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Financial Deception: The Battle of Waterloo

on December 9, 2017
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Usury is the reason for most of society’s financial


problems, going back many centuries. In previous posts, I’ve exposed the results of usury going
back to the Roman Empire. I then explored the creation of the Bank of England and contrasted it
with the usury-free system developed under Napoleon Bonaparte at the turn of the 19th century.
The French Revolution in 1789 left France in bankruptcy, mostly due to over fifty years of war.
This opened the door for one of the greatest commanders in history to rise to power.

When Napoleon took over the creation of France’s money, taxes on the citizens of France were
dramatically reduced, and he made the French franc the most valuable currency in Europe. Under
Napoleon (emperor 1804-15), in the absence of compounding interest from central bankers
beyond the borders of France, the country thrived.

In a similar manner, other countries (one of them Canada) have realized much more vibrant
economies as a result of creating their own money supply, not paying foreign bankers to do it for
them (these foreign bankers then charge governments compounding interest for the privilege). In
Canada, from 1938 to 1974 (through the Bank of Canada), the country paid for WWII, the Trans
Canada Highway, Trans Canada Railroad, the St. Lawrence Seaway, and the Canadian medical
system by creating their own money interest-free. Since 1974, however, foreign bankers have
been contracted to create Canada’s money instead and charged the country compounded interest.
As a result, infrastructure has suffered, the cost of living has risen, and Canadians have been
squeezed financially, resulting in the highest household debt in the world. Australia has
experienced a similar fate.

In France’s case, under Napoleon, the infrastructure was upgraded, with the construction of over
32 thousand kilometres of roads, over 1600 kilometres of canals and bridges, and the expansion
of harbours. It was all financed with interest-free money from the Banque de France.

France Upsets the Financial Community

When Napoleon gained power and changed the financial system, France no longer participated in
the London financial markets and this upset the Rothschild family, who were by now entrenched
within the Bank of England.

In 1803, England, under the direction of her international bankers (the Rothschilds) provided
funds required to Austria, Prussia, Russia, Spain, and Sweden to wage war against Napoleon.
Napoleon had simply refused to sign a trade treaty with England the year before. Europe was
“upset.”

Napoleon, not having the funds to go up against this coalition, decided to sell Louisiana to the
United States and received $3 million in return. There was peace for a couple of years but several
years of wars followed that.

At the time in Eurasia, only France and Russia were not under the influence of the Rothschild
family (the world’s banksters). Most other European countries were, having borrowed from them
to fund the war with France.

As a result, Napoleon made an agreement with Czar Alexander I of Russia to enforce a blockade
against England. However, that agreement eventually broke down and Napoleon went to war
with Russia in an attempt to get it to enforce the blockade. That was a mistake. Russia retreated
and Napoleon, in chasing them into Russia in winter, lost 75% of his army due to the cold and a
lack of food and supplies.

Napoleon was eventually defeated at the Battle of Nations in 1813 by the European coalition and
bannished to the Island of Elba.

The Battle of Waterloo

The Battle of Waterloo

The Battle of Waterloo was one of the most important in the history of the modern world and
was the catalyst for the unsustainable financial situation we have before us today, because it was
the turning point for the Rothschild family and catapulted their fortunes into the stratosphere.

In 1814, Napoleon returned to France and regained control. Without any money, he had no
choice but to borrow $5 million from the City of London. The bankers had won.

At the same time, the English led an army put together by “The Seventh Coalition.” The
commander in charge was the Duke of Wellington. The result was that Napoleon was defeated
soundly at the Battle of Waterloo.

In the background moved the Rothschilds. Nathan Rothschild had developed a vast network of
gold smugglers throughout Europe and had a courier system that was second to none. In London,
Nathan was the first to hear of Napoleon’s defeat—a full twenty-four hours before anyone else.

England’s position in the bond market at this time was rather precarious, as they’d spent so much
money trying to defeat Napoleon. Nathan’s visit to his usual chair in the London stock market
the next morning was watched by everyone in the room. Dejectedly, he began to sell bonds. It
sparked a deluge of selling across the floor. Prices tanked.
A short time later, Nathan reversed his call and bought the dominant holding of England’s entire
debt, but at a fraction of its real value. When the news of Wellington’s success hit the streets, the
trickery became obvious, but it was too late. The Rothschilds had increased their fortune and
when he sold the bonds two years later, they were up 40%, amounting to a haul of some $600
million in today’s money.

After the defeat at Waterloo, Napoleon was exiled to the island of St. Helena, where he was
poisoned at the age of 51, in 1821. This was most likely the work of the Rothschilds, although it
has never been proven.

When Nathan Rothschild died in 1836, his personal fortune was equivalent to 0.62 percent of the
of British national income.

“Between 1818 and 1852, the combined capital of the five Rothschild houses rose from £1.8
million to £9.5 million.” — The Ascent of Money, Niall Ferguson

102 years after the Battle of Waterloo, the economy of Russia would become another victim of
the greedy gaze of central bankers—through the Russian Revolution, in 1917.

Napoleon was just the start. What was to follow was the export of the Rothschild’s influence to
the United States and the Federal Reserve.

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