A vintage illustration of 1st bank of the US, representing the themes of financial power and hidden influence explored in “The Kings Have Won.

5. The Five Arrows

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From The Kings Have Won:

“When a government is dependent for money upon the bankers, they and not the leaders of the government control the situation, since the hand that gives is above the hand that takes … financiers are without patriotism and without decency…”— Napoleon Bonaparte

“Yes, the Five Arrows, Amschel Mayer Rothschild, from Frankfurt, Salomon Mayer Rothschild, based in Vienna, Nathan Mayer Rothschild, in London, and Jakob Mayer Rothschild who resided in Paris, and Calmann Mayer Rothschild, in Italy. They were all bankers in their places of residence, all representing the Rothschild Banking empire under various names,” he said.

“The Five Arrows?”

“The Rothschild’s coat of arms includes a hand holding five arrows to symbolize the five brothers,” Schmidt said. 

The five Arrows tell the story of Frau Rosalie Feinhof who is a paleographer. She is hired to transcribe an old document and discovers facts about the implementation of central banks throughout Europe in the early 1800″s. It is a thought provoking story because it introduces the readers to the facts that central banks are private entities with little to no oversight.

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A vintage illustration of kings and noble elites, representing the themes of financial power and hidden influence explored in “The Kings Have Won.”

3. Messengers

Caillou was a one-eyed beast of sorts—a disfigured being ravaged by fear and the violence of men; part cyclops, part gargoyle, and part man. A soldier amongst the thousands about to die on this dreary battlefield, he sat, sheltered from the torrential rain; silent, immobile, and apprehensive, waiting for the giant before him to move.

A vintage illustration of royal stock exchange, representing the themes of financial power and hidden influence explored in “The Kings Have Won

4. Theater

At precisely five o’clock, Nathan Mayer Rothschild retired to the grand living room of the impressive New Court on St Swithin’s Lane; a most deserved moment of peace. A few days earlier, the rain had begun to fall over London, and while it varied in intensity, it had never ceased.

A vintage photo of chateau de Rilly used and representing the themes of financial power and hidden influence explored in “The Kings Have Won.

6. Your Kingdom or Your Wealth

The Kings’ failures were the fruits of greed and folly, but these men were better, wiser, and more inclined to become the rulers. Von Neiman stood and clapped his hands…”May we withdraw behind a veil of secrecy and become the puppet masters who, in the shadows, will become the invisible rulers, the unknown masters,” Von Neiman said. “To a new World Order!”