GOLD, SUPERPOWERS, AND…RAVEN-SYMONE?

RAVEN GOLD

There’s something wrong with the money system.  It’s fraudulent on its face—“money” is “loaned” into existence, which is a concept so fantastical and illusory that they have to brainwash us our entire lives to get us to accept it.  They have to turn it into a game in which they literally keep score.  You know, a credit score.  And you have to behave, or your score will suffer.  You won’t be “worthy” of credit.

And so that’s got to change ASAP.  Like, yesterday.  But it seems impossible that it will ever change, like we’re just stuck with the fraud.

Or not.

Because for some reason,  when I was flipping through a recent Entertainment Weekly(Game of Thrones cover) and saw the comment from Raven-Symone pictured above, I thought, “Maybe there will be a change sooner than we might have hoped.”  Not sure why that came to me in the form of a Raven-Symone quote, but then again, it really has nothing to do with her.  It’s that a comment about trying to have money and specifically gold play a much more benign and unimportant role in our lives and in society is mentioned in a widely-available, newsstand, low-brow publication like Entertainment Weekly.  Because you know that comment was vetted by Raven-Symone’s publicist/agent/team and by the EW people.  And they didn’t change it.  It wasn’t deemed to be touchy or too political.  That’s progress.

And I guess what also struck me about it was that her comment is part of a rising din of voices saying that we have to change the money system.  The idea is becoming more mainstream every day, and it can’t happen soon enough.  Here is a list of just some of those voices:

The Pope. Nick Hanauer. Princeton University (oligarchy study).  Positive Money UK.  Occupy Wall Street.  COMER v. Bank of Canada.  David Graeber. Michael Hudson. Max Keiser.  Peter Joseph. Michael Tellinger. Russell Brand.  L. Randall Wray.  Alex Schaefer. Alex Jones. Ellen Brown.  Liberty Road Media.

Put any of those names into a search engine along with “money” and you’ll see what I mean. Here are two of the names in the above list discussing this very subject:

Even the monarchy is having to come to terms with what is going on as seen in this Prison Planet article:

Prince Charles ended his tour of the United States in Louisville, Kentucky yesterday where, the Independant reports, that during a speech at the Cathedral of the Assumption Prince Charles took a shot at capitalism by stating that it had “enormous shortcomings”:

Prince Charles spoke of an “economic system that seems to have enormous shortcomings” at one of the final events of his four day royal tour of the United States.

“The future King gave a speech yesterday tackling the environmental and economic issues faces the world at the Cathedral of the Assumption in Louisville, Kentucky.

“…The Prince of Wales told the invited audience: “We are standing at a moment of substantial transition where we face the dual challenges of a world view and an economic system that seem to have enormous shortcomings, together with an environmental crisis – including that of climate change – which threatens to engulf us all.”

What should we replace our money system with?  Self-issued currency, of course.  Don’t scoff, we already self-issue our currency, we’re just forced to pretend that banks lend it to us.

Also, listen to more Hawkwind.  You’ll be glad you did.  Here’s a place to start:

And Marshall Crenshaw.

And a classic tune that literally made my gut unclench a couple days ago:

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BORDER PATROL INSANITY–POLICE STATE TACTICS, PRISONER CONDITIONING

From Prison Planet, a brief description of the encounter in the video:

The Border Patrol issued the following statement regarding the incident:

On March 12, 2015, at around 10:54 am, the driver of a Chevrolet Cavalier approached the El Centro Sector Highway 86 checkpoint where a Border Patrol K-9 detection team produced a positive alert to the vehicle for contraband. Because of this alert for contraband, the male driver was directed by agents to the secondary inspection area for a more thorough examination of the car. The man failed to follow the agents directions to drive to secondary and was removed from the vehicle. Agents searched the vehicle and discovered a small testable amount of marijuana under the driver’s seat. The California Highway Patrol was called to the scene where an CHP officer conducted a roadside sobriety test on the driver as a precaution. The driver was eventually released without any charges.

In an email to police watchdog website photographyisnotacrime.com, Herbert verified that he was detained for some time and led to believe that he was being charged, before eventually just being released.

“I was arrested, fingerprinted and forced to sit on a bench inside for over an hour then let outside to do a field sobriety test conducted by CHP and then brought back inside until I was free to go.” Herbert writes.

“I was also told I was being arrested for a ‘testable amount of Marijuana at a federal checkpoint’ there was no Marijuana in our possession. He told me I am being charged and released and that charge would be on my criminal record permanently.” Herbert added.

The incident serves as a reminder of how the rights of everyday Americans are being violated en mass every day.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/jfs1988/7673304032/

(photo credit: flickr user jfs1988)

Something like this is my worst nightmare.  I have often gone through the border patrol checkpoint at the Riverside-San Diego County Line at around 2 a.m., coming back home from playing gigs in Oceanside or San Diego.  A couple years ago, being stopped at the checkpoint was a rarity; these days, it’s every time I go through there.

