Author Archives: Thomas H. Greco, Jr.

Turn the world back right side up.

There are none so insightful and poetic as the Irish. This short speech by Terry McMahon sums up the rot that has overtaken Western countires as the people, by our misplaced trust, have allowed our so-called leaders to betray us and sell off our material and cultural heritage. No more! Listen, think, and act. Stand for truth, stand for reason, stand for freedom.

Thought and Action in Turbulent Times

We are living in very turbulent and uncertain times in which division and confusion are being intentionally sown by competing forces in hopes of capturing hearts and minds to garner support for one agenda or another. But people are allowed to see only the facades of agendas that are largely hidden; that is why it is essential to pay attention to every voice and every perspective and measure each in relation to our values, attitudes, and beliefs, allowing dissonant evidence, when it is presented to us, some space for serious consideration.

There is much more I could say about this but my intention at the moment is to share a few bits that may be useful to you in your efforts to understand what’s happening in the world, what the near future may bring, and what you might need to know in prepare for it.

Firstly, I recommend to you the thoughts of Charles Eisenstein, author of Sacred Economics, who writes from the perspective of “The transcendent center,” which he describes as reconciling polarized issues by unearthing the unconscious assumptions both sides share and the questions neither side asks.” It does not seek compromise but “unifies them in a greater synthesis.”

Follow him on Substack and ponder, in this order, these recent posts, each of which I found deeply challenging: Shades of Many Colors, Trump and the Tempests of Hate, and, More Naivete, Please.

Secondly, take a few minutes to watch and listen to this recent interview by Judge Andrew Napolitano of noted journalist Pepe Escobar in which the situations in Ukraine and the Middle-east were discussed. Pepe reports on an important conference that just took place in Istanbul in which various knowledgeable political figures and scholars discussed Israel, Iran, and other players in the ongoing conflict, and likely scenarios for future developments in the region and globally.

And thirdly, if that doesn’t get your attention and raise alarm bells, listen to this one:

Love or die!

Love or die; that’s a James Bond movie I’d really like to see. I wonder what Big Entertainment would do with that theme. The human condition is looking to be ever more tenuous amid increasing numbers and intensity of natural disasters, warnings about new microbes and diseases, economic crises, social and political unrest, and “wars and rumors of wars”—all of it hyped to the max by the mainstream legacy media with one evident intent, to persuade you to be fearful, trust “the system” to tell you the truth, and accept the solutions, cures, and dictates that come to you from the top of the entrenched  human hierarchy.

Meanwhile, those same elite few are preparing for the worst, which they see as inevitable. That story is intelligently told in this recent post by Jamie Wheal on Substack, Doomsday Prep for the Rest of Us. This quote is a spoiler but I just can’t resist sharing it: “…a fractional minority of humanity has seized the wheel of our collective future. And your “redemption” means everyone else’s likely annihilation.” If that sounds to you like conspiracy theory, you really need to read the article.

And if you’re seeking a more promising means of surviving and a better future for everyone, pay attention to those who down through the ages have tried to show us what Richard Flyer is now calling “the Ancient Blueprint” which can lead us toward a “Symbiotic Culture.”

For a brief 10 minute introduction, see Richard’s video, Heart of the Matter is the Matter of the Heart.

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Sandpiles, Instability, and Wishful Thinking 

John Mauldin’s recent article, Late Summer Sandpile, is one of his best–thought-provoking and very timely. As an investment advisor, his primary concern is with financial markets and systems, but the academic research findings in complexity and systems theory have a broader relevance. Thinking about systems as sand piles, academics can examine the dimensions of stability and instability as they occur in a wide variety of systems. After reading the article, I felt inclined to respond. Here below is what his article evoked in me.

Our civilization “sand pile” is comprised of many diverse but related fingers of instability, some small, some large, and many interconnected; that puts our entire civilization at risk. Among the most worrisome features are the astronomical growth of debt, religious, and cultural conflicts, competing political ideologies, and international intrigues and violence involving players that are now in command of unprecedented destructive power. If the conflict between Ukraine/NATO and Russia doesn’t trigger a nuclear war in the near term as Peter Koenig expects, the mountains of debt being built up will trigger a global financial collapse in the not-too-distant future. Markets are much more centralized than they used to be and are increasingly dominated by a few major players which tosses free market theories of market behavior out the window. Virtually all markets today are manipulated by huge corporations, investment funds, and asset management firms. But the biggest manipulators are the national governments of the major powers and their partners who run the global banking cartel. The top dog among them is the US government which has greatly abused the status of the dollar as the world’s reserve currency. It doles out privileges not only via legislation and executive orders, but increasingly by the preferential expenditure of massive amounts of legalized counterfeit money to favored clients and proxy governments in a desperate attempt to preserve and extend its “full spectrum dominance,” and replace democratic national governments with a One-World neo-feudal world order. The US and its allies are pushing the limits in the hope and expectation that there will not be a reaction big enough to upset their apple cart. But as Mauldin reminds us, one small grain of sand is often all it takes.

