To complete the circle: Adolf Hitler idolized Henry Ford (originator of Ford Motor Co). Henry Ford openly hated Jews: he wrote 4 volumes on "The International Jew: The Worlds Foremost Problem." Purportedly Adolf Hitler had a portrait of Henry Ford over his bed.
9 years before the second world war (1928) Henry Ford, and oil magnate Rockefeller merged assets with the IG Farben Trust, a German corporation. In 1939, two years into the war, "American Aluminum Company (ALCOA), then the worlds
largest producer of sodium fluoride, and the Dow Chemical Company transferred its technology to Germany. Colgate,
Kellogg, Dupont and many other companies eventually signed cartel agreements with I.G. Farben, creating a powerful lobby group accurately dubbed "the fluoride mafia" as quoted in
http://www.informationliberation.com/print.php?id=14949
*Interestingly, during WW2 (1937-1945) the Nazis used fluoride as the poison of choice in the concentration camps' infamous showers, and added it to prisoners' drinking water to improve prisoner compliance. Even MORE interestingly, H. Ford's son, Edsel, (who took over Ford Motor Co when shareholders conflicted with Henry in 1919), died of stomach cancer, at the tender age of 49 (1945). Henry regained control of Ford Motor Co, and died five years later, at the age of 83. (Stomach cancer was one of the known consequences of fluoride exposure, before all of the references disappeared. Ed. note)
IG Farben negotiated the contract to sell fluoride to the US government, as a way to dispose of the highly toxic industrial by-product. In 1947, the US government began fluoridating the citizens' tap water. I kinda doubt The King of Pop was down with that.
In short, they were all Bat-Shit crazy....from Ford to Hitler, to the artist previously known as M. Jackson. I think if Mr. Jackson "idolized Hitler" it was with the same fascination that any of us slow down to look at a traffic accident...or, perhaps best paraphrased by M. Corleone in The Godfather II: "keep your friends close, and your enemies closer." (Puzo and Coppola, 1974).
Peace out,
M