Smoot Report on Communist Infiltration

Started by Idaho Kid, March 02, 2014, 04:54:04 PM

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Idaho Kid

"God, deliver me from timid patriots..."

Dan Smoot Fearless American Patriot Pt 1 - http://blogfiles.wfmu.org/BU/Dan_Smoot_-_The_Fearless_American_Part_One.mp3
Dan Smoot Fearless American Patriot Pt 2 - http://blogfiles.wfmu.org/BU/Dan_Smoot_-_The_Fearless_American_Part_Two.mp3

FOIA: Dan Smoot Report-HQ-1 - https://archive.org/details/foia_Dan_Smoot_Report-HQ-1
FOIA: Dan Smoot Report-HQ-2 - https://archive.org/details/foia_Dan_Smoot_Report-HQ-2
FOIA: Dan Smoot Report-HQ-3 - https://archive.org/details/foia_Dan_Smoot_Report-HQ-3
FOIA: Dan Smoot Report-HQ-4 - https://archive.org/details/foia_Dan_Smoot_Report-HQ-4
FOIA: Dan Smoot Report-HQ-5 - https://archive.org/details/foia_Dan_Smoot_Report-HQ-5


Howard Drummond Smoot (1913- 2003), better known as Dan Smoot, was an FBI agent and a conservative political activist. From the 1950s to 1971, he published The Dan Smoot Report, which chronicled communist infiltration in various sectors of American government and society.

In 1970, he opposed the selection of a future U.S. President, George H. W. Bush, as the Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate from Texas.  In 1972, Smoot opposed the reelection of Richard Nixon and served as campaign manager for American Independent Party presidential candidate John G. Schmitz of California.

Smoot was an FBI agent from 1942 to 1951, when he resigned for what he cited as professional reasons: namely, the desire to go into the field of political pamphleteering and commentary.

After Smoot left the FBI, he became a commentator and began producing Facts Forum newsletters in conjunction with Dallas oil billionaire H. L. Hunt.

Thereafter, Smoot published his weekly The Dan Smoot Report. He also carried his conservative message via weekly reports over radio and television. The Report started with 3,000 paid subscribers; at its peak in 1965, it had more than 33,000 subscribers. Each newsletter usually focused on one major story. One issue, for instance, was devoted to the Alaska Mental Health Bill of 1956, which Smoot claimed was a communist conspiracy to establish concentration camps on American soil. Another issue lionized Douglas MacArthur after the his death in the spring of 1964, and a later 1964 issue opposed a proposal by President Lyndon B. Johnson to transfer sovereignty of the Panama Canal to the Republic of Panama. Johnson failed in his attempt, but President Jimmy Carter in 1978, with bipartisan support, convinced the Senate by a one-vote margin to give Panama control of the Canal Zone. It was liberal Republican support for many Democratic proposals that particularly angered Smoot, who gave up on the Republicans as a viable alternative to the majority Democrats of his day.

In 1962, Smoot wrote The Invisible Government concerning early members of the Council on Foreign Relations. Other books include The Hope of the World; The Business End of Government; and his autobiography, People Along the Way.
"Certainly the Protocols are a forgery, and that is the one proof we have of their authenticity. The Jews have worked with forged documents for the past 24 hundred years, namely ever since they have had any documents whatsoever." - Ezra Pound