The creation of the Federal Reserve is an instructive story
of how the Big Banks took over Washington. There were two central banks in the
country’s history that were so destructive to the nation’s economy that both
lasted only the length of their charter, which was twenty years. The third,
known as the Federal Reserve, has lasted almost one hundred. In 1910, the big
bankers knew how difficult it would be to convince Congress to pass a bill to
establish a central bank. If the bankers were honest in their demands – to
establish a private banking cartel that would control the printing of money,
and get taxpayers to cover risky bank bets – the public would never accept it.
The central bank had to appear as if it were something that it wasn’t. It
wouldn’t even have the word ‘bank’ in its name. No bankers would be associated
with the bill, so their connection to it would not be in evidence. The central
bank’s true objectives would never be stated, and false objectives would be
offered in their place. The banking PR machine went into full swing, singing
the praises of a Federal Reserve. It would get politics out of financial
policy. It would stabilize the banks and the economy. Still, there was enough
dissent that the bill was not tabled until three days before Christmas, when
most representatives were home for the holidays. The bill passed. And that is
how the big banks, in one bill, seized power over a country’s democracy. As
banking magnate Mayer Amschel Rothschild said, ‘Let me issue and control a
nation’s money and I care not who writes its laws.’
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