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240208 -
Years ago I read William Greider's excellent book published in
1987 on how the US Federal Reserve System works. It was detailed
and explicit and makes wonderful and informative reading, except
for the solution he suggests to a huge problem. His was far too
timid. This article proposes a much different one. Greider
called his book Secrets of the Temple with a sub-title: How the
Federal Reserve Runs the Country. A better sub-title might have
been how the Fed (and other key central bankers) runs the world.
This article attempts to summarize what it does, how it does it,
for whose benefit and at whose expense. For those who don't
know, prepare for some stunning information and commentary.
Let's be clear at the outset. The US
Federal Reserve, Bank of England, Bank of Japan and the European Central
Bank (for the 12 European countries that adopted the single euro
currency in 1999) are institutions with enormous power far beyond what
most people everywhere can imagine. These most dominant of all central
banks, as well as most others, have a powerful influence on the
financial conditions in virtually all countries including their own, of
course, in an increasingly borderless financial world where a
significant economic event in one nation can affect most others for
better or worse.
One other powerful bank is also part of
today's financial world. It needs mentioning because of its importance,
even though it requires a separate article to explain how it works more
fully. It's the secretive, inviolable and accountable to no one Bank of
International Settlements (BIS) founded in 1930 and based in Basle,
Switzerland. This bank most people never heard of is the central banker
to its member central banks - a sort of banking "boss of bosses"
equivalent to what apparently exists in the shadowy world of Mafia dons.
Like most other central banks, including the Federal Reserve (explained
below), it's privately owned by its members.
It's believed by some academicians and
others who've studied the BIS that the ruling elite of financial
capitalism established this bank of banks to be the apex of power to
exercise authority over a world financial system owned and controlled by
them. It's thought their plan was to use this bank to dominate the
political system of every country and control the world economy in a
feudalistic fashion. In a word, the thinking goes that these super-elite
want to rule the world by controlling its money, and they set up this
supranational all-powerful bank of banks to do it. As important as that
is, that discussion remains for another time as the intent of this
article is to focus solely on the US Federal Reserve.
The dominant central banks and BIS,
together with most others, wield their influence in cartel-like alliance
with each other to assure they all benefit more than they otherwise
would without such a cozy arrangement. With their immense power it's no
play on words to say these financial institutions do indeed rule the
world. Because they're able to create money, they fund the needs of
their governments, their militaries and all business activity that
couldn't function without a ready supply of that most needed of all
commodities. It's money, not love, that makes the world go round, and
central bankers have the power to create or remove from circulation as
much or little of it as they choose and for whatever purpose they have
in mind. That kind of power can move mountains or destroy them.
No nation's central bank is more powerful
today than the US Federal Reserve, but it wasn't always that way, and it
now has competition for the top spot it hasn't known since WW II. The
Fed, as it's called, has existed since it was first established by an
act of Congress in 1913. But the Bank of England has been around since
Britannia ruled the waves beginning in 1694 when King William III needed
help funding the kind of escapade that takes lots of ready cash - war.
Back then it was with France, and the king needed a friendly banker to
print it up for him to help him fight it. He also needed financial help
to facilitate trade and manage the country's debt that always mounts up
when wars are fought. The Bank of England wasn't the first central bank,
but it was the modern world's first privately owned one in a powerful
country. It was called the Bank of England to keep the public from
knowing that it, like our Federal Reserve, was and still is privately
owned and not part of the government. It was also the model used in the
formation of our own central bank and most others.
The Brits may have had a 219 year head
start on the Fed, but central bankers are only as powerful as the
countries they represent and their economies. Today the former dominant
Brits must settle for a far lesser role as being just one of many junior
partners to a US hegemon that emerged post WW II as the world's dominant
economic power. It still is today, even though some credible experts
believe this country may have seen and past its peak and is now in
decline. Some go further and claim our decline has been accelerated by
the disastrous policies of the Bush administration that irrationally
believes waging war on the world without end is the way to rule it,
promote endless economic growth and dominance, and thus preserve the
nation's preeminent position as the reigning economic champion.
