl Marx."

 

February 3, 1913

The 16th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, enabling the Federal Government to impose a progressive income tax, is passed.

 

1913

President Woodrow Wilson publishes The New Freedom in which he writes:

 

“Since I entered politics, I have chiefly had men's views confided to me privately. Some of the biggest men in the U.S., in the field of commerce and manufacturing, are afraid of somebody, are afraid of something. They know that there is a power somewhere so organized, so subtle, so watchful, so interlocked, so complete, so pervasive, that they had better not speak above their breath when they speak in condemnation of it.”

 

December 23, 1913

The Federal Reserve, neither federal nor a reserve, but a privately owned corporation with stockholders, is created. It was planned at a secret meeting in 1910 on Jekyll Island, Georgia, by bankers and politicians, including Edward Mandell House. This transfers the power to create money from the American Government to a private group of bankers. The Federal Reserve Act is hastily passed just before the Christmas break. With it comes the first federal income tax and the Internal Revenue Service.

 

Later, Congressman Charles A. Lindbergh Sr., father of the famed aviator, warns:

 

“This act establishes the most gigantic trust on earth. When the President signs this act the invisible government by the money power, proven to exist by the Money Trust Investigation, will be legalized.”

 

1916

Woodrow Wilson observes three years after signing the Federal Reserve Act into law,

 

“I am a most unhappy man. I have unwittingly ruined my country. A great industrial nation is controlled by its system of credit. Our system of credit is concentrated. The growth of the nation, therefore, and all our activities are in the hands of a few men. We have come to be one of the worst ruled, one of the

most completely controlled and dominated governments in the civilized world. No longer a government by free opinion, no longer a government by conviction and the vote of the majority, but a government by the opinion and duress of a small group of dominant men.”

 

1917

The Bolshevik Revolution

With aid from financiers in New York City and London, V. I. Lenin is able to overthrow the free government of Russia.

 

Ultimately Jewish Communists murder and confiscate the property of sixty-six million people, twenty million in Russia, thirty million in Ukraine, and sixteen million in Poland and East Prussia.

 

 Lenin later comments on the apparent contradiction of the links between prominent capitalists and Communism: 

 

“There also exists another alliance, at first glance a strange one, a surprising one, but if you think about it, in fact, one which is well grounded and easy to understand. This is the alliance between our Communist leaders and your capitalists.”

 

March 1919

At the First Communist Party Comintern,

of the three-hundred-ninety-three delegates,

all but seventeen are Jews.

 

June 1919  Treaty of Versailles

There is no evidence that Germany started the 1914 World War, but with the help of banker affiliate, Colonel Edward Mandell House, Germany is blamed for the war, forced to demilitarize, give up large territories, and pay total war reparations, so the bankers can lend the money to Germany. They know that the German effort to stop Communism will provide an excuse for another banker windfall in a second war. 

 

1920

Britain's Winston Churchill recognizes the connection between the Illuminati and the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia. He observes:

 

“From the days of Spartacus Weishaupt to those of Karl Marx, to those of Trotsky, Bela Kuhn, Rosa Luxembourg, and Emma Goldman, this world-wide conspiracy for the overthrow of civilization and for the reconstitution of society on the basis of arrested development, of envious malevolence and impossible equality, has been steadily growing. It played a definitely recognizable role in the tragedy of the French Revolution. It has been the mainspring of every subversive movement during the nineteenth century, and now at last this band of extraordinary personalities from the underworld of the great cities of Europe and America have gripped the Russian people by the hair of their heads, and have become practically the undisputed masters of that enormous empire.”

 

1920

Louis T. McFadden is Chairman of the

House Committee on Banking and Currency.  

 

At some point regarding the Federal Reserve,

he notes:

 

“When the Federal Reserve Act was passed, the people of these United States did not perceive that a world banking system was being set up here. A super-state controlled by International Bankers and international industrialists acting together to enslave the world for their own pleasure. Every effort has been made by the Fed to conceal its powers, but the truth is, the Fed has usurped the Government. It controls everything here, and it controls all our foreign relations. It makes and breaks governments at will.”

 

1921

Edward Mandell House reorganizes the

Institute of International Affairs into the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR).

 

1930s

Communists are flooding into Germany and ambushing citizens in the forests. In the city streets they stop Germans in their cars and interrogate them about politics. If they don’t like the answers, they shoot them in the head. Adolf Hitler's SA Storm Troopers stop this once and for all.

