John Beaty

Colonel John Beaty Ph.D. was a distinguished, intelligent American opposed to Bolsheviks, to Communism and to the Jews, the Zionist crazies infiltrating Western Civilization. His most important book, The Iron Curtain Over America is on line. He wrote To The Reader explaining his background, his qualifications for knowing the truth. Read for yourself. Think for yourself. Decide for yourself. His Biography in Wikipedia is approximately honest. Now Ron Unz has written him up at Prof. John Beaty and the True Origin of the Jews.

John O. Beaty controversy papers A Guide to the Collection
Tells us that Colonel Beaty's research was shoddy, not supported by the evidence etc. I am not convinced. The next reference from a hostile Jew praises the quality of his work. I believe the Jew on that point. To put it bluntly; the Christians are lying. They lack the integrity, the Moral Courage to face the truth.

 

A Pleasant Surprise John Beaty’s ‘The Iron Curtain over America’
A Jew writes. A Jew sneers; the Jew denigrates but the Jew admits obliquely, reluctantly that the good colonel is right. Colonel Beaty's coverage of the Teutonic Knights corresponds with that of the New Advent. He tells us that Franklin D Roosevelt was a communist sympathizer if not an outright traitor. See e.g. FDR recognized the Communist Government of Russia in his first year in office. The Propagandists who told us about the Red Scare keep very quiet about Col. Beaty. They also keep very quiet about their current single issue attacks which are all part of Cultural Marxism.

 

Haskalah
Was an attempt to clean up up the Jews' act. It failed. The inspiration was Moses Mendelssohn, a Jew with decent instincts.

 

John Beaty ex Metapedia
John Owen Beaty
(December 22, 1890 - September 9, 1961) was a scholar of English literature and an anti-communist researcher. He was the author of fourteen books. His most famous work,  The Iron Curtain Over America, documented the Jewish attempt to takeover the country through Communist subversion. Beaty was one of the first to popularize the theory that today’s Jews are actually Khazars.

John Beaty was born in Crow, West Virginia, to James Robert and Eula (Simms) Beaty in 1890. He studied at the University of Virginia receiving his B.A. and M.A. He enlisted in the United States Army in 1917 and served in the final days of World War I. After the war, he and remained in Europe and took graduate courses at Université de Montpellier, France. In 1921 he received a Ph.D. in philosophy from Columbia University. In 1919 he taught English at Southern Methodist University eventually retiring there in 1957. He was head of the English Department at SMU from 1927 until 1940.

He was a military intelligence officer during World War II and served in the Office of War Information in Washington DC. He was rose to the rank of Colonel in the United States Army and served in the army reserves until 1950. During the war he was Chief of the Interview Section. From 1943 to 1946 he interviewed over two thousand individuals including military personnel, diplomatic officials, congressmen, missionaries, explorers, businessmen, refugees, and journalists. One of John Beaty’s colleagues was military intelligence officer Truman Smith who was a close personal friend to Charles Lindbergh.

He married Josephine Mason Powell in 1920 and raised four children. Josephine Beaty was once the Vice President of Defenders of the American Constitution.

Upon his retirement in 1957, Beaty and his wife moved to a farm near Barboursville, Virginia. After period of hospitalized at Gordonsville, Virginia he died on September 9, 1961.

You might find value in the Metapedia's lists:-
List of American military officers opposed to Jewish supremacism
 
List of British military officers opposed to Jewish supremacism
 
List of anti-Jewish American politicians
Nationalist members of Congress
They are rather short, sadly.

 

To The Reader 
Many authors of books on the current world scene have been White House confidants, commanders of armies, and others whose authority is indicated by their official or military titles. Such authors need no introduction to the public. A Prospective reader is entitled, however, to know something of the background and experience of an unknown or little-known writer who is offering a comprehensive volume on a great and important subject.

In the spring of 1926, the author was selected by the Albert Kahn Foundation to investigate and report on world affairs. Introduced by preliminary correspondence and provided with numerous letters of introduction to persons prominent in government, politics, and education, he gained something more than a tourist's reaction to the culture and institutions, the movements and the pressures in the twenty-nine countries which he visited. In several countries, including great powers, he found conditions and attitudes significantly different from the conception of them which prevailed in the United States. Though previously successful in deposing of his writings, he was unable, however, to get his observations on the world situation published, except as the Annual Report of the Foundation and in his friendly home special foreign correspondent, and in the Southwest Review, in whose files his "Race and Population, Their Relation to World Peace" can still be seen as a virtual prognosis of the oncoming war.

After his return to America in the autumn of 1927, the author kept abreast of world attitudes by correspondence with many of the friends he had made in his travels and by rereading French, German, and Italian news periodicals, as well as certain English language periodicals emanating from Asia. World trends continued to run counter to what the American people were allowed to know, and a form of virtual censorship blacked out efforts at imparting information. For instance, though the author's textbooks continued to sell well and though his novel Swords in the Dawn (1937) was favorably received, his book Image of Life (Thomas Nelson and Sons, 1940 ), which attempted to show Americans the grave world-wide significance of the degradation of their cultural standards, was granted, as far as he knows, not a single comment in a book review or a book column in New York. Indeed, the book review periodical with the best reputation for full coverage failed to list Image of Life even under "Books Received".

