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2007-12-12 08:01:01 · 3 answers · asked by johnny 1 in Arts & Humanities History

3 answers

No, there's no reason to think that.

I'm a little confused as to how you could think that.

He did do reconnaissance at times for his troops, that's how he was mortally wounded at Chancellorsville, but that's it.

2007-12-12 08:05:08 · answer #1 · answered by Yun 7 · 0 0

Nope. But there have been people in US history who were spies and whose covert roles are little known.

One of them was Judah Benjamin. His "day job," for a while, was being Secretary of the Confederacy. His real job, however, was being the agent of the Rothschild bankers in Europe. His real task was to ensure that the Confederacy went into debt to his Jewish bosses.

Another of them was Augustus Belmont, who was to the North, or Union, side of the American Civil War what Judah Benjamin was in the South.

There were probably quite a few spies, or subversives, involved in the farcical imposition of the "14th Amendment" on the American people. This legislation, which in fact never was actually legislated, much less ratified, had as its main purpose outlawing any legislative escape from endebtedness for the United States. It's the section of the 14th Amendment that says the public debt shall not be questioned.

The Federal Reserve System is an organized bunch of subversives, operating out in the open under the pretense of "helping" America. (Hiding in plain sight by the principle of the Purloined Letter.) What they actually do is counterfeit money and loan it to Americans, and to the US government, at interest, thereby generating unpayable amounts of new and steadily growing debt that ensures a complete collapse of the economy sooner or later.

There's plenty of espionage, sabotage, subversion and treason afoot.

2007-12-12 18:20:42 · answer #2 · answered by elohimself 4 · 0 1

A spy for whom? I think you might have some names confused.

2007-12-12 16:07:58 · answer #3 · answered by Lex 7 · 0 0

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