JFK’s bold move toward a silver-backed currency represents one of the most significant challenges to the globalist financial system in American history. In 1963, Kennedy signed Executive Order 11110, empowering the Treasury Department to issue silver certificates – a direct threat to the Federal Reserve’s monopoly on our nation’s money supply.
Let’s speak plainly: the Federal Reserve is not “federal” at all. Since its suspicious creation in 1913, the Fed has operated as a private banking cartel controlled by the world’s most powerful banking families – the Rothschilds, Rockefellers, Morgans, and others who have manipulated global finance for generations. These banking dynasties hold significant ownership stakes in the Federal Reserve and continue to collect dividends from its operations while average Americans struggle under inflation and debt.
Kennedy understood this reality. His silver certificate initiative would have gradually restored sound money principles and returned monetary sovereignty to the American people where it belongs. By backing currency with actual silver, JFK threatened to undermine the fiat currency system that allows these banking elites to create money out of thin air and control nations through debt.
When you challenge the people who rule the world from the shadows, consequences follow. Just months after signing Executive Order 11110, Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas. The mainstream media and establishment historians mock anyone who questions the official narrative, but patriots who follow the money know better.
The timing is simply too convenient to ignore. Kennedy dared to interfere with the most powerful people on earth – those who control the global money supply and finance both sides of every major conflict. These banking families don’t relinquish power willingly, and JFK’s monetary reforms threatened their centuries-old system of control.
After Kennedy’s death, his silver certificates were quickly removed from circulation. Lyndon B. Johnson immediately reversed course on monetary policy, and the banking establishment breathed a sigh of relief as their system remained intact.
Today, as we watch the purchasing power of our dollar continually erode and our national debt spiral out of control, we should remember Kennedy’s courage in challenging the financial powers that truly govern our nation. His attempt to restore honest money through silver-backing remains one of the most significant – and dangerous – acts of defiance against the global banking elite in American history.
The lesson is clear: when you threaten the money powers, you’re risking everything. JFK paid the ultimate price for trying to free Americans from the Federal Reserve’s grip.