It's easy to challenge that view and
think that champ has climbed into the ring a few times too many, has
endless plans for more return engagements, and is likely to meet the
same fate many a former human one did who didn't know when to quit and
ended up with chronic brain damage known as dementia. The lesson from
history is always the same. The price for reckless behavior is high,
painful and inevitable. It's true for countries as well as individuals,
but too often neither one sees it until it's too late. The biggest
difference between the US today and other nations in the past that paid
dearly for not yielding when their day had passed is that we have an all-powerful
arsenal others never did. Should we decide to use it, there likely
wouldn't be much left behind for a successor. Not a pleasant thought,
but a very real one.
It All Began in 1910 On Jekll Island
It sounds like the title of a horror
movie, but the real life events that happened at this privately owned
island off the coast of Georgia in 1910 would have challenged even the
Hollywood bad dream factory to come up with. It was here that seven very
rich and powerful men met in secret for nine days and created the
Federal Reserve System that came into being three years later on
December 23, 1913 by an act of Congress. Since that time, the nation and
world would never be the same, but only the rich and powerful were the
beneficiaries. That was the whole idea, and it worked as planned.
The Federal Reserve Act that began it all
must surely rank as one of the most disastrous and outrageous pieces of
legislation to the public welfare ever to come out of any legislative
body. It may have also have been and still is illegal according to
Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution which happens to be the
inviolable law of the land. The article states that Congress shall have
the power to coin (create) money and regulate the value thereof. In
1935, the US Supreme Court ruled the Congress cannot constitutionally
delegate its power to another group or body. The Congress thus acted in
violation of the Constitution it's sworn to uphold and in so doing
created the Federal Reserve System that, as will be explained below, is
a private for-profit corporation operating at the expense of the public
welfare. By its action, our lawmakers committed fraud against the people
of the country and so far have gotten away with it without the public
even knowing about the harm done.
The shameful result is that what should
have arrived stillborn is now the most dominant institution on earth,
and all because of what began on a privately owned island with a scary
name. But had the Congress acted responsibly, the act of Fed creation
might never have happened. The legislation establishing it was so
harmful to the public interest, it likely never would have passed if it
hadn't been shepherded through a carefully prepared Congressional
Conference Committee meeting scheduled for between 1:30 - 4:30 AM (when
most members of Congress were asleep) on December 22, 1913. The Act was
then voted on the next day and passed although many members of the body
had left for the Christmas holidays and most others who stayed behind
hadn't had time to read it or know its contents. Sound familiar? Still
it passed (like a thief in the night) and was signed into law by an
unwitting or complicit Woodrow Wilson who later admitted he made a
terrible mistake saying "I unwittingly ruined my country." But it was
too late for postmortems, and the American people have paid dearly ever
since. It's about time the public understood that and began to demand an
end to over 90 years of damage done.
It almost happened 43 years ago when one
president decided to act on behalf of the people who elected him. That
man was
John Kennedy, who before his death planned to end the
Federal Reserve System to eliminate the national debt a central bank
creates by printing money and loaning it to the government. That debt
has now risen to over $8,400,000,000,000 ($8.4 trillion) which every
taxpayer must pay for and has done so in the amount of nearly
$174,000,000,000 ($174 billion) in just the first three months of 2006.
This debt service is now an annualized amount exceeding two-thirds of a
trillion dollars. It's made the bankers rich (which was the whole idea)
and the public poorer because we're taxed to pay the tab. It's no
exaggeration to call this the greatest financial scam in world history
and one that gets greater every day.
The debt was less onerous 40 years ago,
but Kennedy understood its danger to the country and the burden it
placed on the public. Thus, on June 4, 1963, he issued presidential
order EO 11110 giving the president authority to issue currency. He then
ordered the US Treasury to print over $4 billion worth of "United States
Notes" to replace Federal Reserve Notes. He intended to replace them all
when enough of the new currency was in circulation so he could end the
Federal Reserve System and the control it gave the international bankers
over the US government and the public. Just months after the Kennedy
plan went into effect, he was assassinated in Dallas in what was surely
a coup d'etat disguised to look otherwise and may well have been carried
out at least in part to save the Fed System and concentration of power
it created that was so profitable for the powerful bankers in the
country. Those benefitting from it had good reason to be involved in the
plot to save the special privilege they weren't willing to give up
without a fight. It's a plausible explanation that may explain who may
have been behind the assassination and for what reason. Whatever the
truth is, the banking cartel was only in distress a short time. Once
Lyndon Johnson took office, he rescinded Kennedy's presidential order
and restored the cartel's former power. It's kept it ever since and is
now, of course, more powerful than ever. Even presidents are unable to
stop it and those who would try have a lesson from history to give them
pause.
