"This war is an English war and its goal is the destruction of Germany."
-- Winston Churchill (-- Autumn 1939 broadcast)
Germany's government-issued, value-based currency was a direct threat to the wealth and power of privately-owned central banks throughout Europe, and so, as early as 1933, these banks started to organize a global boycott against Germany, the purpose being to strangle this upstart nation that thought it could break free of privately-owned central banks and their bankster owners.
Then, just as had been the case in World War I, Great Britain and other nations, threatened by Germany's economic power, looked for an excuse to go to war, and as public anger in Germany grew, over this aggravating boycott, the militaristic Hitler foolishly gave them that excuse (to go to war). Years later, in a spirit of candor, the real reasons for that war were made clear:
"The war wasn't only about abolishing fascism, but to conquer sales markets. We could have, if we had intended so, prevented this war from breaking out without firing one shot, but we didn't want to." -- Winston Churchill to Truman (Fultun, USA March 1946)
"Germany's unforgivable crime before WWII was its attempt to loosen its economy out of the world trade system and to build up an independent exchange system from which world-finance (i.e. privately owned central banks) couldn't profit anymore."
--Winston Churchill (The Second World War -- Bern, 1960)
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