Ford H., International Jew, Vol. II, 1921.pdf

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I
Jewish Activities
in the
United States
Volume 11
of
The International Jew
A Second Selection of A rticles from
The Dearborn Independent
Published by
The Dearborn Publishing Co.
Dearborn, Mich.
April 1921
1
Jewish Activities
in the
United States
Volume II
of
The International Jew
Being a Reprint of a Second selection
from articles appearing in
The Dearborn Independent
from Oct. 9, 1920 to March 19, 1921.
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Preface
FORMER volume, containing the first twenty
articles in the series of Jewish studies which began
their appearance in The Dearborn Independent of
May 22, 1920, dealt largely with the theory of the
Jewish World Program. The present volume gives
a general view of some of the evidence which illustrates
and substantiates that Program. As the first volume
brought the subject forward a step, the present volume
brings it forward another step. The Question is a
very big one, the material is of mountainous propor¬
tions, so that it is very desirable that there be sim¬
plicity of method. The method therefore has been
to lay the observable everyday facts alongside the
Program, to see if they agree. It will be time enough
to take up the authenticity of the Protocols when the
parallel between them and the activities of the Jewish
leaders is shown.
The articles thus far printed remain unanswered.
They have been denounced and misrepresented, but
not answered. A favorite evasion of Jewish editors is
to say that the statements made about the Jews could
be made about any other race, and that no race could
refute the statements with facts. But these state¬
ments have not been made about any other race and
could they be? If they were made about, say the
Hungarians, Poles, Rumanians, Italians, English,
Scotch, Irish, Russian or Syrian in our midst, could
they not be met?
Not the mere fact that certain statements are made
about the purposes of Jewish leaders, but the fact that
people can see wherein the statements agree with
actual conditions, is what gives strength to the state¬
ments. The same statements made about any other
group would fall because the people could find nothing
to sustain them. Say-so and hearsay have no weight
at all. Neither has abuse or prejudice. If the statements
A
4
PREFACE
made in these articles are false, they are of a nature
which can be refuted with facts.
If there is no
parallel between the written Program of the Protocols
and the actual program as followed under Jewish
leadership, surely that can be shown. If it has not
been shown, it is because the parallel exists, and Jewish
leaders know it exists.
The following chapters take up numerous matters,
chiefly the interference of the Jew with educational
and religious interests of the majority of the people;
the moral menace in the Jew-controlled theater and
movie; the fight of the New York Stock Exchange
against Jewish domination; a discussion of the ques¬
tion whether the Jews are a “religious denomination”
or a race, only Jewish authorities being quoted; and a
very slight beginning on the endless subject of Jewish
influence during the Great War. Bernard M. Baruch,
although secondary in the real Jewish counsels, pro¬
claimed himself to a Congressional committee as “the
most powerful man in the war,” and the records show
that he was.
This volume does not complete the case. It is
issued to meet the demand of new readers who call for
the articles from the beginning. The editions of The
Dearborn Independent being long ago exhausted, the
publication of these two volumes was undertaken to
enable readers to begin with the first article. The
omission of several single articles from this compilation
is in the interest of compactness, and may be restored
in another volume. The omitted articles are “The
Jews’ Complaint Against ‘Americanism,’ ” Oct. 23;
“Gentile Fall Involved in Hope of Jewish Rule,” Dec. 25.
April, 1921.
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