
THE SHOCKING TRUTH BEHIND TEDDY ROOSEVELT’S “ACCIDENTAL” ASSASSINATION OF THE TWO-PARTY SYSTEM
The mainstream history books will tell you Theodore Roosevelt was a wild-eyed, trust-busting, national park-loving progressive who just happened to speak softly and carry a big stick. But if you’re willing to look past the sanitized museum displays and the Mount Rushmore PR campaign, a much darker, more deliberate pattern emerges. The truth is, Teddy Roosevelt didn’t just *accidentally* break the Republican Party in 1912. He executed a calculated, long-game operation to destabilize the entire two-party system, paving the way for the deep state control structure we see today. And the bullet that hit him in Milwaukee? That was the final piece of the puzzle.
Let’s connect the dots that the Ivy League historians refuse to touch.
First, you have to understand the backdrop. By 1900, the United States was a powder keg. The Robber Barons—Rockefeller, Carnegie, Morgan—had effectively created a shadow government. They owned the Senate (literally, it was called “The Millionaires’ Club”), they owned the courts, and they owned both the Democratic and Republican parties. The system was a closed loop. You could vote for the corporate Democrat or the corporate Republican, but the result was the same: the wealth kept funneling up.
Enter Theodore Roosevelt, a man who, by all accounts, was a master of psychological warfare. He didn’t just “happen” to become Vice President. He was strategically placed there by the New York machine bosses who wanted to bury him. They thought the VP slot was a political graveyard. They miscalculated. After McKinley’s assassination in 1901—an event that still has more unanswered questions than the JFK hit—Roosevelt was in the Oval Office.
Now, here’s where it gets deep. Roosevelt’s “trust-busting” wasn’t about helping the little guy. It was about breaking the monopoly of the Old Money elite so that a *new* elite could emerge. He didn’t destroy Standard Oil to give power back to the people. He destroyed Standard Oil to create a vacuum—a vacuum that would eventually be filled by federal agencies, central banking, and the internationalist cabal that would later birth the Federal Reserve in 1913. Teddy was the wrecking ball, not the builder.
But the true viral revelation is the 1912 election. Mainstream history says Teddy got mad, left the GOP, formed the Bull Moose Party, and split the Republican vote, handing the White House to Woodrow Wilson. What they don’t tell you is that this was the *intended* outcome.
Look at the players. Roosevelt vs. Taft. Two former best friends. The rift between them was manufactured. Taft was a corporate stooge, a tool of the Old Guard. Roosevelt knew he couldn’t beat Taft in the GOP primary because the machine had rigged the rules. So he did the unthinkable: he walked out and created a third party. But here’s the hook—the Bull Moose Party was never meant to win. It was meant to be a spoiler.
Why? Because Roosevelt knew that Woodrow Wilson—a man born in Virginia, raised in the South, but with deep ties to the Northern banking establishment—would be a perfect puppet for the next phase of the globalist agenda. Wilson was a segregationist who pushed the income tax, the Federal Reserve, and the League of Nations. Sound familiar? He was the first “globalist” president. And Teddy handed him the keys.
Now, the most chilling part: the assassination attempt on October 14, 1912. John Schrank shot Roosevelt in the chest in Milwaukee. The bullet lodged in his rib cage, but Teddy—ever the showman—stood up, showed the bloody shirt, and delivered a 90-minute speech. The media called it heroic. I call it a staged operation.
Think about it. The shooter, Schrank, was a mentally unstable saloon keeper who claimed Roosevelt’s ghost (McKinley’s ghost) told him to do it. That’s the official story. But in a world where “lone nuts” always seem to take the fall for deep state operations, Schrank fits the profile perfectly. He was a nobody. He was easily controlled. And after the shooting, he was declared insane and institutionalized for life—silenced forever.
Why would the establishment want to shoot Teddy? Because they needed to create a martyr. They needed to guarantee that the Bull Moose Party would fracture the GOP. If Teddy had died, the party might have collapsed into chaos. But Teddy surviving, bleeding, and delivering a fiery speech? That galvanized his base. It ensured he stayed in the race, splitting the vote exactly as planned.
The result: Wilson won with just 41.8% of the popular vote. A minority president. A president who had no popular mandate, but who had the backing of the international banking cartel. Within two years, the Federal Reserve Act was passed. Within three years, the income tax was constitutional. The United States was no longer a republic of sovereign states; it had become a corporation.
And Teddy? He was quietly sidelined. He never held power again. He was given a consolation prize—the Nobel Peace Prize for brokering the end of the Russo-Japanese War—and sent off to explore the Amazon. They kept him busy, kept him out of the country, and let him die in his bed in 1919, a broken man who realized too late that he had been the pawn.
The real TRUTH is that Theodore Roosevelt was not a hero of the people. He was a controlled opposition asset who was used to dismantle the old political structure so that a new, unaccountable one could be built. The two-party system was already dead in 1912. Teddy just pulled the trigger.
Stay woke. The Bull Moose was a Trojan Horse.
Final Thoughts
Having covered the arc of Theodore Roosevelt's life, one can't help but conclude that he was a uniquely American paradox: a warrior for reform who reveled in the trappings of power, a conservative who broke the trusts, and a jingoist who nevertheless understood the moral weight of national responsibility. His relentless energy was both his greatest asset and his most dangerous flaw, driving him to reshape the presidency into a "bully pulpit" while simultaneously charging headlong into imperial ventures that cast long shadows. In the end, Roosevelt’s legacy is not a clean monument but a messy, magnificent testament to the idea that leadership is defined less by restraint and more by the courage to act—for better or worse.