Hunger Robbers for Robbery Wars, 10

In the words of Jacopo Castellini, “The “constitutional” regime the European intellectuals bandied about against Naples, Rome and Florence was, then, the ideological cover of an economic system that ensured to the few (the private owners of the issuing banks) the power over the many (the people) through the monarch, the government, the parliament and the monopoly of legitimate violence at their disposal (on behalf of third parties). To paraphrase Ezra Pound, it was not a war between liberal state and absolute monarchy, but between legitimate monarchies and usurocracies or daneistocracies, that is, regimes in which the power is wielded by the money lenders.”

The ultimate goal of “Risorgimento” was robbing first, and then annex, the Italian territories not yet under the control of banksters through their infinite debt trap and partners in crime.
And that goal was achieved.
And “Risorgimento” is but an example.

We have here a parasite and a zombiefied host: the bankster and a nation; the parasite uses the force of the zombiefied host, its “monopoly of legitimate violence”, to attack other organisms and fatten at the expense of them all.
This is a different thing from mere international seigniorage, in which a nation forces another to accept the out exchange of its worthless paper in exchange for real products at gunpoint; and this different thing may well be at the root of international seigniorage, too.
This is particularly the case when we see a nation achieve dominance, take on the role of international policeman and then take some liberties with other nations, either with propaganda, “trade agreements” or weapons.
Needless to say, attacking its own citizens through taxation, whether explicit or hidden (inflation) is another such case, although discussed elsewhere.