This is an expose of the Militia of Zeus and Minerva!
The Jesuits were founded in 1540 for 1 reason: destroy the blessed Reformation. The United States of Israel was not in existence back then but we are now their FINAL TARGET.
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It is beyond belief that this visual aid was not removed at the beginning of the ecumenical movement in 1962!
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Jesuit generals appoint Popes and then get rid of the uncooperative ones.... Since the official founding of the Jesuits by Pope Paul III in 1540, there has been a total of 46 White Popes and only 30 Black Popes!!
Peter de Smet was the best known U.S. Jesuit of the 19th century!!
Peter De Smet, S.J., was the best known U.S. Jesuit of the 19th century....He is little known today because his pre-1870 hatred of the U.S. is considered an anachronism due to the fact that the Jesuits desperately need the military might of the U.S. in order to recover the Pope's temporal power.
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He traveled to Europe 19 times to seek finances but he never encouraged Latin Church members to emigrate to the U.S.
Everything changed after 1870. Before that time, in the U.S., the intelligent people knew perfectly well that Rome was just a political system disguised as a religion. Christians were doing their utmost to win the Pope's followers to Christ and the Jesuits feared losing this large source of manpower:
At this period in his life (1860), Father De Smet earnestly discouraged migration to America. As he saw the vast numbers of Catholics coming to these shores, and no possibility of supplying them with teachers, he felt that they could not long withstand the influence of Protestantism and that apostasy would exceed the number of conversions. He also advised some of his more intimate friends not to send their children here on account of the total change from the life to which they were accustomed. In Europe they were to a large degree born to their station in life. They would not work in well where boys commenced at the very foot of the ladder, doing the commonest service for the sake of getting a start. Their language would furthermore be against them until they could gain a command of English; and on the whole they would stand little show in competition with the universal adaptability of the American boy. (De Smet, Life, Letters, & Travels, pp. 116-117).
All that changed after 1870. The Fall of the Papal States and the liberation of Rome was the most earth shattering event since the blessed Reformation of 1517. The immigration floodgates opened up!
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Most of these immigrants were in violation of the Bull of Pope Alexander VI because none of them obtained a license from the king of Spain.
On the statue is a plaque with a poem by Emma Lazarus containing these words:
Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!
How did these teeming millions become WRETCHED REFUSE? Obviously, they were born to their station in life and there was no possibility of any amelioration!
It is an alarming fact that 1/3 of the U.S. population can trace their ancestry to the immigrants who first arrived in America at Ellis Island before dispersing to points all over the country. Serfs for centuries, the immigrants were used to giving blind obedience to the Papacy and very few of them believed in keeping the Sabbath Day holy.
Despite the millions of immigrants, it was not enough to send Cardinal Al Smith to the White House in 1928. As revenge for that defeat, the Jesuits gave us the Great Depression and World War II.
A. P. Giannini and the Bank of Italy
Amadeo Peter Giannini—son of an Italian immigrant—was born in the fateful year of 1870. In 1885 he began his career as a fruit and vegetable commission merchant on the docks of San Francisco.
In 1904 he opened the Bank of Italy in San Francisco.
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The California gold rush of 1849 was a magnet that attracted people from all over the world. In 1863, Luigi Giannini—father-of A. P.— left his small poverty stricken village in Italy to seek his fortune in the Golden State.
Through the instrumentality of the Mexican land grants the colonial character of landownership in Spanish-California was carried over, and actually extended, after the American occupation. By the terms of the cession of California to the United States it was provided that previously issued Mexican land grants would be respected. Under Spanish rule only about thirty land grants had been made, but, in 1846, when the United States took possession, over eight million acres of California land were held by some eight hundred Mexican grantees. The connivers, Mexican and American, had rushed through huge grants on the eve of American occupation. Most of these grants were vague, running merely for so many leagues within certain natural boundaries, and, in the confusion of the period, they were imperfectly registered. Many of the grants had never been surveyed, and thus the bars were down for all manner of fraud. Speculators emerged from dusty archives with amazing documents. The grants, purporting to be conveyed by these documents, assumed all sorts of fantastic shapes - for the purpose of roping in the improvements of settlers and the best land. (McWilliams, Factories in the Field, pp. 12-13).
It seems that California was the home of illegal monopolies long before the Bank of Italy.