 

Josef Goebbels describes Communism

as the "dictatorship of the inferior."

 

Heinrich Himmler concludes that the ongoing war against sub-humanity, because of their vast numbers, can never be completely won, but if all that mankind has achieved is to survive for future generations, that good people everywhere must forever fight simply to hold the line.

 

Germany's huge reparations require nonstop borrowing of fiat currency which causes massive hyperinflation. Germans must sell everything just to eat. Jews buy up large amounts of real estate in Germany. In Czechoslovakia they are three percent of the population, but acquire eighty percent of the property.

 

1933

January 30 ,1933

Hitler is appointed Chancellor of Germany. Soon he breaks the stranglehold of the international bankers on Germany involving the practice of the government borrowing fiat currency rather than issuing it.

 

He nationalizes the Reichsbank, issues a German government currency, the value or which is determined by receipted hours of work rather than that of fixed amounts of scarce and durable commodity.

 

This leads to full employment, prosperity,

and widespread optimism about a sustainable future. (This later comes to be known as  “the German economic miracle.”) Common sense and competence is always surprising in its own time after decades of oppression sustained by subverted media disinformation.

 

The banker response to this is to incite Jewish boycotts against German goods The Manchester Guardian carries a headline. “Judea Declares War on Germany”.

 

Friedreich Nietzsche propounds the ideal of the Ubermensch, or Superman. This does not involve anything unattainable. The superman (men and women) are simply people who do not have to victimize or encroach upon others to survive in a free society. They transcend the myths and false moralities of everyday experience, and work in some area of magnificent obsession to make the world a better place

 

The subhuman is the opposite of the superman, people who have no capacity except to encroach upon others in a free society. This is primarily a function of low I.Q. Their intrinsic inferiority puts them

in opposition to social policies that would otherwise lead to prosperity, and peace.

 

Germans are tired of Jewish Communists and bankers, They decide to find the Jews a homeland of their own. In the meantime they make life Hell on Earth for the Jews by robbing them of their basic rights and property, this in order to provide them with

a  strong incentive to leave Germany.

 

The Germans also begin to right the wrongs of the Versailles Treaty whenever possible diplomatically, but whenever necessary militarily.

 

March 9,1933

Louis T. McFadden says concerning the Great Depression and the country's acceptance of FDR's New Deal:

 

“It was no accident. It was a carefully contrived occurrence. The International Bankers sought to bring about a condition of despair here so they might emerge as the rulers of us all.”

 

March 7, 1936

Germans march into the Rhineland, previously demilitarized at Versailles.

 

Karen is overwhelmed and thinks of Victor’s words, delighted that so much of what he said support the ideas she had the first time she thought seriously as a kid. She says to herself,

 

“I think I’ve found my niche. I sensed it in junior high, but now I know. The manipulation of government by private individuals in the quest for unnecessary wealth is the cause of most problems that nations have with each other. Truth is the only thing that can stop it, but it must be told with great caution.”

 

 

Europe

 

September 30, 1938

Munich Conference: Great Britain and France agree to let Germany reoccupy the Sudetenland, western Czechoslovakia.

 

October 28, 1938

Seventeen thousand Polish Jews are expelled from Germany. Poland will not take them back. Eight thousand are marooned in Zbaszyn.

 

November 7, 1938

Polish Jew, Herschel Grynszpan, enters the German embassy in Paris to murder the German Ambassador, who it turns out, is away on business. Instead, he shoots

an assistant, Ernst Vom Rath.

 

November 9, 1938

Germans want peace and react angrily to this by breaking Jewish shopkeepers' windows. Goebbels has the SA stir up the activity.

 

November 10, 1938

Finally the incident is stopped by the SS at Hitler's order, and is named Kristallnacht, the Night of Broken Glass.

 

Karen reads about Grynszpan and notes how perfectly the goals of the international bankers in financing both sides of another war are aligned with the political goals of everyday Jews who just want to see Germany punished for the crackdown on Jews in general.

 

 

Slander

 

Karen hasn’t talked to Glenda since she moved out, but has seen her scowling fiercely at her from a distance on several occasions.

 

December 3, 1938

Today Karen is walking past a group of five girls who are talking, and one of them says,

 

“Oh, oh. Look out, there she is. Hang on to your underpants.”

 

The other girls laugh. Karen looks around. There is nobody else they could be targeting, so she walks up and asks,

 

“What was all that about?”

 

The girl says,

 

“You know. How’s your collection?”

