Unveiling the Dark Secrets Behind WW1: Versailles and The "Elders of Zion"

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In 1941, Paul Gray Hoffman, President of the Studebaker Company,
and a Trustee of the University of Chicago; along with Robert Maynard
Hutchins, and William Benton, the University’s President and Vice
President; organized the American Policy Commission to apply the
work of the University’s scholars and economists to government
policy. They later merged with an organization established in 1939 by
Fortune magazine, called Fortune Round Table.
Starting out as a group of business, labor, agricultural, and religious
leaders, they soon evolved into an Establishment organization, with
such members as: Ralph McCabe (head of Scott Paper Co.), Henry
Luce (Editor-in-Chief and co-founder of Time, Life, and Fortune
magazines), Ralph Flanders (a Boston banker), Marshall Field (Chicago
newspaper publisher), Clarence Francis (head of General Foods), Ray
Rubicam (an advertising representative), and Beardsley Ruml
(treasurer of Macy’s Department Store in New York City, former Dean
of Social Sciences at the University of Chicago, and Chairman of the
New York Federal Reserve Bank, whose idea it was to deduct taxes from your paycheck).
At the beginning of World War II, Hoffman and Benton approached
Jesse Jones, the Secretary of Commerce, with an idea for an
‘American Policy Commission’ to “analyze, criticize, and challenge the
thinking and policies of business, labor, agriculture, and government,”
which Jones accepted, and began to organize, with their help. On
September 3, 1942, the Committee for Economic Development was
incorporated in Washington, D.C. (2000 L Street NW, Suite 700) to:
“to foster, promote, conduct, encourage, and finance scientific
research, education, training, and publication in the broad field of
economics in order that industry and commerce may be in a
position, in the postwar period, to make their full contribution to
high and secure standards of living for people in all walks of life
through maximum employment and high productivity in our
domestic economy; to promote and carry out these objects,
purposes, and principles in a free society without regard to, and
independently of the special interests of any group in the body
politic, either political, social, or economic.”

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