Via: Gab
The jew Theodore Kaufman’s 1941 book Germany Must Perish! advocated for the complete extermination of the German people via forced sterilization and for the territorial partition of Germany by surrounding countries, France, Poland etc. wiping it off the map, but there were others. It was the publication of this book, prior to US involvement in the war, that triggered Hitler to allow a gleeful Goebbels to force the jews in their midst to wear the infamous yellow star.
“The jew will always tell you what happened to him, but he’ll never tell you why!”
The jew Henry Morgenthau, Jr. was the U.S Secretary of the Treasury and drew up a plan for an occupied Germany after WWII in 1944, and drawing from Kaufman, it advocated various extremely harsh measures which became known as the “Morgenthau Plan.”
While formally rejected, a somewhat modified version of the Morgenthau Plan was approved by Roosevelt and Churchill with the statement: “This program is for eliminating the war-making industries in the Ruhr and in the Saar and proposes converting Germany into a country primarily agricultural and pastoral in its character.”
David Irving wrote:
“The Morgenthau Plan would have led to the death by starvation and pestilence of ten million Germans in the first two years after the war, in addition to the over one million who had been killed in the saturation bombing and the over three million killed during the expulsions […] liquidate entire classes of suspected Nazi war criminals without investigations […] and to leave the German nation to ‘stew in its own juice’.”
Prior to the Marshal Plan, on May 10, 1945, Truman signed the U.S Occupation Directive JCS 1067. For over two years it instructed the U.S Occupation forces to “take no steps looking toward the economic rehabilitation of Germany.”
Morgenthau’s plan was turned into a book called “Germany is our problem” and along with another genocidal jew Louis Nizer’s book “What to do with Germany“, General Dwight Eisenhower, the Military Governor of the U.S Occupation Zone, distributed the books to American officials, heavily influencing their hatred of Germans the and genocidal policies implemented by the Americans during the early years of occupation.