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The Elkhorn Document
Page 6
Introduction - DuPont and General Motors


DU PONT AND GENERAL MOTORS

General Motors is included here because, by 1929, the Du Pont corporation
had acquired controlling interest in, and had interlocking directorships
with, General Motors.

Irenee du Pont, "the most imposing and powerful member of the clan,"
according to biographer and historian Charles Higham, "was obsessed with
Hitler's principles." "He keenly followed the career of the future Fuhrer in
the 1920s, and on September 7, 1926, in a speech to the American Chemical
Society, he advocated a race of supermen, to be achieved by injecting
special drugs into them in boyhood to make their characters to order."
Higham's book on this subject, "Trading with the Enemy: An Expose of the
Nazi-American Money Plot 1933-1949," is highly recommended.

Du Pont's anti-Semitism "matched that of Hitler" and, in 1933, the Du Ponts
"began financing native fascist groups in America . . ." one of which Higham
identifies as the American Liberty League: "a Nazi organization whipping up
hatred of blacks and Jews," and the "love of Hitler.


"Financed . . . to the tune of $500,000 the first year, the Liberty League
had a lavish thirty-one-room office in New York, branches in twenty-six
colleges, and fifteen subsidiary organizations nationwide that distributed
fifty million copies of its Nazi pamphlets. . . .
"The Du Ponts' fascistic behavior was seen in 1936, when Irenee du Pont used
General Motors money to finance the notorious Black Legion. This terrorist
organization had as its purpose the prevention of automobile workers from
unionizing. The members wore hoods and black robes, with skulls and
crossbones. They fire-bombed union meetings, murdered union organizers,
often by beating them to death, and dedicated their lives to destroying Jews
and communists. They linked to the Ku Klux Klan. . . . It was brought out
that at least fifty people, many of them blacks, had been butchered by the
Legion." (5)

Du Pont support of Hitler extended into the very heart of the Nazi war
machine as well, according to Higham, and several other researchers:
"General Motors, under the control of the Du Pont family of Delaware, played
a part in collaboration" with the Nazis.

"Between 1932 and 1939, bosses of General Motors poured $30 million into
I.G. Farben plants . . ." Further, Higham informs us that by "the mid-1930s,
General Motors was committed to full-scale production of trucks, armored
cars, and tanks in Nazi Germany." (6)

Researchers Morton Mintz and Jerry S. Cohen, in their book, "Power Inc.,"
describe the Du Pont-GM-Nazi relationship in these terms:

". . . In 1929, [Du Pont-controlled] GM acquired the largest automobile
company in Germany, Adam Opel, A.G. This predestined the subsidiary to
become important to the Nazi war effort. In a heavily documented study
presented to the Senate Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly in February
1974, Bradford C. Snell, an assistant subcommittee counsel, wrote:

"'GM's participation in Germany's preparation for war began in 1935. That
year its Opel subsidiary cooperated with the Reich in locating a new heavy
truck facility at Brandenburg, which military officials advised would be
less vulnerable to enemy air attacks. During the succeeding years, GM
supplied the Wehrmact with Opel "Blitz" trucks from the Brandenburg complex.
For these and other contributions to [the Nazis] wartime preparations, GM's
chief executive for overseas operations [James Mooney] was awarded the Order
of the German Eagle (first class) by Adolf Hitler.'"

Du Pont-GM Nazi collaboration, according to Snell, included the
participation of Standard Oil of New Jersey [now Exxon] in one, very
important arrangement. GM and Standard Oil of New Jersey formed a joint
subsidiary with the giant Nazi chemical cartel, I.G. Farben, named Ethyl
G.m.b.H. [now Ethyl, Inc.] which, according to Snell: "provided the
mechanized German armies with synthetic tetraethyl fuel [leaded gas]. During
1936-39, at the urgent request of Nazi officials who realized that Germany's
scarce petroleum reserves would not satisfy war demands, GM and Exxon joined
with German chemical interests in the erection of the lead-tetraethyl
plants. According to captured German records, these facilities contributed
substantially to the German war effort: 'The fact that since the beginning
of the war we could produce lead-tetraethyl is entirely due to the
circumstances that, shortly before, the Americans [Du Pont, GM and Standard
Oil] had presented us with the production plants complete with experimental
knowledge. Without lead-tetraethyl the present method of warfare would be
unthinkable.'" (7)

At about the same time the Du Ponts were serving the Nazi cause in Germany,
they were involved in a Fascist plot to overthrow the United States
government.

