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warrprayer

(4,734 posts)
Tue Apr 29, 2014, 02:57 PM Apr 2014

The C.I.A. and Wall Street

Started reading "The Secret History of the C.I.A." by Joseph J. Trento last week. What I learned in the first few chapters alone is enough to make me rethink a lot of opinions I thought were based on fact.

The truth is, in high school and probably college, little is taught of the true history of this country.

The founders of the C.I.A. were, to a man, Wall Street bankers and lawyers. Some of them were former O.S.S. from WW2.

Truman tried to put the brakes on the new intelligence agency early. Dulles and others started running operations without his approval, and he later had to act like he gave them the go ahead. The C.I.A. men wanted to rebuild postwar Germany's industrial might as a bulwark against the Soviets. Truman's vision was of turning
Germany agrarian to prevent another monster from rising out of the ashes.

The real kicker was "Operation Paperclip" - the C.I.A. gave a new life to most of the former S.S. members in Hitlers intelligence services, not just scientists. The C.I.A. was deeply influenced by the likes of Reinhard Gehlen, Hitlers top intelligence officer against the Soviets.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reinhard_Gehlen

It wasn't just Wall Street alone Occupy was fighting. It was the secret army appointed to protect their interests.

The co ordinated crackdown now makes complete sense.

11 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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The C.I.A. and Wall Street (Original Post) warrprayer Apr 2014 OP
A very good read that is. Democracyinkind Apr 2014 #1
will do I'm on a roll. This was good too... warrprayer Apr 2014 #2
They certainly have used the S.S. members involved in propaganda to their advantage in the decades Mnemosyne Apr 2014 #3
not just propoganda warrprayer Apr 2014 #4
It runs so deeply and explains too many things in this country. Mnemosyne Apr 2014 #6
a great example of this warrprayer Apr 2014 #7
Orlov's hi power danvoz Jun 2014 #10
I think that is supremely cool warrprayer Jun 2014 #11
a lot of the stuff we see on the news every day warrprayer Apr 2014 #5
What is that Noam Chomsky quote? truedelphi May 2014 #8
Lve me some Noam warrprayer May 2014 #9

warrprayer

(4,734 posts)
2. will do I'm on a roll. This was good too...
Tue Apr 29, 2014, 03:08 PM
Apr 2014

incomplete, but by itself gave me a "holy fuck" moment.

This goes back to Iran Contra....



Learning about this stuff is eye opening, and at the same time completely disheartening.


Mnemosyne

(21,363 posts)
3. They certainly have used the S.S. members involved in propaganda to their advantage in the decades
Tue Apr 29, 2014, 03:22 PM
Apr 2014

since Operation Paperclip. Amazing how many things do make sense when your perspective/knowledge is broadened. And once awake, you can never get back to sleep.

warrprayer

(4,734 posts)
4. not just propoganda
Tue Apr 29, 2014, 03:25 PM
Apr 2014

from what I am gathering, they pardoned certain SS members and used them to help develop our special forces units.

This is disheartening because it shows such a complete abandonment of any kind of morality at the highest levels.

Mnemosyne

(21,363 posts)
6. It runs so deeply and explains too many things in this country.
Wed Apr 30, 2014, 10:57 AM
Apr 2014

I was so sickened when I first read about it, back in the late 1970's. I devoured every book I could find on Op Paperclip, MK-Ultra, etc., etc.

What a freaking nightmare, when you start digging. Always smoke and mirrors.

warrprayer

(4,734 posts)
7. a great example of this
Wed Apr 30, 2014, 03:23 PM
Apr 2014

Is the story of George Weisz and Igor Orlov.

Weisz was a Jew working for the C.I.A.. He worked in Hungary on the surface as a Nazi hunter, but his real job was to find high value Nazis in hiding and bring them to the U.S. or South America. He operated by turning the low level Nazis over to the Russian authorities. When he went after the high value ones, they were so afraid they would go along with him.

Igor Orlov used the same tactics on Russians who defected and were fighting for the Nazis in Ukraine. He knew the identities of low level NKVD agents in the ranks of the Russian defectors. He would help the germans "uncover" them, thus bolstering his credentials as loyal to the german cause of defeating the soviets. Orlov assisted in the brutal interrogations and executions of members of his own organization (NKVD) to bolster his cover.

In a supreme stroke of irony, Weisz was turned into a double agent by Orlov, who posed as a Russian Nazi hunter.




danvoz

(1 post)
10. Orlov's hi power
Fri Jun 6, 2014, 10:28 PM
Jun 2014

I'm incredibly lucky. The more I read about Orlov the more excited I get about this little pistol I bought recently from my friend. Came with the original 1966 bill of sale from an Alexandria gun shop with "Igor Gregory Orlov" listed as the buyer with his home address. I nearly fell over when I googled him. Bill of sale has his signature from when he sold the pistol. Unbelievable!!

Is it possible to post pictures? Sorry. I'm new.

warrprayer

(4,734 posts)
11. I think that is supremely cool
Wed Jun 18, 2014, 05:06 PM
Jun 2014

but with the atmosphere on D.U., I would recommend you create a discussionist account and go post it there.
What you have is even cooler than owning James Bond's Walther PPK.
Orlov was real.

warrprayer

(4,734 posts)
5. a lot of the stuff we see on the news every day
Tue Apr 29, 2014, 05:04 PM
Apr 2014

such as the Cliven Bundy fiasco, turn out to be manipulations of people like the Kochs. They could give a fuck less about "causes", the only "cause" they really have is wealth for themselves.

And, as the story of the spy agencies both foreign and domestic proves, what serves their wealth best is the gradual but constant movement of this country to the right.

When the people are dissatisfied, the slide to the right slows down a little, but never stops. When they can deceive most of the American public as with the Iraq war, the move to the right is in leaps and bounds.

But, since Reagan, (Poppy Bush, in reality) the slide to the right has not stopped for a moment.

truedelphi

(32,324 posts)
8. What is that Noam Chomsky quote?
Tue May 27, 2014, 01:23 PM
May 2014

It is to the effect that when you don't have a democracy, you still can discuss things in depth, but the powers that be decide what those things are, and the items we should discuss are never mentioned.

In watching Talking Heads shows back in 2009, Single Payer Universal HC was mentioned not once! Why? Ads for Big Pharma would be pulled from a TV or radio station if there was ever serious discussion of the only true way to run health care.

Back in Jan 1994, there was a huge interest by TV and radio in the situation in Chiappas Mexico. Some TV stations even had reporters going down to Mexico and talking to the leaders of that mini-revolution. But then, Citibank got the matter shoved aside, so that the Nancy Kerrigan/Tanya Harding skating debacle was all we saw on TV.

On edit, here is the quote: [h2][font color=red] "The Smart Way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum."[/h2][/font color=red]

Noam Chomsky

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