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THE
BATTLE FOR PRESS CONTROL
The first instinctive answer which the Jew makes to any criticism of
his race coming from a non-Jew is that of violence, threatened or inflicted.
This statement will be confirmed by hundreds of thousands of citizens of the
United States who have heard the evidence with their own ears, seen it with
their own eyes.
If the candid investigator of the Jewish Question happens to be in
business, the "boycott" is the first answer of which the Jews seem to
think. Whether it be a newspaper, or a mercantile establishment, or a hotel, or
a dramatic production; or any manufactured article whose maker has adopted the
policy that "my goods are for sale, but not my principles"-if there is
any manner of business connection with the student of the Jewish Question, the
first "answer" is "boycott."
The technique of this: a "whispering drive" is first
begun. Disquieting rumors begin to fly thick and fast. "Watch us get him,
is the word that is passed along. Jews in charge of national ticker news
services adopt the slogan of "a rumor a day." All leading news
agencies in America are Jew-controlled. Jews in charge of newspapers adopt the
policy of Bra slurring headline a day." Jews in charge of the newsboys on
the streets (all the street concerns are preempted by Jewish "padrones"
who permit only their own boys to sell) give orders to emphasize certain news in
their street cries-"a new yell against him every day. " The whole
campaign against the critic of Jewry, whoever he may be, is keyed to the threat,
"Watch us get him."
"The whispering drive," "the boycott," these are
the chief Jewish answers. They constitute the bone and the sinew of that state
of mind in non-Jews which is known as "the fear of the Jews."
BENNETT'S STRUGGLE
This is the story of a boycott which lasted over a number of
years; it is only one of numerous stories of the same kind which can be told of
America. There have been even more outstanding cases since this one, but it
dates back to the dawn of Jewish ambitions and power in the United States, and
it is the first of the great battles which Jewry waged, successfully, to snuff
out the independent Press.
It concerns the long defunct "New York Herald," one
newspaper to remain independent of Jewish influence in New York. The Herald
enjoyed an existence of 90 years, which was terminated in 1920 by the inevitable
amalgamation. It performed great feats in the world of news-gathering. It sent
Henry M. Stanley to Africa to find Livingstone. It backed the Jeannette
expedition to the Arctic regions. It was largely instrumental in having the
first Atlantic cables laid. Its reputations among newspaper men was that neither
its news nor its editorial columns could be bought or influenced. But perhaps
its greatest feat was the maintenance during many years of its journalistic
independence against the combined attack of New York Jewry. Its proprietor, the
late James Gordon Bennett, a great American citizen famed for many helpful
activities, had always maintained a friendly attitude toward the Jews of his
city. He apparently harbored no prejudices against them. Certainly he never
deliberately antagonized them. But he was resolved upon preserving the honor of
independent journalism. He never bent to the policy that the advertisers had
something to say about the editorial policy of the paper, either as to
influencing it for publication or suppression. In Bennett's time the American
Press was in the majority free. Today it is entirely Jewish controlled. This
control is variously exercised, sometimes resting only on the owners' sense of
expediency. But the control is there, and for the moment it is absolute. Fifty
years ago there were many more newspapers in New York than there are today,
since then amalgamation has reduced the competition to a select few who do not
compete. Lois development has been the same in other countries, particularly
Great Britain.
****************************************
EDITOR'S NOTE: Following the rise of the "popular" syndicated
"columnist" since 1920, the word is now "smear," it is
specially prominent in political-press affairs.
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Bennett's Herald, a three cent newspaper, enjoyed the highest
prestige and was the most desirable advertising medium due to the class of its
circulation. At that time the Jewish population of New York was less than
one-third of what it is today, but there was much wealth represented in it.
Now, what every newspaper man knows is this: most Jewish leaders are
always interested either in getting a story published or getting it suppressed.
There is no class of people who read the public press with so careful an eye to
their own affairs as do the Jews. The Herald simply adopted the policy from the
beginning of this form of harassment that it was not to be permitted to sway the
Herald from its duty as a public informant. And this policy had a reflex
advantage for the other newspapers in the city.
When a scandal occurred in Jewish circles (and at the turn of the
century growing Jewish influence in America produced many) influential Jews
would swarm into the editorial offices to arrange for the suppression of the
story. But the editors knew that the Herald would not suppress anything for
anybody. What was the use of one paper suppressing if the others would not? So
editors would say: We would be very glad to suppress this story, but the Her7ad
will use it, so we'll have to do the same in self-protection. However, if you
can get the Herald to suppress it, we will gladly do so, too.
But the Herald never succumbed; neither pressure of influence nor
promise of business nor threats of loss availed. It printed the news.
