Tragedy and Hope
Carroll Quigley, 1966
Professor Quigley, having been given access to the private records of the "Insiders," spills the beans about the identity (Rothschild, Morgan, etc.) and the world-wide works of those Insider elites. To his surprise, the Establishment was not pleased by his book, and tried to suppress it. Its publication was a watershed event in our struggle to understand who was running the world. Quigley's account of how and why the British leadership supported the rise of Adolph Hitler in the 1930's. →
Professor Quigley, having been given access to the private records of the "Insiders," spills the beans about the identity (Rothschild, Morgan, etc.) and the world-wide works of those Insider elites. To his surprise, the Establishment was not pleased by his book, and tried to suppress it. Its publication was a watershed event in our struggle to understand who was running the world. Quigley's account of how and why the British leadership supported the rise of Adolph Hitler in the 1930's. →
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