"Along with friends of the Morgan Bank and General Motors," in early 1934,
writes Higham, "certain Du Pont backers financed a coup d'etat that would
overthrow the President with the aid of a $3 million-funded army of
terrorists . . ." The object was to force Roosevelt "to take orders from
businessmen as part of a fascist government or face the alternative of
imprisonment and execution . . ."

Higham reports that "Du Pont men allegedly held an urgent series of meetings
with the Morgans," to choose who would lead this "bizarre conspiracy." "They
finally settled on one of the most popular soldiers in America, General
Smedly Butler of Pennsylvania." Butler was approached by "fascist attorney"
Gerald MacGuire (an official of the American Legion), who attempted to
recruit Butler into the role of an American Hitler.

"Butler was horrified," but played along with MacGuire until, a short time
later, he notified the White House of the plot. Roosevelt considered having
"the leaders of the houses of Morgan and Du Pont" arrested, but feared that
"it would create an unthinkable national crisis in the midst of a depression
and perhaps another Wall Street crash." Roosevelt decided the best way to
defuse the plot was to expose it, and leaked the story to the press.

"The newspapers ran the story of the attempted coup on the front page, but
generally ridiculed it as absurd and preposterous." But an investigation by
the Congressional Committee on Un-American Activities - 74th Congress, first
session, House of Representatives, Investigation of Nazi and other
propaganda - was begun later that same year.

"It was four years," continues Higham, "before the committee dared to
publish its report in a white paper that was marked for 'restricted
circulation.' They were forced to admit that 'certain persons made an
attempt to establish a fascist organization in this country . . . [The]
committee was able to verify all the pertinent statements made by General
Butler.' This admission that the entire plan was deadly in intent was not
accompanied by the imprisonment of anybody. Further investigations disclosed
that over a million people had been guaranteed to join the scheme and that
the arms and munitions necessary would have been supplied by Remington, a Du
Pont subsidiary." (8)

The names of important individuals and groups involved in the conspiracy
were suppressed by the committee, but later revealed by Seldes, Philadelphia
Record reporter Paul French, and Jules Archer, author of the book, "The Plot
to Seize the White House." Included were John W. Davis (attorney for the
J.P. Morgan banking group), Robert Sterling Clark (Wall Street broker and
heir to the Singer sewing machine fortune), William Doyle (American Legion
official), and the American Liberty League (backed by executives from J.P.
Morgan and Co., Rockefeller interests, E.F. Hutton, and Du Pont-controlled
General Motors). (9)

The Elkhorn Document
Page 7
Introduction: The U.S - Nazi Cartel Agreement


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THE US/NAZI CARTEL AGREEMENT

"On November 23, 1937," states Higham, "representatives of General Motors
held a secret meeting in Boston with Baron Manfred von Killinger, who was .
. . in charge of West Coast espionage [for the Nazis], and Baron von
Tipplekirsch, Nazi consul general and Gestapo leader in Boston. This group
signed a joint agreement showing total commitment to the Nazi cause for the
indefinite future. . . ." (10)

Seldes describes the plotters as "the great owners and rulers of America who
planned world domination through political and military Fascism" including
"several leading American industrialists, members of the Congress of the
United States, and representatives of large business and political
organizations . . ."

