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  • The entire world is facing a debt driven disaster the scale of which has

  • never been seen before in human history. The situation is now so severe that

  • we're left with only two options:

  • default on our debt, or inflate it away. You can already hear people blaming the

  • free markets and even money itself

  • for our problems and to me this is just tragic because we don't have free

  • markets any more

  • and we certainly don't use real money, This is the real reason for our problems:

  • Our money itself has been corrupted.

  • It's not just an issue of economics, this affects your freedom.

  • When this crisis hits people will be screaming for the government to do

  • something,

  • when it was the government who caused the problems in the first place.

  • Many societies have faced this dilemma in the past and we can learn what the outcome

  • might be

  • simply by studying what they did and comparing it to what we're doing today.

  • So while I was in Germany I decided to stop by one of my favorite museums

  • and take you on a kind of crash course on the history of real money,

  • how it evolved, and the twin dangers that arise When Money Is Corrupted.

  • I'm here at the Bundesbank Money Museum

  • in Germany and this is one of the best museums

  • I have ever seen. Right at the very beginning

  • of the museum you walk in and it starts with barter, you know

  • originally the first form of currency was livestock...

  • the problem with livestock though like for instance this cow,

  • if I traded this cow to you for something and somebody else wants to

  • trade you something else that

  • has a much lower value you can't make change!

  • A system that relies on barter is very inefficient because you not only suffer

  • from the problems of divisibility

  • you also rely on the hope that you'll find someone who has a good or service

  • that you need

  • who wants something that you have at the same place

  • and at the same time. In economics this is called the Coincidence Of Wants.

  • Now add the fact that most goods have a shelf life before they perish

  • and you can see why barter systems held mankind back

  • for so long.

  • So what was it that solved the Coincidence Of Wants and propelled us

  • out of the Stone Age and into space? It was the invention of money.

  • Money is not evil, it is a magnificent tool that allows us to trade our

  • specialized skills

  • and to store our economic energy. Without it

  • we be struggling to feed ourselves each day and our

  • average life span would still be thirty. In episode one we learned that real money

  • has to fulfill certain properties

  • in order to function. But twenty six hundred years after its emergence

  • people still confuse money with currency... even the so-called

  • experts. So they've got here some of the

  • things about what money is, the first example here is

  • 'Money is whatever goes' So, 'in earlier cultures commodities such as cattle

  • stones or medals were used as money. Buyers took the value

  • of the goods on trust when making their purchase.

  • Today too, money is a question

  • of confidence.' So, the

  • currency today isn't money today we're using currency...

  • that's the only reason it has any purchasing power whatsoever,

  • it's because yesterday your experience was that it

  • purchased something so you have faith that it's going to purchase something

  • tomorrow,

  • otherwise it has no value. 'Whatever form it takes

  • reliable money has two characteristics: It is genuine,

  • and it is stable. People can rely on its value.' Well

  • you know what fiat currency around the planet has maintained its value? They

  • all fall in value so right away you can see the difference, they're

  • talking about currency here

  • and when they say it's genuineÉI mean what is genuine?

  • A counterfeiter, somebody that's running their own printing press in their

  • basement

  • is making genuine notes as far as he's concernedÉthey're genuine

  • counterfeits!

  • These things that just come off a printing press well yeah, it's a genuine

  • lie from

  • a central bank or government that you've got something that's going to store

  • value for you because

  • it doesn't over long periods of time... it loses value.

  • 'Gold banknotes and electronic money

  • (meaning electronic currency) may be stored,

  • divided up or transported. As its material value has declined

  • over time, its genuineness has

  • had to be beyond question.' Well this one says that it's got to maintain its value

  • and right here they're contradicting

  • the the next one. The one thing here,

  • gold is the only thing that they're talking about that has not

  • lost its value. 'In the past rare goods were used as money.

  • Today central banks must ensure that the supply of money

  • is restricted.' Well what are they doing all over the planet today?

  • They're lifting all restrictions on how much currency they are creating...

  • they're flooding the planet with currency. The next display shows the usual museum

  • pieces that are described as commodity money

  • cowry shells, representative axes, cocoa beans and the like.

  • While these worked better than barter none of them were actually money

  • because they all had a weakness, one or more properties of money that they

  • couldn't fulfill.

  • Therefore they are commodity CURRENCIES not MONEY.

  • Some of these were widely used right up until the beginning of the 20th century

  • and there's some stuff here that I haven't seen beforeÉ Here's something

  • very interesting,

  • this brick of tea, its value is

  • in the intrinsic, it's in the commodity that you're using, it's the tea.

