All Wars Are Banksters’ Wars
by John Gideon Hartnett | Bible Science Forum
War is big business! Perhaps the best business on Earth. Nation states acquire the munitions of war and then they are destroyed on the battle field, so that they need to be resupplied again and again. A great business model if you are a contractor supplying a government with the weapons and munitions. But it is even better for the international banksters who finance the wars. They extend a line of credit to buy the munitions from the military industrial complex. And they supply both sides of any conflict.
In the following I have a further look at the last 110 years of world wars, which were financed by the private consortium of globalist banksters known as the US Federal Reserve. They are a cartel of private banks given the legal right to ‘print money out of thin air’. That is is scare quotes because they can create credit but they cannot print money. Money must be mined — gold and silver — whereas paper banknotes or electronic credit is fiat currency, not money.
In the following I again examine the US Fed liabilities from their balance sheets published since 1914. In order to properly compare the liabilities from year to year I have normalised their values to 1914 dollars using the exponential growth in the M2 money stock as published by the Fed.
For an introduction to this please read World War III Has Begun (at Least Against the Currency).
Chart 1 shows the Fed liabilities in terms of 1914 dollars plotted as a function of year from 1914 to 2024. The normalisation to 1914 dollars has the effect of visually amplifying the massive currency creation around the World War I and World War II. It puts the values of the liabilities all into the same dollar terms and so we are comparing ‘apples with apples’.
You will notice that the wars WWI and WWII meant major expansion in credit and as those wars ended the credit tightening eventually brought the Fed’s balance sheet liabilities back to a background trend line (1) in Chart 1. That trend line is a very slowly growing linear curve.