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An American Affidavit

Monday, May 27, 2013

The Ruling Elite, the Zionist Seizure of World Power by Deanna Spingola


The Ruling Elite, the Zionist Seizure of World Power
By Deanna Spingola
Timeline
 
 
The Ruling Elite
 
 
1788:
September 16, 1788, laws prohibit the entry into the United States malefactors from foreign countries
 
1794:
January 16, 1794, no one affiliated with a financial institution may be in Congress
 
1799:
April 20, 1799, Napoleon announced that he was going to restore Palestine to the Jews
 
1802:
March 16, 1802, Congress authorized the first military school, West Point
1806:
January 8-18 1806, the Battle of Blaauwberg took place near Capetown; it established British rule in South Africa
 
1807:
February 9, 1807, Sanhedrin authorized any leader who would advocate their cause
 
1808:
August 17, 1808, Nathan M. Rothschild began financially advising the British government
 
1809:
Joseph Frey organized The Jews Society to promote Christianity among the Jews
 
1813:
February 27, 1813, Vaccine Act, first federal law concerning pharmaceuticals
 
1815:
June 15, 1815, Napoleon lost the Battle of Waterloo
 
1819:
March 2, 1819, Immigration Act required the government to keep a list of all foreigners
 
1822:
 
1824:
January 1, 1824, Samuel Russell established Russell and Company, a fleet of clipper ships; He got opium in Turkey and sold it in China

1827:

1830:
May 10, 1830, U.S. sent missionaries to the Ottoman Empire even though the Ottomans suspected them of disseminating anti-Ottoman propaganda a
 
1832:
June 28, 1832, William H. Russell and Alphonso Taft co-founded Skull and Bones at Yale University
July 1, 1832, Jardine and Matheson founded their drug smuggling company
 
1839:
March 18, 1839, the First Opium War started; it was between the United Kingdom and China; it ended August 29, 1842
 
1840:
February 5, 1840, Damascus Affair (false flag provocation?)
August 11, 1840, Lord Palmerston asked the Sultan to let Jews settle in Palestine
August 17, 1840, British government considered “restoring” the Jews to Palestine
 
1841:
July 13, 1841, Lord Palmerston signed the Straits Convention to close the Straits
 
1842:
August 29, 1842, the signing of the Treaty of Nanking
 
1843:
October 13, 1843, Freemasons founded B’nai B’rith International in New York
 
1844:
July 3, 1844, Caleb Cushing negotiated the Treaty of Wàngxià, between China and the U.S., which established five treaty ports for trade
 
1847:
May 7, 1847, Doctors established the American Medical Association (AMA), a private organization of allopathic physicians, now based in Chicago
 
1848:
February, Marxist revolution began in France, then spread to Germany, Italy, Poland, Austria, Denmark, Hungary, Ireland but did not affect Russia
March 6, 1848, Louis Philippe abdicated the French throne and fled to England, Freemasons took over the French government

1851
:
December 2, 1851, French Freemasons installed Louis—Napoleon Bonaparte, through a coup d’état; he ascended the throne on December 2, 1852
 
1853:
June 1853, Lord Palmerston allegedly met with August Belmont, James Buchanan, Mazzini and others to organize global assassination bureau
July 1853, Lord Shaftesbury referred to “a country without a nation”
July 8, 1853, Commodore Perry arrived in Japan with two warships and two side-wheelers to present an official letter from President Millard Fillmore
October 23, 1853, Crimean War begins

1854
:
February 21, 1854, George Sanders, the American Consul in Liverpool, met with Mazzini, Garibaldi, Kossuth, Ruge, Orsini, and Herzen
March 28, 1854, Britain and France declared war on Russia, the Jew's longtime enemy, as France demanded to be the authority in the Holy Land
March 31, 1854, Perry signed the Convention of Kanagawa which opened the Japanese ports of Shimoda and Hakodate to American trade
 
1856
March 30, 1856, Czar Alexander II ended the Crimean War via the Treaty of Paris
August 24, 1856, Bessemer announced his patented process
October 8, 1856, the Second Opium War started; it ended October 18, 1860 with the Convention of Peking
October 18, 1860, in Peking, British and French forces destroyed the Palace and the temples and shrines, showing their contempt for the Chinese
October 25, 1860, Treaty of Tientsin allowed for the further expansion of British opium trade into China
 
1858:
January 14, 1858, Orsini and others tossed three bombs at the imperial carriage as Napoleon III and the Empress were on their way to the theatre
 
1860:
May 17, 1860, Adolphe I. Crémieux created the Alliance Israélite Universelle in Paris
 
1861:
March 3, 1861, Czar Alexander II issued the Edict of Emancipation, abolishing serfdom throughout Russia
1862:
1862, Giuseppe Mazzini, a member of the Carbonari, sent agents to Russia to instigate chaos to create problems for the Czar
 
1863:
May 23, 1863, May 23, 1863, Ferdinand Lassalle founded the General German Workers’ Association
1864:
July 4, 1864, Darius Mills founded the Bank of California

1865
:
1865, the Ottoman government granted the Jews of Constantinople the Constitution of the Jewish Nation
1865, influenced by the Jacobean philosophy of the French Revolution, dissidents formed the Young Ottomans
 
1866:
April 4, 1866,  Dmitry Karakozov, a member of the terrorist Ishutin Society, attempted to assassinate Czar Alexander II 
 
1867:
1867, individuals discovered the first diamonds in the vicinity of the Orange River in South Africa
1867, the Ottoman government banned the activities of the Young Ottomans or Young Turks, a secret organization
March 2, 1867, officials created the National Bureau of Education
March 30, 1867, Austro-Hungarian compromise reestablished the sovereignty of the Kingdom of Hungary and separated it from the Austrian Empire
 
1868:
May 3, 1868, various events culmnated in the Meiji Restoration, a restoration of imperial rule to Japan
June 11, 1868, International Red Cross founded
June 10 1868, assassins, probably the Karađorđevićs shot and killed Mihailo Obrenović, the Prince of Serbia; Milan Obrenović succeeded him
July 28, 1868, the desire for cheap labor in America prompted the Burlingame Treaty between the U.S. and China
 
1869:
March 4, 1869, Ulysses S. Grant became president
November 29, 1869, U.S. leased Samaná Bay from the Dominican Republic
 
1870:
January 17, 1870, Paul J. Reuter (Israel B. Josephat) and his European media rivals agreed to divvy up the world for dissemination of news
July 19, 1870, Franco-Prussian War, between the Second French Empire and the Kingdom of Prussia, began; it ended May 10, 1871
September 1870, individuals found diamonds on the farms of Dutoitspan and Bulfontein
 
1871:
1871, prospectors discovered diamonds in at Kimberley, in South Africa
January 18, 1871, unification of the German states into the German Reich
May 8, 1871, Washington Treaty, greatly influenced International Law
May 22, 1871, James T. Lowenstein, William Shields and O. E. Owens organized the Bank Clerks’ Association of Missouri
June 1, 1871, seeing the intimidating U.S. warships in their waters, a Korean shore battery fired on the ships
June 10, 1871, U.S. invades Korea, killing approximately 350 Koreans
July 1871, merchants founded a diamond mine at Kimberley, a city in South Africa
July 25, 1871, the Imperial Japanese Navy received the Un’yō, a small warship, built in Scotland
October 1871, Britain annexed the Vaal/Harts region
 
1873:
January 1, 1873, Carnegie broke ground for the J. Edgar Thomson Steel Works in North Braddock, Pennsylvania
September 18, 1873, U.S. stock market crash
October 4, 1873, contrived panic triggered an international economic depression
 
1875:
1875, the U.S. began restricting immigration
May 24, 1875, Howenstein, of the Valley National Bank in St. Louis, invited bankers around the nation to meet to establish a banker’s association
July 1875, bankers created the American Bankers Association (ABA)
September 20, 1875, Japan sent a battleship to Ganghwa Island, part of Korean territory
October 6, 1875, Ottoman Empire defaults on usury payment to European bankers
November 25, 1875, Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli borrowed £4,080,000 from Rothschild and purchased 176,000 shares in the Suez Canal
December 8, 1875, Britain assumed managerial control of the Suez Canal
 
1876:
January 22, 1876, Johns Hopkins University founded
February 26, 1876, Officials signed the Japan-Korea Treaty of Amity that awarded Japan the same privileges in Korea that Westerners acquired
July 1, 1876, the establishment of Japan’s first private bank, the Mitsui Bank
August 31, 1876, Abdülhamid II became Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
November 23, 1876, the beginning of the First Constitutional Era in the Ottoman Empire; it ended on February 13, 1878
 
1877:
March 4, 1877, Rutherford B. Hayes became president
April 24, 1877, Russo-Turkish War started; it ended March 3, 1878
July 14, 1877, the first nationwide strike began in Martinsburg, West Virginia
 
1878:
March 3, 1878, Treaty of San Stefano
June 4, 1878: secret alliance between Britain and Ottoman Empire against Russia
June 13 - July 13, 1878, the West imposed the Treaty of Berlin on Russia which divided Bulgaria into Eastern Rumelia and the Principality of Bulgaria
October 19, 1878, Otto von Bismarck enacted the Anti-Socialist Laws, outlawing Lassalle's socialist party due to its anti-monarchy attitudes

1879
:
April 14, 1879, Alexander Soloviev attempted to kill Czar Alexander II
November 19, 1879, Leo Hartmann, Grigory Goldenberg, Sophia Perovskaya, all Narodnaya Volya members tried to assassinate the Czar
 
1880:
February 17, 1880, terrorists attempted (again) to assassinate Czar Alexander II 
December 16, 1880, the British invaded South Africa starting the First Boer War; it ended March 23, 1881
 
1881:
1881, The First Aliyah of Zionist Jews migrate to Palestine from Eastern Europe
February 27, 1881, Paul Kruger’s forces defeated the British at Battle of Majuba Hill
March 4, 1881, James A. Garfield became president
March 13, 1881, terrorists killed Czar Alexander II; his son, Czar Alexander III replaced him
July 2, 1881, Charles J. Guiteau shot President Garfield who died two months later
September 19, 1881, Chester A. Arthur became president
August 3, 1881, the newly created South African Republic signed a treaty with the British
Fall 1881, Ottoman government ends Jewish immigration to the Ottoman Empire
October 20, 1881, Decree of Muharram, bankers take over Turkey’s economy
 
