Earlier today I wrote this:
History seems to be repeating itself, except this time they have replaced immigrants, as the Jews.After the destruction of Jerusalem, in 586 BCE the elite of the Jewish society, were deported into Babylon, and told never to return. A vast quantity of them move to Mesopotamia and steadily multiplied. 250 years later after the conquest of Alexander the Great, the dispersion intensified from Egypt and Alexandria and on to Rome and then on to most European towns by early second millennium. It was there and then that they earnestly got involved into the money trade. They became identified with money and money lending, in the eyes of the Christian consciousness, and they occupy that same stance of position, to this day.
The difference only being in the class status, of the "employed occupation".
Immigrants take jobs from a country's people, Jews took the financial industry of every country they immigrated to, by an intentionally designed plan.
Don't believe me?
I will show you later on this evening, why that statement is undeniable true.
Within the tradition of Jewish law, one Jew cannot charge another Jew interest.
The head of the Fed is Jewish, and the large investment bankers are as well.
The large investment bankers have been borrowing money from the FED for free, for quite a few years now.
The uncouth question is: Is Jewish law being applied, to the detriment of the country? Or is it just another one of those bizarrely weird coincidences?
Think about it
A diaspora (from Greek διασπορά, "scattering, dispersion")[1] is "the movement, migration, or scattering of people away from an established or ancestral homeland"[2] or "people dispersed by whatever cause to more than one location",[3] or "people settled far from their ancestral homelands".[2]
The word has come to refer to historical mass-dispersions of people with common roots, particularly movements of an involuntary nature, such as the expulsion of Jews from the Middle East, the African Trans-Atlantic slave trade, the southern Chinese during the coolie slave trade, or the century-long exile of the Messenians under Spartan rule.[3]
Recently, scholarship has distinguished between different kinds of diaspora, based on its causes such as imperialism, trade or labor migrations, or by the kind of social coherence within the diaspora community and its ties to the ancestral lands. Some diaspora communities maintain strong political ties with their homeland. Other qualities that may be typical of many diasporas are thoughts of return, relationships with other communities in the diaspora, and lack of full assimilation into the host country.[3