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Philander Chase Knox was born in 1853 in western
Pennsylvania, son of a bank cashier. While attending college
in Ohio, he became closely acquainted with William McKinley,
then the local district attorney, who was prosecuting a local
tavern owner for selling alcohol to the college students. Knox
took McKinley's advice and became a lawyer.
McKinley, having chaired the powerful House Ways and Means
Committee in Congress, was elected governor of Ohio in 1891.
Although he owed his election to support from both business
and labor, he quelled the labor strike called by Eugene V.
Debs against the Great Northern Railroad in 1894 by summoning
federal troops.
McKinley won the 1896 presidential race with a great deal
of support from Big Business, e.g., John D. Rockefeller's
Standard Oil contributed $250,000 to the "front
porch" campaign that defeated Bryan and his populist
platform of returning to the constitutionally mandated
monetary system and reform of McKinley's high tariffs that had
allowed domestic manufacturers to raise their prices to a
level that matched the artificially-induced higher prices of
foreign goods, thus causing a severe depression. Knox helped
in this financial and political effort that was directed by
the wealthy Ohio industrialist Mark Hanna, who was appointed
to a vacant U.S. Senate seat the following year by Ohio's
governor. McKinley had already been saved from personal
financial ruin by help from his old friend, Philander Knox,
who had become wealthy as counsel to the very wealthy.
Knox came to be regarded as one of the ablest lawyers in
the country, his repute due in no small measure to his being
counsel for Carnegie and Vanderbilt and their corporate
enterprises. He was instrumental in Carnegie's big victory in
a crucial patent case in which the most important invention
for the manufacture of crude steel was at stake. In 1892, he
defended Henry Frick, Carnegie's steel plant manager, who was
being sued by the steel workers who had been beaten up by
Pinkertons brought in by Frick during the infamous Homestead
strike, a strike that was provoked by two of Carnegie's
presidents, one of whom was also an attorney for J.P. Morgan.
Knox also deflected prosecution and civil suit against
Carnegie in 1894 after it was shown to Congress that Carnegie
had defrauded the Navy with inferior armor plate for U.S.
warships. Morgan himself had defrauded the U.S. Army in arms
sales during the Civil War. And Knox averted prosecution of
Carnegie after the president of the Morgan-controlled
Pennsylvania Railroad testified that Carnegie had regularly
received illegal kickbacks from the railroad. Knox's other big
client at the time, the Vanderbilt family, was connected to
Carnegie primarily through the railroad industry.
President McKinley offered Knox the post of U.S. Attorney
General in 1899, but Knox had to decline, because he was then
and for two more years engaged in arranging the merger of the
railroad, oil, coal, iron and steel interests of Carnegie,
J.P. Morgan, Rockefeller, and other robber barons into the
largest conglomerate in history - U.S. Steel. This immense
corporation encompassed the interests of nearly all the robber
barons in what Knox's new client, J.P. Morgan, referred to as
a "community of interest." One important component
of the conglomerate was Consolidated Iron Mines in the Mesabi
Range of Minnesota, which Rockefeller had fraudulently
swindled from the Merritt family, who later successfully sued
John D. for fraud, but had to settle for a fraction of the
award because they ran out of money during Rockefeller's
appeals.
After the U.S. Steel merger, Knox accepted McKinley's offer
to make him Attorney General, an appointment that was
personally promoted by Carnegie in a letter to McKinley and by
Morgan in a personal visit to the White House. The appointment
was strenuously and loudly opposed by anti-trust forces, since
it would then be up to Knox to prosecute anti-trust law
violations against the very robber barons who had been his
clients for many years and who had made him a wealthy man.
Sure enough, the public outcry to investigate the big new U.S.
Steel monster that Knox had created met with Knox's response
that he knew nothing and could do nothing, and nothing is what
he did.
After McKinley's assassination in 1901, Knox continued as
Attorney General under Theodore Roosevelt. Even though
Roosevelt labeled himself as a "trust-buster," Knox
saw to it that very little harm came to his benefactors. U.S.
Steel was unscathed, and most of the actions that were taken
against the railroad companies were largely done with the
urging of the railroad giants themselves, who were the
strongest advocates of federal regulation of the industry,
because that regulation, with their own agents working in the
federal commissions, enabled them to gain greater control over
the industry, be protected from competition, and maintain
prices. The best-known anti-trust case was against Northern
Securities, a railroad holding company formed by Morgan as a
show of strength for the benefit of Hill, Harriman,
Rockefeller, and their bankers, Kuhn, Loeb & Company. The
dissolution of Northern by the Supreme Court in 1904 was
deemed "inconsequential" by the financial press,
since the two major railroads it encompassed had not been
competing anyway, and the defendants ended up suffering no
loss. Knox, of course, did not pursue any of the
criminal sanctions that he should have undertaken against his
former allies and clients, but the case gave the appearance
that Roosevelt was doing something and was a public relations
success for the president. But Roosevelt, while touting
himself as an anti-trust champion, disparaged and labeled as
"muckrakers" those journalists who actually
investigated and exposed the corrupt activities of the robber
barons.