1882
1882, Ottoman authorities restrict foreign Jews, except pilgrims, from Palestine
1882, Alfred Thayer Mahan argued for enlargement of the navy
1882, hoards of Jews immigrated from the Russian Pale to New York
January 1, 1882, Dr. Leon Pinsker published An Appeal to His People
January 1, 1882, Ferdinand de Lesseps began the original construction of the Panama Canal
January 2, 1882, Rockefeller created the Standard Oil trust; trustees controlled the stock of 14 companies and the majority stock of 26 others
February 1, 1882, London Jews meet to initiate fund raising for Russian Jews following pogroms on January 11 and 13
May 6, 1882, Congress passed the first Chinese Exclusion Act limiting Chinese immigration
May 15, 1882, Alexander III introduced the May Laws expelling Jews from rural areas and small towns and restricting their access to education
May 20, 1882, Triple Alliance between Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy
May 22, 1882, Korea and the U.S. finally negotiate and sign a friendship treaty after America's invasion of Korea in 1871
July 31, 1882, Rothschild funded the first Israeli settlement, Rishon LeZion
September 13, 1882, nationalist rioting resulted in Battle of Tel el-Kebir (Egypt); military authorities re-instated Tewfik Pasha twelve days later
 
1883:
1883, Emma Lazarus wrote the poem, The New Colossus
March 5, 1883, Ottoman authorities pass laws to prevent Jews from acquiring land
 
1884:
January 4, 1884, British Fabian Society created to introduce socialism into English society
February 27, 1884, London Convention, Germany urged Boer independence which led to an Anglo-Boer treaty in the aftermath of the First Boer War
April 1884, out of 3,763 containers of opium headed for China, Jewish traders owned 2,918 of them
May 17, 1884, individuals laid the cornerstone for the New York Cancer Hospital
October 6, 1884, Stephen B. Luce established the U.S. Naval War College at Newport, Rhode Island
November 6, 1884, international Jewish assembly at Kattowitz formalized Zionism
 
1885:
1885, Mekertitch Portugalian, a former teacher, inspired his students to found the Armenakan Party, the first Armenian revolutionary party in Van
March 4, 1885, Grover Cleveland became president
May 1885, Rockefeller sent George Kennan to Russia, where he joined with the revolutionaries; he encouraged their rebellion against the Czar
 
1886:
1886, the government of Kiev issued the Edict of Expulsion on the Jews of Kiev
March 1886, an Australian gold miner discovered part of the main gold-bearing reef near Ferreira’s Camp (now Johannesburg), in the Witwatersrand
May 4, 1886, strike staged by a group of anarchists at Haymarket Square, Chicago
August 1886, George Kennan returned to the US and spent the next twenty years advocating a revolution in Russia, primarily through lectures
December 8, 1886, Gompers helps found the American Federation of Labor
 
1887:
January 20, 1887, U.S. obtains rights to build a naval base at Pearl Harbor
February 4, 1887, Grover Cleveland created the Interstate Commerce Commission
May 5, 1887, the state executed Lenin’s older brother, Aleksandr Ulyanov, because he had participated in the attempted assassination of the Czar
July 6, 1887, Kalākaua, Hawaiian monarch, signed the Bayonet Constitution
August 1887, Avetis Nazarbekian and other radicals created the Hunchak Party, the first socialist party in Turkey and Persia to create “a new order”
 
1888:
October 6, 1888, the Ottomans awarded railway concession to Dr. George von Siemens and the Deutsche Bank
 
1889:
1889, Arminius Vámbéry (Hungarian Jew) began sending reports to the British foreign office about the Armenian’s situation in the Ottoman Empire
1889, the Young Turks established the Royal Medical Academy in Constantinople, called the Ottoman Union Committee
March 4, 1889, Benjamin Harrison became president
May 31, 1889, South Fork Dam, in the mountains above Johnstown, burst, destroying the town, killing 2,200 people and wrecking 1,600 homes
October 22, 1889, Vámbéry reported that the Sultan placed the blame on the Armenian agitation on his pashas yet he failed to replace them
December 1899, the Ottoman government awarded the Baghdad concession to German financiers
 
1890:
1890, nationwide pogroms began in earnest in Russia
1890, American theologians introduced socialism in all of the major seminaries
1890, Rockefeller purchased the Encyclopedia Britannica
1890, Hunchakian Revolutionary Party, part of the Second International, advocated the Marxian class struggle and sought the victory via revolution
1890, in Tiflis, Russia, Christapor Mikaelian, Stepan Zorian, and Simon Zavarian created the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF)
January 11, 1890, the British presented an ultimatum to Portugal’s King Carlos, claiming a breach against the Treaty of Windsor (1386)
March 20, 1890, strapped for cash, the Iranian Shah granted a monopoly over the production, sale, and export of tobacco for the next fifty years
April 1890, leftist reformers founded the Society of American Friends of Russian Freedom (SAFRF); its journal opposed Czarist Russia
July 1890, Cecil Rhodes became Prime Minister of the Cape Colony
July 2, 1890, the Sherman Anti-Trust Act
July 15, 1890, the Hunchaks organized the Demonstration of Kum Kapu to call attention to the government’s mistreatment of the Armenians
August 20, 1890, Portugal and Britain signed the Treaty of London, angering Portuguese citizens; the Jacobins then criticized the monarchy
October 1, 1890, McKinley Tariff bill became effective
November 18, 1890, Stanislaus Padlewsky, a Nihilist, murdered General Michael de Seliverstoff, the former St. Petersburg police chief
December 29, 1890, Seventh Cavalry participated in the Wounded Knee massacre where they slaughtered 370 unarmed women and children
 
1891:
January 29, 1891, Queen Liliuokalani becomes the monarch of Hawaii
February 5, 1891, Rhodes established the British Round Table/Pilgrims Society
March 3, 1891, Congress began disqualifying certain immigrants, felons, those with contagious diseases and imposing a tax on them
March 29, 1891, Sergei Alexandrovich, son of Czar Alexander II, as Governor General, initiated the expulsion of Moscow’s 20,000 Jews
September 11, 1891, Baron Maurice de Hirsch, a banker and Baron Alfred de Rothschild created the Jewish Colonization Association (JCA)
September 1891, Hovevei Zion societies try to create a worldwide agency
 
1892:
June 29, 1892, workers strike at Carnegie Steel Company in Homestead
July 12, 1892, the governor sent in the militia to occupy the area and protect Carnegie's interests over the objections of the people
August 18, 1892, secretive Franco-Russian Alliance Military Convention
November 1892, Ottoman government stops all land sales to Jews
December 1892, the Korean peasants protested the abuses of local officials and petitioned King Gojong for help; he failed to respond
 
1893:
1893, hostilities erupted in Anatolia with skirmishes between armed Armenians and the Muslims
January 16, 1893, armed U.S. sailors and marines disembark in Honolulu to seize control of Hawaii's government
January 17, 1893, U.S. deposes Liliuokalani to accommodate the sugar industry
February 23, 1893, Philadelphia and Reading Railroad went into receivership
March 4, 1893, Grover Cleveland became president
March 11, 1893, the ABA sent out a Panic Circular to all national banks promoting immediate financial legislation by Congress
May 4, 1893, Jewish money powers formalized the Educational Alliance, on Manhattan's Lower East side, to educate arriving Jewish immigrants
 
1894:
1894, many Americans were demanding immigration restraint
1894, the Hunchak leader Murat encouraged the Armenians to refuse to pay taxes which the government viewed as rebellion and deployed troops
January 11, 1894, Korean rebels, led by Jeon Bong-jun, defeated government forces
March 28, 1894, Hong Jong-u, a Korean who studied in Paris, assassinated Kim Ok-gyun, another Korean reformist, in Shanghai
May 11, 1894, Pullman Strike in Chicago to protest wage cuts; the government, for Pullman, used the Pinkerton Agency to quash the laborers
June 8, 1894, Japanese seized Korean Emperor Gojong and occupied the Royal Palace
August 1894, a rebellion erupted between the Hunchaks, the Turkish government and the Kurds
August 1, 1894, Sino-Japanese War begins between China and Japan, basically over control of Korea; it ended April 17, 1895
September 1, 1894, bankers called in outstanding loans and refused to renew loans under any circumstances
November 1, 1894, Czar Alexander III died; his son Nicholas II succeeded him as Czar
October 22, 1894, a vicious battle began when the well-entrenched Japanese beat the poorly-armed Korean peasants who suffered heavy losses
December 25, 1894, Abdülhamid directed his subordinates to carry out actions against the Armenians
 
1895:
April 8, 1895, the Supreme Court declared the income tax law unconstitutional
May 11, 1895, The European Powers demanded that Abdülhamid II implement the Armenian Reform Programs and reform his Armenian policies
July 20, 1895, Secretary of State Richard Olney warned Britain to stay out of the Caribbean and Latin America
September 18-30, the Hunchaks arranged the Demonstration of Bab Ali in Constantinople
October 8, 1895, Japanese assassins, from the Black Ocean Society, entered her private quarters during the night and killed Korea’s Queen Min
October 9, 1895, in Breslau, in southwestern Poland, the Socialists held a Congress
October 12, 1895, the Hunchak Party rebelled; Turkish troops retaliated and a four-month battle ensued in several villages
November 11, 1895, Britain, urged by Rhodes, added bechuanaland to its jurisdiction and gave Rhodes a piece of land by the western border
December 1895, Britain and the U.S. agreed to be plundering partners
December 29, 1895, Leander S. Jameson and his forces perpetrated a raid on Paul Kruger’s Transvaal Republic, a buildup to the Second Boer War
 
1896:
February 1896, copies of Theodor Herzl’s book arrived at the local booksellers
February 1, 1896, European forces intervened in Turkey after the Hunchak Party created chaos beginning on October 12, 1895
March 1896, the Matabele people revolted against the British; the British sent troops to suppress the dissidents which caused many deaths 
May 1896, Bodenheimer wrote to Herzl for help in creating the Zionist movement
On May 1, 1896, Mirza Reza Kermani assassinated Nasser al-Din Shah Qajar, the King of Iran (1848-1896)
May 19, 1896, Herzl met with Cardinal Antonio Agliardi in Vienna to seek his support for Zionism
May 3, 1896, Turkey stated it would not surrender any of its provinces
June 30, 1896, Vickers bought Barrow’s Naval Construction and Armaments Co.
July 9, 1896, at the Democratic convention, William Jennings Bryan gave the Cross of Gold Speech in which he strongly advocated bimetallism
August 23, 1896, Aguinaldo led the Filipino rebellion against Spanish dominance
August 26, 1896, Dashnaks seized the Ottoman Bank in Constantinople using pistols, grenades, dynamite and hand-held bombs; killing 10 people
October 1, 1896, Vickers bought Maxim-Nordenfelt Guns and Ammunition Co.
October 11, 1896, British officials kidnapped Sun Yat-sen while he was exiled in London; they intended to return him to China to face punishment
 