  • But this one has a certain fungibility to it, each unit would have the

  • same

  • value and you can make change. You can snap these things apart

  • into units of six, it's portable it's not that heavy, this one fulfills quite a

  • few functions and money...

  • I would not imagine that is that durable, and probably doesn't wear that well.

  • And now we come to the emergence of real money. Here

  • we have little pieces of metal, just little pieces that have been broken off

  • bars or something that was cast, other little blobs of

  • metal. They were traded as a currency you know they had purchasing power they had

  • an intrinsic value

  • but they still weren't fungible which means interchangeable...

  • every one of them has a different value, you can see that

  • some of them have a higher silver content, some of them have a higher gold

  • content.

  • These are called electrum, a mixture of gold and silver,

  • naturally-occurring. What you notice is that this is from the 7th century BC

  • and then between the seventh and the sixth century were talking about

  • somewhere between 680 and 630 BC the emergence of

  • true money. Here we've got four coins,

  • the large one is a one-third stater coin,

  • and the other three are one-sixth stater coins.

  • Each unit is interchangeable, it's now a unit of account

  • you can take so many of these in trade for so many have loaves of bread

  • and you don't have to break out your little scale and weigh them any longer.

  • With the little chunks of metal you had to weigh

  • every transaction that was going on and you had to weigh whatever your payment was and

  • then take a guess as to what the purity was.

  • Here you have some standards that were set by mints and guaranteed by those

  • mints.

  • These are a unit of account, they're fungible, every one of them is

  • interchangeable,

  • their portable, they're durable, in your pocket

  • over long periods of time,

  • they're divisible you can make change. You can see there's a one-third stater

  • and one sixth staters. And they're a store in value over long periods of time.

  • These still have purchasing power today

  • 2,600 years after they were made.

  • Another thing that I find really interesting is that

  • between maybe 680 BC in the year 300 BC

  • cultures all around the world, they all

  • gravitated toward gold and silver coinage as money.

  • The entire world sort of decided altogether

  • that gold and silver were money. Why? Because the free markets keep on

  • selecting gold and silver as money because of the properties that

  • they have.

  • So now we get to the room of real money. This is a vault door

  • and this is where they've got all the great examples of the real gold and

  • silver coins so come on in and join me.

  • So here we get to the first display, here's gold and silver, what they're using

  • to make money and here we have some very early representations of gold and silver

  • coins.

  • And, I love these displays, they start with coins in Lydia so these coins go

  • back to the very first minting

  • of true coinage. So here we have... starting the 6th century BC,

  • and then it goes up to the 3rd century and then

  • from the 5th to the 11th century and the 13th to the 15th century

  • and these displays just go on and on with the history of

  • real money, gold and silver. And here seventeenth and eighteenth century,

  • here we come to the 19th century and

  • now we're all the way up to the 20th century here.

  • And here we come to our first example government issued fiat

  • currency this is a from China this is from 1375

  • and what's interesting is I have a chart

  • that compares the value have the paper currency in China

  • compared to silver, and there was a hyper inflation of this currency

  • it wasn't backed by anything, it wasn't backed by taxes it wasn't backed by

  • anything. The Treasury

  • they could just print this and so this went into hyper-inflation

  • because the government was just running its budget by just doing deficit

  • spending by printing.

  • And then I'm gonna skip to sum of the colonial currency.

  • This is the United States and each one of these currencies

  • is printed by a different state, we've got Maryland

  • South Carolina, North Carolina, Connecticut,

  • New York, this one here is particularly interesting it's printed in the

  • fourteenth year

  • of the reign of King George the

  • third, it's dated March 25th

  • 1776 so this is just a few months before the declaration of independence.

  • it says here 'Tis death to counterfeit'

  • This was printed just before

  • we started coming out with the continental dollar

  • which went into hyper-inflation because of pure deficit spending on the

  • Revolutionary War.

  • And so...this is the wall where

  • real money gets corrupted. This is where it all turns

  • to paper which sometimes is backed by something

  • but it can be a lie, they can print more

  • than they have of the stuff to back it.

  • As we learned in Episode 2 one of the first things the country does at the

  • outbreak of war is to suspend redemption rights

  • so that their currency is no longer redeemable in gold.

  • This is exactly what Germany did before World War one.

  • After losing the war they suffered through one of the worst hyper

  • inflations on record

  • when they were burdened with massive reparation payments to France and the

  • Allies.