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A pathway toward building a decentralized, peaceful, convivial society

This short video about Sarvodaya describes with great clarity the pathway toward creating a decentralized, peaceful, convivial society that Gandhi and others have envisioned, and the Symbiotic Culture that Richard Flyer has for a long time been working on and writing about.

Scott Ritter, champion of peace and defender of the Constitution. Listen to him.

Scott Ritter is a former Marine intelligence officer and chief weapons inspector for the wapons treaty between the US and USSR. He has been working diligently to reduce the threat on nuclear war, a war which is becoming ever more likely given the aggressive stance of the recent US administrations that have not only refused to negotiate with presumed adversaries been but seem bent on extending at all costs US and western control of resources in counries around the world. Scott tells his story in his recent post titled, My Lost Summer, on Substack. I hope you will read it.

Now published, Chapter 11—Credit Clearing, the “UnMoney”

This is the latest chapter to be published of my new 2024 edition of The End of Money and the Future of Civilization. It continues the story about “credit clearing” that was begun in the previous chapter and shows how it will revolutionize trade and payments and make money, as we have known it, obsolete.  

Here is a brief excerpt:

If there were no money, any system of crediting sellers and debiting buyers would be fully competent to accomplish the work now performed by money. – Hugo Bilgram, 1914

In Chapter 10 we explained that the highest stage in the evolution of reciprocal exchange is “credit clearing,” and that banks have been using it for the past few hundred years to settle obligations amongst themselves.  In this chapter we will further describe the history and applications of credit clearing, and we will show how clearing can be used to offset claims among not only groups of banks, but also among any persons or entities that have financial claims against one another. Most significantly, it is a process that may be applied among buyers and sellers of goods and services to directly offset their respective claims without involving banks as middle-men and without the need for conventional bank- or government-created currencies.

Direct Clearing Among Buyers and Sellers

Credit clearing is actually an ancient process. During the Middle Ages, credit played a major role in the various European “market towns” which hosted, at regular intervals, trading fairs in which merchants from widely scattered areas would gather to trade their goods. It is reasonable to conclude that the process of credit clearing would have been fundamental in their trading activities. This is evidenced by the fact that these market towns typically provided market courts for settling disputes under “merchant law” that was separate from common law and could be adjudicated in a matter of hours or days. James Davis points out that, “At the pettiest level of sales credit, many traders appear to have acted both as creditors and debtors, and there is evidence for running accounts, reciprocal dealings and a ‘complex of claims and counterclaims,’” and that, “Credit oiled the wheels of trade, and market courts dealt in small-scale sales debts that were integral to local retail and wholesale commerce. A market court ostensibly lowered transaction costs and thus attracted more traders by aiding a perception of the market as ‘fair, affordable, efficient’”. 

The possibilities of direct credit clearing among buyers and sellers have long been recognized. In modern times, as early as 1914, Hugo Bilgram and L. E. Levy noted that, “If there were no money, any system of crediting sellers and debiting buyers would be fully competent to accomplish the work now performed by money.”  They further suggested that:

“Were a number of businessmen to combine for the purpose of organizing a system of exchange, effective among themselves, they could clearly demonstrate how simple the money system can really be made. The greater the number of businessmen that would thus cooperate, the more complete would be their own emancipation from the obstruction to commerce and industry which existing currency laws impose.”

They then went on to propose such a system and describe how it might operate, which I summarized in one of my previous books and in a website post.  I’ll not repeat that here because the context today is much different from what it was in 1914, but we will present a similar proposal based on what has since been learned and tailored to our current realities. I believe that it is no exaggeration to say that the creation and operation of such credit clearing systems is crucial to reversing the present trend toward economic ruin and global tyranny and changing the course toward realizing our human potential and the emergence of a peaceful, convivial civilization in which all can thrive.

You can read or listen to the entire chapter here.