The predecessors of the possible
Kennedy coup plotters were the men who met on Jekyll Island in 1910.
They represented some of the richest and most powerful men in the world
- the Morgans, Rockefellers, Rothschilds of Europe (who dominated all
European banking by the mid-1800s and became and still may be the
wealthiest and most powerful family of all) and others of great
influence and power. Included was a US senator, a high ranking Treasury
official, the president of the largest bank in the country at the time,
a leading Wall Street figure and the man who would later become the
first chairman of the Federal Reserve System. It was quite an assemblage,
and they came to accomplish one thing. They wanted to change the
ideology and course of American business that up to then was based on
marketplace competition and replace it with monopoly. They also knew
what Baron M.A. Rothschild understood when he once said: "Give me
control over a nation's currency and I care not who makes its laws."
They knew the wisdom of what's stated in Proverbs 22:7 as well: "The
rich rule over the poor, and the borrower is servant to the lender."
This was the dawning of the age of
powerful cartels when the seven financial titans meeting secretly in the
island's clubhouse decided no longer to compete with each other and
wanted the power to arrange it. They were already colluding informally
but knew it would all work better under a legally sanctioned cartel.
They wanted a banking cartel and got one that flourishes today below the
public radar with the tool they wanted most - the ability to control the
nation's money supply that gave them almost unlimited power. The cartel
now works cooperatively with their governments and all other powerful
transnational corporations in a dominant global alliance that allows
them to control the world's markets, resources, cheap labor and our
lives.
The Federal Reserve System Is Not A
Government Agency - It's A Privately Owned Cartel of Powerful Banks
Protected By Law
It's commonly but falsely believed the
Federal Reserve System is a function of government and subject to its
control. False. It's often referred to as a quasi-governmental,
decentralized central bank, but that's just cover to disguise what, in
fact, it really is: a privately held and operated cartel made to look
like the government is in charge. The fact that it's headquartered in
Washington in the formidable and impressive-looking Eccles building (named
after a former Fed chairman) is just part of the clever subterfuge.
Here's how it works:
The Fed is composed of a Board of
Governors in Washington and 12 regional banks in major cities throughout
the country (including in my own city of Chicago where anyone once but
no longer could walk up to a teller's window and buy US Treasury
securities). The system also includes many and various member banks
including all national banks that are required to be part of the system.
Other banks were also allowed to join and many did. The Federal Reserve
began operating in November, 1914, almost one year after the
Congressional act creating the system the previous year as explained
above. It was mandated by law to have the greatest power of any
institution in the country - the power to create and control the
nation's money supply.
Most people know little or nothing about
money and banking, likely never think about it, and have no idea how
what the Fed and bankers do affect their lives. Before writing this
article, I had little more than the modest knowledge I learned in a
required course on the subject and basic accounting as part of my MBA
curriculum 46 years ago. Those courses left out the most important parts
of the story and never hinted at anything sinister about how the banking
system works in fact. But no one should ever imagine banks were
established or intended to be run for our benefit. They surely are not,
and anyone suggesting they are should read on. They're about as
beneficial to the public welfare as was the MX Peacekeeper ICBM (the
clever language is impressive) intended to carry nuclear warheads back
in the mid-80s that had the power to destroy all life on the planet and
one day may do it in its old or updated form.
The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 (the law
of the land) stipulates that the Federal Reserve Banks of each region
are owned by the member banks in it. These Fed banks are privately owned
corporations that make a great effort to hide the fact that they, in
fact, own what the public largely thinks is part of the public treasury
and government. It's easy to think that as Fed chairmen and seven of the
twelve Governors are appointed by the President and approved by the
Senate. As such, the FRB is a sort of quasi-government entity, but the
fact is the System is a privately owned for profit enterprise just like
any other business. It has stockholders like other public corporations
that are paid 6% risk free interest every year on their equity holdings.
The public doesn't know this, and it likely wouldn't be good PR if it
found out. People might be even more upset if they learned some of the
owners of our Federal Reserve are powerful foreign investors in the UK,
France, Germany, The Netherlands and Italy. They're partners with giant
US banks like JP Morgan Chase and Citibank as well as powerful Wall
Street firms like Goldman Sachs in a new world order banking cartel that
influences and affects business activity everywhere and our lives.