There was a certain Jewish banker who periodically demanded that
Bennett discharge the Herald's financial editor. The banker was in the business
of disposing of Mexican bonds at a time when such bonds were least secure. Once
when an unusually large number of bonds were to be unloaded on unsuspecting
Americans, the Herald published the story of an impending Mexican revolution,
which presently ensued. The banker frothed at the mouth and moved every
influence he could to change the Herald's financial staff, but was not able to
effect the change even of an office boy.
Once when a shocking scandal involved a member of a prominent
family, Bennett refused to suppress it, arguing that if the episode had occurred
in a family of any other race it would be published regardless of the prominence
of the figures involved. The Jews of Philadelphia secured suppression there, but
because of Bennett's unflinching stand there was no suppression in New York.
A newspaper is a business proposition. There are some matters it
cannot touch without putting itself in peril of becoming a defunct concern. This
is especially true since newspapers no longer receive their main support from
the public but from the advertisers. The money the reader gives for the paper
scarcely suffices to pay for the amount of white paper he receives. In this way,
advertisers cannot be disregarded any more than the paper mills can be. As the
most extensive advertisers in New York were, and are, the department stores, and
as most department stores were, and are, owned by Jews, it comes logically that
Jews often influence the news policies of the papers with whom they deal.
At this time, it had always been the burning ambition of the Jews to
elect a Jewish Mayor of New York. They selected a time when the leading parties
were disrupted to push forward their choice. The method they adopted was
characteristic. They reasoned that the newspapers would not dare to refuse the
dictum of the combined department store owners, so they drew up a "strictly
confidential" letter which they sent to the owners of the New York
newspapers, demanding support for the Jewish mayoralty candidate. The newspaper
owners were in a quandary. For several days they debated how to act. All
remained silent. The editors of the Herald cabled the news to Bennett who was
abroad. Then it was that Bennett exhibited that boldness and directness of
judgment which characterized him. He cabled back, "Priest the letter."
It was printed in the Herald, the arrogance of the Jewish advertisers was
exposed, and non-Jewish New York breathed easier and applauded the action.
The Herald explained frankly that it could not support a candidate
of private interests, because it was devoted to the interests of the public. But
the Jewish leaders vowed vengeance against the Herald and against the man who
dared to expose their game.
They had not liked Bennett for a long time, anyway. The Herald was
the real "society paper" of New York, but Bennett had a rule that only
the names of really prominent families should be printed. The stories of the
efforts of newly-rich Jews to break into the Herald's society columns are some
of the best that are told by old newspaper men.
The whole "war" culminated in a contention which arose
between Bennett and Nathan Straus, a German-Jew whose business house was known
under the name of "R. H. Macy and Company," Macy being the Scotsman
who built up the business and from whose heirs Straus obtained it. Straus was
something of a philanthropist in the ghetto, but the story goes that Bennett's
failure to proclaim him as a philanthropist led to ill-feeling. A long
newspaper-war ensued, the subject of which was the pasteurization of milk -a
stupid discussion which no one took seriously, save Bennett and Straus.*
The Jews, of course, took Straus' side. Jewish speakers made the
welkin ring with laudation of Nathan Straus and maledictions upon James Bennett.
Bennett was pictured in the most vile business of "persecuting" a
noble Jew. It went so far that the Jews were able to put resolutions through the
Board of Aldermen.
Long since, of course, Straus, a very heavy advertiser, had
withdrawn every dollar's worth of his business from the Herald. And now the
combined and powerful elements of New York Jewry gathered to deal a staggering
blow at Bennett. The Jewish policy of "Dominate or Destroy" was at
stake, and Jewry declared war.
*******************************************
EDITOR'S NOTE: It is significant that, in the long years since this first
'food war," the business of "processing" and
"substituting" pure foods, messing about with natural food-stuffs, has
developed into a world wide business; mostly controlled by Jews.
*******************************************
As one man, the Jewish advertisers withdrew their advertisements.
Their assigned reason was that the Herald was showing animosity against the
Jews. The real purpose of their action was to crush an American newspaper owner
who dared to be independent of them.
The blow they delivered was a staggering one. It meant the loss of
600,000 dollars a year. Any other newspaper in New York would have been put out
of business by it. The Jews knew that and sat back, waiting for the downfall of
the man they chose to consider their enemy.
