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Draft the
Corporations
-- Warren G. Harding
By Dick
Eastman
Here is an amazingly good but unfortunately
long-forgotten idea from the President that imposter historians like
Arthur Schlesinger Jr. have been deceitfully telling us was "the
worst president in our history."
Revisionist Historians, i.e., true historians, know better.
Warren G. Harding --
contrary to what almost everyone has been taught by imposter
historians like Arthur Schlesinger Jr. (the anti-MacArthur,
anti-McCarthy, anti-populist, anti-Jefferson Zionist Jew who the
Money Power placed as the "Camelot court historian" after John
Kennedy's assassination so that he could re-write the Kennedy
history to suit the Rockefeller interests while gate keeping (or
destroying) all of the critical documents. Schlesinger assassinated
what Kennedy stood for -- opposition to the Money Power conspiracy
-- just as the gunmen assassinated the man himself. Warren G.
Harding was not the "worst President of American history," in fact
he was the greatest in terms of what he accomplished and opened up
for the Coolidge administration (featuring the economics of Irving
Fisher and Andrew Mellon) to continue. Only the deliberate sabotage
of the economy by Baruch, Warburg, Percy Rockefeller and other Wall
Street speculators in 1929 brought Americas true last golden age,
the "Roaring Twenties," to an end.
Harding was the president who ended the crushing centralized war
economy and "war-on-terror-like" police state of Wilson and Bernard
Baruch after WWI. Harding, with Coolidge his Vice President, was
the first President elected with the newly franchised women's vote.
He promoted the view of American progress that was Henry Ford's view
and Thomas Edison's view, not the vision of the Rockefellers,
Morgans, Baruchs which holds us in its death grip today.
 
1920
Election: "America First," "Law and Order,"
and regaining something called "Normalcy"
lost when America entered World War One.
It was
Harding who said that in the "next war" the state should draft the
corporations -- since they are legal persons -- and have them
operate on the equivalent of soldiers pay as they make munitions and
other supplies for the conflict. Doing that and also adopting
Lincoln's rule that when in war the Treasury will make the money to
fund it ("Greenback authorization, rather than central bank
credit money") would just about nail the lid shut on war- profiteer
imperialism.
Let me
introduce you to the President you were always taught was
"the worst President in our history" -- I give you Warren G.
Harding:
"There is something inherently wrong, something out of accord with
the ideals of representative democracy, when one portion of our
citizenship turns its activities to private gain amid defensive war
while another is fighting, sacrificing, or dying for national
preservation."
-- Warren G. Harding
If, despite this attitude, war is again forced upon us, I earnestly
hope a way may be found which will unify our individual and
collective strength and consecrate all America, materially and
spiritually, body and soul, to national defense. I can vision the
ideal republic, where every man and woman is called under the flag
for assignment to duty for whatever service, military or civic, the
individual is best fitted; where we may call to universal service
every plant, agency, or facility, all in the sublime sacrifice for
country, and not one penny of war profit shall inure to the benefit
of private individual, corporation, or combination, but all above
the normal shall flow into the defense chest of the Nation. There is
something inherently wrong, something out of accord with the ideals
of representative democracy, when one portion of our citizenship
turns its activities to private gain amid defensive war while
another is fighting, sacrificing, or dying for national
preservation. Out of such universal service will
come a new unity of spirit and purpose, a new confidence and
consecration, which would make our defense impregnable, our triumph
assured. Then we should have little or no disorganization of our
economic, industrial, and commercial systems at home, no staggering
war debts, no swollen fortunes to flout the sacrifices of our
soldiers, no excuse for sedition, no pitiable slackerism, no outrage
of treason. Envy and jealousy would have no soil for their menacing
development, and revolution would be without the passion which
engenders it. --Warren G. Harding
"America's present
need is not heroics, but healing; not nostrums, but normalcy; not
revolution, but restoration; not agitation, but adjustment; not
surgery, but serenity; not the dramatic, but the dispassionate; not
experiment, but equipoise; not submergence in internationality, but
sustainment in triumphant nationality.... --Warren G. Harding
The voice of the United States has a respectful hearing in
international councils, because we have convinced the world that we
have no selfish ends to serve, no old grievances to avenge, no
territorial or other greed to satisfy. But the voice being beard is
that of good counsel. not of dictation. It is the voice of sympathy
and fraternity and helpfulness, seeking to assist but not assume for
the United States burdens which nations must bear for themselves. We
would rejoice to help rehabilitate currency systems and facilitate
all commerce which does not drag us to the very levels of those we
seek to lift up. --Warren G. Harding
We are ready to associate ourselves with the nations of the world,
great and small, for conference, for counsel; to seek the expressed
views of world opinion; to recommend a way to approximate
disarmament and relieve the crushing burdens of military and naval
establishments. We elect to participate in suggesting plans for
mediation, conciliation, and arbitration, and would gladly join in
that expressed conscience of progress, which seeks to clarify and
write the laws of international relationship, and establish a world
court for the disposition of such justifiable questions as nations
are agreed to submit thereto. In expressing aspirations, in seeking
practical plans, in translating humanity's new concept of
righteousness and justice and its hatred of war into recommended
action we are ready most heartily to unite, but every commitment
must be made in the exercise of our national sovereignty. Since
freedom impelled, and independence inspired, and nationality
exalted, a world super-government is contrary to everything we
cherish and can have no sanction by our Republic. This is not
selfishness, it is sanctity. It is not aloofness, it is security. It
is not suspicion of others, it is patriotic adherence to the things
which made us what we are. --Warren G.
