Crime Against Humanity: Pensée Unique in Economics, 62

The Orwellian deletion of banking goes so far back in our history that it may well confirm the Biblical excerpts I mentioned before, whose main importance is their existence, regardless of who authored them, such as, “You may charge a foreigner interest, but you may not charge your brother interest, that the LORD your God may bless you in all that you undertake in the land that you are entering to take possession of it.” “For the LORD your God will bless you, as he promised you, and you shall lend to many nations, but you shall not borrow, and you shall rule over many nations, but they shall not rule over you.”
As well as the hypotesis that “when he took a whip and drove them out of the Temple … by performing this act of vengeance on the money−lenders Christ signed his own death warrant.”

These are not mere combination of random events that just happen, be it in the immediate or in the course of time. What’s staring straight at us is an operation.

Knowing our inclination to be “reasonable” when confronting evil, some more evidence from Werner that it is an operation won’t hurt. So, keeping an eye on dates:
“The link between credit and the macroeconomy has not been commented upon much in the twentieth century, although at its beginning this theory was widespread enough to warrant the following entry in the Encyclopaedia Britannica (1910–11 edition):
‘The immense growth of credit and its embodiment in instruments that can be used as substitutes for money has led to the promulgation of a view respecting the value of money which may be called the Credit Theory. According to the upholders of this doctrine, the actual amount of metallic money has but a trifling effect on the range of prices, and therefore on the value of money. What is really important is the volume of credit instruments in circulation. It is on their amount that price movements depend. Gold has become only the small change of the wholesale markets, and its quantity is comparatively unimportant as determinant of prices.’ …

Crime Against Humanity: Pensée Unique in Economics