Crime Against Humanity: Banking Reflux, Clearing House, Criminal Conspiracy, 9

And this projects banking into the metaphysics of moneypulation, with a somewhat more questionable potential for the future of mankind: if the link between purchasing power changing hands in point A and purchasing power changing hands in point B is not for us to know within the bankers’ watertight clearing house system, where else to look for it?

A goal of the bankers, of moneypulators, is the monopoly of creation, certification, circulation and persistence of purchasing power, above any jurisdiction. And most definitely their plans are well under way.
Their clearing house systems as a whole, within the favourable legal environment lovingly provided by the bankers and their mates, are the backbone.
As we move towards that goal, as they achieve unfettered monopoly, gradually and imperceptibly ALL the power will pass into the hands of the criminal conspiracy, the chaste of bankers and moneypulators, and all the citizens will become utterly powerless at their mercy, even though mostly unaware due to graduality and manipulation.
Unfettered monopoly will mean unfettered freedom in creation, certification, circulation and persistence of all purchasing power. That will mean unfettered freedom to create purchasing power in their hands and move it anywhere, and unfettered freedom to ransom and cancel purchasing power in our hands.

We hear about “money laundering”, and see it instrumentalised as a justification for an ever increasing Orwellian surveillance on each one of us. Well, what is money laundering? It consists of making purchasing power, usually in money form, untraceable and acceptable enough. Once upon a time money was physical, and it even had serial numbers on it, so there were objective elements on the basis of which it could be traced, while now money is “dematerialised”, and it lost its serial numbers even before it lost its physical form; not that it makes much of a difference, because the tracing is assigned to some legal body anyway, which in turn concerns itself with the practicalities. And the bankers’ systems are said to be instrumental to such surveillance by making everything more traceable.