“That Couldn’t Possibly Be True”: The
Startling Truth About the US Dollar
from Casey's Daily Despatch.
For years I had heard people talking about “the fraud of the
Federal Reserve.” But I was busy trying to survive and the dollars I was paid
with bought food at the grocery store, so I didn’t give those reports a great
deal of attention.
The more I began to study economics, however, the more I
understood that this was an essential issue: that if I didn’t understand the
foundation, I’d never really understand what was built upon it. So, little by
little, I began to pay attention to the question, “Where do dollars come from?”
One of my first discoveries was that almost no one knew anything
about this. Shocking though it may seem, they don’t teach this in general
economics programs. I’ve had econ grads from well-respected programs come to
me and say, “I’m kind of embarrassed to ask, but they never taught it to us
in school: Where do dollars come from?”
“No, That Can’t Be True”
That’s what I
said when I first understood where dollars came from. I said, “No way. That
couldn’t be what it is.”
Unfortunately, I was wrong; it really is this way.
The secret to understanding the creation of dollars and of the
operation of the Fed lies in two quotes from economist John Kenneth
Galbraith:
The study of money,
above all other fields in economics, is one in which complexity is used to
disguise truth or to evade truth, not to reveal it.
The process by which
banks create money is so simple that the mind is repelled.
I must give the Fed credit for one thing: it has admitted to
what it does. A publication called Modern
Money Mechanics identifies how the Fed creates dollars. It cloaks
that admission in unnecessarily difficult accounting and a convoluted
discussion (confirming the first Galbraith quote), but still, it does admit
it.
You can find Modern
Money Mechanics online, and I recommend that you do. You
should see it for yourself.
Brief Points
There’s a lot to discuss here and we have limited space, so
allow me to make just a few central points. It will be your job to verify
them.
#1: Dollars originate with an
accounting trick.
Dollars begin with a process that looks like this:
While intricately accounted for, dollars begin as a check that
the Fed writes “drawn on itself.” Those are the precise words from Modern Money Mechanics,
by the way.
Can you and I write checks “drawn on ourselves”? Of course not.
We have to back them up with value. The Fed does not.
So, the mighty US dollar is not backed by gold or silver or
anything at all; it’s simply an accounting trick.
#2: Every dollar is skimmed
from, as it is created.
As shown in the chart above, dollars come from a transaction
between the Fed and the Treasury. Can you think of any reason why these two
institutions would be unable to handle this transaction by themselves? (And
in fact, we know they can, because they gave the Chinese an exemption from
the middle step a few years back.)
So, what’s the purpose of the primary dealers (simply called
“dealers” in Modern Money
Mechanics) that sit between the Fed and the Treasury?
In fact, there is no purpose, aside from the obvious. The
primary dealers take a slice from every dollar as it is made.
Again, get Modern Money Mechanics.
Go through it slowly. Check this for yourself. I know it sounds
crazy, but most of it is right there in black and white.
And who are these primary dealers? The big banks, of course.
#3: Your mortgage loan was
created out of thin air.
It's A Wonderful Life is a
fine film, but Jimmy Stewart’s character was entirely wrong when he claimed
that he borrowed the savings of one virtuous person to make a home loan to
another.
When you take a loan from a bank, they do not take Mr. Smith’s
money or Mrs. Jones’s money and lend it to you. They make it up on the spot
with a bookkeeping entry. Until you take the loan, that money doesn’t exist.
You don’t have to take my word on this. Here are the words of
Robert B. Anderson, who was secretary of the Treasury under Eisenhower:
When a bank makes a
loan, it simply adds to the borrower’s deposit account by the amount of the
loan. It does not take this money from anyone else’s deposit; it was not
previously paid in to the bank by anyone. It’s new money, created by the bank
for the use of the borrower.
You may have to work overtime to pay those dollars back, but no
one worked overtime to get them in the first place. They were simply made up,
on the spot.
#4: Money for interest is never
created.
Every dollar is created with interest attached:
So, every dollar is birthed with a debt obligation attached.
This creates an interesting problem: Extra dollars will be
required to pay back all of that interest. Where will they come from? I can
work hard and pay back my $1000. loan with interest, but every dollar I use
to pay interest is created with an interest obligation of its own. Where does
it end?
In fact, it cannot end—it cannot resolve—unless there are
debt-free dollars that can cover the gaps. And there are none.
This means that the dollar system can run effectively in one
direction only. It can operate smoothly while creating ever-more currency,
but if the system starts to contract, there will be a currency shortage. And
that leads to all sorts of troubles.
I Know This Sounds Crazy…
If all of this is new to you, you have my sympathies; I know
it’s a lot to take in. Go slowly and double check it all. Make up your own
mind.
Like I say, the first time I saw this, I couldn’t believe that
it could possibly be true. Reading the Fed’s own words, even though I had to
plod through them slowly, convinced me.
And if you want to read the wild story of how this astonishing
system was created, you can find it in The Creature from Jekyll Island, by G. Edward
Griffin.
A Free-Man’s Take is
written by adventure capitalist, author, and freedom advocate Paul Rosenberg.
You can get much more from Paul in his unique monthly newsletter, Free-Man’s Perspective.
AJ adds: Since, the US Dollar is the world's currency, this means that we can obtain some of the world's worth by simply printing Dollars. The Chinese want the deal and they will offer a currency that is backed by gold. Yet, the Dollar's value has risen from 79 to above 95. It is because other pieces of currency are even worse than the Dollar. Where and when will this scam end? I don't know but it will not end well.
|
Friday, February 27, 2015
How US Dollars are created.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment