
	by Amitakh Stanford
	
	2003
	
			from
			
			XeeATwelve Website
	
			
			Spanish 
			version
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	Near the end of the nineteenth century and at 
	the beginning of the twentieth, Western industrialization had taken a heavy 
	toll on the environment; the air was turned chewy from black smoke that 
	belched from chimneys and rivers became sludgy from putrid waste products 
	from the manufacturing process. 
	
	 
	
	These manifold invasions of the environment were 
	tolerated in the name of progress and production.
	
	Many had proclaimed that machines would take away the drudgery of life, 
	would free the ordinary people from having to do mundane tasks, and would be 
	used to improve everyone's living conditions. Inventors were encouraged and 
	improvements of every implement imaginable were instituted. And, indeed, 
	life of the ordinary people did improve, but this was only to be a 
	short-term situation. 
	
	 
	
	The ruling elite would not allow the lot of 
	commoners to improve over the long term. But, for the time being, the 
	machines were so productive, and growth of the markets so profound, that 
	blue-collar workers were paid enough to have some extra income.
	
	This had a profound effect - it began to erode the class differences. This 
	was intolerable to the ruling elite. Prior to industrialization of the 
	Western world, the class structures were quite well defined between the 
	"haves" and the "have nots". 
	
	 
	
	As industrialization moved people into the 
	cities and away from the farms and rural communities, it concentrated the 
	"have nots" in smaller geographical areas, but, in order to lure people away 
	from the rural regions, remuneration for factory work had to far out-strip 
	farm pay, otherwise, people would tend to stay where they were, in the 
	agrarian life style.
	
	As the labor force became more and more affluent, it became less servile to 
	the middle and upper class people. This was particularly noticeable in the 
	United Kingdom. Prior to industrialization, there was such a distinction 
	between the poor and the rich, that it was almost inconceivable for the 
	lower class to imagine climbing the rung from the "have nots" to the 
	"haves". It was the Western world's caste system, and it was almost 
	impervious to penetration by the lower classes.
	
	As the lower classes in the Western World gained control of more and more 
	financial resources, they began to see themselves as equal to the middle and 
	upper class, and a type of revolution commenced. Some of the former "have 
	nots" began to show obvious displeasure to the snobs above them in the class 
	structure. 
	
	 
	
	Even those of
	
	royal blood were in danger of being jeered 
	at, insulted, and perhaps bombarded with eggs and rotten fruits if they 
	dared to venture into the living areas of the working class. 
	
	 
	
	To the ruling elite, this situation was 
	intolerable, and something had to be done quickly to halt the "unruliness" 
	of the working class.
	
	The industrial machines that had produced so many products and brought so 
	much wealth and luxury to the ruling elite had also caught the ruling elite 
	in the machines' wakes, which began the erosion of the Western world's class 
	structure. The ruling elite set out to halt the erosion of the class 
	structure that they used to control the lower classes.
	
	The ruling elite understood all too well that these industrial machines 
	could produce weapons of destruction. The war-making machines were set in 
	motion, and artillery pieces were crafted, refined and perfected for maximum 
	destructive capabilities. Vehicles were mounted with cannons and machine 
	guns, and airplanes were designed to carry guns, bombs, toxic chemicals and 
	gases to deliver tonnes of eruptive and infective destruction and death.
	
	While governments were building armies and materials for making war, the 
	ruling elite were also scheming for more effective ways to wage economic war 
	on the lesser-privileged classes. 
	
	 
	
	In America, the Congress passed the Federal 
	Reserve Act under very suspect circumstances in 1913. With this tool, 
	the ruling elite gained the right to print all American currency, and the 
	price the ruling elite was paid for the service of printing paper money was 
	the going rate of interest on each bill or credit, for as long as that bill 
	or credit remained in circulation. 
	
	 
	
	With this single Act by the American 
	Congress, the ruling elite gained access to all the wealth of the nation, as 
	long as they were willing to patiently strip away a little bit at a time.
	
	To understand the extent of the power wielded by the
	
	Federal Reserve Bank, consider that the interest paid by the 
	Congress for a single dollar that was "lent" to it by the Federal Reserve in 
	1913, has been nearly $100.00! 
	
	 
	
	That is just the interest on each dollar 
	"borrowed" from the Federal Reserve. 
	