  • These heavy penalties stifled the German economy and brought it to a standstill

  • leaving the country with the same two choices all indebted nations have faced

  • throughout history:

  • Default on their debt or inflate it away

  • Defaulting was not a viable option as they were completely impoverished,

  • weakened, and surrounded by armed forces ready to take their land.

  • Since the currency was no longer tied to gold it was decided to light up the

  • printing presses and inflate their way out,

  • paying the debts with new currency created out of thin air.

  • This had drastic consequences, check out some other this Weimar currency.

  • The display starts with one mark that actually purchased something,

  • but soon the notes rise to the thousands, then the millions,

  • then the billions, and finally the trillions.

  • It's mind-blowing. You'll notice that I'm laughing a little bit as we move through

  • the museum

  • but I'm not laughing at the people, I'm laughing at the stupidity of central

  • banks,

  • and of governments, and how we never seem to learn from history.

  • OK, and this is an example of

  • different currencies used during the hyper-inflation

  • and they call some of it inflation money and

  • emergency money. This is interesting, they figured the way out of hyper-inflation

  • was to print more!

  • So, 'In 1923 the value of money fell by fifty percent or more per day.'

  • That means prices are doubling every day, it's falling by fifty percent.

  • 'Nearly everyone spent their money as quickly as possible on

  • bread, shares and other safe assets.' Well I don't consider shares

  • safe assets, actually the stock market did not keep up with the inflation.

  • 'However, this rapid circulation only served

  • to stoke inflation even further.' That's the function of velocity of money it's

  • just a when velocity

  • picks up it's just like expanding the quantity,

  • it has the same effect. 'At the end, even 144 printing companies

  • working for the Reichsbank could not keep up with the demand for banknotes.

  • Emergency money issued by cities, local authorities, as well as banks

  • and other enterprises started being circulated.' So

  • everybody was issuing currency to add to the currency that the government was

  • printing like crazy! 'Although bank notes with face values of trillions of marks

  • were issued

  • the vast demand for moneyÉ' That's

  • not correct! 'The vast demand for CURRENCY led to a paper shortage.

  • Printers used anything that could be found including

  • wool wood and silk.' So so here's some examples of wood,

  • wool and silk currencies over here.

  • So this is a great example of how even here,

  • in a museum of what they call 'money'... this is the Bundesbank,

  • one of the world's great central banks, (if you can call

  • any central bank greatthey don't understand the difference between money

  • and currency! They're calling all of this 'money'

  • and it has nothing to do with money, it was a promise to pay

  • money at one point, and then

  • it was a broken promise. People have faith in these government created

  • currencies and it allows governments

  • to basically rob their own people. The government erased the debts

  • that they had left over from World War one

  • by just hyper inflating the currency

  • and basically that transfers all the wealth of the middle class

  • to the government. The government inflated away the debts but they also

  • inflated away the prosperity

  • of their entire population.

  • When we were in Germany we got a chance to shoot in front of the Bundestag,

  • which used to be called the Reichstag, and it felt...

  • it's very very significant

  • in that...out of monetary crisis you

  • very often see the political landscape change dramatically.

  • It's the middle class of a country that defines the country with their vote

  • they're the largest sector of any country, about 70 percent.

  • And a currency crisis like a hyperinflation

  • wipes out and impoverishes the middle class, and they

  • become filled with fear, and it's very

  • easy for somebody to come in and prey on that fear...

  • and dictators arise out of

  • hyper-inflation, and this is one of my greatest fears as far as the United

  • States goes.

  • I think that we all have to be

  • very very careful and very watchful for what happens in

  • the future.

  • A few years ago I was interviewing Congressman Ron Paul

  • and he said 'I think that there's going to be a financial collapse before they

  • come around to thinking seriously about monetary policy

  • but the real thing we have to worry about

  • is not the loss of our wealth, it's the rise of a dictator,

  • it's the loss of our freedom.' What's interesting is that the rise of Hitler,

  • there were two times where he played on the public's fear, he could never have

  • come to power

  • had there not been a hyper inflation back in 1923.

  • Just one week before the end of that hyper-inflation

  • that's when Hitler made his first big public appearance.

  • Playing to the public fear Hitler and his

  • storm troopers took over a beer hall called the BurgerBraukeller

  • that seats around 3,000 people and he took the stage by gunpoint, and to this

  • literally captive audience

  • he gave a speech that would change the world. Because of the hyperinflation

  • the audience had been recently impoverished, their wealth had been

  • stolen

  • by the government running the printing presses, and so they're all scared.

  • He offers them a scapegoat and tells them he's got the way out.

  • He became very popular after that and the very next day

  • the people that we're listening to him followed him in an attempt to overthrow

  • the government.