Here’s what happens at one of these 2 a.m. stops–as you approach the checkpoint, there’s an LED sign saying “US OFFICERS–ALL VEHICLES MUST STOP.”  Traffic cones are set up in the outside lanes, and gradually funnel the traffic into two lanes.  Then you get up to the station, and there’s a single officer standing in the middle of the two open lanes.  There are Border Patrol vehicles parked on the shoulder and by the checkpoint office with giant floodlights on, pointing at the area where the officer is standing.  You come to a stop, he looks at you, and waves you on.

That’s it.

What is the point of this little power-tripping exercise, one wonders?  Anyone with half a brain who is smuggling immigrants or drugs or what have you is not going to go through the checkpoint.  Such people are undoubtedly aware that the checkpoint is there–it’s online, for Pete’s sake.  That would be insane.  Is the Border Patrol just counting on smugglers having a memory lapse every once in a while and heading straight up through the main freeway, right into their waiting hands, standing in the middle of the freeway?  Surely not.  Maybe if the Border Patrol didn’t do the rolling stop every weekend, smugglers might be willing to take their chances, and maybe they’d actually catch somebody once in a while.  But I doubt it.  And to be fair to the Border Patrol, I don’t go through the checkpoint every weekend, so maybe they don’t do it every weekend.  But still…

At any rate, the only purpose I can think of for the now-ritualistic 2 a.m. roll-through is essentially an exercise of raw power.  They stop you because they can, not because it accomplishes anything.  They know it’s pointless (for catching immigrants or drugs, anyway), and are apparently hoping we don’t.  It’s police-state conditioning, in other words.  We have to be gradually acclimated to being stopped for no reason in the middle of the night, with near-blinding lights on us.  And then it’ll just be another one of those inconveniences, explained away as being “for our protection.”

I don’t think the guy in the video above felt too protected, though.  And that was in broad daylight.

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TODAY, JAZZ—TOMORROW, REVOLUTION?

I had no idea before I clicked over to his page, but it was no surprise to find out that a person who was participating in the same Facebook conversation that I was and had come to the same conclusions I have about money and it being created out of thin air is a fellow musician. Not sure why we music-types can see through all this BS, but governments tend to not like musicians; as the Soviets used to say: “Today he plays jazz, tomorrow he betrays his country.”

So why do musicians see through this fiat currency scam?  Others see through it too, of course; I just enjoy giving musicians a little extra credit because I am one.  Well, it may be because, as Robert Fripp once said, “The reward of the musician is music,” not money.  That is true of any profession–except maybe banking.  Indeed, the reward of the football player is football.  The reward of the teacher is teaching.  And so on.

Once a person can see that there are incentives other than money and financial profit, one can see The Financial System–as opposed to the economy–for what is is: a system for centralizing power and control into the hands of a very few people. And once you’ve seen that simple reality, it can’t be unseen. And then you feel compelled to get everyone else to see it.

So again, here is my idea for a solution:

Indeed, since the dollar has been a pure fiat currency (i.e., backed by nothing and created out of thin air) since 1971, the cat has been let out of the bag that you can actually run a society on…nothingness. It has now been proven that society can run on imaginary “money” that has no inherent value, that is given value only by our faith in it, and is in fact created by we the people.  So why should anyone but we the people create the money?  It doesn’t really exist anyway, but we know that people do appreciate a token, a feeling that they have not been taken advantage of.  That is where the self-issued currency I have written about before comes in:

“I propose that government/central bank-issued money be replaced with self-issued currency.  That is, each individual person can issue as much currency as he or she needs to buy whatever he or she wants.  And he or she would also have to accept the self-issued currency of others.  Sounds crazy, I know, but it’s not.  At all.  I’ll give you a couple reasons it’s not:

1) Money is already self-issued…

2)Money is already worthless.”

And let’s face it, there’s going to have to be some kind of change in the financial system sooner rather than later.  Might as well go into this inevitable change with an idea of something that benefits all people, instead of a small handful.

Let me close with a passage from an earlier post mentioned above–“The Solution”:

“…since the money isn’t real, then the debt isn’t either.  Indeed, If we all would accept the truth that the money that was “loaned” to us for houses, cars, educations, etc. was not in fact a loan at all but instead was a purposeful hoax–a trick played on us to get us to spend our lives in a perpetual state of anxiety, panic, and labor that benefits the corporation/state instead of ourselves–we could easily allow all of this “debt” to be forgiven/repudiated immediately and start over from scratch with a new and better system.  Indeed, that’s the real story of the Bank of England’s press release about money creation: they are telling us in no uncertain terms that we’ve been had and that we were purposely misled.”

