Title: “Frank Sumera’s Crimson Ledger”
By Frank Sumera
Let me tell you a story drenched in red — not the color of love, but the color of power, debt, and blood. A story of velvet ropes and razor wires. Of fine wine and the winepress of wrath. And like all good stories, it begins with a name whispered through revolutions and recessions alike:
Rothschild.
Red Tape
They say “red tape” strangles progress. Bureaucracy, signatures, protocols. But who wrapped the world in this web to begin with?
It was the Rothschilds — not out of malice, but out of design. In the Napoleonic era, when letters crossed kingdoms and coin moved across continents, red tape was how they made war predictable. You don’t conquer nations with armies. You do it with paperwork — loan guarantees, indemnity clauses, bonds wrapped in crimson silk.
The bankers didn’t fire the muskets. They just made sure the bullets got paid for.
Being in the Red
Ever wonder why debt is colored red? Because it’s the color of wounds. Of bleeding.
“Being in the red” means you owe — and in this world, everyone owes. Whole nations. Your local hospital. Your mom’s mortgage. Blood, interest, and time.
Frank Sumera once saw a small Balkan country sell its mineral rights to pay the interest on a Rothschild-backed IMF loan. “Better red than dead,” the finance minister joked. But the mines collapsed anyway. Ten dead.
He wasn’t wrong. He just didn’t get to laugh long.
The Red Terror
- The Tsar falls, and the Bolsheviks rise.
Frank believes in the people. But even he knows revolutions are expensive.
It’s said the Rothschilds were terrified of communism. But that’s a half-truth. Terrified? No. Prepared? Always.
They funded both sides, like bookies taking bets. Trotsky sailed from New York with cash in his coat. Who wrote the check? A man in a top hat who’d dine with Lenin one day and Churchill the next.
The Red Terror was never just ideological. It was financial restructuring — with guillotines.
Red Communism
The sickle, the hammer, and the red flag. Workers of the world unite, under new management.
But communism turned out to be just another banking client. The Soviet Union needed oil rigs, trucks, machines. Western banks obliged — at a cost. Even as the Cold War raged, the hot money flowed. Stalin murdered millions, but the Rothschilds diversified portfolios.
Frank called it Red Communism, Inc.
The Kremlin burned books. Wall Street cooked books. And the proletariat bled for both.
The Red Army & The Thin Red Line
The Red Army marched for Mother Russia. But who fed it? Who armed it? Follow the steel shipments and oil convoys, and you’ll find familiar banking fingerprints.
Across the battlefield was the “Thin Red Line” — the poetic name for British infantry holding against chaos. Frank saw the irony. Soldiers on both sides, dying in trenches, separated by inches — and united by interest payments.
Different flags. Same creditors.
Red String
There’s an old superstition: a red string ties the fates of those destined to meet. Lovers. Killers. Puppets and puppetmasters.
Frank found red string on a Rothschild document dated 1913 — the year the Federal Reserve was born. Same year the IRS appeared. Same year the world changed shape.
Coincidence? Maybe.
But every time a president got shot or a regime fell, that red string was there — tying a boot in the mud to a shoe on the red carpet.
The Red Carpet
It’s where actors, princes, and oligarchs strut like gods. It’s also where politicians announce wars. Frank says the red carpet is not for royalty — it’s a blood trail. A ritual. A contract written in claps and cameras.
“Roll out the red carpet,” they say.
And somewhere, a drone launches. A market crashes. A child vanishes in a copper mine.
The Red Cross
Ah yes, the Red Cross. The symbol of hope, neutrality, and mercy.
But Frank, the cynic, noticed something. Wherever the bombs fell, the Red Cross was right behind — offering aid, bandages, water, silence. He respected the doctors. The nurses. The volunteers.
But the question always came back: who funded the bandages after funding the bombs?
During the wars, the Red Cross patched what bankers shattered. On the surface, humanitarian. Beneath it, a beautiful form of brand management.
After all, every empire needs a conscience. Even if it’s rented.
Epilogue: Red Everywhere
Frank Sumera once tried to break the cycle. He mailed a red thread to every G20 leader with a note: “Cut this, or be cut.”
No one replied. But three days later, the Swiss vault holding the last physical Rothschild ledger burned mysteriously.
The world shrugged.
Red was still everywhere. On screens. In ledgers. On flags. On fingers.
And Frank knew: you can’t stop the color of control.
But you can name it.
And sometimes, that’s a start.
– Frank Sumera