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  • "The old appeals to racial, sexual or religious chauvinism,

  • to rabid nationalist fervor are beginning not to work."

  • "The business of who I am and whether I'm good or bad, or achieving or not,

  • all that's learned along the way."

  • "It's just a ride

  • and we can change it anytime we want.

  • It's only the choice. No effort, no work, no job, no savings of money."

  • "I realised I had the game wrong.

  • The game was to find out what I already was."

  • "We were seeing

  • how very important it is

  • to bring about, in the human mind,

  • the radical revolution.

  • The crisis is a crisis in consciousness.

  • A crisis that cannot, anymore,

  • accept the old norms,

  • the old patterns,

  • the ancient traditions.

  • And, considering what the world is now,

  • with all the misery,

  • conflict,

  • destructive brutality,

  • aggression,

  • and so on...

  • Man

  • is still as he was.

  • Is still brutal,

  • violent,

  • aggressive,

  • acquisitive,

  • competitive.

  • And, he's built a society

  • along these lines."

  • It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society. J. Krishnamurti

  • Society today,

  • is composed of a series of institutions.

  • From political institutions,

  • legal institutions,

  • religious institutions.

  • To institutions of social class,

  • familiar values,

  • and occupational specialization.

  • It is obvious, the profound influence these traditionalized structures have

  • in shaping our understandings and perspectives.

  • Yet, of all the social institutions, we are born into,

  • directed by and conditioned upon,

  • there seems to be no system as taken for granted,

  • and misunderstood,

  • as the monetary system.

  • Taking on nearly religious proportions,

  • the established monetary institution exists as one of the most unquestioned forms of faith there is.

  • How money is created,

  • the policies by which it is governed,

  • and how it truly affects society,

  • are unregistered interests of the great majority of the population.

  • In a world where 1% of the population owns 40% of the planets wealth.

  • In a world where 34.000 children die every single day

  • from poverty and preventable diseases,

  • and, where 50% of the world's population lives on less than 2 dollars a day...

  • One thing is clear.

  • Something is very wrong.

  • And, whether we are aware of it or not, the lifeblood of all of our established institutions,

  • and thus society itself,

  • is money.

  • Therefore, understanding this institution of monetary policy

  • is critical to understanding why our lives are the way they are.

  • Unfortunately, economics is often viewed with confusion and boredom.

  • Endless streams of financial jargon, coupled with intimidating mathematics,

  • quickly deters people from attempts at understanding it.

  • However, the fact is:

  • The complexity associated with the financial system is a mere mask.

  • Designed to conceal one of the most socially paralyzing structures,

  • humanity has ever endured.

  • None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free. - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe - 1749-1832

  • A number of years ago, the central bank of the United States, the Federal Reserve,

  • produced a document entitled "Modern Money Mechanics".

  • This publication detailed the institutionalized practice of money creation

  • as utilized by the Federal Reserve and the web of global commercial banks it supports.

  • On the opening page the document states its objective.

  • "The purpose of this booklet is to describe the basic process of money creation

  • in a 'fractional reserve' banking system."

  • It then precedes to describe this fractional reserve process

  • through various banking terminology.

  • A translation of which goes something like this:

  • The United States government decides it needs some money.

  • So it calls up the Federal Reserve and requests, say, 10 billion dollars.

  • The FED replies saying: "sure, we'll buy ten billion in government bonds from you".

  • So the government takes some pieces of paper,

  • paints some official looking designs on them and calls them treasury bonds.

  • Then it puts a value on these bonds to the sum of 10 billion dollars

  • and sends them over to the FED.

  • In turn the people of the FED drop a bunch of impressive pieces of papers themselves.

  • Only this time, calling them Federal Reserve notes.

  • Also designating a value of ten billion dollars to the set.

  • The FED than takes these notes and trades them for the bonds.

  • Once this exchange is complete,

  • the government then takes the ten billion in federal reserve notes,

  • and deposits it into an bank account.

  • And, upon this deposit the paper notes officially become legal tender money.

  • Adding ten billion to the US money supply.

  • And there it is, ten billion in new money has been created.

  • Of course, this example is a generalization.

  • For, in reality, this transaction would occur electronically. With no paper used at all.

  • In fact, only three percent of US money supply exists in physical currency.

  • The other 97 percent essentially exists in computers alone.

  • Now, government bonds are by design instruments of debt.

  • And when the FED purchases these bonds

  • with money it essentially created out of thin air,

  • the government is actually promising to pay back

  • that money to the FED. In other words, the money was created out of debt.

  • This mind numbing paradox, of how money or value

  • can be created out of debt,

  • or liability, will become more clear as we further this exercise.

  • So, the exchange has been made. And now, ten billion dollars sits in a commercial bank account.

  • Here is where it gets really interesting. For, as based on the fractional reserve practice,

  • that ten billion dollar deposit

  • instantly becomes part of the bank's reserves.

  • Just as all deposits do.

  • And, regarding reserve requirements as stated in "Modern Money Mechanics":

  • "A bank must maintain legally required reserves

  • equal to a prescribed percentage of its deposits".

  • It then quantifies this by stating:

  • "Under current regulations,

  • the reserve requirement against most transaction accounts is 10 percent".

  • This means that with a ten billion dollar deposit,

  • ten percent, or one billion,

  • is held as the required reserve,

  • while the other nine billion is considered an excessive reserve,

  • and can be used as the basis

  • for new loans.

  • Now, it is logical to assume, that this nine billion

  • is literally coming out of the existing ten billion dollar deposit.

  • However, this is actually not the case. What really happens, is that the nine billion

  • is simply created out of thin air

  • on top of the existing 10 billion dollar deposit.

  • This is how the money supply is expanded.

  • As stated in "Modern Money Mechanics":

  • "Of course they" - the banks - "do not really pay out loans for the money, they receive as deposits.

  • If they did this, no additional money would be created.

  • What they do when they make loans

  • is to accept promissory notes"

  • - loan contracts -

  • "in exchange for credits" - money - "to the borrowers' transaction accounts."

  • In other words, the nine billion can be created out of nothing.

  • Simply because there is a demand for such a loan,

  • and that there is a 10 billion dollar deposit to satisfy the reserve requirements.

  • Now let's assume that somebody walks into this bank and

  • borrows the newly available nine billion dollars.

  • They will then most likely take that money and deposit it

  • into their own bank account.

  • The process then repeats.

  • For that deposit becomes part of the bank's reserves.

  • Ten percent is isolated and in turn 90 percent of the nine billion,

  • or 8.1 billion is now availlable as newly created money for more loans.

  • And, of course, that 8.1 can be loaned out and redeposited creating an additional 7.2 billion

  • to 6.5 billion... to 5.9 billion... etc...

  • This deposit money creation loan cycle can technically go on to infinity.

  • The average mathematical result is that about 90 billion dollars can be created on top of the original 10 billion.

  • In other words, for every deposit that ever occurs in the banking system, about nine times that amount can be created out of thin air.

  • Money-Jitters. Ask the obliging Bank of America for a jar of

  • soothing instant money.

  • M-O-N-E-Y in the form of a convenient personal loan.

  • So, now that we understand how money is created by this fractional reserve banking system.

  • A logical yet illusive question might come to mind:

  • what is actually giving this newly created money value?

  • The answer: the money that already exists.

  • The new money essentially steals value from the existing money supply.

  • For the total pool of money is being increased irrespective to demand for goods and services.

  • And, as supply and demand defines equilibrium,

  • prices rise, diminishing the purchasing power of each individual dollar.