Click the image below for more self-issued currency articles/research:

SELF-ISSUED CURRENCY Tags

Posted in Crap-italism, Debt Slavery, Everything Is Rigged, Federal Reserve, fiat currency, Financialization, Redistribution, Rent-seeking, Rentier, Reverse socialism, self-issued currency, Wage slavery | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

SELF-ISSUED CURRENCY: THE WAY OUT OF DEBT SLAVERY

Check out this extremely relevant and important article from Washington’s Blog: 9 Mind-Blowing Facts About Money.    It is a great primer for those not familiar with fiat currency and the fact that modern currency is, without question, created out of thin air (i.e., we are on the Air Standard as opposed to the gold standard).  Fiat currency is, in short, the most important financial invention ever because of the fact that–as the article states–it “is not backed by any tangible commodities.”  Fiat currency is the perfect form of money because it is admittedly and openly fictional, as all forms of money are (yes, even precious metals).  The problems with fiat only arise when: 1) it is treated as non-fictional and as the primary obligation of a person, taking precedence over life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, and 2) when the issuance of it is monopolized, which inevitably leads to the first problem.

Self-Issued Currency

The solution to these problems, then, is self-issued currency.  That is, every citizen in a fiat system ought to have the ability to issue his or her own money, up to any amount needed.  [NOTE 8-5-15: By “his or her own money”, I mean money denominated in the national currency, i.e., dollars, euro, etc.  I do not mean that each person would issue his or own personal currency named after him or herself, as some critics of this idea apparently misunderstood.]  This will solve both of the problems above, because when self-issued currency becomes the norm, paying money will be as easy and as painless and as much as an afterthought as saying “Thank you” is now.  Problem one solved.  And obviously problem two is solved because there would be no monopoly on the issuance of currency, hence no unnecessary control over anyone or anything, either by the state or by the issuer of the state’s currency.

For those that might recoil in horror at such an idea, keep in mind that all money is fictional.  In fact, all money is already self-issued, as will be shown below.  Money must be created by someone, somewhere, because money does not exist in nature–except to the extent that a natural item like gold or salt might be assigned the properties of money.  Despite what the typical Western economics professor might say, money does not just naturally come into being as a consequence of people needing to exchange things.  Indeed, as Bartolome de las Casas observed of the native Cubans in the 16th century:

“…[the natives] put no value on gold and other precious things. They lack all manner of commerce, neither buying nor selling, and rely exclusively on their natural environment for maintenance. They are extremely generous with their possessions and by the same token covet the possessions of their friends and expect the same degree of liberality.”

That is to say, money is a creation of man, and as such, it should serve man, not enslave him.  Can it be that the “uneducated,” “pagan,” and “savage” natives of Cuba from centuries ago were more civilized and wiser about economics than we are today?  It certainly would seem so.

Anything can be, and has been, money

It is beyond dispute that money can be–and has been–anything: gold, paper, shells, sticks, salt, binary code, cigarettes, fabric, etc., etc.  So it stands to reason that money can (and arguably ought to) be the following:  a check written by a buyer for any amount [NOTE 8-5-15: any amount denominated in the national currency, depending on one’s location] requested by a seller and drawn on a fictional, non-existent account.   In other words, self-issued currency.  And everyone would have this same check-writing power.  The only problem with this scenario?  No more poverty, no more control of the masses, no more larceny, no more want, no more war, no more prostitution, no more slavery, no more debt.  Oh wait, those aren’t problems at all–unless you’re one of the few people benefiting from the present system of rapaciously fraudulent currency.

How is modern currency “fraudulent?”

To get right to the point, modern currency is fraudulent for the following reason:  all modern currency is actually created by the participants in a currency system but it is legally treated as though it is created by, and therefore owed to, banks.  That’s it in a nutshell.  That’s the entire problem.

Let me try to explain what I mean as clearly as possible.  The Federal Reserve itself tells us that “banks actually create money when they lend it.”  The emphasis in that little nugget is on the role of the bank in the money-creation process, but that emphasis is completely misplaced.  That’s because what is implied in that statement is that for a bank to “create money,” someone first has to come to the bank and ask to be lent money.  In other words, a bank is powerless to “create money” unless a “borrower” comes along.

Now, how does the all-important “borrower” get money from the bank?  The borrower writes a check for the amount requested, signs his name, and presents it to the bank.  This check (which is one form of a “note”) is called a “promissory note” in modern parlance (and, to be sure, in less-than-modern parlance), but in reality, the “borrower” is self-issuing the currency he needs, yet he is being forced by law to treat his self-issued currency as though it were issued by the bank (and then having to “pay back” the bank with interest)!  In fact, when you think about it, the ramifications of this completely typical scenario are absolutely insane: the bank doesn’t have the money to lend the borrower until the borrower–who also “doesn’t have the money”–writes the check (i.e., the “promissory note”) to the bank to create the money, which is then called a “loan” from the bank to the borrower.