The issue of private ownership of the
Federal Reserve Banks has been challenged several times in the federal
courts to no avail. Each time the courts upheld the current system under
which each Federal Reserve Bank is a separate corporation owned by
commercial banks in its region. One such case was Lewis v. United States
that was decided by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals that ruled the
Reserve Banks are independent, privately owned and locally controlled
corporations.
Our Founding Fathers Had Different
Ideas Than the Powerful Men who Met on Jekll Island
Throughout our history, there was
disagreement over who should control the power of the nation's money
supply and the right to issue it. The Founding Fathers understood that
the British Parliament was forced to levy unfair taxes on its American
colonies and its own citizens because the Bank of England had run up so
much debt the government needed revenue to reduce it. Benjamin Franklin,
in fact, believed that was the real cause of the American Revolution.
Most of the Founders also understood the danger that could result from
bankers' accumulating too much wealth and power. James Madison, the main
drafter of our Constitution, called them "Money Changers," referring to
the Bible that said Jesus twice drove the Money Changers from the Temple
in Jerusalem 2,000 years ago. Madison said:
"History records that the Money Changers
have used every form of abuse, intrigue, deceit and violent means
possible to maintain their control over governments by controlling money
and its issuance."
Thomas Jefferson was just as strong in
his condemnation when he said:
"I sincerely believe that banking
institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies.
Already they have raised up a money aristocracy that has set the
government at defiance. The issuing power should be taken from the banks
and restored to the people to whom it properly belongs."
Jefferson and Madison understood the
dangers of commercial monopolies of all types and tried to assure they
never would exist in the new nation. They, in fact, wanted two
additional amendments added to the "Bill of Rights" in the Constitution
but never got them. They believed to protect the liberty of the people
the nation should have "freedom from monopolies in commerce" (what are
now giant corporations including the big international banks and Wall
Street investment firms) and "freedom from a permanent military," or
standing armies. Try to imagine what the country would be like today if
Jefferson and Madison had gotten their way - a country without giant
predatory corporations exploiting everyone for profit and without a
rampaging military waging war on the world, threatening to destroy it,
and doing it so those corporate giants could earn even greater profits.
They never did, of course, and the people
have paid dearly ever since including the great harm caused because the
government relinquished its right to control the nation's money supply.
It gave it away secretly with the public none the wiser, never knowing
how greatly it's been harmed. It's been even worse since the 1980s
because the power of the Fed grew under a friendly Republican president,
and the corporate media led cheerleading for it hid the effect. For them,
no public demeaning of it, its giant member banks or Wall Street allies
is allowed.
Things were especially out of hand during
the tenure of
Alan Greenspan - a Fed chairman no one should have found
much reason to cheer either before he headed the Fed when he was a
presidential advisor or during the time he did. It was only after his
economic consulting firm failed that he went into government service
likely because he needed a new line of work. There he managed to become
a larger than life seer of central banking who was elevated to near
sainthood by the business pundits who thought under his tenure the skies
were only blue and the few clouds in sight always had silver linings.
Now Alan is retired to the greener pastures of lucrative book contracts
and speaking engagements, which shows when you do your job well for the
rich and powerful (at the expense of the rest of us) who gave it to you,
you'll be well rewarded in the end. It's likely the new Fed chairman has
taken note and will dutifully try to follow in the tradition that
preceded him.
But try imagining a different sort of Fed
chairman, one who knew, believed in and practiced the words and wisdom
of another American president of some note - Abraham Lincoln. In 1886
Abraham Lincoln said the following: "The money powers prey
upon the nation in times of peace and conspire against it in times of
adversity. It is more despotic than a monarch, more insolent than
autocracy and more selfish than a bureaucracy. It denounces, as public
enemies, all who question its methods or throw light upon its crimes. I
have two great enemies, the Southern Army in front of me and the bankers
in the rear. Of the two, the one at the rear is my greatest foe."
Abraham Lincoln also appears to have said (although some
dispute it): "I see in the near future a crisis approaching that
unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country.....corporations
have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow,
and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by
working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated
in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed." Imagine what
Lincoln might say today.
