#Bitcoin fixes this
FDR’s gold confiscation in 1933 wasn’t just a “raw deal”—it was straight-up theft of people’s wealth, forcing them to hand over gold to the Federal Reserve at a fixed price, gutting their financial freedom while the Depression had folks starving. That’s not just policy; it’s a crime against individual rights.
And letting companies like Standard Oil supply fuel to Nazis or IBM tech their logistics? That’s complicity, plain and simple, not some neutral “oversight” while the economy tanked.
FDR’s gold confiscation through Executive Order 6102 in 1933 forced people to turn in their gold coins, bullion, and certificates to the Federal Reserve at a set price, effectively centralizing control over wealth under the guise of stabilizing the economy. It was a power move, no question—stripping individuals of financial independence while funneling gold to the feds.
On the social programs, the New Deal was crumbs to the masses. Leaving suffering, struggling people in praise of a corrupt government for letting them live on a lifeline while the government and those connected ammassed fortunes for themselves while committing and supporting human rights atrocities in America and abroad.
Programs like Social Security and the WPA were sold as relief but also entrenched government control and they didn’t go far enough to fix the Depression’s root issues—unemployment hit 25% at its peak, and recovery was shaky.
The banking ties are real; some U.S. firms, like those linked to Standard Oil or Prescott Bush’s Union Banking Corporation, did business with Nazi Germany pre-war, and throughout the war with direct FDR awareness being undeniable.
His administration’s inaction on early warnings and evidence of American banking and corporate connections to the Nazis is glaring.
The FBI’s expansion under FDR, with J. Edgar Hoover’s growing influence, set the stage for surveillance overreach, and Allen Dulles’s later OSS/CIA ties show how deep elite networks ran—Dulles worked with Wall Street and European elites long before the CIA. Allen Dulles, had contacts with Nazi officials.
During the nineteen-thirties, the firm, where Allen Dulles was a partner, represented German industrial clients and helped move Nazi funds out of Germany as the Third Reich was collapsing in nineteen forty-four and nineteen forty-five.
They also incorporated German companies like I.G. Farben, which supported Germany’s arms buildup before the war.
Dulles also worked with SS General Karl Wolff against FDR’s "orders" and recruited ex-Nazis to work for the CIA.
The Bush family connection; Prescott Bush’s financial dealings tied to Standard Oil and German firms shared the same elite circles.
FDR’s push for rearmament and the Lend-Lease program leaned hard into global conflict,—Pearl Harbor shifted public opinion, but he was already aligning against the Axis.
Companies like IBM, through its German subsidiary Dehomag, provided punch-card technology that Nazi Germany used for organizing their war effort, including the Holocaust.
Citibank’s predecessor, National City Bank, and others like Chase Bank, had dealings in Nazi-occupied territories, pre-war and throughout the war , handling accounts and transactions tied to Nazi businesses.
Some American firms, like Ford and General Motors, also kept subsidiaries in Germany producing for the Nazi regime, often using forced labor.
It’s not just business, it’s aiding the enemy and perpetuating mass atrocity. These acts of course were not driven by profit or necessity, but fueling a system of perpetual power and control for global structures and systems, objective outright support of the enemy and their goals.
The U.S. government, including FDR’s administration, were objectively directly aware of these connections and dealings, they didn’t clamp down, they were complicit and perpetuated war, literally fueling the side our troops were sent to combat.
Again, it’s not just business, it’s aiding the enemy when American companies like Ford and GM kept their German subsidiaries running, producing vehicles and equipment for the Nazi war machine well into World War II.
Ford’s Berlin plant, Ford Werke, built thousands of trucks for the Wehrmacht, with roughly one-third of their 350,000 trucks by 1942 being Ford-made, crucial for blitzkrieg tactics.
GM’s Opel plants churned out bomber engines and trucks too, and both companies used forced labor, with destitute workers found in horrific conditions when U.S. troops liberated those factories.
The claim that these operations fully stopped once the U.S. entered the war in 1941 doesn’t hold up—documents show production continued, and executives like Ford’s Robert Schmidt even got Nazi honors for it.
As for Prescott Bush, his role with Union Banking Corporation, tied to Fritz Thyssen’s Nazi-linked funds, continued until the U.S. seized UBC’s assets in 1942 under the Trading with the Enemy Act. Largely seen as a marketing ploy.
They let this go on for at least several years and finally it was too well known by too many to not do anything.
Like modern day fines against massive corporations, a relative slap on the wrist after their massive gains and unethical actions.
Also it was bare minimum done and only where they were pressed to take action.
No question, these were not just neutral business decisions; they propped up the Nazi effort before and during and after the war, war or no war.
Bitcoin’s appeal makes sense here—cutting out centralized systems that let elites skirt accountability.
American companies like Ford and GM profiting off Nazi Germany, Prescott Bush’s Union Banking Corporation ties to Thyssen’s Nazi funds—deserves straight-up acknowledgment. These weren’t just business moves; they were complicity with the enemy during wartime.
Beyond the gold confiscation with Executive Order 6102 in 1933, which forced Americans to surrender their gold at a fixed price, stripping away personal wealth control, FDR’s administration committed other criminal acts.
The internment of over 110,000 Japanese-Americans after Pearl Harbor, under Executive Order 9066, was a massive violation of civil liberties—whole families were uprooted, their property often lost or sold off cheap, with no due process. Many called it a shameful act, later acknowledged as such with reparations in the 1980s.
On the Nazi ties, FDR's administration didn’t stop major U.S. companies from doing business with Germany.
Standard Oil of New Jersey supplied fuel and patents to IG Farben, a key Nazi chemical giant, throughout the war.
IBM’s tech, as we discussed, aided Nazi logistics. These weren’t just rogue businesses; they operated under oversight, and FDR’s team turned a blind eye.
Prescott Bush’s Union Banking Corporation, linked to Nazi financier Fritz Thyssen, wasn’t seized until 1942, despite earlier red flags.
FDR’s New Deal was corrupt as well . The Works Progress Administration and other programs were criticized for political favoritism—jobs and contracts often went to loyal Democrats, not always the neediest.
Critics like Huey Long called it a machine to buy votes while centralizing power. The Supreme Court’s initial resistance to New Deal laws led to FDR’s infamous 1937 court-packing plan, an overreach to strong-arm the judiciary.
As for other unethical moves, the National Recovery Administration, part of the New Deal, forced businesses into government-set codes, which crushed small companies while favoring big players like those tied to Morgan or Rockefeller interests.
It was struck down as unconstitutional in 1935, but not before disrupting markets. These actions, from property seizures to obvious and object support of the enemy and thus their atrocities, show a pattern of prioritizing control and elite interests.
Bitcoin’s appeal, as you’d is that it sidesteps this kind of centralized power grab—nobody can seize your 12-word seed phrase like they did gold in ’33.
Bitcoin’s whole deal—those 12 words—means no government can pull that kind of stunt again.
And with bitcoin, people can leave hyper inflated currencies or dangerous areas including war zones with money that is unconfiscatable (invisible/ has no physical encumbrance), incorruptible/unstoppable and borderless.