So who needs the bank?

The obvious question then, is, why is a bank necessary given this state of affairs?  Short answer: the bank is completely unnecessary, because the bank only deals in credit–as opposed to tangible assets or commodities–and credit can easily be created between individuals via self-issued currency.  And that kind of person-to-person credit creation and destruction is no less than the only hope of salvation for humanity.  Because if every person can create money equally and without restriction (which already happens as discussed previously, it’s just not acknowledged to be the case and is instead treated as though money is created by banks), there can be no advantage gained by holding someone hostage over a debt of money or by trying to take someone’s money–there’d be no point to such behavior.

NOTE:  Some of the assertions above about how money is created and how banking works are made on the basis of research that is not linked, quoted, or otherwise notated in the foregoing article.  This is done in the interest of clarity and brevity and the absence of such links, quotations, or notations is not in any way an indication that the aforementioned assertions are made without evidence, not based on research, or have no basis in fact.  Indeed, there is no shortage of official admissions of–and academic (and non-academic) commentary attesting to the basic premises of–these assertions, as any cursory search of both online and offline sources will reveal.

Note: This article originally appeared at The Air Standard, my other blog, on 10-16-13.

Posted in Crap-italism, Debt, Debt Slavery, Everything Is Rigged, Federal Reserve, fiat currency, Financialization, Nixon Shock, Redistribution, Rent-seeking, Rentier, Reverse socialism, self-issued currency, Wage slavery, Wages | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

WHY NOT EMBRACE WORTHLESS CURRENCY?

FREE MONEY MEME LRM

Extremely interesting post from Sprott Money linked at Zero Hedge (Debt-Free Money: NOT A Solution, Zero Hedge, Feb. 10, 2015), in which the lawsuit of COMER v. Bank of Canada is evaluated.  I will confess that until reading the article, I had never heard about the lawsuit, which was filed in 2011 and which an article at Global Research describes thusly (The Case to “Reinstate” the Bank of Canada, globalresearch.ca, Feb. 7, 2015):

Canadian constitutional lawyer, Rocco Galati, on behalf of Canadians William Krehm, and Ann Emmett, and COMER (Committee for Monetary and Economic Reform) on December 12th, 2011 filed an action in Federal Court, to restore the use of the Bank of Canada to its original purpose, by exercising its public statutory duty and responsibility. That purpose includes making interest free loans to municipal/provincial/federal governments for “human capital” expenditures (education, health, other social services) and /or infrastructure expenditures.  The action also constitutionally challenges the government’s fallacious accounting methods in its tabling of the budget by not calculating nor revealing the true and total revenues of the nation before transferring back “tax credits” to corporations and other taxpayers. The Plaintiffs state that since 1974 there has been a gradual but sure slide into the reality that the Bank of Canada and Canada’s monetary and financial policy are dictated by private foreign banks and financial interests contrary to the Bank of Canada Act.

I will be looking further into the lawsuit in the coming days, but for now I wanted to comment on Sprott Money’s take on the ideas contained in the lawsuit, which can be loosely summarized as follows:

1. Fiat money is worthless and faulty

2. Gold standard is superior

3. If money costs nothing it is worthless

4. Supply of money must be artificially scarce

And it is no surprise to find out that Sprott Money is a dealer of gold and silver as stated on its website:

Established in February 2008, Sprott Money Ltd. is a leading precious metals wholesale, institutional and retail dealer selling gold, silver and platinum bars, coins and wafers online and over the phone.

Surely the fact that Sprott Money is a precious metals dealer does not color its perception regarding the objective merits of a metals-backed currency (i.e., a gold standard) vs. a fiat currency.  Surely not.

The Sprott/Zero Hedge article does make some good points and accurately sums up the problem with the fiat system to which we are now enslaved, thanks to the Nixon Shock (see the LRM article:  HOW FAKE MONEY BECAME LEGAL MONEY: THE AFFIRMATION OF THE NIXON SHOCK).  The Sprott article repeatedly refers to the “assassination” of the gold standard, and fingers Paul Volcker—rather than Nixon, then-Treasury Secretary John Connally, or then-Fed Chairman Arthurs Burns—as the murderer.  In my view however, all of these men were nothing more than the puppets of the private banks and to the extent that any one or all of them could be considered to be the assassins of the gold standard and/or the architects of the current “free money for banks and expensive money for the people” system, they were really nothing more than hitmen, goons put up to the task of enslaving the population in debt by Bank of America, among others.

However, Sprott says some pretty outlandish things, which I will briefly address in turn.

