Misplaced fears are the most dangerous of
all

The terrorists of Mumbai are not our greatest threat nor
will they cause the greatest suffering in the days ahead. That which will
cause the greatest grief is the banker’s system of credit-based paper
money, a house of cards now in flames and about to burn all inside who
still believe it to be shelter instead of a charnel house.
Those who have attended Professor Antal E. Fekete’s
Gold Standard University Live (GSUL) are not found around corporate
watering holes discussing stock tips. Although aware of the markets, those
in attendance have their focus on the system itself, on what caused its
problems and what can be done to correct it.
Last June at Session IV of GSUL a group of Hungarian
bankers were in attendance. I asked one why they had come to hear Professor
Fekete. His answer was unusual, at least for a banker. He answered that
they had realized their models could not explain current markets and, as a
consequence, they were looking for models that could do so.
When most people are confronted with the inexplicable,
instead of looking for other explanations they instead attempt to explain
away what is happening. In times of systemic stress, the usual response is
denial. The Hungarian bankers were obviously an exception.
What is extraordinarily dangerous today is the ubiquitous
ignorance that exists about our financial system. Those who benefit the
most from the current monetary pathology—bankers and
government—through their influence in the corporate-controlled media
and academia have effectively hidden the cause of society’s problems
from society itself.
By controlling the content and direction of social and
academic dialogue, the present beneficiaries of our credit-based system of
paper money have effectively prevented any real response to correct that
which is now our greatest threat—the collapse of the global economy
which will bring unimaginable suffering to most of humanity, a collapse
that is now upon us.
The bankers’ influence over government and the media
has effectively stifled social and academic discussion about the real cause
of our problems. Those who live off debt do not want its origins and their
influence exposed to the light of day. As a consequence, society will
suffer immensely though ignorant of the reasons why—which is exactly
what bankers and governments prefer.
A DEPRESSION PLUS
We are about to experience a depression in
extremis. Although similar to the Great Depression, what is about to
happen has never happened before; we are about to experience something new,
a depression in combination with a currency collapse, une Grande
Dépression à la papier-monnaie.
Ralph T. Foster’s important book, Fiat Paper
Money—The History And Evolution Of Our Currency notes that
paper money first appeared in China, which is also the first country to
later ban its use.
Over the course of 600 years, five dynasties had
implemented paper money and all five made frequent use of the printing
press to solve problems. Economic catastrophe and political chaos
inevitably followed. Time and time again, officials looked to paper money
for instant liquidity and the immediate transfer of wealth. But its
ostensible virtues could not withstand its tragic legacy; those who held it
as a store of value found that in time all they held were worthless pieces
of paper.
Page 29, Ralph T. Foster, Fiat Paper Money—The
History And Evolution Of Our Currency, to order email
tfdf(at)pacbell.net
While good ideas often spread, terrible ideas do also.
Eventually, the “virtues” of paper money were too great for the
West to resist; and like another Chinese invention, gunpowder, paper money
was to be used in the pursuit of wealth, empire and, ultimately, war.
But, in the beginning, the West was highly dubious of this
alleged Chinese invention. Foster’s book notes that the first mention
of paper money in the West was found in Marco Polo’s account of his
travels. The chapter heading which refers to paper money begins:
“HOW THE GREAT KHAN CAUSETH THE
BARK OF TREES, MADE INTO SOMETHING LIKE PAPER, TO PASS FOR MONEY OVER ALL
HIS COUNTRY”
Page 39, Ralph T. Foster, Fiat Paper
Money—The History And Evolution Of Our Currency
The idea that the bark of trees could pass for
money was met with disbelief, derision and ridicule in the West. Such a
possibility was considered as absurd as the more modern idea that $ 1.5
trillion of subprime “don’t ask, don’t tell”
mortgages could be sold to banks, pension funds, and insurance companies as
risk-free AAA investments.
The use of paper money was formally abolished in China in
1661. But, like the proverbial bad penny, it reappeared again in the 1900s.
Bereft of alternatives, China wholeheartedly embraced the West’s
paper-based credit markets believing that perhaps in its 300 year
“journey to the west” paper money had picked up some
“western mojo” along the way.
Unfortunately, as China is about to discover, paper money
was no more viable upon its return than in 1661 when it was banished. Once
again, economic catastrophe and political chaos will
follow—this time on a global scale.
Foster also points out that although Kubalai Khan’s
methods of encouraging the use of paper money were brutal, i.e. the
penalty for not accepting paper money in trade was death, the Great
Khan was certainly not ignorant in the ways of money, as Marco Polo
noted:
But what really captured Polo’s attention was how
all the gold and silver went to the imperial treasury, while the population
gladly received paper.
