are the modus operandi
of the bankers. You’ve heard of names like Rothschild and
Rockefeller. What do they have in common? They both became
rich and powerful using these unfair and corrupt methods and
the law never stopped them as they achieved their goals.
During the great Anglo-French battle of Waterloo in 1815 the
London Stock Exchange was thrown into disorder. If Napoleon
won, the market would be ruined, but if he lost, the market would
be enriched. Rothschild saw this battle as an opportunity to make a
fortune for himself. Using messenger pigeons and signals from boats
along the English Channel he was the first to learn that Napoleon
lost. He quickly spread false information that Napoleon had won to
the London Stock Exchange. He started selling his shares with others
following him and the price of securities went spriraling downward.
Rothschild and his partners, knowing that England had
actually won, bought all the shares for a pittance. A day later,
when the London Stock Exchange learnt about the victory of
England, those shares skyrocketed and were worth a fortune.
Nathan Rothschild earned 40 million pounds on this information
flip. This fraud went down in history as one of many examples
showing the impropriety bankers and their principles.
Rothschild Rockefeller
Rothschild was a great deceiver, however Rockefeller often
used openly criminal methods for doing business ruining the
businesses of his competitors. His criminal infamy reached such
a level that mothers used his name to frighten their misbehaving
children.
The ability to print money without constraint is the dream
of any financier allowing him or her to print as much he desires.
This large supply of money was used to seize the treasures and
resources of others from around the world. Millions were robbed
of the opportunity to share the wealth of the world. The Federal
Reserve engaged in the bribing of politicians, the take-over of
competition and the buying of entire governments in order to
strengthen its position. And in order to protect its position it
financed the world’s strongest army, that of the United States of
America.
What does an ambitious entrepreneur do if he can obtain
a surplus of money? He expands his business. And that is
what the bankers did. In order to increase their earnings
they began to give out loans. This also began to happen
on a governmental level giving out massive loans to build
up armies through the sale of arms and pitting one country
against the other. This led to the destruction of countries,
which gave the banks the opportunity to turn around and
begin giving loans for the rebuilding of these countries, and
the cycle repeated itself. The First and Second World Wars
were examples of this scenario.
Shortly after the FRS was established, the First World
War began. It culminated in the collapse of two currencies
secured with gold – the Russian ruble and the German mark.
However, many American businessmen opposed the bankers
and realized the real motives of the financial robber barons.
In 1929 the Great Depression began. The discount rate of
the FRS suddenly increased and almost half the money
supply was withdrawn from the economy making the credit
cost skyrocket.
Companies that relied on credit went bankrupt and
the regular investors’ lives were ruined by the gratuitous
consumer loans. Securities were not worth a penny and
millions people became unemployed and idle. Some
people flaunt the idea that during the depression in the
United States all of the country’s assets were lost. But this
is not what happened, when someone loses value – another
receives it. The well-kept secret is who had bought those
assets. Those who control the FRS bought them, the same
people who organized the economic depression with the
help of the FRS.
In 1932 Franklin Delano Roosevelt was elected president
of the US. He began “fighting the crisis”. US citizens were
barred from possessing precious metals and had to hand
them over to the authorized banks, or the owner would face
a prison sentence. Soon after the expropriation the price of
gold went up significantly.
At the same time American industry was being procured
by the bank clans and the FRS. This was not only about
saving American industry.
Not everybody kept silent, congressman and banker from
Pennsylvania, Louis McFadden, gave a famous speech that exposed
the Great Depression. In a highlight he said: “It was no accident.
It was a carefully contrived occurrence. The International Bankers
sought to bring about a condition of despair here so they might
emerge as the rulers of us all”. In 1936 the politician suddenly died
at the age of 50.
World War II made the United States the world’s richest
country. Investments in the construction plans of the Third Reich
were successful. The list of American backers of Hitler included
names like Rockefeller and Morgan. In the summer of 1929, at a
special meeting of bankers, representatives of the Morgan Financial
and industrial group acknowledged the need to support the German
Nazi movement.
At the end of the war, in 1944, all States signed the
Bretton Woods agreement, which made the dollar the only
legitimate global reserve currency. Since 1944 these green
papers, printed by a private organization and unsecured,
were supposed to be used for all the settlements and storage
of foreign-exchange reserves. However, the US suddenly
experienced problems.
The young and charismatic president John Fitzgerald
Kennedy –