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Study of the Hegemony of Parasitism - michaeljgoodnight.com

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[German] Reichsbank, <strong>the</strong> Bank <strong>of</strong> England, and <strong>the</strong><br />

Bank <strong>of</strong> France, all <strong>of</strong> which were controlled by <strong>the</strong><br />

House <strong>of</strong> Rothschild.<br />

To enact <strong>the</strong> Federal Reserve Act into <strong>the</strong> law <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

land, <strong>the</strong> bankers elected Woodrow Wilson president <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> U.S. in 1912 by splitting <strong>the</strong> Republican Party,<br />

defeating <strong>the</strong> popular William Howard Taft by financing<br />

Theodore Roosevelt's malicious Bull Moose third party<br />

candidacy.<br />

Wilson's academic career at Princeton had been<br />

financed by gifts from Cleveland H. Dodge, director <strong>of</strong><br />

Citibank, and Moses Taylor Pyne, grandson and heir <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> founder <strong>of</strong> National City Bank. Wilson <strong>the</strong>n signed an<br />

agreement not to go to any o<strong>the</strong>r college.<br />

The Federal Reserve Act was legislated through<br />

Congress as <strong>the</strong> Glass-Owen bill, backed by two<br />

Democrats, Congressman Carter Glass <strong>of</strong> Virginia, and<br />

Sen. Robert Owen <strong>of</strong> Oklahoma. Owen was persuaded<br />

to back <strong>the</strong> bill by Samuel Untermyer, who had cultivated<br />

him while acting as counsel for <strong>the</strong> Pujo Money Trust<br />

investigation. Untermyer flattered Owen by entertaining<br />

him at Greystone, his palatial Hudson River estate.<br />

Untermyer claimed to be a "progressive Democrat",<br />

although he lived in feudal splendor, employing 167 men<br />

to tend his expanse <strong>of</strong> orchids and greenhouses. At<br />

Greystone, Owen dined with Paul Warburg, Bernard<br />

Baruch, and o<strong>the</strong>r financiers who had been instructed to<br />

get <strong>the</strong> Federal Reserve Act passed. Owen, a former

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