We'll start way back in history to give some kind of historical
perspective to this; we'll go back to the first century BC and the tiny kingdom
of Phrygia. There was a philosopher by the name of Epictetus and it was
Epictetus who said "Appearances are of four kinds: things either are as they
appear to be; or they neither are nor appear to be; or they are but do not
appear to be; or they are not and yet appear to be." When I read that statement
for the first time, I had a big chuckle over it and I thought for sure that if
Epictetus were alive today he would probably be a Harvard professor of money and
banking; it sounds like so many explanations that I have read about various
aspects of the Federal Reserve System. What he did was he took a fairly simple
concept but by the time that he was through explaining it, we didn't have any
idea what he was talking about. All Epictetus said was that appearances can
sometimes be deceiving. That's all he said but by the time he was through
explaining the four different ways in which they can be deceiving, we were left
back at the switch somewhere.
Nevertheless, I thought, accidentally perhaps, Epictetus had given
me a track to run on so-to-speak. Actually it could be the theme since if
there's anything in the world that is deceiving it is the
Federal Reserve
System. In fact, it is one of those appearances of the fourth kind which are
those appearances which are not and yet appear to be. I'm going to use that as
sort of a hook on the topic. We'll come back to it from time-to-time and
punctuate it if I can remember to do that because it tells us something at the
most fundamental level about the Federal Reserve System and that is that
appearances can be deceiving.
When I did my research on this topic I came to the startling
conclusion that the Federal Reserve System does not need to be audited, it needs
to be abolished. This is very intriguing to think we should audit the Fed but I
discovered that probably if they audited the Fed it would get a clean bill
because it's undoubtedly doing exactly what it's supposed to do according to the
law. What it is supposed to do according to the law is justification for
abolishing it so all we have to do is understand what the Federal Reserve System
is supposed to do and we'll be pretty upset about it. The fact of the matter is
that most people haven't the foggiest idea of what it is in fact supposed to do.
I came to the conclusion that the Federal Reserve needed to be
abolished for seven reasons. I'd like to read them to you now just so that you
get an idea of where I'm coming from, as they say. I put these into the most
concise phrasing that I can to make them somewhat shocking and maybe you'll
remember them:
1. The
Federal Reserve is incapable of accomplishing its stated objectives.
2. It
is a cartel operating against the public interest.
3. It's
the supreme instrument of usury.
4. It
generates our most unfair tax.
5. It
encourages war.
6. It
destabilizes the economy.
I don't know what you think about those seven points. I know a lot
of you folks agree with them right off the bat, but I presume that there are
some skeptics here tonight and I hope there are otherwise I am the minister
talking to the choir. I know in fact that there are always quite a few skeptics
that come to these meetings and frankly you are the folks I'm talking to tonight
because once, not too long ago, I was in that same frame of mind. I would've
thought to myself those are rather extreme statements, I don't think they can be
supported by fact. Though time doesn't permit me to cover all of those seven
points here tonight, I would like to splash around on the first four topics for
a little while and show you that there is in fact quite a bit of reason for a
rational person to conclude that those statements are true.
I think the best place to begin is with the formation of the
"creature from Jekyll Island"; the creation of the Federal Reserve. It takes me
back to the title of the book "The Creature from Jekyll Island" and anybody
that's here thinking that we're going to show a movie which is a sequel to
Jurassic Park, you're in the wrong place. The title was designed, of course, to
attract attention but it does have a great deal of significance to it. For those
of you who have not yet had a chance to delve into this, I should explain to you
that Jekyll Island is a real island that's off the coast of Georgia. It was on
that island back in 1910 that the Federal Reserve System was created at a highly
secret meeting that took place there. What I'd like to do is illustrate to you
that the meeting did in fact take place and I'll show some of the documentation
that is available for that to prove that the secrecy was extreme and then we'll
come face-to-face with the question "why the secrecy"? When things are done in
secret quite often there's something to hide and we'll explore what it was that
they wanted to hide. Once we've come to an understanding of that, then we'll
finally understand a very important aspect of the Federal Reserve System which
is not generally understood.
Click image to watch video
Where it began -- Jekyll Island, Georgia
Back in 1910, Jekyll Island was completely privately owned by a small
group of millionaires from New York. We're talking about people such as J. P.
Morgan, William Rockefeller and their associates. This was a social club and it
was called "The Jekyll Island Club." They owned the island and it was where
their families came to spend the winter months. There was a magnificent
structure there, the clubhouse, which was the center of their social activities.
That clubhouse is still there, by-the-way. The island has since been purchased
by the state of Georgia, converted into a state park and the clubhouse has been
restored and you can visit it. I think you'd be very impressed by it. As you
walk through the downstairs corridors you'll come to a door and on the door
there is a brass plaque and it says: "In this room the Federal Reserve System
was created." This is not a secret anymore; it's a matter of public record.
Around the clubhouse there were some cottages as they were called which were
built by some of the families to quarter themselves. They're attractive little
things; they were magnificent examples of the architecture of the turn of the
century. One of the cottages through which they take tours if you're interested
in doing that, as I recall the guide told us that there were 14 bathrooms in
that cottage -- not exactly what we would call a cottage.
The clubhouse is where the Federal Reserve System was created. Let's
retell that story in detail and see how it came about. The year was 1910, that
was three years before the Federal Reserve Act was finally passed into law. It
was November of that year when Senator Nelson Aldrich sent his private railroad
car to the railroad station in New Jersey and there it was in readiness for the
arrival of himself and six other men who were told to come under conditions of
great secrecy. For example, they were told to arrive one at a time and not to
dine with each other on the night of their departure. They were told that should
they arrive at the station at the same time they should pretend like they didn't
even know each other. They were instructed to avoid newspaper reporters at all
cost because they were well-known people and had they been seen by a reporter
they would've asked questions. Especially if two or three of them had been
spotted together, this would've raised eyebrows and they would've asked a lot of
questions. One of the men carried a shotgun in a big black case so that if he
had been stopped and asked where he was going he was prepared to say that he was
going on a duck hunting trip. The interesting thing about that part of the story
is that we find out later from his biographer that this man never fired a gun in
his life, in fact he borrowed that shotgun just to carry with him on this trip
as part of the deception.
Once they got on board the private railroad car this pattern continued.
They were told to use first names only, not to use their last names at all. A
couple of the men even adopted code-names. The reason for that is so that the
servants on board the train would not know who these people were. They were
afraid that if the servants would talk about it then the word would leak out and
it might get into the press. They traveled for two nights and a day on board
this car and they arrived after a 1,000 mile journey to Brunswick, Georgia. From
there they took a ferry across the inland straits and they ended up on Jekyll
Island in the clubhouse where for the next nine days they sat around the table
and hammered out all the important details of what eventually became the Federal
Reserve System. When they were done they went back to New York.
For quite a few years thereafter these men denied that any such meeting
took place. It wasn't until after the Federal Reserve System was firmly
established that they then began to talk openly about their journey and what
they accomplished. Several of them wrote books on the topic, one of them wrote a
magazine article and they gave interviews to newspaper reporters so now it's
possible to go into the public record and document quite clearly and in detail
what happened there.
Who were these seven men? The first one I have already mentioned, Senator
Nelson Aldrich was the Republican whip in the Senate, he was the chairman of the
National Monetary Commission which was the special committee of Congress created
for the purpose of making a recommendation to Congress for proposed legislation
to reform banking. The public was quite concerned in those days over what was
going on in the banking industry; a lot of banks were folding, people were
losing their investments in banks, they had broken their promise to guard the
depositors assets, there were runs on the bank, banks couldn't give the people
their money back. In particular they were concerned over the concentration of
wealth in the hands of a few large banks in New York on Wall Street. This is
what they called the "money trust" in those days. The money trust was a common
phrase. Quite a few politicians had been elected to office on their campaign
promise to break the grip of the money trust. President Wilson was one of those
politicians that campaigned on that even though Wilson was himself hand-picked
by the money trust and financed by the money trust and surrounded by the money
trust -- all of his advisors and politic cronies. The public didn't know that at
the time and it was a popular issue. If you campaigned against the money trust
you were quite apt to be elected and that was what I call "the people you love
to hate" money trust.