Given Lincoln's sentiment about the
bankers and money power of the country, it would seem to beg the obvious
question: did it play a role in, or was it the reason for, his untimely
death at the hands of John Wilkes Booth? The international bankers
clearly disliked
Lincoln after he managed to get the Congress to pass the
Legal Tender Act in 1862 that empowered the US Treasury to issue paper
money called "greenbacks." Lincoln needed this legislation after he
declined to pay the bankers the usurious 24 - 36% interest rates they
demanded on the loans he needed to fund his war with the South. With the
new banking law,
Lincoln was then able to print up the millions of dollars he
needed which was debt and interest free. Clearly this was not what the
greedy bankers wanted as they can only profit when they get their pound
of flesh from financial transactions they control. Right after the war
ended
Lincoln was assassinated, and shortly thereafter the so-called
Greenback law was rescinded, a new national banking act was passed, and
all money became interesting-bearing again.
How the Federal Reserve System Works
The Federal Reserve System is the result
of the Congress and President having agreed to privatize the nation's
money system and relinquish the power that should have remained the
government's exclusive right. That act was so outrageous the Fed had to
be deliberately designed to look like a branch of the federal government
to hide the fact that it's really an all-powerful privately owned
banking cartel whose member banks (including all the national ones)
share in the vast profits earned from having the most important of all
franchises governments alone should have - the right to print money in
any amount, control its supply and price, and benefit hugely by loaning
it out for a profit including to the government itself that must pay
interest on the money it should never have to if it simply printed its
own. Think of what happened as the government having legalized the right
to counterfeit the national currency for private gain. It's no
exaggeration to claim this is the greatest ever of all financial scams
causing incomprehensible harm with the public none the wiser. Here's how
it works in simple terms:
The Fed was given the authority to
conduct the nation's monetary policy with the power to control the
supply and price of money. It has three ways to do it - through open
market operations, the discount rate it charges member banks, and the
reserve requirement percentage of member banks assets it requires them
to hold and not loan out. The Board of Governors is responsible for
handling the discount rate and reserve requirements while the Federal
Open Market Committee (FOMC) is in charge of the open market operations
of buying or selling bonds explained further below. Using these tools,
the Fed is able to influence the supply and demand for money and thus
directly control the federal funds short-term rate that's always fixed
unless the Fed wishes to raise or lower it. Longer rates are controlled
by the powerful institutional traders in the bond market.
The FOMC and How It Works
The Federal Open Market Committee is
really key to the whole process of money creation or contraction. It
consists of 12 members - seven members of the Board of Fed Governors,
the president of the New York Fed Bank (the most important one of all)
and four of the remaining 11 Reserve Bank presidents who serve one year
terms on a rotating basis. The FOMC holds eight regularly scheduled
meetings a year to assess economic conditions and decide how loose or
tight it wants monetary policy to be to further its stated goal of
sustainable economic growth and price stability.
The FOMC literally has the power to
create money out of nothing. It does it in a four step process:
Step 1 - The FOMC first approves the
purchase of US government bonds on the open market.
Step 2 - The New York Fed bank buys them
from sellers (financial markets always have an equal number of buyers
and sellers).
Step 3 - The Fed pays for its purchases
with electronic credits to the sellers' banks, which, in turn, credit
the sellers' bank accounts. These credits are literally created out of
nothing.
Step 4 - The banks receiving the credits
can then use them as reserves to enable them to loan out as much as 10
times their amount (if their reserve requirement is 10%) through the
magic (only banks have) of fractional reserve banking and, of course,
collect interest on all of it. What a business, and it's all legal.
Imagine how rich we might all be if we as private individuals could do
the same thing. Borrow a million from the Fed and like magic it becomes
10 times as much, and we get to collect interest on all but the 10% of
it we must hold in reserve. This is the magic of fractional reserve
banking money creation and explains how powerful an economic stimulus it
is when the Fed wants to enhance economic growth.
When the Fed wishes to contract the
economy by reducing the money supply, it simply reverses the above
process. Instead of buying bonds, it sells them so that money moves out
of the buyers' bank accounts instead of into them. Bank loans must then
be reduced by 10 times if the reserve requirement is 10%.
