• International Monetary
Fund told to vacate the country; nation now issuing debt-free money
By Ronald L. Ray
Hungary is making history of
the first order.
Not since the 1930s in Germany
has a major European country dared to
escape from the clutches of the
Rothschild-controlled international banking cartels. This is
stupendous news that should encourage nationalist patriots
worldwide to increase the fight for freedom from financial tyranny.
Already in 2011, Hungarian
Prime Minister Viktor
Orbán
promised to serve justice on his socialist predecessors,
who sold the nation’s people into unending debt slavery under the
lash of the International Monetary Fund
(IMF)
and the terrorist state of Israel. Those
earlier administrations were riddled with Israelis in high places, to
the fury of the masses, who finally
elected Orbán’s Fidesz
party in response.
According to a report on the
German-language website “National Journal,” Orbán has now moved
to unseat the usurers from their throne. The
popular, nationalistic prime
minister told the IMF that Hungary neither wants nor needs
further “assistance” from that proxy
of the Rothschild-owned Federal Reserve
Bank. No longer will Hungarians be forced to pay usurious interest to
private, unaccountable central bankers.
Instead, the Hungarian
government has assumed sovereignty over
its own currency and now issues money
debt free, as it is needed. The results have been
nothing short of remarkable. The nation’s economy, formerly
staggering under deep indebtedness, has
recovered rapidly and by means not seen
since National Socialist Germany.
The Hungarian Economic
Ministry announced that it has, thanks to a “disciplined budget
policy,” repaid on August 12, 2013,
the remaining €2.2B owed to the IMF—well before the March 2014
due date. Orbán declared: “Hungary enjoys the trust of
investors,” by which is not meant the IMF, the Fed or any other
tentacle of the Rothschild financial empire.
Rather, he was referring to investors who
produce something in Hungary for Hungarians and cause true economic
growth. This is not the “paper
prosperity” of plutocratic pirates, but the sort
of production that actually employs people and improves their lives.
With Hungary now free from the
shackles of servitude to debt slavers,
it is no wonder that the president of
the Hungarian central bank, operated by the government
for the public welfare and not private enrichment, has demanded that
the IMF close its offices in that
ancient European land. In addition, the state attorney general,
echoing Iceland’s efforts, has brought
charges against the last three previous prime ministers
because of the criminal amount of debt into
which they plunged the nation.
The only step remaining, which
would completely destroy the power of
the banksters in Hungary, is for that
country to implement a barter system for foreign exchange, as existed
in Germany under the National Socialists
and exists today in the Brazil, Russia,
India, China and South Africa, or BRICS,
international economic coalition. And if the United States
would follow the lead of Hungary, Americans could
be freed from the usurers’ tyranny and likewise hope for a return
to peaceful prosperity.
No comments:
Post a Comment