Category Archives: The Political Money System

New Links and Resources

We have added some new websites to our Recommended Links (in the right hand column). One of these is the Inspired Constitution link which has recently added an html version of Edward Popp’s classic book, The Great Cookie Jar. This version is searchable via google.

Usury and the Church of England by Rev. Henry Swabey Now Available

Usury and the Church of England by Rev. Henry Swabey is now available in its entirety.

CFR Economist Recommends Abandoning National Currencies – with exceptions!

I strongly recommend that anyone interested in the subject of money should take the time to read this article by Benn Steil. One may be dubious about his intentions, but this is one economist who knows what he’s talking about within the frame of central banking and political currencies.
By Benn Steil, From Foreign Affairs , May/June 2007


Summary: Global financial instability has sparked a surge in “monetary nationalism” — the idea that countries must make and control their own currencies. But globalization and monetary nationalism are a dangerous combination, a cause of financial crises and geopolitical tension. The world needs to abandon unwanted currencies, replacing them with dollars, euros, and multinational currencies as yet unborn.
Steil also gave an interesting presentation on related subjects at this month’s New York Hard Assets Investment Conference. Read and hear it here.

How Our Government Protects Our Interests

The Hillbilly Report explains it.

The Truth About the Sub-prime Crisis and the Spitzer Connection

It was shock to learn of Eliot Spitzer’s downfall over his sexual indiscretions. We thought he was a “white knight,” repeatedly coming to the aid of the American public by challenging the financial establishment. He was, that’s why they took him down. As the old saying goes, “if they wanna get ya, they’ll find a way to get ya.” That story, and a clear description of the financial shenanigans that underlie the current crisis can be had by reading Greg Palast’s article cited below.  That’s really just the beginning of what the powers that be have in store for us. Power has now become so centralized, and we have all become so dependent upon money, banks, and credit cards, that survival without them seems almost impossible. Is it? – t.h.g. 

The $200 billion bail-out for predator banks and Spitzer charges are intimately linked

Jim Rogers Talks Sense on CNBC – “Abolish the FED;” “Buy Commodities.”

If you want to protect yourself from the machinations of the Federal Reserve and hear some common sense about finance and the global economy, go to the CNBC website and view the Rogers interview.

Engdahl Explains the global “Financial Tsunami”

F. William Engdahl is a knowledgeable and astute observer of the global financial matters. He has been writing a series of articles titled, The Financial Tsunami, which are posted on his website. This is essential background knowledge that you’ll need to protect yourself and your family from the worst effects of the deepening crisis, and to be able to distinguish real solutions from false solutions offered up by the political and financial oligarchy.

The Global Research website is also an excellent source that features writings by Engdahl, investigative journalist Greg Palast, and others. – t.h.g.

Global Meltdown

If you want to understand what’s happening in the realm of global finance, one website worth monitoring is Global Vision 2000. For those who live close enough to reach London, you would do well to attend this event on April 5, 2008: Meltdown, Socioeconomic Injustice And War: Cause And Remedy

Ron Paul on the End of Dollar Hegemony

The Wall Street Journal, in its edition of February 29, 2008, published the following letter by Ron Paul. It was posted by Lew Rockwell at http://www.lewrockwell.com/blog/lewrw/archives/019692.html. Congressman Paul hits the bulls eye when he says, “Decades of manipulation by the Federal Reserve have benefited the government and certain politically-connected firms, while gradually destroying the purchasing power of middle-class Americans.” But it’s not only the malfeasance of the Fed that is to blame; it’s also the fiscal irresponsibility of the federal government in running almost perpetual budget deficits and allowing huge trade deficits to continue. Prospects are for the rate of inflation in the U.S. to accelerate as the budget deficits and trade deficits continue and the dollar loses its status as a global reserve currency. On the global scene, the dollar has already lost a major part of its value over the past few years, with the Euro going from about 92 cents in early 2001 to more than $1.50 at the end of February 2008. There seems to be no end in sight to the dollar slide. – t.h.g.

Ron Paul on the End of Dollar Hegemony

“I was delighted to read in Judy Shelton’s op-ed, ‘Security and the Falling Dollar‘ (Feb. 15), that at long last the security implications of the dollar’s collapse have made their way into the mainstream media. The dollar’s strength (or lack thereof) has been of paramount concern to me, and the subject of many of my statements over the past several years. Decades of manipulation by the Federal Reserve have benefited the government and certain politically-connected firms, while gradually destroying the purchasing power of middle-class Americans. Despite numerous warnings in the past, it is only now at a point of acute crisis that Washington insiders are beginning to awaken to the reality of the end of dollar hegemony.

“While I desire reform of our current monetary system, my own proposals have not been as all-encompassing as Ms. Shelton’s suggestion to return to a Bretton Woods-style system. Her recommendation, though, that gold backing should make up a component of a future monetary system, is one that we would all do well to heed. My own legislative proposals focus around eliminating the taxes and laws that dissuade individuals and institutions from using gold as currency or as a backing for currency. By allowing market processes to determine the issuance of currency, we can allow individuals to decide for themselves what currency they wish to use. This would lead to a gradual reintroduction of sound money and avoid the market shocks that occur when monetary decisions are mandated by government fiat.”

