President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Jewish Cabal
Some of these Jews were directly responsible for plunging America into WWII by deliberately alienating America from anti-Communist countries such as Germany and Japan long before the outbreak of hostilities. These Jews also pioneered the idea of Big Egalitarian Government in America; some of them were later discovered to have been spies for the Soviet Union.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt (photo at right), president of the United States of America, 1933-1945, was himself partly of Dutch-Jewish ancestry.
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Bernard M. Baruch – a financier and adviser to FDR.
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Felix Frankfurter – Supreme Court Justice; a key player in FDR's New Deal system.
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David E. Lilienthal – director of Tennessee Valley Authority, adviser. The TVA changed the relationship of government-to-business in America.
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David Niles – presidential aide.
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Louis Brandeis – U.S. Supreme Court Justice; confidante of FDR; "Father" of New Deal.
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Samuel I. Rosenman – official speechwriter for FDR.
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Henry Morgenthau Jr. – Secretary of the Treasury, "unofficial" presidential adviser. Father of the Morgenthau Plan to re-structure Germany/Europe after WWII.
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Benjamin V. Cohen – State Department official, adviser to FDR.
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Rabbi Stephen Wise – close pal of FDR, spokesman for the American Zionist movement, head of The American Jewish Congress.
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Frances Perkins – Secretary of Labor; allegedly Jewish/adopted at birth; unconfirmed.
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Sidney Hillman – presidential adviser.
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Anna Rosenberg – longtime labor adviser to FDR, and manpower adviser with the Manpower Consulting Committee of the Army and Navy Munitions Board and the War Manpower Commission.
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Herbert H. Lehman – Governor of New York, 1933-1942, Director of U.S. Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operations, Department of State, 1942-1943; Director-General of UNRRA, 1944 - 1946, pal of FDR.
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Herbert Feis – U.S. State Department official, economist, and an adviser on international economic affairs.
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R. S. Hecht – financial adviser to FDR.
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Nathan Margold – Department of the Interior Solicitor, legal adviser.
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Jesse I. Straus – adviser to FDR.
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H. J. Laski – "unofficial foreign adviser" to FDR.
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E. W. Goldenweiser – Federal Reserve Director.
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Charles E. Wyzanski – U.S. Labor department legal adviser.
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Samuel Untermyer – lawyer, "unofficial public ownership adviser" to FDR.
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Jacob Viner – Tax expert at the U.S. Treasury Department, assistant to the Treasury Secretary.
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Edward Filene – businessman, philanthropist, unofficial presidential adviser.
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David Dubinsky – Labor leader, president of International Ladies Garment Workers Union.
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William C. Bullitt – part-Jewish, ambassador to USSR [is claimed to be Jonathan Horwitz's grandson; unconfirmed].
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Mordecai Ezekiel – Agriculture Department economist.
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Abe Fortas – Assistant director of Securities and Exchange Commission, Department of the Interior Undersecretary.
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Isador Lubin – Commissioner of Labor Statistics, unofficial labor economist to FDR.
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Harry Dexter White [Weiss] – Assistant Secretary of the Treasury; a key founder of the International Monetary Fund, and the World Bank; adviser, close pal of Henry Morgenthau. Co-wrote the Morgenthau Plan.
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Alexander Holtzoff – Special assistant, U.S. Attorney General's Office until 1945; [presumed to be Jewish; unconfirmed].
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David Weintraub – official in the Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operations; helped create the United Nations; Secretary, Committee on Supplies, 1944-1946.
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Nathan Gregory Silvermaster – Agriculture Department official and head of the Near East Division of the Board of Economic Warfare; helped create the United Nations.
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Harold Glasser – Treasury Department director of the division of monetary research. Treasury spokesman on the affairs of United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration.
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Irving Kaplan – U.S. Treasury Department official, pal of David Weintraub.
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Solomon Adler – Treasury Department representative in China during World War II.
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Benjamin Cardozo – U.S. Supreme Court Justice.
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Leo Wolman – chairman of the National Recovery Administration's Labor advisery Board; labor economist.
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Rose Schneiderman – labor organizer; on the advisery board of the National Recovery Administration.
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Jerome Frank – general counsel to the Agricultural Adjustment Administration, Justice, U.S. Court of Appeals, 1941-57.