Conflation of “Interest” and “Debt”

One major problem with the Sprott article is that it mischaracterizes what COMER wants to achieve.  The COMER is seeking “interest-free” loans, while Sprott says that COMER is seeking “debt-free” money.  Interest-free and debt-free are not the same, as can easily seen in the following example: Bill lends Betty $5 and tells her that he would like her to pay him back just the $5 with no interest.  Betty still owes a debt of $5 to Bill, but without interest.  Therefore, Bill’s loan to Betty is interest-free but is not debt-free.  To relate back to the COMER/BoC suit, it is pretty clear that COMER is not asking that the BoC make loans that don’t have to be paid back, but rather is asking that loans be made without interest.  Again, one can clearly see the distinction—make loans that are interest-free without being debt-free.

This is important because if COMER wins this suit (I predict they unfortunately will not), what will essentially be acknowledged is the following principle, with which I absolutely agree: since money (all money, including gold and silver) is created out of thin air (and is presently required as payment for goods and services and is therefore a basic requirement of life itself), charging interest is both unnecessary and immoral.  Unnecessary because when one loans money created from thin air and that didn’t exist previously, one is not doing without the amount of the loan until it is paid back.  That is to say, there is no risk to a “lender” when that “lender” is “loaning” money created from thin air that didn’t exist prior to the “loan.”  One could argue that a rental fee for a loan—which is what “interest” is—is justifiable if the loan is made from pre-existing funds that the lender will have to make do without until the pre-existing funds are paid back, which is how loans typically work between natural persons (i.e., you and me) as opposed to the way it works between corporate persons and natural persons.  And charging interest is immoral both for the reason just stated, as well as the fact that since money is for better or worse (worse) a necessary component of literally keeping body and soul together, it should be available at no charge, like sunlight or oxygen.

Value and Scarcity

Sprott essentially argues that fiat currencies such as the dollar are worthless because they are not scarce.  Those living paycheck to paycheck and surely even more so, those living in various extremely poverty-ridden areas around the world, may disagree with the idea that dollars are not scarce.  Here’s Sprott on the value/scarcity continuum:

As with all “fiat currencies”, there was no longer anything to give this so-called “money” any value. But while that is the most-obvious deficiency of all fiat currencies, it is arguably not the most-important deficiency. The other reason why (for a thousand years) every fiat currency ever created has been destroyed through hyperinflation (or removed before it could destroy itself) is there is no mechanism to limit supply.

Again, would for example, the people in Detroit who are having their water turned off for failure to pay their water bills agree with Sprott that there is “no mechanism to limit supply” of dollars?  Would the people who can’t get decent jobs with decent pay—i.e., the working poor–to pay their medical bills or their student loans (or both) agree that there is “no mechanism to limit supply” of dollars?  I doubt very much that such people would agree with this premise.

Sprott then takes us into a thought experiment:

“Suppose tomorrow that the Harper government declared that Canada’s new “unit of currency” would be a grain of sand. It was the new “fiat currency” for Canada, and thus officially money.

Obviously, despite the fact that our government had bestowed its “fiat” on this so-called currency, it would quickly (instantly?) become worthless, because of the combination of the two factors previously mentioned. It could be produced virtually for free (since grains of sand, like scraps of paper, have no value), and there would be no mechanism to limit supply – since it is available in virtually infinite amounts.

This example brings us to a fundamental principle of economics (and thus any/all monetary systems): any “currency” produced for free, and in (near) infinite quantities must be worthless. It must be worthless for two practical reasons, which go entirely beyond the fact that the “fiat currency” has no inherent fundamental value.

As a practical matter, if one could produce currency (virtually) for free, and in (virtually) infinite amounts, one person/entity would create a near-infinite amount of this “funny money” – and buy every asset on the planet. It is because of this absurdity that we have the second practical reason which such a currency would be worthless: no one would respect such a currency. Thus they would not accept it as payment for goods/services.”

My first reaction to this is that Sprott’s conclusion that if sand grains were money then one person could buy every asset in the world does not follow from the premise, for two reasons: 1) just because someone wants to buy doesn’t mean the seller has to sell, particularly because 2) the seller will also be able to get enough sand to buy whatever he wants to buy, so he would not be impressed with purchase price offered by Sprott’s theoretical buyer.  Indeed, in Sprott’s sand example, both buyer and seller have equal access to money and as such would be able to trade with each other as true equals.  In my view, this would be positive rather than negative.

