Monday, 8 December 2025

The Hidden Hand: How the Rothschild and Rockefeller Families Gained Dominance Over America’s Money Supply Through the Federal Reserve

 https://x.com/JackStr42679640/status/1997597215649644698

Jack Straw
The Hidden Hand: How the Rothschild and Rockefeller Families Gained Dominance Over America’s Money Supply Through the Federal Reserve A century ago, the United States surrendered control of its currency to a small circle of private banking interests led by the Rothschild and Rockefeller dynasties. On December 23, 1913, President Woodrow Wilson signed the Federal Reserve Act into law, transferring the power to create money and set interest rates from the American people and their elected representatives to a network of banks dominated by these two families and their allies. What followed was a century of debt, inflation, and financial crises that enriched a narrow elite while steadily eroding the wealth of ordinary citizens. The groundwork was laid in the years leading up to 1913. European banking houses, led by the Rothschilds, had already established themselves as the dominant force in international finance, lending to governments and controlling vast gold reserves. In the United States, John D. Rockefeller’s Standard Oil fortune and his control of Chase Bank gave the family parallel influence over domestic industry and banking. By the early 1900s, these two power centers had formed a working partnership that spanned continents. The turning point came after the Panic of 1907. The crisis exposed the fragility of America’s banking system, but it also created the political opening the banking interests needed. In 1910, a small group of men met in complete secrecy on Jekyll Island, Georgia, to draft legislation that would centralize control of the nation’s money. The attendees included Senator Nelson Aldrich (whose daughter married John D. Rockefeller Jr.), Paul Warburg of Kuhn, Loeb & Co. (the American arm of Rothschild banking interests), and representatives of J.P. Morgan and Rockefeller-controlled banks. The plan they produced—initially called the Aldrich Plan—was rewritten and rebranded as the Federal Reserve Act to make it politically palatable. The new system was sold to the public as a way to prevent bank runs and stabilize the economy. In reality, it gave a handful of private banks the exclusive right to create money as debt, lend it to the government at interest, and profit from every dollar in circulation. From the moment the Federal Reserve opened its doors in 1914, the United States began paying a permanent tribute—in the form of interest—to the banking houses that own and control the system. The results speak for themselves. In 1913, the dollar was backed by gold and the national debt stood at roughly $1 billion. Today, the dollar has lost more than 97% of its purchasing power, and the national debt exceeds $36 trillion. Every dollar of that debt represents interest flowing to the banks that dominate the Federal Reserve’s ownership structure—banks that have been tied for generations to the Rothschild and Rockefeller fortunes. The Fed’s policies have repeatedly favored large financial institutions over the broader population. Credit expansions in the 1920s fueled speculative bubbles that collapsed into the Great Depression, allowing major banks to acquire distressed assets at fire-sale prices. Similar patterns repeated in the savings-and-loan crisis, the dot-com bust, and the 2008 financial meltdown—each time concentrating more wealth and power in fewer hands. Meanwhile, the Rockefeller family used its influence to shape education, medicine, and foreign policy through tax-exempt foundations, while the Rothschild interests maintained leverage over global commodity markets and central banks in Europe and beyond. Together, they have benefited from a monetary system that rewards debt creation and punishes savers through perpetual inflation. A growing number of Americans now recognize that the Federal Reserve is not a government agency in any meaningful sense—it is a private cartel with a government-granted monopoly. Returning the power to issue money to Congress, as required by Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution, would end the silent transfer of wealth from citizens to banking elites. Replacing fiat currency with sound money—whether gold, silver, or decentralized digital assets—would break the cycle of debt and inflation that has defined the Fed era. The Federal Reserve was not created to serve the American people. It was created to serve the interests of the families that designed it. Until it is abolished, the United States will remain financially tethered to the same private banking dynasties that seized control of its money more than a hundred years ago. End the Fed.

https://x.com/JackStr42679640/status/1997597215649644698

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home