That was one of the purposes of the National Monetary Commission which was
to propose legislation to break the grip of the money trust and Aldrich was
chairman of that committee. He was also the very important business associate of
J. P. Morgan. He was the father-in-law of John D. Rockefeller, Jr. which means
that eventually he became the grandfather of Nelson Rockefeller, our former
vice-president. You remember his full name was Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller; his
middle name being derived from his famous grandfather.
The second important person there was Abraham Andrew who was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury. He later became a Congressman and he was very
important in banking circles.
Frank Vanderlip was there. He was the President of the National City Bank
of New York which was the largest of all of the banks in America representing
the financial interests of William Rockefeller and the international investment
firm of Kuhn, Loeb & Company.
Henry Davison was there, the senior partner of the J. P. Morgan Company.
Charles Norton was there; he was the President of the First National Bank of New
York which was another one of the giants. Benjamin Strong was at the meeting; he
was the head of J. P. Morgan's Banker's Trust Company and Benjamin Strong three
years later would become the first head of the Federal Reserve System.
Finally, there was Paul Warburg who was probably the most important at the
meeting because of his knowledge of banking as it was practiced in Europe. Paul
Warburg was born in Germany and eventually became a naturalized American
citizen. He was a partner in Kuhn, Loeb & Company and was a representative of
the Rothschild banking dynasty in England and France where he maintained very
close working relationships throughout his entire career with his brother, Max
Warburg, who was the head of the Warburg banking consortium in Germany and the
Netherlands. Paul Warburg was one of the wealthiest men in the world. In fact,
those of you who are Little Orphan Annie fans will remember Daddy Warbucks.
Daddy Warbucks was the characterization of Paul Warburg and everyone at the time
was well aware of that fact. I have his photograph in my book and if you compare
the photograph to the cartoon drawing you'll see the resemblance between Paul
WARburg and Daddy WARbucks. And while we're on the topic of cartoon characters,
if you played Monopoly, you remember the drawing of the capitalist with the
handle-bar mustache and the cigar? That's J. P. Morgan.
These were the seven men aboard that railroad car who were at Jekyll
Island. Amazing as it may seem, they represented approximately 1/4 of the wealth
of the entire world. These are the men that sat around the table and created the
Federal Reserve System. For the skeptic who's wondering it didn't happen that
way surely Griffin is exaggerating to make some kind of a point. Let me put your
mind at ease that it did happen that way (perhaps not at ease but in a state of
tension).
How do we know? For example, Frank Vanderlip who was at the meeting wrote
an article that appeared in the Saturday Evening Post on February 9, 1935 and
I'd like to read for you just a short excerpt from that article. This is what
Vanderlip said: "I do not feel it is any exaggeration to speak of our secret
expedition to Jekyll Island as the occasion of the actual conception of what
eventually became the Federal Reserve System. We were told to leave our last
names behind us. We were told further that we should avoid dining together on
the night of our departure. We were instructed to come one at a time and as
unobtrusively as possible to the railroad terminal on the New Jersey littoral of
the Hudson where Senator Aldrich's private car would be in readiness attached to
the rear-end of a train to the south. Once aboard the private car we began to
observe the taboo that had been fixed on last names. We addressed one another as
Ben, Paul, Nelson and Abe. Davison and I adopted even deeper disguises
abandoning our first names. On the theory that we were always right, he became
Wilbur and I became Orville after those two aviation pioneers the Wright
brothers. The servants and train crew may have known the identities of one or
two of us, but they did not know all and it was the names of all printed
together that would've made our mysterious journey significant in Washington, in
Wall Street, even in London. Discovery we knew simply must not happen."
Why not? why the secrecy? what's the big deal about a group of bankers
getting together in private and talking about banking or even banking
legislation. And the answer is provided by Vanderlip himself in the same
article. He said: "If it were to be exposed publicly that our particular group
had gotten together and written a banking bill, that bill would have no chance
whatever of passage by Congress." Why not? Because the purpose of the bill was
to break the grip of the money trust and it was written by the money trust. And
had that fact been known at the get-go, we would never have had a Federal
Reserve System because as Vanderlip said it would have had no chance of passage
at all by Congress. So it was essential to keep that whole thing a secret as it
has remained a secret even to this day. Not exactly a secret that you couldn't
discover because anybody can go to the library and dig this out, but it is
certainly not taught in textbooks. We don't know any of this in the official
literature from the Federal Reserve System because that was like asking the fox
to build the henhouse and install the security system.
That was the reason for the secrecy at the meeting. Now we know something
very important about the Federal Reserve that we didn't know before, but there's
much more to it than that. Consider the composition of this group. Here we had
the Morgans, the Rockefellers, Kuhn, Loeb & Company, the Rothschilds and the
Warburgs. Anything strange about that mixture? These were competitors. These
were the major competitors in the field of investment and banking in those days;
these were the giants. Prior to this period they were beating their heads
against each other, blood all over the battlefield fighting for dominance in the
financial markets of the world. Not only in New York but London, Paris and
everywhere. And here they are sitting around a table coming to an agreement of
some kind. What's going on here? We need to ask a few questions.
This is extremely significant because it happened precisely at that point
in American history where business was undergoing a major and fundamental change
in ideology. Prior to this point, American business had been operating under the
principles of private enterprise-free enterprise competition is what made
American great, what caused it to surpass all of the other nations of the world.
Once we had achieved that pinnacle of performance, however, this was the point
in history where the shift was going away from competition toward monopoly. This
has been described in many textbooks as the dawning of the era of the cartel and
this was what was happening. For the fifteen year period prior to the meeting on
Jekyll Island, the very investment groups about which we are speaking were
coming together more and more and engaging in joint ventures rather than
competing with each other. The meeting on Jekyll Island was merely the
culmination of that trend where they came together completely and decided not to
compete -- they formed a cartel.
I need to define that word so that you will know what I mean when I use
the word cartel. It is a group of independently owned businesses which come
together for the purpose of reducing or eliminating competition between
themselves to enhance their profit margin or to secure their positions in the
market. They do this by various means one of which is price fixing -- no
competition on price. There are other means. If we were forming a cartel here I
might insist that I get the north and you can have the south and we won't
compete. Or I would say I'll produce the gizmo and you can have the widget and
we won't compete or we'll share patents and processes and whatever we do we
agree to eliminate competition between ourselves. The more layers of agreement
that we put one on top of the other, the more we become encased in this cartel
structure and we become as one insofar as the market is concerned even though
within that grouping we are separately owned.
This is just as true with a banking cartel as it is with any other
industry. We come to the conclusion when we analyze the nature of the Federal
Reserve System how it operates, read the Federal Reserve Act, place it against
the context of the historical background and we come smack to the realization
that the Federal Reserve System although it parades around looking as though
it's a government operation of some kind, is merely a cartel of banks right
under our noses and it is protected by law. I sometimes get the impression that
it's been there dangerously operating all these years and we didn't even know
it. I saw a video some years ago about the lava tubes in Hawaii. They are very
impressive because apparently once in a while the ground will just break out, a
hole will fall down and you can look into the hole and you see that there's a
river of lava actually flowing just a few feet under your feet and you don't
even know it's down there unless something breaks through and you hope you're
not on the piece that breaks through. I got the feeling that this is how the
Federal Reserve has been operating right under our feet; this cartel has been
running and we didn't even know it because that fact has been carefully
concealed from us.
Conclusion number 2 about the Federal Reserve System, a very important
thing that we didn't know is the cartel. There's even more to it than that.
Perhaps the third ingredient is the most important of all and that is the
realization that this cartel went into partnership with the government. Now we
have hold of something extremely significant. Cartels often go into partnership
with governments because they need the force of law to enforce their cartel
agreement but in this case they did it in spades.
Whenever a partnership is formed there has to be a benefit to the partners
otherwise they don't form it. So we need to ask the question what is the
benefit, the payoff, for these two partners? Why did they go into it? Why did
the government go into a partnership like this and why does the banking cartel?
In answering those questions we finally come to grips with the reality of what
this creature from Jekyll Island is. Let's take a look at that; what's the
payoff to these two partners? In order to see that we'll have to examine in some
detail the mechanism by which the Federal Reserve System creates money. This is
a real interesting study. I call it the "Mandrake Mechanism" named after that
comic-book character of the 40s, Mandrake the Magician, who could create
something out of nothing and then wave his cape and it was back into the void
again. That's a pretty descriptive phrase for the way the Federal Reserve System
does it.