How the Fed Harms the Public Interest
The Federal Reserve System exists only to
serve its owners and member banks and in doing so is hostile to the
public interest. That's because it's a banking cartel with the power to
restrict competition for greater profits gained at our expense. It goes
from our pockets to theirs, and the public loses in at least four ways:
One - Through the invisible tax of
inflation that results from the dilution of purchasing power caused by
newly created money entering the system reducing the value of dollars
already there. The Greenspan Fed was especially expansive, never was
held to account for its excess and was able to pass a serious problem it
created on to a future Fed chairman and society to deal with. The man we
now lionize as a monetary magician began sensibly. From 1982, before he
arrived in 1987, until 1992, the money supply increased on average by 8%
a year. But from 1992 - 2002, the printing press worked overtime in sync
with the deregulation and growth of global markets expanding the
currency by more than 12% a year. It became even more extreme post 9/11
and since 2002 grew at a 15% rate. It now has more than doubled in less
than a decade. It appears that the new Fed chairman has taken note and
has begun reducing the rate of money expansion as he continues raising
the federal funds rate to whatever level he has in mind.
Currency traders as well apparently have
taken note of the rate of money supply expansion overall. Except for a
respite in 2005, it's quite likely the dollar weakness since 2002 is the
result of the excess amount of them created for the
Bush administration's profligate spending to fund its
endless wars and reckless tax cuts for the rich. The problem is further
compounded as from 1964 to the present debt service has grown from 9% to
16.5% of the federal budget and rising; the current account deficit has
gone from a 1% surplus to an almost 7% deficit; and federal indebtedness
has grown by 40% just since 2001 and financed in large part by "the
kindness of (foreign) strangers" that may be growing restive.
Furthermore, since March, 2006, the Fed stopped publishing the M-3
aggregate of the total amount of dollars in circulation. With that
transparency gone, big buyers of US Treasuries now have to calculate the
value of the dollar based on speculation and uncertainty rather than
hard data - not a way to inspire trust in the financial markets that
function best in an atmosphere of openness and clarity.
Two - The public also loses
because the banking cartel is able to practice usury - from it's power
over a flexible currency to artificially move rates up or down to any
level it chooses which many small lenders in a truly free and open
market can't do. In addition, the cartel's market dominance forces most
borrowers (especially smaller ones less able to issue their own debt
instruments) to come to them for loans which it's then able to make
using what should be the peoples' money available to them at the lowest
possible cost from many highly government regulated small lenders
competing for customers.
Three - Through the taxes, we, the
public, must pay to cover the interest on the huge national debt (now
over $8.4 trillion) accumulated from the money the Fed printed and
loaned to the government. As mentioned earlier, that now totals an
annualized amount exceeding two-thirds of a trillion dollars and
increasing daily. It's made the bankers rich, ordinary people poorer,
and the public none the wiser it's been fleeced big time.
Four - Compounding the above abuse, the
cartel is able to get the public to bail out the system with more of its
tax dollars. It happens whenever any of the too-big-to-fail banks need
financial help to survive. The same is true for big corporations like
Chrysler or Lockheed, large investment firms or hedge funds like Long-Term
Capital Management or even countries like Mexico. It's also true when a
single bank goes out of business and depositors must be compensated or
more seriously in the wake of a systemic financial meltdown like the one
that wiped out many savings and loan banks in the 1980s. Whether it's a
single bank or many dozens at a time, public tax dollars are used to
save the system or just pick up the tab to repay depositors insured
against losses through government insurance protection up to a
stipulated amount per account.
How Would
Adam
Smith Have Reacted to the Federal Reserve System
This concentration of banking cartel
wealth and power is the opposite of what
Adam Smith, the ideological godfather of free market
capitalism, advocated in his writings including his seminal work The
Wealth of Nations.
Adam Smith wrote about an "invisible hand" that he said
worked best in a free market with many small businesses competing
locally against each other. He strongly opposed the concentrated
mercantilism of his day (what there was of it) which now would be the
equivalent of today's giant transnational corporations and the banking
cartel with the power to restrict competition, maintain higher prices
than otherwise possible and earn greater profits as a result at the
public's expense.
