Have You Read the Most Important Book of the Year?
Ron Paul's End the Fed Can Change the World
by
Charles Scaliger
Recently
by Ron Paul: The
Fed's Interesting Week
The entire
federal government, laments Congressman Ron Paul in his newest
book, End
the Fed, is one giant toxic asset at the moment. It
certainly has no business telling the private sector how to run
its affairs. It is in worse financial shape than all the companies
in the private sector put together.
Hard words,
but Congressman Paul knows whereof he speaks. It was Ron Paul, unique
among congressmen for his understanding of how a free-market economy
is supposed to work, who warned repeatedly of the coming economic
calamity. It was Ron Paul, too, who warned both the Bush and Obama
administrations that attempts by the government to bail out failing
corporations with taxpayer dollars and passing massive stimulus
packages would only make things worse. And it has been Ron Paul
who has warned of disastrous long-term consequences of the inflationary
activities of the Ben Bernankeled Federal Reserve.
Congressman
Pauls concerns about the Federal Reserve are nothing new.
The gynecologist-turned-eleven-term congressman from Texas has spent
a long political career promoting liberty and limited constitutional
government as the American Founders understood them and exposing
the mischief at the Federal Reserve. With the unexpected success
of his presidential campaign and his recent best-selling manifesto
on liberty, Dr. Pauls uncompromising, consistent, and thoroughly
principled stances on limited, constitutionally legitimate government
are well known around the world. Now, thanks to End the Fed,
his views on paper money, fractional-reserve banking, and the Federal
Reserve and its manipulation of the money supply are summarized
for a mass readership. Under a single cover and on just 212 readable
pages are assembled philosophical, economic, and constitutional
arguments for abolishing the Federal Reserve, a succinct history
of banking, and a number of fascinating recollections and snippets
of telling dialogue between Dr. Paul and various chairmen of the
Fed as far back as Paul Volcker.
Finances
and Freedoms
For Dr. Paul,
an understanding of economics and finance is absolutely crucial
to understanding liberty fully; one cannot embrace liberty while
rejecting free-market economics in any degree. Yet it has become
characteristic of many on the right otherwise eloquent partisans
of liberty and free-market economics, like the late Milton Friedman
to set aside certain free-market principles where money and
banking are concerned. Laissez faire for factories, mines, retailers,
and agriculture, indeed, say apologists for the Fed, but for banking,
money, and finance, we must have regulation, currency manipulation,
the fixing of interest rates, and other characteristics of a command
economy.
Unfortunately,
many people have allowed themselves to be persuaded that economics,
banking, and finance are numinous, abstract disciplines best left
to the experts. But we ignore these topics to our considerable detriment.
Dr. Paul writes: Everyone should have an intense interest
in what money is and how its manipulated by the few at the
expense of the many. Money is crucial for survival. It is necessary
for maintaining a free society. A healthy economy depends on it.
Limiting political power is impossible without it. Sound money is
essential for preventing unnecessary wars. Prosperity and peace
in the long run are impossible without it. To understand money,
one absolutely must understand what a central bank is all about.
Americas
central bank, the Federal Reserve or Fed, was established
in 1913, and according to Dr. Paul, has been complicit in
indeed, has been the driving engine for the supersizing of
the federal government that has transformed America since the First
World War, and not for the better. This is because the Federal Reserve,
with its ability to artificially increase the money supply (especially
after the gold standard was abandoned), has largely emancipated
Washington decision makers from the risky politics of raising revenue
via direct taxation.
Heavy, direct
taxation we certainly have, but the income tax and other federal
taxes, obnoxious though they are, pale beside the Feds ability
to raise money for the federal government simply by printing it
(or, which amounts to the same thing, making a computer entry).
Only thus has the federal government been able to finance hugely
unpopular projects, like international wars, that Americans would
never consent to if the monies were extracted up front via direct
taxation. Thanks to the inflationary magic of so-called fiat money,
the Federal Reserve (and other central banks like it around the
world) can print money as needed, and the bill will come later,
in the form of reduced purchasing power resulting from inflation.
Inflation, by the way, is also a kind of tax, but one so subtly
(and dishonestly) administered that few are able to diagnose its
origin.
Read
the Rest of the Article
See
the Ron Paul File
September
15, 2009
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
© 2009 The
New American
The
Best of Ron Paul
|