Let's take a look at it and see how they create money through the Mandrake
Mechanism. I am going to do this in a very simplified form. I want to warn you
that it's going to sound like it's too simple. It's not. I'm going to strip out
all the banking terminology, all the banker language, all the accounting phrases
that need to be defined and speak in very plain English that anybody can
understand. It may sound to you as though I've simplified it too much and I want
to assure you that in spite of the simple language everything I'm going to tell
you is absolutely 100% technically accurate. The other thing I want to warn you
about is don't try and make sense out of this because it can't be done; this
does not make sense and you'll blow a fuse trying to make it make sense. Just
remember that it is a scam and if you keep that fact in mind then you'll have no
trouble comprehending what's going on.
Here's how it works. It starts with the government side of the
partnership, it starts in Congress which is spending money like crazy. It spends
far more money than it takes in. It is spending way beyond its income. How can
it do that? Basically this is what happens. Let's say Congress needs an extra
billion dollars today so it goes to the treasury and says "we want a billion
dollars" and the treasury official says "you guys have got to be kidding, we
don't have any money here, you spent it all a long time ago, everything that
we've taken in taxes you fellows have spent by March." Congress says "we thought
that was true but we thought we'd stop by just in case somebody sent some more
in." They get together and they go down the street and they get the idea that
we'll borrow the money. So they stop at the printing office and they don't print
money at the printing office, they print certificates and they're very fancy
things with borders on the edge with an eagle across the top and a seal at the
bottom and it says "US Government Bond" or "Note" or "Bill" depending on the
length of the maturity of it. If you hold it up to the light it really says
"IOU" because that's what it is. They print these things up and it looks very
impressive and then they offer them to the private sector; they're hoping that
people will come up and loan money to the federal government and a lot of people
do and are anxious to lend money to their government. Why? Because they've been
told by their investment advisors that that's the most sound investment that you
can make. Why? We've all heard that these loans are backed by the full faith and
credit of the US government. They're not quite sure what that means but it sure
sounds good. I'd like to explain for you who are in doubt what that means. The
full faith and credit of the US government means that the government solemnly
promises to pay back that loan plus interest if it has to take everything you
and I have in the form of taxes in order to do it, it's going to do it. It will
take everything we have if necessary to hold its pledge. People don't realize
that they're putting themselves on the line, they're going to get their own
money back minus a substantial handling fee.
Plenty of money is loaned to the government but never enough. Congress
needs more money than that. They say not to worry. They go further down the
street to the Federal Reserve building. The Fed has been waiting for them,
that's one of the reasons it was created. By the time they get inside the
Federal Reserve building the officer of the Fed is opening his desk drawer. He
knows they're going to be there and he's ready and he pulls out his checkbook
and he writes a check to the US Treasury for one billion dollars or whatever the
amount is that they need. He signs the check and gives it to the treasury
official.
We need to stop here for a minute and ask a question. Where did they get a
billion dollars to give to the treasury? who put that money into the account at
the Federal Reserve System? The amazing answer is there is no money in the
account at the Federal Reserve System. In fact, technically, there isn't even an
account, there is only a checkbook. That's all. That billion dollars springs
into being at precisely the instant the officer signs that check and that is
called "monetizing the debt," that's the phrase they throw at you. That means
they just wrote a check, a big rubber check. If you and I were to do that we
would go to jail but they can do it because Congress wants them to do it. In
fact, this is the payoff, this is the benefit to the government side of this
partnership, this is how the government gets its instant access to any amount of
money at any time without having to go to the taxpayer directly and justify it
or ask for it. Otherwise, they would have to come to the taxpayer and say we're
going to raise your taxes another $3,000 this year and of course if they did
that, they would be voted out of office real fast. They like the Mandrake
Mechanism because it's a no questions asked source of money. You may have
noticed that it's been many years since Congress has even discussed what
anything costs, it's not an issue. It doesn't make any difference what the cost
is because regardless of the overrun they know they can go down the street to
the Federal Reserve and by law the officer has to write that big check and give
it to them and they're off and running.
There in a nutshell is the reason the government likes the Mandrake
Mechanism -- easy instant access to any amount of money of any kind without the
taxpayer being involved directly in the loop. But what about the banking side?
This is where it really gets interesting. Let's go back to that billion dollar
check. The treasury official deposits the check into the government's checking
account and all of a sudden the computers start to click and it shows that the
government has a billion dollar deposit meaning that it can now write a billion
dollars in checks against that deposit which it starts to do real fast. For the
sake of our analysis, let's just follow $100 out of that billion in a check that
for some reason they write to the fellow that delivers the mail to our door. The
postal worker gets a check for $100 and he looks at this thing and he can't
imagine in his wildest dreams that that money didn't exist two days ago anywhere
in the universe. It's spendable so he wouldn't even care if you told him. He
deposits it now into his personal checking account. Now we're finally out of the
Federal Reserve and out of the government's check and we're into the private
banking system. We're in finally to that part of the partnership which is
involved in the cartel. A $100 deposit has now been made in the local bank and
the banker sees that and runs over to the loan window and opens it up and says
"attention, everybody, we have money to loan, someone just deposited $100."
Everyone is overjoyed at that because that's one of the reasons they come to the
bank, they come to borrow money. That's a sign of national health if you're in
debt so they're anxious to know that the bank has money to loan, they line up
for these loans. They heard the banker and they say $100 that's not very much
and he says not to worry we can loan up to $900 based on that $100 deposit. How
can that be done? It gets complicated the way they do it and I'll tell you in
very simple terms. The Federal Reserve System requires that the banks hold no
less than 10% of their deposits in reserve. The bank holds 10% of that $100 in
reserve, $10, and it loans this first fellow in line $90. What does he do with
it? He wants to spend it so he puts it into his checking account. In fact it
probably goes directly into his checking account. Let's assume that they gave it
to him and he puts it back, when he puts it back it's a deposit isn't it?
Only a $100 deposit but $900 in loans and that deposit is still there.
Where did the $900 come from and the answer is the same -- there was no money.
This springs into existence precisely at the point at which the loan is made.
Notice the difference, an important distinction is when the money is created out
of nothing for the government it is spent by the government. On the banking
side, however, when it's created out of nothing it's not spent by the banks it
is loaned by the banks to you and to me and we spend it. Notice that when they
loan it to us we have to pay them interest on it. Think about this for a minute.
This money was created out of nothing and yet they collect interest on it which
means that they collect interest on nothing. Not too shabby! What a concept, why
didn't I think of that! I wish I had a magic checkbook like that where I could
just write checks all day long and didn't have to have any money any place just
checks, loan it to you folks and you're silly enough to pay me interest on it.
That's how it works.
Now you see what the benefit is to the banking cartel for being involved
in this Federal Reserve System, interest on nothing. The process doesn't end
there, however. It has consequences to you and to me. I've heard some people say
"isn't that interesting, these fellows are sure smart, I guess they deserve to
be rich." It's as though we're out of the loop, it doesn't affect us any, they
got rich but we're ok. Well no, they got rich alright but they got it by taking
it from us. How does that work? Let's follow this.
This newly created money goes out into the economy and it dilutes down the
value of the dollars that were already out there. It's like pouring water into a
pot of soup, it dilutes the soup. So by throwing more and more money into the
economic soup out there the money gets weaker and weaker and weaker and we have
the phenomenon called inflation which is the appearance of rising prices. I
emphasis the word "appearance" because in reality prices are not rising at all.
What we're seeing is that the value of the dollar is going down, that's the real
side of the equation. If we had real money based on gold or silver or anything
tangible that couldn't just be created out of thin air, it could be based on
microphones, that they couldn't just create with the stroke of a pen, you would
see then that prices would remain stable over a long period of time.
To illustrate that point, it's interesting to know that if we had lived in
ancient Rome with a one ounce gold coin we would've been able to buy a very fine
toga, a hand-crafted belt and a pair of sandals -- that was the price in Rome.
Today, if we have a one ounce gold coin what can we buy with it? We can go into
any men's store and buy a very fine suit, a hand-crafted belt and a pair of
shoes. The price of these items hasn't changed in thousands of years when
expressed in terms of real money but when expressed in terms of these things we
carry around in our pockets called Federal Reserve notes which is not really
money at all, fiat money anyway, the prices keep going up and up and up because
the value of those units keeps going down and down and down because they keep
making more and more and more of them and dumping them into the economic soup.