 

Karen says,

 

“No, I don’t know. Just be fair and tell me what you’re talking about?”

 

The girl looks abashed and says,

 

“We heard you were suspended for a week at Concord Academy for stealing panties…  that they found a big collection locked in one of your suitcases.”

 

Karen says,

 

“Slanderers mix lies with truth to manipulate. people. Yes, I went to Concord, but, no, I didn’t steal anything from anybody. Would you mind telling me who said this about me?

 

The girl tries to look dumb and says,

 

“I can’t remember.”

 

Karen replies,

 

“Maybe Lana Warren can jog your memory.”

 

The girl says,

 

“You wouldn’t…”

 

Karen looks at her watch,

 

“I have time to do it before class.”

 

The girl says,

 

“Okay, it was Glenda.”

 

Karen, looking at all the girls, says,

 

“Thankyou. Is this the general type of thing that Glenda says about girls she doesn’t like?”

 

The girls see that Karen is okay. They all look thoughtful and now a different girl speaks up, 

 

“Yes, I think you may be right. She has

said stuff like this a couple of times before.”

 

Karen says,

 

“Thanks. I’m still going the dean’s office, but to report Glenda. Maybe we can get her some psychiatric help. Is there anything else you can tell me about her?”

 

A third girl speaks up and says,

 

“I heard she had a roommate at Dana Hall who was found dead from poison. The police questioned Glenda for a very long time, but finally decided it was suicide.”

 

Karen is bewildered and thinks to herself,

 

“I hope a psychiatrist will be enough.”

  

 

Suspension

 

Karen decides to wait until after class to visit Lana Warren, the acting Dean. It takes almost ten minutes to explain the entire business.

 

Dean Warren suspends Glenda until the normal return to classes after the Christmas vacation with the admonition,

 

“I’m going to notify your parents of your impending arrival. My advice to you, young lady, is to turn over a completely new leaf in your attitude and behavior towards the other girls. The start of a new year is the perfect time to do this. Human history shows that you will feel much happier and more fulfilled if you do.”

 

Glenda hides her anger as usual, thanks the dean, packs her stuff, and heads home for the extended holiday. When she arrives, her parents greet her angrily and ground her until her return to school in late January. 

 

 

Rehearsal

 

February 14, 1939  5:16 P.M.

It’s dark outside as Karen is walking back from the college library past the well-lighted window of the dorm room she shared briefly with Glenda last September.

 

Suddenly she’s startled to see Glenda walk briskly to the center of the room with a large French chef knife raised high over her head, then make rapid stabbing movements to the torso of a visualized victim.

 

Karen watches awestruck as the knife stabs again and again and again. She isn’t sure how, but knows that Glenda is rehearsing a murder, namely her own. What has been simple annoyance and contempt until now is suddenly replaced by intense fear. She moves quickly on in case Glenda comes to her senses enough to look cautiously out the window.

 

The next day she visits Dean Warren, who knows Glenda’s history, sends Karen off to class, and immediately summons Glenda to ask the emotional intent of her violent behavior seen by a “group” of girls outside her room  Glenda is very cool and laughs,

 

“Oh that… I was improvising a scene from Hamlet. I apologize for the confusion. I should have pulled the shade down for privacy.”

 

The Dean gets back with Karen, tells her what happened, and adds,

 

“I told Glenda she was seen by several girls. She was quite convincing that she was merely rehearsing for a play. I can’t do anything more without additional evidence, but I want you to talk to an old friend, Captain John Hurley of

the Wellesley Police. He may have some suggestions. I’ll call him to speed it along.”

 

Karen meets with the captain who says,

 

“I dealt with Glenda previously on another matter. I won’t mention your name, but I’ll talk with her just so she’ll know that there are others aware of her recent behavior,

but I recommend that you always walk with other girls whenever possible, especially at night, and avoid remote parts of the campus.

 

“If you own an strong umbrella with a good steel point at the top, best to carry it closed everywhere you go. If you don’t have one, try Filene’s or Olken’s downtown. Practice attack moves like poking at eyes. Also try blocks with counter thrusts from different angles, including if the attacker grabs the umbrella. In that event, thrust forward, then using both hands rotate it out of their grasp.”

 

Karen thanks him and immediately buys a sturdy steel shafted umbrella and practices.

 

 

Corrections

 

March 15, 1939

Germany occupies Czechoslovakia.

 

September 1, 1939

A plebiscite has established that the residents of Danzig, lost at Versailles, all want to be re-annexed to their rightful German homeland. Hitler decides to liberate them.