1897:
1897, Zionist Organization of America founded
1897, Vickers, DuPont, Nobel, Koln, Kottweiler and others created a military trust
1897, Britain and America formalized their alliance with the Pilgrims Society
March 4, 1897, William McKinley became president
March 27, 1897, Herbert Hoover left for England to work as a consultant for Bewick, Moreing & Co.; by 1909, he was a Rothschild asset
April 14, 1897, officials incorporated the American Medical Association in Chicago
April 17, 1897, Turkey declared war on Greece
June 1897, Hoover arrived in the gold fields of Australia
June 1897, Annexation Treaty between the U.S. and Hawaii, House ratified it on June 15, 1898, the Senate passed it on July 6, 1898
June 17, 1897, Queen Liliuokalani of Hawaii presented an official protest to the Treaty of Annexation in Washington D.C.
July 17, 1897, the authorities arrested Felix E. Dzerzhinsky and kept him in solitary confinement for a year
August 8, 1897, Michele A. Lombardi killed Spanish Prime Minister Castillo
August 29 to August 31, 1897, First Zionist Congress at Basle, Switzerland
August 29 to August 31, 1897, Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion issued
October 7, 1897, individuals founded the General Jewish Labour Bund, a secular party, to exclusively represent the Jewish working class
October 13, 1897, as a result of the First Sino-Japanese War, officials proclaimed the Korean Empire
October 21, 1897, Dewey assumes command of the Asiatic Squadron
 
1898:
1898, Herzl meets with Kaiser Wilhelm II in Eretz Israel
January 25, 1898, McKinley sent the USS Maine, an armored cruiser, to Havana
February 11, 1898, Dewey leaves Japan heading towards Hong Kong
February 15, 1898, deadly explosion on the USS Maine which sunk it
February 17, 1898, William Sampson heads the Board of Inquiry of the USS Maine
March 1, 1898, The Marxist Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) held its first Party Congress
March 13 –15, 1898, First Congress of Russian Social Democratic Labour Party
March 17, 1898, Hoover unscrupulously depreciated and then claim-jumped the Sons of Gwalia gold mine in Leonora, an under-funded mine
March 26, 1898, officials advance William Sampson over several other officers
April 11, 1898, per Sampson’s findings, an external explosion sunk the USS Maine  
April 14, 1898, Oliver H. Payne founded the Cornell University Medical College
April 15, 1898, McKinley demanded that Spain grant independence to Cuba
April 21, 1898, the U.S. fleet began a blockade of Cuba
April 25, 1898, the U.S. Congress declared war on Spain
May 1, 1898, the U.S. claimed victory against Spain in the Philippines
May 2, 1898, Congress voted a war emergency credit of $34,625,725
June 21, 1898, the U.S. seized Guam
July 3-17, 1898, U.S. assault on Santiago, Cuba
July 7, 1898, America annexes Hawaii against the will of the its people
July 25, 1898, the U.S. invaded Puerto Rico by landing at Guánica
August 14, 1898, U.S. sent 11,000 occupational troops to the Philippines
August 28 - 31, 1898, Second Zionist Congress at Basle
September 10, 1898, Italian anarchist Luigi Lucheni assassinated Franz Joseph’s wife, Empress Elizabeth of Austria
November 4, 1898, the U.S. government, to protect Americans living in China, sent Marines to Peking
December 10, 1898, Spain ceded the Philippines, Puerto Rico and Guam to the U.S. for $20 million dollars per the Treaty of Paris
December 21, 1898, McKinley issued his Benevolent Assimilation Proclamation regarding America's invasion and occupation of the Philippines
 
1899:
1899, Ottoman official told Wilhelm II that the Sultan would not support Zionism
1899, Winston Churchill said, “Mohammedanism is a militant and proselytizing faith”
January 17, 1899, the U.S. seized Wake Island in the North Pacific Ocean
February 4, 1899, U.S. military forces surround Manila and other crucial areas
February 6, 1899, U.S. military occupiers views all Filipinos as insurgents
March 8, 1899, Herbert Hoover and his wife arrived in China where he assumed the job of chief engineer for the Kaiping mines
May 1, 1900, Hoover, because of the local chaos, halted his expeditions into the interior despite the discovery of anthracite deposits
June 2, 1899, Churchill and Rhodes had breakfast at London’s Burlington Hotel and planned South Africa’s war, which began on October 11, 1899
October 11, 1899, Second Boer War began; it ended May 31, 1902
November 2, 1899, the nationalistic Boxer Rebellion began against the foreigners in China; it ended September 7, 1901
December 1899, the Ottomans awarded the Baghdad concession to Germans
December 22, 1899, Congress passed the Foraker Act
 
1900:
1900, the Grand Orient assumed control of the Young Turk Party, composed almost entirely of Jews, Greeks and Armenians
1900, Theodor Herzl began negotiating with Abdülhamid II, the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire
May 25, 1900, General Arthur MacArthur takes command in the Philippines
May 30, 1900, diplomats requested military to defend their legations in China
May 31, 1900, Capt. John T. Myers arrived in Peking with two Marine detachments
July 29, 1900, Benedetto Cairoli assassinated King Umberto I of Italy
July 30, 1900, Herbert Hoover deceptively seized total ownership of the Kaiping mines through a Deed of Trust
August 14, 1900, U.S. and other troops crush the Boxer Rebellion in China
August 17, 1900, Pasha wrote, “We must have no illusions about Zionism.
November 21, 1900, Ottomans allow Jews a three-month permit to Palestine
December 20, 1900, General Arthur MacArthur declared that the Filipinos were an “inferior race”
December 20, 1900, the U.S. authorized General Order #100 against the Filipinos
 
1901:
February 19, 1901, using legal shenanigans, Hoover obtained a directorship in the reorganized English Chinese Engineering and Mining Company
February 25, 1901, incorporation of the United States Steel Corporation
February 7, 1901, U.S. started a concentration camp policy in the Philippines and incarcerated thousands of people
March 2, 1901, Congress passed the Platt Amendment
March 23, 1901, U.S. troops capture Emilio Aguinaldo, the Filipino leader
May 1901, the Shah of Persia sold the exclusive oil rights to William K. D’Arcy
June 1901, Rockefeller founded The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research
September 6, 1901, Leon F. Czolgosz shot President William McKinley
September 14, 1901, Theodore Roosevelt became president
September 28, 1901, Filipino guerrillas attack U.S. Army in Balangiga and kill forty-eight; the U.S. retaliated and killed 250 villagers
November 27, 1901, officials established the U.S. War College
December 20, 1901, U.S. Army confiscates all food, kills all animals, torches homes and poisons wells in Batangas outside of their concentration camps 
 
1902:
1902, Joseph Stalin began working at the Rothschild’s refinery in Batumi
January 1, 1902, U.S. Army extermination campaign continues in Batangas resulting in 100,000 Filipino insurgent deaths
January 12, 1902, Rockefeller established the General Board of Education (GEB)
January 30, 1902, Britain and Japan signed the Anglo-Japanese Treaty; Britain would side with Japan if any nation joined with Russia against Japan
July 1, 1902, Congress established the centralized Philippine government and authorized a population census including property ownership
July 1, 1902, U.S. authorized the creation of corporations in the Philippines
July 4, 1902, Roosevelt officially declared the end of the war in the Philippines
July 11, 1902, Lord Frederick Roberts and others established the London branch of the Pilgrims Society
September 1902, Beatrice and Sidney Webb formed the Coefficients
 
1903:
1903, U.S. military imposes compulsory smallpox vaccinations in the Philippines
1903, British cabinet ministers devised the British Uganda Program
1903, Zionists began negotiating with the British for a Zionist homeland
1903, officials authorize Emma Lazarus poem on plaque on Statue of Liberty
1903, Israel Zangwill and Lucien Wolfe founded Jewish Territorialist Organization
January 13, 1903, Lindsay Russell and others established the New York branch of the Pilgrims Society
February 4, 1903, American chapter of the Pilgrims Society organized
April 6-7, 1903, Kishinev pogrom
April 7, 1903, Prime Minister Balfour informed the House of Commons about Baghdad project and suggested that British financiers might invest in it
August 23, 1903, Max Nordau, at the Zionist Congress revealed the Basel Program
July 30–August 23, Second Congress of Russian Social Democratic Labour Party,
August 1903, von Plehve told Herzl that Russia would support Jewish state
 
1904:
1904, America’s Jews applauded Japan’s assault against Russia
January 22, 1904, Herzl met with Secretary of State Cardinal Rafael Merry del Val
January 25, 1904, Herzl met with Pope Pius X regarding Jewish settlement in Palestine
February 6, 1904, Japan suspended contact with Russia
February 8, 1904, without a declaration of war, Japan attacked Russian ships at Port Arthur and Incheon
February 10, 1904, Japan declared war on Russia, starting the Russo-Japanese War
April 8, 1904, Entente Cordiale between United Kingdom and French Republic
April 18, 1904, Herbert Hoover sold 200,000 unemployed Chinese into slavery in South Africa
May 4, 1904, U.S. officially took control of the Panama Canal
July 28, 1904, Yegor Sozonov assassinated Vyacheslav von Plehve
December 6, 1904, President Theodore Roosevelt delivered Roosevelt Corollary
December 13, 1904, the Moscow City Duma created a national legislature for popular representation
December 25, 1904, the Czar promised insurance for industrial workers, the emancipation of Inorodtsy (aliens), and cessation of censorship
 
