1913: Birth of the Fed

In 1913, three international banking families met on Jekyll Island, New York. They went by the names: Rothschild, Rockefeller and Morgan. Together they wrote a piece of legislation that President Woodrow Wilson would ensure was passed by Congress on their behalf.

"Jekyll Island is where the crime of the century was hatched"

JFK

President Wilson passed the Federal Reserve Act on Christmas Eve, 1913, when many Congressmen had returned home for the holiday and were not present to oppose the new legislation. The Federal Reserve Act replaced Abraham Lincoln's system, which was the printing of American money free from interest. If the American Government had continued with the policy set up by Abraham Lincoln, or the similar policies that would be put forward by JFK in 1963, America would now be a debt-free nation.

It would be the most prosperous country in the world.

But with the passing of The Federal Reserve Act, Congress gave up its power to create its own money, which was given to them in the United States Constitution. Instead, this power was given to private bankers (The Rothschilds, The Rockefellers and The Morgans), who called themselves the Federal Reserve. These families achieved their ultimate goal, for now the United States operated under a central bank that was privately owned. They now control America's greatest power: the creation of the money and were free to charge the American people whatever amount of interest they desired for their own money.

Mayer Anselm Rothschild once said: “Permit me to issue and control the money of a nation, and I care not who makes its laws”

The Federal Banking Act is in direct violation of the Constitution of the United States. The actions that occurred on Jekyll Island in 1913 and the behaviour of President Wilson are considered treason by the very same Constitution.

"If the American people understood how their money system worked, I fear that there would be a Revolution tomorrow."

Henry Ford

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