October 31, 2012

Keith Johnson's Revolt of the Plebs Broadcast Oct 30, 2012

Usury as an instrument of financial warfare utilized by organized Jewish interests against Gentile populations.

Keith is joined from South Africa by Stephen Goodson to discuss this and other matters.

 

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2 comments:

Anonymous said...

This article explains what Goodson was talking about w/respect to Japan's banking system

http://www.veteranstoday.com/2011/06/26/was-world-war-ii-fought-to-make-the-world-safe-for-usury/

Japan in WWII: A Casualty of Usury?
Was WWII Fought to make the World Safe for the Bankers?

by Dr. Ingrid Rimland Zundel

Goodson points out something astounding to many of the uninitiated:

It can thus be seen that the US Federal Reserve Bank was intimately involved in plotting and financing the overthrow of the Russian Empire7. With its stranglehold on the media and its placemen occupying most of the key positions in government in 1941, the Bank was in a favourable position from which to manipulate and provoke war with Japan.

Both the Bank of Japan and the German Reichsbank8 with their systems of state creation of the money supply at zero interest – and the inevitability that those systems of finance would be replicated by other countries, in particular those of the proposed Greater East Asian Co-prosperity Sphere – posed such a serious threat to the private investors of the US Federal Reserve Bank, that a world war was deemed to be the only means of countering it.

...
thanks for posting all of these excellent shows!
amanda

Anonymous said...

The ever-weird (and more so near the end) Johnson introduced Goodson as a director of the South African Reserve Bank but in Spingola's recent interview with Goodson she referred to him as a former director.

Fairly poor audio quality but another significant listen if Goodson and his former status can be believed, although I think his reference to Arthur Kitson ("A Fraudulent Standard") sounds slightly incorrect.

@Anon October 31, 2012 5:27 PM:
Ezra Pound also knew of the monetary reform moves in Japan (as well as in Italy).