1905:
1905, in Odessa, Nachman Syrkin formulated the Zionist Socialist Workers Party
1905, Seventh Zionist Congress, Basle
1905, Alexander Parvus, who supported the Soviet revolutions, relocated to Constantinople to be the economics editor of a Young Turk newspaper
1905, Dr. Bahaeddin Sakir, a founding member, led the CUP
January 2, 1905, Russia relinquished Port Arthur to the Japanese
January 7-8, the strike in St. Petersburg became a general strike throughout Russa; in St. Petersburg about 456 companies closed down
January 22, 1905, Bolshevik Revolution started; it ended July 16, 1907
February 5, 1905, Czar Nicholas II agreed to the formation of a State Duma
January 7-8, 1905, general strike among munitions factories in Russia; this well-timed strike impacted Russia’s ability to fight the Japanese
January 8, 1905, St. Petersburg was without electricity and the newspapers had stopped publishing
January 22, 1905, in St. Petersburg, more than 300,000 striking workers and their families, led by Father Gapon, marched to the Winter Palace
January 22, 1905, the first Bolshevik revolution started; it ended unsuccessfully on July 16, 1907
January 26, 1905, in Riga, police killed eighty protesters
January 1905, more than 400,000 workers in Russian Poland were on strike
February 5, 1905, Czar Nicholas II had agreed to the formation of a State Duma
February 17, 1905, terrorists assassinated Sergei Alexandrovich, Moscow’s Governor General who had expelled the Jews from Moscow in 1891
February 20, 1905, Battle of Mukden began; the Japanese Army defeated Russia at Mukden where Russia lost 90,000 men; it ended March 10, 1905
February 23, 1905, Paul P. Harris, of B’nai B’rith, with Silvester Schele, Gustavus Loehr, and Hiram Shorey founded Rotary International in Chicago
May 1905, the Congress of the German Social-Democratic Workers’ Party, Jena
May 11, 1905, rebels assassinated Russian Prince Giorgi Nakashidze
May 31 - June 2, 1905, American Society of International Law established at the Eleventh Lake Mohonk Conference
June 1905, Anglo-Jewish Committee began collecting money for Russian Jews
July 21, 1905, Marxist terrorists, of the Dashnak group, using a bomb, attempted to kill Abdülhamid, Ottoman Sultan; they killed 58 people
July 27-29, 1905, William Howard Taft met with Prime Minister Katsura Tarō to negotiate and divvy up territory like Korea and the Philippines
July 29, 1905, Taft–Katsura Agreement or Memorandum which sanctioned Japan’s plundering of Asia
September 5, 1905, Treaty of Portsmouth ending the Russo-Japanese War; Jacob H. Schiff, the financier of Japan's warfare, advised Roosevelt
October 17, 1905, Czar signed the October Manifesto which they had presented to him on October 14
October 21, 1905, Railway workers called a strike which evolved into a general strike in Saint Petersburg and Moscow
October 26, 1905, over two million workers were on strike and they had deactivated rail travel throughout Russia
November 15, 1905, Federal Council of Churches founded in New York City
November 17, 1905, the Peking Treaty, the Chinese agreed not to construct a competitive line in the same vicinity as the South Manchurian Railway
November 17, 1905, Japan claimed Korea as a protectorate, formalized by the Eulsa Treaty
 
1906:
1906, Congress chartered the National Education Association (NEA)
1906, Otto Warburg learned about the massive mineral resources of the Dead Sea
1906, Dr. Bahaeddin Sakir, changed the CUP organization into a political association and allied with the Young Turks
January 3, 1906, Count Lamsdorf produced a document, The Proposed Anti-Semitic Triple Alliance which detailed the anarchist activities in 1905
February 28, 1906, Doubleday, Page and Company (co-owned by Walter H. Page, published Upton Sinclair’s novel, The Jungle
March 10, 1906, the U.S. massacre of the Muslim Moro natives in the Philippines
April 1906, Russia had executed over 14,000 people and imprisoned 75,000
April 23, 1906, Czar Nicholas II agreed to a State Duma and the first constitution, or Fundamental Laws
May 1, 1906, by January 1906, the Marxists planned to initiate an assault against Germany to achieve success on May 1, 1906
May 26, 1908, D’Arcy's men struck oil in Iran and soon created Anglo-Persian Oil Company which would later become British Petroleum (BP)
June 30, 1906, Roosevelt signed Pure Food and Drug Act, and created the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
July 1906, the Czar dissolved the Duma 
August 10, 1906, the British Museum accepts a copy of the Protocols… Zion
 
1907:
1907, Stalin was again working as a laborer in the Rothschild’s refineries in Batumi
1907, Mehmed Talaat was the Grand Master of the Scottish Rite Masons in the Ottoman Empire
February 15, 1907, Roosevelt made a “Gentlemen’s Agreement” with the Japanese government
July 16, 1907, the first Bolshevik revolution ended; they were not successful in seizing the government
August 14-21, 1907, Eighth Zionist Congress, at The Hague
August 31, 1907, Triple Entente between Britain, France and Russia
September 1907, CUP merged with the Ottoman Freedom Society
October 14, 1907, economic panic struck New York
 
1908
January 20, 1908, Woodrow Wilson arrived in Bermuda where he met Mary Peck
February 1, 1908, Freemasons assassinated King Carlos of Portugal and one of his sons
May 26, 1908, Anglo-Persian Oil Company strikes oil in Persia
May 30, 1908, enactment of the U.S. Emergency Currency Act
July 3, 1908, Young Turks create a new parliament and government, the Committee of Union and Progress with headquarters in Constantinople
1908, Israel Zangwill play, The Melting Pot, is a popular sensation in America
October 6, 1908, Austria-Hungary annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina
November 30, 1908, Root-Takahira Agreement, recognition of Japan’s territorial status, affirmation of the open door policy to China, free trade
 
1909:
1909, Ninth Zionist Congress, Wolffsohn and Nordau expect changes as a result of the Young Turk Revolution.
January 26, 1909, Cancer was practically unknown until cowpox vaccination
March 4, 1909, William Howard Taft became president
March 12, 1909, the Black Hand killed Joseph Petrosino, New York City detective
March 31, 1909, the White Star Line began construction on the Titanic
April 9, 1909, Congress passed “free trade” Payne Bill against Filipino opposition
April 27, 1909, Young Turks deposed and exiled Abdülhamid to Salonica and replaced him with his younger brother
May 1, 1909, individuals representing forty-five Turkish Lodges convened in Constantinople and created the Grand Orient Ottoman
July 1908, the CUP established headquarters in Constantinople
November 6, 1909, Knox wrote to Sir Edward Grey of the Milner Group confirming the U.S. and British alliance for the Chinchow-Aigun Railway.
 
1910:
1910, Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky attended International Masonic Conference in Copenhagen where the Socialization of Europe was presented
February 6, 1910, proponents of American Society for the Judicial Settlement of International Disputes (ASJSID) met at Theodore Marburg’s home
April 5-7, 1910, Jewish International Convention on the Suppression of the Traffic in Girls and Women met in London
May 30, 1910, Jews helped officially create the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
August 22, 1910, Japan annexed Korea, effective on August 29
October 5, 1910, the republican coup d'état in Portugal which which deposed King Manuel II perpetrated by international Freemasons 
November 25, 1910, Andrew Carnegie, an internationalist, established the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
December 15-17, 1910, first official international conference of American Society for the Judicial Settlement of International Disputes (ASJSID)
 
1911:
February 12, 1911, Leon Furnémont, of the Grand Orient Lodge, admitted participation in the Portuguese revolution and the murder of the king
October 10, 1911, Chinese Revolutionary Alliance began their revolution, Wuchang Uprising
December 29, 1911, Dr. Sun became the Provisional President of the new Republic of China
 
1912:
1912, leading Freemasons purportedly met to decide to assassinate Ferdinand in order to initiate worldwide warfare
January 8, 1912, National Monetary Commission issued its final report and recommended a proposed bill, known as the Aldrich Plan
April 15, 1912, the Titanic sank on her maiden voyage across the Atlantic
August 1912, during the presidential campaign, Louis D. Brandeis and Wilson met for a private three-hour conference in New Jersey
September 15, 1912,  a newspaper said, “The Archduke is a remarkable man...a pity that he is condemned. He will die on the steps of the throne.”
October 8, 1912, Balkan Wars began; they ended May 30, 1913
 
1913:
January 23, 1913, Ismail Enver and his accomplices interrupted the cabinet as it was in session; an Ottoman army officer, shot Hussein Nazim Pasha
February 3, 1913, government added the Sixteenth Amendment for the levying of the income tax; the states did not ratify the amendment
March 4, 1913, Woodrow Wilson became president
April 7, 1913, Senator Henry Cabot Lodge introduced the Aldrich Bill
April 8, 1913, Congressed passed the Seventeenth Amendment, the popular election of Senators
May 14, 1913, New York State legislature chartered the Rockefeller Foundation
May 22, 1913, ten prominent physicians and five New York business leaders founded the American Society for the Control of Cancer (ASCC)
October 1913, Sigmund Livingston founded the Anti-Defamation League (ADL)
November 23, 1913, Rockefeller, Mellon, Carnegie, Morgan and others created the AIC, capitalized with $50 million to assist the Bolsheviks
December 23, 1913, President Wilson signed the Federal Reserve Act into law
 
1914:
1914, MI6 Director sent William Wiseman to the U.S. as its liaison to Colonel Edward M. House and President Woodrow Wilson
1914, establishment of American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee for Jewish war sufferers
1914, Margaret Sanger organized the Birth Control League
January 1914, Colonel House arrived in Europe to evaluate European leader's views about a potential, imminent war; he stayed until the end of July
February 10, 1914, Andrew Carnegie and others created the Church Peace Union
February 12, 1914, during the Mexican Revolution, Wilson lifted the embargo, allowing Dodge to ship munitions to the opposition leader.
April 20, 1914, the Ludlow Massacre of miners, women and children by the National Guard and the militia in Colorado in behalf of Rockefeller
May 23, 1914, the London Petroleum Review published a map of Iraq showing the oilfields that would fall into the hands of certain British citizens
June 1914, Germany and England had settled their differences regarding Mesopotamia and the Baghdad Railroad
June 17, 1914, Churchill urged Britain to purchase 51% of Anglo-Persian Oil as he anticipated a major world war that would need oil for ships
June 28, 1914, assassins associated with the Pan Serbian Black Hand killed Archduke Ferdinand and his wife, Duchess Sophie, in Sarajevo
July 5, 1914, Wilhelm II received a letter from Emperor Franz Josef explaining Austria’s objections against Serbia
July 7, 1914, Kaiser William II promises German support for Austria against Serbia
July 9, 1914, Colonel House wrote a “brush-off” letter to the Kaiser
July 23, 1914, Austrian Ultimatum to Serbia triggered a huge exportation of gold from the US in anticipation of funding a war in Europe 
July 28, 1914, Austro-Hungarian Empire declared war on Serbia on the grounds that it had a role in the assassinations
July 29, 1914, Russia declared war on Germany
July 29, 1914, Rathenau introduced the Mitteleuropa Plan to Sir William E. Goschen
July 30, 1914, Winston Churchill directed the Malta-based British Mediterranean Fleet to safeguard the French transports
August 1914, British naval blockade of Germany; it ended July 12, 1919
August 1, 1914, Germany declared war on Russia
August 2, 1914, A faction within the CUP made a secret alliance between the Ottoman Empire and Germany 
August 3-4, 1914, German troops went through neutral Belgium
August 4, 1914, Friedrich Ebert, the SPD co-chairman, Karl Liebknecht and other Marxists supported bonds to finance Germany in World War I
August 4, 1914, Belgian authorities warned the citizens not to organize such as civil guards or town militias to attack the Germans passing through
August 4, 1914, Belgian officials warned citizens against organizing militias
August 28, 1914, Emile Francqui, chairman of the Commission for Relief in Belgium (CRB) created the Brussels Relief Committee to accrue profit
September 9, 1914, Matthias Erzberger, the Chancellor's assistant, drafted war objectives, the September Program, with staffer Kurt  Riezler
October 1914, Dr. Weizmann advocated a British-Zionist alliance
October 28, 1914, Turkey entered World War I on the side of the Central Powers, Germany and Austria-Hungary
November 2, 1914, Russia declared war on the Ottoman Empire
November 5, 1914, Britain and France declared war on the Ottoman Empire
December 14, 1914, Dr. Weizmann and Balfour met to plan strategy
 
