100 year old conspiracy
(media.scored.co)
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It's interesting, the origin of this quote is somewhat mysterious, a bit like the Protocols of Zion. It is claimed as hoax rather vehemently all over the internet, so I had to look into if there is anything to it - I've not found the exact origin, but Estace Mullins quoted it, and Myron Fagan said Israel Cohen himself described it to him. But it is unclear if the title is a book title, a chapter title from some book, an article title, or whether the text is quoted from a book by Cohen or an article, essay or pamphlet. Cohen was a prolific writer, and somewhat oddly, wikipedia only gives a partial list of his published works. I'm going to look more into this, but I'll drop some links from various sources where I found alternative info about the quote beyond the hoax screeching of wikipedia and others:
https://www.stormfront.org/forum/t53741/
https://www.stormfront.org/forum/t52756/
https://archive.org/details/congressionalrec103dunit/page/n25/mode/2up?view=theater (page 8559, first column, Zoom in.)
(edit: BTW for those reporting OP for "illegal content" the above link is the text from the image in print in the congressional record, as quoted from June 7th, 1957)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Abernethy_%28politician%29
https://en.metapedia.org/wiki/A_Racial_Program_for_the_Twentieth_Century
https://rense.com/general82/plan.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Racial_Program_for_the_Twentieth_Century
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:A_Racial_Program_for_the_Twentieth_Century
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israel_Cohen_(Zionist)
https://tetraktys.co.uk/the-fabian-society/
So, this is your painful and exhaustive way of admitting that the quote isn't real? Thanks, anyone with two brain cells already knew that.
don't be so sure that you have more than 2 brain cells. The image of the text is real, it's a direct copy of the scan of the congressional record from 1957.
The image of the text from the "congressional record" is simply Abernathy's recitation of the Mullins forgery. That doesn't make it any more legit, which I know must be heartbreaking for you.
not sure of the purpose of your inverted commas, it is the congressional record for June 7th 1957 ie. what people said in congress, transcribed.
As to legitimacy, you apparently place faith in the legitimacy of what anonymous wikipedia editors and the ADL write, despite a lack of evidence. Me, I remain open-minded - I've not seen anything that certainly confirms who wrote the quote originally or where it came from.