He obtained the text of the agreement, and published it in his newsletter,
"In Fact," on July 13, 1942. The plan "goes much further than the mere
cartel conspiracies of Big Business of both countries," writes Seldes,
"because it has political clauses and points to a bigger conspiracy of money
and politicians such as helped betray Norway and France and other lands to
the Nazi machine. The most powerful fortress in America is the production
monopolies, but its betrayal would involve, as it did in France, the
participation of some of the most powerful figures of the political as well
as the industrial world." (11)

The Elkhorn Document
Page 8
Introduction - Standard Oil of New Jersey


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STANDARD OIL OF NEW JERSEY (Now Exxon)

"On February 27, 1942," according to Higham, "Arnold, with documents stuffed
under his arms, . . . strode into the lion's den of Standard at 30
Rockefeller Plaza. Just behind him were Secretary of the Navy Franklin Knox
and Secretary of the Army Henry L. Stimson." They confronted Standard offici
al William Farish and "Arnold sharply laid down his charges" that "by
continuing to favor Hitler in rubber deal and patent arrangements," Standard
Oil "had acted against the interests of the American government . . .
suggested a fine of $1.5 million and a consent decree whereby Standard would
turn over for the duration all the patents" in question.

"Farish rejected the proposal on the spot. He pointed out that Standard" was
also selling the U.S. a "high percentage" of the fuel being used by the
Army, Navy, and Air Force "making it possible for America to win the war.
Where would America be without it?"

Blackmail? Yes, says Higham. And effective. Arnold was finally reduced to
asking the oil company official "to what Standard Oil would agree. After
all, there had to be at least token punishment. . . . Arnold, Stimson, and
Knox soon realized they had no power to compare with that of Standard."

The price Standard Oil "agreed" to pay for its crime? A modest fine of a few
thousand dollars divided up among ten defendants. "Farish paid $1,000, or a
quarter of one week's salary, for having betrayed America."

In New Jersey, charges of "criminal conspiracy with the enemy" were filed
against Standard, then "dropped in return for Standard releasing its patents
and paying the modest fine." But Arnold, and his ally, Secretary of the
Interior Harold Ickes, weren't finished with Standard Oil just yet. They
approached Senator Truman, chairman of the Senate Special Committee
Investigating the National Defense Program. "With great enthusiasm Give 'em
Hell Harry embarked on a series of hearings in March 1942, in order to
disclose the truth about Standard."

Between the 26th and the 28th of March, 1942, Arnold "produced documents
showing that Standard and Farben in Germany had literally carved up the
world markets, with oil and chemical monopolies all over the map," according
to Higham. (12)

Mintz and Cohen describe the confrontation:

"Four months after the United States entered World War II, the Justice Depar
tment obtained an indictment of Exxon and its principal officers for having
made arrangements, starting in the late 1920s with I.G. Farben involving
patent sharing and division of world markets. Jersey Standard agreed not to
develop processes for the manufacture of synthetic rubber; in exchange,
Farben agreed not to compete in the American petroleum market. After war
broke out in Europe, but before the attack on Pearl Harbor, executives of
Standard Oil and Farben, at a meeting in Holland, established a 'modus
vivendi' for continuing the arrangements in event of war between the United
States and Germany - although the arrangements interfered with the ability
of the United States to make synthetic rubber desperately needed after it
entered the war in December 1941. Rather than face a criminal trial, Exxon
and the indicted executives entered no-contest pleas - the legal equivalent
of guilty pleas - and were fined the minor sums which were the maximum
amounts permitted by law. A few days later, on March 26, 1942, the Senate
Special Committee Investigating the National Defense Program held a hearing
at which Thurman Arnold, chief of the Antitrust Division, put into the
record documents on which the [criminal] indictment had been based,
including a memo from a Standard Oil official on the 'modus vivendi' agreed
to in Holland. After the hearing, the committee chairman, Harry S. Truman,
characterized the arrangements as treasonable." (13)

Another source book on this subject of US / Nazi corporate activities is
"The Secret War Against the Jews," by Mark Aarons and John Loftus. Here is
their version of the events:

"Before the war Standard of New Jersey had forged a synthetic oil and rubber
cartel with the Nazi-controlled I.G. Farben," which "worked well until the
United States joined the war in 1941. . . . Next to the Rockefellers, I.G.
Farben owned the largest share of stock in Standard Oil of New Jersey. Among
other things, Standard had provided Farben with its synthetic rubber patents
and technical knowledge, while Farben had kept its patents to itself, under
strict instructions from the Nazi government."

