now that the payseur digs have began, maybe people are ready to look at the influence of royal bloodlines on US history through proxies like roths, vanderbilts, etc. this goes way back. once you start looking, the threads are not really that hard to find. consider the possibility that the american revolution was not about freedom from king george III (hanover), but was actually between battling royal houses. on one side you have the protestant/anglican faction represented by germany/geo.IIrd and on the other you have scottish/french papists (who won in the end). on the papists side we had washington/lafayette/jefferson/franklin along with the nine sisters loge (grand orient), and scottish rite. both groups are templar derived. then you have the hessian mercenaries, lutherans, and rite of strict observance on another side. in the end the US was carved up by european factions into power blocks. this is evidenced by the way things were named: New Amsterdam (house of Orange), the Carolinas (carolignians/merovingians/charlemagne), Georgia (george III), New Orleans (french nobles). my feeling is that the catholic faction ended up winning top rung which is why Georgetown Jesuit is the real power center, and why bonnie prince charlie (allied with papists and sicilians) was considered for kingship of America. The jacobin/catholic/illuminati faction was represented by washington/jefferson/franklin. franklin (grand orient nine sisters lodge) was postmaster general and effectively spymaster for the roths, monitoring all communications. this type of jockeying continues right down through today. CIA is a jesuit power block by and large and took its blueprint from the inquisition as did the FBI. does this explain current events and factionalization? jesuit pope and CIA both gunning for trump. what do you think?
"During the Revolution, the French Government also provided the Americans with loans, eventually totaling over two million dollars, most of which were negotiated by Benjamin Franklin. John Adams also secured a loan from Dutch bankers in 1782. After fighting between the Americans and the British ended in 1783, the new U.S. Government established under the Articles of Confederation needed to pay off its debt, but lacked sufficient tax authority to secure any revenue. The government struggled to pay off the loans, stopping payments of interest to France in 1785 and defaulting on further installments that were due in 1787. The United States also owed money to the Spanish Government and private Dutch investors, but focused on paying off the Dutch because Amsterdam remained the most likely source of future loans, which the United States successfully obtained in 1787 and 1788, despite its precarious financial state."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Orient_de_France
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Orange-Nassau
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rite_of_Strict_Observance
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_Rite