FINAL WARNING: Financial Background
opposed the Aldrich Bill, made some additional revisions, in an
attempt to keep them from completely dominating our monetary
system. Sen. Elihu Root of New York criticized some of these
revisions, and some points were modified. It was passed by the Senate
on December 19th.
Since different versions had been passed by both Houses, a
Conference Committee was established, which was stacked with six
Democrats and only two Republicans, to insure that certain portions of
the original Bill would remain intact. It was hastily prepared without
any public hearings, and on December 23, 1913, two days before
Christmas, when many Congressmen, and three particular Senators,
were away from Washington; the Bill was sent to the House of
Representatives, where it passed 298-60, and then sent to the Senate,
where it passed with a vote of 43-25 (with 27 absent or abstaining). An
hour after the Senate vote, Wilson signed the Federal Reserve Act into
law, and the Illuminati had taken control of the American economy. The
gold and silver in the nation’s vaults were now owned by the Federal
Reserve. Baron Alfred Charles Rothschild (1842-1918), who
masterminded the entire scheme, then made plans to further weaken
our country’s financial structure.
Although Wilson, and Rep. Carter Glass were given the credit for
getting the Federal Reserve Act through Congress, William Jennings
Bryan played a major role in gaining support to pass it. Bryan later
wrote: “That is the one thing in my public career that I regret- my work
to secure the enactment of the Federal Reserve Law.” Rep. Glass
would later write: “I had never thought the Federal Bank System would
prove such a failure. The country is in a state of irretrievable
bankruptcy.”
Eustace Mullins, in his book The Federal Reserve Conspiracy, wrote:
“The money and credit resources of the United States were now in
complete control of the banker’s alliance between J. P. Morgan’s First
National Bank, and Kuhn & Loeb’s National City Bank, whose principal
loyalties were to the international banking interests, then quartered in
London, and which moved to New York during the First World War.”
The Reserve Bank Organization Committee, controlled by Secretary of
the Treasury, William Gibbs McAdoo, and Secretary of Agriculture