Hunger Robbers for Robbery Wars, 7

This said about their origin, as to their destination, the Naples bank, the Banco delle Due Sicilie, after being robbed of its gold reserves by Garibaldi, was then split into Banco di Napoli and Banco di Sicilia and forbidden from withdrawing from circulation the gold and silver ducats it itself had issued – the 65 percent of the money circulating in Italy. A Turin bank syndicate did withraw them: the Banca Nazionale negli Stati Sardi, which became Banca Nazionale nel Regno d’Italia, together with other Turin banks created ad hoc; considering the circumstances, a bank syndicate quite likely to be well rooted in the City of Rothschilds – pardon, the City of London. Thus the gold reserves, upon which credit and loans could be extended, were stolen by Turin, the only state in Italy at the time who, worth repeating, through borrowed fiat debt money, played in the hands of banksters. The puppeteers through their puppets, the banksters through theirs partners in crime, had now successfully expanded up to the whole the Italian territory subjected to their control and to their infinite debt trap.
So much for the immediate plunder. Beyond the immediate plunder, there was the fierceness, or rather, the long−term plunder.
The robbery of Naples gold was in fact merely the immediate part of the plunder, and one may say the best had yet to come. Gold backed credit and loans? And there were credit and loans, indeed. Only, they followed suit: the Turin Robin Hood took the blood and oxygen of credit and loans from the South to give it to the North. “I napolitani non dovranno essere mai più in grado di intraprendere”, “Neapolitans must no longer be able to undertake”, wrote one Mr. Carlo Bombrini, who was the general manager of the Turin bank both when its name was Banca Nazionale negli Stati Sardi, and then Banca Nazionale nel Regno d’Italia, as well as the head of the Turin bank syndicate. The outcome of this intention is history; past history as much as contemporary history.