Page 41, Ralph T.
Foster, Fiat Paper Money—The History And Evolution Of Our
Currency, to order email tfdf(at)pacbell.net
WE KHAN TOO
Today, paper money is more common than herpes and far more
dangerous (and hopefully not with us forever). When paper money loses its
value, economies collapse which is now about to happen.
Kubalai Khan’s experiment with paper money, however,
gives us an important clue about what to do. As long as everyone accepts
paper money, we should exchange our paper money for goods and services.
But, like Kubalai Khan, our savings should be held in gold and silver.
WHAT LIES AHEAD
A depression is now beginning. The last depression, i.e.
the Great Depression, lasted approximately ten years. While it is not
possible to know how long this depression will last, we do know this
depression will be much worse than the 1930s. It will be a depression
in extremis, a depression in combination with a currency
collapse.
The US dollar is a now a fiat currency, a paper coupon
issued by the US government stating it is legal tender. Without the ink,
however, it is similar in all respects to Kubalai Khan’s currency
which started out as the bark of a tree made into something like paper to
pass for something like money.
When the US dollar was accorded the status of a reserve
currency by the Bretton-Woods agreement in 1944, it was convertible to gold
upon demand by other nations. Today, it is convertible only to whatever
speculators decide. Someday, as with all fiat currencies, it will be
zero.
Some believe that a US default on its debts will occur this
year. Such a default may or may not happen soon but it will happen someday.
When the US allowed private bankers to issue the US dollar (via the Federal
Reserve in 1913) thus changing the dollar from a savings based currency to
a debt based currency, the death warrant of the US dollar was signed. Its
burial was only a matter of time, a time which has almost arrived.
It has been less than one hundred years since bankers and
businessmen conspired to create the Federal Reserve Bank to control
America’s finances and to profit from the economic expansion of this
once great economic power.
The consequences of that conspiracy are now around
us—a collapsing dollar, a collapsing economy and, now, a collapsing
nation. Using soundbite slogans, the bankers convinced Americans that its
markets were free while they controlled the markets through the issuance of
credit.
Thomas Jefferson warned about what would happen if private
bankers controlled America’s currency. Jefferson’s warnings
were ignored, forgotten and buried by the press, academics and politicians
who were paid to promulgate the false promises of bankers. Americans took
the bait, swallowed it and are now about to be flayed.
THE BANKERS SINK WITH THE SHIP BERNARD
MADOFF—THE POSTER BOY OF DEREGULATION
The irony is that, today, bankers themselves are being
destroyed by the very system they created. The excessive issuance of
debt-based money by bankers is destroying bankers and banks as well as
businesses, families, and governments.
Bankers’ influence turned government oversight into
culpable blindness giving bankers the rope they needed to hang themselves.
The soundbite of self-regulation ultimately spawned the largest Ponzi
scheme ever, a decades long $50 billion theft by investment banker and
former NASDAQ Chairman Bernard Madoff—accomplished directly beneath
the blind eye of SEC oversight
Madoff’s extraordinary accomplishment is the
pièce de résistance to the hallowed soundbite
of free markets. I am a strong believer in freedom and free markets but
only fools and dupes believe that today’s credit driven financially
manipulated markets are free. Follow the money, not the soundbites. Follow
the truth, not the bullshit.
CHRISTMAS AND THE COMING NEW YEAR
This year’s holiday season will not be
like last year’s, i.e. “the last happy Christmas”.
Americans especially have been living in a self-induced bubble of illusion
and denial which has now popped along with the real estate and stock market
bubbles.
Reality is finally beginning to dawn on those who believed
their denial would save them from what they fear. What is happening is a
surprise only to the indentured slaves of debt who believed the
banker’s promise that credit would give them their dreams; instead,
that credit has now become debt and their dreams have become
nightmares.
The past year has destroyed the illusion of eternally
expanding growth driven by eternally expanding credit. Salome was never so
attractive; but now, society must pay the price for having succumbed to the
bankers’ beckoning pole dance.
Only if we learn from history will we not repeat it. But if
China’s experience with paper money is any indication of
mankind’s learning curve, I suggest you put your savings into gold
and silver—and soon.
Darryl Robert Schoon
www.survivethecrisis.com
blog www.posdev.net/pdn/index.php?option=com_myblog&blogger=
drs&Itemid=81
****
Note: I will be speaking at
Professor Fekete’s last session of Gold Standard University Live to
be held in Canberra, Australia from November 11th to the 14th. The focus of
the session will be trading the gold and silver basis for profit. For
further details, contact feketeaustralia@yahoo.com.