 

September 2, 1939

Lord Halifax, by banker machination, has replaced peace loving Neville Chamberlain as the British peace negotiator. The subverted politicians are now able to take England and France into a another World War.

 

September 3, 1939

The Danish newspaper Kristeligt Dagblad initiates the official designation on its front page, "The Second World War broke out yesterday at 11 a.m."

 

Many changes follow upon this. In furtherance of Adolf Eichmann's plan for the creation of Israel, Germany wants to send a ship to Madagascar with thirty thousand Jews on board, but with the outbreak of war, the plan is spoiled because of French shipping blockades.

 

Reinhard Heydrich has been conducting a successful resettlement program for the Jews, but due to the war this too comes to a halt. Ultimately, Germany asks twenty-five different countries to take their Jews, but nobody will have them.

 

September 17, 1939 Russia invades Poland.

 

September 21, 1939

Reinhard Heydrich issues orders to establish Jewish ghettos in Poland.

 

October 12, 1939

Germany begins deportation of Austrian and Czech Jews to Poland.

 

October 28, 1939

First Polish ghetto established in Piotrków

 

Karen has been following these events and what seems most strange to her is the phony outrage and horror in which the “Allies” indulge themselves, over what are just the normal readjustments that one would expect now that Germany is re-militarized.

 

She also notices how the press runs true to form in calling September 1st, Hitler invading Danzig, the “beginning” of another war, rather than September 3rd, the actual declaration of war by France and England against Germany engineered by Lord Halifax for the bankers.

 

 

 

Halloween

 

Since Glenda was six years old she has loved camping outdoors. In 1930, when her parents toured Sweden, they came across a remarkably light but strong shovel that comes apart at four joints and fits easily into a knapsack. They bought it for their daughter’s tenth birthday. She was delighted.

 

October 30, 1939  3:40 P.M.

Glenda still has her shovel, and has just finished digging a hole in the woods adjacent to a well-used walkway along Lake Waban at the college. The hole is six feet long, two feet wide, and three feet deep. It’s a cool day, but she’s breathing hard. When this subsides, she peeks out of the woods and gets quickly back on the walkway then walks briskly to her dorm.

 

October 31, 1939 

Halloween is always a special time in New England. The campus at Wellesley College is no exception.

 

10:16 A.M.

Walking to class, Karen, Paula, and Gathie, now sophomores, are delighted by the smell of burning leaves and the bountiful display of gourds and pumpkins on the grounds. It’s tacitly understood that if a girl grabs a vegetable for her room or to make a pie at home that she will not get in trouble.

 

7:37 P.M.

Karen looks very fetching as a Witch. She’s excited about tonight and is taking a shortcut to the recreation center for a Halloween mixer with the guys from Harvard.

 

Karen is alone, but has her trusty umbrella. As she comes around a corner in the walkway, she suddenly smells familiar perfume and hears a soft footfall immediately behind her. She whirls just in time to see Glenda with

that big kitchen knife raised high for stabbing.

 

She reacts quickly with the umbrella and pokes at Glenda’s left eye, but hits her cheek. There is blood. Glenda is enraged and rushes forward in another attempt. Karen strikes again, this time the forehead. Again there is blood. Glenda shrieks in pain, accepts that she is outmatched, turns, and runs away.

 

As Glenda approaches the lighted area, she ducks into some bushes and grabs a small suitcase which she packed in advance for what she hoped would be an unlikely contingency.

 

Karen hurries along to the party and calls the police. She gets some punch, spots Teddy and tells her what happened. Then she steps outside until the police arrive. She tells Captain Hurley the whole story. He initiates a search for Glenda, but they cannot find her anywhere.

 

9:06 P.M.

Captain Hurley visits the train station and is told that in the afternoon a girl inquired about the 8:16 P.M shuttle to Boston, and returned less than an hour ago with “bad cuts on her face,” bought a ticket, and boarded the train.

 

Hurley calls the Boston Police immediately, then goes back to the police station and sends a follow-up teletype case file with a good photo of Glenda.

 

 

Investigation

 

Nov 1, 1939  8:40 A.M.

Captain Hurley visits Dean Warren at her office. At Hurley’s request Lana calls Glenda’s mother, tells her what happened, and asks a few questions about Glenda’s past schooling and summer camp activity.

 

She puts Hurley on the line,

 

“… so if Glenda contacts you or comes home, please call me immediately. It may very well keep her from getting into worse trouble than she’s in already.”

