COG

Monetary Reform Discussion


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Re: MONETARY: Leader of Social Credit Movement in U.S. Senate



Yes, Cutting.  Just a minor point of clarification:  I thought Munson was a journalist not a professor.  It's possible at some point in his life he may have taught journalism, but I'm not aware of it.  What do you know about this?

What do you know about the death of the person known as Lord Tavistock in Social Credit lore?

>From: "Wallace M. Klinck"
>Reply-To: monetaryreform@cog.kent.edu
>To: COG Monetary Reform
>Subject: MONETARY: Leader of Social Credit Movement in U.S. Senate
>Date: Sun, 03 Nov 2002 00:49:30 -0700
>
>Bill Ryan wrote:
>
>There were also a number of deaths of prominent Social Creditors that were never satisfactorily explained - and this I will admit is my "conspiracy theorist" side speaking, for I have no evidence whatever that the official explanations are not true. It is my hypothesis - knowing what I know about Stalin's paranoia and method - those deaths may well have been assassinations. There was the death of Orage shortly after his return to England, the very night of his radio address to the nation. There was the death of Senator Cutter, the leader for the movement in the United States Senate. There was the death of Aberhart in 1943. There were others.
>
>Wally asks a question:
>
>Bill, when you refer to Senator "Cutter" are you not talking if fact about Senator Bronson Cutting who had become a convinced advocate for Social Credit and who in 1934 gave a supper for senators and congressmen in Washington where C.H. Douglas was guest of honour? This was after Douglas's immensely successful tour of Australia (e.g., an audience of over 12,000 in Melbourne), New Zealand and Canada where he testified before the Agricultural Committee of the Alberta Legislature and then in Ottawa at the Committee on Banking of the Dominion Parliament. In April, 1934 Douglas spoke at the New School for Social Research in New York prior to the Washington event sponsored by Senator Cutting. This all comes from U.S. Social Credit leader Prof. Gorham Munson's book "Aladdin's Lamp: The Wealth of the American People (Creative Age Press, 1945, p. 202)
>


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