Evidence which Thurman Arnold turned over to the Truman Committee, which
Truman would declare "treasonous," included "Standard's 1939 letter renewing
its agreement, which made it clear that the Rockefellers' company was
prepared to work with the Nazis whether their own government was at war with
the Third Reich or not. Truman's Senate Committee on the National Defense
was outraged and began to probe into the whole scandalous arrangement, much
to the discomfort of John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Suddenly, however, the whole
matter was dropped.

"There was a reason for Rockefeller's escape: blackmail. According to the
former intelligence officers we interviewed on this point, the blackmail was
simple and powerful: The Dulles brothers [John Foster, later Secretary of
State, and Allen, later director of the CIA] had one of their clients
threaten to interrupt the U.S. oil supply during wartime."

When confronted by Arnold on the Standard - Farben arrangement "Standard
executives made it clear that the entire U.S. war effort was fueled by their
oil and it could be stopped. . . . The American government had no choice but
to go along if it wanted to win the war." (14)

July 13, 1944, Ralph W. Gallagher, attorney for Standard Oil, filed a
lawsuit against the U.S. government's seizure of the contested patents. "On
November 7, 1945, Judge Charles E. Wyzanski gave his verdict," according to
Higham. "He decided that the government had been entitled to seize the
patents. Gallagher appealed. On September 22, 1947, Judge Charles Clark
delivered the final word on the subject. He said, 'Standard Oil can be
considered an enemy national in view of its relationships with I.G. Farben
after the United States and Germany had become active enemies.' The appeal
was denied." (15)

One aspect of this Standard - I.G. Farben relationship, revealed in
testimony during the Patents Committee hearings, chaired by Senator Homer T.
Bone in May 1942, is of interest to those who seek direct evidence of a
conspiracy by big oil companies to suppress development of synthetic
substitutes to petrochemical products such as industrial chemicals, aircraft
lubricants and fuel, all of which can be made from hemp:

"On May 6th, John R. Jacobs, Jr., of the Attorney General's department,
testified that Standard had interfered with the American explosives industry
by blocking the use of a method of producing synthetic ammonia. As a result
of its deals with Farben, the United States had been unable to get the use
of this vital process even after Pearl Harbor. Also, the United States had
been restricted in techniques of producing hydrogen from natural gas and
from obtaining paraflow, a product used for airplane lubrication at high
altitudes. . . ."

On August 7th, "Texas oil operator C.R. Starnes appeared to testify that
Standard had blocked him at every turn in his efforts to produce synthetic
rubber after Pearl Harbor. . . ."

On August 12th, "John R. Jacobs reappeared in an Army private's uniform (he
had been inducted the day before) to bring up another disagreeable matter:
Standard had also, in league with Farben, restricted production of methanol,
a wood alcohol that was sometimes used as motor fuel." (16)

The restriction against methanol production apparently did not apply to the
Nazis, however. "As late as April 1943," Higham reveals, "General Motors in
Stockholm [Sweden] was reported as trading with the enemy. . . . Further
documents show that, as with Ford, repairs on German army trucks and
conversion from gasoline to wood-gasoline production were being handled by
GM in Switzerland." (17)

The use of hemp as a source of methanol was known to the Nazis, revealed in
the pamphlet "The Humorous Hemp Primer," published in Berlin, also in 1943.
This document, recently re-published in the 1995 edition of "Hemp and the
Marijuana Conspiracy: The Emperor Wears No Clothes," by veteran hemp
conspiracy researcher Jack Herer, states that:

"Crops should not only provide food in large quantities, they can provide
raw materials for industry. . . . Among such raw materials of especially
high value is hemp . . .

"The woody part of this large plant is not to be thrown out, since it can
easily be used for surface coatings for the finest floors. It also provides
paper and cardboard, building materials and wall paneling. Further
processing will even produce wood sugar and wood gas. . . .

