Review of 'History of central banking and the enslavement of mankind' on 'Goodreads'
2 stars
Some very interesting stuff. The problem with central banking is very clearly described through multiple sources, multiple accounts, and historical bliss whenever it was replaced with state-controlled banks. The problem is the constant blips. An assassin was seen at a synagogue (unsourced), therefore it's safe to assume that he was controlled and sent by the Rothschilds. Gavrilo Princip was jewish (unsourced)! Pre-revolutionary Russia was great! Look at all these export numbers! Nazi Germany was forced into a war, they had no intentions of grabbing eastern Europe in their lebensraum fantasy!
There's passing mentions of non-jewish usurers, even the Catholic Church, but all of the focus is on the "international jew"? Can the author at least concede the fact, that this group of extremely greedy people (who admittedly happen to be overwhelmingly jewish) are just that? Greedy? And not just jewish? Greedy people, mixed with the seemingly common trait of nepotism. …
Some very interesting stuff. The problem with central banking is very clearly described through multiple sources, multiple accounts, and historical bliss whenever it was replaced with state-controlled banks. The problem is the constant blips. An assassin was seen at a synagogue (unsourced), therefore it's safe to assume that he was controlled and sent by the Rothschilds. Gavrilo Princip was jewish (unsourced)! Pre-revolutionary Russia was great! Look at all these export numbers! Nazi Germany was forced into a war, they had no intentions of grabbing eastern Europe in their lebensraum fantasy!
There's passing mentions of non-jewish usurers, even the Catholic Church, but all of the focus is on the "international jew"? Can the author at least concede the fact, that this group of extremely greedy people (who admittedly happen to be overwhelmingly jewish) are just that? Greedy? And not just jewish? Greedy people, mixed with the seemingly common trait of nepotism.
The good parts coincide with the parts where my knowledge of history is the weakest, but the argument is compelling. Especially talking about the very suspicious Libya, Iraq, Iran wars. Fits in with the theme that the parasitic worm that is central banking needs wars to stay sated.
But where I felt most convinced was when the modern world was brought into question. Why did so many industries and companies move to China? That's the concept of infinite growth. Even if I'm sure most financial people are aware of it, they're still expecting is, and it's bleeding everyone dry.
A very important book, soiled by the antisemitism, and baseless accusations.