 In 1940 - as our President was feverishly and secretly preparing to enter World War II and publicly denying any such purpose - the author, a reserve captain, was "alerted," and in 1941 was called to active duty in the Military Intelligence Service of the War Department General Staff. His first assignment was to write, or help write, short pamphlets on military subjects, studies of several campaigns including those in Western Europe and Norway, and three bulletins on the frustration of an enemy's attempts at sabotage and subversion.

 In 1942, the author became a major and Chief of the Historical Section (not the later Historical Branch of the War Department Special Staff). In his new capacity, he supervised a group of experts who prepared a current history of events in the various strategically important areas of the world. Also, he was one of the two editors of the daily secret "G-2 Report," which was issued each noon to give persons in high places, including the White House, the world picture as it existed four hours earlier. While Chief of the Historical Section, the author wrote three widely circulated studies of certain phases of the German - Russian campaign.

 In 1943 - during which year he was also detailed to the General Staff Corps and promoted to lieutenant colonel the author was made Chief of the Interview Section. In the next three years he interviewed more than two thousand persons, most of whom were returning from some high mission, some delicate assignment, or some deed of valor - often in a little-known region of the world. Those interviewed included military personnel in rank from private first class to four stars, diplomatic officials from vice-consuls to ambassadors and special representatives of the President, senators and congressmen returning from overseas investigations, missionaries, explorers, businessmen, refugees, and journalists - among the latter, Raymond Clapper and Ernie Pyle, who were interviewed between their next to the last and their last and fatal voyages. These significant people were presented sometimes individually but usually to assembled groups of officers and other experts from the various branches of G-2, from other General Staff divisions, from each of the technical services, and from other components interested in vital information which could be had by interview perhaps six weeks before being received in channeled reports. In some cases the author increased his knowledge of a given area or topic by consulting documents suggested during an interview. Thus, from those he interviewed, from those specialists for whom he arranged the interviews, and from study in which he had expert guidance, he had a unique opportunity for learning the history, resources, ideologies, capabilities, and intentions of the great foreign powers. In its most essential aspects, the picture was terrifyingly different from the picture presented by our government to the American people!

 After the active phase of the war was over, the author was offered three separate opportunities of further service with the army - all of them interesting, all of them flattering. He wished, however, to return to his home and his university and to prepare himself for trying again to give the American people the world story as he had come to know it; consequently, after being advanced to the rank of colonel, he reverted to inactive status, upon his own request, in December, 1946. Twice thereafter he was recalled for a summer of active duty: in 1947 he wrote a short history of the Military Intelligence Service, and in 1949 he prepared for the Army Field Forces an annotated reading list for officers in the Military Intelligence Reserve.

 From 1946 to 1951 the author devoted himself to extending his knowledge of the apparently diverse but actually interrelated events in the various strategic areas of the present-day world. The goal he set for himself was not merely to uncover the facts but to present them with such a body of documented proof that their validity could not be questioned. Sustaining quotations for significant truths have thus been taken from standard works of reference; from accepted historical writings; from government documents; from periodicals of wide public acceptance or of known accuracy in fields related to America's foreign policy; and from contemporary writers and speakers of unquestioned standing.

The final product of a long period of travel, army service, and study is The Iron Curtain Over America. The book is neither memoirs nor apology, but an objective presentation of "things as they are." It differs from many other pro-American books principally in that it not only exhibits the external and internal dangers which threaten the survival of our country, but shows how they developed and why they continue to plague us.

The roads we "travel so briskly lead out of dim antiquity" said General James G. Harbord, and we must study the past "because of its bearing on the living present" and because it is our only guide for the future. The author has thus turned on the light in certain darkened or dimmed out year tremendously significant phases of the history of medieval and modern Europe. Since much compression was obligatory, and since many of the facts will to most readers be wholly new and disturbing, Chapters I and II may be described as "hard reading." Even a rapid perusal of them, however, will prepare the reader for understanding better the problems of our country as they are revealed in succeeding chapters.

  In The Iron Curtain Over America authorities are cited not in a bibliography or in notes but along with the text to which they are pertinent. The documentary matter is enclosed by parentheses, and many readers will pass over it. it is there, however, for those who wish its assurance of validity, for those who wish to locate and examine the context of quoted material, and especially for those who wish to use this book as a springboard for further study.

 In assembling and documenting his material, the author followed Shakespearean injunction, "nothing extenuate, nor set down aught in malice." Writing with no goal except to serve his country by telling the truth, fully substantiated, he has humbly and reverently taken as his motto, or text, a promise of Christ the Saviour as recorded in the Gospel According to Saint John (VIII, 32):

  And Ye Shall Know The Truth And The Truth Shall Make You Free.

  Only an informed American people can save America - and they can save it only if all those, to whom it is given to know, will share their knowledge with others.