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SECRETS OF THE BANK OF ENGLAND 3 | ||||||||
Before the American Revolution, the Bank financed 4 wars with France known in America as the French and Indian wars (1) King William's War: 1698 - 1697. (2) Queen Anne's War or the War of the Spanish Succession: 1702-1713. (3) King George's War or the War of the Austrian Succession: 1744-1748 . (4) French and Indian War or the Seven Years' War in Europe: 1754-1763. England lost the Colonies thanks to the Bank of England!! As was previously stated, the colonists were very poor and took little money with them from England. The settlers bartered their goods and services with each other. Later, Indian Wampum, black and white shells, tobacco etc., etc were used as currency. Eventually a circulating medium called Colonial Scrip was printed by the Governors of the various Colonies. With this release of purchasing power, great prosperity came to the Colonies since they had an abundance of produce and goods available. The greedy banksters of the Bank of England soon took steps to destroy the U.S. even before it was born: "III. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That if any governor or commander in chief for the time being, in all or any of the said colonies or plantations, shall, from and after the said first day of September, one thousand seven hundred and sixty four, give his assent to any act or order of assembly contrary to the true intent and meaning of this act, every such governor or commander in chief shall, for every such offence, forfeit and pay the sum of one thousand pounds, and shall be immediately dismissed from his government, and for ever after rendered incapable of any public office or place of trust." (Currency Act of 1764). Editor's Note Many of the powerful Roman Catholic lords in the English Parliament had money in the Wisselbank which was used to finance the inglorious (usury) Revolution of 1688 "Amongst those thought to have "provided for a retreat" in this way were members of the English Commonwealth Parliament and the Danish court, the Prince Palatine and the Republic of Venice. The Wisselbank was also used by the Spanish crown to pay subsidies to Sweden in the 1660's. To this extent the Wisselbank was not only a public bank for Amsterdam and its citizens but also a secure haven for other European governments and political interests. Its success continued well into the eighteenth century, even after Amsterdam's ascendancy was coming to an end, and it survived until 1820." (Edwin Green, Banking An Illustrated History, p.33). The Bank of England financed Jenner and vaccination, ape-man Charles Darwin and Jesuit futurism etc., etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Vital links Historic Documents of the U.S. Patrick Henry's Great "Give Me Liberty Or Give Me Death" speech The Bank of Ireland is also a clone of the Bank of England. worldhistory.com Henry Stuart, Prince of Wales King Charles I. King Charles II King James II Mary Queen of Scots William of Orange References Andrews, Charles, M. The Colonial Background to the American Revolution, Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn, 1924. Andréadés, A., History of the Bank of England, 1640 to1903, Reprinted by Augustus M. Kelley Publishers, New York, 1966. Cobbett, William, M.P., Paper Against Gold, or, The History and Mystery of the Bank of England, of the Debts, of the Stocks, of the Sinking Fund, and of all the other tricks and contrivances, carried on by the means of paper money, John Doyle, 12 Liberty St., New York City, 1834. (Originally published in London in 1828 as a series of letters by William Cobbett while serving a prison sentence in Newgate Prison). Blaxton, John, English Usurer, or Usury Condemned, London, 1634. Clapham, Sir John, The Bank of England: A History, in 2 volumes, The Macmillian Company, New York 1945. Francis, Joseph Hume, History of the Bank of England, Euclid Publishing Co., Chicago, Illinois, 1888. Giuseppe, John, The Bank of England: A History from its Foundation in 1694, Evans Brothers Limited, London, 1966. Green, Edwin, Banking An Illustrated History, Rizzoli Pub., New York, 1989. Vieira, Edwin Jr., Pieces of Eight, The Monetary Powers and Disabilities of the U.S. Constitution, Old Greenwich, Conn., 1983. END From the site: http://www.reformation.org/bank-of-england.html |
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