SILENCED FOR 100 YEARS: This SHOCKING 1926 Document Reveals the TRUTH They Don’t Want You to Know About Japan and America
A buried report has erupted from the archives, exposing the LIES we’ve been fed for a century. In 1926, a powerful businessman, J. Russell Kennedy, stood before elites at San Francisco’s Palace Hotel and delivered a bombshell truth. He revealed America’s trade with Japan was a colossal $800 million, declaring the U.S. was Japan’s “best customer” and that war would mean “BANKRUPTCY” for Japan.
The media buried it. The public never heard it. WHY?
Because this proof dismantles every war-mongering narrative that followed. Kennedy stated plainly that Japan “never entertained the slightest intention of war” with America. This wasn’t just a speech—it was a financial reality check delivered to the powerful, then HIDDEN. It shows the terrifying disconnect between the cozy, profitable relationships of the elite and the suffering of regular people sent to fight.
Who benefited from this silence? The arms dealers. The politicians. The war profiteers. They let the “agitation” against Japanese Americans continue, fueling the hatred they needed to build their empires, while business elites quietly pocketed fortunes. They knew the truth of peace and prosperity, but they chose conflict and cash.
Every war since has followed the same dark pattern.
They have been lying to you for generations.



