Read The Falsification of History: Our Distorted Reality Online
Authors: John Hamer
It was also discovered that recent use of NSAIDs by elderly patients doubles the odds of being admitted to hospital with an episode of Congestive Heart Failure. The estimated relative risk for first admission with heart failure and the risk of this outcome was increased substantially by NSAID use in those with a history of heart disease.
NSAIDs, particularly including generic aspirin are truly a silent epidemic that has caused a tremendous amount of pain and unnecessary, premature deaths.
Public knowledge of this tragedy is virtually non-existent, with an enormous amount of critical information primarily existing within the sanctuary of medical libraries and thus being unavailable to the public in general.
Big Pharma still markets and promotes worldwide sales of these toxic substances and governmental agencies have done nothing at all to alert the public or even medical practitioners, many of whom remain totally unaware of these facts.
The 20 to 50 million deaths during 1918 have long been attributed to a virulent new virus but the NIAID has now clearly stated that common upper respiratory bacteria was responsible, not a new virus.
There was no new deadly virus but there was something new in 1918 and that was toxic aspirin, being used in totally inappropriate, dangerous dosages.
“... just before the 1918 death spike, aspirin was recommended in regimens now known to be potentially toxic and to cause pulmonary oedema and may therefore have contributed to overall pandemic mortality and several of its mysteries. Young adult mortality may be explained by willingness to use the new, recommended therapy and the presence of youth in regimented treatment settings (military).” Dr. Karen Starko
Use of Bayer aspirin and other generic aspirin suppressed immunity, allowing the bacteria to develop into a massive bacterial infections and pneumonias.
In addition to the deaths by pneumonia, the use of Bayer aspirin (and generic versions) at toxic doses can explain the lingering mysteries of extremely rapid deterioration from health to death as well as the death of young, apparently otherwise healthy people.
Bayer's heavy advertising and government and medical recommendations fuelled use of both Bayer aspirin and generic versions.
Based on the primary role that aspirin played in the millions of 1918 deaths versus the survival of those who avoided it in favour of natural treatments, it would suggest that 1918 was not a plague caused by a virus, but a pharmaceutical industry issue.
And given the scale of the deaths, it was without question, the greatest medical catastrophe in human history, exceeding even the ‘Great Plague’ of the Dark and Middle Ages.
Whilst the events of 1918 expose the extreme toxicity of Bayer's most staple of drugs, aspirin, it also reveals something even more profound; the continuing abject failure of the oil-based synthetic, pharmaceutical drug industry to treat disease and the persistent Elite propaganda directed at us, the masses, in order to cover up and obfuscate this fact.
The overall conclusion must therefore be that ‘Spanish influenza’ was not the cause of the 1918/19 deaths.
Whilst I have focused on medical evidence indicating that aspirin overdose is the most reasonable explanation for the terrifying rapid deaths and aspirin use appears responsible for the massive bacterial infections that led to lethal pneumonias, there is an instigating factor prior to the use of aspirin itself and that is Bayer's desire for profits to the detriment of all else.
As millions of people died in this reckless quest, how much money did Bayer make because of the 1918 ‘flu’?
This question is extremely pertinent and should be answered.
However, I would not advise ‘holding one’s breath’ on any answers being forthcoming any time very soon.
As always, the Elite spider’s web of deceit and chicanery will prevent anyone from investigating these issues too closely and anyone who does get too close… well I will leave that to reader’s own imagination.
The true facts of this financial disaster do not appear in any history textbooks today.
Today’s history uses this inflation to twist the truth into its opposite.
It cites the radical devaluation of the German mark as an example of what goes wrong when governments print their own money, rather than borrow it from private cartels run by the banksters.
In reality the exact opposite is the truth as with so much of our accepted historical wisdom today.
The Weimar financial crisis actually began with the impossible reparations payments imposed at the Treaty of Versailles. Hjalmar Schacht (who was never a Nazi Party member and now it appears clear why that was the case), the Rothschild agent who was currency commissioner for the Republic, opposed letting the German government print its own money…
“The Treaty of Versailles is a model of ingenious measures for the economic destruction of Germany.
Germany could not find any way of holding its head above the water, other than by the inflationary expedient of printing bank notes.”
Schacht echoes the history books’ deception that Weimar inflation was caused when the German government printed its own money; however, in his 1967 book ‘The Magic of Money’, Schacht revealed that it was the privately owned ‘Reichsbank’, not the German government that was injecting new money into the economy. Thus, it was that this Elite-owned and run private bank caused the Weimar hyperinflation.
