Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Historians Work Overtime To Paint Patton As An Anti-Semite







Books About Patton's Anti-Semitic Tone





George Patton Detested These Three Schemers








American Boys Died So Stalin Could Control Europe








 
The Dark Side of George S. Patton
A 2007 article by Jon Hopwood describes that General was deeply Anti-Semitic. 
 

 



The Movie About Patton Infuriated George C. Scott
George C. Scott won and refused an Oscar for his magisterial portrayal of the general. He believing that the film lacked a soul as well as a point of view. 9
The film skipped over Eisenhower, a total incompetent, who was driven by Jewish revenge on Germans. It never touched on Patton's distrust of Stalin's Communists, and how he considered Jewish officers the equivalent of spies.
 



A Young Patton Was A Scholar
He had studied the Bolshevik Revolution of Russia and saw the Jewish war on Europe in the 1930's as a prelude to WW-2.
Patton was an outspoken genius, and he lusted for combat.
 




His First Action Was Fighting American WW1 Veterans
As a cavalry major, Patton has to share the ignominy of putting down the Bonus March in Washington in 1932 along with his superiors, Army Chief of Staff General Douglas MacArthur and MacArthur's aide-de-camp, Major Dwight David Eisenhower. 9

 




Brutal Treatment Of Veterans
Tanks also were on hand to quash the crowd, who had come to the District in the depths of the Great Depression to lobby Congress for an immediate payment of the World War I bonus promised to veterans of the "Great War".
 




Eisenhower Loved The Confrontation
Eisenhower tried convincing MacArthur, and Patton  that the veterans were "Reds" -- communists, and that the March was a communist conspiracy to overthrow the government.
 




Hoover Ordered No Bloodshed
MacArthur was ordered by President Herbert Hoover to allow the Bonus Army to retreat, as he didn't want any violence. When the Bonus Army retreated to its main encampment in Anacostia, Virginia, where Eisenhower persuaded MacArthur to have his troops attack the veterans. 9
 
 




Burning Out The WW1 Veterans
The regular Army troops burned the Bonus Army's encampment to the ground. The flaming ruins sent up smoke against the sky and the monuments of the District and would become an indelible image of the Depression.
 



Jewish Historians
Throughout all of Patton's biographies the Zionist historians painted him as an egotistical mystic, who belittled his troops. Jacob Belcher went so far as saying that "Patton charged into the veteran's cardboard shacks, waving his sword, and threw the torch that burned the WW1 heroes out"
When Patton would question Eisenhower or Marshall, the newspapers would paint him as a nut. After The New York Times ran a series of articles defaming Patton, his distaste for Jews began to fester.
 



Patton Was Demoted For His Attitude
The veteran's march scare the Zionists in Washington, and they actually wanted the soldiers to fire on the veterans. Patton objected and was reduced in rank from full colonel to the "permanent" rank of captain.
 



Patton Becomes An Anti-Semite
The famous author, Leonard Dinnerstein, said Patton's diaries showed him as an anti-Semite. Dinnerstein claimed in his book 'Anti-Semitism in America', Patton would not allow Jewish chaplains at his headquarters. 8
 





Patton Didn't Hate Germans Enough
"World Jewry" said the war was about a a Jewish genocide by Germans, and Patton didn't feel their pain. Eisenhower loaded Patton's headquarters with Jewish staff officers, Patton delegated them to gofers, and wouldn't allow them access to himself or vital information.
 



Patton's Military Heritage
Patton's family were Celtic decent, they were from Scotland. His grandfather often talked about the Jewish involvement in instigated the Civil War, their lack of service, and how the carpetbaggers ravaged the south.  
 




His Distaste For Eisenhower Grew
After Eisenhower's debacle at Kasserine pass in 1942, Patton became openly critical of  Eisenhower who were referred to as "Ike, and his band of Kikes". 

 



He Fought The Coup In 1942 Morocco
In November 1942, after the Allies had pushed the Axis powers out of Morocco, Patto wanted to maintain the Vichy regime's anti-Jewish laws in Morocco.
The laws were modeled after Nazi Germany's Nuremburg laws. Patton believed the Jews were involved in a conspiracy to "take over" Morocco, and this conspiracy justified the maintenance of the anti-Semitic laws on the basis of cultivating the favor of the Arabs.
Even more egregiously, Patton persuaded General Eisenhower to prevent the release of Moroccan Jews held in forced labor camps.
 



Patton Wanted Laws Like The 1933 Germans Had
When the 1933 Weimar depression was at it's height Germany passed laws forbidding any women under 45 years old to work as a live in domestic in Jewish households.
 



Eisenhower Went To Roosevelt
Eisenhower wanted Patton relieved, but Roosevelt knew they needed him.
   





Patton Knew His History
Patton cited orders from Major General Ulysses S. Grant that banned Jews from the area of his command on the grounds that they were war profiteers and black marketers. Grant saw these carpetbaggers stealing land, defiling the children, and inciting the blacks against the whites.

 



This Incident Sealed Patton's Fate
Patton walked into his headquarters and was informed of a delay caused by a troop shortage. The olnly place that Jewish soldiers served was in the quartermasters corps., or in the rear echelon. He went to a hospital and slapped a kid calling him a "Yellow belly Jew".
After the second incident, Patton reportedly made an anti-Semitic remark, claiming that "battle fatigue" was a fake concept created by the Jews (a reference rooted in the perception in the first half of the 20th Century that there was a predominance of members of the Jewish faith in the psychiatric profession). 
 



The 1945 Jewish DP Camps
With the Nazi regime defeated in 1945 and Germany in ruins, Bendersky claims that Patton's anti-Semitism "set the tone for army policies and behavior" toward the Jewish survivors of Nazi death camps anguishing in DP camps in the American Occupation Zone. Patton denounced Jewish DPs as "animals" and "a sub-human species without any of the cultural or social refinements of our time."
 



Eisenhower Makes Officers Tour Camps
Ike made his command officers tour the Jewish DP camps.
 



Patton Was A Little Too Frank
After he visited a synagogue he threw up. When a German couple complained that the Jewish refugees were sh*tting on the floor, Patton suggested a soldier make these animals clean the mess up at the end of a bayonet.

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