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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars excellent
Couldn"t put it down. I like the way, he documents what he says. My husband hates reading, but read Blood, Money, and Greed in its entirety. Cliff Ford and Hal Lindsey are two of my favorite authors. Also, have read Facing Millennium Midnight , by Hal Lindsey and Cliff Ford. That too, was excellent reading.
Published on March 24, 1999

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A good book but requires some extra reading
When reading the book for the first time in 1999, it was a mind blower. It described the various steps taken by a money trust to take over the World, punctuating the evolution with episodes about the various financial crisis, the foundation of the Federal Reserve including the infamous Depression, the end of Bretton Woods, the 1973 oil crisis, the fall of the Berlin Wall...
Published on March 17, 2000 by Eric Vertommen


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars excellent, March 24, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Blood, Money, & Greed: The Money Trust Conspiracy (Paperback)
Couldn"t put it down. I like the way, he documents what he says. My husband hates reading, but read Blood, Money, and Greed in its entirety. Cliff Ford and Hal Lindsey are two of my favorite authors. Also, have read Facing Millennium Midnight , by Hal Lindsey and Cliff Ford. That too, was excellent reading.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Every American must read this book., October 17, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Blood, Money, & Greed: The Money Trust Conspiracy (Paperback)
This book is a must read. It starts out kind of slow talking about how money was first used hundreds of years ago. But then it takes off and you can't put it down. Find out that the Federal Reserve is not federal at all and there is no reserve. All the info is backed up with documentation and can be proved. You won't believe what you read.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Blood, Money & Greed, December 28, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Blood, Money, & Greed: The Money Trust Conspiracy (Paperback)
Excellent work, Mr. Ford! I wish I had learned some of this in my years of "Higher Education". Thoroughly documented and in-depth. What every Tax Paying American should no about the economic world in which we live. This book opened my eyes to the simple truth that money does make the world go around, and who is spinning it.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Book!!!! Mr.Ford you owe me a highlighter!, August 18, 1999
By 
JEDIXON@AOL.COM (Missouri City, TX) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Blood, Money, & Greed: The Money Trust Conspiracy (Paperback)
Excellent read. Very clear and to the point. I could not stop highlighting all the solid and relevant information.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Governments are merely puppets to World Bankers, January 22, 1999
By 
uscwes@hotmail.com (Columbia, South Carolina (USA)) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Blood, Money, & Greed: The Money Trust Conspiracy (Paperback)
What an incredible revelation about the power structures of this world. Ultimately, God is in charge, but Cliff does a wonderful job in showing the progression of how the world is leaning toward a one world government (setting the stage for the anti-christ). First, there must be a one world economy. I'm saddened that many Christians can not see prophesy being revealed before their eyes. Just listen to the "State of the Union" address, and you will understand the double-talk that so many people accept regarding the financial status of this great country. 1999 will be an interesting year to watch. After reading this book, the events make so much more sense to me now.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The title says it all!, March 23, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Blood, Money, & Greed: The Money Trust Conspiracy (Paperback)
Easy reading, excellently presented! The human suffering in this world as a result of the manipulation and control of money is incredible! I wish that every American would read this book, along with Creature from Jekyll Island by Griffin. Perhaps that would help take off the mental blinders that most people here in the states are wearing. No question but that we need wisdom from God.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A good book but requires some extra reading, March 17, 2000
By 
Eric Vertommen (Brussels Belgium) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Blood, Money, & Greed: The Money Trust Conspiracy (Paperback)
When reading the book for the first time in 1999, it was a mind blower. It described the various steps taken by a money trust to take over the World, punctuating the evolution with episodes about the various financial crisis, the foundation of the Federal Reserve including the infamous Depression, the end of Bretton Woods, the 1973 oil crisis, the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the Y2K bug which was a plan for Europe's old money to take over the World again. At the time it opened several mind barriers.

