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13
love-hate relationship,
which is so valued during the traumatization
&
programming
of mind-
controlled slaves.
Some sources state that Walt’s love for animals came from the time his family had a farm near
Marceline, Missouri. Walt began his schooling at Marceline, but continued
it after the age of eight at
Benton School in Kansas City, MO. Walt’s Dad had a serious gambling problem and passed the spirit
of gambling to his son Walt. Walt never graduated from high school. He had a natural love and a flair
for art work, although (contrary to his public image) he never became proficient at it. He joined the
army in W.W. I as an ambulance driver by lying about his age. During the war, he also chauffeured
dignitaries. He also did some other things that are very revealing. He enjoyed drinking & gambling
while in the service, and he ran a scam where he doctored German artifacts picked up on the
battlefield to sell to people. War relics were tampered with to get them in shape to get the most
money from them possible. Walt took the battle souvenirs - and dressed them up, for instance, coating
the insides of helmets with grease, hair & blood and putting holes in them to make them into
expensive souvenirs. This shows that Walt was willing to build illusions if it paid. He could be
deceptive if he saw an advantage to it. From gleanings from things Walt said to people, it appears that
as a child, he’d seen the darker side of life (for instance, his father had a habit of beating him in the
basement) and had had some interest or exposure to magic as a child. Bob Thomas writes, "Walt took
a
boyish delight
in playing tricks on his parents. He was fascinated with magic tricks..."
(Walt Disney,
An American Original, p. 35.)
After the military, Walt hoped to have a career as an artist. He applied to the advertising agency of
Pesman-Rubin.
Roy, his brother, claimed that Pesman-Rubin
hired Walt as a personal favor to Roy
who handled the agency’s account at the bank Roy worked at. Walter lasted a month until the
advertising agency let him go due to Walt’s "singular lack of drawing ability." According to Current
Biography 1952, in 1923, Walt and Roy had together $290. They borrowed $500 from another
Disney, one of their uncles named Robert Disney and began to try to make cartoons. Robert Disney
had retired in the L.A. area in Edendale, CA after a successful mining career. Robert had always been
close to Walt’s father Elias, and helped Walt and Roy out when they came to California. Walt loved
to study Charlie Chaplin (a member of the Collins family). He scrawled notes about his body
language, facial features, and his gag methods. He also read everything he could about animation and
cartooning. They worked out of their uncle’s garage in Hollywood,
CA. They were finally able to
make a good cartoon Steamboat Willie in 1928, which became an instant hit. As with many things in
life, the cartoon was not only good, but Walt finally had the right ,,connections."
On Nov. 18, ’28,
Steamboat Willie was shown in a small,
independent
theater without any advance promotion or
advertising.
But amazingly(!)
the New York Times, Variety, and Exhibitor’s Herald all ran rave
reviews of the cartoon the next day. Was this an accident? did journalists from all these prestigious
periodicals just happen to go to this tiny independent
theater? no it was connections.
The reason the
elite decided to promote Walt Disney after Steamboat Willie came out as Hollywood’s
newest "boy
wonder" was to deflect enormous bitterness that had been generated by the Stock Market collapse
toward Jewish financiers. Hollywood,
even in its first two decades, was known as "Babylon" and "Sin
City". The movie industry was well-known
to be run by Jews, and many people blamed the Stock
Market Crash on the moral degradation
that Hollywood
had introduced to this nation. There were
calls for government regulatory groups to stop the smutty Hollywood films. Edgar Magnin, the
spiritual
leader of the major movie makers who were part of the Los Angeles B’nai B’rith reportedly
encouraged those in the Mishpucka and others who were B’nai B’rith movie makers that Hollywood
needed to protect itself by putting Walt Disney in the limelight as a Christian "white knight with family
values". (By the way, Edgar Magnin was nicknamed "Rabbi to the Stars", because he was "the
Hollywood rabbi".) E. Magnin’s grandfather’s
department store chain was one of the first major
accounts of the Bank of Italy, and Edgar Magnin had continued his family’s close association with the
Bank of Italy. The closeness also came from the Bank of Italy’s close ties to the B’nai B’rith and
ADL. In 1930, the movie industry made a production code which stated that the industry must make a
special effort to make movies appropriate for children. Hollywood
directly praised Disney in that
code as an exemplary model of what the movie industry wanted to do.
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