1915: 
In 1915, the SPD advocated German participation in World War I; the avid Marxists who dominated the SPD tried to legitimize their support of war
January 1, 1915, Rosa Luxemburg, a Polish Jew, Karl Liebknecht, Clara Zetkin and others officially founded the anti-war Spartacus League
January 9, 1915, Wangenheim cabled Arthur Zimmermann as Alexander Parvus, one of the leaders of the last Russian Revolution, wanted to meet
January 10, 1915, Zimmermann responded asking that officials keep Parvus’ visit a secret
February 1915, 1,000 Armenians within the Ottoman Empire cut telegraph lines to the front and attacked supply convoys to the front
February 4, 1915, Germany declared the waters around Britain and Ireland a war zone; they would sink all enemy ships in that area after February 18
February 15, 1915, Churchill ordered merchant ships, like the Lusitania, to ram German submarines on sight; Germany was aware of the order
March 1915, Germany, short of money, energy and food, attempted to declare peace
March 1915, Eitan Belkind, Aharon and Sarah Aharonson, his sister, and Avshalam Feinberg founded Nili, a Jewish espionage network in Turkey
March 6, 1915, Parvus arrived in Berlin for a meeting with Kurt Riezler, a Permanent Assistant in the Foreign Ministry
March 18, 1915, France and Britain officially promised Constantinople and the Dardanelles (occupied by the Ottoman Empire) to Russia
April 15, 1915, Sir Gilbert Parker, of Parliament, assured the Pilgrims Society of London that the U.S. would enter the war on Britain’s side
April 15, 1915, House, in private papers wrote, “I never commit myself. But here I can say what I think; I do not believe the Kaiser wanted the war.”
April 20, 1915, wellarmed, uniformed Ottoman Armenians seized the city of Van, drove Ottoman forces into the citadel and torched much of the city
April 22, 1915, Germany warned Americans not to travel on British ships in the war zone and bought space in the The New York Times
April 24/25, 1915, Young Turk authorities arrested between 235 and 270 Armenian leaders in Constantinople - politicians, clergymen, physicians, etc.
April 26, 1915, Treaty of London, a secret pact between Italy and Triple Entente
May 1, 1915, The New York Times, though it had the notice by April 22, did not publish the warning from German officials until May 1
May 1, 1915, Lusitania departed from New York; there was a 2.5 hour delay; they transfered passengers from the Cameronia to the Lusitania
May 7, 1915, the Lusitania reduced its speed, stopped the zigzag pattern to avoid being hit and its military escort withdrew
May 12, 1915, James Bryce, Member of Parliament, published an official document, Report of the Committee on Alleged German Outrages
May 24, 1915, Siege of Van in the Ottoman Empire, it was purportedly the insurgency against the government’s Armenian policies
May 24, 1915, England, France, and Russia issued a joint statement charging, for the first, the Ottoman government of crimes against humanity
May 27, 1915, Talaat Pasha issued the Temporary Law of Deportation authorizing the government to deport anyone that it “sensed” was a threat
May 31, 1915, Wangenheim notified officials in Berlin to block Armenian espionage and their extensive risings
June 2, 1915, German ambassador met with President Wilson and diplomatically resolved the Lusitania issue
June 7, 1915, Marxist infiltrators in Germany transferred five million marks to the Bolsheviks
June 17, 1915, Wangenheim wrote, “It is obvious that the banishment of the Armenians is not due solely to military considerations.”
June 26, 1915, authorities posted the deportation proclamation pertaining to all Armenians
July 1, 1915, Count Johann von Pallavicini, Ambassador at the Sublime Porte, told Talaat that the deportations “seemed hardly justified.”
July 4, 1915, Wangenheim told the Grand Vizier that Germany would not hide the results “created by these harsh measures and mass deportations...”
July 8, 1915, House wrote, “The nation continues to show itself clearly opposed to war.”
July 12, 1915, Wangenheim demanded the end of large-scale massacres in the Ottoman Empire
July 17, 1915, the Board of Trade concluded that the loss of the ship was due to “damage caused” by torpedoes fired by a German submarine
August 4, 1915, about 90% of the U.S. public was against participating in the European War
August 14, 1915, German Minister in Copenhagen urged German officials to support the Bolsheviks; he advocated using Parvus to destabilize Russia
August 26, 1915, House warned Americans, “German agents will no doubt try to blow up hydroelectric plants, gas and electricity stations...”
September 1915, New York bankers loaned England and France $500 million
September 5-8, 1915, pacifist, socialist Zimmerwald Conference; Karl Radek, trotsky and others infiltrated it to present the Zimmerwald Manifesto
September 16, 1915, the CUP decided to destroy all Turkish Armenians
September 29, 1915, Jesse B. Jackson, U.S. Consul in Aleppo, sent Morgenthau charts and tables enumerating the railway deportations
October 6, 1915, James Bryce, a friend of President Wilson, told Parliament about the premeditated murder of “around 800,000” Armenians
October 15, 1915, a firing squad executed Edith Cavell for revealing Herbert Hoover and his associate's highly profitable food scam
October 24, 1915, the British promised to support Arab independence
November 11, 1915, Socialists organized an American branch of the fellowship
November 22, 1915, Alfred Milner intimated, “The whole future of the British Empire as a Sea Empire” hinged on taking control of Palestine
 
1916:
1916, German emissaries approached numerous London officials to end the war
1916, In Germany, in this year, there were 125,000 workers who participated in 240 strikes
1916, British published James Bryce and Arnold J. Toynbee Blue Book, The Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as war propaganda
February 15, 1916, a State Department document mentions the Czar's overthrow and reveals Max Breitung and Isaac Seligman, as participants
March 1916, Russia and France signed the Sazanof-Paleologue Treaty
March 9, 1916, Wilson, while campaigning for reelection, promising to keep America out of war, sanctioned U.S. entry into the war in Europe
February 9, 1916, the Senate resolved that the President designate a day for citizens to contribute funds for the relief of the Armenians
May 16, 1916, Mark Sykes and François Georges-Picot negotiated the agreement; Britain made promises if the Arabs would join the British
December 12, 1916, German officials, wanting peace, approached U.S. officials to see if Wilson would persuade the Allies to meet together
April 16, 1916, Karl Marx’s son-in-law, held a pacifist demonstration
April 24 to 30, 1916, the Second Zimmerwald Conference in Kienthal
May 1, 1916 (a Communist holiday), Luxemburg and Liebknecht organized an anti-war demonstration with 10,000 workers in Berlin
May 4, 1916, Germany assured President Wilson that they would search all merchant ships and make provisions for passenger ships and crews
May 16, 1916, Sykes-Picot Agreement aiding Armenians, Arabs, Turks and Jews
May 21, 1916, Morgenthau gave a speech at the Wise Center Forum in Cincinnati regarding the sale of Palestine after the war
May 24, 1916, The London Times reported that the English Zionist Federation planned to commemorate June 4, 1916 as “Declaration Day”
June 1916, in Berlin, 55,000 munitions workers went on strike
June 1, 1916, Wilson appointed Louis D. Brandeis, a budding Zionist, to the Supreme Court
June 3, 1916, Julius Kahn sponsored the National Defense Act increasing the army from 108,000 to 175,000 and the National Guard to 450,000
June 4, 1916, Brusilov began offensive against the Central Powers on the eastern front; it ended in late September 1916
June 6, 1916, Kitchener, who opposed Jewish policy, died on his way to Russia when his ship went down, apparently due to an explosion
June 9, 1916, U.S. instituted the draft and created the Bureau of Information
June 15, 1916, Karl Artelt, a Marxist and a SPD party member led a strike of his fellow workers demanding peace and better food
June 30, 1916, German ambassador said the CUP was directing everything, imposing its philosophy, enriching itself by the annihilation of Armenians
August 1916, Congress authorized a huge buildup of the navy to make it the largest and best in the world
August 11, 1916, Baker sent the draft of a law sanctioning extensive censorship to Edwin Y. Webb, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee
August 12, 1916, Hugo Stinnes agreed to fund a Russian publishing house
August 29, 1916, Congress passed the Philippine Autonomy Act which promised Filipino independence as some vague future date
October 1916, the Zionists made a deal with the British to give them Palestine at the end of the war if the Zionists could bring the US into the war
October 21, 1916, Friedrich Adler assassinated Austrian Prime Minister Karl von Sturgkh
November 22, 1916, Zimmermann replaced von Jagow as State Secretary for Foreign Affairs in Germany
December 1916, Prime Minister Herbert H. Asquith resigned under pressure
December 6, 1916, King George met with Balfour and David Lloyd George at Buckingham Palace
December 7, 1916, David Lloyd George became Britain’s Prime Minister; Milner's Round Table positioned several members into government posts
December 10, 1916, Lord Balfour replaced Sir Edward Grey as the British Foreign Minister
December 12, 1916, German officials said they wanted peace and to talk with their adversaries and hoped Wilson would urge them to meet together
December 18, 1916, U.S. Ambassador to Britain Walter H. Page relayed a peace offer to the Allies from Germany and other Central Powers
December 21, 1916, Secretary of State, Robert Lansing, said on  “We are on the eve of war.”
 
