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The Wall Street Coup That Almost Overthrew FDR

In 1933, a group of wealthy American businessmen and financiers secretly plotted to overthrow President Franklin D. Roosevelt and replace him with a fascist dictator. Known as the "Business Plot" or "White House Putsch," this conspiracy involved some of the most powerful names on Wall Street who were furious about FDR's New Deal policies threatening their profits during the Great Depression.

The conspirators had a shocking plan: recruit retired Marine Corps Major General Smedley Butler, a decorated war hero and two-time Medal of Honor recipient, to lead 500,000 unemployed veterans in a march on Washington. They wanted to force Roosevelt to step down or be removed, then install Butler as a puppet dictator who would roll back all New Deal reforms meant to save the working and middle classes and restore corporate control over America.

What the plotters didn't count on was Butler's unwavering patriotism. Instead of joining their coup, he immediately reported the entire conspiracy to Congress and the FBI. Butler testified before the House Un-American Activities Committee in explosive hearings, naming names and revealing the shocking scope of the plot.

The congressional investigation confirmed that the conspiracy was real and involved prominent figures from major corporations including DuPont, General Motors, and banking houses like J.P. Morgan. The committee had access to detailed evidence and witness testimony that validated Butler's shocking claims.

The conspirators had access to millions of dollars in funding and significant political connections. However, most of the wealthy plotters were never prosecuted, and mainstream media largely suppressed the story to avoid embarrassing America's business elite.

This remains one of the closest attempts at overthrowing the U.S. government by domestic forces - orchestrated not by foreign enemies or fringe radicals, but by America's own corporate titans who valued their wealth over democracy.

Disturbingly, some wealthy elites today still openly advocate for fascism and authoritarianism. Billionaires have poured over $1.6 billion into dark money networks designed to undermine democratic institutions. The Business Plot mentality - that democracy threatens elite wealth and must be replaced with authoritarian control - remains very much alive among America's richest families.

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