 

Mrs. Von Tappen replies,

 

“Thank you for calling, Captain Hurley. We love our daughter, but we know she’s a strange troubled girl and will help any way we can.” 

 

9:48 A.M.

From his office, Hurley calls Camp Shawmut in New Hampshire, where Glenda spent her eleventh summer. He tells them only that Glenda is missing and wants to ask a few ‘routine’ questions.

 

The camp mother, Tabatha, says,

 

“I remember Glenda. She was physically mature for her age, looked older, and seemed unhappy even before her closest friend ran away from camp. The police never found out where, and the girl has never contacted anyone since, even her parents.” 

 

Next Hurley calls the Beaver Country Day School attended in junior high. This time, he learns that Glenda’s roommate in eighth grade also ‘ran away’ and was never heard of again.

 

10:32 A.M.

One of the groundskeepers at the college finds the hole and shovel in the woods. He immediately notifies Lana Warren.

 

She calls Glenda’s mother and asks about whether Glenda owned such a shovel,

 

Mrs. Von Tappen begins to sob and says,

 

“Oh God. We bought it for her tenth birthday

as an outdoor camping gift. I feel responsible.”

 

Lana says,

 

“Who knows where the blame lies, if there is any. In any case, a shovel is only a tool, not a motivator.”

 

Now Lana calls Captain Hurley and tells him what she found. He says,

 

“Good police work. I’ve been on the phone all morning and will get back to you later when I sort it all out.”

 

By midafternoon Hurley sees a pattern for Glenda: a ‘friend’ or roommate disappears or dies about every two years after Glenda reaches puberty, that is, when Glenda develops early at eleven, then at thirteen, then at fifteen as a sophomore at Dana Hall. Now at eighteen it would have been Karen, and neatly buried too, except for some good umbrella wielding. Hurley updates the Boston police, Camp Shawmut, Beaver Country Day,, and Dana Hall about this and all his findings from now on. 

 

 

Fugitive

 

Back to Halloween Night, c. 8:46 P.M.

Glenda gets off the train in Boston, goes to a drugstore, buys antiseptic and bandages, then cleans and bandages her face in a public washroom. Within a half hour she has found refuge at an establishment on Beacon Hill that she has visited since she was fourteen. Millie, the proprietor considers her an old friend.

 

9:48 P.M. police all over Boston have Glenda’s picture and are notified to keep a lookout for her.

 

November 1, 3039  8:00 A.M.

Today is Glenda’s first day of work at the women’s hotel on Beacon Hill. She’s representing herself as a runaway victim of an impossible misunderstanding about a “Halloween prank” gone wrong. Millie told her last night that she can start the regular work when her face heals. In the meantime she will cook meals, do maid duty, and laundry chores. If anyone asks about her, there’s a secret panel inside a closet where she can hide.

 

One would think this to be a Hellish scenario for a girl from a wealthy family who could have had a fine future, but Glenda actually feels more contented now than she has for some time. She likes Boston and will use wigs and sunglasses to go out and about in normal fashion shopping and dining around town. Very good save for a serious fugitive.

 

Glenda writes a letter to her parents saying that she’s alright and has a good job. She fabricates absurd detail about the “prank” even the grave in the woods, and since she has “left the nest” urges them to focus on raising the younger daughter and forget about her. She encloses the stamped letter in a big envelope with a brief note of explanation to a friend in Florida to please mail the letter down there to help protect her whereabouts.

 

When Mrs. Von Tappen reads the letter she is saddened, but also annoyed that Glenda would think that she would be so stupid as to believe that it was just a “prank.” She notifies Captain Hurley about the letter, who visits to examine it, and then in turn notifies Dean Warren, who immediately tells Karen.

 

When Karen returns home for Thanksgiving the feelings of relief make the festivities especially joyful. Mrs. Fisher says to all seated as she passes the butternut squash at table,

 

 “It seems that Karen is safe from Glenda.”

 

Karen smiles bravely and says,

 

“I hope so, but I will continue to carry my umbrella. You never know if one of Glenda’s sick friends will want to finish the job.”

 

There is a grim silence as the reality sinks in. Mrs. Fisher smiles wanly, then nods,

 

“Good idea. Better safe than sorry. In rainy climates people carry umbrellas all the time.” 

 

 

Life Goes On

 

The rest of 1939 passes without additional concern about Glenda. Karen and her friends return to their respective families for Christmas Break. The war in Europe continues.

