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the South who emerged from the War Between the States with a
great fortune.
Colonel House was what they called a king maker in Texas poli-
tics. He personally chose Woodrow Wilson, the most unlikely of all
political candidates, and secured his nomination for President on
the Democratic ticket in 1912. It was House who convinced the
Morgan group, and others with power in politics and media, to
throw their support to Wilson, which is what enabled him to win
the election and become the 28th President of the United States.
House was certainly a member of the Round Table and possibly a
member of its inner circle. He was a founder of the CFR.
In 1912 he wrote a novel, entitled Philip Dru Administrator. It
was intended to popularize the Fabian blueprint for converting
America to collectivism using the Fabian strategy of working slowly
as a turtle and secretly as a wolf in sheep s clothing. The hero of his
story is Philip Dru, who is a fictionalized version the author,
himself: a quiet, unassuming intellectual, working behind the
scenes advising and controlling politicians who are easily
purchased and just as easily discarded.
67
The Chasm The Future Is Calling
Speaking through Dru, House describes his political ideal as:
socialism as dreamed of by Karl Marx. 24 Dru s socialism, of
course, was the Fabian version. It was to have gentle and humane
qualities to soften its impact and set it apart from the Leninist
version called Communism.
Like all collectivists, House spoke eloquently about defending the
poor and the downtrodden, but in reality, he had great disdain for
the masses. In his view, they are too stupid and lazy to take an
interest in their own government, so it s up to the professionals to
do that for them. Speaking through the fictional character of
Senator Selwyn, House says:
The average American citizen refuses to pay attention to civic
affairs, contenting himself with a general growl at the tax rate,
and the character and inefficiency of public officials. He sel-
dom takes the trouble necessary to form the Government to
suit his views. The truth is he has no cohesive or well-digested
views, it being too much trouble to form them; therefore, some
such organization as ours is essential.25
Philip Dru foments civil war, leads an uprising against the old
order, captures control of the government, becomes a dictator with
the grateful support of the people, is given the title Administrator
of the Republic, scraps all constitutional restrictions against
government power, establishes a progressive income tax, creates a
national banking cartel,26 annexes Canada, conquers Mexico,
invites European nations to participate in world government, and
ushers in a glorious new age of collectivism. This was not just a
fictional story for entertainment. House described this book as an
expression of his own ethical and political faith. 27
The reason this is important is that the ethical and political faith
of Col. House now is the ethical and political faith of American
leadership and it started with Woodrow Wilson.
24 Philip Dru, Administrator (New York: Angriff Press, 1912) p. 45.
25 Ibid., pp. 199, 200.
26 It must be remembered that Philip Dru was published in 1912. The U.S. income
tax and Federal Reserve System were then in the drafting stages and being
promoted by House, Wilson, J.P. Morgan, and other collectivists in
Washington. The income tax and Federal Reserve were passed into law the
following year, 1913.
27 The Historical Significance of the House Diary, by Arthur Walworth, Yale
University Library, www.library.yale.edu/un/house/hist_sig.htm . Also An
Internationalist Primer, by Wlliam Grigg, The New American, September 16,
1996, www.thenewamerican.com/tna/1996/vo12no19/vo12no19_cfr.htm.
68
Colonel House
In his memoirs, President Wilson said: Mr. House is my second
personality. He is my independent self. His thoughts and mine are
one. 28
George Viereck was an admiring biographer of Colonel House
and approved of almost everything he did. This is what Viereck
said:
For seven long years, Colonel House was Woodrow Wilson s
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