U.S. citizens did have something in common with the Italian immigrants. They both mistrusted banks. Giannini had a Herculean task in separating his Italians from their money:
Giannini knew from the start that persuading North Beach Italians to deposit their savings in his bank would be an uphill battle. In addition to their preference for dealing strictly in gold, most were deeply suspicious of banks and lacked confidence in the people who either owned or managed them. North Beach Italians had ample reason for their distrust of financial institutions. Back in 1878, for example, a small neighborhood bank, the French Mutual, went into bankruptcy, wiping out the hard-earned savings of scores of Italian depositors. This calamity left a deep impression on the collective memory of the community. Rather than put their trust in a bank, most North Beach residents preferred to keep their savings safely at home, where it was hoarded in cans, jars, and mattresses. (Bonadio, A. P. Giannini, Banker of America, p. 30).
Every state except California outlawed branch banking and interstate banking was strictly prohibited.
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Bank employees were called "missionaries".
The same relentless spirit that drove missionary Peter De Smet now possessed Giannini:
The fear and resentment of Giannini's opposition was not difficult to understand. By the early 1920s the Bank of Italy had emerged as an immensely powerful force in the state. A crucial factor was the activity of the bank's Italian Department, which Giannini had established some years earlier and then placed under the direction of Armando Pedrini. Sharing the department's duties and responsibilities with Pedrini was Robert Paganini, a young, energetic, and demanding North Beach businessman who had owned an Italian-language newspaper in Sacramento before joining Bank of Italy. Paganini directed the activities of the department's corps of handpicked solicitors, or "missionaries" as they were called, all of them Italians, whose job was to turn every Italian resident of California into a depositor and stockholder in the Bank of Italy. (Bonadio, A. P. Giannini, Banker of America, p. 76).
By 1928 Giannini had conquered California and his next big move was to conquer Wall Street.
The Bank of Italy became the Bank of America in 1928
The Wall Street bank that Giannini chose for his takeover bid was the successor to the corrupt 1st Bank of the United States which lost its charter in 1811:
Sometime toward the end of 1927 Belden found the kind of large, well-connected bank he felt certain Giannini was looking for: the 116-year-old Bank of America, successor to the Bank of the United States, which had been founded in 1812 and later grew to financial prominence as one of the leading banks of New York. Located at 66 Wall Street, Bank of America occupied the lower five floors of its own thirty-two story, spiral-topped skyscraper that the New York Times had described as "the best known in greater New York and an architecture purely American." Although in recent years Bank of America had experienced serious losses, it was still valuable property, primarily because of its historic reputation and eight city branches with total deposits of $l00 million. (Bonadio, A. P. Giannini, Banker of America, p. 118).
The first bank of the United States was chartered by Congress in 1791. The charter was to last for 20 years.
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Congress refused to renew the bank charter when it expired in 1811. The bank then changed its name to protect the guilty and became known as the Bank of America with headquarters in New York City:
One of the three other banks incorporated in 1812 was organized by the New York stockholders of the Bank of the United States who, wishing to obtain a charter under which the business of the Bank's New York office might be continued, applied for incorporation as the Bank of America. The capital would be $6,000,000, including $5,000,000 of Bank of the United States stock. It would be the largest bank in the States and a gain for New York over Philadelphia in the financial and commercial rivalry that had arisen between them. Being mainly Federalist and possessed of so much capital, the bank was sure to be opposed both by the Republicans who had a legislative majority, and by the existing banks in New York. (Hammond, Banks and Politics in America, p. 162).
War soon followed with England and President Madison renewed the bank charter in 1816.
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He distributed its funds to the states and thereby laid the foundation for the economic expansion of the country.
President Jackson's unflinching determination and unwavering patriotism prevailed over Biddle and his Bank. President Jackson called the Bank a monster and was determined to pull all its teeth. He said:
I am ready with the screws to draw every tooth and then the stumps.
The paper-money system and its natural associations—monopoly and exclusive privileges—have already struck their roots too deep in the soil, and it will require all your efforts to check its further growth and to eradicate the evil.
California was the land of monopoly and exclusive privileges long before it became part of the United States so it was rich soil for the Bank of America.