The kind of banking cartel that exists
today is precisely what
Adam Smith would have condemned. But having a central bank
is not in itself a bad thing provided the bank is government owned,
controlled and operated for the public welfare. There's only a problem
when through subterfuge the bank is set up to appear government owned
and run but is, in fact, for private profit the way ours is and most
others as well. And in the US, to make the arrangement work, a mostly
publicly appointed governing authority runs the System acting as a shill
for its private for-profit banking cartel members that wanted it in the
first place and got a corrupted Congress to give it to them. To work,
the cartel needs the cover it gets from its partnership with government,
but it's through that arrangement that it harms the public interest for
its own private gain.
And that goes to the heart of the problem:
that the Congress elected to serve the people instead betrayed them by
creating an all-powerful banking cartel and gave it the authority to
practice fractional reserve banking with the power to get free money by
creating it out of nothing. It then allowed its members a near-monopoly
right to set the rates of interest they wish to charge borrowers. The
whole process amounts to a legally sanctioned heist by the powerful
banks working in league with government for its own gain. It's also part
of a more extensive government arranged process to transfer wealth from
the people to the pockets of large corporations and the rich and doing
it while those being harmed are unaware it's even happening.
Another Way the Federal Reserve System
Harms the Public
The Fed harms the public welfare in one
other important way, and again most people are none the wiser about it.
Supposedly the Federal Reserve System was established to stabilize the
economy, smooth out the business cycle, maintain a healthy rate of
sustainable growth while holding prices steady and benefitting everyone.
So how well has it done its job? Since its creation in 1913, and with
them in charge, we had the crashes of 1921 and the most important and
remembered one in 1929. That was followed by The Great Depression that
lasted until the onset of WW II that noted conservative economist Milton
Friedman explained was caused and exacerbated because the Federal
Reserve oddly decided to reduce the money supply at a time of economic
contraction instead of increasing it. We then had recessions in 1953,
1957, 1969, 1975, 1981, 1990 and 2001. We also had inflation beginning
in the 1960s which became quite severe through much of the 1970s and
early 1980s. And we had a major banking crisis in the 1980s at which
time more banks and savings and loan associations failed than ever
before in our history. It happened in the wake of financial market
deregulation when banks were allowed to pursue their own interests
without government oversight to check their willingness to assume excess
risk or stop them from trying to get away with deliberate fraud.
Along with the economic stability the Fed
never achieved, we've also had soaring consumer debt; record high
federal budget and trade deficits; a high level of personal bankruptcies
and rising mortgage loan delinquencies; interest on a mounting national
debt that's a large and rising percentage of the federal budget; the
loss of our manufacturing base and it's high-paying jobs with good
benefits because they're being exported to low wage countries; an
economy in which services now account for nearly 80% of all business
that provide mostly lower paying, less skilled jobs with few or no
benefits; and a widening income and wealth gap that continues to harm
lower and middle income earners to benefit the rich and well-off
privileged few and a government that encourages it.
Sum it all up and the conclusion is clear.
The one thing the Fed failed to accomplish above all else was what it
was established to do in the first place. But it's much worse than that
if we understand a cartel's real motives. It's not to serve the public
interest. It's to abuse it because that's how it benefits most. It's
able to do it with its legally sanctioned concentrated power and a
friendly government in league with it as partners or facilitators. It's
from that cozy hidden from view arrangement that it's able to get away
with the grandest of grand thefts.
A Needed Solution to A Huge Problem
>From the information presented above,
it's clear that the Federal Reserve System was established through
stealth and deceit by a handful of corrupted politicians in service to
their powerful banking and Wall Street allies. They did it to defraud
the public and without them being any the wiser about what, in fact, had
been done or how harmful it was to be to their welfare and interests.
Those in the Congress and President Wilson (a man trained in the law,
one-time practicing attorney, former esteemed academic and president of
Princeton University) either knew or should have known that the act he
and they approved establishing the Fed was in direct violation of the
Constitution they were sworn to uphold. They didn't, they broke the law,
and the public paid dearly for their crime ever since to this day.
So what recourse is left, and can people
be mobilized to pursue it. There's only one sensible and just solution
to undo the damage done to so many for so long - abolish the Federal
Reserve System and restore the power it now has to the federal
government working for the public welfare. Take it back from the
powerful banking cartel working against it and never allow it to be in
its hands again. That alone is the only way. The great German poet and
playwright
Bertolt Brecht would have agreed and once said it was "easier
to rob by setting up a bank than by holding up (one)."
