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Free issue of MICHAEL
John said to Herod, “It is not lawful for you to have
your brother’s wife.”)
It is not lawful !
You are not permitted to restrict
the distribution of the abundant goods of the earth
to human beings who are in deprivation.
It is not !awful !
You are not permitted, you to-
day’s governments, to protect with your laws the
monsters who remove blood from the economic
body. The children, the women, the men, who suf-
fer from needs in front of a paralyzed abundance,
accuse you before mankind and before the Creator
who gave the earth to all of the human species.
You can reduce to silence voices that should de-
nounce you, in stuffing them with money or honors
or in threatening them with your vengeance. All the
same, there will remain some unmanageable souls
to put before your eyes, in broad daylight, your in-
fringements of human rights, and to repeat to you,
even though you are shaking with anger:
It is not
lawful !
You had been made the guardians of a
people. You are hand in glove with its executioners.
They and you will have to account one day for
this — to the outraged public perhaps, to God surely.
Louis Even
The dictatorship of the bankers and their debt-
money system are not limited to one country, but
exist in every country in the world. They are work-
ing to keep their control tight, because the example
of what an honest system could be, with one coun-
try freeing itself from this dictatorship and issuing
its own interest- and debt-free currency, would be
enough to bring about the worldwide collapse of the
bankers’ swindling debt-money system.
This fight of the International Financiers to install
their fraudulent debt-money system has been par-
ticularly vicious in the United States of America since
its very foundation. Historical facts show that several
American statesmen were well aware of the dishon-
est money system the Financiers wanted to impose
upon America and of all of its
harmful effects. These statesmen
were real patriots, who did all
that they possibly could to main-
tain for the USA an honest mon-
ey system, free from the control
of the Financiers. The Financiers
did everything in their power to
keep in the dark this facet of the
history of the United States, for
fear that the example of these
patriots might still be followed to-
day. Here are some facts that the Financiers would
like the population not to know:
We are in 1750. The United States of America
does not yet exist; it is the 13 Colonies of the Ameri-
can continent, forming “New England”, a possession
of the motherland, England. Benjamin Franklin wrote
about the population of that time:
“Impossible to find
a happier and more prosperous population on all
the surface of the globe.”
Going over to England to
represent the interests of the Colonies, Franklin was
asked how he accounted for the prosperous condi-
tions prevailing in the Colonies, while poverty was
rife in the motherland:
Benjamin
Franklin
The happiest population. No interest to pay
“That is simple
,” Franklin replied.
“In the Colo-
nies we issue our own money. It is called Colonial
Scrip. We issue it in proper proportion to make
the products pass easily from the producers to the
consumers. In this manner, creating our own paper
money ourselves, we control its purchasing power,
and we have no interest to pay to any one.”
The English bankers, being informed quickly, had
a law passed by the British Parliament prohibiting the
Colonies from issuing their own money, and ordering
them to use only the gold or silver debt-money that
was provided in insufficient quantity by the English
bankers. The circulating medium of exchange was
reduced by half.
“In one year,”
Franklin stated,
“the conditions
were so reversed that the era of prosperity end-
ed, and a depression set in, to such an extent that
the streets of the Colonies were filled with unem-
ployed.”
Then the Revolutionary War was launched
against England, and was followed by the Declaration
of Independence in 1776. History textbooks errone-
ously teach that it was the tax on tea that triggered
the American Revolution, but Franklin clearly stated:
“The Colonies would gladly have borne the little
tax on tea and other matters, had it not been the
poverty caused by the bad influence of the English
bankers on the Parliament: which has caused in the
Colonies hatred of England, and the Revolutionary
War.”
The Founding Fathers of the United States, bear-
ing all these facts in mind, and to protect themselves
against the exploitation of the International Bankers,
took good care to expressly declare, in the American
Constitution, signed at Philadelphia in 1787, Article
1,
Section 8, paragraph 5:
“Congress shall have the power to coin money
and to regulate the value thereof.”
Alain Pilote