The structure of any human society is a typical pyramidal one, with a
critical minority of people gradually moving up through the social
structure due to their own intelligence and diligence, and in some cases
through violence and fraud. When they have sufficient financial power
and influence, they will in turn consolidate and expand their vested
interests by changing the rules of the game and creating a ruling elite
with interlocking interests. If the power pyramid structure of Eastern
societies is based on regimes, the Western pyramid of domination is a
chain of very hidden debts that hold the various strata of society
firmly together. In Western societies, creditors have dominant power and
debtors are in a dominated position, and the main function of the state
apparatus is to protect and reinforce the reliability of this chain. In
the West, whoever is the biggest creditor is the ultimate lawmaker of
the game, and central banks, controlled by international bankers since
the 19th century, are undoubtedly the biggest creditors of society as a
whole, with the rest of society, including governments, being their
debtors. From this perspective, the West today is actually a financial
powerhouse controlling government decisions.
This book will comprehensively describe the formation, development,
exclusion, conflict, alliance and checks and balances of the major
financial power groups in Europe and the United States over a period of
300 years, systematically analyze the operation and decision-making
mechanism of the dominant forces behind the scenes in the world today,
and for the first time unveil the mystery of the "international banking
family club" that rules the world.