Not
All ‘End the Fed’ People Quite Get It
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
Recently
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.: I
Was Fooled by the War-Makers
Several days
ago I managed to get myself drawn into a Facebook exchange with
someone who opposes the Federal Reserve and the current banking
system in general for not quite the right reasons. Thus the Fed
is a private bank, it does not put enough money into
circulation, its member banks enslave people by charging interest
on loans, etc. This person thinks of himself as part of the liberty
movement.
Another claim
of his was that the elites funded and promoted the Austrian School
of economics, and that these same elites were behind the funding
of Karl Marx. This theory would probably have a difficult time accounting
for why Austrian economics is still relatively obscure why
should that be, if the worlds most powerful people are supposedly
promoting it? or why Marx, far from drowning in money thrown
at him by the elites, spent his life begging for money, mainly from
Friedrich Engels. Given how badly Marx treated and took advantage
of Engels, the latter would presumably have been delighted if some
moneybags had taken over the task of funding poor Karl.
Until now Ive
more or less let these folks be. But when I heard someone say he
had dropped out of the End the Fed movement because it was so dominated
by people like this people who think fiat money per se is
fine, but that it ought to be issued directly by Congress rather
than by the Fed I began to wonder if I should address it.
So in this exchange, I asked my opponent if he could distill his
thoughts into five or ten propositions on money, which I could then
examine. I am convinced that the misguided policy proposals coming
from people like this are the result of fallacious reasoning about
money, so I wanted him to spell out his thinking clearly and systematically.
I am going
to reproduce for you what he wrote. The first time through he listed
ten things he wanted me to prove. I explained to him that demands
are not propositions. I want to know what your views on money are,
I said. Someone came along and reworded his demands into the form
of propositions.
I said I would
respond to these propositions. Not because of the importance or
lack thereof of the individual involved, but because these fallacies
are evidently widespread within the end-the-Fed orbit. Id
like to have good answers out there.
But look at
what he produced. Totally unsystematic. Fundamental issues completely
ignored, and in general the list makes me feel foolish for even
offering to do this. (If you were asked to give ten propositions
on money, would you leave out what money is, where it comes from,
and what purpose it serves?) I have no idea what his positive theory
of money is, what his ideal system is, or whether the charging of
interest is just or unjust in itself in his view.
I said I would
respond to these, so I will do so in the coming days, in dribs and
drabs. But yikes.
Here are the
propositions:
1. The fact
that people are having trouble paying their debt indicates that
too few dollars are in circulation.
2. It is impossible
to pay back the interest on the debt when payments are reloaned,
and not recirculated.
3. Monetary
deflation benefits the private bankers who wish the People to default
in order to seize collateral with, or without govt force.
4. Engineered
scarcity is the PRIMARY cause of higher commodity prices. The People
in a drought with lack FRNs [Federal Reserve Notes]. They
are not drowning in too many FRNs.
5. Private
bankers will create private monopolies to control the People rather
than compete in a free market.
6. Private
banks can enslave the people through the use of un-payable interest
based contracts.
7. Private
banks will not compete, or offer interest free money creation/lending
to people with, or without government force.
8. Private
banks are the sovereigns and use patsy government to escape the
wrath of the People. Divide and conquer
9. Austrian/Keynsian
economics are simply a Hegelian Debate wherein un-payable debt/interest
contracts prevail with, or without force.
10. If you
end central banking, and remove all government granted privileges
to the private bankers, they will CONTINUE reign over the people.
Private banks do not wish to compete in a free
market. Competition is a sin ~ Rockefeller.
11.
Bonus: Here is a money related topic that Alex Jones/most others
refuse to cover. Some VERY DEEP truth which few will touch due to:
possible threats of anti-semitism/political correctness. However,
it is essential to dig into this deep, and ugly history so that
we may gain greater understanding of why the US has dozens of US-Israeli
citizens in its govt. (Chertoff/Emanuel/etc) And why the US is perpetually
fighting Israels wars INCLUDING WWI+II. The private usurers
have been the sovereigns for thousands of years. Usury/riba/interest
if forbidden by each of Islam, Christianity, and Judaism. Because
it is a MATHEMATIC fraud, whereby it is impossible for all borrowers
to pay. However, Judaism permits ELITE Jews to perp the voluntary
contract fraud/usury on gentiles. Elite, Jews have sacrificed millions
of beautiful Jews, and gentiles with genocide, and perpetual war.
Usury is a methodology of international conquest. Usury bankrupts
nations and steals their national sovereignty. Theres a reason
why theres a Rothshchild Star of David on the back of a buck.
Usury is the original sin of the worlds economic, and monetary problems.
Al Pacino represents Shylock
in Shakespears The Merchant of Venice on topic.
12. Love
the Sinner(parasitic usurers) hate the Sin(usury) Prayers
go out for peace, and blessings to all our Brothers in Sisters in
Rothschilds occupied Israel/Palestine. Rothschild will sacrifice
beautiful Jew, and gentile alike as the private usurers are the
Synagogue of Satan
See what I
mean?
Reprinted
with permission from TomWoods.com.
October
6, 2012
Thomas
E. Woods, Jr. [send him
mail; visit his
website], a senior fellow of the Ludwig von Mises Institute,
is the creator of Tom
Woods’s Liberty Classroom, a libertarian educational
resource. He is the author of eleven books, including the New
York Times bestsellers Meltdown
(on the financial crisis; read Ron Paul’s foreword)
and The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History, and most
recently Nullification
and Rollback.
Copyright
© 2012 Thomas
Woods
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