Harriman's great fortune had been acquired through a series
of fraudulent maneuvers, key of which was legislation signed
by Roosevelt, at that time governor of New York, allowing New
York banks to invest in railroad bonds being sold by Harriman
and his partners at inflated prices. Hill profited
enormously from fraud, deceit, and outright theft involving
vast amounts of public lands that were given to the railroads
and then resold, or raped and then traded to the government
for new lands. The Vanderbilt fortune had also gained
greatly from fraudulent maneuvers involving railroad
securities and Cornelius's evasion of taxes. When all
this was investigated after Cornelius's death, Morgan came to
the Vanderbilt's rescue (managing to take control of their New
York Central Railroad in the process).
Knox persuaded Roosevelt that the anti-trust laws should be
accompanied by increased regulation of business. He
advocated and drafted federal statutes that gave his rich and
powerful friends even more power and control over interstate
commerce - setting rates and eliminating competition in
restraint of trade - all under federal authority and with
agents of the conglomerates appointed to and sitting on the
governmental boards and commissions. This plan derived
from and implemented a strategy set by Morgan and the other
robber barons at a meeting in 1889. Knox continued in
this vein as a U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania, being appointed
to a vacant seat by Pennsylvania's governor in 1904 at the
behest of several powerful capitalists, including Carnegie's
man, former client Frick (which showed they approved of Knox's
handling of anti-trust matters as Attorney General).
Knox, by now a multi-millionaire, was in the Senate when
the Morgan-controlled financial Panic of 1907 hit, which led
to a congressional inquiry into the monetary and banking
systems. Senator Nelson Aldrich (father of the wife of John D.
Rockefeller, Jr. and namesake and god-father of Nelson A.
Rockefeller) led the inquiry producing the 1912 report that
recommended a national bank (controlled and owned by the
robber barons) and ultimately resulted in the Federal Reserve
Act of 1913, co-authored by Aldrich and Robert Owens. Owens
later testified to Congress that the banking industry
conspired to create financial panics like the one in 1907 in
order to rouse the people to demand reform - reform that would
be directed by, and to the benefit of, the very financial
experts who had caused the panic.
Knox resigned from the Senate and became Secretary of State
under President Taft from Ohio in 1909. He was the most
powerful figure in the Taft administration, and drew up the
lists from which Taft appointed his other cabinet members,
many of whom were intimately concerned with the giant
corporations. He was Taft's primary confidante.
Knox became active in organizing the international court at
The Hague, and fought hard for the Rockefeller/Morgan-inspired
concept of a League of Nations, although U.S. opposition to
the Treaty of Versailles forced him to temper his public views
on the League. He proclaimed the era of "Dollar
Diplomacy," his legacy to U.S. foreign policy, under
which the Secretary of State's office was used to promote and
protect American commercial and industrial interests in
foreign countries, especially in Latin America, but also in
East Asia and even Europe. This period of U.S. imperialism
featured the annexation of Hawaii in the 1890s at the request
of American businesses there despite the unanimous opposition
by Hawaiians; the taking of Cuba and the Philippines from the
Spanish as well as from the native rebels whom the U.S had
ostensibly come to assist in gaining their liberty (this
included the massive slaughter of a hundred thousand Filipinos
by the U.S Army in a war in which the news media was censored.
(even William Randolph Hearst, who had helped instigate the
war with Spain, was aghast and disgusted.)
Then came the Honduras financial crisis of 1909, in which Knox
brokered a deal for J.P. Morgan & Company to make huge
loans to that country, backed by the full faith and credit of
the U.S., and for American bankers to take control of the
Honduras taxing authority (to ensure adequate cash flow to
make the loan payments). Knox's diplomatic maneuvers resulted
in the U.S. Navy being sent to support and give victory to
rebel forces in Nicaragua, who then made arrangements, again
devised by Knox, to give control of Nicaraguan taxing
authority and tax collection to Americans. American bankers
then immediately made big loans to Nicaragua, once again
guaranteed by the U.S. government, providing a risk-free
investment environment for Knox's banker friends.
