‘The China Opium Trade’
James Bradley is the author of the best-selling The China Mirage: The Hidden History of American Disaster in Asia (Little
Brown, 2015). In these excerpts from his interview with John Pilger, he
describes how modern America was built on the ‘China trade’.
James Bradley: For most of American history, it was illegal for
someone like me to know a Chinese. The Chinese came to America to mine
gold and build the railroads, and Americans decided we didn’t like
competition. So in 1882 we had the Chinese Exclusion Acts, which kept
the Chinese out of the United States for about 100 years. Just at the
point we were putting up the Statue of Liberty saying we welcome
everybody, we were erecting a wall saying: ‘We welcome everybody except
those Chinese.’
John Pilger: And yet, for the American elite in the 19th century, China was a goldmine.
JB: A goldmine of drugs. Warren Delano, the grandfather of
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, was the American opium king of China; he was
the biggest American opium dealer, second only to the British. Much of
the east coast [establishment] of the United States – Columbia, Harvard,
Yale, Princeton – was born of drug money. The American industrial
revolution was funded by huge pools of money – where did this come from?
It came from illegal drugs in the biggest market in the world: China.
JP: So the grandfather of the most liberal president, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, was a drug runner?
JB: Yes. Franklin Delano Roosevelt never made much money in his
life. He had public-service jobs that were very lowly paid, but he
inherited a fortune from Warren Delano, his father. Now if you scratch
anyone with the name Forbes, you’ll find opium money… such as John
Forbes Kerry…
JP: That’s the present Secretary of State [during Obama's administration].
JB: Yes. His great-grandfather [Francis Blackwell Forbes] was an
opium dealer. How big was opium money? Opium money built the first
industrial city in the United States. It built the first five railroads.
But it wasn’t talked about. It was called the China trade.
No comments:
Post a Comment