Kenneth Goff

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Kenneth Goff

Kenneth Goff (September 19, 1914 - April 11, 1972) was an anti-fluoride, Christian Identity, anti-Communist minister. He was the 1944 national chairman of Gerald L. K. Smith's Christian Youth for America.

Biography[edit]

According to his biographical material, he was a member of the Communist Party of the United States of America (CPUSA) from May 2, 1936, to October 9, 1939, when he testified before the Dies Committee. He claimed that while in the CPUSA he infiltrated youth organizations and worked for Communist front organizations, maintaining links with Communist leaders both in the U.S. and the U.S.S.R., in order to lay the groundwork for Communist revolution in the United States. He also claimed that his testimony before the Dies Committee led to the dismissal of 169 federal employees.[1]: 120  He died at the age of 57 in Chicago in 1972 during a speaking tour.[2]

Following his appearance before the Dies Committee, Goff made numerous speaking tours and was the author of 28 books, numerous tracts and several periodicals, including from 1962-1967 The Pilgrim Torch.[1]: 120  In his 1954 book, Hitler and the Twentieth Century Hoax, which denied the Holocaust, Goff claimed that Hitler was a Communist agent, hinted he was Jewish, and also that Hitler was still alive and would reappear to advance Communism.[1]: 121 [3] He also claimed that both hippies and desegregation were part of a Communist plot.[1]: 120-121  He told the Dies Committee that the Communists were in favor of water fluoridation, because they intended to take over water treatment plants and threaten to poison the water supply with fluoride if Americans did not surrender.[4]

Goff's main influence on Christian Identity came through his leadership of the Soldiers of the Cross Training Institute, located in Evergreen, Colorado, which trained Christian Identity ministers, including Dan Gayman of the Church of Israel and Thomas Robb, pastor of the Christian Revival Center and National Director of The Knights Party (KKK). The Institute provided courses on Christianity, politics, survivalism and other subjects.[1]: 121-122 

On The Joe Pyne Show Episode #12 1965, Joe Pyne asked Kenneth Goff if he were anti-Semitic. He dodged the question by saying Arabs are included in the term Semitic. Then, Joe Pyne said "Jesus was a Jew." Kenneth Goff said "Jesus could not be a Jew because Jesus was human and Jews aren't."

In his 1970 book, The Hoaxers: Plain Liars, Fancy Liars and Damned Liars, Morris Kominsky claimed that Goff was the author of Brain-Washing, a book that purported to be a condensation of a work by Lavrentiy Beria, the Soviet secret police chief.[5]

Goff has also been attributed with creating the "strangled to death quote", which he falsely attributed to the CPUSA leader, Gus Hall. The purported quote was:

I dream of the hour when the last congressman is strangled to death on the guts of the last preacher-and since the Christians seem to love to sing about the blood, why not give them a little of it? Slit the throats of their children [and] draw them over the mourners' bench and the pulpit and allow them to drown in their own blood, and then see whether they enjoy singing those hymns.

The quote is evocative of Denis Diderot, the eighteenth-century philosopher who allegedly wrote, "I should like to see ... the last king strangled with the guts of the last priest." The evangelist Jerry Falwell used the false quote as late as 1980.[6]

In 2011, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police released a 1960 letter from Goff to the anti-Communist writer Pat Walsh, which claimed that Canadian socialist leader Tommy Douglas had been active in Communist circles in the 1930s. According to Goff, "Premier Douglas was a preacher in Chicago about the time I was a member of the Communist Party and he attended party rallies on the University campus presided over by Claude Lightfoot and Morris Childs".[7]

Books[edit]

  • Brainwashed Into Slavery, by Kenneth Goff, 63 pages
  • They would destroy our way of life (1944) 48 pages
  • Traitors in the Pulpit and Treason Toward God (1946) 61 pages
  • Confessions of Stalin's Agent (1948) 78 pages text
  • Red betrayal of youth (1948) 32 pages
  • The Soviet Art Of Brainwashing - A Synthesis of the Russian Textbook on Psychopolitics (1950)
  • Will Russia Invade America? (1951) 63 pages
  • Communism in America (1952)
  • The scarlet woman of Revelation (1952) 32 pages
  • One World a Red World (1952) 64 pages
  • The Long Arm of Stalin (1952) 63 pages
  • Hitler and the Twentieth Century Hoax (1954) 72 pages. Goff suggests Hitler was a communist agent and may have survived the fall of Berlin.
  • Strange Fire (The Church, Christianity & Communism in America) (1954) hardcover
  • The flying saucers: From Russia, from another planet, from God (1955) 32 pages
  • AMERICA: Zion of God (1955) 80 pages
  • Reds Promote Racial War (1958) 76 pages
  • Red Shadows (1959) 93 pages
  • Still 'tis Our Ancient Foe (1962)
  • Red tide (1962) 63 pages
  • Crackpot or crack shot (1964) 10 pages
  • Satanism - the father of Communism (1968) 72 pages
  • Red atrocities against Christians (1968) 63 pages
  • Reds launch war to destroy white race (1969)
  • From Babylon to Baruch
  • Pilgrim Torch (c.1946-1967)
  • Christian Battle Cry (1966-1971)

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e Kaplan, Jeffrey (2000). Encyclopedia of White Power: A Sourcebook on the Radical Racist Right. Altamira Press. pp. 120–122. ISBN 0742503402. OL 18110106M.
  2. ^ "Communism Foe Rev. Goff Dies". Associated Press. April 13, 1972. Retrieved January 16, 2013 – via Greeley Tribune.
  3. ^ Durham, Martin (2007). White Rage: The Extreme Right and American Politics. Routledge. p. 63. ISBN 9780415362337. OL 10204042M.
  4. ^ Hodapp, Christopher; Von Kannon, Alice (2008). Conspiracy Theories & Secret Societies for Dummies. Wiley Publishing. p. 49. ISBN 9780470184080. OL 23125405M.
  5. ^ Kominsky, Morris (1970). The Hoaxers: Plain Liars, Fancy Liars and Damned Liars. Boston: Branden Press. p. 539. ISBN 0-8283-1288-5. OCLC 129413.
  6. ^ Boller, Paul F.; George, John (1990). They Never Said It: A Book of Fake Quotes, Misquotes, and Misleading Attributions. Oxford University Press US. p. 44. ISBN 0195064690. OL 7386842M.
  7. ^ Lilley, Brian (February 20, 2011). "RCMP's secret files on Tommy Douglas". QMI agency. Archived from the original on January 15, 2013. Retrieved August 13, 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)

External links[edit]