헨리 키신저의 하버드대 지도교수이자, 6명의 미국 대통령들의 책사 노릇을 한 밴더빌트대/옥스퍼드대 로즈장학생 출신 William Yandell Elliott의 이력을 보면 데이비드 록펠러의 황제 재임기 이전 영국의 지배층이 어떻게 미국을 지배했는지 알 수 있다; 피에르 트뤼도, 나카소네 야스히로도 그의 제자뻘
하버드대 니얼 퍼거슨이 이 사람을 헨리 키신저의 멘토로 강조하며서 새삼 부각된 인물.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Yandell_Elliott
William Yandell Elliott (1896–1979) was an American historian and a political advisor to six US presidents.
Biography
Born in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, he served as an artillery battery commander in World War I. He attended Vanderbilt University, where he was a member of the group of poets and literary scholars known as the Fugitives. As a Rhodes Scholar, he attended Balliol College, Oxford, where he read Philosophy, Politics and Economics and, among others, would meet the poet William Butler Yeats, the Indian nationalist Krishna Menon, and John Marshall Harlan II, a future Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. His dissertation, The Pragmatic Revolt in Politics, completed under supervision of A. D. Lindsay, proved to be influential.
He was hired by Harvard President Abbott Lawrence Lowell, and he was to remain at Harvard for the next 41 years. He became an advisor to a number of American presidents and presidential candidates, including Al Smith in 1928. He was a member of Franklin Roosevelt's Brain Trust in the 1930s and the 1940s and the Vice President of the War Production Board in Charge of Civilian Requirements during World War II. He also accompanied Roosevelt to the Yalta Conference.
After the war, Elliott served on the National Security Council. He was a scriptwriter for Republican Richard Nixon's 1960 election run, but Democratic Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson retained him as a US State Department advisor.
He also taught at the Harvard Extension School.[1] Elliott became dean of the Harvard Summer School, where he would establish the Harvard International Seminar, directed by his student and protégé Henry Kissinger. Many attendees went on to become heads of state or government in their respective countries, including Yigal Allon in Israel, Yasuhiro Nakasone in Japan, and Pierre Trudeau in Canada.
One of his sons, Ward Elliott, was a notable political scientist. Other sons include the late Charles Elliott and David Elliott, both political scientists.
Influence
Elliott has become the recipient of recent attention, with historians Niall Ferguson and Sean Stone paying close interest to Elliott's role as Kissinger's mentor.
이 사람의 지도교수
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandie_Lindsay,_1st_Baron_Lindsay_of_Birker
스코틀랜드 출신
이 사람을 하버드대 교수로 꽂아준 인물; 최장기 하버드대 총장 역임 (1909-1933)
로스차일드-모건 그룹이 만든 국제연맹 옹호
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A._Lawrence_Lowell
He took the progressive side on certain public issues as well. He demonstrated outspoken support for academic freedom during World War I and played a prominent role in urging the public to support American participation in the League of Nations following the war.
...
The initial efforts of the League to Enforce Peace aimed at creating public awareness through magazine articles and speeches. Then-President Wilson's specific proposal for the League of Nations met resistance from the Republican-controlled Senate and the opposition led by Senator Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts. Lowell watched the high-minded debate deteriorate until the ideal of international cooperation was "sacrificed to party intrigue, personal antipathy, and pride of authorship."[30] Lowell and the League to Enforce Peace tried to hold the middle ground. He cared little about Wilson's specific plan or the details of the reservations or amendments Lodge wanted to attach for the Senate to give its assent. Lowell believed American participation was the greater goal, the exact nature of the organization secondary.[31]
그의 성격에 대한 재미있는 품평:
One historian summarized his complex personality and legacy with these words: "He played many characters—the rich man of simple tastes, the gentleman who loathed gentlemanly C's, the passionate theorist of democracy whose personal conduct was suavely autocratic."[2] The interplay of democratic and patrician instincts, and especially his insistence on defending his positions when others found them indefensible, made him hard for his contemporaries to grasp. As one historian posed the question: "How could a consensus form around one who exasperated his friends as often as he confounded his enemies."[3]
이 사람 집안은 중국에 마약팔아 돈 번 Lowell가문
Many of Harvard’s 19th-century heroes and villains were inextricably linked to the drug. In “The Imperial Cruise: A Secret History of Empire and War,” historian James Bradley shows that many of Boston’s elite families—Cabot, Lowell, and Kirkland included—sustained their wealth through the opium trade.
https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2017/3/30/opium-at-harvard/
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