Hunger Robbers for Robbery Wars, 3

Naples: the first target host; the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, its King Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies, and the Banco delle Due Sicilie (Bank of the Two Sicilies), then split into Banco di Napoli (Bank of Naples) and Banco di Sicilia (Bank of Sicily).
Rome, Florence, Parma and Modena: the other target hosts; Papal States, Grand Duchy of Tuscany, Duchy of Parma, Duchy of Modena and Reggio.
Patriots: the hit−men, the hooks of the parasite; Giuseppe Garibaldi, Giuseppe Mazzini, and all the others; among which Ippolito Nievo, and a less famous Filippo Curletti.

Let’s then take a look at these pieces on the chessboard before and after the treatment.

Before the “Risorgimento” treatment:
The Naples bank issued only commodity money and receipt money: gold coins, silver coins, deposit receipts, and no paper banknotes. The Turin bank practiced fractional reserve for its paper money over its gold reserves, and by the unification Turin imposed that paper money as legal tender by law because too many wars had made those gold reserves insufficient.
The economic policy of Naples was protectionist and autarchic, geared towards meeting the domestic demand first, and only then exporting the surplus alone, and its foreign policy was free of expansionist ambitions. It is observed how this produced a slow but steady development, and a middle class committed to economy, that creates wealth for the community, instead than committed to finance, that deprives the community of it. The “economic model” of Turin was that now so familiar to us of monetary sovereignty gifted to banksters – in exchange for who knows what – and of the ensuing infinite debt trap, spoliation, and cancer stage of economic parasitism.