They (the Jews) work more effectively against us than the enemy's armies. They are a hundred times more dangerous to our liberties and the great cause we are

engaged in. It is much to be lamented that each state, long ago, has not hunted
them down as pests to society and the greatest enemies we have to the
happiness of America."

Source: Maxims of George Washington by A.A. Appleton & Co.
As the American colonies rose in revolt against political oppression occasioned
by the attempt of Jewish banking houses in Europe to consolidate their economic
foothold in the New World, no man among the Founding Fathers was more alert
to the designs of international Jewry than that shrewd elder statesman of the
American Revolution, Benjamin Franklin. Perhaps Ben Franklin's most damning
indictment of Jewry was contained in his famous prophecy at the Constitutional
Convention of 1787 in Philadelphia. In one of the most anti-Jewish utterances of
all time, he declared:

"I fully agree with General Washington, that we must protect this young nation
from an insidious influence and impenetration. That menace, gentlemen, is the
Jews. In whatever country Jews have settled in any great number, they have
lowered its moral tone; depreciated its commercial integrity; have segregated
themselves and have not been assimilated; have built up a state within a state;
and when opposed have tried to strangle that country to death financially, as in
the case of Spain and Portugal.

"For over 1700 hundred years, the Jews have been bewailing their sad fate in
that they have been exiled from their homeland, as they call Palestine. But,
gentlemen, did the world give it to them in fee simple, they would at once find
some reason for not returning. Why? Because they are vampires, and vampires
do not live on vampires. They cannot live only amongst themselves. They must
subsist on other people not of their race. If you do not exclude them from these
United States in the Constitution, in less than 200 years they will have swarmed
here in such great numbers that they will dominate and devour the land, and
change our form of government, for which we Americans have shed our blood,
given our lives, our substance, and jeopardized our liberty."

"If you do not exclude them, in less than 200 years our descendants will be
working in the fields to furnish them substance, while they will be inthe counting
houses rubbing their hands. I warn you, gentlemen, if you do not exclude the
Jews for all time, your children will curse you in your graves."
Franklin's remarks were recorded in "Chit Chat Around the Table During
Intermissions," a section ofthe Diary of Charles Cotesworth Pinckney of South
Carolina. Pickney (1746-1825) attended the Convention as a delegate, and took
down excerpts of some of the outstanding addresses and discourses, which he
later published in his diary. Perhaps the best proof of the Franklin prophecy
--as with any prophecy--lies in its actual fulfillment. What Benjamin Franklin foresaw as an ominous possibility in 1787 has today--a little over two hundred years later--become painful reality.