 

April 9, 1940

Germany invades Denmark and Norway.

 

May 10, 1940

Germany invades the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, and France.

 

May 20, 1940

A huge very neatly laid out concentration camp is established by the Germans at Auschwitz in Poland.

 

June 22, 1940

France surrenders to Germany.

 

July 18, 2040

Karen is visiting Boston for ten days. Today

she phones Freddie’s Uncle Victor at his place of work and asks if she can buy him lunch and get an update on the events he detailed for her at the skeet shooting event last year. She adds,

 

“My approach to journalism is becoming more and more that of cautious expose as I contemplate the vast scale of human atrocity and loss that accrues to the insatiable greed of the international bankers. These bastards have to be stopped and it’s only truth that will do it.”

 

Victor is a normal man, and while Karen’s youthful good looks are not lost upon him, he is happily married, and is able to love Karen in a fatherly way. As a proponent of liberty and truth himself he is delighted to hear from her again, and agrees with a chuckle,

 

“Yes, I’m a starving journalist, but you don’t have to buy me lunch. Let’s do Dutch Treat at Jacob Wirth’s. The prime rib is excellent. How about tomorrow at 1:00 P.M.?”

 

Overnight Victor compiles a special list. At lunch, after hearing about the events involving Glenda, he updates Karen on the things she would not have gotten from the mass media. As they start on dessert, he produces the list and says,

 

“Last night I compiled a list of special sources. Many are books. When they are people, just mention that I referred you, but don’t mention the list. I give this to you only with your promise that you will use it with the utmost discretion and never share the list itself with anyone.

 

“I’m confident that your desire to not run afoul of powerful internationalists with murderous henchmen will moderate the way you release the specific facts that you gain.”

 

 

The War Goes On

 

August 8, 1940

The Battle of Britain begins.

 

September 27, 1940

The Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis is created.

 

February 1, 1941

German authorities begin rounding up Polish Jews for transfer to the Warsaw Ghetto

 

March 1941

Adolf Eichmann is appointed head of the department for Jewish affairs of the Reich Security Main Office.

 

June 22, 1941

Germany invades the Soviet Union

 

October 1941

Germany establishes Auschwitz II at Birkenau, for Jews, Gypsies, Poles, and Russians.

 

December 7, 1941

The Japanese attack Pearl Harbor.

 

December 11, 1941

The United States declares war on Japan and Germany

 

December 20, 1941

Karen is now a junior at Wellesley and is angry to learn about the treasonous complicity of Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the attack on Pearl Harbor. She would like to ring his vulture neck, but realizes that releasing information on this would most certainly get her killed. She is also assured by her source that a good many other people know the truth, and that it will come out in due course without anyone being murdered.

 

March 1942

An article in “TIME” magazine chronicles the Federal Council of Churches, which later becomes the National Council of Churches, a part of the World Council of Churches, lending its weight to efforts to establish a global authority. A meeting of the top officials of the council comes out in favor of:

 

1) a world government of delegated powers;

 

2) strong immediate limitations on national sovereignty;

 

3) international control of all armies and navies. Representatives, 375 of them, of 30-some denominations assert that “a new order of economic life is both imminent and imperative,” a new order that is sure to come either “through voluntary cooperation within the framework of democracy or through explosive revolution.”

 

February 2, 1943

German 6th Army surrenders at Stalingrad. Germany negotiates for an end to the war, but Sir Winston Churchill, with a personal obsession to defeat Hitler, persuades the

Allies to insist on unconditional surrender.

 

For Germany, this would mean another Versailles, or worse, so the war drags on, and the Jews are shipped to work camps, mostly in Poland. The Allies succeed in bombing German supply lines. This leads to malnutrition and disease in the camps.

 

June 6

D-Day: Allied invasion at Normandy

 

July 7, 1944

The World Bank is established at the Bretton Woods Conference in northern New Hampshire. 

 

 

New Evidence

 

August 16, 1944

Tabatha is still mother at Camp Shawmut and calls Captain Hurley.

 

“…We cleared away some woods for a horse corral. When we dug the post holes for a split rail fence, we hit a human skeleton which turned out to be Glenda’s friend who went missing in 1931…

 

 

The War Ends

 

January 27, 1945

As the war winds down, the Russians liberate Auschwitz and other camps in Poland, but will not allow the press inside any of them for another five years.

 

In Berlin, invading Russian soldiers see flush toilets for the first time and think they are potato washing machines. They rape fifty thousand German women.

