we talk about the Thule Society again they didn't fund that much of the party, instead providing the spiritual ideology
then there's the White Russians, like Alfred Rosenberg, who first brought the Protocols to Hitler
well, he wasn't quite a white russian, but you know.
then we talk about the funding of the Völkischer Beobachter, the Nazi newspaper, ran by Max Amann, the guy who witnessed Hitler's hysterical blindness
Dr. Emil Gansser, an executive at Siemens & Halske, got Hitler to speak at the prestigious National Club of Berlin, where he made connections
Admiral von Trotha, who probably funneled the Nazis funds from the Navy covertly
JF Lehmann again, from Thule
Kurt Lüdecke, who becomes extremely important to our story of Nazi fundraising
Ernst Hanftstaengl, probably the first German-American Nazi, and spy. lmao would you trust this guy?
another guy hidden in the shadows: Max Erwin von Scheubner-Richter, very spooky
everyone's favorite beer from St. Louis also gave funds
industrialists Fritz Thyssen and Ernst Borsig gave small amounts in the early days
Hitler made an early connection with Prince Ahrenberg, who bragged to Hitler of having been sentenced to 12 years for "having killed a n*****", which it looks like he served like 3, in Deutsch-Südwestafrika
Admiral Canaris also funneled funds to the Nazis covertly
then there's Hermann Ehrhardt, who ran one of the freikorps, who also ran the Viking Bund and the Organization Consul, an out-and-out paramilitary death squad via by German naval intelligence and funds
the Organization Consul killed Matthias Erzberger and Walther Rathenau, high-ranking government officials, and the Nazis' ties to the OC were pretty strong
pic unrelated
and finally we discuss General Ludendorff, who's come up in prior episodes
at Programmed to Chill, we're just getting started. it's probably not giving away the game to say there's 4 more episodes on early Nazi funding coming up, so check it out.
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parenthetically I've got 934 pages of various WerBell Word docs - the text of the 17 episodes is 225 pages and then everything else is stuff not in the episodes that would have formed the bulk of the book (lol)
how about one last thread for the road? maybe the second to last?
I’m a fan of Cuba and the Cuban people. Politically, I support ending the embargo and the repeal of the Helms-Burton act. I think Fidel Castro and Che Guevara were some of the most interesting figures of the 20th century. There is much to admire in the Cuban project.
I’m always a fan of subterranean histories, especially when they intersect with insurrectionary and/or revolutionary history. What’s the parapolitics take on Cuba? What still remains to be studied with the Cuban Revolution?
a thread: a couple days ago, Daniela Klette, age 65, of the Red Army Faction’s third generation was arrested.
a lot of people are saying Bellingcat and/or podcasters found her. it's not entirely clear which, but it looks like some German podcasters for like a Most Wanted type podcast found her using AI tools, and then either they or a Bellingcat guy sent it to the cops
via the NYT article, the Bellingcat guy said “Somebody like me, who does not speak German, who does not know much beyond the basic background of Daniela Klette — Why was I able to find such a lead in like literally 30 minutes?”
for various reasons I’m obsessed with the baleada. it’s become one of my all-time favorite dishes.
the baleada is in some ways THE national dish of Honduras. what’s known for sure is that the baleada was invented in La Ceiba on the beautiful northern coast of Honduras. some claim that it was originally a Mayan dish (which I'll discuss later)