"Anyone who grows hemp today need not fear a lack of a market, because hemp,
as useful as it is, will be purchased in unlimited amounts." (18)

The Nazis obviously considered hemp a vital war material that could be used
to produce methanol, or "wood gas," at the same time, in 1943, that Du
Pont-controlled General Motors in Switzerland was "converting from gasoline
to wood-gasoline production." This, taken into consideration along with the
earlier statement that Standard Oil-I.G. Farben had "restricted production
of methanol" and the GM-Standard Oil-I.G. Farben joint venture, Ethyl, Inc.,
whose profitability depended on the production of lead-tetraethyl for
oil-based petrochemical gasoline - in direct competition with the
alternative methanol, or "wood gas," certainly opens new avenues of
investigation into the existence of a conspiracy against hemp as an
alternative, and competing, industrial raw material, by these very same
corporations which sold America out to the Nazis for profit and control of
world resources and markets.

"Just after Pearl Harbor," writes Seldes, "the Assistant Attorney General,
Mr. Thurman Arnold, issued a sensational report of the sabotage of the
national [war production] program, the first report naming the practices
which were later to be referred to as the treason of big business in
wartime. Said Mr. Arnold:

"Looking back over 10 months of defense effort we can now see how much it
has been hampered by the attitude of powerful basic industries who have
feared to expand their production because expansion would endanger their
future control of industry.

"Anti-trust investigations during the past year have shown that there is not
an organized basic industry in the United States which has not been
restricting production by some device or other in order to avoid what they
call 'ruinous overproduction after the war'." (19)

By "ruinous overproduction," of course, they meant free-market competition.
So, to question the existence of an industrial conspiracy against
competition, during the 1930s and 1940s, is pointless. It has long been
totally documented by volumes of evidence, available in the public record.
And among this list of convicted corporate conspirators are murderers,
racists, pro-Nazi collaborators, blackmailers and American Fascists who
plotted at least one armed take-over of the U.S. government. And the list is
not yet complete.

NOTES: U.S. CORPORATIONS AND THE NAZIS

Facts and Fascism, George Seldes, p. 122
Trading with the Enemy, Charles Higham, p. 167
Even the Gods Can't Change History, Seldes, pp. 140-144
Facts and Fascism, p. 68
Ibid., p. 262
Trading with the Enemy, pp. 162-165
Ibid., p. 166
Power, Inc., Morton and Mintz, pp. 497-499
Trading with the Enemy, pp. 163-165
The Plot to Seize the White House, Jules Archer, Hawthorn Books, 1973
(Quoted from It's A Conspiracy, National Insecurity Council, EarthWorks
Press, 1992, pp. 179-184)
Trading with the Enemy, pp. 167-168
Facts and Fascism, pp. 68-70
Trading with the Enemy, pp. 45-46
Power, Inc, pp. 499-500
The Secret War Against The Jews, Aarons and Loftus, pp. 44-65
Trading with the Enemy, pp. 61-62
Ibid., pp. 49-52
Ibid., p. 176
The Emperor Wears No Clothes, Jack Herer, pp. 127-130
One Thousand Americans, Seldes, pp. 142-143
Trading with the Enemy, pp. 154-156
Ain't Nobody's Business If You Do, p. 734
Popular Mechanics Magazine, Vol. 76, No. 6, Dec. 1941
(The Emperor Wears No Clothes, 1995 edition, p. 199)
A History of the Hemp Industry in Kentucky, Professor James F. Hopkins,
University of Kentucky Press, 1951
Trading with the Enemy, p. 99
Spooks, Jim Hougan, pp. 423-424
The Sovereign State of ITT, Anthony Sampson, p. 47
(Power, Inc., pp. 500-501)
GM and the Nazis, by Bradford C. Snell, Ramparts Magazine, June 1974, pp.
14-16 (Democracy for the Few, Michael Parenti, pp. 91-92)
The Secret War Against the Jews, pp. 55-60


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