FINAL WARNING: Financial Background
international bankers, said: “You see, gentlemen, who owns the United
States.”
Sen. Barry Goldwater wrote in his book With No Apologies: “Does it
not seem strange to you that these men just happened to be CFR
(Council on Foreign Relations) and just happened to be on the Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve, that absolutely controls the
money and interest rates of this great country. A privately owned
organization ... which has absolutely nothing to do with the United
States of America!”
Plain and simple, the Federal Reserve is not part of the Federal
Government. It is a privately held corporation owned by stockholders.
That is why the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (and all the others)
is listed in the Dun and Bradstreet Reference Book of American
Business (Northeast, Region 1, Manhattan/Bronx). According to Article
I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution, only Congress has the right to
issue money and regulate its value, so it is illegal for private interests
to do so. Yet, it happened, and because of a provision in the Act, the
Class A stockholders were to be kept a secret, and not to be revealed.
R. F. McMaster, who published a newsletter called The Reaper, through
his Swiss and Saudi Arabian contacts, was able to find out which
banks held a controlling interest in the Reserve: the Rothschild Banks
of London and Berlin; Lazard Brothers Bank of Paris; Israel Moses Seif
Bank of Italy; Warburg Bank of Hamburg and Amsterdam; Lehman
Brothers Bank of New York; Kuhn, Loeb, and Co. of New York; Chase
Manhattan Bank of New York; and Goldman, Sachs of New York. These
interests control the Reserve through about 300 stockholders.
Because of the way the Reserve was organized, whoever controls the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York, controls the system, About 90 of
the 100 largest banks are in this district. Of the reportedly 203,053
shares of the New York bank: Rockefeller’s National City Bank had
30,000 shares; Morgan’s First National Bank had 15,000 shares; Chase
National, 6,000 shares; and the National Bank of Commerce (Morgan
Guaranty Trust), 21,000 shares.
A June 15, 1978 Senate Report called “Interlocking Directorates
Among the Major U.S. Corporations” revealed that five New York
banks had 470 interlocking directorates with 130 major U.S.