1917:
January 1917, Luxemburg, Liebknecht and Haase left the SPD and founded the anti-war Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany (USPD)
January 1917, Trotsky arrived in New York where he collaborated with Jacob H. Schiff who provided an apartment and chauffeur-driven limousine
January 9, 1917, Prime Minister David Lloyd George repudiated the peace offering from Germany and declared that Britain would fight to the victory
January 16, 1917, the British claimed they intercepted a German message later known as the Zimmermann Telegram
January 19, 1917, Zimmermann sent a second telegram to the German Embassy in Mexico City
January 30, 1917, House urged Wilson, “If I were you I would be cautious enough to hasten the state of readiness of the navy and the army.”
February 1, 1917, Bernstorff told the U.S. that Germany was beginning submarine warfare the very next day
February 4, 1917, Mehmed Talaat became the the Grand Vizier (like a Prime Minister)
February 5, 1917, Congress enacted Immigration Act restricting immigration
February 7, 1917, Secretary Mark Sykes held a meeting with Weizmann and other Zionist leaders in London
February 14, 1917, the U.S. government suspended all diplomatic relations with Germany and demanded that Bernstorff leave the country
March 1917, demonstrations in St. Petersburg, Bolsheviks attempt to manage the masses
March 8 - March 12, 1917, early Bolshevik revolution, a demonstration against the war
March 15, 1917, revolutionaries halted the Czar’s train and informed him that his reign was over
March 15, 1917, Czar Nicholas II abdicated and officials formed a provisional government later under the leadership of Alexander Kerensky
April 2, 1917, Wilson pleads with Congress to declare war against Germany; Congress complied on April 6
April 2, 1917, Congress initiated censorship policies and began regulating the media
April 8, 1917, Dr. Weizmann wrote and asked Judge Brandeis to counsel Wilson to oppose a joint protectorate but to confirm support of Balfour
April 11, 1917, Benedict XV told Sykes Vatican would accept Zionist settlement in Palestine
April 13, 1917, Wilson, as directed by Colonel House, created the Committee on Public Information (CPI) to acquire support for the war
April 13, 1917, officials waylaid the ship that Trotsky was traveling to Europe in Halifax, Canada and arrested him
April 1917, the German General Staff and the German Supreme Command, unknown to the Kaiser, facilitated Lenin and others on their train journey
April 16, 1917, Lenin, his wife Nadeshda Krupskaya, Grigory Zinoviev, Grigori Sokolnikov, and Karl Radek left Bern for Stockholm
April 26, 1917, Agreement of St.-Jean-de-Mauriennean, Triple Entente and Italy
April 29, 1917, Nahum Sokolow met with Pacelli
May, 1917, Nahum Sokolow negotiated with France for the Balfour Declaration
May 1, 1917, Nahum Sokolow met with Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Gasparri
May 4, 1917, Nahum Sokolow met with the Pope who wanted protection of the holy places
May 20, 1917, Weizmann announced that the Pope supported a Jewish homeland in Palestine
By mid-1917, Matthias Erzberger, of the Centre Party, began opposing the war (he was pro-war in 1914 and voted for bonds to fund it)
June 1917, Morgenthau and Felix Frankfurter, for the War Department, traveled to Turkey to convince its leaders to abandon the Central Powers
June 1, 1917, the U.S. took responsibility for the contributions for the Belgian and Northern France relief efforts; profits went to Hoover and others
June 1, 1917, U.S. loaned $75,000,000, payable in six installments of $12,500,000 - $7,500,000 was to go to Belgium, and  $5,000,000 to France
June 7, 1917, Henry Jones, a Freemason, founded Lions Clubs International, headquartered in Oak Brook, Illinois
June 9, 1916, Newton D. Baker, Jr., War Secretary, instituted the draft and created the Bureau of Information headed by Major Douglas MacArthur
June 10, 1917, U.S. Jews established the American Jewish Congress (AJC)
June 15, 1917, Congress passed the Espionage Act, the twentieth century version of the 1798 Sedition Law, devised to squelch internal dissent
June 18, 1917, in St. Petersburg, workers and soldiers participated in a huge demonstration that affected people throughout Russia
June 27, 1917, Lord Edmund Allenby, took over as commander-in-chief of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force to conquer Palestine and Syria
June 28-30, 1917, Masonic Congress developed the plan to create the League of Nations
July 1, 1917, the Kerensky Offensive, during which troops attacked the Austro-Hungarian and German forces in Galicia; it ended July 19
July 4, 1917, Lenin, in Petrograd, directed his agents to take to the streets, a tactic he previously prohibited
July 4, 1917, Weizmann met with a representative of the British government
July 6, 1917, in the Reichstag, Matthias Erzberger passionately called for peace
July 17, 1917, Erzberger authored the Peace Resolutions; the Reichstag adopted them seeking a negotiated peace (he drafted war objectives in 1914)
July 21, 1917, Kerensky becomes Prime Minister of Russia
August 10, 1917, Wilson created the Food Administration led by Herbert Hoover who sent food abroad while demanding austerity at home
August 10, 1917, the Lever Act authorized Hoover to regulate the distribution, export, import, purchase, and storage of food
September 1917, Schiff gave Trotsky funds through the Warburg Bank, his correspondent in Stockholm, which managed Trotsky’s account
September 1917, House persuaded Wilson to create a “body of experts” to devise peace terms
October 24, 1917, Bolshevik forces began the takeover of government buildings; they captured the Winter Palace the next day
October 25, 1917, the Bolsheviks arrested members of Kerensky’s cabinet
October 26, 1917, after they had seized St. Petersburg and gained control, Lenin presented first official document, the Decree on Peace
October 27, 1917, Edgar Sisson left the U.S. to become the Petrograd-based representative of the government’s propaganda apparatus, the CPI
(October 31-November 7, 1917, Allenby's third battle of Gaza
November 2, 1917, Balfour Declaration cited in a letter to Baron Rothschild
November 7, 1917, Bolshevik Revolution, a political coup
November 12, 1917, The Germans knew that Morgenthau, Walter Rothschild, Frankfurter and Wilson had conspired to get the U.S. to enter the war
November 23, 1917, in as much as their political survival was at stake, Lenin and Trotsky decided to negotiate with Germany at Brest-Litovsk
November 28, 1917, Edward M. House cabled Wilson soon after the Bolsheviks seized power and told to suppress all criticism of the Bolsheviks
December 1917, William B. Thompson’s document to David Lloyd George
December 9, 1917, Allenby captured Jerusalem
December 18, 1917, the Pope changed his mind about the Jewish homeland in Palestine
December 19-20, 1917, Lenin authorized Cheka to repress any dissent
December 23, 1917, at least 15,000 American Jews gathered at Carnegie Hall to celebrate the signing of the momentous Balfour Declaration
 
1918:
1918, Sir Alfred E. Zimmern, of Alfred Milner’s Round Table, wrote a plan for Germany, The Economic Weapon against Germany
January 8, 1918, President Woodrow Wilson delivered his Fourteen Points to Congress
January 18, 1918, Bolsheviks placed police armed with machine guns at the Taurid Palace and killed twenty-three opposition assembly members
February 5, 1919, Allies charged three officials with the mass murder of deportees
February 8, 1918, some senators convened a committee to hear the views of McAdoo regarding the establishment of a War Finance Corporation
February 9, 1918, Ukrainians declared independence; negotiated treaty with Germany
February 10, 1918, Britain created the Ministry of Information; in 1917, they had established the Department of Information
February 11, 1918, France formally endorsed the Balfour Declaration about Zionism
February 23, 1918, Italy formally endorsed the Balfour Declaration about Zionism
March 1918, President Wilson wrote the Soviets, the American people are heartily with the Russians...to be free of autocratic government
March 3, 1918, German troops moved towards Petrograd to ‘encourage’ Russia to accept the terms of the Brest-Litovsk Treaty
March 3, 1918, Russia and Germany signed the Brest-Litovsk Treaty
March 7, 1918, Senate authorized the extension of $4 billion in credit to firms and corporations engaged in war-related industries
March 21, 1918, Germany began the Spring Offensive
April 5, 1918, Congress created the agency in order to fund industries deemed essential for World War I, and to the banks that financed them
May 1, 1918, William Wiseman cabled Colonel House from London suggesting Allied assistance to help organize the Bolshevik forces
May 7, 1918, Russia signed the Treaty of Bucharest with Austria-Hungary
May 30, 1918, Russian Armenians, members of the ARF, declared the Democratic Republic of Armenia’s independence with Yerevan, the capital
June 11, 1918, the Zionist Organization of America (ZOA) sent a letter to each member of Congress to assess their attitudes about the Zionism
July 4, 1918, President Wilson provided direction regarding the dismantlement of the Ottoman Empire and Jewish immigration
July 17, 1918, Jewish thugs murdered the entire Romanov family at the Ipatiev House in Yekaterinburg
July 27, 1918, Lenin outlawed all anti-Semitism, a law, if broken, might result in execution
August 10, 1918, Warburg, the first Federal Reserve vice Governor (1913-1918), authored the plan for the War Finance Corporation
August 27, 1918, Lenin and Trotsky agreed to pay Germany war reparations, six billion marks which allowed Germany to fight until November 1918
August 31, 1918, President Wilson wrote Rabbi Wise approving of British actions in Palestine
September 2, 1918, Cheka began the mass murders of the Red Terror
September 12, 1918, Pershing instructed U.S. forces to attack the Germans as they were retreating from the St.-Mihiel salient
September 24, 1918, U.S. Marines arrive at Brest under Smedley D. Butler
September 29, 1918, Army leaders informed Kaiser Wilhelm about the military situation and the numerous uprisings in Berlin and other places
October 1918, Matthias Erzberger became Secretary of State after he helped to oust Chancellor Bethmann-Hollweg
October 3, 1918, Prince Maximilian of Baden became Chancellor of Germany
October 3, 1918, Germany and Austria-Hungary ask Wilson for an  armistice
October 5, 1918, Germany asked Wilson to negotiate the peace terms
October 9, 1918, Royal Society sponsored Conference on International Scientific Organizations
October 27, 1918, Ludendorff resigned from the German army
October 29, 1918, another mutiny and sabotage at Wilhelmshaven led to the arrest of 300 sailors who refused to obey orders
October 30, 1918, the Ottoman Empire and the Allies signed the Armistice of Mudros, ending hostilities
November 3, 1918, about 3,000 German sailors/workers, cooperating with local unions, seized ships and buildings under the red Communist flag
November 3, 1918, Austria-Hungary surrendered and signed a truce, all of which impacted Germany’s military situation
November 4, 1918, Marxists start German Revolution; it ended August 11, 1919
November 4, 1918, sailors refused to obey directions and more demonstrations erupted
November 5, 1918, Secretary of State, Robert Lansing, told Germany that they had to compensate the Allies for damages, including civilian property
November 5, 1918, because of Soviet revolutionary propaganda, Germany renounced the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk and terminated diplomatic relations
November 7, 1918, Prince Maximilian formed a new government which included Friedrich Ebert, Philipp Scheidemann, and other top SPD members
November 7, 1918, first anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution, Eisner at a peace rally in Munich, in front of 60,000, he demanded the war's end
November 7, 1918, France and Britain issued statements claiming that they were fighting for the freedom of those the Turks had horribly oppressed
November 9, 1918, Luxemburg founded the The Red Flag, of the Spartacist League, which would evolve into the Communist Party of Germany
November 9, 1918, Emperor Wilhelm II abdicated the throne and within a day fled to Holland
November 9, 1918, after the German Revolution erupted, Maximilian relinquished his office to Friedrich Ebert, head of the provisional government
November 11, 1918, Matthias Erzberger signed the Armistice which officially ended the war and led to the Treaty of Versailles
November 12, 1918, the French enter Constantinople
November 13, 1918, the British enter Constantinople; Allies occupy Constantinople; it ended September 23, 1923
December 17, 1918, Marxists said the German Empire was the main target
December 12, 1918, after the armistice, the U.S. Naval Secret Service questioned Paul Warburg’s connections while we were at war with Germany
November 24, 1918, Béla Kuhn, a former journalist, a communist politician, and a Bolshevik revolutionary founded the Communist Party of Hungary
November 29, 1918, the Red Army to take over the governments of Estonia
December 4, 1918, the Soviets took over Latvia
December 8, 1918, the Soviets took over Lithuania
December 17, 1918, the Marxists published a manifesto in Riga describing the German Empire as the main target of their immediate assault
 
