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To: Raymond Duray who wrote (12102)3/29/2001 4:40:13 PM
From: jhg_in_kc  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13572
 
Don't have that URL, but go to google.com and type in "1934 Naxi overthrow of Roosevelt" or some such combination and you will find a dozen or more articles.
Here is another.

Hidden history - the attempted coup of 1934
By Jim Marrs
Date: 05/18/2000
URL: alienzoo.com

Most Americans think the possibility of a military-supported coup d’etat in
the United States is a far-fetched notion.


Seven Days in May
But others, President John F. Kennedy being one of the foremost, did
entertain such thoughts. His White House gave full cooperation to the
production of the film Seven Days in May, which dramatized an attempted
military coup.

Interestingly enough, the accused assassin of JFK, Lee Harvey Oswald, noted
in his diary, "Americans are apt to scoff at the idea, that a military coup
in the U.S., as so often happens in Latin American countries, could ever
replace our government. But that is an idea that has grounds for
consideration." (Warren Commission Vol. XVI, p. 441)

Ever since Gen. George Washington declined the post of military dictator of
the United States offered by wealthy and powerful men following the defeat of
the British in the American Revolution, attempts have been made to gain
control of this nation.


Oswald
Modern history records at least one possible attempt at a military takeover
in this country. This classic but little known example of conspiracy within
the United States can be found in the attempted overthrow of Franklin D.
Roosevelt early in his presidency.
It is not only an example of hidden U.S. history - you didn’t hear this story
in high school - but also the lengths to which powerful persons will go to
exert their will.

In 1933, the same year Hitler came to power in Germany, many wealthy
Americans looked with favor on a fascist political system to act as a shield
against socialism and communism. Many were disgruntled with President
Roosevelt’s social policies and felt he was secretly a communist. Little did
they realize that the Wall Street financiers behind Roosevelt were the very
people who helped fund the advent of communism.

Others more in the know decided that Roosevelt was too restrictive on big
business and too bound by constitutional restraints.


Washington
"Early in 1934, Irenee Du Pont and (General Motors President) William S.
Knudsen reached their explosion point over President Roosevelt," reported
author Charles Higham. "Along with friends of the Morgan Bank and General
Motors, certain Du Pont backers financed a coup d’etat that would overthrow
the President with the aid of a $3 million-funded army of terrorists, modeled
on the fascist movement in Paris known as the Croix de Feu."

The undoing of this scheme was Marine Corps Commandant General Smedley
Butler, who was approached by the men traceable to the J. P. Morgan and Du
Pont financial empires and urged to head the new military-based fascist
government. They said they could get an additional $300 million if necessary.

Butler, who had openly attacked Roosevelt’s New Deal programs, however,
proved to be a loyal citizen and immediately informed Roosevelt of the
treasonous conspiracy.

"...Roosevelt...knew that if he were to arrest the leaders of the houses of
Morgan and Du Pont, it would create an unthinkable national crisis in the
midst of a depression and perhaps another Wall Street crash. Not for the
first or last time in his career, he was aware that there were powers greater
than he in the United States," noted Higham.


FDR
Roosevelt decided to leak the story to the press, which generally downplayed
it as a "ridiculous" rumor. Nevertheless, some of the primary plotters
skipped the country until the furor died down and the story prompted Congress
to appoint a special committee to look into the matter.

Yielding to the powerful interests involved, the McCormack-Dickstein
Committee dragged its feet for four years before finally publishing a report
marked for "restricted circulation." Although downplaying the significance of
this attempted coup, the committee’s report did state that "certain persons
made an attempt to establish a fascist organization in this country" and that
the committee "was able to verify all the pertinent statements made by
General Butler."

In later years, the committee’s co-chairman, Rep. John J. McCormack told
author Jules Archer that America might well have gone the way of fascist
Germany if Butler had not blown the whistle on the plotters.

"The people were in a very confused state of mind, (the Great Depression was
hitting full force and Prohibition was being rescinded) making the nation
weak and ripe for some drastic kind of extremist action," recalled McCormack.

Due to the secrecy and confusion surrounding this attempted takeover, some
researchers have even theorized the whole thing was a plot to install
Roosevelt as a total dictator in the United States. This theory has it that
when Butler led his fascist army on Washington, it would have presented
Roosevelt with an excuse to declare martial law and take sole control of the
nation.

Whatever the truth, this was the last overtly public move against an American
president by powerful business interests until 1963. However, it clearly
illustrated that America’s hidden rulers are not content to operate within
the confines of the U.S. Constitution.

The fact that this attempted overthrow of the government is not mentioned in
history texts illustrates the deficiency of this nation’s public education in
such matters, thanks to a mass media more concerned with "Mickey Mouse"
topics than investigative news. It is indeed ironic that today the Disney
empire includes many news media organizations.

For further information regarding issues such as this, read Rule by Secrecy
by Jim Marrs, now available from finer bookstores everywhere. For an in-depth
look at UFOs read Alien Agenda by Jim Marrs, available from this web site and
in bookstores. Also Jim Marrs’ book on the U. S. Army’s remote viewing
program, Psi Spies, which was suppressed in 1995, is now available online
right here at AlienZoo. Order yours today.

©2000 AlienZoo, Inc.