Saturday, 12 December 2009

Heroes of the Resistance: Charles Coughlin

December 1

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WHEN TRAITORS RULE, PATRIOTS ARE PARIAHS


By Reb Culhane

Reb Culhane is the pseudonym of a 21 year old college student in Denver, Colorado.

Throughout the 20th century, voices that cut a little too close to the core of the New World Order, were silenced, slandered, and discredited. One such voice, was Father Charles Coughlin (1891-1979.) A Roman Catholic priest of Canadian birth, Coughlin pioneered use of the radio to reach vast numbers of people during the 1930s era of Roosevelt's New Deal. While his message was not without flaws, Father Coughlin spoke the truth in key areas which led to his consignment to the "wrong" side of history in official accounts.

Originally a strong supporter of the Wall Street puppet FDR, Coughlin said, "The New Deal is Christ's Deal" and "God is directing Franklin Roosevelt." However, he soon changed his mind. Coughlin became a staunch proponent of monetary reform and an early advocate of abolishing the Federal Reserve.

With the advent of Coughlin's radio program, he began to reach millions of people a week and by 1934 had become the most prominent Roman Catholic economic and political speaker. Roosevelt himself sent Frank Murphy and JFK's father Joseph P. Kennedy to try and "tone him down." Coughlin ignored them and began to denounce FDR as a puppet of Wall Street. Coughlin also began to support the Louisiana populist leader Huey Long, who was murdered by the Illuminati.

Father Coughlin was a major opponent of the twin Hegelian heads of the New World Order, monopolistic capitalism and communism. He declared in 1935 "I have dedicated my life to fight against the heinous rottenness of modern capitalism because it robs the laborer of this world's goods. But blow for blow I shall strike against Communism, because it robs us of the next world's happiness."

Indeed, Coughlin was by very nature anti-globalist and supported the America First Movement of which Charles Lindbergh was a prominent figure.

"Less care for internationalism and more concern for national prosperity" was a campaign slogan of Coughlin's organization, the National Union for Social Justice. Speaking like this brought the full scorn of the New World Order down on the outspoken Catholic priest.

SHUTDOWN

During its height, Coughlin's radio program was wildly popular, with listeners flooding his office with 80,000 letters a week. It is estimated that almost a third of the nation tuned in at the time. However, Coughlin's popularity gained him some powerful enemies. The Roman Catholic Church itself did not approve of him and the Vatican wanted him silenced. The Roosevelt administration was determined to shut down the "Radio Priest".

Eventually accomplished this by performing an end run around the 1st Amendment. The administration decided that freedom of speech did not apply to broadcasting because radio was a "limited national resource" and should be regulated as a "publicly owned commons." New regulations were put into place demanding that regular radio broadcasters obtain operating permits. Coughlin was denied a permit and forced off the air.

He attempted to work around this by purchasing air time, but this became incredibly costly and reduced his resources and ability to reach people. Coughlin then resigned himself to publishing editorials in his own newspaper, entitled Social Justice. The Roosevelt administration acted predictably and revoked his mailing privileges, rendering him impotent in sending the paper out to subscribers.

Upon this, his influence was crippled. In addition, the attack on Pearl Harbor and entrance into World War II turned public opinion against anti-interventionists like Coughlin and official government propaganda smeared them as "collaborating with the enemy."

Thus, Coughlin faded into obscurity, spending his retirement keeping a low profile and writing anti-communist pamphlets until his death in 1979. His church, the National Shrine of the Little Flower in Royal Oak, Michigan, still stands today and was declared a National Shrine by the United States Bishops Conference in 1998.

Modern history texts smear him as a demagogue and anti-Semite with fascist sympathies. This isn't surprising because the winners write history and the Illuminati has been the winner for quite some time now.

COUGHLIN'S FLAWS

While he was indeed a great voice of opposition against the New World Order, Father Coughlin did fall into the trap of describing it as a "Jewish conspiracy".

While he correctly identified Jewish central bankers such as Jacob Schiff as being behind the Russian Revolution and helped to expose the Protocols of Zion, he had a tendency to generalize the entire conspiracy as a Jewish plot. This led him to express a degree of sympathy for Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini.

In this researcher's opinion, that was a mistake. While some Cabalistic Jews are involved in the New World Order, many Gentiles are involved as well, as Coughlin was surely aware of (i.e. Roosevelt). In addition, Hitler and Mussolini both were instruments of the same conspiracy and should not be admired, especially by a Christian like Coughlin. Speaking of a "Jewish conspiracy" severely discredited him and opened him to be smeared into obscurity with the charge of anti-Semitism.


CONCLUSION

Despite the above shortcomings, Father Charles Coughlin was a strong anti-NWO activist and showed steadfast courage and bravery in his crusade to expose those who run the Shadow government. He pointed to the power structure, the central bankers, and called to abolish their control center, the Federal Reserve. For this he should be commended and held as an example for all patriots who value God, Freedom, and Country.

Coughlin's story also brings with it a strain of pessimism, though. After all, if a man who once had the attention of a third of the nation could not effect change, what chance do we have of doing so today?