Eisenhower Went From Being The D-Day Commander To A Conspiracy Theorist In Fifteen Years With His "Military Industrial Complex" Farewell Speech
JD Salinger had a short, ill-fated marriage with a beautiful German gentile doctor named Sylvia at the exact time he was determining the fate of many doctors at the Nazi doctor trials in Nuremburg, Germany.
We believe Salinger, working for the US Army Counter Intelligence Corp (CIC), softened his judgements of the Nazi doctors during this crucial period, not only commuting their death sentence, but also allowing some to come to the United States like Eric Traub.
Many of the Nazi doctors at Nuremburg were marked for execution.
Yet somehow, Salinger’s group conducted the interviews of these doctors, and the Nazi doctors won their reprieve. Otto Ambrose and Walter Schreiber were responsible for the development of bioweapons and used Jews for experiments, and later went on to successful careers at IG Farben. Eric Traub came to the United States under CIA patronage and created bioagents like Lyme Disease at Plum Island Lab 257.
We attribute that to Salinger torrid romance with a German doctor during these crucial Nazi doctor interviews to spare them from execution. Salinger wrote Catcher in the Rye when his eight-month romance with Sylvia Welter had soured, after Salinger had recommended the reprieves.
Catcher in the Rye strikes out at the phoniness of society, and perhaps he was still stinging from his romance being used to secure Nazi doctor commutations. We believe his true title for his book should have been “Nazi Catcher In The Rye” because he regretted failing in his Jewish heritage to bring the “Nazi Doctors” to justice. (more...)
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