Do any of you read him? He's dead now unfortunately, but in his time he exposed some major corruption by bankers and big business. He was an uber meticulous researcher and has the sources to back up everything. Right now I'm reading his book Wall Street and The Bolshevik revolution, and I would say at least one fourth of the book consists of excerpts from state department files, telegrams and letters sent by prominent people, and quotations. If you want to check out his stuff just look him up on wikipedia you'll find links to some of his books online for free. For those of you that have heard of him, I was wondering if you knew of other investigators/journalists/historians that wrote on similar topics and backed up there work with indisputable evidence, basically people who were really meticulous researchers. check this dude out http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antony_Sutton
I am very much aware of Antony Sutton. I own every single one of his books, and I also have several interviews on tape he did over the years. Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution is essential reading, as is Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler. It's imperative that people read these books if they want to get an idea of the dialectic maneuvering behind the scenes that manipulate wars. You can read several of Sutton's books online here: http://reformed-theology.org/html/books.htm Here is an interview with Antony Sutton by Dr. Stanley Monteith from the early 80s: The Best Enemies Money Can Buy http://video.google.com/videoplay?d...=-bbNSNmqEorW-wGi-7DBAg&q=Antony+Sutton&hl=en
If you like Sutton's work, you need to check out Carroll Quigley, who wrote Tragedy & Hope and The Anglo-American Establishment.
I found most of them online. There are many online bookstores that specialize in rare and hard-to-find books. You can also try looking on eBay, or just go to any bookstore and they will order them for you. I think a few of his books are out of print, but you can still find them.
Yeah, Quigley was the archivist for the Council on Foreign Relations in the 1960s and a professor at Georgetown University. It was Quigley who selected Bill Clinton for the Rhodes Scholarship in 1968. His books really shed a lot of light on how the elite have operated throughout the past 100+ years.
If there were just five books I had to recommend to people, it would be: 1)Carroll Quigley - The Anglo-American Establishment (1981) 2)Zbigniew Brzezinski - Between Two Ages: America's Role in the Technetronic Era (1970) 3)Antony C. Sutton - Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler (1976) / Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution (1974) 4)Carroll Quigley - Tragedy & Hope (1966) 5)Antony C. Sutton - America's Secret Establishment (1986)
They may be old books, but they're every bit as relevant today as they were the day they were published. I was surprised to see Ron Paul mention Quigley the other day in reference to what Quigley said about the two-party system. Someone actually took the footage from the speech Paul gave and spliced it together with the video I made on Quigley a year ago without even giving me any credit. Plus they removed the original soundtrack and replaced it with Pink Floyd's 'Money'. Oh well. http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=e74_1221283917