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Q6. How do the Rothschilds control the US dollar?<br />
and required no stocks of gold or silver. Britain found this<br />
to be against its interest and encouraged massive<br />
counterfeiting of Colonial paper. The Currency Act of<br />
1751 and 1764 effectively banned all Colonial paper. To<br />
prevent a return to these independent debt-free currencies,<br />
prominent American Freemasons were tasked with ending<br />
the independence of the colonies, <strong>for</strong>mation of a single<br />
country in its place under a centralized <strong>government</strong> - that<br />
would then authorize the use of an interest-bearing<br />
currency controlled by the Rothschilds. Work on a central<br />
bank started immediately after the American Revolution.*<br />
A Bank of United States was <strong>for</strong>med in 1791, on the<br />
lines of the Bank of England, three years after George<br />
Washington was inaugurated as the first US president.*<br />
By the time its charter was up <strong>for</strong> renewal, more than<br />
70% of its stock was owned by <strong>for</strong>eigners, who received<br />
8.4% dividend – resulting in depletion of considerable gold<br />
and silver. There was also conflicts of interest as this<br />
“central bank” set rules <strong>for</strong> banking and at the same time<br />
competed with other banks. The bank's charter ended in<br />
1811 and was not renewed. A second Bank of United<br />
States was chartered in 1816. It began disastrously with<br />
allegations of outright fraud dominating it. There was<br />
much debate about the constitutional legality of the<br />
central bank. Although the Supreme Court deemed it<br />
constitutional, President Andrew Jackson refused to renew<br />
its charter, who was driven to do it in a game of oneupmanship<br />
with the Whig Party (its most ardent<br />
<strong>World</strong> Government Slave Handbook 25