[Editor's Note: Reports
of Eustace Mullins 'Disappearance' Erroneous: Internet reports Friday
claiming that legendary conspiracy historian Eustace Mullins had been missing
from his Staunton, Virginia home for seven days and was feared dead appear to
be erroneous.
Friend's
concerns that Mullins, author of "Secrets of the Federal Reserve,"
had been abducted by one of the myriad of government agencies or Zionist groups
that he has for years been a thorn in the side of for decades subsided when
Mullins e mailed a colleague to say he was staying with friends in Ohio.]
Friends, associates,
and admirers of renowned conspiracy author Eustace Mullins have gone into full
panic mode over his mysterious disappearance. Mullins, 82, has been missing for
seven days (as of Jan. 12) from his Staunton, Virginia, home, where his cars
are still parked and his mail and newspapers are piling up on the front porch.
Local police say
there's nothing they can do and are notoriously vague and nonchalant about his
welfare or whereabouts, according to friends who have called them to express
alarm over his sudden disappearance.
Mullins, author of
"Secrets of the Federal Reserve" and more than a dozen other
well-researched tomes about who runs the world from behind the scenes, was
scheduled to appear on an Internet radio show, Hesham Tillawi's Current Issues, on Thursday, Jan 5, but
did not appear.
Filmmaker Randy
Atkins, who was scheduled to appear with Mullins and did actually participate
in the show with Tillawi, has no idea where Eustace is, but noted it was very
unlike the affable and professional Mullins to miss a scheduled appointment.
Atkins recently
created a new film about Mullins' perspective on world events, titled
"Neo-Zionist Order: Who Rules Your Rulers?" This DVD is available at Arsenal of Hypocrisy (a site
named for an earlier Atkins film about the U.S. space weapons program that
featured Noam Chomsky). Both Mullins and Atkins recently participated in a
European talk show in which the methods of the international bankers who run
the world from behind the scenes were extensively discussed.
Mullins' longtime
friend and webmaster, Wayne Blanchard of Staunton, is not only worried about
the sudden disappearance, but furious at the nonchalance of public officials in
the matter.
"Both the
sheriff's department and the police department gave me no cooperation,"
said Blanchard. "Eustace has lived there for 35 years. You'd think they'd
be more concerned."
But, Blanchard
noted, such a meticulous researcher of sacred cows as Mullins has made his
share of enemies over the years. "He's filed a lot of lawsuits" (and
has one pending)," Blanchard noted. "Everybody tends to shy away from
him" over his involvement with the hottest topics possible.
The notorious bane
of patriots everywhere, Morris Dees of the Zionist-front organization Southern
Poverty Law Center, wrote a hit piece on Mullins for the local Staunton
newspaper several years, and because of Mullins' dedicated zeal in researching
the sinister underpinnings of corrupt politics, he has made a lot of enemies.
Nor does Mullins
have a loving family to rely upon. According to Blanchard, when Mullins had a
series of ministrokes three years ago, "his brother had him put in a
nursing home, and tried to have him declared incompetent. I got him out."
But serious damage
to Mullins' health had been done, not by his illness, according to Blanchard,
but by his family.
"He lost
everything," Blanchard explained. "His brother Bob proceeded to steal
his assets, life insurance policy, and his silver collection worth
$150,000." In addition, Blanchard said Mullins had a joint bank account
with his grandnephew, Matt Mader, from which "$30,000 was stolen out of
that account."
Mullins later sued
his brother, Blanchard said.
Worse, brother Bob
closed Mullins's post office box, which he had used for 35 years and from which
he sold all his books.
Mullins' prolific
career as a conspiratologist began when he befriended the legendary poet Ezra
Pound who had been jailed in a mental hospital for broadcasting against
American corporate interests during World War II. Mullins wrote the only
approved biography of Pound.
Other noteworthy
books by Mullins, all of which he self-published, include "Secrets of the
Federal Reserve," "The Curse of Canaan: A Demonology Of
History," "Murder By Injection: The Medical Conspiracy Against America,"
"The Rape of Justice," "Education for Slavery," "The
London Connection," and "Who Owns the TV Networks."
Blanchard said
"Secrets of the Federal Reserve" sold over 100,000 copies and insists
it was later plagiarized by G. Edward Griffin in his popular book, "The
Creature from Jekyl Island."
"Eustace gave
power of attorney to his brother Bob under duress," Blanchard explained.
His brother Bob put him into a nursing home, saying Eustace suffered from the
initial stages of dementia. Later tests at the University of Virginia
determined Eustace competent, Blanchard said.
"Bob was
probably run by the ADL (the Jewish Anti-Defamation League)," Blanchard
said. "Things just don't add up."
Filmmaker Atkins
recently posted a sensational video clip of Mullins on his
website, in which Mullins makes a chilling prediction of what is in store
for the world at this time.
Quoting from the
video clip: Mullins says, "Israel actually plans to exterminate the
entire Arab Muslim population in the world, and the Muslims know this . . . Israel
is interested only in genocide and exterminating all the Arab people or putting
them under complete domination . . . the Israelis are always
exterminationists."
Then Atkins asks,
"Is the United States being used by Israel to create a Christian-Muslim
war?"
Mullins responds,
"Yes. It's all deliberate . . . a billion Christians and a billion
Muslims are now at a war to the death with each other, and the only victor will
be the state of Israel."
Atkins recounts the
last time he talked with Mullins. "I talked to him that Monday (Jan. 2),
reminded him of Thursday's interview. He said he was looking forward to
it." Whether that was the last public utterance of Eustace Mullins remains
to be determined.
Blanchard had a
darker view. "I think the ADL probably snatched him and did away with
him."
John
Kaminski is a writer who lives on the Gulf Coast of Florida whose Internet
essays are seen on hundreds of websites around the world. His latest collection
of essays, "Recipe for Extinction," will be available for sale in
late February. For more information see JohnKaminski.com.