 

May 8, 1945

V-E Day: Germany surrenders; end of the Third Reich

 

American forensic doctors examine hundreds of bodies, but can't find even one that was gassed, most having died of typhus or starvation. Throughout the war the Red Cross, under the rules of the Geneva Convention, visited each of the camps once every two weeks. They say the total number of people who died in the camps is 271,301, including non-Jews. Based on census data, the World Almanac for 1940 gives the world's total Jewish population as 15,319,359. For 1949 it puts the number at 15,713,638.

 

For Auschwitz specifically, the Russians claim a number of four million, but the top Jewish authority on Holocaust demographics, Gerald Reitlinger, says the number for Auschwitz is eight hundred thousand. The banker media, however, hold fast against all the updated estimates, and always make a point of stressing the activity of atypical Germans like Dr. Joseph Mengele. Decades pass before they speak about Oskar Schindler.

 

August 6, 1945

Bombing of Hiroshima

 

August 9, 1945

Bombing of Nagasaki

 

August 15, 1945

V-J Day: Victory over Japan proclaimed.

 

September 2, 1945

Japan surrenders; end of World War II

 

After the official end of the war, three million Germans are murdered, two million civilians, mostly women, children and elderly, and one million prisoners of war. British historian Giles Macdonough details how they are killed in cold blood, or confined and left to die of disease, cold, malnutrition, or starvation. 

 

 

Aftermath

 

October 24, 1945

The United Nations Charter becomes effective. Democratic Senator Glen Taylor of Idaho calls on the U.S. Senate to go on record in favor of creating a world republic, with an international police force.

 

December 27, 1945

The International Monetary Fund is created largely through the efforts of government economist Harry Dexter White.

 

The publicly expressed rationale and main economic premise is based on the theories of John Maynard Keynes. When Karen hears this she knows that there is a putrid cauldron aboil because Keynes insists that economic activities occur in ‘natural’ cycles that nobody really understands, when in fact we know that they are caused entirely by the manipulation of currencies by international bankers for their own mercenary purposes.

 

Karen at first thinks of putting this in an editorial. Anyone who has read a primer on economics will know what’s going on, but that’s not the same as proactively disseminating the information from an adversarial position. A small mammal although intelligent should not engage a Tyrannosaurus.

 

March 14, 1948

Karen marries a Harvard history professor, Sven Lindstrom. He’s a quiet scholarly man. They don’t argue much about current events. Karen places the same emphasis on nature, as opposed to nurture, in improving the human condition that he does. They have a very good sex life and enjoy their vacations together travelling and skiing.

 

1949

At the Nuremberg Trials, seventy-five percent of the staff lawyers are Jewish. Affidavits alleging atrocities by the Germans are allowed to flood in from all over Europe without any requirement of corroborating oral testimony. Cross examination of prosecution witnesses by defense council in not allowed, because the witnesses might be ‘traumatized.’

 

Controlled media, friendly to Jewish banker goals, latch on to a careless estimate offered by a Vermont magistrate Raul Hilberg, that six million Jews were gassed in the camps. The higher the death toll, the bigger can be the loans for Germany's ongoing reparation payments to Israel.

 

In January 1950, one year after the final verdicts at Nuremberg. the camps liberated by the Russians in Poland are opened. There are lots of gas chambers that no one remembers seeing who visited the camps during the war.

 

February 7, 1950

International financier and CFR member James Warburg tells a Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee:

 

“We shall have world government whether or not you like it, by conquest or consent.”

 

October 8, 1951

Karen and Sven have a baby boy, Siegfried.

 

When Sven first sees the boy he is very happy and says,

 

“Karen, he looks like a Viking warrior.”

 

September 14, 1953

They have a second child, this time a daughter,

Freya. When Sven first sees the girl he is delighted and says,

 

“Karen, she looks like a Valkyrie.”

 

1954

Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands establishes the Bilderbergers, a group of top international politicians and bankers who meet secretly

once a year.

 

 

Glenda Returns

 

February 24, 1956

Since 1939 Glenda has been living an uneventful life at the hotel on Beacon Hill. Today the angry jealous former boyfriend her roommate / girlfriend slashes Glenda’s

face badly with his jumbo size pocket knife.

 

She spends two days in the hospital. After four months of healing, she is badly scarred for life. Millie let’s her stay, but only kitchen, maid, and laundry from now on. Glenda’s low self-esteem renders her very peevish and quarrelsome. After two months of abuse, her girlfriend

moves out.

