 Anmerkung |
Prescott Bush Robbed Geronimo's Tomb and Brought His Skull & Bones to YalePrescott Bush
Indian Country Today reports, ' ''They dug up Geronimo's body in 1918. His body is at the Skull and Bones Museum. Grandfather Prescott Bush dug it up,' [former San Carlos Apache tribal councilman Raleigh] Thompson said. The grave robbing was exposed when Apache leaders received a photo and information in the 1980s... of the cult museum's display of Geronimo's remains in a glass cage [and] a copy of a Skull and Bones Society log book, in which the 1918 grave robbery was recorded. According to the Skull and Bones log book entry, Prescott Bush, grandfather of George W. Bush, and five other officers at Fort Sill, Okla., desecrated Geronimo's grave... [Apache leaders] met with Skull and Bones officials and Jonathan Bush, George HW Bush's brother, in NYC in 1986. However, Thompson said the skull that the Skull and Bones Society offered to return to the Apache delegation was that of a young boy, not Geronimo, and the Apache leaders refused it... 'I think they switched the skull on us.'' '
-----------
Jewish Gen.
' 'According to classified documents from Dutch intelligence and US government archives, President George W. Bush's grandfather, Prescott Bush made considerable profits off Auschwitz slave labor. In fact, President Bush himself is an heir to these profits from the holocaust which were placed in a blind trust in 1980 by his father, former president George Herbert Walker Bush.' '
Prescott Bush
Holocaust Survivors Sue Bush Family over Nazi Link25-Sep-2004Prescott Bush
' 'During WWI, it was reported that Prescott Sheldon Bush (W's grandfather, Poppy's father) had received the Cross of the Legion of Honor, the Victoria Cross, and the Distinguished Service Cross 'for a deed of rare valor and great military importance' YET, 'Four weeks after the news of the decorated Prescott Bush appeared in the newspaper, the following Notice appeared: 'A cable received from my son, Prescott S. Bush, brings word that he has not been decorated, as published in the papers a month ago. He feels dreadfully troubled that a letter, written in a spirit of fun, should have been misinterpreted. He says he is no hero and asks me to make explanations. I will appreciate your kindness in publishing this letter.... Flora Sheldon Bush.' Prescott Bush was discharged in mid-1919, and returned for a short time to Columbus, Ohio. But his humiliation in his home town was so intense that he could no longer live there. The 'war hero' story was henceforth not spoken of in his presence.' '
The Guardian: ' 'The Guardian has obtained confirmation from newly discovered files in the US National Archives that a firm of which Prescott Bush was a director was involved with the financial architects of Nazism. His business dealings, which continued until his company's assets were seized in 1942 under the Trading with the Enemy Act, has led more than 60 years later to a civil action for damages being brought in Germany against the Bush family by two former slave labourers at Auschwitz and to a hum of pre-election controversy. The evidence has also prompted one former US Nazi war crimes prosecutor to argue that the late senator's action should have been grounds for prosecution for giving aid and comfort to the enemy.' ' Giving aid and comfort to the enemy is called TREASON.
Simon Rozenkier is suing Bayer and Schering for complicity in grotesque medical experiments performed on him by Nazi doctor Josef Mengele and fellow torturers from I.G. Farben. Incredibly, Bush is trying to have Rozenkier's case dismissed. He writes: ' 'After my years of [military] service to this country in Korea, I always expected the president of the United States to stand by me against my persecutors. I never realized that Prescott Bush, Bush's grandfather, made a fortune on Wall Street during the 1930s selling war bonds for Nazi Germany and 'cloaking' American assets owned by German companies [also partners of I.G Farben!]. Now I understand why the Bush administration is urging the presiding judge to dismiss my case and placing legal closure for corporate perpetrators ahead of moral and financial closure for victims of the Holocaust. The apple never falls far from the tree.' ' Perhaps Joe Conason and Eric Alterman would like to reconsider their dismissal of the Prescott Bush story.
|