Hollywood and the Bank of America
The movie industry in Hollywood actually became a branch office of the Bank of Italy a.k.a. Bank of America. Hollywood movies led the moral decline of the nation. Western movies distorted the image of the Christian pioneers and gangster movies glorified crime and corruption.
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Taking advantage of the Great Depression, Giannini jumped right in as a major studio financier:
With Hollywood desperately in need of financing, Giannini moved quickly to increase Bank of America's presence in an industry of enormous importance to the economic vitality of Los Angeles. As early as 1930, he authorized a loan of $3 million for two of Hollywood's most aggressive producers, Darryl F. Zanuck and Joseph Schenck, to form a new production company, which became 20th Century-Fox two years later. Schenck, who sat on Bank of America's board of directors, persuaded Giannini that Zanuck's drive and talent as a movie producer was justification enough to make loans available to him. With $400,000 in Bank of Italy money, Zanuck worked furiously to rush six films into production, including such financial successes as The Bowery, The House of Rothschild, Cardinal Richelieu, and Bulldog Drummond Strikes Back. By the end of the decade 20th Century-Fox had expanded into a $60 million studio and was turning out some of Hollywood's biggest box-office attractions. (Bonadio, A. P. Giannini, Banker of America, p. 118).
Khazar Joseph Schenck was a major movie mogul and he launched the film career of actress Marilyn Monroe.
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In 1939 the Bank of America panicked when a book entitled Factories in the Field was published. The book was about the exploitation of migrant farm workers, and the ownership of the mega-farms by Bank of America:
When one realizes that approximately 50 per cent of the farm lands in Central and Northern California are controlled by one institution—the Bank of America—the irony of these "embittered" farmers deeding their "homes" against strikers becomes apparent. (McWilliams, Factories in the Field, p. 233).
The 2 books were published within months of each other. Unlike Steinbeck, McWilliams was not an employee of the Bank of America.
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The bank countered by publishing a FICTION book by John Steinbeck entitled Grapes of Wrath.
Grapes of Wrath soon became a bestseller and was made into a movie in 1940. As expected, the book by Carey McWilliams was soon forgotten.
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The list of Jesuit Bank of America produced Hollywood movies denigrating the Christian Faith is legion. We can only cover a few.
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Elmer Gantry was based on a 1927 FICTION novel by Sinclair Lewis. Gantry, and ex-seminary student, becomes a skeptic when he is required to believe that Joshua made the sun stand still. At the end of the book, Gantry finds "salvation" in the Latin Church.
The Hollywood Western movies were no better. According to Hollywood, the center of town in the Old West was the SALOON . . . and not the CHURCH!
The Military-Banking Complex
In his farewell address to the U.S. people, President Eisenhower warned of the military-industrial complex. He wasn't very far off the mark and the real danger is the military-banking complex:
In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. (President Eisenhower's Farewell Address).
The War of Independence with Great Britain began over the stationing of a standing army in Boston.
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The restoration of the Pope's temporal power would automatically follow the conquest of Russia!!
A standing army and a banking monopoly go hand in hand. It wasn't until after the founding of the Bank of England in 1694 that Great Britain began to maintain a standing army.
The best way to beat the Pope's fanatics whether Latin or Muslim is to be always ready to die as President Lincoln advised:
But I see no other safeguard against those murderers but to be always ready to die, as Christ advises it. As we must all die sooner or later, it makes very little difference to me whether I die from a dagger plunged through my heart or from an inflammation of the lungs. (Chiniquy, Fifty Years in the Church of Rome, pp. 706-707).
This expose is continued on the Jesuit/Indian War Against the United States of Israel.
References
Bonadio, Felice A. A. P. Giannini, Banker of America. University of California Press, 1994.
De Smet, Peter. Life, letters and Travels of Father Pierre-Jean de Smet, S.J., 1801-1873.
Hammond, Bray. Banks and Politics in America from the Revolution to the Civil War. Princeton University Press. 1957.
Laveille, E, The Life of Father De Smet, S.J. Loyola University Press. Chicago, Illinois, 1981.
McWilliams, Carey,Factories in the Field. The Story of Migratory Farm Labor in California. Little, Brown & Co., Boston, 1939.
Richardson, Peter. American Prophet: The Life and Work of Carey McWilliams. University of Michigan Press. Ann Arbor, Michigan, 2005.
Copyright © 2010 by Niall Kilkenny
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