That's still not the end of the process. We lost some purchasing power
through this process called inflation. We lost something and very few people ask
the question "who got it"? It's as though nobody got it, we all lost it, it's
like it evaporated and went up to heaven somewhere. No, somebody got it. For
every loser there's a winner. Or I should say for every fifty losers there's one
winner that gets it all. Somebody got it. Who? Those people that got our lost
purchasing power are the ones who were right up at the point where the fresh
money was injected into the economic pot of soup. The ones that got the money
first gained because they had full purchasing power at that instant when the
money was created. By the time they spent it and gave it to you and you spent it
on something and gave it to him and by the time that it got out to the edge of
the pot where most of us are it's diluted. The ones that were right up at the
nozzle got our lost purchasing power. Who are they? Obviously the government was
up there first. Remember the billion dollar check, the very beginning of this
process went to the government and they spent it instantly and that money went
out into the economy and that was the beginning of this ripple effect. Who else?
The next ones were the people who were up at the loan window. They got the money
that was freshly created by the banking system because they were the borrowers.
We all know that in times of inflation borrowers gain, this is no mystery. We've
been told and advised to borrow money and stay up to the hilt in debt because
you borrow in dollars but because of inflation you can pay back with 50 cent
pieces.
So everybody knows about this part of it. What they forget is that the
alleged benefits of doing this are surrendered to the bank in the form of
interest payments. They're really not gaining that much. The gain that they are
getting through the inflation process they're having to give to the bank in the
form of interest on nothing. And it seems that they're gaining because they have
these paper profits. The value of this real estate is going up and up and up or
the value of my stock is going up and up and up but it's all paper. As far as
purchasing power is concerned it's not going up, up, up at all. Nevertheless
they're still having to pay for that illusion in the form of interest payments
on nothing.
Then comes the inevitable contraction of the economy. People don't realize
that the economy moves traditionally like a sawtooth -- it goes up gradually for
a long period of time and seems like forever it's going to go up, you can plan
on it forever and don't worry about it and then clunk! it falls down very
quickly and then it starts the next long climb and people forget that every once
in a while it comes down very abruptly. When it contracts people are extended
out there and they can't service their debt and make the payments and they lose
their assets.
Another interesting thing about this is that when the bank loans you money
which it created out of nothing, it costed nothing to make it, it wants
something from you. It wants you to sign on the dotted line and pledge your
house, your car, your inventory, your assets so that in case for any reason you
cannot continue to make your payments they get your marbles, they get all of
your assets. They're not going to lose anything on this. Whether it's expansion
or contraction, inflation or deflation the banks are covered and we like sheep
go right along with it because we haven't figured it out, we don't know that
this is a scam. Of course we have no choice either right now because it's all
enforced by law. We have no escape. We have no choice but it's even better that
we don't understand it because we can't complain about it either. There you have
it.
The two groups that got our lost purchasing power -- is anyone surprised?
-- the two members of the partnership, the government and the banking cartel.
The two groups that comprise the Federal Reserve System.
This lost purchasing power which is going from us to them is a tax. We
don't think of it as a tax but it is. We have no escape from it. In fact, it's
more a tax than the income tax or the excise tax which you can escape in one way
or another. You can't escape this one. There are no deductions, no exemptions,
everyone pays it and it is the most cruel, unfair tax of all because it falls
most heavily on those who can least afford to pay it. It falls on those on fixed
incomes, those who are retired. Anyone who has saved their money is paying this
tax in direct proportion to the degree to which they have been frugal. It's a
tax even though we don't think of it as that and it's time to think of it as
that. It's a tax that goes from us to the government and to the banking cartel.
Let's summarize. What is the benefit to the members of the partnership?
The government benefits because it is able to tax the American people any amount
it wishes through a process which the people do not understand called inflation.
They don't realize they're being taxed which makes it real handy when you're
going for re-election. On the banking side they're able to earn perpetual
interest on nothing. I emphasis the word "perpetual" because remember when the
loan is paid back it's turned around and loaned out to somebody else. Once that
money is created the object of the bank is to stay "loaned up" as they say. In
reality the banks can never stay 100% loaned up and that ratio varies a lot but
the objective is to stay loaned up to whatever extent is possible. Generally
speaking once this money is created in the loan process it is out there in the
economy forever, perpetually earning interest for one of the members of the
banking cartel which created that money.
There you have in a condensed form a crash course on the Federal Reserve
System and I can assure you that you know more about the Federal Reserve than
you would probably if you enrolled in a four year course in economics because
they don't teach this reality in school.
So what, they say? Can you imagine that? I knew when I wrote this book and
it got out that there would be some objection to it but I never dreamed what it
would be. I couldn't think of any objection to it, I thought what are they going
to say, what are the defenders of the Federal Reserve System going to say to me?
I figured they were going to try and pick some error that I had made in some
technical issue and try and make me look like a buffoon. But I never dreamed
that the only opposition, at least that I've run into so far, is the question
"so what"?
I was on the Pat Buchanan radio show about a month ago and they have a
cohost which is usually a representative of the opposing point of view and this
day they had a fellow by the name of Barry Lind(?) who was an ACLU type
high-powered intellectual and I was kind of nervous thinking here it comes, I'm
going to get it now and I'm going to be made a fool of right in front of all
these millions of people out there in radio land. I was really worried. It's
kind of hard on these radio shows to get your point across as they don't let you
speak like you folks let me do here. The lion's share of the time goes to
Buchanan and then the cohost gets his shot and then the commercials come in and
you've got three minutes to say your whole thing and they're always interrupting
you. I made my little shot as best I could and it was Barry Lind's turn and he
looked at me and he said: "Well, what you say is true, but so what?" I couldn't
believe it. And then he capped it with, which is the real argument: "We're
living well aren't we?"
This is an interesting question and I have run into that repeatedly since
then. What are you complaining about? we're living well aren't we? And the
implication is that without this scam we couldn't be living well, without this
scam somehow we'd be still crawling around in caves. We wouldn't have society
with a high standard of living, we wouldn't have any of the things that we
cherish without this scam, that's the whole implication. So how do you answer
that? So what?
First of all, we are not living that well. People like Barry Lind are
undoubtedly living very well and there are plenty of people in the system who
are living very well. Generally those are the ones who are up at the nozzle
where this new money is coming into the system or they're involved in the
government or they have government subsidies of they're close to the nozzle. For
most people, away from the nozzle, it's not going so well, we're not living that
well. It is a matter of fact that the only reason that America has been able to
maintain the appearance of a high standard of living since the Federal Reserve
System has gotten into full swing, especially after WWII, is because of the
shift towards two family incomes. It now takes two working people to just
maintain the semblance of where we used to be with one person working in the
family. And in spite of the two family income real wages are down for the common
man today, real wages in terms of the number of hours a person must work in
order to acquire the necessities of life. Young couples who are living on a
single income now have a lower standard of living than their parents did. The
net worth of the average household is falling. The leisure time for the average
American is shrinking. The percentage of families who own their own homes is
dropping. The age at which a family acquires its first home is rising. The
number of families that are counted in the middle class is falling. The number
of people below the poverty line is rising. Personal bankruptcies today are
about three times what they were in the 1960s and over 90% of Americans are
broke at the age of 65. So we're not living well at all as a result of this
creature.
Furthermore, there's another thing wrong with it. That is that when you
have a money supply based upon thin air it not only expands but it contracts. If
it were based on gold or silver or microphones, the money supply couldn't expand
and contract because there they are but when it's politically motivated it can
contract and that is the core cause of all of the booms and busts that have
plagued America for so many years. In other words, this is the concept behind
the recession and the depression and that is another thing that's wrong with it.
The third thing that's wrong with it is that it is dishonest. You don't
really need anything more than that do you? Even if it were the element that was
creating our prosperity, even if it didn't cause recessions and depressions the
fact that it is fraud, the fact that it is deception, it's dishonest and theft
is really a good enough reason in my opinion to get rid of it. That's what's
wrong with this scam.
Let's go back to Jekyll Island. They had an interesting problem there
which was what to call their creature. This partnership between government and
banks which we've been discussing was not new with the Federal Reserve System.
