The Shooting Of The (hungry) People In Washington In 1932 - Alternative View

The Shooting Of The (hungry) People In Washington In 1932 - Alternative View
The Shooting Of The (hungry) People In Washington In 1932 - Alternative View

Video: The Shooting Of The (hungry) People In Washington In 1932 - Alternative View

Video: The Shooting Of The (hungry) People In Washington In 1932 - Alternative View
Video: America's "Hunger Marchers" (1932) 2024, May
Anonim

Recently, unique footage appeared, which confirmed that in the USA in 1932 in Washington, the police and the army destroyed and shot with tanks the tent camp of World War I veterans

A rare video about those events:

Washington Tiananmen in its purest form …

In 1932, a "Hunger March" was organized for unemployed (unarmed) World War I veterans with their families to the capital. Regular troops and tanks were sent against them.

The dispersal of the veterans was led by General D. MacArthur, Colonel D. Eisenhower and Major D. Paton. All three are the most famous personalities in history. They became famous military leaders during the American involvement in the final stages of World War II in Europe. And Dwight D. Eisenhower was twice elected President of the United States from 1953 to 1961.

I will add that the executioner of American unemployed veterans, General D. MacArthur, fully deserved the gallows for the war crimes and genocide during its occupation by the North Korean army during the 1950-1953 intervention.

Total silence about those tragic events was observed for almost 80 years!

Promotional video:

They rehearsed their martial arts on fellow citizens in the center of their own capital. In the summer of 1932, former World War I soldiers gathered in Washington, DC, demanding, at the height of the Great Depression, higher unemployment benefits and cash compensation for veterans that the government did not want to pay.

Many families then lived on $ 1 a day. There were many demonstrators - about 30 thousand people. Many came to the capital with their families and children. They didn't want to leave until President Hoover met their demands. On the outskirts of the capital, Anacostia Flats, a campground was set up.

The veterans waited in the capital for about two months, organizing demonstrations from time to time. The government could not find a pretext to disperse the veterans who built their own village out of rubbish on the outskirts of Washington, Anacostia Flats. In response, President Herbert Hoover declared all the demonstrators "communists" and ordered General Douglas McCarthur to disperse them. The soldiers stormed the wretched settlement built by the veterans and burned it down.

Some sources describe these events as follows (for example, in Consulting Services in the United States in the Time of Roosevelt):

General MacArthur celebrated the victory at Anacostia-Flags; in hindsight, he argued that the "crowd" was inspired by "revolutionary ideas." The government issued a statement that the fight is against "criminals and communists." A grand jury (court) was appointed to prove the charge.

It failed - only former soldiers came to Washington, every fifth of them was wounded in the war. The story of the veteran D. Apgelo, who recognized D. Patton as the officer leading the cavalry in the attack, was heard throughout America. In 1918, at the front, Angelo saved his life and received a medal for it. "Surely this man saved my life," Patton confirmed."

Here's a story …

US veterans organizations still insist that several thousand people died then, and 200 activists were taken to the Florida swamps and shot there.

Hoover's rival in the upcoming presidential elections Franklin Roosevelt said at the time: "THIS will make me president." And so it happened.

PS Forbidden history of the USA is a huge layer of knowledge. For example, in 1932 the so-called "march of veterans to Washington" took place. About 25 thousand former military personnel and their family members marched across the country to the capital, where they were dispersed using tanks. 1,600 killed. Thousands of people were forcibly put into military trucks and taken away (the camp was allegedly located in the Everglades, Florida), no one else was ever seen. Information "from there" - from the book of the American historian William Manchester ("The Glory and the Dream: A Narrative History of America, 1932-1972", William Manchester, 1974).

The soldiers killed women and children. In Leonid Kuznetsov's book "One hundred percent American: A historical portrait of General MacArthur" (1990), there is a terrible moment - during the dispersal of the tent camp of veterans, the punisher stabs a seven-year-old child with a bayonet. Is it worth it against this background to be surprised at the bandit lawlessness - there was a war of the ruling circles of the United States against its population. God bless America …"

Author: SERGEY FILATOV