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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"In Ascona, a tiny Alpine village at the southern tip
of Switzerland, Central European naturalists, pacifistic
vegetarians, Nietzsche-obsessed writers, radical anarchists, Runeists, and devotees of free love and
Ausdruckstanz set up various ramshackle campsites and
sanatoriums."
"In the shadow of Monte Verita, Ascona’s bohemian leaders preached new health regimens, new diets, new communal values, and new sexual practices. By the end of World War I, their teachings had spread to Germany. It was the beginning of an international counterculture."
I'm aware that, like, leading with 3 episodes about a law firm in the early 19th century was not exactly riveting in the traditional sense, but I think this is genuinely gonna be interesting to most people. it's also my best work so far, by a lot
new episode, with lots of great stuff, like where else will you find out that Allen Dulles didn't get to make contact with VI Lenin because he was having a threesome with some Swiss twin sisters?