Harding
Perhaps we can make no more helpful contribution by example than
prove a Republic's capacity to emerge from the wreckage of war.
While the world's embittered travail did not leave us devastated
lands nor desolated cities, left no gaping wounds, no breast with
hate, it did involve us in the delirium of expenditure, in expanded
currency and credits, in unbalanced industry, in unspeakable waste,
and disturbed relationships. While it uncovered our portion of
hateful selfishness at home, it also revealed the heart of America
as sound and fearless, and beating in confidence unfailing.
Amid it all we have riveted the gaze of all civilization to the
unselfishness and the righteousness of representative democracy,
where our freedom never has made offensive warfare, never has sought
territorial aggrandizement through force, never has turned to the
arbitrament of arms until reason has been exhausted. When the
Governments of the earth shall have established a freedom like our
own and shall have sanctioned the pursuit of peace as we have
practiced it, I believe the last sorrow and the final sacrifice of
international warfare will have been written.
--Warren G. Harding
Let me speak to the maimed
and wounded soldiers who are present today, and through them convey
to their comrades the gratitude of the Republic for their sacrifices
in its defense. A generous country will never forget the services
you rendered, and you may hope for a policy under Government that
will relieve any maimed successors from taking your places on
another such occasion as this. Our supreme task is the
resumption of our onward, normal way. Reconstruction, readjustment,
restoration all these must follow. I would like to hasten them. If
it will lighten the spirit and add to the resolution with which we
take up the task, let me repeat for our Nation, we shall give no
people just cause to make war upon us; we hold no national
prejudices; we entertain no spirit of revenge; we do not hate; we do
not covet; we dream of no conquest, nor boast of armed prowess.
--Warren G. Harding
"Let's get out of the fevered delirium of war, with the
hallucination that all the money in the world is to be made in the
madness of war and the wildness of its aftermath. Let us stop to
consider that tranquility at home is more precious than peace
abroad, and that both our good fortune and our eminence are
dependent on the normal forward stride of all the American people."
-- Warren G. Harding
" It is one thing to battle
successfully against world domination by military autocracy, because
the infinite God never intended such a program, but it is quite
another thing to revise human nature and suspend the fundamental
laws of life and all of life's acquirements... "This republic has
its ample tasks. If we put an end to false economics which lure
humanity to utter chaos, ours will be the commanding example of
world leadership today. If we can prove a representative popular
government under which a citizenship seeks what it may do for the
government rather than what the government may do for individuals,
we shall do more to make democracy safe for the world than all armed
conflict ever recorded. "The problems of maintained civilization are
not to be solved by a transfer of responsibility from citizenship to
government, and no eminent page in history was ever drafted by the
standards of mediocrity. More, no government is worthy of the name
which is directed by influence on the one hand, or moved by
intimidation on the other... --Warren
G. Harding
There is
no indication that Harding knew about the corruption under him, that
is until he called for Herbert Hoover to go west for consultation
with him on the subject just before his sudden death.
According to Hoover's autobiography, Harding called for Hoover
while Harding was traveling in the west and told Hoover
about discovered corruption that he had to face -- Hoover advised
Harding to face up to it.
Harding soon
after became sick and and died.
The criminals in his circle were probably tipped off by Harding's
hushed emergency call for Hoover. The Harding
Administration and his policy of Normalcy -- taking down the
totalitarian warfare and police state which had been built and
controlled by Bernard Baruch during World War One ranks very
high among the greatest accomplishments of any American president.
--Dick Eastman

Harding and Coolidge you-tube:
http://2.gvt0.com/ThumbnailServer2?app=vss&contentid=d881bc5fd510d02a&label
=cover_thumb&offsetms=5000&itag=w160&hl=en&sigh=m7RVhMpzn4680SfyqBCQRMdYsuI
http://1.gvt0.com/ThumbnailServer2?app=vss&contentid=0eba6486d376eb19&label
=cover_thumb&offsetms=5000&itag=w160&hl=en&sigh=um1TkrKlXUdlt50501nCMgHG5qI
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