The Sovereign Voice issue 4 | Page 25

ADOR JAMES BERNARD GILMORE theless there for all of us who have the time and inkling to look. The Bankster Diaries — the first installment in a series — is the result of a 25-year long path of research into the history of international finance from the 1930’s Great Depression through the end of WWII. At times the narrative reads like an action/spy novel (albeit with an inordinate amount of accounting information for said genre), yet the various situations and characters in this story are taken from real life. Indeed, this is a work of nonfiction, derived from official records, that outlines in painstaking detail numerous key geopolitical realities of the 20th century that hold deep significance for the present moment. When you finally see — to give a few examples — who was behind the funding for the Nazi party; what motivated the attempted coup at the White House under FDR; what businesses collaborated to manufacture arms to be sold to “friends” and “enemies” alike; and what individuals were responsible for maintaining and promoting the very conflicts of interest that made such scenarios possible; then it will help you see, with a high degree of clarity, our collective imperative. The information contained in The Bankster Diaries comes from official records, as well as legal, military, and financial journals and reports. Thus, its contents cannot be regarded as “theoretical”. That is to say, we are not being presented here with an “argument”, “proposition”, “theory”, etc., about what “might” be true — instead, we are being provided with hard data and evidence. Furthermore, in writing this book, the author wished for the sources to speak for themselves, and thus to a large degree its content comprises a collage built from said sources. One can think of it as though, by reading The Bankster Diaries, one is eavesdropping on a decisive “insider” conversation in which matters of international high treason will be discussed, and real-world suspects will be named. The history of modern financial despotism is a dense subject, to say the least. However, rest TheSovereignVoice.Org