Benefactor — Jump, by Alfred Lawson — Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 - Next

they make monkeys out of those who preach FALSITY.
 When professors of astronomy tell our children that the Earth dropped off of the Sun or that the moon fell off of the earth, they tell them not to talk such college nonsense.
 Astronomers sometimes make good surveyors in measurements of the distances between stars, but when they tell you their theories of the movement of matter they make fools of themselves.
 When you ask them what makes those northern lights they say, “Nobody knows.” Still any one of our little children who has studied LAWSONOMY can explain the cause in the plainest of language.
 Some of these mathematical jugglers pretend that they are so wise that nobody can understand what their calculations mean. They pretend they are too deep for you common people but I can prove that most of them are just grandiloquent fakers.
 Natural Law is not too deep for anybody, because it only treats of the truth.
 But when they try to teach you false theories that are too deep even for themselves as is shown by their constant changing of their own notions, they show their ignorance.
 Signs should be placed at the entrance of colleges saying, “Leave truth behind, all you who enter here.”
 In order to have better colleges they must be taken out of the control of financiers.
 Well, that’s enough about the miseducating theorists. Let’s talk about manufacturers’ and merchants’ associations.
 For many years I happened to be a manufacturer and I learned first hand that manufacturers’ associations were all run by finan­ciers.
 I also learned a lot about merchants’ associations when I was building up the aircraft industry.
 During that period of more than twenty years I received invitations from almost every city and town in America to visit them for the purpose of establishing an aircraft plant or an airport in their territory.
 So for many years I traveled around the United States visiting these different manufacturers’ and merchant’s associations. Yes, I visited this city and had lunch with the members of one of your merchants’ associations. They wanted to establish an aircraft factory and an airport here so they invited me to come and talk business with them. They treated me fine. Of course, I had to pay my way from New York City but they paid for my lunch.
 It was the same in every city, they treated me all right but when it came to a final decision they invariably introduced me to a financier and said, “He’ll talk business with you.”
 You merchants and manufacturers are paying fees and dues into associations run by agents of the financiers who have put out of business more than two hundred thousand factory owners and more than three million merchants during the past ten years. Think of that you manufacturers and mer-

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