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Dernières notes



La Bibliothèque
L'Apocalypse de notre temps, de Henri Rollin
Le Complot : L'histoire secrète des Protocoles des Sages de Sion, de Will Eisner
Le complot judéo-maçonnique, d'Alain Goldschläger & Jacques Lemaire
Les Protocoles des Sages de Sion : Faux et usages d'un faux, de Pierre-André Taguieff
L'effroyable mensonge, de Guillaume Dasquié et Jean Guisnel
La Foire aux illuminés, de Pierre-André Taguieff
L'imaginaire du complot mondial, de Pierre-André Taguieff
La Logique du grain de sable, de Erik Durschmied
Mythes et mythologies politiques, de Raoul Girardet
La Société parano, de Véronique Campion-Vincent







By Richard McGregor


Song Hongbing - montage : Financial Times
The Battle of Waterloo. The deaths of six US presidents. The rise of Adolf Hitler. The deflation of the Japanese bubble economy, the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis and even environmental destruction in the developing world.

In a new Chinese best-seller, Currency Wars, these disparate events spanning two centuries have a single root cause: the control of money issuance through history by the Rothschild banking dynasty.

Even today, claims author Song Hongbing, the US Federal Reserve remains a puppet of private banks, which also ultimately owe their allegiance to the ubiquitous Rothschilds.

Such an over-arching conspiracy theory might matter as little as the many fetid tracts that can still be found in the west about the “gnomes of Zurich” and Wall Street’s manipulation of global finance.

But in China, which is in the midst of a lengthy debate about opening its financial system under US pressure, the book has become a surprise hit and is being read at senior levels of government and business.

Lire la suite sur le site du Financial Times.


Source : The Financial Times, September 25th, 2007.