	 
	
	In addition to being the sole supplier of 
	currency to the Congress, the Federal Reserve also was awarded the right to 
	expand or contract the money supply, ostensibly to help keep the economy 
	from having huge unpredictable swings from boom to recession cycles. This is 
	an awesome power - it is literally the power to artificially manipulate the 
	economy to suit the ruling elite. 
	
	 
	
	This is the same model used by many other 
	countries for their national banks, including Australia.
	
	When the Western governments believed that they had assembled sufficient 
	supplies of disgusting implements of physical destruction and large enough 
	military forces to employ those horrible weapons, the Western world went to 
	war, and it became known as World War I. 
	
	 
	
	For years, the lower classes 
	were forced to fill the foxholes and either be subjected to or subject 
	others to the frightening weapons used in that horrible, protracted war. 
	When the war ended, many of the previously "snooty" lower class people had 
	either been killed or the survivors were so shaken and traumatized that they 
	were much less likely to dare to offend or insult the middle and upper class 
	people.
	
	During the period of rebuilding after the war, many laborers went back to 
	work, and eventually, some of the working class were again able to claw 
	their way up the financial ladder until there were some who had surplus 
	income. The ruling elite would not tolerate a repeat of the period leading 
	up to World War I to recur, and thus swift action was taken. It used many 
	economic tools to wage a class war, not the least of which being the 
	American Federal Reserve Bank.
	
	The entire world's supply of money dried up as deflation slowed global 
	economic activity, and soon, the world fell into what is now known as the 
	Great Depression. The poor became desperately poorer, and the vast gap 
	between the rich and the poor became insurmountable. Under such conditions, 
	the unemployed felt hopeless, useless and were in great despair. 
	
	 
	
	The Great 
	Depression was worldwide and it dragged on and on until the lower classes 
	were absolutely desperate. Many of those who lived through the Great 
	Depression are still haunted by it.
	
	Governments became extremely active in their propaganda. It was being spread 
	everywhere, preaching how wonderful their form of government was, whether it 
	was socialism, fascism or democracy. Nationalism was the order of the day in 
	all countries and people were stirred into hysterical frenzies. Everyone 
	began pointing fingers at one another, and it was not long before the 
	Second World War broke out.
	
	World War II had displayed just how sick and evil the minds of scientists 
	were, as they prepared more sophisticated gases, liquids and solids to 
	poison the Earth and its inhabitants. Bigger and bigger bombs were built for 
	the war; faster planes were built to deliver these horrendous weapons to 
	their targets. Men were conscripted into the armed forces, and women were 
	forced to work in factories, producing bombs for the men to drop on other 
	countries. 
	
	 
	
	This scenario was widespread throughout the 
	Western world.
	
	When the war was over, the men returned home to find that because women now 
	worked in the factories the men encountered competition in the work force 
	with the women. In order for everyone to be employed, all the wages were 
	slowly reduced accordingly. 
	
	 
	
	Since WWII, the standard of living of the 
	working class has gone down, down, down, and the distinction between classes 
	has widened greatly.
	
	The Western World's economic class distinctions are not unlike the social 
	caste system in India, which still exists today. The Indian caste system 
	divides its people into elite and middle classes and the lowest class which 
	is known as Harijan or the "untouchables". The Indian caste system was 
	designed to create human and spiritual bondage and alienation, subjugation, 
	oppression and misery for the lower classes. 
	
	 
	
	Force and economic pressures were the initial 
	tools used by the dominant oppressors to preserve this caste system.
	
	Likewise, the ruling elite of the modern world employ force and economic 
	pressures to maintain the socio-economic class structure of our society. A 
	Roman leader, Constantine I, followed the Hindu caste system and 
	decreed most occupations to be hereditary. For example a class of tenant 
	farmers were to be permanently assigned to live and work on the land where 
	they lived.
	
	Both the caste system and the class system take their roots and origins from
	
	the Anunnaki Elite and who took control of 
	sections of the Earth when they arrived from
	Nibiru 
	(Planet "X") a long, long time ago. 
	
	 
	
	The ruling elite in the physical on the Earth 
	today are either the
	
	descendants of the Anunnaki Remnants who 
	remained on the planet, or they are trying to emulate the Anunnaki 
	Remnants. 
	
	 
	
	The aim of the ruling elite is to control,
	oppress and exploit people by dividing races, nations and the 
	world at large.