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The remarkable Dr. Makow: The street corner Der Sturmer’s popular columnist, Henry Makow, has what can only be described as an incredible CV, as detailed on Wikipedia (my bolds):
Henry Makow, Ph.D., (born November 12, 1949 in Zürich, Switzerland) is a Canadian conspiracy theorist, inventor of the board game Scruples, and the author of A Long Way to go for a Date, the story of his courtship and marriage to a young Filipina. (He has since divorced and remarried.)
As a baby, he moved with his family to Canada, settling in Ottawa. At the age of 11 he began to write the syndicated advice-to-parents column “Ask Henry.” The column ran in 50 newspapers in the early 1960s. This led to appearances on the Jack Paar Show (the forerunner to the Tonight Show), What's My Line and To Tell the Truth.[1] In 1984, he invented Scruples, a game of moral dilemmas which was translated into five languages and sold seven million copies worldwide.
He received his Ph.D. in English Literature from the University of Toronto in 1982, and lives in Winnipeg. His critique of feminism as an attempt to destabilize society and his explanation of how heterosexuality works have been collected in a book Cruel Hoax: Feminism and the New World Order.[2]
Many of his articles cite evidence of a hidden hand shaping modern history according to a long-term occult (satanic) agenda. He associates this force with the "-isms" :Zionism, Communism, Liberalism, Secularism, Neo-Conservatism, Fascism, Nazism and Feminism. He argues that democracy today is a charade and serves as an instrument of social control; the mass media generally stifles information and channels thought; and popular entertainment diverts the audience from what it is happening and degrades us. The occult force, which operates through Freemasonry, is empowered by the London-based central banking cartel which must bring about world tyranny to defend its monopoly on credit (money creation.) Using the pretext of war, the goal is depopulation and ultimately, the enslavement of mankind, mentally and spiritually, if not physically.
Makow is Jewish[3] and his grandparents were victims of the Holocaust. He criticizes using the Holocaust as a PC club, the denial of crimes by the communists and by Turks against the Armenians.[4]
To Tell the Truth? Scruples? Freemasonry? Folks, you can’t make this stuff up (although as Dr. Makow demonstrates, you can confabulate and/or expand upon plenty of other piffle; hey, maybe "Piffle" can be the name of the good doctor's next board game).
