ANTARCTICA: The Rothschild Connection
Why is a secretive Antarctic island named for the world's biggest banking family?
It may be a surprise for many to learn, but a highly restricted island off the coast of Antarctica is named for the infamous Rothschild banking family, specifically the France-based arm of the family whose financial operation was eventually nationalized.
According to the United States Geological Survey, Rothschild Island is “24 mi long, mainly ice-covered, but surmounted by [the] prominent peaks of [the] Desko Mountains.”
While it’s publicly available knowledge that the Desko Mountain Range is purported to be 20 miles long with peaks rising over 1,000 meters in the sky, little additional information is known, but Rothschild Island has been described as “black” and “rugged,” implying that portions of the territory are free from snow and ice formations.
Despite the name, it is widely asserted that the Rothschilds don’t actually own the island and that it was simply named for them during the French Antarctic Expedition of 1908-10.
But under the Antarctic Treaty System, they don’t have to own the island, because no one is allowed to explore that entire part of the earth without explicit permission from global governments.
So in other words, IF the Rothschild family is connected to Rothschild Island, whatever secrets they may be keeping there are safe from plebian scrutiny.
The Rothschild family's ties to Antarctica don’t end with Rothschild Island, however.
In the early days of Antarctic exploration, the Jewish banking family that spent centuries becoming a dominant force atop Western financial systems, including America’s Federal Reserve, was a major funder of Antarctic expeditions which, at the time, were still permitted.
In fact, a letter published in the Rothschild family archives sheds light on their Antarctic ties and shows that it wasn’t just the French who were praising the Rothschild family upon their arrival in the world’s most mysterious place.
In the 1914 letter attached below, famed explorer E.H. Shackleton, of the United Kingdom, wrote to the wife of Leopold de Rothschild (of the Rothschild family’s London-based tentacle) from a “sub-antarctic island” and thanked her for her “great assistance” and all that she had “given” to the expedition.
In closing, Shackleton vowed to make unspecified Antarctic objectives “a success” in the name of the Rothschild family.
Read the Full Letter Below:
So what’s on Rothschild Island?
The truth is, we don’t know.
Very few people do.
And if they do, they aren’t talking.
However, like the rest of Antarctica, the possibilities are seemingly endless.
We know for a FACT that the snowless mountain ranges discovered on the Antarctic mainland by Admiral Richard Byrd and his men are full of absolutely massive bounties of coal, oil, uranium, and other treasured natural minerals and resources.
Not only that, but they were surrounded by “freshwater lakes,” full of “warm,” unfrozen water.
Last week, after a previous Substack entry regarding Admiral Byrd’s aforementioned 1946-47 Antarctic expedition under the name of Operation Highjump, I joined Stew Peters on the Stew Peters Show to dive into more detail.
Watch below…
TO BE CONTINUED…