In fact, it was a concept that was created in Europe in the 16th century. It was
perfected with the formation of the Bank of England in 1694 and from that point
forward all of the governments of Europe had used this Mandrake Mechanism. They
didn't call it the Mandrake Mechanism, of course, they called it a "central
bank," that's the technical phrase for this partnership. If you want to look it
up in a textbook or encyclopedia you'll find it under the heading "Central
Bank."
From the Bank of England forward all the governments of Europe had central
banks for a very good reason. The kings and princes of Europe had learned from
hard experience that they could raise the taxes of their subjects only so high
and then they had a revolt on their hands and they tended to lose their jobs
(and heads). It appears that that natural level was about 40-43%; people will
tolerate taxes up to about 40-43% and then they start digging in their heels and
they just won't allow it to go any further. But with the central bank mechanism
in place the lid was off. Now these governments could tax their people 50%, 60%,
70% and in some cases 80% of everything they produced and they did not have a
revolt on their hands. They did not have resentment because the people didn't
know that they were paying a tax. They knew that prices were going up, but they
didn't understand why, they didn't know who was getting their lost purchasing
power.
It was a nifty arrangement for these governments. It was at that point in
history that governments' wars began to heat up. They always had wars but they
were relatively small things because wars are expensive and the people won't pay
more than 40% for everything including wars. But now that they had a way to tax
higher than that, they could engage in very expensive wars. It's at that point
in history that Europe plunged headlong into continuous war and big, very, very
expensive wars. The people paid for them uncomplainingly through the process of
inflation.
So when it came time to transplant this concept to America these seven men
on Jekyll Island knew very well that they were creating a central bank; that was
the reason that Paul Warburg was so valuable because he was the man with the
intense knowledge, the detailed technical knowledge of how central banks
operate. But they had a problem. How could they conceal that from the American
people because Congress was already on record as saying they did not want a
central bank in America. I don't think they knew what that phrase really meant,
but they knew that Europe had them, whatever they were, and we didn't want any.
They said in America if we're going to have banking reform we don't want what
they do over in Europe, we want something that is unique for America and its
principles and economy.
The problem before these men on Jekyll Island is what to call the central
bank so that nobody would know it was a central bank. And they theorized over
this and this was their strategy: they said first let's give it a name and we'll
add the word "Federal" to it to make it sound like it's government. Then we'll
add the word "Reserve" to make it seem like there are reserves somewhere, like
it was a banking concept. We'll add the word "System," a very important word
even though it may seem obscure now because remember in those days the concern
was the concentration of financial power in New York so they had to sell the
idea of a system of regional banks which would diffuse that power all over the
nation. First they talked about ten regions and then they said that wasn't
enough, twelve regions, we'll have twelve banks. And we'll build big buildings
out there in all of those regions so the local yokels can go and look at the
building and say "golly we've got one of those out here." Diffusion of power
away from New York; you can go and touch the building. The word "System" was
very important.
When you look at it you realize that what they created there was not
federal, there are no reserves, it's not a system at all in the sense of
diffusion of power and these Federal Reserve banks aren't even banks. On all
four words we're dealing with appearances of the fourth kind. It was brilliant
strategy.
The next thing was to sell this creature to the public. The first draft of
the Federal Reserve Act as it was presented to Congress was called the Aldrich
Bill named after the sponsor, Senator Nelson Aldrich. This was against the good
advice of Paul Warburg. He said: "Nelson, don't put your name on that bill
because you are so identified with big business interests that Congress will
vote it down; the people will not accept it." And apparently Aldrich's ego was
too big. He must've said: "Well no, after all I'm highly respected in the Senate
and I am the Chairman of the National Monetary Commission" and for whatever
reason he insisted that his name be on the bill. It appears that he wanted to go
down in history as the originator of the Federal Reserve System. Warburg was
right. When the bill was introduced Congress put thumbs-down on it. "The Bill of
Big Business."
They took the bill back for it was just a minor setback, they scrambled
the paragraphs around a little bit, took Aldrich's name off real fast and they
found a couple of Democrats to sponsor the bill. This was different. Everybody
knew that the Republicans represented big business but they also knew that
Democrats represented the common man, the little guy, the fellow on the assembly
line (like Ted Kennedy). They found a couple of millionaire Democrats to sponsor
the bill. They found Carter Glass in the House and Senator Robert Owen who
himself was a banker. Now it was the Glass-Owen bill and it was totally
different and acceptable.
The next thing, Aldrich and Vanderlip began to give speeches and
interviews to newspaper reporters condemning the bill. They said: "This bill
will be ruinous to banking. It will be terrible for the country." By the time
the common man read that in his newspaper he said: "Oh golly, I guess these big
bankers don't like the bill very much so it must be pretty good."
These fellows were not stupid. You have to give them credit. They didn't
get to be where they were by being country bumpkins. They understood politics,
they understood mass psychology and they played their cards exceedingly well.
Meanwhile these same individuals out of their own pockets were paying the price
for the costs of bringing up what they called grassroots study clubs all over
the country. They sponsored these clubs and they held public meetings and
printed brochures and pamphlets extolling the virtues of the Federal Reserve
System. They gave large amounts of money to some of the better known
universities in America; they created newly formed departments of economics with
that money; they hand picked their own people to be the professors to head up
those departments and then those professors with all of their academic
credentials gave speeches and wrote scholarly essays extolling the virtues of
the Federal Reserve System. And then at the insistence of Paul Warburg who was
forever the master strategist, they added several very sound provisions to the
Federal Reserve Bill. By that I mean they added some provisions which seriously
restricted the ability of the Federal Reserve to create money out of nothing.
Warburg's associates said, "Paul, what are you doing? We don't want those in
there this is our bill." And his response was this, he said, "Relax fellas,
don't you get it? Our object is to get the bill passed. We can fix it up later."
Those were his exact words. "We can fix it up later." He was so right. It was
because of those provisions that they won over the support of William Jennings
Bryan the head of the Populist Movement, the last hold-out against the bill.
Bryan was concerned that this would be an instrument for ruining the nation's
money supply but when he saw those provisions he said, "Oh well, those are good
provisions, I guess I can support the bill now" never dreaming that this was
temporary. Everything is temporary in politics. When people go to sleep things
can get changed.
Warburg was right and they fixed it up later. The Federal Reserve Act
since it was passed has been amended over 100 times. Every one of those
provisions were long ago removed and many more have been added which greatly
expand the power and reach of the Federal Reserve System to create money out of
nothing. With this kind of professional strategy and deception these people were
real professionals and the public didn't stand a chance. It is no surprise that
popular support was finally gained for the bill and on December 22, 1913 the
bill was passed by Congress and the following day was signed into law by
President Wilson and the creature from Jekyll Island finally moved into
Washington, DC.
Let's stand back from the creature a few paces and take a look at its
general form and shape and see what it is we got. We got a corporation chartered
by Congress which was given an exclusive franchise to create our nation's money
supply. We got a mechanism whereby Congress has been able to raise unlimited
taxes from the American people without them even knowing that they're paying a
tax and we got a mechanism whereby the banks can earn perpetual interest on
nothing. That is the shape and form of the creature from Jekyll Island.
Here's an interesting question, Who owns the Federal Reserve System? You
hear a lot of discussion on this particularly on talk radio nowadays. When the
subject of money comes up somebody calls in and says, "Did you know the Federal
Reserve is completely owned by the private banks? It's a private corporation.
What we need to do," they say "is abolish the Fed and turn it over to the
government so they can operate it for the benefit of the people." Some of you
are laughing and I'm sure there are some people here thinking what's wrong with
that so let's analyze it.
First of all it is a half-truth and it is a non-solution. Let's deal with
the half-truth first. It is true that the Federal Reserve System is not an
agency of the federal government in any shape or form. As I mentioned before, it
is a corporation that is chartered by Congress and like all corporations it has
stock certificates and those stock certificates in this case are held by the
banks within the Federal Reserve System. Every bank that's in the system is an
owner of the Federal Reserve -- remember this is a cartel. They own it in one
sense of the word, in the sense that they have stock certificates but up to that
point it looks as though it has all the attributes of a privately held
corporation. But that's as far as it goes because those stock certificates do
not carry with them any of the attributes of private ownership. For example, the
holders of these certificates cannot sell them. If you can't sell something then
you don't really own it, that's one of the tests of ownership, your ability to
dispose of it. You cannot sell it. Furthermore the larger banks put up more
money than the smaller banks, it's a ratio to their assets, so the larger banks
have more stock certificates in the system than the small ones and yet
regardless of the number that they hold, every bank has just one vote. There's
another violation of the principle of private ownership. Furthermore that vote
doesn't buy them anything. They can't vote for anything of substance; they
cannot vote for their national management which is the most important thing,
isn't it? The board of directors and chairman of the Federal Reserve System are
appointed by the President, they're not elected by the banks that are part of
the system, the President does that.