1919:
January 4, 1919, Chaim Weizmann arrived in Paris as part of the Zionist Delegation
January 5-January 15, 1919, the Spartacist uprising in Berlin that Karl Liebknecht ordered, a revolt against the government
January 15, 1919, the Freikorps, Horse Guards Division, under Captain Waldemar Pabst crushed the revolt, captured and killed Luxemburg
January 18, 1919, the Paris Peace Conference began; it ended January 21, 1920
February 1919, George E. R. Gedye traveled to inspect the humanitarian situation in Germany
February 3, 1919, Zionists submitted their demands to the Peace Conference officials
February 5, 1919, first trial begun when they charged three Turkish officials with the mass murder and plunder of the deportees
February 6, 1919, Friedrich Ebert was the first president during the Weimar period and soon the reparations rhetoric began
February 13, 1919, Japanese submitted Racial Equality Proposal at the Paris Peace Conference
February 14, 1919, Polish–Soviet War began; it ended in March 18, 1921
February 16, 1919, Georges Clemenceau sent in the military and forced the German units to retreat behind a provisional line
February 21, 1919, Anton Graf von Arco auf Valley, a nationalist, shot and killed Kurt Eisner
March 4, 1919, Lenin and Trotsky devised the Communist International, or Comintern, with the goal of creating a “World Soviet Socialist Republic”
March 4, 1919, Lenin and Trotsky created the Communist International
March 7, 1919, Johannes Hoffmann, the leader of the SPD, unsuccessfully attempted to form a coalition government in Bavaria
March 10, 1919, Pope told his advisors that Jews should never have custody of holy places
March 21, 1919, Communists established the Hungarian Soviet Republic
March 24, 1919, the Communist infiltrators seized control of the government buildings in Hamburg
April 6, 1919, Marxists officially proclaimed a Soviet Republic in Bavaria which lasted until May 3, 1919
April 7, 1919, Norman H. Davis and John Foster Dulles, a well-connected New York lawyer, wrote the War Guilt Clause, article 231
April 12, 1919, the Communists seized power in Bavaria and Eugen Leviné, a Jew born in St. Petersburg but educated in Germany, was the leader
April 28, 1919, the main trial of those responsible for the Armenian massacre began
April 28, 1919, to supervise every nation’s activities, the Freemasons erected the international organization, the League of Nations in Paris
April 30, 1919, Russian soldiers, sent by Lenin, murdered eight men, including Prince Gustav and Countess Hella von Westarp
May 3, 1919, a 39,000-member force of members of the German army and the Freikorps arrived in Munich where they defeated the Communists
May 6, 1919, lawyers completed the text, in secret, of the Versailles Treaty
May 6, 1919, a defense lawyer in the case against the Ottomans defied the court’s frequent mention of the indictment (genocide) as if it was a fact
May 7, 1919, Prime Minister David Lloyd George read the text of the Versailles Treaty
May 14, 1919, Hugo Haase and those who controlled the Weimar government fought to gain approval of the Versailles Treaty
May 15, 1919, Greece sent a military expedition to prevent Italy from taking land promised to her (April 26, 1915) for fighting with the Allies
May 19, 1919, Turkish War of Independence started; it ended July 24, 1923
May 30, 1919, In Paris, Baruch, Hoover, House and others met to discuss a need for a council of “private bodies” to resolve international problems
June 20, 1919, the Allies gave Germany a five-day ultimatum to sign the treaty
June 20, 1919, members of the Hungarian Red Army entered Slovakia and declared the Slovak Soviet Republic
June 22, 1919, the Reichstag ratified the treaty
June 28, 1919, Germany signed the Versailles Treaty
July 8, 1919, Wilson returned to the U.S. with a million dollars worth of gift, for his assurance that he would get the U.S. to join League of Nations
July 12, 1919, Allies ended the naval blockade of Germany; it began in 1914
August 5, 1919, Trotsky stated, “The road to Paris and London lies through the cities of Afghanistan, Punjab, and Bengal”
August 11, 1919, Germany established the Weimar Republic and presented its constitution
August 31-September 5, 1919, Marxists create the CommunistLabor Party of America (CLP) in Chicago
September 1919, Wilson appointed King and Crane to the Inter-Allied Commission
September 1, 1919, Communists create the American Communist Party in Chicago
September 10, 1919, Treaty of St. Germain economically devastated Austria
September 25, 1919, the U.S. Senate declined League membership, which reportedly caused Wilson to suffer a nervous breakdown
September 25, 1919, because of his deep depression and rejection by the people, Wilson's wife ruled the U.S. with Colonel Rixey Smith
October 19, 1919, Nathan Straus wrote an article claiming that 6,000,000 Jews, out of the world’s 16,000,000, were destitute and starving in Europe
October 19, 1919, introduction of 6,000,000 number; Martin H. Glynn, former governor of New York, wrote an article entitled, The Crucifixion of Jews Must Stop
November 12, 1919, intro of 6,000,000 number; Warburg claimed war reduced the Jewish population by 6,000,000; from 1914, Jews spent $30 million to feed Jews in Europe
November 18, 1919, Paul von Hindenburg testified and said that certain civilians betrayed the German army
November 27, 1919, the Treaty of Neuilly for the disposition of Bulgaria
December 1, 1919, England’s Chief of Staff discouraged any kind of armed intervention against the Bolsheviks by the Allied countries
 
1920:
1920, American Civil Liberties Union founded
1920, Illuminati-based Royal Institute of International Affairs (RIIA) established
1920, The Memoirs of Naim Bey: Turkish Official Documents Relating to the Deportation and the Massacres of Armenians, published in London
January 10, 1920, the League of Nations charter took effect
January 28, 1920, Nationalist Turkey signed the National Pact, a declaration of independence and the British withdrawl
February 12-24, 1920, Conference of London to discuss partition and dismantlement of the Ottoman Empire
February 17, 1920, the Ottoman Parliament adopted a resolution declaring support for the Nationalist Movement led by Mustafa Kemal
March 1920, about twelve million workers in Germany participated in a strike
March 1, 1920, the U.S. reversed Theodore Roosevelt's agreement with Japan and began restricting Japanese immigration (cheap labor)
March 6, 1920, Lenin said, “Victory will be ensured in the not-too distant future”
April 13, 1920, James Harbord reported to the Senate on the mutilation, violation, torture, and death that occurred in a hundred Armenian valleys
April 23, 1920, rebels declared the formation of a Turkish nation with a Parliament in Ankara, the Grand National Assembly (GNA), led by Kemal
April 24, 1920, San Remo Resolution allowed for the establishment of the Civil Administration
April 25, 1920, San Remo Resolution legalized British rule, Southern part, Ottoman Empire
May 1920, the Franco-Turkish War began; it ended October 1921
May 11, 1920, Senate Resolution established the truth of the massacres and “other atrocities from which the Armenian people have suffered”
May 31, 1920, the members of American Jewish Committee elected Nathan Straus as Chairman
June 1, 1920, the AJC intended to create a World Tribunal to indict the persecutors of the Jews
June 4, 1920, Treaty of Trianon, Hungary gave up over two-thirds of its territory
June 20, 1920, War Finance Corporation, facilitated by Meyer, and the Treasury paid over $1,894 billion for bonds via the War Finance Corporation
August 10, 1920, Tripartite Agreement defined Britain’s oil and commercial interests, including the former German ventures in the Ottoman Empire
August 10, 1920, integration of the Balfour Declaration into the Treaty of Sèvres, the Mandate for Palestine
August 11, 1920, Kemal’s regime, located in Ankara, demanded that the Allies discontinue all court-martial proceedings; the Allies complied
September 24, 1920, the Turkish-Armenian War began; it ended December 2, 1920
October 17, 1920, the Allies ended the trials of the CUP leaders for the Armenian Genocide at the request of Mustafa Kemal
October 15, 1920, Lenin declared, “The order held by the Versailles Peace Treaty lies over a volcano...”
December 6, 1920, Lenin said, to have world socialism they had to incite the “conflicts and contradictions” between the Capitalist states
 
1921:
February 5, 1921, Herbert Hoover presented Stanford with a collection of Bolshevik documents, along with records from other European countries
February 21, 1921, Representative Mason told the House of Representatives that Bernard Baruch made over $50 million just in copper during the war
March 4, 1921, Warren G. Harding became president
March 5, 1921, Herbert Hoover became the U.S. Secretary of Commerce
March 22, 1921, the Communists organized a general strike throughout the industrialized part of central Germany
March 24, 1921, the Communists took control of the government buildings in Hamburg
May 1, 1921, Arabs attacked Jewish communists who were celebrating their special day in Jaffa
May 1, 1921, the war reparations commission was to submit its report on how much Germany owed
May 1-7, 1921, Jaffa riots spread elsewhere in the Ottoman Empire
May 19, 1921, Congress passed the Emergency Quota Act, restricting immigrants
June 13, 1921, Pope Benedict XV criticized Zionism during a meeting of cardinals
July 29, 1921, they incorporated the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), a RIIA branch in New York City
August 26, 1921, members of the nationalistic Organization Consul murdered Matthias Erzberger
October 3, 1921, the Soviets established the first central State bank which began operations on November 16, 1921
November 12, 1921, start of the Washington Conference, ended February 6, 1922
 
