RUMPEL$TILZCHEN


    For hundreds of years people have tried to make gold from lead or other elements.  The alchemist Johann Friedrich Bottgher was held captive by King August the Strong, as in the fairy tale 'The Miller's Daughter' to make gold; in spite of which he made Meissen porcelain!  Our financial system is similar to the fairy tales: we make actual straw and strips of wood, into which we first change into paper with which we can also purchase gold!  We go even further and print not even money, but rather credit with money that does not exist except on paper: debt.

   Banks hold only one-fourth of the cash of which credit they loan out.  Our credit is not only straw, it is air.  The fairy tale shows that one can hold gold or merchandise forth with a simple trick for a short time.  Certainly then, however, comes the hard inevitable time of inflation.  It has to be paid with suffering and tears, with life and health.  "Something living is more valuable to me than all treasures of the world." says the fiend to the princess.  We pay for our indebtedness with the life of our youth; who are drunk with materialism and succumb to all vices out of laziness or maybe even death.  The price is a desolate nature, destroyed families and an insane facade that can all be annihilated with one blow.  Everything was possible, however because of the exchange with "straw" credit money.  Earlier insane projects failed miserably at financing.  Today everyone pays with "straw" that has been spun overnight.

 

     How can we, how can the princess be saved from the sickness?  How can she, how can we save our children?  Insofar as we call the monster names, insofar as we knock the block off the root of the evil and not with all names and attacks are unsuccessful.  The monster is not called Hinz or Kunz in the fairy tales, but rather Rumpel$tilzchen (or Zionist Jew in English).  And the threatening sickness is not called economic crisis or unemployment, not war or suffering, but rather fraudulent money!  With usurious credit money healthy businesses and folk tradesmen are destroyed, the youth are directed to vice, and Third World countries are driven to bankruptcy.   Money not only rules but rather destroys the world in which every lunacy is financed.  And the international bankers laugh and sing in their golden palaces:

 

"Today I press money, tomorrow I loan it.  The week after tomorrow I command every government of the world.  Oh, how great that no one knows, who it is that interest and usury grows!"