All that the local banks can vote for with their vote are the boards of
directors of the regional banks, so-called, which are subdivisions within the
system. They can't even vote for the leadership in their local subdivisions
because the chairman and the vice-chairman of those 12 regional banks are
appointed by the national board. They can vote for their officers at those
regional banks, the president, the vice-president and treasurer but guess what?
Those are subject to veto by the national board. Get the picture? All power has
always been at the top of this system. The only thing that the charter allows
them to vote for, those boards of directors, of substance is to set the interest
rates within their regions. But this should come as no surprise to anybody that
even that is subject to veto by the national board. You see this concept of
diffusion of power throughout the regions of the US is a scam. There is no power
at the local level. There is nothing that these boards of directors who are
voted in by the banks who hold the certificates can do of substance. All they're
allowed to do really is play golf.
It is not a privately held corporation in the traditional sense of the
word. This idea of diffusion of power over the 12 regional banks was just a
necessity of 1913 to sell the concept to the American people. If it hadn't been
for this aversion against the concentration of power in New York they would
never have had these 12 regions; it's just a leftover from the necessity to sell
it and doesn't serve any function whatsoever. So it's not a corporation in the
traditional sense of the word, it's not a government agency in the traditional
sense of the word so what is it? It's a hybrid, part corporation and part
government, part private, part government. In fact, it is exactly what you would
expect it to be considering the fact that it is a partnership between the
private banking cartel and the government. It's a unique structure which was
designed to perform a unique function.
Is it a solution to abolish the Fed and turn it over to the Congress to
run on behalf of the people? At least we get the dirty bankers out of the loop,
right? And that makes everybody feel good...well, we're not paying interest to
the banks anymore but what happens? Now the government is running the whole
thing by itself. Now that solves a lot of problems doesn't it? Now they're
creating money out of nothing all by themselves. Well, they've always been able
to do that. The government doesn't want to do that, that's the reason they got
into this partnership in the beginning because when the government creates money
directly it's too obvious. That's why the kings and princes of Europe couldn't
do it. They printed money, that's how they did it generally, but when the
government prints money you can see all this money around that says the
government on there and you know exactly what's going on. They like to work
through the banking system because when it appears in your checking account it
doesn't say government on it and you don't know how it got there.
The government really doesn't want to do it that way but even if they did
it wouldn't make much difference because it's not important who owns the Federal
Reserve System. The important thing is what it does and as long as it a central
bank, which means as long as it has the power and the mandate to create money
out of nothing it will create money out of nothing. That's what it will do and
it will continue to do exactly the same thing and be run no doubt by the same
people as it is now and we would not have solved anything. We must keep in mind
that in Europe all of the central banks there are in fact direct agencies of
their respective governments; they are not hybrid organizations at all like
ours. And yet in those countries they do exactly the same as the Federal Reserve
System has been doing here. Just turning it over to the government is a
non-solution.
Let's talk briefly about what the objectives of the Federal Reserve System
are. We've been told over and over again that the purpose of the Fed is to
stabilize the economy. Right now with the interest rates going up, up, up what
are we told? why are they doing that? Well, that's to stabilize the economy so
we won't have massive inflation right? It's being done for us folks! Don't you
feel just warm all over knowing that they're looking out for you? That's always
the answer; the purpose of the Fed is to look out for us and stabilize the
economy, put an end to banking anarchy and all that sort of thing. Right now the
textbook that is most commonly used in our school systems in economics is a book
written by Paul Samuelson and in that book here's what he says regarding the
purpose of the Fed: "The Federal Reserve sprang from the panic of 1907 with its
alarming epidemic of bank failures. The country was fed-up once and for all with
the anarchy of unstable private banking." That's what the students are learning.
Let's let that go for the moment and say ok if that is the purpose of the
Fed, let's give it a report card and see how well it has done in stabilizing the
economy. Since it was created in 1913 the Federal Reserve System has presided
over the crashes of 1921 and 1929, the Great Depression of 1929-1939, recessions
in the years 1953, 1957, 1969, 1975 and 1981, and a stock market Black Monday in
1987. We all know that corporate debt is soaring, personal debt is greater than
ever before, both business and personal bankruptcies are at an all-time high,
banks and savings and loan associations have failed in greater numbers than ever
before in our history, interest on the national debt now consumes half of all of
our tax dollars, heavy industry has all but been replaced by overseas
competition, we're facing an international trade deficit for the first time in
our history, 75% of downtown Los Angeles and other metropolitan areas are now
owned by foreigners and over half of the nation now officially is in a state of
recession.
That is the report card for the Federal Reserve System after 80 years of
stabilizing our economy. I don't even think it's controversial to say that it
has failed to meet its stated objectives. The only controversial part is why has
it failed? My answer is because those have never been its real objectives at
all.
What are its objectives? What are the objectives of any cartel? To make
money for the members of the cartel, to improve the profit margins of the
members of the cartel and to stabilize themselves in the marketplace. That is
the true objective of the Federal Reserve System. Now if we hold that up as our
guiding principle and give the Federal Reserve a report card it gets a different
grade.
In particular I'd like to have you look with me at three particular
objectives which were very well discussed in that period in which the Federal
Reserve System was created. We always have to go back to that because we can
learn so much from that period of history. There were three things that the
bankers, particularly the ones on Jekyll Island, wanted the Federal Reserve Act
to accomplish. What are they? The first one was to stop the erosion of their
power away from New York. Just the opposite of what the Federal Reserve Act was
sold to us as to accomplish, to keep the power of New York. They were concerned
that as the nation was expanding westward and southward new banks were springing
up all along the frontier and every year a little bit more of the nation's
capital would drift away from New York. They still had the lion's share, of
course, but they could see the chart and they knew that they had to put a stop
to that now while they still had the power to do so. Competition is a sin said
John D. Rockefeller I and that includes competition from these upstart banks.
It's a good point to mention that when I'm talking about the banking
cartel I'm talking primarily about the big New York banks and not the local bank
down the street that's struggling under the system. One of the purposes of the
Federal Reserve System was to keep the lid on those new competitive banks so
they could never grow and become large like the ones on Wall Street. The small
banks have always been the target in this system and needed to be kept in line,
to be regulated out of existence, a process which you've noticed has been going
on for many, many years. There is objective number one, to keep control over the
money markets in New York.
Objective number two was to reverse the trend of what is called private
capital formation. That's banker language for a process in which an individual
or a corporation uses their own savings to pay for something instead of going to
the bank and borrowing it, if you can imagine that happening. It was happening
at the turn of the century. The trend was that businesses in particular were
withholding some of their dividends each quarter and putting that money into a
sinking fund and then as the money accumulated or as the capital formed, then
they finally had enough that they could use their own money to build that new
factory or to launch a research & development project or whatever instead of
going to the banks and borrowing for it. The banks were very concerned over this
trend because this is their life-blood. Loaning money is what they do so how do
you loan money when people don't want to borrow it? The answer they knew, and
they talked a lot about this, was to lower interest rates, get those rates down
so that they were so attractive that people would be crazy not to come to the
banks and borrow money at those good interest rates.
How do you lower interest rates? Today it's easy when you've got the lever
at the Federal Reserve you just throw it up or down and interest rates go up or
down; you have total control over it. In 1913 there was no lever. The money in
those days was backed by gold and silver and they couldn't control it. They
hated that. These guys hate gold and silver behind money because under those
conditions interest rates are the result of the natural forces of supply and
demand; they couldn't just create money out of nothing. It was the result of the
interaction of millions of people bidding for products and services and digging
money out of the ground, literally gold and silver and converting into money.
They were looking for a way to artificially push the interest rates down.