Indeed, what is the real point of currency itself having value?  Why should a currency be itself a commodity?  Would that not be essentially barter? If the true purpose of currency is to facilitate exchange, there is no need for the currency itself to have value.  Indeed, money—as opposed to currency—is not a thing at all.  Rather, money is a measuring standard, like a meter or an inch.  Money is a concept which is imprecisely expressed in terms of a “currency,” which could be gold, but doesn’t by definition or out of any real necessity have to be. After all, remember that at one time, salt was traded for gold (but we don’t hear people now saying “salt IS money”).  Therefore, it doesn’t really make much sense nor is it at all necessary for a currency to be a thing of value—unless of course one is in a position to control that thing of value, which would necessarily put one in the position of controlling transfers of money and more importantly, the necessities which money is used to exchange.  In other words, one who holds a lot of gold (like Sprott Money, perhaps?) would have a vested interest in gold being the backing for a currency, or being the currency itself.

That holder of large amounts of gold could make the gold artificially scarce via hoarding and/or otherwise removing it from circulation (or by ending its extraction from the earth).  Then we would see a return to the bad old days of finding it necessary to kill people for gold—neo-conquistadors, in other words.  There is a downside to currency being scarce, and that downside is the same thing that Sprott and others tout as the big upside—the scarcity makes it valuable, which makes people desperate to have it.  And desperate people do desperate things.  Indeed, Ferdinand of Spain was purported to have told the conquistadors (most likely a paraphrase): “Get gold! Humanely, if you can, but at all hazards, get gold.”  Is desperation what we really want in our republics which purport to represent the interests of everyone?

I would argue that no, we the people do not want desperation.  Our overlords, however, are perfectly okay with it.

Worthless currency the answer?

Sprott correctly points out that the currency we now use is in fact worthless:

Every dollar/euro/pound/yen of “quantitative easing” is not merely worthless, but fraudulent – because our central banks have been cranking-out trillions upon trillions of this funny-money knowing that it was fundamentally worthless in every respect. In monetary terms, “QE” is literally identical to counterfeiting. Thus when our governments began their “QE” fraud, they made all of our currencies effectively worthless.

But the answer is not to make the currency something of value.  The answer, as I have said many times before, is to take the power of creating currency away from private banks and from governments and give it to the people.  In other words, embrace, not reject the worthlessness of the currency and thereby encourage cooperation rather than competition.  After all, as in the Sprott sand example, if you and I both have access to all the currency we’ll ever need, what is the problem for us?  There isn’t one.  We don’t have to compete, we can just cooperate.  And that’s a big problem for those who want to control us—money is the ultimate divide and conquer strategy—but you and I won’t have a problem if we embrace worthless currency.

And for those who say that having a worthless currency created out of thin air will be disastrous somehow, I say this: civilization is currently at an unprecedented peak in almost every measurable way yet also currently uses a worthless currency that is created out of thin air.  This is undeniable.  We have computers and a worthless currency.  We have planes and spaceships and worthless currency.  Yet think of the resource-saving projects and ideas for bold new products and cures for diseases that can never get off the ground merely because they are denied access to that worthless currency for one reason or another.  It’s not just a nice idea but vitally necessary to the survival of the species that we take the “out of thin air” money-creation powers out of the hands of the private, criminal banks and give it to the people.

It can only help, not hurt as we already use worthless, self-issued currency from out of thin air.  The problem is not the currency, the problem is who is allowed to issue it and thereby create—no sense in mincing words—absolute debt slavery.

My standard self-issued currency argument:

“Fiat currency is, in short, the most important financial invention ever because of the fact that–as the article states–it “is not backed by any tangible commodities.”  Fiat currency is the perfect form of money because it is admittedly and openly fictional, as all forms of money are (yes, even precious metals).  The problems with fiat only arise when: 1) it is treated as non-fictional and as the primary obligation of a person, taking precedence over life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, and 2) when the issuance of it is monopolized, which inevitably leads to the first problem.

Self-Issued Currency

The solution to these problems, then, is self-issued currency.  That is, every citizen in a fiat system ought to have the ability to issue his or her own money, up to any amount needed.  This will solve both of the problems above, because when self-issued currency becomes the norm, paying money will be as easy and as painless and as much as an afterthought as saying “Thank you” is now.  Problem one solved.  And obviously problem two is solved because there would be no monopoly on the issuance of currency, hence no unnecessary control over anyone or anything, either by the state or by the issuer of the state’s currency.

For those that might recoil in horror at such an idea, keep in mind that all money is fictional.  In fact, all money is already self-issued, as will be shown below.  Money must be created by someone, somewhere, because money does not exist in nature–except to the extent that a natural item like gold or salt might be assigned the properties of money.  Despite what the typical Western economics professor might say, money does not just naturally come into being as a consequence of people needing to exchange things.  Indeed, as Bartolome de las Casas observed of the native Cubans in the 16th century:

“…[the natives] put no value on gold and other precious things. They lack all manner of commerce, neither buying nor selling, and rely exclusively on their natural environment for maintenance. They are extremely generous with their possessions and by the same token covet the possessions of their friends and expect the same degree of liberality.”