But since (15 November 2001) I also discovered "Return of Depression Economics" from Paul Krugman explaining fundamentals in economy in an easy way, "False Dawn" from John Gray explaining the dangers of over borrowing which causes our present and probably temporary downturn, "Essays on the Great Depression" from Ben S. Bernanke explaining why the countries which abandoned the gold standard quickly (Britain 1931, Germany 1933) recovered much faster than those who did not (US 1934, Belgium 1935, France 1936). And those who did not use gold but silver did not suffer at all (China, Spain) because the metal was never in short supply.

If the Federal Reserve had not been there, if the Bank of England had not showed the way to the solution in 1931 and if this solution did not become a global standard after 1971, we would all be in a bad shape today. The reason why the dollar fares better than the euro is not because economic fundamentals but because the Federal Reserve has more room to manoeuvre and avoid crisis (recent slowdown in employment proves it) than the European Central Bank influenced by Germany who was rightfully traumatised by its 1923 hyperinflation period. Gray explains how a depression or an hyperinflation leave a deep trauma to a generation that lived true one of those events. Unfortunately fighting inflation is only one side of the coin. Recession and depression also exist.

Global finance is shaped by all those rules. September 11, 2001 showed why insurance companies and other financial institutions pool together to reduce risk. This is not a conspiracy, just the desire to diminish exposure. In 1929, central bankers were a new specie initiated by the Warburg before and after WW I to prevent problems (US, Russia, Germany, Japan, Bank of International Settlements) on the model of the banks found in France and Britain. Nobody ever had to cope with a global depression before and several states including the US did exactly what made it worse: raise interest rates, raise taxes, close their borders for foreign goods (see last chapter Krugman and also Bernanke). Since 2000 Fed reduced the rates, US government diminished taxes and lawmakers in industrial countries insist to keep borders open to avoid the unnecessary collapse of global trade. Rather trade adapts to demand.

Last but not least "All Connected Now, Living in the First Global Civilisation" from Truett Anderson explaining how our system became global thanks to telecommunication (telegraph, telephone, telex, fax, internet). Circa 1850 people started to install electric communications lines and everything else followed the wire to become global (business, finance, politics, culture, religion, social movements, information, etc...).

So a good book but reader must search for further reading to find the true meaning of the paradigm shift that occurred between 1850 and 2001.

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars after thoughts, April 2, 2001
By A Customer
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This review is from: Blood, Money, & Greed: The Money Trust Conspiracy (Paperback)
The author started off with a respectable historical review of how the fed came about. It was eye opening and provided a lot of information which was not widely available. (For example, who were the shareholders of the fed).

The later chapters got wackier and wackier. He started making claims that he either neglected to or were unable to substantiate and thereby greatly diminished his credibility.

It was an entertaing and easy to read book. But I would classify if as part fact and part speculation.

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5.0 out of 5 stars A SIMPLY STUNNING, BRILLIANT & INFORMATIVE BOOK!!, June 12, 2010
By 
B. Robyn Donison (Fort Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan Canada) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Blood Money & Greed (Paperback)
Cliff Ford, an authority on international finance, wrote this book in the late 1990s, a decade before Zietgeist debuted with the same material debuted on the internet. However, while Ford ties the history of money and the influence of astoundingly greedy money giants through world history to Bible prophecy through his work with Bible prophecy expert Hal Lindsey, the famous recent internet movie uses the same information a faithless spin. Ford is brilliant and anyone with a sincere interest in the history of money, how money has affected world politics and direction it is going needs to get this book. For the imitators - go to this original source!
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5.0 out of 5 stars BLOOD MONEY & GREED, November 16, 2009
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This review is from: Blood, Money, & Greed: The Money Trust Conspiracy (Paperback)
This is an excellent book written in the late 1990's. It talks about the American dollar and how the world will turn to Europe for the standard money exchange. This book is very timely for 2009 with the Euro becoming the standard exhange in Europe. This makes the European Euro strong as a currency. BLOOD MONEY & GREED is a very easy read and it is also very informative.
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Blood, Money, & Greed: The Money Trust Conspiracy
Blood, Money, & Greed: The Money Trust Conspiracy by Cliff Ford (Paperback - Oct. 1998)
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