With the conclusion of World War II, the Rothschilds rushed to reorganize the European continent under a supranational authority that had been created out of thin air and which was accountable to no one.
Led by Baron Robert Rothschild, a member of the Belgium branch of the Rothschild family, a core group of countries, including Belgium, France, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and West Germany, signed the Treaty of Rome in 1957.
The treaty established a nascent European common market, the Economic Economic Community (EEC), that began the process of pooling the sovereignty and wealth of participating nations so that the dynasty could better extract the wealth of those countries for its own purposes and prevent national governments from acting in the interests of their own people.
Gradually other European nations would join the common market, a template used around the world to integrate nations into regional markets regulated by supranational structures that would eventually be linked and and integrated under a global government.
The pretext for the EEC given to Europeans was that everlasting peace could only be achieved if nationalism, billed as a contributing factor to the world wars, was curtailed, notwithstanding that both wars had been planned in advance within the City of London, to the detriment of all nations concerned.
Even though the Rothschild dynasty had controlled the British Crown since the reign of Queen Victoria and wielded tremendous influence upon the British Parliament and the Bank of England, the British people and their representatives were fiercely protective of their sovereignty and opposed to joining the emerging European common market.
In 1972, Prime Minister Ted Heath overrode the objections of Euro-skeptics and signed Britain onto the Treaty of Rome, which consisted of 12 clauses that accepted previous EEC regulations.
The timing could not have been more serendipitous for elites. In 1971, while Parliamentarians were debating the merits of the treaty, nations were redeeming their dollars for gold, prompting President Richard Nixon to close the gold window.
With the establishment of the Federal Reserve in 1913, the dollar was backed by gold.
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