The Christian Front - America's Answer to Communism
April 24, 2025

In the 1930's many Americans looked to Nazi Germany for inspiration in their opposition to the Communist Rothschild banking cartel.
Before Donald Trump, there was Father Charles Coughlin, who popularized fascism for Americans in the 1930s.
When Fascism Was American
By Joe Allen
(excerpt by henrymakow.com)
In the United States, the public and the press were virtually unanimous in condemning Kristallnacht, with one poll reporting that nearly 94 percent of Americans disapproved of Germany's treatment of Jews.
Yet despite Nazism's unpopularity, one voice took to the airwaves to defend these actions -- Father Charles E. Coughlin, a Catholic priest based in Royal Oak, Michigan. Coughlin was a popular radio personality with an audience of millions, largely concentrated in the northeastern United States, and in New York City in particular.
In a highly anticipated broadcast that took place eleven days after Kristallnacht, Coughlin began by posing three questions: "Why is there persecution in Germany today?"; "How can we destroy it?"; and why is "Nazism so hostile to Jewry?"
Coughlin presented a simple answer: Nazism was a "defense mechanism against Communism," and that the "rising generation of Germans regard Communism as a product not of Russia, but of a group of Jews who dominated the destinies of Russia."

In the broadcast Coughlin minimized the Nazi "fine" of $400 million on Germany's Jewish community with the claim that "between these same years not $400 million but $40 billion . . . of Christian property was appropriated by the Lenins and Trotskys . . . by the atheistic Jews and Gentiles" and accused the
New York investment bank Kuhn Loeb & Company with helping to finance the Russian revolution and other Communist plots.
Coughlin's unapologetic Nazi propaganda inspired swift backlash. WMCA, the New York radio station that provided his largest audience, demanded to see his scripts in advance of any future broadcasts, and cancelled his program after he refused. Coughlin later admitted that he used "Nazi sources" in his broadcast.
Following the broadcast the New York Times' Berlin correspondent reported that Coughlin had become "the new hero of Nazi Germany." But Coughlin wasn't only a hero in Berlin; thousands of American supporters responded enthusiastically to his calls for militant action against "atheistic communism."
Coughlin began broadcasting from his Michigan church, "The Shrine of the Little Flower," in 1926, when radio represented a novel, thrilling experience for millions of people. With his rich baritone voice, and slight Irish brogue which he employed for great theatrical effect, Coughlin was made for the new medium.
The 1929 Wall Street crash and the ensuing depression impoverished large parts of Coughlin's working- and lower-middle-class audience. In the wake of the crisis his broadcasts changed from religious sermonizing to political commentary that began with violent attacks on communism. According to historian Alan Brinkley,
As Coughlin attacked the "banksters" he blamed for the Great Depression, his audience grew massive. By 1933, the network of radio stations that carried his broadcasts reached a potential listenership of forty million.

In November 1934, Coughlin announced that he would organize his followers into a new political organization, the National Union for Social Justice. He denied that it was a third party even though it bore the hallmarks of every traditional American political party, and was organized by congressional districts. Coughlin waited for the right issue to flex the muscles of his new formation and got it in January 1935 when Roosevelt proposed that the United States affiliate to the World Court.
No president since Woodrow Wilson -- for fear of provoking an isolationist backlash -- had proposed the US make itself accountable to an international institution. A largely symbolic act, it initially appeared that Roosevelt would win the Senate majority needed to ratify the treaty for affiliation.
Coughlin mobilized his forces along with other World Court opponents, including the mighty newspaper chain of arch-reactionary William Randolph Hearst. They overwhelmed Washington with hundreds of telegrams over one crucial weekend and defeated the treaty. A jubilant Coughlin declared that he intended to slay greater dragons. "Our next goal is to clean out the international bankers."
The phrase "international bankers" was a euphamism for Jews and was widely used in those years by numerous public figures including auto magnate (and fellow Michigander) Henry Ford, who bankrolled the distribution of antisemitic propaganda through his newspaper the Dearborn Independent.
Coughlin made the leap from antisemitism to open fascism after his political ambitions were crushed in the 1936 election. Coughlin had merged his National Union of Social Justice with the remnants of the late Huey Long's Share Our Wealth clubs, led by the antisemitic preacher Gerald L.K. Smith, and old-age pension activist Francis Townsend, in order to mount a third-party challenge to Roosevelt.
The Union Party nominated North Dakota congressman William Lemke for president. Roosevelt, however, had shifted dramatically to the left during the course of 1935. In the face of failing New Deal policies and a huge upsurge in labor struggle, the president signed into law historic legislation including the Social Security Act and the National Labor Relations Act, the popularity of which undercut any electoral challenge.
As Lemke's campaign faltered, Coughlin grew increasingly agitated and vitriolic. "When an upstart dictator in the United States succeeds in making this a one-party form of government, then the ballot is
useless," he asserted to an audience of twenty-five thousand supporters in Providence, Rhode Island. Coughlin declared: "I shall have the courage to stand up and advocate the use of bullets" and promised "more bullet holes in the White House than you could count with an adding machine."
Winning less than nine hundred thousand votes across the country, Lemke went down in crushing defeat while Roosevelt secured one of the biggest presidential landslides in US history. With the election over, Coughlin announced that he would retire from the airwaves. Despondent, he confided to a reporter, "Democracy is doomed. This is our last election . . . It is fascism or communism. We are at a crossroads."
"What road do you take, Father Coughlin?" the reporter asked.
"I take the road of fascism," the priest replied.
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Related - America First. Although this documentary is in French, it contains footage of the American Nazi movement in the 1930's which actually had a paramilitary wing modelled on the SS dedicated to overthrowing the Communist FDR administration.
Makow comment- Fascism was created by Organized Jewry as false opposition to provoke genocidal wars against humanity.
Insider said (April 24, 2025):
{ I'll break communism down real easy !!!!! }
{ China is the test model, but North Korea is the end game !!!!! }