Taking Back Our Stolen History
HISTORY HEIST
North America

North America

Occupying the northern part of the large supercontinent known as Americas or New World, North America is surrounded by the Arctic Ocean from the north and by the Atlantic Ocean from the east, by the Pacific Ocean from the west and south. It has an overland border with South America continent, which runs along the state boundary between Panama and Colombia.

Totally in North America, there are 23 officially recognized independent states. The largest of them is Canada, followed by also rather big the United States, these two giants together occupy more than 79% of the whole continent area. The smallest country in this part of the world is Saint Kitts and Nevis, it is only two small islands in the Caribbean.

Among the most visited North American countries the number one is the USA, where New York City is considered the most attractive landmark for travelers, further followed by Mexico and Canada. (Source)

Alphabetical list of countries in North America (Click a country to view events related to it):

A
Antigua and Barbuda

B
Bahamas
Barbados
Belize

C
Canada
Costa Rica
Cuba

D
Dominica
Dominican Republic

N
Nicaragua

P
Panama

S
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines

T
Trinidad and Tobago

U
United States of America (USA)

Chronological History of Events Related to North America

The McCollum Memo is Written: The Smoking Gun of Pearl Harbor

The McCollum Memo is Written: The Smoking Gun of Pearl Harbor

On October 7, 1940, Lieutenant Commander Arthur McCollum of the Office of Naval Intelligence submitted a memo to Navy Captains Walter Anderson and Dudley Knox (whose endorsement is included in the following scans). Captains Anderson and Knox were two of President Roosevelt's most trusted military advisors. The memo, scanned below, detailed an 8 step plan to provoke Japan into attacking the United States. President Roosevelt, over ...
Charles Lindbergh Stands for America First and Against Militarism, Interventionism

Charles Lindbergh Stands for America First and Against Militarism, Interventionism

In May 1927, a shy, handsome young man from Michigan named Charles Lindbergh suddenly became the idol of millions when he landed his small airplane in Paris after a grueling 33-hour flight from New York - the first person to fly alone,nonstop, across the Atlantic ocean. Twelve years leater, this politically astute son of a United States Congressman resolved to speak out against President Franklin Roosevelt's ...
Hindenburg Disaster: The German Zeppelin Burst into Flames while Docking at Lakehurst, NJ. Was this a False Flag Intended to Provoke War?

Hindenburg Disaster: The German Zeppelin Burst into Flames while Docking at Lakehurst, NJ. Was this a False Flag Intended to Provoke War?

On May 6, 1937 the German zeppelin Hindenburg burst into flames while docking at Lakehurst, New Jersey.  The spectacular disaster brought an end to the airship era. In March 2013, major news outlets reported that the calamity’s “true” cause had been identified.  “The explosion that destroyed the Hindenburg was caused by static electricity,” said Reuters, based on a British documentary by TV host Jem Stansfield, who ...
Shiro Ishii was Given Command of Unit 731, A Human Experimentation Prison in Japanese Occupied Manchuria, China

Shiro Ishii was Given Command of Unit 731, A Human Experimentation Prison in Japanese Occupied Manchuria, China

Kept a secret for over 40 years, Unit 731 was exposed in 1984 when a graduate student at Keio Medical University in Tokyo found records of human experiments in a bookstore. The pages described the effects of massive dosages of tetanus vaccine. There were tables describing the length of time it took victims to die and recorded the muscle spasms in their bodies. After the Mancurian ...
Smedley Butler, the Most Decorated Marine in U.S. History, Publishes 'War is a Racket'

Smedley Butler, the Most Decorated Marine in U.S. History, Publishes ‘War is a Racket’

Smedley Butler became widely known for his outspoken lectures against war profiteering, U.S. military adventurism, and what he viewed as nascent fascism in the United States. In December 1933, Butler toured the country with James E. Van Zandt to recruit members for the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW). He described their effort as "trying to educate the soldiers out of the sucker class." In his speeches ...
President Franklin D. Roosevelt Extended “Normal Diplomatic Relations” to the Communist Dictatorship under Joseph Stalin in Moscow

President Franklin D. Roosevelt Extended “Normal Diplomatic Relations” to the Communist Dictatorship under Joseph Stalin in Moscow

As I argue in my book, “American Betrayal,” it’s the seminal event in modern U.S. history. On this day in 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt extended “normal diplomatic relations” to the communist dictatorship under Joseph Stalin in Moscow which began the fundamental transformation of America. In exchange for a page of Soviet concessions signed by Foreign Minister Maxim Litvinov (who, with Prohibition-era beer on his breath, returned to ...
The Agricultural Adjustment Act, or Farm Relief Bill, Enacted by FDR. Another Trojan Horse Psyop for Government to Control Food Prices?

The Agricultural Adjustment Act, or Farm Relief Bill, Enacted by FDR. Another Trojan Horse Psyop for Government to Control Food Prices?

“Curiously enough,” wrote John T. Flynn in his 1948 classic The Roosevelt Myth, “while [Franklin Roosevelt’s Secretary of Agriculture Henry] Wallace was paying out hundreds of millions to kill millions of hogs, burn oats, plow under cotton, the Department of Agriculture issued a bulletin telling the nation that the great problem of our time was our failure to produce enough food to provide the people with a mere ...
Herbert Yardley Exposes US Surveillance and Codebreaking Secrets in His Book Titled, 'The American Black Chamber'

Herbert Yardley Exposes US Surveillance and Codebreaking Secrets in His Book Titled, ‘The American Black Chamber’

On 1 June 1931, Herbert O. Yardley's The American Black Chamber stunned the world by exposing American codebreaking activities. Among the diplomatic messages uncovered by his Cipher Bureau, "the most important and far-reaching telegram" as Yardley put it was an instruction to the Japanese plenipotentiary sent to the Washington Naval Conference in 1921 (see another article). While there have been statements that the book caused Japan ...
Buck v. Bell: Supreme Court Rules in Favor of Compulsory Sterilization of the Unfit

Buck v. Bell: Supreme Court Rules in Favor of Compulsory Sterilization of the Unfit

One of the worst Supreme Court rulings in history. In the 1927 case Buck v. Bell, the court upheld a statute that enabled the state of Virginia to sterilize so-called mental defectives or imbeciles. The person in question was Carrie Buck, a poor, young woman then confined in the Virginia State Colony for Epileptics and the Feebleminded, though she was neither epileptic nor mentally disabled (only ...
The Palmer Raids Biggest Raid

The Palmer Raids Biggest Raid

Americans woke up to discover just how little their own government regarded the cherished Bill of Rights. During the night, some 4,000 of their fellow citizens were rounded up and jailed for what amounted, in most cases, to no good reason at all and no due process, either. Welcome to the story of the Palmer Raids, named for their instigator, Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer. Though largely ...