The Jesuit Monetary Control of America
By James Donahue
Most people in the United States are unaware of the way the Jesuits control their lives through a complex international banking system.
The way it works is this: There is a rule of banking called the International Maritime Admiralty Law. This is in reality a Vatican Canon Law. All central banks are controlled by the Sovereign Military Order of Malta (SOAM), a secret Jesuit order. From the United States the Federal Reserve pays the Bank of England. The Bank of England bows to the Swiss Bank of International Settlements, which is the SOAM monetary system that controls all of the wealth.
Clear as mud is it not? It is cleverly designed that way so that very few people understand the system, or even want to.
We are going to try to explain this evil, twisted banking system and why it came into existence. Banks have been around for a very long time. There was a Bank of Rome that was collapsing when the Roman Empire was under siege. The City of Rome was sacked by the Imperialists in 1527 just about the time the Jesuits were coming into existence.
When Cardinal Francis Borja became the succeeding Superior General of the Jesuits and Roman Catholic universities were opened throughout Europe the decision was made to store the gold and silver in Switzerland to guard against further attacks. Thus the heart of the world banking system was established in Switzerland and it remains there to this day.
After Pope Gregory XIII granted the Jesuits the rights to deal in commerce and banking in 1572, the schools and colleges began preparing the brightest minds in Europe how to utilize usury rather than brutal conquest to overpower nations.
As this plan was evolving the reorganized Bank of Rome began opening branch offices in cities throughout Europe. The Bank of England, which opened in 1694, became the world’s first Central Bank. England in those years had established colonies and literally owned land throughout much of the world, including the American colonies.
The colonists first established their own banking system. There were no gold or silver mines so each colony issued non-interest bearing paper notes. This was working well for the colonists who were able to purchase locally manufactured goods and services for the notes they earned while employed for others.
The Bank of England, however, persuaded Parliament to pass the Stamp Act in 1765, which levied taxes on the colonists that had to be paid in specie or coin. This forced the colonists to borrow at usury from the Bank of England. This was the issue that drove the colonists to fight the American War for Independence.
Right after the revolution, the new colonial government attempted to establish a new banking system where the government issued its own value-based money. But within the year Mayer Amschel Rothschild and the European bankers established the First Bank of the United States with the help of Alexander Hamilton. This of course created the same problem that stirred the Revolutionary War. At the end of a 20-year charter, with the nation’s economy in ruins, Congress refused to renew the charter.
Rothschild demanded that England declare a new war against the United States in an effort to force the colonies to accept the English banking system. When British Prime Minister Spencer Perceval opposed another war, he was assassinated. His successor, Robert Banks Jenkinson supported a war. Thus we fought the infamous War of 1812, which the United States won. But in winning the war the states generated so much debt they were forced to form the Second Bank of the United States to cover it. Even though the colonists won the war, the Rothschild bankers got their way.
In 1832 Andrew Jackson campaigned for his second term for President with a promise to block a renewal of the charter for the Second Bank of the United States. He was elected, the bank debt was paid off, but there was an attempted assassination on Jackson’s life by a man named Richard Lawrence. Fortunately, both pistols used by Lawrence failed to fire.
President Zachary Taylor ran for office, also opposing the creation of a new Private Central Bank because of the dark history of the two earlier banks. Taylor died in 1850 after eating a bowl of cherries and milk. Arsenic poisoning was suspected.
President James Buchanan also opposed a private central bank. During a panic of 1857 Buchanan tried to limit banks from loaning more money than they had funds, and required all issued bank notes to be backed by the Federal Government. He was poisoned by arsenic but survived. Another 38 people attending the same dinner died.
The slavery issue was bubbling during Buchanan’s term and southern states were seceding. Abraham Lincoln was the next president. When faced with a civil war, Lincoln sought loans to cover the cost. When the European banks set interest at 30 percent, Lincoln refused to borrow the money. Instead he issued government money called Greenbacks.
The Union won the Civil War. After Lincoln declared that he would continue issuing Greenbacks, he was assassinated. Russian Tsar Alexander II, who gave military assistance to the Union and supported the Greenbacks, survived multiple assassination attempts until he too was murdered in 1881.
President Ruthford B. Hayes submitted to the Rothschilds banking system in 1878, and the Bank of England once again was in control of the U.S. economy.
President James Garfield ran for office in 1880 on a promise of putting government back in control of the money. Of course, Garfield also was assassinated. He was shot on July 2, 1881 and died of his wounds a few weeks later. Chester A. Arthur succeeded him.
President William McKinley ran for office in 1896 on a platform of establishing gold-backed government issued currency instead of bank notes borrowed at interest from private banks. He was fatally wounded by a bullet in Buffalo in 1901.
An attempt to create a new U.S. Central Bank under what was called the Aldrich Plan failed in 1910. The plotters met secretly on Jekyll Island, Georgia to hatch that plan.
Then in 1913, private Central Bankers of Europe including the Rothschilds of Great Britain and Germany’s Warburgs, held another secret meeting with key U.S. legislators on Jekyll Island on Christmas Eve. Thus the Federal Reserve was born. It was, in essence, The Third Bank of the United States. The nation has been operating on borrowed debt ever since.
The federal income tax also was created in 1913.
The only president to attempt to stop the Federal Reserve and put the issuance of U.S. money back in the hands of Congress since that date was President John F. Kennedy. And we all know what happened to him.