1922:
January 22, 1922, Pope Benedict XV died; Pope Pius XI replaced him
February 6, 1922, England, France and Italy signed the Nine Power Treaty, initiated by the U.S., at the Washington Conference
April 2, 1922, Weizmann met Gasparri who continued to object to the Mandate over Palestine
April 3, 1922, Stalin seized complete power and was the General Secretary until his death, probably by poisoning, on March 5, 1953
April 5, 1922, Margaret Sanger’s American Birth Control League incorporated in New York
April 3, 1922, Stalin seized complete power and became General Secretary
April 16, 1922, Walther Rathenau, Weimar official, signed Treaty of Rapallo with the Soviets; they reaffirmed with Treaty of Berlin, April 24, 1926
May 15, 1922, Cardinal Gasparri notified the League of Nations that it opposed the British Mandate and that the Holy See could not consent to it
May 26, 1922, per the Allies suggestion, German officials released the Reichsbank from government regulation
June 24, 1922, members of the nationalistic Organization Consul murdered Walther Rathenau
July 22, 1922, despite opposition, the League of Nations authorized the British Mandate, including the Balfour Declaration
July 24, 1922, the League of Nations confirmed the British Mandate for Palestine
September 16, 1922, Britain apportioned the Ottoman Empire into two administrative sections
September 18, 1922, the Turks, duped by the Dönmes to think they were fighting in their interests, expelled the occupiers and established Turkey
November 22, 1922, Friedrich Ebert, via a presidential decree, appointed Wilhelm Cuno as Chancellor of Germany
December 30, 1922, Bolsheviks created USSR and envisioned no geographic limitations but rather worldwide with a global image on its coat of arms
 
1923:
January 9, 1923, the Reparations Commission declared that Germany had defaulted on her payments
June 9, 1923, President Harding signed the Washington Treaty limiting the construction of battleships and aircraft carriers by the signatories
July 24, 1923, the Treaty of Lausanne for the disposition of the Ottoman Empire
August 2, 1923, Harding died and Calvin Coolidge became president
August 6, 1923, Joseph Grew and Mustafa İsmet İnönü of the new nationalist government of Ankara, signed the Treaty of Amity and Commerce
October 29, 1923, Turkish officials proclaimed the republic with the new capital in Ankara
November 9, 1923, the Bolsheviks had instigated and dictated the circumstances of the revolution in Germany, planned for November 9, 1923
December 1923, Schacht became the bank president after meeting with Montagu Norman
 
1924:
1924, Bernard Baruch reportedly financed Maxwell L. Schuster and Dick Simon to form Simon and Schuster
January 21, 1924, Lenin died
March 3, 1924, the new government dissolved the Caliphate and exiled the Sultan and his family, Kemal previously pretended to support the Sultan
May 26, 1924, Congress further restricted immigration with the Act of 1924
June 16, 1924, Dr. Sun officially established the Whampoa Military Academy, to train soldiers for the revolution, Chiang Kai-shek was commandant
 
1925:
1925, the Institute of Pacific Relations (IPR) established in ten Asian countries
March 12, 1925, Sun Yat-sen died at Rockefeller’s Peking Union Medical College Hospital creating a crisis for the Nationalist Party and China
April 28, 1925, Churchill, Chancellor of the Exchequer, returned England to the gold standard
May 13, 1925, a sudden unexplained fire destroyed half of all the cases of Russian gasoline in the Canton harbor, an economic catastrophe
May 30, 1925, British-led police in the Shanghai International Settlement slaughtered Chinese demonstrators which outraged the nationalists
June 23, 1925, British and French troops killed fifty Chinese demonstrators (against foreign powers) in Canton
 
1926:
March 13, 1926, the Comintern (ECCI) issued a stern directive ordering an alliance between the Kuomintang and the communists
April 24, 1926, Treaty of Berlin wherein Germany and the Soviet Union pledged neutrality in the event of an attack on the other by a third party 
September 20-24, 1926, American Society for the Control of Cancer held international symposium at Lake Mohonk, funded by Rockefeller
 
1927:
March 16, 1927, U.S. Marines arrive in Shanghai to protect Standard Oil interests
March 25, 1927, General Smedley D. Butler arrived with the Third Marine Brigade and set up their encampment in Standard Oil’s compound
April 12, 1927, Keswick, of the Extraterritorial International Settlements ordered the Chiang, of the Nationalist Army, to begin a reign of terror
July 1, 1927, Montagu Norman, the Bank of England and Hjalmar Schacht, Reichsbank arrived in NY to meet Benjamin Strong and Charles Rist
December 1, 1927, Chiang Kai-shek married Soong Mei-Ling although her mother vehemently objected
December 24, 1927, the Standard Oil plant outside of Tientsin caught fire during a battle between rival Chinese forces
 
1928:
September 17, 1928, Shell Oil, Britain’s Anglo-Persian Oil Company and Standard Oil Company formalized the Achnacarry Agreement
October 10, 1928, the bankers installed Chiang Kai-shek as president of China after he agreed to certain arrangements
 
1929:
March 4, 1929, Herbert Hoover became president
March 28, Henry L. Stimson, Secretary of State initiated efforts to assist Rockefeller to obtain oil rights in Bahrain from the Gulf Oil Company
September 23, 1929, Winston and Jack Churchill had dinner with William G. McAdoo, former Treasury Secretary
October 2, 1929, Baruch met Churchill and his party when they arrived in Chicago
October 4, 1929, Churchill addressed the Commercial Club, the CEOs of Chicago’s firms
October 14, 1929, President Herbert Hoover (1929-1933) denied rumors that a severe depression in business and industrial activity was impending
October 18, 1929, Churchill, accompanied by Charles Duncombe, visited President Hoover who certainly knew the names of the plungers
October 24, 1929, Baruch mainmained close contact with his brothers at Hentz & Company brokerage where he kept a secret account
October 24, 1929, Black Thursday, followed by Black Tuesday, October 29
October 25, 1929, Hoover, said, “The fundamental business of the country...is on a sound and prosperous basis.”
October 29, 1929, the big crash; that night Baruch had a lavish celebration at his mansion
December 6, 1929, Baruch accompanied $10 million in gold to Europe
 
1930:
January 1930, Young Plan replaced the Dawes Plan
January 20, 1930, Bank for International Settlements (BIS) chartered
March 7, 1930, Hoover said, “All the evidence indicates that the worst effects of the Crash...will have passed during the next sixty days.”
May 26, 1930, Hoover signed the bill to create the National Institute of Health that reorganized the Laboratory of Hygiene (created in 1887)
September 16, 1930, Hoover appointed Eugene I. Meyer, Baruch’s partner in his gold mining operation, as Governor of Federal Reserve Board
November 21, 1930, first birth control clinic opened in New York City
December 11, 1930, New York’s fourth largest bank, the Bank of the United States, failed
 
1931:
May 8, 1931, Rothschild’s Creditanstalt declared its insolvency
July 7, 1931, German citizens tried to pull their funds from the Reichsbank
September 21, 1931, Churchill removed England from the gold standard
1932:
March 8, 1932, the Dow Jones Index was down to $41.22, the bankers had wiped out nearly 90% of its value  
 
1933:
February 27, 1933, the Dow Jones bottomed out
March 4, 1933, Baruch’s candidate, Roosevelt, was inaugurated; he immediately closed the banks until March 15, 1933
March 9, 1933, Roosevelt issued Executive Orders 6073, 6102, 6111, and 6260
April 5, 1933, because of the stipulations in the Emergency Banking Act, Roosevelt made it illegal for citizens to own gold
June 5, 1933, Congress enacted a joint resolution outlawing all gold clauses in contracts
June 16, 1933, Roosevelt signed the Glass-Steagall Act which took effect June 16, 1934
 
1934:
June 21, 1934, the Turkish Parliament, with the Surname Law, would confer the surname Atatürk (Father of the Turks) upon Mustafa Kemal
July 11, 1934, Federal Communications Commission began operating with seven commissioners appointed by the President, confirmed by Senate
1936:
July 21, 1936, Alfred Milner's participation in drafting the Balfour Declaration became public

1937
:
August 6, 1937, Congress established the National Cancer Institute as a research institute that played a role in the discovery of anti-cancer drugs
September 13, 1937, in an investigation, Baruch admitted that wars are economic in nature, despite the political or religious reasons repeatedly used
1938:
November 9-10, 1938, Kristallnacht

1940
:
June 21, 1940, General Butler, who opposed warfare on behalf of the corporations, died unexpectedly in a military hospital

1941:
December 8, 1941, Japan attacked the Philippines

1942:
January 29, 1942, the Birth Control Federation of America changed its name to the Planned Parenthood Federation of America

1946:
July 4, 1946, the U.S. grants the Philippines a limited independence
 
1948:
December 9, 1948, Raphael Lemkin, a Polish-born Jewish lawyer defined the crime of genocide
1957:
October 28, 1957, employees at the Hoover Institution opened the sixteen 500-pound crates of the Okhranka files (Soviet records) shipped in 1925

1961:
April 11, 1961, Adolf Eichmann trial began; Ben-Gurion insisted the trial be in Israel as a way of bolstering the legitimacy of the Jewish State
1964:
October 14, 1964, David Rockefeller fired Nikita S. Khrushchev from his job as head of the Soviet government
1981:
April 30, 1981, The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council resolved that the Holocaust Memorial Museum would include the Armenian Genocide
1985:
August 29, 1985, a UN Commission accepted Benjamin Whitaker’s report - at least one million or over half the Armenians died during a death march
1987:
June 18, 1987, in Strasbourg, the European Parliament voted to recognize the Armenian Genocide
1987, with the European Parliament’s actions, the House of Representatives declared April 24 as a day of remembrance for genocide victims
1993:
April 22, 1993, the tax-exempt United States Holocaust Memorial Museum had its grand opening in Washington DC
1999:
April 9, 1999, Stuart Eizenstat pledged that the US would raise the issue of the recovery of Armenian assets from the genocide period with Turkey
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