국제투기자본과 허버트 후버 2; 제1차 세계대전 때 벨기에를 전장터로 만든 영국/항구를 완전봉쇄해 벨기에인들을 굶어죽게 만든 영국/벨기에 구호위원히의 숨은 목적은 독일에 식량조달/벨기에는 1912년부터 금, 은을 녹여서 영란은행에게 줬는데 벨기에왕은 벨기에에서 터질 전쟁을 미리 알았던 것일까?
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ZDFmA3BH0jo&t=7s&pp=2AEHkAIB
1916년
나다니엘 로스차일드
허버트 후버에게 러시아 채권 팔라고 투자팁 전수?
후버는 에드워드 그레이 친구
에드워드 하우스 친구
후버가 멤버였던 벨기에 구호위원회 - JP모건과 로스차일드가 조종
숨은 목적은 독일에 식량조달
https://www.hoover.org/library-archives/histories/Hoover100/a-path-to-peace
https://www.heritage-history.com/index.php?c=read&author=mullins&book=order&story=rothschild
Herbert Hoover was also appointed a director
of Rio~Tinto; he would soon be asked to head the "Belgian Relief
Commission" which prolonged World War I from 1916 to 1918.
Wilson returned to the United States July 8, 1919, laden with one million dollars worth of jewelry, gifts from appreciative Europeans as a reward for his promise to get the U.S. into the League of Nations. Not a single member of Congress had been with him at the Paris Peace Conference. His associates were the Fabians of America, Dr. James T. Shotwell, Eugene Delano, and Jacob Schiff. Herbert Hoover immediately joined Col. House as the most vociferous advocate of our joining the League of Nations.
https://www.sdjewishworld.com/2019/04/01/herbert-hoover-funded-inspired-stanford-institutions/
After his graduation in 1895, Hoover initially was hard-pressed to support himself. He applied in San Francisco to the offices of Louis Janin, a mining engineer affiliated with the Rothschild interests in America. Janin told him there was a long line of aspiring geologists ahead of him, and that in any event there were no positions available, except one as a clerk typist. Hoover astutely accepted the position on the spot, intuitively understanding that if he could be near Janin in the office, he could learn from him. For his part, Janin soon recognized Hoover’s aptitude and training, and assigned him to the Sierra Mountains as a mine scout.
It was a brief association with Janin, because Hoover soon was recruited by the British firm of Bewick, Moreing, to evaluate and administer mines in Western Australia, and later China. Eventually he traveled to various locales all over the world in behalf of the British firm, developing such a solid reputation for rejuvenating mining operations that he was able to open his own London-based independent consulting company. Having become a wealthy man, Hoover returned on occasion to Stanford to deliver lectures, and also to present the university library with books and papers that he had gathered during his travels.
Biographer David Burner wrote that “No other President except Woodrow Wilson so closely identified himself with his alma mater in later life. During his business career, Hoover brought for the library many hundreds of books, especially on Australia and the Far East. In a letter of 1908 to Theodore H. Adams, who then taught history at Stanford, he announced he would give complete sets of several publications of scientific societies ‘in relation to Asiatic matters, particularly early Jesuit publications’ and he wrote Adams in 1912 that he was sending some shelves of books on China.”
Hoover became a trustee of his alma mater in 1912, later donating $100,000 for a Student Union, and helping to found after World War I both the School of Business and the Food Research Institute.
Wrote Burner: “His most impressive achievement was to salvage quantities of fugitive literature from Europe in the same era and house it on campus at the Hoover War Library, later renamed the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace.”
Hoover’s association with the Rothschild family enterprises was tangential, but somewhere along his life’s journey, he developed a sympathy for other Jews. As head of the American Relief Administration, in the immediate aftermath of World War I, Hoover was instrumental in having Henry Morgenthau appointed as a commissioner to investigate the slaughter of 280 Jews in Poland in April 1919. As U.S. President in 1932, he appointed Benjamin Cardozo to the U.S. Supreme Court, the second Jew so named. Justice Louis Brandeis, with whom Cardozo served, was the first Jew to become a Supreme Court Justice; appointed by Woodrow Wilson.
https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/abs/jp-morgan-co-and-the-crisis-of-capitalism/witchcraft-jp-morgan-co-hoover-and-the-depression-in-the-united-states-19301933/C9D46804541B3E03D346271BCB5DB0A5
This chapter examines J.P. Morgan & Co., the Hoover administration, and the progress of the Depression in the United States between 1930 and 1933. It challenges the idea that banks were bystanders as the trauma of the Great Depression unfolded. Morgan activity took several forms. The first was acting selectively to aid private institutions in trouble in 1930–31. This policy ended with the last quarter of 1931 when heavy losses weakened the Morgan bank. While 1930–33 was devastating for the bank’s operations, two periods stand out as especially harmful: the last quarter of 1931 and the first quarter of 1933. The Morgan partners pushed the Hoover administration to adopt forceful measures to respond to deflation. Leffingwell and Parker Gilbert believed that deflation was imperilling capitalism’s existence. Attempts to shift Hoover were unsuccessful, in part because of the latter’s suspicion of the Morgan bank, in part because of the incoherence of the Morgan policy prescription. By the opening months of 1933 the Morgan partners had come to accept that suspension of the gold standard was necessary to save capitalism. Yet, the chapter suggests, by Roosevelt’s inauguration neither Hoover nor Roosevelt were listening to the partners.





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