  • He was arrested, tried and convicted of high treason,

  • and served time. While he was in jail he was provided with a

  • private secretary, Rudolf Hess and he actually wrote about half 'Mein Kampf'

  • while serving time.

  • But once the economy started to recover

  • Hitler lost that leverage, that power, he could no longer play on the fear of the

  • public,

  • once the economic situation had changed. By the middle of the Roaring Twenties

  • he had become a joke. The Nazi Party had gone to less than two percent of the

  • vote, then along came the Great Depression,

  • and Hitler seized this opportunity again. He was the first politician to actually

  • campaign by aircraft hitting multiple cities in a single day

  • and the Nazi Party went from two percent of the vote to the second largest party

  • in Germany.

  • So playing on the public's fear Hitler was able to take away

  • the rights and Germans, all these guaranteed rights in Weimar

  • Constitution

  • private property rights, the right to assemble, public assembly,

  • the right to privacy in the mail, the telephone system,

  • he'd just took away all their rights and seized power.

  • So this is some of the things that we have to be concerned about and be

  • very mindful of...

  • Economic crisis very often leads to the rise of a dictator.

  • Yeah the fact that this was just seventy to eighty years ago,

  • basically there are still people alive today that experienced

  • this, but enough of them have died off to where

  • the warnings fall on deaf ears. Berlin is a great example of another massive

  • danger to individual freedom that economic crisis can bring:

  • the swing from capitalism to collectivism.

  • After world war two the city was basically divided in half

  • the West being capitalist and the East communist.

  • Germany was reunified in 1990 but even this short period of separation showed the

  • vastly different levels of prosperity that the two systems achieved.

  • So this is the famous Checkpoint Charlie and

  • what's interesting is how quickly an economy can heal.

  • Just twenty years ago you would have seen a tremendous difference between the

  • East and the West you'd have one

  • side that has tall buildings and is much more industrialized and

  • new and then one side that was that's very old and gray.

  • It was one of the best examples of

  • what a state-run society does to an economy.

  • How the more the public relies on government, the worse the general economy

  • gets.

  • What happens you know in capitalism you have the greatest disparity

  • between the poorest and the richest individuals

  • and there's a backlash against that and you see this happening in waves

  • and cycles, this cycle that goes

  • from capitalism to collectivism. Here,

  • the example, I mean you had this line going right through a city

  • and one side of the city that was very poor and the other side

  • prosperous by comparison. Now when we go toward

  • collectivism, they want to eliminate

  • this great disparity between the poorest in the richest individuals,

  • but what happens is it that they don't raise the standard of living for the poor

  • up here, they drag the whole economy down so that everybody ends up living down

  • here...

  • except for the people that are in running the government.

  • Collectivism is a danger because we've proven time and time again that it

  • doesn't work.

  • The evidence is in. If you look at history it's clear that maximum

  • prosperity can only be achieved through

  • individual freedom, free markets and sound money.

  • You'd think that we would learn from history, but I'm going to show you a few more displays

  • from the museum that prove conclusively

  • we haven't. And this is where we are today,

  • this is a sheet of Fifty Euro notes and these just come out at printing press bam

  • bam bam bam bam just like those notes did!

  • and the entire world today is sort ofÉ

  • every central bank across the planet is creating currency like crazy right now,

  • toÉI i think we're going into deflation so they're trying to stave off deflation

  • right now,

  • by printing their way out of it.

  • So here we've got some examples of the technology

  • that governments around the world are putting into their counterfeit currency

  • so that the public

  • can't counterfeit the currency that the governments are now counterfeiting.

  • So you've got all these holograms and watermarks and different threads and

  • different types of the paper,

  • and then here's this big old printing plate where they pop these things out a

  • mile a minute,

  • and right now they are hyper inflating the base money around the world -

  • the paper money. We're going into a deflation of

  • the credit money - that voodoo hocus-pocus currency that the banks just type into

  • the computers, that's starting to collapse

  • where this stuff is expanding.

  • So we learned in episode 4 that modern currency creation is a complete scam,

  • but a whole lot of people had trouble believing that it could be true.

  • The European Central Bank has this awesome display that shows you exactly

  • how it's done and it's basically the same

  • as our episode 4, so here's a quick recap thanks to the ECB.

