Jew Corrupter: Zionist Samuel Zemurray (Schmuel Zmurri)

Started by CrackSmokeRepublican, January 16, 2010, 11:57:35 PM

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CrackSmokeRepublican

Sam Zemurray

Samuel Zemurray (January 18, 1877-November 30, 1961) was a U.S. businessman. He made his fortune in the banana trade and founded the Cuyamel Fruit Company, which played a significant and controversial role in the history of Honduras. Zemurray later became head of the United Fruit Company.

Zemurray's original name was Schmuel Zmurri. He was born in Kishinev, Bessarabia, Russia (present-day Chişinău, Moldova) to a poor Jewish family that emigrated to America when he was fourteen years old. Zemurray had no formal education. He entered the banana trade in Mobile, Alabama in 1895, at the age of eighteen. His early wealth was largely due to a very successful venture in New Orleans, Louisiana, where he bought the bananas that had ripened in the transport ships and then sold them locally. His success earned him the nickname "Sam the Banana Man." By age twenty-one he had banked $100,000. He later bought a steamship and went to Honduras. In 1910, he bought 5,000 acres (20 km²) of land along the Cuyamel River. He later added more land and found himself heavily in debt.

Honduras and Nicaragua at the time were working to reschedule their debts. United States Secretary of State Philander C. Knox was involved in the negotiations, which would have agents of bankers J.P. Morgan and Company sitting in the countries' customs offices to collect the taxes needed to repay the debt. Zemurray feared that he would be taxed out of business and appealed to Knox for help. Knox spurned him so he returned to New Orleans, where deposed Honduran president Manuel Bonilla was living. Zemurray smuggled Bonilla back to Honduras and a revolution was fought that led to Bonilla's return to power. Bonilla granted Zemurray land concessions and low taxes that saved his business.

In 1930, Zemurray sold his company, Cuyamel Fruit, to the rival United Fruit Company of Boston, Massachusetts, for $31.5 million in stock and retired. But the company suffered because of mismanagement and the Great Depression. The stock plunged 90% from when he sold, so Zemurray returned to the business in 1933 by voting out the board of directors. Zemurray reorganized the company, decentralizing decision-making and made the company profitable once more. In 1951, Zemurray authorized Edward Bernays to launch a propaganda campaign against Jacobo Arbenz, democratically-elected president of Guatemala.[1] He retired as president of United Fruit later that year.

Zemurray and his family made generous donations to Tulane University, Zamorano, and to other philanthropic ventures, including the Zionist movement through his personal acquaintance, beginning in the 1920s, with Chaim Weizmann. Zemurray supported President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal policies, helping to draft the Agricultural Adjustment Administration industry codes [1], and contributed financially to left-wing causes such as The Nation magazine [2]. He created the Zemurray Foundation in 1951. His former mansion on Audubon Place is now the residence of Tulane's president. His daughter, Doris Zemurray Stone, an archaeologist and ethnographer, served as the director of the National Museum of Costa Rica and endowed various professorial chairs in U.S. universities.

Zemurray died in New Orleans, where he had lived for most of his life.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Zemurray

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QuoteThe Honduran economy in the 1980s was based on the banana trade controlled by Standard Fruit and United Fruit in New Orleans.  The New Orleans mafia fused the drug trade with the banana trade through use of the same route.  Joe Macheca, New Orleans mafia boss, and his successor Charles Matranga had close ties to United Fruit. .  The Vaciaro brothers, Sicilian immigrants to New Orleans with connections to international syndicates, founded Standard Fruit.  Honduras exported 87 kg of European morphine to the US through use of the banana trade route. (p.51-2)

 

Central America's railroad empire was built by New Orleans mafiosos employed by United Fruit.  (p.52)

 

Guy Maloney, a soldier of fortune and police chief of New Orleans, led an invasion of Honduras in 1911 that was financed by Samuel Zemurray, a US banana entrepenuer who became in 1930 United Fruit's largest shareholder in charge of United Fruit's operations in Central America.  In 1930 Guy Maloney again led a mercenary revolt in Honduras that installed Tiburcio Carias Andino in power.  Carias took control of the drug trade and authorized use of the Honduran airline TACA for drug shipments.  A 1975 coup replaced Oswaldo Lopez Arellano with Humberto Regalado Lara as president.  Arellano retired to direct the airline Tan-Sasha which transported coke controlled by Regalado to the US.  In 1978 Policarpo Paz Garcia was brought to power in Honduras in a coup financed by Juan Ramon Matta Ballesteros.  This coup was responsible for connecting Honduras to Mexican syndicates and the CIA Contra supply apparatus thereby making it a drug trafficking center in Latin America. US economic assistance to Honduras tripled between 1978-80.  (p.53-4)

 

SETCO, Matta's airline, was the chief transporter of supplies to the FDN and was paid for its services through a bank account established by Oliver North.  The airline was also used for Matta's smuggling operations, which were carried out through his contacts with Policarpo Paz, Col. Leonides Torres Arias, head of Honduras' military intelligence unit G-2, and Duane Clarridge, CIA station chief in Latin America. (p.55-6)

http://www.infocollective.org/dalescottabstract.html
After the Revolution of 1905, the Czar had prudently prepared for further outbreaks by transferring some $400 million in cash to the New York banks, Chase, National City, Guaranty Trust, J.P.Morgan Co., and Hanover Trust. In 1914, these same banks bought the controlling number of shares in the newly organized Federal Reserve Bank of New York, paying for the stock with the Czar\'s sequestered funds. In November 1917,  Red Guards drove a truck to the Imperial Bank and removed the Romanoff gold and jewels. The gold was later shipped directly to Kuhn, Loeb Co. in New York.-- Curse of Canaan