Freeing us from the these powerful "Money
Changers" would have enormous benefits for everyone. It would establish
a prudent policy of money creation that would minimize our most unfair
tax - inflation which is caused by private for-profit bankers
manipulating the nation's money supply to enhance their profits. It
would stabilize the economy and smooth out the extremes in the business
cycle exacerbated by the cartel working for its benefit and against ours.
It would lower the cost of money for borrowers because it would end the
monopoly power the cartel now has to set the rates it chooses by opening
the market to more competition. It would reduce the growing and
oppressive national debt freed eventually from the extra money supply
growth needed to pay it off. It would lower the public's tax burden as
less revenue would be needed for debt service. It would be a momentous
step toward reducing and hopefully one day eliminating the overwhelming
power of all predatory corporate giants preying on us so they can grow
and prosper. It might even discourage wars which are only fought for
wealth and power - never for glory or to make the world safe for
democracy or other false motives. Without a powerful corporate banking
cartel and other industry giants that feed on the human misery they
create, there would be less of a reason to pursue any. Try to imagine
that kind of world and a government working for the public welfare
instead of harming it as it now must do in service to capital. That
world is possible, and responsible people need to work for it as the one
we now have has failed and must be changed before it's too late.
A View of the World Created by the
Interests of Capital and Our Government That Supports It
It's the ugly, corrupted world of
neoliberal "free market" capitalism controlled by giant corporations;
that benefits the privileged few alone causing great human misery and
despair; a despotic world that can't endure nor must we allow it to much
longer; one with endless wars for power and profit; where people are
commodities to be used as needed and discarded like trash when they're
not; with no concern for preserving an ecology able to sustain us and
won't much longer because we're destroying it and ourselves for profit;
where essential human needs don't matter under an economic model only
valuing private gain; where democracy is incompatible with predatory
capitalism; one no one should want to live in or ever have to; one we
must change or perish. In the language of capital, that's the bottom
line. Only a mass movement of committed people can change that world. It
must or we all will.
Unless we can move from our failed
economic model to a better alternative, it will end on its own one day
by one means or other. But it may be a denouement no one would wish for
- it's own self-destruction taking all else with it either by nuclear
holocaust or an environment so inhospitable it won't support our ability
to live in it. Our only chance is to work for change while there's still
time.
A Vision of A Different Kind of World
History proves a better world is possible
when committed people work hard enough for it. It's how slavery was
ended; workers won the right to organize and bargain collectively; women
gained equal suffrage to men, control of their own bodies, and more
rights and status in the work force; blacks and other minorities won
important civil rights; and politicians once enacted important social
legislation if only out of fear of what might happen if they didn't.
Thomas Jefferson explained the "The price
of liberty is eternal vigilance." It's also the price to keep our hard
won social gains. For the past generation those gains have eroded while
we weren't paying attention and only mass people action can regain them.
The goal should be for a world of caring and sharing; where peoples'
lives improve because we all work together for it; one at peace and not
with endless wars to benefit the rich and powerful at our expense; where
all essential human needs are met because governments work for the
common good to assure it; with real participatory democracy where the
public and elected officials work together to keep it strong and vibrant;
with no oppressive corporate giants or banking cartels because the law
won't allow any; where ecological nurturing and preservation are
central; with clean air, water and soil and food that's fit and safe to
eat; a much simpler world, more locally based than today's where notions
like globalization aren't even in the vocabulary; one based on social
equity and justice for all with government, law enforcement and the
courts working to assure it stays that way; one we all want to live in
and hope some day we can; one we want to pass on to future generations;
one we can't afford not to have because the alternative may be no world
at all.
We may now be at a key watershed moment
where our fate hangs in the balance. We can either work together for a
better, sustainable world or likely become the first species in it ever
to destroy itself. If it happens, we'll likely take most others with us
and not leave much behind for the few hearty ones that remain. We no
longer have the luxury of debate for the kind of world we need to
survive. The giant banks and corporations won't give it to us nor will a
hostile government allied with them. It's up to us to go for it or
likely perish if we fail. A good beginning would be by driving the
Federal Reserve "money changers" out of our temple and the corporate
giants with them. A better world is possible if we remember and live by
political theorist Antonio Gramsci's inspirational words about "the
optimism of the will." With it, organized people can find a way to beat
organized money.
June 29, 2006
Stephen Lendman lives in
Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit
his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com.
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