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PO ![]() Dr.
Eugene Schroder Penetrating insight into how
government control, highly centralized authority, and large corporations
all function together, using extraordinary and unconstitutional powers
assumed during pretense of national emergency. Thoroughly researched
and footnoted with excerpts from Senate Studies, the Congressional Record,
State Archives, and Supreme Court Decisions. War, Central Planning and Corporations, a new book by Dr. Eugene Schroder and David Schechter, was the basis of Dr. Schroder's presentation at the Western Economic Conference in Seattle July 12. Dr. Walker F. Todd, formerly with the Federal Reserve, served as editor. Dr. Schroder shows penetrating insight into how government control, highly centralized authority, and large corporations all function together, using extraordinary and unconstitutional powers assumed during pretense of national emergency. Thoroughly researched and footnoted with excerpts from Senate Studies, the Congressional Record, State Archives, and Supreme Court Decisions. This landmark study continues with the work Dr. Schroder began in Constitution: Fact or Fiction. War, Central Planning and
Corporations had its beginning almost twenty years ago in 1979.
Dr. Eugene Schroder, a founder of the American Agriculture Movement,
was invited to the White House to meet with Stuart Eizenstat, President
Carter's chief economic advisor. Dr. Schroder posed the question to
Mr. Eizenstat "Under the current prices for inputs and current market
prices, the family farmers cannot meet their obligations to the Farmers
Home Administration, Federal Land Banks, and banks. If we do not change
agricultural policy and support the market prices, what is the government
going to do? Are you going to nationalize the farmland?" Dr. Schroder recalls "The full meaning and consequences of central planning authority had finally reached home with me... We began extensive research into the history of central planning and the influence of economic combinations, especially corporations, on the origination and use of the central planning power of government." Five years ago he and other researchers uncovered the use of emergency powers as a way to set aside the Constitution of the United States in order to achieve this central planning and impose unconstitutional control. Since then Dr. Schroder has documented extensively how war and emergency powers, meant to be used only in times of actual invasion or rebellion, are used daily to set aside the Constitution, affecting every man, woman, and child in the country. The Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933, a curse to farmers for so many years, was a key piece of legislation in these emergency powers, for it took the power to coin and regulate money away from congress (as provided in the Constitution) and gave it to the president. Tracing back through the archives, further investigation showed how emergency government was simultaneously implemented in all states through a highly coordinated effort coming straight down from FDR and the federal government. Emergency government, outside the bounds of the Constitution, has now been the norm for more than 64 years, according to the Senate's own study. The results of this extensive research are contained in three books Constitution: Fact or Fiction (1995), the latest, War, Central Planning and Corporations (presented to the Western Economic Conference in 1997), and the upcoming Free Our Children: Breaking the Chains of Debt. Now shipping War, Central Planning and Corporations. $10 plus $3.00 shipping per order. Quantity discounts available. Dr. Eugene Schroder is a founder of the American Agriculture Movement, best remembered for its tractorcade to Washington D.C. As a doctor of veterinary medicine and farmer in Campo, Colorado, he questioned why he and other farmers had to ask government agencies what they could plant, how much they could plant, and what they would be paid for their products. Each year farmers went deeper into debt until finally many lost their farms. Five years ago he and other researchers uncovered the use of emergency powers as a way to set aside the constitution. The Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933, a curse to farmers for so many years, was a key piece of legislation in these emergency powers, for it took the power to coin and regulate money away from congress (as provided in the Constitution) and gave it to the president. The results of his extensive research are contained in the books Constitution: Fact or Fiction (1995), War, Central Planning and Emergencies, (just released), and the upcoming Free Our Children. Dr. Schroder graduated from Colorado State University in 1971 with a doctorate in veterinary medicine. Five Ways
to Order:
Call 1-800-610-4908 for quantity discount information.
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