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A Comment and Critique of Congressman Ron Paul’s Statement on Competing Currencies

A Comment and Critique of Congressman Ron Paul’s Statement on Competing Currencies

Thomas H. Greco, Jr. February 18, 2008

My recent message, which included the text of Congressman Ron Paul’s Statement on Competing Currencies, drew a flurry of responses, some positive and some negative. That’s fine because now I know I’ve got people’s attention.

Now I would like to explain why I think his message is so important and why I decided to circulate it. There are several good reasons I did not mention in my introduction.

I intended from the start to write a detailed critique of Congressman Paul’s monetary agenda, but I did not want to delay its circulation. I’ll include at least a portion of that critique toward the end of this message. I will outline what I agree with and what I disagree with, adding some points about implementation strategies that I think have better chances of success than the political approach which Congressman Paul and other monetary reformers find it difficult to see beyond.

The truth of Lord Acton’s warning that “power corrupts” becomes more evident every day, so anything that enables the ever-increasing concentration of power must be exposed and disabled. Although it is not widely recognized, the monopolistic control of the money system is primary among these.

So my reasons are these:

1. Ron Paul’s message has made the money issue, for the first time in decades, part of the mainstream political dialog. His candidacy for the office of president, and his demonstrated ability to raise significant amounts of money from a grassroots constituency have attracted some mainstream media attention, enabling his statements on money to get some major exposure.

2. Congressman Paul’s statement explicitly exposes the fact that we have “a government-instituted banking cartel that monopolizes the issuance of currency,” and makes the case that competition in currencies is necessary to restoring democracy in America.

3. His statement calls for “eliminating legal tender laws.” People need to understand that legal tender laws play an essential role in empowering and enriching central governments and banking elites at the expense of the people and democratic governance. Legal tender laws amount to, quite simply, a license to steal. They enable the federal government to spend virtually any amount of money for wars and favors to crony corporations without regard to its limited tax revenues. Chronic deficit-spending creates debt that will never be repaid. It takes value out of the economy by diluting the money supply with legalized counterfeit. Eliminating legal tender is the single most important step in reining in abusive central government and restoring the balance of power.

Do I believe that repeal of legal tender is a likely prospect? Under the present circumstances I put the probability at nil, as I do the chances of getting any kind of political solution to the money problem. But we must look ahead to a time when it will be possible to establish truly democratic government in which people hold power at the local level and the upward assignment of responsibilities is only provisional and temporary. Just as the separation of church and state was a huge step forward, which was enshrined in the United States Constitution, and is generally accepted as a fundamental tenet of democracy, so too the separation of money and state will need to be explicitly enshrined in a new or amended constitution.

4. He correctly states that, “In the absence of legal tender laws, Gresham’s Law no longer holds.”

Under legal tender laws, which force acceptance of “bad money,” “bad money” drives “good money” out of circulation. In the absence of legal tender laws, the bad money will be rejected or discounted in the marketplace leaving in circulation only “good money,” money that people trust.

5. The Paul message includes some current and historical anecdotes that provide additional insights into the dimensions of the money problem. Specifically, he refers to various government actions that were designed to eliminate free exchange by shutting down competing exchange media.

Anyone who seeks to establish community currencies or other alternative exchange processes, needs to be cognizant of these potential hazards.

Now, for my critique:

Anyone who has been following my work knows that I have repeatedly made clear my opposition to using gold as money. While gold (or silver) might serve as an objective measure of value, there is no need to revert to gold as a payment medium. But even in the role of value measure, gold has serious shortcomings, not the least of which is the fact that the market for gold is manipulated by the large holders of gold. I made these points in my 2007 Malaysia presentation http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=-1399011433067824706&hl=en.

The traditional functions which money is supposed to serve must be segregated. For my brief recent statement on this see, https://beyondmoney.wordpress.com/new-chapters/fundamentals-of-alternative-currencies-and-value-measurement/

The exchange of real value, which money is supposed to facilitate, has evolved beyond money. This is the fact that the “gold bugs,” and almost everyone else, fail to recognize. As I’ve described in my presentation on The Evolution and Transformation of Money, the highest stage of evolution in the exchange process is direct credit clearing. This is a process by which accounts payable (resulting from purchases) are offset by accounts receivable (resulting from sales) within a circle of associated buyers and sellers.

This approach has the added advantages of bypassing all the sales tax issues associated with using commodities, including gold, as exchange media.

So, in brief, all kinds of “money” are obsolete. All that is required now is a system that provides for the democratic allocation and management of credit. If we insist on using the term money, we must say that money is nothing more than credit.

The local, democratic management of credit and the establishment of networks that connect those local credit clearing entities into regional and global trading unions provides the means for establishing true economic and political democracy and a dignified life for all.