Anonymous ID: 47daaa Dec. 21, 2017, 7:20 a.m. No.139221   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9243

>>139154

<all the world is a stage, and all the players are puppets;

[…]

"The alliance of Standard Oil with the Nazis wasn’t well regarded by the US-government, above all after the entered into the war after Pearl Harbour, on December 7 th , 1941. Officials remembered an old law, "Trading with the Enemy“, and opened a formal investigation against Standard Oil. The accusation was that the company hid patents from the US-Navy and supplied fuel to German submarines. John D. Rockefeller said that he wasn’t aware of that and Farish pled "no contest" to charges of criminal conspiracy with the Nazis. In March 1942, the Pentagon begged President Roosevelt to stop the investigation, to protect war production and oil supply. Roosevelt agreed. The Company paid a fine of 5000 dollars and promised to stop fuel supply for the enemies"

[…]

taken from

gabyweber.com/dwnld/artikel/eichmann/ingles/secret_pact_standard_oil.pdf

for the unaware

Anonymous ID: 47daaa Dec. 21, 2017, 7:39 a.m. No.139297   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>139278

pls read Hitler and the Wall street,

[…]

The Standard Oil subsidiary in Germany, Deutsche-Amerikanische Petroleum A.G. (DAPAG), was 94-percent owned by Standard Oil of New Jersey. DAPAG had branches throughout Germany, a refinery at Bremen, and a head office in Hamburg. Through DAPAG, Standard Oil of New Jersey was represented in the inner circles of Nazism — the Keppler Circle and Himmler's Circle of Friends. A director of DAPAG was Karl Lindemann, also chairman of the International Chamber of Commerce in Germany, as well as director of several banks, including the Dresdner Bank, the Deutsche Reichsbank, and the private Nazi-oriented bank of C. Melchior & Company, and numerous corporations including the HAPAG (Hamburg-Amerika Line). Lindemann was a member of Keppler's Circle of Friends as late as 1944 and so gave Standard Oil of New Jersey a representative at the very core of Nazism. Another member of the board of DAPAG was Emil Helfrich, who was an original member of the Keppler Circle.

 

In sum, Standard Oil of New Jersey had two members of the Keppler Circle as directors of its German wholly owned subsidiary. Payments to the Circle from the Standard Oil subsidiary company, and from Lindemann and Helffrich as individual directors, continued until 1944, the year before the end of World War II"

fro