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CHAPTER FIVE
The House of Rothschild
The success of the Federal Reserve Conspiracy will raise many
questions in the minds of readers who are unfamiliar with the history of
the United States and finance capital. How could the Kuhn, Loeb-
Morgan alliance, powerful though it might be, believe that it would be
capable, first, of devising a plan which would bring the entire money
and credit of the people of the United States into their hands, and
second, of getting such a plan enacted into law?
The capability of devising and enacting the "National Reserve Plan", as
the immediate result of the Jekyll Island expedition was called, was
easily within the powers of the Kuhn, Loeb-Morgan alliance, according
to the following from McClure’s Magazine, August 1911, "The Seven
Men" by John Moody:
"Seven men in Wall Street now control a great share of the
fundamental industry and resources
of the United States. Three of the
seven men, J.P. Morgan, James J. Hill, and George F. Baker, head of
the First National Bank of New York belong to the so-called Morgan
group; four of them, John D. and William Rockefeller, James Stillman,
head of the National City Bank, and Jacob H. Schiff of the private
banking firm of Kuhn, Loeb Company, to the so-called Standard Oil
City Bank group... the central machine of capital extends its control
over the United States... The process is not only economically logical; it
is now practically automatic."32