But Bennett was a fighter. Besides, he knew the Jewish psychology
probably better than any other non-Jew in New York. He turned the tables on his
opponents in a startling and unexpected fashion. The coveted positions in his
papers had always been used by the Jews. These he immediately turned over to
non-Jewish merchants under exclusive contracts. Merchants who had formerly been
crowded into the back pages and obscure corners by the more opulent Jews, now
blossomed forth full page in the most popular spaces. One of the non-Jewish
merchants who took advantage of the new situation was John Wanamaker, whose
large advertisements from that time forward were conspicuous in the Bennett
newspapers. The Bennett papers came out with undiminished circulation and full
advertising pages. The well-planned catastrophe did not, then occur. Instead,
there was a rather comical surprise. Here were the non-Jewish merchants of
America enjoying the choicest service of a valuable advertising medium, while
the Jewish merchants were unrepresented. Unable to stand the spectacle of trade
being diverted to non-Jewish merchants, the Jews came back to Bennett,
requesting the use of his columns for advertising. The "boycott" had
been hardest on the boycotters. Bennett received all who came, displaying no
rancor. They wanted their old positions back, but Bennett said, No. They argued,
but Bennett said, No. They offered more money, but Bennett said, No. The choice
positions had been forfeited.
Bennett triumphed, but it proved a costly victory. All the time
Bennett was resisting them, the Jews were growing more powerful in New York, and
they were obsessed by the idea that to control journalism in New York meant to
control the thought of the whole country.
The number of newspapers gradually diminished through combinations
of publications. Adolph S. Ochs, a Philadelphia Jew, acquired the "New York
Times." He soon made it into a great newspaper, but one whose bias is to
serve the Jews. It is the quality of the Times as a newspaper that makes it so
weighty as a Jewish organ. In this paper the Jews are persistently lauded,
eulogized and defended; no such tenderness is granted other races.
Then Hearst came into the field-a dangerous agitator because he not
only agitates the wrong things, but because he agitates the wrong class of
people. He surrounded himself with a coterie of Jews, pandered to them, worked
hand in glove with them, but never told the truth about them; never '{gave them
away."
The trend toward Jewish control of the press set in strongly, and
has continued that way ever since. The old names, made great by great editors
and American policies, slowly dimmed.
A newspaper is founded either on a great editorial mind, in which
event it becomes the expression of a powerful personality, or it becomes
institutionalized as to policy and becomes a commercial establishment. In the
latter event, its chances for continuing life beyond the lifetime of its founder
are much stronger.
The Herald was Bennett, and with his passing it was inevitable that
a certain force and virtue should depart out of it. Bennett, advancing in age,
dreaded lest his newspaper, on his death should fall into the hands of the Jews.
He knew that they regarded it with longing. He knew that they had pulled down,
seized, and afterward built up many an agency that had dared to speak the truth
about them, and boasted about it as a conquest for Jewry.
Bennett loved the Herald as a man loves a child. He so arranged his
will that the Herald should not fall into individual ownership, but that its
revenues should flow into a fund for the benefit of the men who had worked to
make the Herald what it way He died in May, 1919. The Jewish enemies of the
Herald, eagerly watchful, once more withdrew their advertising to force, if
possible, the sale of the newspaper. They knew that if the Herald became a
losing proposition, the trustees would have no course but to sell,
notwithstanding Bennett's will.
But there were also interests in New York who were beginning to
realize the peril of a Jewish press. These interests provided a sum of money for
the Herald's purchase by Frank A. Munsey.
Then, to general astonishment, Munsey discontinued the gallant old
paper, and bestowed its name as part of the name of the "New York
Sun."
The newspaper managed by Bennett is extinct. The men who worked on
it were scattered abroad in the newspaper field and, in the main, retired or
dead.
Even though the Jews had not gained actual possession of the Herald,
they at least succeeded in driving another non-Jewish newspaper from the field.
They set about obtaining control of several newspapers, their victory is now
complete. But the victory was a financial victory over a dead man. The moral
victory, as well as the financial victory, remained with Bennett while he lived;
the moral victory still remains with the Herald. It demonstrated what could be
done by fearless, independent minds, supported by men who knew their work and
loved it for its own sake. It demonstrated what could have been achieved had
these men received the support of wide-awake, active, non-Jewish Americans. The
Herald is immortalized as the last bulwark against Jewry in New York, in
America. Today the Jews are more completely masters of the journalistic field in
New York than they are in any capital in Europe. Indeed, in Europe there
frequently emerges a newspaper that gives the real news of the Jews. There is
none in New York.
And thus the situation will remain until Americans shake themselves
from their long sleep, and look with steady eyes at the national situation. That
look will be enough to show them all, and their very eyes will quail the
oriental usurpers.
*********************************************
"Our triumph has been rendered easier by the fact that in
our relations with the men whom we wanted we have always worked upon the most
sensitive chords of the hymn mind, upon the cash account, upon the cupidity,
upon the insatiability for material needs of man; and each one Of these human
weaknesses, taken alone, is sufficient to paralyze initiative, for it hands over
the will of men to the disposition of him who has bought their activities."
-The First Protocol.
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