The Rothschild Waterloo story is used as a model of fast information, media panic, asset collapse, and buying distressed assets to build financial power.
Topic brief
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Rothschild
The Rothschild Waterloo story is used as a model of fast information, media panic, asset collapse, and buying distressed assets to build financial power.
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Key Notes
Disraeli and Lionel de Rothschild are introduced as elite meeting points between British empire and Jewish financial networks.
Sidonia is framed as a Rothschild-based wealthy Jewish character who voices the novel's theory of Jewish global power.
Jiang stresses that he is not verifying the claim but finds it striking that a powerful Jewish prime minister put it in the mouth of a Rothschild-like character.
Jiang treats this passage as the clearest Disraeli/Rothschild expression of the theory that hidden Jewish networks coordinate world power.
Timestamped Evidence
"And this alliance goes back hundreds of years. And the Rothschild family is, of course, one of the most powerful banking families in the..."
"All right. So this is very strange how science is supposed to be a field of rigorous debate, rigorous science. Right? But the evidence..."
"And the second person is Leonon de Rothschild, who is here to the Rothschild banking family. They're best friends. And you can argue the..."
"...is Sidonia, who is a wealthy Jewish person based on the Rothschild family, okay? And he's going to explain. He's going to explain to..."
"...stuff. Okay. He's putting it in the mouth of basically a Rothschild. Okay. Can you read, Amber?"
"Connerspeak. This pleads the truth and my consent that we are then convinced by the same Docker safety that the world is governed by..."
"...And again, he's getting a lot of this information from the Rothschild banking family. So the Rothschild, for whatever reason, think they control the..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
A source-grounded reading of Jiang’s lecture on transnational capital, British sea empire, Frankist revolutionary theology, Disraeli’s Coningsby, Bolshevism, Marx, Bakunin, and Freud: modernity appears as a machine that hides capital, displays a scapegoat, turns...
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