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This day in 1941 Charles A. Lindbergh, a national hero since | This day in jew history

This day in 1941
Charles A. Lindbergh, a national hero since his nonstop solo flight across the Atlantic, testifies before the House Foreign Affairs Committee and suggests that the US negotiate a neutrality pact with Germany.
Lindbergh testified on the Lend-Lease policy, which offered cash and military aid to countries friendly to the US in the war effort against the Axis powers. He publicly denounced “the British, the Jewish, and the Roosevelt Administration” as instigators of intervention in the war which a majority of Americans did not support at the time. In April 1941, when Roosevelt compared Lindbergh to Confederate sympathizer Clement Vallandigham, Lindbergh responded by resigning his Air Corps Reserve commission. He eventually did contribute to the war effort, flying 50 combat missions over the Pacific.
Lindbergh was promoted to brigadier general of the Air Force Reserve in 1954 by President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
In Nov 1939, Lindbergh penned an article about the war in Reader's Digest, which White people would do well to give attention to, and has since been scrubbed from the internet completely as an original document. (The downloadable versions of Reader's Digest have completely omitted the months of November and December)
The following pdf was created using text from landoverbaptist.net