That is to say, money is a creation of man, and as such, it should serve man, not enslave him.  Can it be that the “uneducated,” “pagan,” and “savage” natives of Cuba from centuries ago were more civilized and wiser about economics than we are today?  It certainly would seem so.”

Posted in Crap-italism, Debt, Debt Slavery, Everything Is Rigged, Feudalism, fiat currency, Financial Terrorism, Financialization, Nixon Shock, Reverse socialism, self-issued currency, Wage slavery | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

MORE JOBS, LESS WAGES

image

Wow! The unemployment rate supposedly just went to the lowest rate since 2008. That should be awesome news (if true), but it really isn’t because wages aren’t increasing.  It’s stories like these that foster the impression of a recovery even though there is no actual, you know, recovering going on.  You could create 10 billion low-wage jobs in one month, but if they’re all low-wage, part-time, subsistence jobs, is that a recovery? Of course not.

From the AFP:

The pace of wage increases — which should rise in a tightening labor market — was also barely higher. At $24.78, average hourly wages were up three cents from January, a bare 0.1 percent.

Baker says the data shows wage increases are slowing rather than picking up pace as expected with the strong hiring. Over the last three months wages have risen at a 1.8 percent annual pace, compared to 2.0 percent previously.

Posted in Crap-italism, Everything Is Rigged, Federal Reserve, Wage slavery, Wages | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

WHY WE ARE WAGE SLAVES: THE CIRCULAR LOGIC EXPLAINED

L. Randall Wray MMT Interview

Extremely eye-opening discussion with economist L. Randall Wray about, among other things, how money is ultimately valuable only as payment for taxes, which is how labor is compelled and the government controls the populace.  If you want to check it out, go to about 16:33 .  It’s a very engaging look behind the curtain at the Oz-like nonsense that serves as the basis for the wage slavery that is the bane of our everyday existence.

And don’t miss this exchange at 21:07:

“People need to understand what is the purpose of the tax—I just want to repeat this.  When the British went to Africa, they didn’t need to get pounds from the Africans.  They didn’t need pounds.  All the pounds in Africa came from Britain.  The Africans didn’t use pounds, they didn’t print pounds.  Every pound that an African had came from Britain.  So, the colonial governor in Africa did not need the pounds, he needed the labor.  He wanted the roads built.  OK?  So the purpose of the tax was to move resources, that is, labor, to the colonial governor.  It was not to get pound revenue.

And that is still true today in the UK and in the United States. Our governments do not need dollars or pounds. All the dollars and pounds that they receive came from the government.  The purpose of the tax is to drive a demand for the government’s own currency. The government doesn’t need its own currency—it issues the currency.  It can never run out.”

Wray doesn’t say this in so many words, but the extrapolation from the words he does say is inescapable: the U.S. government does not need our taxes, it needs our labor.  Given this fact, the idea that we use fake money created out of thin air by banks as a “medium of exchange” and so that we can trust each other in the marketplace is absolute piffle and poppycock.  And let’s be clear—by “government” in this sense, I don’t mean “we the people,” I mean the banks and corporations that are the government by virtue of being the entities that finance putting our “representatives” in their positions.

This is why self-issued currency is no more—and is in fact a lot less—absurd than our present system:

“It is beyond dispute that money can be–and has been–anything: gold, paper, shells, sticks, salt, binary code, cigarettes, fabric, etc., etc.  So it stands to reason that money can (and arguably ought to) be the following:  a check written by a buyer for any amount requested by a seller and drawn on a fictional, non-existent account.   In other words, self-issued currency.  And everyone would have this same check-writing power.  The only problem with this scenario?  No more poverty, no more control of the masses, no more larceny, no more want, no more war, no more prostitution, no more slavery, no more debt.  Oh wait, those aren’t problems at all–unless you’re one of the few people benefiting from the present system of rapaciously fraudulent currency.”

Posted in Crap-italism, Debt, Debt Slavery, Everything Is Rigged, Feudalism, Financialization, history, Keiser Report, Redistribution, self-issued currency, Tax, Wage slavery | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

CARTOON: A MILLION IRAQI WIDOWS…FOR OUR “FREEDOM”

A MILLION WIDOWS 2-26-15 copy

This is not really new, but it was in the news at the beginning of the week:

“Iraq’s violent conflict has left as many as one million widows over the past few years, the country’s Minister of Women’s Affairs Bayan Nouri said yesterday.” (Middle East Monitor, Feb. 23, 2015)

That’s a lot of recent widows.  I say it isn’t new, because in this 2011 story about possibly bringing back polygamy, the BBC was already talking about one million widows:

“Years of conflict in Iraq have left the country with more than one million war widows and a shortage of young unmarried men – pressures that may be bringing about the return of polygamy.” (BBC, Jan. 26, 2011)

Note that the BBC refers to these women as “war widows.”  Multiply the number of “children per woman”—in Iraq it’s 3.5—and you have at least 3.5 million people affected by this unsuccessful attempt to “win hearts and minds.”  That’s slightly fewer people than the entire city of Los Angeles, just to put it in perspective (almost 3.8 million as of 2010).

