If there were truth to it, they would.Funny the "democrats" don't ever bring up how the Bush dynasty made their money.
Yep. We went over this whole thing about a year or two ago at THR. I'm not interested in rehashing it.I see; so you are saying it is not true
Introduction
The thesis of this book is simple: if George Bush were to be re-elected in
November 1992 for a second term as the President of the United States, this
country and the rest of the world would face a catastrophe of gigantic
proportions.
The necessity of writing this book became overwhelming in the minds of the
authors in the wake of the ghastly slaughter of the Iraq war of
January-February 1991. That war was an act of savage and premeditated
genocide on the part of Bush, undertaken in connivance with a clique in
London which has, in its historical continuity, represented both the worst
enemy of the long-term interests of the American people, and the most
implacable adversary of the progress of the human species.
Using valid documents to make false assertions is nothing new. Yep, Prescott got his single share of UBC back in 1951.Prescott's involvement with Nazi finance is more complicated. Though Thyssen had been an ardent backer of the Nazis in the early days, he broke with them in 1938 after the Kristallnacht pogrom against the Jews. He fled to Switzerland the following year, and Hitler confiscated his fortune and stripped him of his citizenship. In I Paid Hitler Thyssen confessed his role in financing the Nazis and denounced the Führer. Arrested in Vichy France, he spent the balance of the war as an Axis prisoner. Prescott Bush, for his part, owned a single share of stock (of 4,000) in UBC, the Thyssen bank. According to a 2001 Boston Globe piece, the New York Herald Tribune ran a story in July 1942 headlined "Hitler's Angel Has 3 Million in US Bank," in which Prescott and other BBH partners "explain[ed] to government regulators that their position [as directors of UBC] was merely an unpaid courtesy for a client."
Prescott and other BBH partners "explain[ed] to government regulators that their position [as directors of UBC] was merely an unpaid courtesy for a client."
And there were charges filed when?