Like the US Federal Reserve, the Reichsbank was overseen by appointed government officials, but was operated for private gain.
What drove the wartime inflation into hyperinflation was speculation by foreign investors, who sold the German Mark short, betting on its decreasing value.
In the manipulative device known as the ‘short sell’, speculators borrow something they do not own, sell it, and then ‘cover’ by buying it back at the lower price.
Speculation in the German Mark was made possible because the privately owned Reichsbank (not yet under Nazi control) made massive amounts of currency available for borrowing.
This currency, like all first-world currency today, was created with accounting entries in the bank’s books and then this ‘magic’ money was lent at compound interest.
When the Reichsbank could not keep up with the voracious demand for Marks, other private banks were then allowed to also create Marks out of nothing and to lend them at interest.
The result was runaway debt and inflation.
On the 24th June 1922, right-wing fanatics assassinated Walter Rathenau, the moderate German foreign minister.
Rathenau was a charismatic figure and the idea that a popular, wealthy and glamorous government minister could be shot in a law-abiding society shattered the faith of the German people, who needed to believe that the country was in safe hands after the trauma of the previous decade. The wealthier, by now extremely nervous citizens were already taking their money out of banks and investing it into ‘real goods’ such as diamonds, works of art and safe real-estate, with true intrinsic values, unlike currency which the Elite will manipulate up or downwards to suit their own agendas. Eventually, the ordinary German citizens also began to trade their Marks for real commodities.
The British historian Adam Fergusson noted that pianos were being bought, even by non-musical families.
Sellers held back because the Mark was worth less every day and as prices soared, the amounts of currency demanded became greater and greater and the German Central Bank responded to these demands through the printing of more, increasingly worthless paper.
Yet still the ruling authorities did not acknowledge that there was anything amiss.
A leading financial newspaper at the time, reported that the amounts of money in circulation were not excessively high but nevertheless Dr. Rudolf Havenstein, the president of the Reichsbank (German equivalent to the Federal Reserve / Bank of England) told an economics professor that he needed a new suit but wasn't going to buy one until prices came down.
Why did the German government not act sooner to halt the inflation?
The problem was partly that it was a shaky, fragile government, especially after the assassination of Rathenau.
The vengeful French sent their army into the Ruhr to enforce their demands for reparations due under the Versailles Treaty and the Germans were powerless to resist due to the virtual disbandment of their armed forces and they feared unemployment far more than inflation.
In 1919, Communists had attempted a coup and severe unemployment may have given the Communists another opportunity to seize power.
The great German industrial combines Krupp, Thyssen, IG Farben and Stinnes welcomed the inflation and survived it well by astute forward planning and possibly foreknowledge of what was to come.
A cheaper Mark, they reasoned, would make German goods cheap and easy to export and they needed the export earnings to buy raw materials abroad.
Inflation kept everyone working.
And so the printing presses continued producing the ever-decreasing in value Mark and once they began to run, they were impossible to stop.
The price increases became unmanageable.
Menus in cafes could not be revised quickly enough to keep up with the speed of the inflation.
A student at Freiburg University ordered a cup of coffee at a café and the price on the menu was 5,000 Marks per cup.
He had two cups but when the bill arrived, it was for 14,000 Marks.
‘If you want to save money and you want two cups of coffee, you should order them both at the same time’, he was told by the proprietor.
Things became so bad that people would not even bother to bend down to pick up a one hundred million Mark note carelessly discarded by a passer-by as by that time it had become worth less than the paper upon which it was printed.
There was a famous case of a man walking along a street on a shopping trip to buy bread, carrying his money in a large wicker basket, such was the quantity and bulk of the notes he needed to carry.
Upon unsuccessfully attempting to enter a particularly busy shop, he reasoned that he could quite safely leave most of his money outside in the basket as no-one would bother to risk stealing such a bulky yet paltry amount of money.
He was absolutely correct.
When he returned, he found his money was all still there but someone had stolen his basket!
The presses of the Reichsbank could not keep up to demand, even though they ran through the night.
Individual cities and states began to issue their own money and Dr. Havenstein, the president of the Reichsbank, did not get his new suit.
A factory worker described payday, which was every day at 11 am: ‘At 11:00 in the morning a siren sounded, and everyone gathered in the factory forecourt, where a five-ton lorry was drawn up loaded to overflowing with paper money.
The chief cashier and his assistants climbed up on top.
They read out names and just threw out bundles of notes.
