Logo
facts about eustace mullins.html

29 Facts About Eustace Mullins

facts about eustace mullins.html1.

Eustace Mullins's father was a salesman in a retail clothing store.

2.

Eustace Mullins said he was educated at Ohio State University, New York University, and the University of North Dakota, although the FBI was unable to verify his attendance at any of them, with the exception of one summer session at NYU in 1947.

3.

Eustace Mullins was a veteran of the United States Army Air Forces, serving thirty-eight months during World War II.

4.

In 1949 Mullins worked at the Institute for Contemporary Arts in Washington, DC where he met Ezra Pound's wife Dorothy, who introduced him to her husband.

5.

Eustace Mullins visited the poet frequently, and for a time acted as his secretary.

6.

Eustace Mullins became a researcher at the Library of Congress in 1950 and helped Senator Joseph McCarthy in making claims about Communist Party funding sources.

7.

Eustace Mullins later stated that he believed McCarthy had "started to turn the tide against world communism".

Related searches
Joseph McCarthy
8.

From April 1953 until April 1954, Eustace Mullins was employed by the American Petroleum Industries Committee.

9.

Eustace Mullins was cited in 1954 as a "neo-Fascist" by the House Un-American Activities Committee, which noted in particular his article "Adolph Hitler: An Appreciation", written in 1952, in which he compared Hitler to Jesus and described both as victims of Jews.

10.

Eustace Mullins was a member of the National Renaissance Party and wrote for its journal, The National Renaissance.

11.

Eustace Mullins was on the editorial staff of the American Free Press and became a contributing editor to the Barnes Review, both published by Willis Carto's Liberty Lobby.

12.

Eustace Mullins lived in Staunton, Virginia, in the house at 126 Madison Place where he grew up, from the mid 1970s through the end of his life.

13.

Eustace Mullins then showed me a ten dollar bill marked "Federal Reserve Note" and asked me if I would do some research at the Library of Congress on the Federal Reserve System which had issued this bill.

14.

Eustace Mullins told Pound that he had little interest in such a research project because he was working on a novel.

15.

Eustace Mullins said, 'You must work on it as a detective story.

16.

Eustace Mullins completed the manuscript during the course of 1950 when he began to seek a publisher.

17.

Eustace Mullins argued that the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 defies Article 1, Section 8, Paragraph 5 of the United States Constitution by creating a "central bank of issue" for the United States.

18.

Eustace Mullins went on to claim that World War I, the Agricultural Depression of 1920, and the Great Depression of 1929 were brought about by international banking interests to profit from conflict and economic instability.

19.

Eustace Mullins cited Thomas Jefferson's staunch opposition to the establishment of a central bank in the United States.

20.

Eustace Mullins called the Rothschilds "world monopolists", and claimed that City of London bankers owned the Federal Reserve, since they owned much of the stock of its member banks.

21.

Eustace Mullins attempted to trace stock ownership, as it changed hands via mergers and acquisitions, from the inception of the Federal Reserve in 1913 to the early 1980s.

22.

Eustace Mullins criticized the Bilderberg Group, attacking it as an international consortium produced by the Rockefeller-Rothschild alliance.

23.

Eustace Mullins dedicated Secrets of the Federal Reserve to George Stimpson and Ezra Pound.

24.

In particular, Eustace Mullins argues that by the mid-1960s, in order to divert the world's attention away from this putative mass slaughter, "the Jews" had cooked up the story of the Holocaust, using "photographs of the bodies of their German victims, which are exhibited today in gruesome 'museums' in Germany as exhibits of dead Jews" as evidence for their claims.

25.

In 1968, Eustace Mullins authored the tract The Biological Jew, which he claimed was an objective analysis of the forces behind the "decline" of Western culture.

Related searches
Joseph McCarthy
26.

Eustace Mullins claimed that the main influence that people were overlooking in their analysis of world affairs was "parasitism".

27.

Eustace Mullins was involved with a number of extremist right-wing and neofascist groups from the early 1950s through the 1990s.

28.

Eustace Mullins spoke regularly to militia groups across the United States during this time.

29.

Eustace Mullins died on February 2,2010, aged 86, in Hockley, Texas.