Friday, February 5, 2010

The Greatest American Patriot of the 20th Century Passes Away

It has been difficult in deciding an appropriate heading for the blog article that I'm writing tonight. And I still don't know if the title is appropriate enough. Hopefully the careful words I choose pay adequate respect to Eustace Mullins in my piece.

Eustace Clarence Mullins, Jr, the 20th Century's Greatest American Patriot, born on March 9th, 1923 in Roanoke, VA, passed away at noon at the home of his caretaker Jesse Lee in Hockley, Texas. He was 86. It was a blessing and privilege to have met him last year and to have spent some time with him. My only regret is what has become a squandered opportunity, as damnable as it is: not taking the time out to get to know him more than I did. These past few days have been very burdensome for me because withholding the tears is no easy task. To me, he was and still is the greatest political researcher who ever lived.

I loved him like a family member.

His corpus of work, which was the product of Mullins' unique meticulous research, provided a "happy hunting ground" for his student readers to utilize in fighting back against the World Order conspirators. He was a Prophet; a Godsend; a National Treasure; and to those oblivious to him who may yet still discover and cherish his work, he will be known as an Unsung Hero and America's Unknown Soldier.

John Kaminski commented on his passing:
Eustace Mullins was the greatest political historian of the 20th century, and not just because he was not beholden to the power structure that deters candid reports about significant events, but because, guided by the greatest poet of the 20th century who was imprisoned for broadcasting for peace, his meticulous research eventually uncovered virtually every political secret of the last 400 years. It’s a pity so many people are afraid to believe what Mullins told them, because it was much more of the truth than has ever been seen in our schools or our media.
The author of this blog piece hopes to attend the funeral services of this great man.

A Daryl Bradford Smith interview with John Kaminski can be accessed from the following link: http://iamthewitness.com/audio/John.Kaminski/TFC.SMITH.KAMINSKI.04-02-2010.mp3

I will close this article out with Mullins' own words. Asked by James Dyer what he was most proud of in life, Mullins replied:
Getting Ezra Pound out of St. Elizabeth's, and now trying to rehabilitate Joe McCarthy. These are two of the most maligned persons of the 20th century. If I can change public thinking of these two men that I admired and loved, maybe they'll get their just desserts.

1 comment:

  1. You are just not that interested to take on all the responsibility that goes along with being a politician. There are many ways of looking at it; you could consider it a lot more or a little bit less than that. Get more information about become a politician click here now.

    ReplyDelete