By James Donahue
Most people in the United States are unaware of the way the Jesuits control their lives through a complex international banking system.
The way it works is this: There is a rule of banking called the International Maritime Admiralty Law. This is in reality a Vatican Canon Law. All central banks are controlled by the Sovereign Military Order of Malta (SOAM), a secret Jesuit order. From the United States the Federal Reserve pays the Bank of England. The Bank of England bows to the Swiss Bank of International Settlements, which is the SOAM monetary system that controls all of the wealth.
Clear as mud is it not? It is cleverly designed that way so that very few people understand the system, or even want to.
We are going to try to explain this evil, twisted banking system and why it came into existence. Banks have been around for a very long time. There was a Bank of Rome that was collapsing when the Roman Empire was under siege. The City of Rome was sacked by the Imperialists in 1527 just about the time the Jesuits were coming into existence.
When Cardinal Francis Borja became the succeeding Superior General of the Jesuits and Roman Catholic universities were opened throughout Europe the decision was made to store the gold and silver in Switzerland to guard against further attacks. Thus the heart of the world banking system was established in Switzerland and it remains there to this day.
After Pope Gregory XIII granted the Jesuits the rights to deal in commerce and banking in 1572, the schools and colleges began preparing the brightest minds in Europe how to utilize usury rather than brutal conquest to overpower nations.
As this plan was evolving the reorganized Bank of Rome began opening branch offices in cities throughout Europe. The Bank of England, which opened in 1694, became the world’s first Central Bank. England in those years had established colonies and literally owned land throughout much of the world, including the American colonies.
The colonists first established their own banking system. There were no gold or silver mines so each colony issued non-interest bearing paper notes. This was working well for the colonists who were able to purchase locally manufactured goods and services for the notes they earned while employed for others.
The Bank of England, however, persuaded Parliament to pass the Stamp Act in 1765, which levied taxes on the colonists that had to be paid in specie or coin. This forced the colonists to borrow at usury from the Bank of England. This was the issue that drove the colonists to fight the American War for Independence.
Right after the revolution, the new colonial government attempted to establish a new banking system where the government issued its own value-based money. But within the year Mayer Amschel Rothschild and the European bankers established the First Bank of the United States with the help of Alexander Hamilton. This of course created the same problem that stirred the Revolutionary War. At the end of a 20-year charter, with the nation’s economy in ruins, Congress refused to renew the charter.
Rothschild demanded that England declare a new war against the United States in an effort to force the colonies to accept the English banking system. When British Prime Minister Spencer Perceval opposed another war, he was assassinated. His successor, Robert Banks Jenkinson supported a war. Thus we fought the infamous War of 1812, which the United States won. But in winning the war the states generated so much debt they were forced to form the Second Bank of the United States to cover it. Even though the colonists won the war, the Rothschild bankers got their way.
In 1832 Andrew Jackson campaigned for his second term for President with a promise to block a renewal of the charter for the Second Bank of the United States. He was elected, the bank debt was paid off, but there was an attempted assassination on Jackson’s life by a man named Richard Lawrence. Fortunately, both pistols used by Lawrence failed to fire.
President Zachary Taylor ran for office, also opposing the creation of a new Private Central Bank because of the dark history of the two earlier banks. Taylor died in 1850 after eating a bowl of cherries and milk. Arsenic poisoning was suspected.
President James Buchanan also opposed a private central bank. During a panic of 1857 Buchanan tried to limit banks from loaning more money than they had funds, and required all issued bank notes to be backed by the Federal Government. He was poisoned by arsenic but survived. Another 38 people attending the same dinner died.
The slavery issue was bubbling during Buchanan’s term and southern states were seceding. Abraham Lincoln was the next president. When faced with a civil war, Lincoln sought loans to cover the cost. When the European banks set interest at 30 percent, Lincoln refused to borrow the money. Instead he issued government money called Greenbacks.
The Union won the Civil War. After Lincoln declared that he would continue issuing Greenbacks, he was assassinated. Russian Tsar Alexander II, who gave military assistance to the Union and supported the Greenbacks, survived multiple assassination attempts until he too was murdered in 1881.
President Ruthford B. Hayes submitted to the Rothschilds banking system in 1878, and the Bank of England once again was in control of the U.S. economy.
President James Garfield ran for office in 1880 on a promise of putting government back in control of the money. Of course, Garfield also was assassinated. He was shot on July 2, 1881 and died of his wounds a few weeks later. Chester A. Arthur succeeded him.
President William McKinley ran for office in 1896 on a platform of establishing gold-backed government issued currency instead of bank notes borrowed at interest from private banks. He was fatally wounded by a bullet in Buffalo in 1901.
An attempt to create a new U.S. Central Bank under what was called the Aldrich Plan failed in 1910. The plotters met secretly on Jekyll Island, Georgia to hatch that plan.
Then in 1913, private Central Bankers of Europe including the Rothschilds of Great Britain and Germany’s Warburgs, held another secret meeting with key U.S. legislators on Jekyll Island on Christmas Eve. Thus the Federal Reserve was born. It was, in essence, The Third Bank of the United States. The nation has been operating on borrowed debt ever since.
The federal income tax also was created in 1913.
The only president to attempt to stop the Federal Reserve and put the issuance of U.S. money back in the hands of Congress since that date was President John F. Kennedy. And we all know what happened to him.