Taking Back Our Stolen History
HISTORY HEIST
1900’s

1900’s

This century opened with some amazing scientific and technological feats: the first flight by the Wright brothers, Henry Ford’s first Model-T, and talking motion pictures. It included hardships like two world wars, the Boxer Rebellion, and the San Francisco Earthquake. The 1900s also saw the burgeoning of the silent movie industry and the teddy bear. During the 1900’s, the Luciferian conspirators were finally able to gain complete control of the US monetary system with the Federal Reserve Act. The Rockefeller Foundation, Carnegie Endowment and other newly approved tax exempt organizations began funding the health and medical system, education system, news media, entertainment, and other influential industries in order to steer them away from natural health, Christianity, free thought and divergent thinking, morality and more toward overall corruption in order to destroy, then rebuild as their planned new world order.

2020s | 2010s | 2000-09 | 1990s | 1980s | 1970s | 1960s | 1950s | 1940s | 1930s | 1920s | 1910s | 1900-09 | 1800s | 1700s | 1600s | 1500s | 1400s | 1300s | 1200s | Full TimelineTop 100 Conspiracies

The JP Morgan led Bank Panic of 1907: A Financial Coup to Trick the Government and People that a Central Bank was Necessary

The JP Morgan led Bank Panic of 1907: A Financial Coup to Trick the Government and People that a Central Bank was Necessary

The mother of all insider trades was pulled off in 1815, when London financier Nathan Rothschild led British investors to believe that the Duke of Wellington had lost to Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo. In a matter of hours, British government bond prices plummeted. Rothschild, who had advance information, then swiftly bought up the entire market in government bonds, acquiring a dominant holding in England’s ...
Indiana Becomes the World's First Legislature to Pass Law Permitting Compulsory Sterilization for Eugenics

Indiana Becomes the World’s First Legislature to Pass Law Permitting Compulsory Sterilization for Eugenics

On April 9, 1907 the Governor of Indiana signed into law a bill passed by the state legislature that provided for the involuntary sterilization of "confirmed criminals, idiots, imbeciles and rapists." Although it was eventually found to be unconstitutional, this law is widely regarded as the first eugenics sterilization legislation passed in the world. - Indiana Eugenics: History and Legacy, 1907-2007 Website The eugenics movement arrived in ...
1906 NY Gubernatorial Race:

1906 NY Gubernatorial Race:

The 1906 New York gubernatorial race was one for the ages: The current president stepping in for a future presidential candidate, a propaganda war, and one of America’s most flamboyant demagogues. But when the results came in, 1906 would prove to be a year where the votes were decided on a clash between the old machine politics and the new power of media, with all the ...
The Brownsville Raid of 1906: The Incident of the Black Soldiers of the 25th Infantry at Fort Brown, Texas

The Brownsville Raid of 1906: The Incident of the Black Soldiers of the 25th Infantry at Fort Brown, Texas

When the black soldiers of the 25th Infantry moved into Fort Brown, Texas, they arrived in a place that had already had problems with the presence of armed troops in its midst. Several sections of the town resented the soldiers’s presence and openly expressed their hostility. The soldiers were subjected to racial slurs and taunts, and received biased or surly hospitality from the white businesses. Customs ...
The Persian Constitutional Revolution Results in the Establishment of the Constitutional Monarchy

The Persian Constitutional Revolution Results in the Establishment of the Constitutional Monarchy

August 5 is the anniversary of Iran’s 1905 Constitutional Revolution, although 1905 was the beginning of a process that led to the revolution’s victory in 1911. It was the outcome of Europe’s multifaceted ascendance in the 19th century that motivated Iranian intellectuals to demand freedom and justice. Justice was the main demand, and many thought “Constitution” meant justice and a process that would eventually lead to the ...
A Trip Down San Francisco's Market Street 4 Days Before the Earthquake and Fire that Destroyed 80% of It

A Trip Down San Francisco’s Market Street 4 Days Before the Earthquake and Fire that Destroyed 80% of It

"Produced as part of the popular Hale's Tours of the World film series, the film begins at the location of the Miles Brothers film studio, 1139 Market Street, between 8th and 9th Streets; it was filmed 14 April 1906, four days before the devastating earthquake and fire of 18 April 1906, which virtually destroyed the entire downtown area. The negative was taken by train to the ...
Moro Crater Massacre: 800 to 1,000 killed including women and children

Moro Crater Massacre: 800 to 1,000 killed including women and children

The First Battle of Bud Dajo, also known as the Moro Crater Massacre, was a counterinsurgency action fought by the United States Army against the Moro people in March 1906, during the Moro Rebellion in the southwestern Philippines.[3][4][5] Whether the occupants of Bud Dajo were hostile to U.S. forces is disputed, as inhabitants of Jolo Island had previously used the crater, which they considered sacred, as a place of refuge during Spanish assaults.[6] Major Hugh Scott, the district governor of Sulu Province, ...
Santayana (in The Life of Reason, 1905): “Those Who Cannot Remember the Past are Condemned to Repeat It.”

Santayana (in The Life of Reason, 1905): “Those Who Cannot Remember the Past are Condemned to Repeat It.”

Santayana (in The Life of Reason, 1905): “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” The Life of Reason, subtitled "the Phases of Human Progress", is a book published in five volumes from 1905 to 1906, by Spanish-born American philosopher George Santayana (1863–1952). It consists of Reason in Common Sense, Reason in Society, Reason in Religion, Reason in Art, and Reason in Science ...
Theodore Roosevelt's First Inaugural Address

Theodore Roosevelt’s First Inaugural Address

My fellow-citizens, no people on earth have more cause to be thankful than ours, and this is said reverently, in no spirit of boastfulness in our own strength, but with gratitude to the Giver of Good who has blessed us with the conditions which have enabled us to achieve so large a measure of well-being and of happiness. To us as a people it has been ...
Jacobson v. Massachusetts, SCOTUS Upheld the Authority of States to Enforce Compulsory Vaccination Laws (Individual Liberty < Police Power of the State)

Jacobson v. Massachusetts, SCOTUS Upheld the Authority of States to Enforce Compulsory Vaccination Laws (Individual Liberty < Police Power of the State)

Massachusetts was one of only 11 states that had compulsory vaccination laws. Massachusetts law empowered the board of health of individual cities and towns to enforce mandatory, free vaccinations for adults over the age of 21 if the municipality determined it was necessary for the public health or safety of the community. Adults who refused were subject to a $5 monetary fine. In 1902, faced with an ...