How do you do that? They said the only way you can do that is with a flexible
currency. That was the cry that they put up in those days. What the nation
needs, they said, is a flexible currency to meet the demands of industry and
agriculture. You still hear that phrase today -- "flexible currency." What does
that mean? You need a dictionary sometimes to look these phrases up. Flexible
currency does not mean the paper stuff in our pockets that bends, it means money
created out of nothing. The trick here is not hard to figure out. If you can
create money out of nothing, you don't have to charge an awful lot of interest
on it to show a profit. It's that simple. If you have a flexible currency you
can in fact lower interest rates and still do pretty well, can't you? They
wanted a flexible currency so they could lower interest rates and entice people
back into the banks to borrow money and to reverse the trend toward private
capital formation. Objective number two.
The third objective was to pass on the inevitable losses within the
banking system on to the taxpayer in the name of protecting the people. Those
were three of the major objectives at the time the Federal Reserve System was
created. I say those are the true objectives of the Fed. On that basis, let's
give it a report card.
Did it keep control in New York in the hands of the larger banks? The
answer is a resounding yes. Anyone who knows about the financial markets knows
that this is definitely what's happened. Yes we have big banks in the west and
in the south but they're nothing compared to those banks in New York which are
astride the world with offices in Peking and Moscow and Africa and everywhere;
these are the giants and they have remained that way from the very beginning
because of the Federal Reserve System.
A few years ago there was a book that was published by Simon & Schuster
and it was called "Secrets of the Temple" written by William Grider(?). It was a
best-seller and it was advertised as a scathing attack against the Federal
Reserve System. When I heard that I couldn't believe my ears. A scathing attack
against the Federal Reserve System published by Simon & Schuster? one of the big
publishing houses? I thought, I don't have to finish my own book, they've done
it. So I ran down and got a copy of the book and devoured it and read it in one
day and I was totally amazed on two points. First of all, much to my surprise, I
did not expect this, Grider's history was, I thought, excellent. I thought it
would be a whitewash but his history was right-on. He had all the gory details
and I couldn't believe it but I knew these things were true because I was right
then in the middle of researching them.
On the subject of the concentration of power in New York, I'd like to read
to you an excerpt from Grider's book. He said: "At the time [he's talking about
1913] the conventional wisdom in Congress was that the government institution
would finally harness the money trust, disarm its powers and establish broad
democratic control over money and credit. The results were nearly the opposite.
The money reforms enacted in 1913 in fact helped to preserve the status quo, to
stabilize the old order. Money center bankers would not only gain dominance over
the new central bank but would also enjoy new insulation against instability and
their own decline. Once the Fed was in operation the steady diffusion of
financial power halted. Wall Street maintained its dominant position and even
enhanced it."
The other thing that amazed me was Grider's conclusion. He proved that the
Federal Reserve had always acted against the public interest. He proved that it
was designed to do that from the very beginning so what do you suppose his
conclusion was regarding a solution? that we abolish the Fed? No, nothing that
extreme. How about a major overhaul? No, not necessary. What then? Grider said,
you see it's all so complicated, we're learning as we go, we've made a lot of
mistakes but don't worry folks we're on it now, relax, it's under control, all
we need now is wiser men.
That is the kind of powderpuff criticism it takes to be published by Simon
& Schuster or any of the other major publishing houses which are firmly
interlocked in the investment web on Wall Street. It doesn't make any difference
how accurate your history is; it doesn't make any difference how much you point
with alarm or how righteous you may sound if you have no realistic solution to
the problem then who cares? They like that because it gives the people the
impression that something's being done, somebody is really calling attention to
the problem. But they have no solution or they're carefully selected so that the
ones with the real solutions do not get the media, do not get the major
publishing houses.
This is a tactic which we have to better understand especially in these
critical days ahead. A tactic of controlled opposition. It makes no difference
how accurate you are when you're pointing to the problems in America. If you
don't have a solution what difference does it make? If your solution is put
wiser men in there or if your solution is vote Republican and don't ask
questions about what kind of Republican then you are controlled opposition and
this is something we have to be very, very alert to in these critical days
ahead.
Back to the topic. The Federal Reserve System gets an A on its report card
for maintaining control over the financial markets in New York. What about
reversing the trend toward private capital formation. Boy, did they ever.
Periodically they get those interest rates down so low and everybody is lured
into the banks. Borrow like crazy and then the economy crunches down and they're
all stuck with this overhead and they can't make their interest payments.
We've seen businesses go out of existence because they cannot service
their debt. You've seen people lose their homes and their cars because they
cannot service their debt. There are many giant corporations today that are just
hanging in there by the skin of their teeth because of their debt overhead. The
fact is that many of these companies now send more money to the banks every
quarter in the form of interest payments on their loans than they send to their
stockholders as dividends on their stock. Think about that for a minute. The
banks which had no part in the operation of the company whatsoever, the banks
which made this money out of nothing are making more money from these industries
than the people who work for the money, save the money, invested the money and
risked the money to own those corporations. This is because they quite
successfully reversed the trend toward private capital formation and they did it
with a flexible currency. The Federal Reserve System gets an A+ on its report
card for objective number two.
Finally, did they pass along their inevitable loses to the taxpayer in the
name of protecting the people? This is what I call "Operation Bail-Out." Every
time one of the big banks gets into trouble, not the small banks remember,
they're the competition, the big banks get into trouble and they are bailed out
at taxpayers' expense. Always in the name of protecting the people. If a large
corporation is in trouble because it can't make its interest payments to the
bank anymore, they go to Congress and say "we can't let this corporation fold;
look at the thousands of jobs that would be lost; look how the people would
suffer." When a third world country can no longer make its interest payments to
a large bank in New York, what happens? The bank goes to Congress and says "you
know, you'd better do something about this because if we have to write that loan
off of our books we may be bankrupt, we could fold. And look at all of the
depositors, good Americans, who have their accounts with us who would lose their
deposit. Maybe the FDIC won't be able to cover; we could have a crisis on our
hands. If our bank falls maybe the other banks will fall too and we'll have a
national recession. Look how the people will suffer." So Congress dutifully
steps forward, remember it's a partner in this, and votes the funds to guarantee
the loans or in some way to pass the payments on directly or indirectly in some
very ingenious methods to the taxpayer. That money is raised primarily through
the Federal Reserve System and we pay it through the Mandrake Mechanism.
So the Federal Reserve System has done pretty well on that. In case you
have missed a few of the more memorable games, I'd like to review them for you.
Penn Central Railroad was bailed out in 1970. That was a good year because
Lockheed Corporation was bailed out the same year. Commonwealth Bank of Detroit
was bailed in 1972; New York City in 1975; Chrysler in 1978; First Pennsylvania
Bank in 1980; Continental Illinois, the largest of the banks so far, in 1982.
And look at all of these third world countries which cannot pay their interest
payments. They are paying their interest payments and you're doing it for them
because the Federal Reserve System creates the money that we send to the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank and then they give it to those
countries so that they can pay the interest to the banks. Maybe you've missed
that little trail but that's how it works.
The Federal Reserve System gets an A+++ on all of these points and it has
surely been a huge success in terms of the people who created it.
Actions have consequences and one of the consequences of this scam is what
we call a "national debt." Its rapidly approaching 5 trillion dollars that we
know about, it's much higher than that if you include the unfunded debt and all
of the things that are off-budget and all of the funny stuff that they do with
the accounting in Washington. With all honest accounting you'd find it was much,
much higher than that.
But even at 5 trillion dollars it's a staggering figure. I'm told if we
had a stack of $100 bills about 40 inches high we'd be a millionaire. A stack of
$100 bills equaling 5 trillion dollars would rise into space 3,350 miles. That's
a lot of money and it all came from us and it's earning perpetual interest.
Another way of measuring that is that we've had a known inflation of
1,000% since the Federal Reserve System was created. Another way of phrasing
that is that a dollar in 1913 today buys about nine cents worth of goods. That's
how much money has been taken from us, taxed from us, through this hidden
process.
I say 1,000% inflation that is known because it's much more than that.
Have you ever wondered, as I used to, why don't we have more inflation than we
have had? I knew they were creating this money like crazy, why only this
inflation? And then I found out. Have you ever heard the expression that we're
"exporting our inflation." Every once in a while you find that phrase in the
financial section of the newspaper. It used to drive me crazy -- how can you
export inflation? It's one of those phrases that people use and I'm not sure
most of the people who use the phrases know what they mean. Like the other day I
read that the Federal Reserve System bought dollars today to bolster up the
dollar. How can you buy dollars? What do you buy it with? They buy it with other
currencies, the Federal Reserve holds a lot of different currencies, yens and
deutsch marks and that kind of thing so they just swap currencies around.