 

September 18, 1956

Karen has blossomed into an especially beautiful woman / highly successful journalist, recently nominated for the Pulitzer Prize, and to this day, she still carries the umbrella.

 

Late in the morning she is walking home from the public library. As she approaches the massive oak tree in front of her house she sees the last part of a woman’s trouser leg disappear behind the trunk.

 

Suspecting the worst, she grips her umbrella for thrusting and quicky follows the individual around the trunk. There is Glenda, older, still beautiful, but with long deep scars on both cheeks. Glenda has her knife, raises it high, and comes right at Karen.

 

As she steps backward, Karen stumbles over a tree root and falls, but manages to hold the umbrella at a forty-five degree angle against the ground, like a pike. Glenda stumbles too, poised to stab, but falls forward and is impaled in her stomach on the umbrella.

 

Glenda teeters, then falls over to one side, looks at Karen and says,

 

“I loved you and you ruined my life.”

 

Karen says,

 

“No, you did not love me. You ruined your own life, and have tried to take mine twice.”

 

At some level Glenda knows that Karen is right, begins to look at peace, then passes out from blood loss. Karen calls an ambulance. They load Glenda in and drive off, but she dies on the  way to the hospital. 

 

 

What Future?

 

April 27, 1961

President John F. Kennedy to the American Newspaper Publishers Association

 

From Part 1:

 

“For we are opposed around the world by a monolithic and ruthless conspiracy that relies primarily on covert means for expanding its sphere of influence--on infiltration instead of invasion, on subversion instead of elections, on intimidation instead of free choice, on guerrillas by night instead of armies by day. It is a system which has conscripted vast human and material resources into the

building of a tightly knit, highly efficient machine that combines military, diplomatic, intelligence, economic, scientific and political operations.

 

Its preparations are concealed, not published. Its mistakes are buried, not headlined. Its dissenters are silenced, not praised. No expenditure is questioned, no rumor is printed, no secret is revealed. It conducts the Cold War, in short, with a war-time discipline no democracy would ever hope or wish to match.

 

Nevertheless, every democracy recognizes the necessary restraints of national security--and the question remains whether those restraints need to be more strictly observed if we are to oppose this kind of attack as well as outright invasion.”

 

1973

Gary Allen, Washington D.C. insider journalist for Politico Magazine, publishes the most important book of the Twentieth Century.

 

None Dare Call it Conspiracy.

 

Karen reads it, is delighted and enthralled. The truth is finally out. Tears run down her cheeks as she thinks of what Victor said so many years ago about how people in the thick of events can supply the greatest amount of detail.. She buys a box of one-hundred copies, keeps them in her car, and gives them to fellow journalists and friends everywhere. 

 

 

Afterword

 

By February 2016, if anybody disputes the six million number, they are immediately labeled a “Holocaust denier." Banker friendly publishers have almost exclusive control of all mass media, and with tribal singularity of purpose using selective emphasis, have turned three generations of white Europeans into guilt ridden self-haters, blindly acquiescent in New World Order plans to ruin national economies, destroy European culture, and eliminate the white race with endless immigrant hordes of Third World savages. Any white person who will not proactively participate in the extermination of his own race, is labeled a "hater" or a "white supremacist." The next time a subverted globalist traitor invites you to a "conscious raising" Holocaust seminar, hang him for treason.

 

Jewish Globalist injustice in Europe today is legendary. The escalating plunder of the United States has taken the standard of living of the average American down forty percent since 2000. Financial aid from the US to Israel amounts to three thousand dollars a year for each Israeli family of four, in a time when Americans can't even pay off their own mortgages. The aid to Israel is the reason for another banker delight, the continuing US war with Islamic nations, including the attack on the World Trade Center.

Fifty years ago, the US was the world's biggest creditor nation, now it is the biggest debtor nation. At this writing, the US National debt is nearly thirty-four trillion dollars, every penny created by fiat. It’s only controlled media disinformation that keeps Americans from knowing that the government can create its own currency, and tie its value to receipts for hours worked. We don’t need to borrow from

a Globalist banker cartel.

 

In 2001, the busy boys at the NSA got a bill through Congress mandating all telephones manufactured from that point forward must have a reversible hang-up button function that they can activate whenever they want to listen in to private conversations.

 

The bankers have slowly made almost every simple matter in life somehow involve a mobile phone, for ‘security’ purposes.