Hour Of Decision

Hour Of Decision


Episode 71 Hour of Decision: FDR (5) Moral Bankruptcy, Alien Influences, the Bankers Behind the Curtain, and the Rotten Origin of Today’s Democrats

March 29, 2025

In the final episode of his FDR series Lew discusses the moral bankruptcy displayed by Roosevelt’s cooperation in sending two million Russians into Stalin’s death camps. He calls out the immoral foundation the New Deal was built upon: removing funds from some Americans to manipulate other Americans into supporting the FDR administration (Tax and Tax, Spend and Spend, Elect and Elect).


He explains that the alien influence pervading the entire Roosevelt enterprise was Marxism. Two extremely powerful purveyors of that philosophy behind the scenes were Felix Frankfurter, at the center of Fabian socialist ferment which was found at Harvard University; and Bernard Baruch, who by his own admission operated at the center of Wall Street, and was the leading advocate in America for complete government control of industry--- the kind of control he exerted using the wartime powers in the Wilson administration.


Frankfurter stocked the new FDR administration with hundreds of appointees of high and low stature (“personnel is policy”). Baruch funded the Democrat party, built a network of Wall Street types to support Roosevelt, and provided the template for the National Recovery Administration (NRA), “the Blue Eagle,” the New Deal program which intended to exert complete control over manufactures and commercial transactions in America.


Then there were the bankers “behind the curtain,” in the FDR presidency, including Thomas Lamont, who controlled J.P. Morgan and Co. (agents of the Rothchild banking dynasty in Europe), Herbert Lehman, the former governor of New York from the Lehman Brothers family, James Warburg of the infamous Warburg banking family that controlled the Bank of Germany and produced the plan for the Federal Reserve bank, and Col. Edward Mandell House, the notorious agent of international finance connected with both the Morgan interests in America and international banking houses overseas.


These banking interests pushed for consolidation of power in the U.S. government, recognition of the Soviet Union, and for the U.S. entry into WWII.


Finally, all the Democrat presidents after FDR sought to emulate him and his program of creating bigger government at home, and fostering more powerful international institutions to lead eventually to a one world government.


Lew then highlights Roosevelt’s last major speech to the nation, where he called for a new Bill of Rights that would conform our Constitution more closely to the Soviet’s ruling document.