The European bankster planned to conquer America by helping precipitate civil war and then taking over our central bank
Before you can fully understand this takeover of our government's central bank by private interests in the late 19th century (and again in 1913), it's necessary to look more carefully at the origins of the coup d'etat which that takeover represents.
We've all been taught that the main reasons for the civil war had to do with the issue of slavery, but consider for a moment the possibility of another cause as well: the attempt by a European (mainly British) elite to foment still further the divide between our northern and southern states, which would, with any luck (for these early banksters), then leave our country greatly weakened by war, thereby creating an opportunity for these bloodsuckers to conquer the finances of our country and eventually, in many ways, conquer the country itself. (Matt Taibbi's colorful description suddenly comes to mind:
"The world's most powerful investment bank is a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money. In fact, the history of the recent financial crisis doubles as a history of the rapid decline and fall of the suddenly swindled-dry American empire, . ."
As German Chancellor Bismarck observed:
"The division of the United States into federations of equal force [The North & The South] was decided long before the Civil War. These bankers were afraid that the United States would upset their financial domination over the world."
And today, this long forgotten and controversial part of Britain's past is being unearthed by an American historian living in London. Tom Sebrell has uncovered evidence of strong support for the southern Confederate states in America's Civil War. While Britain was officially neutral during the war, Sebrell is now leading walking tours of London that reveal untold stories of Britain's role in this war.
Well before the shadowy birth of our current Federal Reserve System, on Jekyll Island in 1913, we had a true, nationally-owned bank, created in 1791 with the support of Alexander Hamilton. It lasted until 1811. In those days, (privately owned) banks were given limited charters only, because our forefathers knew the immense power, to threaten the state, that could grow out of too-powerful banks that were privately owned -- in just the same way that immense power to threaten the state could grow out of too-powerful corporations, privately owned.
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