everything
but their SQUEAL, and they are
getting ready to take even that
from them pretty soon.
There are three grades of financial swindlers. The peewee buzzard who does the actual dirty work of stealing the homes and inheritances from the widows and orphans; the second story giraffe who takes them away from the peewee buzzards in quantities; and the gluttonous mastodon who finally takes them away from the second story giraffes. All wealth thus winds up in the clutches of a few big alien financiers. How do we know that the Three Hundred Billion Dollars’ worth of wealth that was stolen from the American people was taken by the financiers? Let us search everybody and see who has it. Have the Manufacturers possession of it? No. Have the Merchants possession of it? No. Have the Farmers possession of it? No. Have the Working people possession of it? No. Well, who has possession of those 200,000 stolen factories—those 3,000,000 stolen stores, those 3,000,000 stolen farms, those 6,000,000 stolen homes, those stolen railroads, airlines, boatlines, mines, apartments, hotels and office buildings? THE FINANCIERS HAVE THEM AND THEY DO NOT DENY IT. What did the financiers give to the American people for all of those properties? NOTHING. ABSOLUTELY NOTHING. Worse, the financiers by and through their control of the money that belongs to the people and their ability to charge a tribute for the use of it and then to charge from ten to twenty times more tribute on a trick scheme of credit that they practice, have run up an interest-bearing indebtedness against the people to more than another $300,000,000,000 (Three Hundred Billion Dollars). The interest-bearing indebtedness of the people of the United States of America today is over Three Hundred Billion Dollars and consists of Federal, State, County, Municipal and Public indebtedness. The Public indebtedness takes in everything that interest must be paid upon, such as railroads, trolley lines, bus lines, boatlines, airlines, mines, quarries, buildings of all kinds and real estate mortgages. The interest on over Three Hundred Billion Dollars of indebtedness amounts to about Twenty Billion Dollars, so there is not enough money in America to pay the interest, let alone the principal. Not counting the gold, which is useless dead metal stored away in the controlled vaults of the financiers, there is considerably less than Ten Billion Dollars in money in America. And right now it is questionable if there is more than Four Billion Dollars of actual money in circulation among the people, the rest being stored away in the vaults of the financiers. Therefore, Twenty Billion Dollars cannot be paid annually to the financiers by the |