Sunday, 16 September 2012

Did J.P. Morgan Kill Off his Competition on the Titanic and Form the hated Federal Reserve? Check the Coincidences:






In 1898, Morgan Robertson wrote a book titled "Wreck of the Titan" about a luxury liner deemed unsinkable that was going too fast in the North Atlantic in April and hit and iceberg killing most everyone on board due to lack of lifeboats.

14 years later this fictional book would play out in real life exactly down to the name, with the wreck of the Titanic; but this time it would have major political implications. Some of the wealthiest men in the world were on that ship and some were opposed to the Federal Reserve and central banks.

FACT: JP Morgan funded/built the Titanic
FACT: JP Morgan was booked on the voyage but cancelled at the last second.
FACT: Friend of JP Morgan, Milton Hersey, also cancelled at the last moment and survived to build the Hersey food empire.
FACT: There were no red flares on board to signal to any boats for rescue. Only white flares that signal a party and that everything is okay.
FACT: It was the first ship of its kind with the ability to seal decks electromagnetically which could also seal people below deck.
FACT: The Captain Edward Smith was one of the most decorated Captains of his time and would have been totally out of character by avoiding precautions.
FACT: Morgan Robertson, the author of the book was poisoned to death a couple years after the Titanic sank.
FACT: The Federal Reserve was formed the very next year.
FACT: The Astor Family was one of the richest families in the world and John Astor III along with the other leading wealthy figures on the Titanic opposed the Federal Reserve.

John Jacob Astor IV, the richest man in the world at the time, a friend of Nikola Tesla, and an outspoken opponent of the creation of the Federal Reserve. Astor gained his wealth, in part, as a real estate builder, investor, and inventor. Other prominent Federal Reserve detractors, such as Benjamin Guggenheim and Isa Strauss, also died on board.


Haunting: The first photo of the iceberg that sunk the Titanic
The first photograph of the mammoth iceberg which sunk the Titanic has surfaced a century after the disaster happened.
The haunting back and white picture was taken less than 10 hours after the historic tragedy in April 15, 1912.

 
 
Survivor's letter: Sent from the ship, it said the author was “peacefully and complacently smoking”


Did JP Morgan get the idea of how to kill off the opposition to the Federal Reserve from a book written 14 years prior? This was a book titled "The Titan" published 14 years before the Titanic sank and look at the similarities. 
The Federal Reserve Act
JP Morgan

Did they hatch a plan at the clandestine Jekyll Island meeting to build a ship to eliminate the competition and those opposed to the illegal Federal Reserve Act? Assassinated former U.S. president, Abraham Lincoln fought the bankers and opposed their plans. John Wilkes Booth was also employed by the Rothschild family. Other political and influential figures who also opposed the Federal Reserve Act were also either assassinated, met untimely deaths or had attempts on their lives.

Similarities to the Titanic

Although the novel was written before the Olympic-class Titanic had even been designed, there are some remarkable similarities between the fictional and real-life counterparts. Like the Titanic, the fictional ship sank in April in the North Atlantic, and there were not enough lifeboats for the passengers. There are also similarities between the size (800 ft long for Titan versus 882 ft 9 in long for the Titanic), speed (25 knots for Titan, 21 knots for Titanic) and life-saving equipment.

Beyond the name, the similarities between the Titanic and the fictional Titan include:

Described as "unsinkable"
The Titanic was the world's largest luxury liner (882 feet, displacing 63,000 long tons), and was once described as being practically "unsinkable".
The Titan was the largest craft afloat and the greatest of the works of men (800 feet, displacing 75,000 tons), and was considered "unsinkable". 

Shortage of lifeboats
The Titanic carried only 16 lifeboats, plus 4 Engelhardt folding lifeboats,less than half the number required for her passenger capacity of 3000.
The Titan carried "as few as the law allowed", 24 lifeboats, less than half needed for her 3000 capacity.

Struck an iceberg
Moving too fast at 22½ knots,the Titanic struck an iceberg on the starboard side on the night of April 14, 1912 in the North Atlantic 400 miles away from Newfoundland.
Also on an April night, in the North Atlantic 400 miles from Newfoundland (Terranova), the Titan hit an iceberg while traveling at 25 knots, also on the starboard side.

Sinking
The unsinkable Titanic sank, and more than half of her 2200 passengers died.
The indestructible Titan also sank, more than half of her 2500 passengers drowning.
Went down bow first, the Titan actually capsizing before it sank.

Satanic One World Government
Paul Warburg attendee at JP Morgan's Jekyll Island meeting in Georgia



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The Ghosts of the Titanic 

 

The victims of The Titanic
Eino Viljami Panula, a.k.a. The Unkown Baby





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