February 16, 2006
From BluWiki
February 16, 2006
Host: Daryl Bradford Smith
Guest: David Musa Pidcock
Here are today's lies, misstatements, disinformation, and stupidity:
(1) David Pidcock makes an interesting statement about Woodrow Wilson: That he gave Trotsky “his American passport” and sent him to Russia to ensure Bolshevik rule. Trotsky lived in the U.S. for a grand total of two months, and he never got a U.S. passport because he never became a U.S. citizen. In fact, he only came to the U.S. in the first place because he had been deported from Russia, then from France, and finally from Spain, which sent him here. And in fact, Trotsky did not make it back to Russia in due time – his ship was intercepted by the British Navy and he was held in Canada until the Russian foreign minister (under the Kerensky provisional government established in March 1917) requested his release.
In fact, if any single person is responsible for sending in the Bolsheviks, it is Kaiser Wilhelm II, who found Lenin in Zurich and sent him in a sealed rail car to St. Petersburg following the inability of Germany to get a peace treaty with Russia following the March Revolution.
(2) Pidcock says that the lending of money on interest is against Judaism. It is not. See Deuteronomy 23:19-20.
(3) David Pidcock says that Hjalmar Schacht, director of the Reichsbank during the Third Reich, worked for J.P. Morgan in New York. He never did. In fact, Schacht met Morgan once on a visit to the U.S. as a delegate of the Dresdner Bank.
(4) Daryl Bradford Smith says Solomon Bush was sent over by the Illuminati to set up Masonic lodges in the U.S. Solomon Bush was actually born in Philadelphia.
(5) Albert Pike did not found the KKK. The KKK was founded by General Nathan Bedford Forrest.
(6) Daryl Bradford Smith says a forgery is “a copy of the original.” He is wrong. [1] David Pidcock says that the Protocols are merely a copy of the Talmud. They are, in fact, a copy of Maurice Joly’s A Dialogue in Hell.
(7) David Pidcock shills for Israel Shahak’s book Jewish History, Jewish Religion. I have refuted it. [2]



