The Treasury Letter – with Justin Walker

Justin Walker has been questioning the legitimacy of the international banking system and how money is created for many years. His assertion remains that our money is created by unelected, unaccountable, private bankers and that this corrupt system is overseen by equally unaccountable banks, of which the Bank for International Settlements is the most powerful. UK Column has supported these investigations and readers are encouraged to learn more from our previous reports:

Bankers, Bradburys, Carnage and Slaughter on the Western Front 

Bradbury Pound: QE By Another Name?

Justin Walker: The Bradbury Pound and Fraudulent Banking 

Alongside our reports, Justin highlighted the excellent documentary by Mark Felton Productions, which featured the Bank for International Settlements: Himmler’s Fourth Reich—SS Saved in Global Conspiracy.

More recently, Justin sent a letter on these monetary issues to Chancellor Rachel Reeves via his MP, Tim Farron. The letter provided significant factual evidence about the nature of international banking and money creation, but most importantly asked four key questions. Paraphrasing, these were:

  1. Does Andrew Bailey, Governor of the Bank of England, come to brief you, Rachel Reeves, following his meetings with the Bank of International Settlements?
  2. Is Professor Richard Werner correct in his assertion that the City of London is a foreign state in its own right? If so, how does this impact upon the position of the Bank of England as the guardian of the UK’s money supply?
  3. Particularly with her Oxford, London School of Economics, and Bank of England education and career, does Chancellor Rachel Reeves know what happened on August 7th, 1914, when the Bradbury pound was first issued?
  4. Chancellor Rachael Reeves, will you, on Budget Day, fill your £22 billion black hole using interest and debt free sovereign money based on the wealth of the nation in the way that was demonstrated in 1914?

The unsigned Treasury letter received back was perfunctory to the point of rudeness, and significantly, it ignored the important questions above. That the brusque dismissal was sent to an MP displays blatant arrogance, as well as a callous disregard for the standing of the MP and the importance of his service to his constituents. 

Join this critical interview to understand why the UK Treasury refuses to engage on the issues of unelected, unaccountable, private bankers, money creation, and the corrupt banking system.

Book recommendation at timestamp 11:00: Tower of Basel by Adam LeBor