Knox tried to conduct the same kind of activity in the rest
of Central America and much of South America as well, and used
America's claim against the Chinese from the Boxer Rebellion
to coerce China to deal with a syndicate of Harriman and his
bankers Kuhn & Loeb, Morgan and his First National Bank,
and the Rockefeller-controlled National City Bank, instead of
with the British, French, and Germans, in a scheme to
establish a round-the-world transportation system using
American steamship and railroad lines. There was even action
by Morgan's man in that syndicate, Henry Davidson, to supply
arms to the Bolsheviks in hopes of gaining oil and commerce
concessions in Russia if they were victorious.
At the international level, Knox has been criticized for
oafish and heavy-handed diplomacy that caused ill will and
damaged the reputation of the United States worldwide. His
conduct was more that of a huckster than a diplomat.
Domestically, Knox's influence extended to the Supreme Court,
where he succeeded in having Taft appoint three justices who
were extremely sympathetic to the big business trusts:
Devanter, Lamar, and Pitney. The first two of these had
formerly had clients among the big corporate trusts, including
the railroads.
The 16th Amendment itself was given its decisive shove
through Congress in 1909 by Sen. Nelson Aldrich of Rhode
Island (co-author of the Federal Reserve Act of 1913), who
spoke for the "community of interest' of both Morgan and
Rockefeller. This represented and led to an astonishing
reversal of attitudes among the old-line big-business
conservatives in the Senate, who had long staunchly opposed an
income tax. Obviously, something was afoot to change their
minds. It was that the robber barons had already figured out
how to avoid the proposed income tax, especially through the
establishment and use of foundations, the number of which grew
from 18 in 1910 to 94 by 1920 and 267 by 1930. The super-rich
have avoided the income tax ever since, leaving it to be paid
instead by the middle and lower classes.
CONCLUSIONS
Deceit and fraud were, for the robber barons, standard
operating procedures - among the numerous underhanded methods
they typically employed to achieve their objectives. Knox had
protected them from fraud charges many times. His term as
Attorney General was itself a big fraud in regard to
enforcement of the anti-trust laws, especially against former
clients to whom he owed so much of his own professional
success.
Besides preying on the government with their fraudulent
activities, the robber barons employed a strategy of locking
in and stabilizing their advantageous positions by using
government authority and regulations to reduce competition,
keep prices at very profitable levels, control labor problems,
minimize risk, and generally make themselves quite
comfortable. They also expanded their scope of operations,
including financing and extension of credit, to other
countries and used government to aid them in these adventures.
Knox, of course, was a key man, perhaps the key man, in the
Administration in all of this, both as Attorney General and
then as Secretary of State.
J.P. Morgan seems to have been the real genius and
visionary behind much of this strategy. His background was
more oriented to finance, and his financial acumen enabled him
to make inroads against the other robber barons on their own
turfs - a robber baron's robber baron. He was regarded as more
cultured and cosmopolitan than most of the others, and perhaps
that is why he was able to envision and plan on such an
international scale. His financial perspective helped him to
see the benefits of making monetary loans to governments and
securing them with strong and reliable methods of tax
collection.
One might wonder why Knox seemed to be in such a hurry in
1913 to declare the 16th amendment ratified. We can see that
it was because of the Federal Reserve Act of 1913. It was
important to the banking interests that would be lending money
to the U.S government that there be an assured flow of
revenue, especially since the robber barons would be removing
themselves from the income tax system. Just as an ordinary
bank wants to know that a borrower who is given a mortgage has
a cash flow adequate to meet the payments, so the banks
comprising the Federal Reserve System wanted to be sure the
federal government had a dependable method of tax collection
in place to provide ample money to pay its debts to them. The
income tax and the Federal Reserve are inextricably tied
together; it was not mere coincidence that they happened in
the same year. The robber barons, their bankers, and Knox had
developed this concept and practiced it in Latin America, and
in 1913 they were ready to apply it to the United States.
In less than a month after proclaiming the 16th amendment
ratified, Knox returned to private practice in Pittsburgh,
resigning as Secretary of State so that the new president,
Woodrow Wilson, could appoint his own man to the post.* One
gets the distinct impression that getting the amendment
through the ratification process had indeed been his ultimate
goal; he wasn't just a disinterested public official
objectively administering the procedure. If he hadn't declared
it ratified before leaving office, there was no way to know or
control what his successor would do.
The title of this piece asks whether it's credible that
Knox would commit fraud in ratifying the 16th amendment. We
leave it to readers to decide for themselves, but for us, it
seems like a "no-brainer." He would and he did.
*Taft's brand of republicanism had upset Roosevelt enough
that the latter ran again for President in 1912. His third
party "Bull Moose" candidacy spoiled Taft's
re-election, and Democrat Wilson won.
Link: http://www.givemeliberty.org/features/taxes/philanderknox.htm