by OilsNotWell » Fri 30 Sep 2005, 01:21:52
Jaws, you are right, but perhaps he's another way to present this concept to our questioner...
Think of the money people use nowadays as just debt...pieces of paper that are just a promise to pay. It's fiat - by government decree - money. A "Federal Reserve" (a private banking cartel composed of private banks) note could just as soon be replaced by a check from me to you. If I give it to you, it's my promise to pay you some amount of 'money' if you take it to the bank it is drawn upon. But you are tired and don't want to make a trip to the bank, so you bring it to Bob's grocery store, who you happen to know, and he accepts my check (which you signed over to him) as payment for some butter and eggs...This essentially, is what the founding fathers called 'bills of credit'..
But a funny thing happened since 1789, when the US Consitution was enacted. You see, that document clearly specifies that fiat money was not to be used. The Founding Fathers realized and felt quite strongly that throughout history, fiat money always had very bad consequences. It led to the theft of wealth though its inevitable inflation (rampant unrestricted printing)), wars (creating the 'resources' to finance them, and general overall suffering through giant wealth disparities and classes. The Constitution was very explicit about what 'money' was to be defined as, and what the proper unit of money was to be, even going to so as specificing exactly how much of a certain precious metal was to be defined as a 'dollar' and so forth.
But over the years, and despite the very best intentions of Presidents like Andrew Jackson and Abraham Lincoln, and even John Kennedy, a private monopoly over the creating of money has sprung up and become entrenched in the fabric of your everyday life. Gradually, all vestiges of true money have disappeared (gold consfication 1933, eliminating redeemable gold and silver certificates, debasing (taking out or reducing the precious metal content) of coins (1965 silver taken out of dollars, half-dollars, quarters, and dimes; 1982 even the penny stopped being 95% copper)...Think about it...where'd all that stuff go...whose vaults is it sitting in? When you learn that the Constitution specifically provided for the DEATH penalty in cases where a person was found to have debased money, well then, you know they were quite serious about it. But you'll never hear THAT from your controlled media.
Anyway, an ever-present, constant, inflation now reigns supreme...the reduction in your real purchasing power by ever-increasing concentrations of wealth in the hands of fewer and fewer. The 'business cycle' they say...inflation, deflation, inflation, deflation...all designed to make you poorer and a very few people very, very, very rich. For instance, did you know that the wealthiest 400 people in the US are worth over 1 TRILLION dollars? That's right, only 400 people. In a nation of 260 million folks, that comes out to over $3800 for every man, woman, and child. Astonishing, no? But yet, we're all sold a dream.
Now back to the point about this bills of credit thing. This debt-based money is really just created out of thin air. When an excess of money-creation has occured, the bankers (I prefer to call them banksters, for they are the real age-old mafia), they start to call back in their 'loans', so to speak. They start to 'dry up' 'credit', making 'money' (the debt) scarcer, so more people are chasing less money that is available. The banksters utilize one of only two weapons they have: interest rates. So they make 'money' (credit, but really debt) less available by raising rates, and then stopping the negative effects of the inflation they caused in the first place!
But the real tricky part for these banksters is that sometimes they like to raise interest rates at the same time they are printing 'money' (or making it available in purely electronic form) furiously...At which point, the system becomes quite unstable, of course. That is called 'stagflation', which happened in the 70's. And, I believe, is happening again. Right now.
I am not very familiar with your country's particular economic monetary and 'central bank' history, but I would venture to say it is quite similar...Currency debasement and rampant deficit spending and debt creation.