Do you feel the freedom that the “American Sniper” has provided?  I don’t think these 3.5 millions Iraqis do.  As the cartoon points out, neither do Barrett Brown, Eric Garner, Edward Snowden, all of us being spied on by the NSA, or the largest prison population in the world which is right here in the U.S.  Not largest per capita.  Largest, period.  But the damn operation was called “Operation Iraqi Freedom”—turns out that really meant “freeing souls from bodies,” not “freeing people from tyranny.”

Posted in Antiwar, Domestic Spying, Edward Snowden, Everything Is Rigged, Iraq, Liberty Road, Middle East, NSA, oil, petrodollar, Police State, Surveillance, Terrorism, Tyranny, War Is A Racket | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

LIBERTY ROAD COMIX: NEW FEATURE

A new, periodic feature here at LRM—a cartoon or comic.  In the past I have done some cartooning under the titles “Eggs Is Tense” and “Free Country.”  I miss doing it and occasionally get ideas for cartoons and figured, why not post them here and just go ahead and name the cartoons after the blog itself?  Especially since some of my cartoons will likely be coming from the kind of perspective that is generally espoused here, i.e., not one that is in keeping with mainstream/conventional analysis, and “getting” some of the cartoons may require a bit more background than can be effectively included in the cartoons themselves. So here’s the first one, titled “Cutthroat De-Capitalism.”  It’s obviously a nod to the now chillingly iconic ISIS beheading videos (written about here and here at LRM).  The thought was this: the banks are the real terrorists, but we keep being shown this fake ISIS claptrap, so why not show the banks to be the ISIS they really are—the “Insolvent Stealing Institutions of Stealing,” led by “Jihadi Jamie.”  And what are they doing? De-capitalizing the American public—decapitating us financially with the dull knife of the fiat, out-of-thin-air dollar.  With no small amount of debt to the “market fundamentalist,” “bankers are terrorists,” and “capitalism without capital” (see 5:24 in this video) tropes of the great Max Keiser, I present the inaugural Liberty Road comic:

LRC-Cutthroat De-Capitalism 2-23-15

Posted in Bank of America, Chase, Conspiracy, Crap-italism, Debt Slavery, Everything Is Rigged, fiat currency, Financial Terrorism, ISIS, Keiser Report, Liberty Road, Paper terrorism, Too big to fail, Tyranny, US Bank, Wealth transfer, Wells Fargo | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

WTF? DEPT. OF “JUSTICE” INCORRECTLY TELLS MAN REPRESENTING HIMSELF THAT HE HAS WAIVED HIS RIGHT TO DUE PROCESS

Department of Injustice is more like it…

DOJ-Malik-letter

Pennsylvania Court Watch has posted a literally unbelievable letter(shown above)–on what is apparently letterhead from the United States Department of Justice–to a California man, telling him the following:

“…when you chose to represent yourself, you waived your right to due process, including any access to the courts.  Further, a decision to go pro per results in losing your rights to investigators, law libraries, the hiring of experts and other resources that is [sic] available to a civil attorney.”

However, this is completely farcical, patently false and absurd, absolutely incorrect, and has never been true at any time.  The website of California courts tells its citizenry the complete opposite of the information contained in the letter in question:

There are several reasons why people represent themselves without a lawyer:

  • In criminal cases, if you cannot afford a lawyer, the court will appoint a lawyer for you, like a public defender. But in civil cases, you do not have the right to a court-appointed lawyer so, if you cannot afford your own lawyer, you have to represent yourself.
  • Some people choose to represent themselves even if they could pay a lawyer because they feel they can handle the case on their own.
  • In small claims cases, you are not allowed to have a lawyer, so everyone in small claims court is representing himself or herself.

Whatever the reason, you have the right to represent yourself, to be your own lawyer in all cases in California. But just because you can represent yourself does not mean you should. It is very important that you learn about what is at stake in your case, and what you will be expected to do and know in order to handle it on your own.

It’s been clear for a very long time that courts cast a jaundiced eye on pro se/pro per litigants, but this is beyond the pale.  Did we miss a Supreme Court decision like the recent ones which said police don’t have to have a warrant to search your property and that police can be ignorant of the law?

Posted in California, Everything Is Rigged, freedom, Police State, Tyranny | Tagged , , , , , | 5 Comments