  • Basically the central bank

  • and the Treasury swap IOUs,

  • the central bank writes a check and the Treasury

  • issues a Treasury bond which is an IOU

  • and that creates currency, and then

  • somebody is paid, it gets deposited into a bank account

  • and a thousand marks - they withhold 10 percent so right here they're already

  • telling you

  • that his bank account is a lie, he deposited 1000 in it,

  • they only withhold 100 in case he wants some of that

  • and then they loan out 900 which then

  • she buys something from this guy he deposits the nine hundred

  • they borrow ninety percent of that and leave just 10 percent on deposit for him

  • and the result is that it expands, every 1000 ends up creating

  • 10,000, or every one dollar creates ten dollars.

  • You know they've got the result here - it's all sort of a voodoo hocus-pocus

  • scheme. One of the great things that I've noticed here is that throughout the

  • museum they keep on proving the point

  • that even though this is the Bundesbank museum...

  • they prove the point that fiat currencies that come off of a printing

  • press,

  • eventually go to zero, that they're really worthless.

  • This says'The ideal goal of all monetary systems

  • was to ensure that money is trustworthy and kept in short supply.

  • Metal-based currencies restrict the money supply because metal deposits

  • are naturally limited. However,

  • during the industrial revolution in the nineteenth century

  • the rapidly growing economy needed a means of

  • payment which could adapt flexibly to this growth.'

  • BALONEY! You can have a fixed currency supply and

  • when you have economic growth it means that the currency gains in purchasing power.

  • 'In the 20th century uncovered currencies (meaning un-backed

  • currencies) have been the norm. In principle

  • the money stock could grow unchecked. This is why central banks must ensure

  • that the money stock is in line with economic growth.'

  • Yeah, right!

  • So here we've got my buddy Milton.

  • Actually Milton was a sort of semi-free market economist,

  • he won the Nobel Prize, so he's

  • considered the Dean of the Chicago School of monetary thought, which are

  • 'Monetarists' - they believe that

  • we should have a Federal Reserve and it should expand and contract we currency supply

  • to achieve a stable prices. One of the problems with Keynesians

  • and Monetarists and so on is that they think you should expand it and contract it

  • but they never contract it!

  • They just, you know Keynesian: You're supposed to spend when the economy is

  • bad the government's supposed to spend and stimulate

  • and then withdraw currency from circulation to keep us from going into a

  • bubble

  • caused by the expansion of credit and the spending that they did

  • during the bad portion in the economy so they

  • take this rubber band and they stretch it and is supposed to come back, but they

  • never do that, they just keep on stretching it to infinity!

  • And here we are right now,

  • where we are in the world is that that rubber band is about to snap

  • with every currency on the planet. And so I'm

  • in instability, and deflation, inflation let me see maybe I'll cause a hyperinflation...

  • Uh! It just went off the inflation scale I guess I did cause a hyper-inflation...

  • oops! And now the whole thing is collapsing!

  • I this game of inflation and deflation has never worked,

  • right now we're on the precipice of the whole system collapsing and just like the

  • game,

  • our monetary system will reset. This is where the twin dangers we learned about

  • may rear their ugly heads

  • so it's up to all of us to learn from history. I mentioned earlier that it was

  • the invention of money that allowed humans to prosper and

  • rise out of the Stone Age, but money is only part of the equation.

  • What use is money if you don't have freedom?

  • So what's going to happen? Will we default

  • or inflate our way out of the mess we're in? Since 2005 I've been stating publicly

  • and I also wrote in my book that I believe we're headed toward a series of events

  • involving a short term deflation,

  • followed by a big inflation or hyperinflation.

  • If you really want to learn how this inflation might affect you and your

  • family

  • join me at HiddenSecretsOfMoney.com for this episode's exclusive

  • presentation,

  • It's a special video that shows where I believe we are on this economic roller

  • coaster ride

  • and how I think it'll play out. So for now what can you do?

  • 1 - share this video on social media and subscribe to our YouTube channel. 2 -

  • Educate yourself by watching the rest of this series, and 3 -

  • Take action to protect yourself and your family. Learn what you can do

  • at HiddenSecretsOfMoney.com I'll see you there.

  • Should I buy half million or a million?

  • Let me see how much, this is not gonna travel well in the suitcase...but it would

  • be good to have

  • a million euros wouldn't it?

  • Tough decision, so

  • okay I'm gonna buy a quarter million Euros

  • so here's 50 Euros for your quarter-million

  • and uhhÉ.

  • yeah, and I get change back!

  • It's about 8 euros to buy a quarter million Euros.

  • OK

  • Okay and what's interesting is these are going to eventually

  • be in here. And it won't be too long

  • before these end up like this. Oh,

  • and we get some a chocolate gold coins! Danke.

  • So that's our tour of one of the best monetary museums I've seen so far,

  • but what amazes me is that they still

  • just don't get it!

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