As soon as you had caught one you made a dash for the nearest shop and bought just anything that was going.’
Teachers, paid at 10 am, brought their money to the playground, where relatives took the bundles and hurried off with them.
Banks closed at 11am as by this time they had invariably run out of cash anyway.
The flight from currency that had begun with the buying of diamonds, gold, country houses and antiques now extended to minor and almost useless items, bric-a-brac, soap and hairpins to name but a few.
This hitherto law-abiding country crumbled into petty thievery, petrol (gasoline) was siphoned from cars and people bought things they didn't need and used them to barter.
A pair of shoes for a shirt or some crockery for coffee.
Berlin had an unreal atmosphere, prostitutes of both sexes roamed the streets and cocaine was the fashionable drug.
When the 1,000-billion Mark note was first issued in 1923, few bothered to collect the change when they spent it.
By November 1923, with one dollar equal to one trillion Marks, the breakdown was complete and the German economy had become one of barter.
The currency had completely lost its meaning.
Then, a new president took over the Reichsbank, Horace Greeley Hjalmar Schacht, who came by his first two names because of his father's admiration for an editor of the New York Tribune.
The Rentenmark was not Schacht's idea, but he executed it and as the Reichsbank president, he got the credit for it.
For decades afterward he was able to maintain a reputation for financial wizardry and he became the architect of the financial prosperity brought by the Nazi party.
Obviously, although the currency was worthless, Germany was still a rich country with mines, farms, factories, and natural resources aplenty.
The backing for the Rentenmark was mortgages on the land and bonds on the factories, but that backing was a fiction; the factories and land could not be turned into cash or used abroad.
Nine zeros were struck from the currency, that is, one Rentenmark was equal to one billion old Marks.
The Germans wanted desperately to believe in the Rentenmark, and so they simply did.
But although the country slowly began to function almost normally again, the savings of the middle-classes were never restored, nor were the values of hard work and decency that had accompanied the savings.
With the currency went many of the lifetime plans of average, ordinary citizens.
It was the custom for the bride to bring some money to a marriage; so many marriages were called off and many widows dependent on insurance found themselves destitute.
People who had worked for a lifetime and built up a sizeable pension fund, found that their pensions would not even buy a cup of coffee.
Such are the ways that the ordinary citizens of the world are cheated out of the money by these vultures.
“The cities were still there, the houses not yet bombed and in ruins, but the victims were millions of people.
They had lost their fortunes, their savings; they were dazed and inflation-shocked and did not understand how it had happened to them and who the foe was who had defeated them.
Yet they had lost their self-assurance, their feeling that they themselves could be the masters of their own lives if only they worked hard enough; and lost, too, were the old values of morals, of ethics, of decency.”
Pearl Buck, American author
Thus, according to Schacht himself, the German government did not cause the Weimar hyperinflation.
On the contrary, the government brought hyperinflation under control.
It placed the Reichsbank under strict government regulation and took prompt corrective measures to eliminate foreign speculation.
One of those measures was to eliminate easy access to loans from private banks and eventually Hitler regained Germany’s financial stability through the issuance of Government Treasury Certificates.
Schacht, the Rothschild agent, disapproved of this government fiat money (obviously) and was consequently dismissed as head of the Reichsbank when he refused to issue it.
Nevertheless, he acknowledged in his later memoirs that allowing the government to issue the money it needed did not produce the price inflation predicted by classical economic theory, which states (for obvious reasons) that currency must be borrowed from private cartels.
What really causes hyperinflation is uncontrolled speculation.
When speculation is coupled with debt (owed to private banking cartels) the result is always disaster.
On the other hand, when a government issues currency in carefully measured ways, it causes supply and demand to increase together, leaving prices unaffected.
Hence there is no inflation, no debt, no unemployment, and no need for income taxes.
Naturally this terrifies the bankers, since it eliminates their powers and it also terrifies the Elite, since their control of banking allows them to buy the media, the government and everything else.
Were the nations of the world to revert to Government-only money issuance, then the world financial crisis would be solved overnight, as would much of the ever-increasing poverty and suffering we are currently witnessing.
Significantly, it was in the midst of this financial carnage that further devastated an already prostrate nation, that an unobtrusive, former army corporal was thrust into the spotlight and promoted as a great ‘leader of men’.
The prevailing conditions of the time providing a perfect stage for anyone with any aspirations of greatness and the ability to ‘mesmerise’ his audiences with nationalist, patriotic rhetoric.
And thus the world was introduced to the soon-to-be world public enemy number one, Adolf Hitler…