Not only at Halloween, Wikipedia might equally be coined "Wicked Pedia" or "Wicca Pedia" as it is collectivist evil any way you look at it. Just the term "free encyclopedia" should be a major clue to its atheistic Marxist-collectivist nature.
As a Father Charles Coughlin scholar, I tried on several occasions to edit the Charles Coughlin article for truthfulness. Easily discerning its severe Marxist spin on Father Coughlin - who for over a decade stood firm against Marxism and warned of its propaganda inroads into America - I attempted to put the article straight. But each time it reverted to the Marxism spin, as if my editorial input had not existed.
So we may have to have an "Ameripedia" of truth to counter the subversive "Wikipedia." The following is my article and demonstrates what should truthfully be on "Wikipedia." But after several tries the Marxists in America continue to censor the truth:
Charles Edward Coughlin (October 25, 1891 – October 27, 1979) was a Canadian-born Roman Catholic priest at Royal Oak, Michigan's National Shrine of the Little Flower Church. He was one of the first political leaders to use radio to reach a mass audience, as more than forty million tuned to his weekly broadcasts during the 1930s. This hard-hitting patriotic radio program included exposing communism and nazism. But Marxist propaganda retaliated with a smear campaign lying that the radio program was "a variation of the Fascist agenda applied to American culture."[2] "Social Justice" exposed the New Deal and its underhanded communist dealings (see Charles Coughlin's first interview on the Howard Miller radio program) . Antisemitism not once permeated his radio broadcasts, though anti-communism did.
Coughlin was born in Hamilton, Ontario, to Irish Catholic parents, and was ordained in Toronto in 1916. He taught at Assumption College in Windsor, Ontario, before moving to Detroit in 1923. He began his radio broadcasts in 1926 over station WJR, broadcasting weekly sermons on a regular program. In 1931 the CBS radio network dropped free sponsorship, so he raised money to create his own national network, which soon reached millions of listeners. He strongly endorsed Franklin D. Roosevelt during the 1932 Presidential election. He was an early supporter of Roosevelt's New Deal reforms, and coined the phrase "Roosevelt or ruin," which was famous during the early days of the FDR administration as well as "The New Deal is Christ's Deal."[3] However, Coughlin's focus changed during the 1930s as he preached more and more about Roosevelt's support of atheistic Marxism and the negative influence of amoral international bankers and of Wall Street on the general welfare and about the need for monetary reform. Coughlin claimed that the Depression was a cash famine, and proposed monetary reforms, including the elimination of the privately-owned Federal Reserve System, as the solution.
By 1934 Coughlin was perhaps the most prominent Catholic spokesman on political and financial issues, with a radio audience that reached millions of people every week. When he began exposing the "New Deal," Roosevelt organized a propaganda fund and sent Joseph P. Kennedy and Frank Murphy, prominent Irish Catholics, to try to tone him down. But seeing Henry Morgenthau giving a ten million dollar check from US taxpayer money to Mexico - the same Marxist Mexico persecuting and murdering Catholics - Coughlin began denouncing Roosevelt as a tool of Wall Street. He supported Huey Long until Long's death in 1935, and then supported William Lemke's third party in 1936. Thus, as Coughlin became a bold and widely-admired opponent of the New Deal, his radio talks escalated against the politician Roosevelt, capitalists and atheistic-Marxist Jewish conspirators (Trotsky's real name was Bronstein). Kennedy, who strongly supported the New Deal, warned as early as 1933 that Coughlin was "becoming a very dangerous proposition" as an opponent of Roosevelt and "an out and out demagogue." Kennedy worked with Roosevelt, Bishop Francis Spellman and Eugenio Cardinal Pacelli (the future Pope Pius XII) in a smear-campaign effort to get the Vatican to shut Coughlin down in 1936. The hypocrisy was especially noticeable on Pacelli's part, who concealed from the public Pius XI's final encyclical against antisemitism. Had Pacelli really been concerned about antisemitism, he would have published this, but Pacelli was towing the Marxist and world government line, a world govt. Father Coughlin opposed till his death in 1979.[4] In 1940-41,though Kennedy wrongfully attacked the isolationism of Coughlin (and aviator Charles Lindbergh), But Father Coughlin stood firm on George Washington's views against foreign entanglements as solidified in the Monroe Doctrine. To benefit the military/industrial complex, Coughlin warned, "Poor people fight the wars and poor people are made to pay for the wars." Father Charles Coughlin was known as only second to Roosevelt in power and popularity.
Antisemitism: Propaganda Lie To Smear Father Coughlin
After 1936, Coughlin never expressed sympathy for the fascist policies of Hitler and Mussolini, explaining both fascism and Marxist communism were totalitarian and dictatorial and that Roosevelt was not to choose one over the other. His CBS radio broadcasts were never antisemitic though this was part of the ongoing Marxist propaganda and smear campaign to say they were. He blamed the Depression on an international conspiracy of Jewish and gentile bankers, and also claimed that Jewish and gentile bankers were behind the Russian Revolution.
Do you get the gist? Father Charles Coughlin was such a brilliant Catholic priest - equally fighting communism and nazism - that he is still a threat to the strongly-embedded cultural Marxism of our day, known as "political correctness." So the battle is on. If we are now to have "Patriotic Correctness" we must have an "Ameripedia" where truth is told and with editorial watchdogs refusing Marxist propaganda inroads.
Go now to FatherCoughlin.com and turn up your speakers to soak in truth!
Stephen Volk