Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Yes; sometimes it annoys me to have somebody who does not know anything about conditions anywhere else in the world attack while he is himself actually a Communist. You see what I mean? A Communist to me, in a bad sense, is somebody who does not believe in free discussion. So it annoys me that somebody Bircher will tell me, "George, we are for freedom here." I said, "Just the opposite, you are not for freedom."
Mr. Jenner. That is, you have taken the position that the Bircherites are not for freedom?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. I don't like that movement personally. I dislike it very much. I have run into trouble lately in Texas before I left with some of my clients who were very much inclined in that direction.
For instance, they object to the United Nations. They put words in my mouth. I remember one day they said, "George, would you believe in abolition of the Army in the United States and creating an international force?"
I said, "No."
He said, "Well, that is what the United Nations stands for."
Mr. Jenner. Well——
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. I get sometimes into heated discussions and sometimes I say things which maybe you don't think. But I may have insulted some other people's feeling, because I don't have a hatred against anybody. I don't hate communism—hell, let them live.
Mr. Jenner. You don't hate it for somebody else, but you don't want it yourself?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. I don't want it myself; no.