November 08, 2014
This Difficult Individual: Ezra Pound by Eustace Mullins (1961) PDF
Ezra Pound: Poet, artist, free-thinker and the inspiration for Eustace Mullins to pen Secrets of the Federal Reserve in 1951. Now an underground classic, Mullins' book was first to reveal the private/corporate nature of America's central bank. (G. Edward Griffith is often accredited with originally revealing the information, but that simply is not true).
In 'Difficult Individual', Mullins takes the reader on a biographical journey of Ezra Pound's life: From growing up in rural Idaho during the late 1800's to becoming a leading poet/linguist in 1920's Europe.
Pound helped open an artistic exchange between British and American writers and was famous for advancing the careers of Robert Frost and T.S. Elliot. He also had a profound influence on Irish writers, W.B. Yeats and James Joyce.
During WWII, Pound hosted a shortwave radio show from Mussolini's Italy and later became a POW charged with treason by the FDR administration. Fearing the death penalty, he was forced into a plea deal and became an unwilling inhabitant of St. Elizabeth's hospital for 12 years.
Pound's life is an amazing story and Mullins' biography is a time-machine journey into the past - Well worth the time to read.
This Difficult Individual: Ezra Pound by Eustace Mullins PDF File : http://nationalvanguard.org/books/mullins-eustace-this-difficult-individual-ezra-pound-1961.pdf
Secrets of the Federal Reserve - Mullins (1951) PDF: http://thetruthnews.info/secretfed.pdf
Loverly. Will join the read list immediately.
ReplyDeleteTa.
I have the book, some parts are really dry but worth a read
ReplyDeleteRegarding Griffin's book, George Whitehurst-Berry exposed misinformation possibly intended as disinformation, like Griffin's claim that the Bank of Venice's paper documents circulated only at a small premium over gold (Griffin provides no source), whereas Berry cited more than one source that showed that their documents were in such demand that they circulated at a minimum of a 20% premium over gold, and even went up to 40% until they were regulated to a lower premium. Griffin also said they ultimately failed, which is intellectually dishonest at best, since the Bank only went under when Venice was conquered by Napoleon.
ReplyDeleteSo much for the gold bug notion that we need to have a gold-backed money supply for stability and its "intrinsic value."
And the late Dr. Stan Monteith even called out John Birch Society co-founder, Robert Welch, as a NWO operative, and Griffin has been a long-time Bircher, even trying to defend Welch's outlandish "Eisenhower was a Communist" claim. http://themindrenewed.com/interviews/2014/529-int060
I have no love for the John Birch society and am pretty sure the man who oversaw the death of over a million unarmed German POWs, and collaborated with the holohoax story not to mention many other war crimes and acts of treason is a definite communist agent
ReplyDeleteChristian, I believe Welch was also saying ideologically, and not just politically.
ReplyDeleteGriffin said that if Welch would've called Eisenhower a collectivist, then there wouldn't have been the big uproar, and he would've been right. Indeed, he would've, since perhaps everyone in top government positions back then was a collectivist.
Can someone tell National Vanguard to fix the PDF file? There seems to be photocopy errors made in the facsimile. Passages are abruptly interrupted by cutoff lines where two pages are joined together.
ReplyDelete