This expression of exporting inflation -- what does that mean? It means
70% of the American currency that has been created by our Federal Reserve System
is no longer in America, it's overseas. Other nations use American dollars as
their unofficial money supply. Especially those countries which have no
realistic money of their own. These countries that undergo inflation rates of
5,000 and 10,000% a year, you can't work with money like that. Women have to
take wheelbarrows full of paper money to the grocery store to buy a bottle of
milk. You can't carry on any serious economic transaction with money like that
and they don't, they use American dollars.
All the banks in those systems have dual types of money. American dollars
are the mainstay of economic transactions in most of those countries. That's
where a lot of our money went. We have been spared the inflationary impact of
all that money because had it stayed here, it would've bid against the existing
money here and would have diluted our pot even more and we would've known what
the inflation should've been.
What happens when the day comes when for whatever reason these countries
can no longer, or no longer wish to, use American dollars? What are they going
to do with those dollars? They'll send them back. They'll buy something with
them while they can. It'll be a big rush. It'll be our refrigerators, our
automobiles, our real estate, our high-rise buildings, our corporate stock, our
politicians, whatever's for sale. All of this money will come in and then we'll
find out in a very short period of time what the true inflation rate really
should have been all of these years.
Incidentally, if you've followed in the newspapers the talk about the new
money that they're going to release, they're talking about two-tiered money, one
for overseas and one for here. It will probably be a different color. Frankly I
think they're recognizing this fact that the money would return and they're
going to make it illegal for all of this overseas money to come back by making
it a different color so that they won't be able to bring it here or if you do
bring it here you won't be able to spend it here, it won't be legal here. Those
are some of the consequences of the actions of the Federal Reserve Scam.
I have one last topic that I want to talk to you about and then I'll get
to the conclusion. This is an extremely important topic and it has to do with
usury. In ancient times usury was defined as interest on a loan, any interest on
any loan. In modern times that has been redefined to mean excessive interest on
a loan. Moderate interest seems logical to us in recognition of the fact that if
we work hard for our money, we save it and surrender its use for a period of
time being a sacrifice on our part and then loan it to somebody else for their
venture, we're entitled to a reasonable return on that sacrifice. A reasonable
interest rate is a concept that very few people have problems with, it seems
logical and fair.
But what is this thing called excessive interest? Thomas Edison said,
"People who will not turn a shovel-full of dirt on the project nor contribute a
pound of materials will collect more money than will the people who will supply
all the materials and do all the work." I wondered when I read that if Tom was
exaggerating so I got my calculator out. I assumed that there was going to be a
$100,000 house built. I assumed that $30,000 would have to go for land,
architect's fees and permits and that kind of thing. $70,000 would go for the
actual construction of the house, building materials and labor. I assumed that
the buyer would go to the bank and put 20% down and then borrow the balance at
10% over 30 years. I punched in the numbers and discovered that the borrower
will pay to the bank in interest $172,741 compared to $70,000 paid for the
construction of the house. In other words, about 2 1/2 times as much money will
be paid to the bank in interest than will be paid to those who provide all the
labor and all the materials. And you may say to yourself, yes but that's fair,
after all a 30 year loan is a long loan and people work for their money and
sacrifice its use and loan it and so forth and deserve to be compensated. No.
Not this money. Nobody worked for this money, nobody saved this money. There was
no sacrifice of any kind for this money. This money was created out of nothing
and I suggest that $172,741 interest on nothing is excessive!
I think it's time for a new definition of usury as follows: any interest
on any loan of fiat money (meaning money made out of nothing). This example of a
$100,000 home, as shocking as it is, producing $172,741 unearned interest, this
is just a grain of sand in the Sahara. You have to multiply that by all the
homes in America, by all of these hotels in America, all the high-rise
buildings, all the factories, all the airplanes, automobiles, farm equipment,
schools, everything, all the physical assets of America. You apply this same
ratio and can you see it in your mind? We're talking about a river of unearned
wealth that is so wide you can't even think of crossing it, flowing perpetually
into the banking cartel. A dead short across the productive element of society.
Money being taken from people who are working hard providing the material and
the labor. They don't even know that this is being taken from them and it's in
this huge river of wealth flowing into the banking cartel. It's a staggering
thought.
You are led to the question of where is this river flowing? Where's it
going? Get a picture of this that it's all going into a lake somewhere and maybe
there's a dam and the wealth is building up and somewhere they're getting it
all. Getting it no, they're spending it. They're not accumulating it at all.
What are they spending it for? The answer may surprise you. They're not buying
more yachts and mansions with this money, they've already got all of those they
possibly want. In fact they got rid of the mansions on Jekyll Island a long time
ago because they were bored with that. That's not it. When a person has all the
wealth that you could possibly want for the material pleasures of life, what is
left? Power. They are using this river of wealth to acquire power over you and
me and our children.
They are spending it to acquire control over the power centers of society.
The power centers are those groups and institutions through which individuals
live and act and rely on for their information. They are literally buying up the
world but not the real estate and the hardware, they're buying control over the
organizations, the groups and institutions that control people. In other words,
to be specific, they are buying control over politicians, political parties,
television networks, cable networks, newspapers, magazines, publishing houses,
wire services, motion picture studios, universities, labor unions, church
organizations, trade associations, tax-exempt foundations, multi-national
corporations, boy scouts, girl scouts, you name it. Make your own list of
organizations and you will find that this is where those people have been for
many decades spending this river of wealth to acquire operational control
particularly over those institutions and individuals, those organizations that
represent opposition to themselves. That's a critical area for expenditure on
their part.
This process has gone on not only to a marked degree in America and in the
other industrialized nations of the world, but it has gone on in the so-called
third world or underdeveloped nations to such a degree that I would say the
process is now complete. They own these countries already. Have you ever
wondered what's going on there at the International Monetary Fund and the World
Bank? Kind of an obscure operation isn't it? you don't read much about it except
once in a while on the back page of the newspaper you find out that Congress at
the insistence of the President authorized another $100 billion for the
International Monetary Fund. And then the article tells you that this money will
be used to make loans to underdeveloped nations or grants to them to raise their
standard of living. Do you believe that? That's one of those appearances of the
fourth kind if you ever saw one. If the money is to be used to raise the
standard of living of these countries they're not doing a very good job of it
because after all of these decades, after all of these hundreds of billions of
dollars, you cannot point to one country that has had its standard of living
raised one iota by that. In fact in most cases it's the other way around and
that's not an accident because the money has not been used to raise the standard
of living. The money does not go to the people in those countries. It goes to
the politicians of those countries, to their governments and the money is
designed and spent to strengthen their power structures, their ability to
control their populations. They usually start off as inefficient dictatorships
but by the time they get all this money from the IMF, they are now efficient
dictatorships. They have a well-equipped army, a better bureaucracy, total
control of their subjects. That's where the money's being spent.
These countries have been purchased because the politicians in those
countries are now totally addicted to this money. We talk about welfare families
in America that are third and fourth generation welfare, they're on the dole
forever, they cannot dream of anything else. The politicians in these countries
are the same way and it's now second, third and in some cases fourth generation
international welfare from the United Nations funding. They have no ideology --
communism, socialism, capitalism, fascism, what difference does it make? where's
the money? As long as they live well, they have their mansions, their yachts,
their limousines, they go to New York to the UN and have their suites at the
Waldorf-Asoria and that's all they care about.
These countries have been purchased through this means and are now owned
by this group at the UN and they're firmly in place in the new world order where
they're just waiting for you and me to show up. That's the other side of this
coin. Not only does this transfer of wealth from America to these countries not
raise their standard of living but it does lower ours. That too, believe it or
not, is part of the plan. Just waste, get rid of money, get rid of productive
power to reduce our standard of living. A strong nation is not a candidate to
surrender its sovereignty but a weak nation is. If America can be brought to her
knees where she is struggling for survival, if people are hungry, if we have
riots in our streets, then Americans could possibly be grateful for any
assistance we could get from the UN. Those wonderful blue-helmeted peace-keeping
forces could bring order back to our streets or international money, a new world
money with purchasing power again might be welcomed by the unthinking, unknowing
American public. That is what we're dealing with.
What I'm trying to say is that the name of the game out there is not
wealth, it is
power.
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