Press "Enter" to skip to content

“Mein Kampf” — Hitler Used Rothschild Banker’s Typewriter

By Henry Makow PhD

 

It contradicts the image we have of Hitler in 1924 leading a grass roots fringe party. In fact, he was a front man for the international bankers he pretended to oppose. But if we read the “The Protocols of Zion” carefully, we shouldn’t be surprised.”

(Protocol 12.11)

The Secret Masonry is setting up “our own, to all appearance, off position, which in at least one of its organs will present what looks like the very antipodes to us. Our real opponents at heart will accept this simulated opposition as their own and will show us their cards.”

Sometimes the symbolic details speak volumes.

Emil Georg von Stauss, the president of  Germany’s largest bank, the Deutsche Bank, lent Hitler a portable Remington so he could write his infamous anti-Jewish banker manifesto “Mein Kampf.”

Von Stauss, a principal Nazi Party fundraiser, also was a longtime business associate of the Rothschilds.

Hitler dictated “Mein Kampf” to typists Rudolf Hess and Emil Maurice during his cushy eight-month stay at Landsberg Prison in April-December 1924. (His five-year sentence was commuted. He had a two-room suite with a view and was allowed to receive gifts and visitors.)

Von Stauss was part of a “Hitler support group” consisting of wealthy Illuminati, many of whom I suspect were crypto Jews.

Helene Bechstein, the wife of the piano manufacturer pretended to be Hitler’s adopted mother and smuggled out sections of the manuscript. She took care of all Hitler’s expenses and hoped he would marry her daughter Lotte. Franz Thyssen, the chairman of United Steelworks sent Hitler a birthday gift of 100,000 gold marks…

READ FULL ARTICLE HERE… (henrymakow.com)

Live Stream + Chat (zutalk.com)

We need your help to keep Caravan to Midnight going,

please consider donating to help keep independent media independent

Breaking News: