Creature from Jekyll Island
Below is an excerpt from We The People, Free As Slaves. It surely applies to what is happening in the world today.
There were certain principles the Rothschilds, Illuminati, and all the groups, which eventually evolved by whatever name, followed. These principles are outlined in The Creature from Jekyll Island, by G. Edward Griffin, p. 230. (Hereafter abbreviated in footnotes as “The Creature….”)
1. War is the ultimate discipline to any government. If it can successfully meet the challenge of war, it will survive. If it cannot, it will perish. All else is secondary. The sanctity of its laws, the prosperity of its citizens, and the solvency of its treasury will be quickly sacrificed by any government in its primal act of self-survival.
2. All that is necessary, therefore, to insure that a government will maintain or expand its debt is to involve it in war or the threat of war. The greater the threat and the more destructive the war, the greater the need for debt.
3. To involve a country in war or the threat of war, it will be necessary for it to have enemies with credible military might. If such enemies already exist, all the better. If they exist but lack military strength, it will be necessary to provide them the money to build their war machine. If an enemy does not exist at all, then it will be necessary to create one by financing the rise of a hostile regime.
4. The ultimate obstacle is a government which declines to finance its wars through debt. Although this seldom happens, when it does, it will be necessary to encourage internal political opposition, insurrection, or revolution to replace that government with one that is more compliant to our will. The assassination of heads of state could play an important role in this process
5. No nation can be allowed to remain militarily stronger than its adversaries, for that could lead to peace and a reduction of debt. To accomplish this balance of power, it may be necessary to finance both sides of the conflict. Unless one of the combatants is hostile to our interest and, therefore, must be destroyed, neither side should be allowed a decisive victory or defeat. While we must always proclaim the virtues of peace, the unspoken objective is perpetual war. (The Creature from Jekyll Island, p. 230)
Shortly after the formation of the Illuminati, May 1, 1776, an obstacle appeared to the Illuminati plan. It was the formation of the United States of America. This was a government by the people, rather than by a hierarchy. Clearly, a new tactic had to be employed.
Therefore, after the American Revolution and the formation of the country, the Rothschilds began to try to gain control of the money. They tried to establish a central bank to issue “debt money” which would be paid back to the bankers with interest. Alexander Hamilton was paid to work on the bankers’ (Rothschilds) behalf. He was also given money to bribe members of Congress to vote for the central bank.
There were certain principles the Rothschilds, Illuminati, and all the groups, which eventually evolved by whatever name, followed. These principles are outlined in The Creature from Jekyll Island, by G. Edward Griffin, p. 230. (Hereafter abbreviated in footnotes as “The Creature….”)
1. War is the ultimate discipline to any government. If it can successfully meet the challenge of war, it will survive. If it cannot, it will perish. All else is secondary. The sanctity of its laws, the prosperity of its citizens, and the solvency of its treasury will be quickly sacrificed by any government in its primal act of self-survival.
2. All that is necessary, therefore, to insure that a government will maintain or expand its debt is to involve it in war or the threat of war. The greater the threat and the more destructive the war, the greater the need for debt.
3. To involve a country in war or the threat of war, it will be necessary for it to have enemies with credible military might. If such enemies already exist, all the better. If they exist but lack military strength, it will be necessary to provide them the money to build their war machine. If an enemy does not exist at all, then it will be necessary to create one by financing the rise of a hostile regime.
4. The ultimate obstacle is a government which declines to finance its wars through debt. Although this seldom happens, when it does, it will be necessary to encourage internal political opposition, insurrection, or revolution to replace that government with one that is more compliant to our will. The assassination of heads of state could play an important role in this process
5. No nation can be allowed to remain militarily stronger than its adversaries, for that could lead to peace and a reduction of debt. To accomplish this balance of power, it may be necessary to finance both sides of the conflict. Unless one of the combatants is hostile to our interest and, therefore, must be destroyed, neither side should be allowed a decisive victory or defeat. While we must always proclaim the virtues of peace, the unspoken objective is perpetual war. (The Creature from Jekyll Island, p. 230)
Shortly after the formation of the Illuminati, May 1, 1776, an obstacle appeared to the Illuminati plan. It was the formation of the United States of America. This was a government by the people, rather than by a hierarchy. Clearly, a new tactic had to be employed.
Therefore, after the American Revolution and the formation of the country, the Rothschilds began to try to gain control of the money. They tried to establish a central bank to issue “debt money” which would be paid back to the bankers with interest. Alexander Hamilton was paid to work on the bankers’ (Rothschilds) behalf. He was also given money to bribe members of Congress to vote for the central bank.
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