The Matrix Behind Money

 

Oh mortal man, is there anything
you cannot be made to believe?
                                       Adam Weishophf

      The real shocker for Americans is the sad fact that they lost the American Revolutionary War after all. Sure they won it on the battlefield, politically as well, but financially, the reason for the war in the first place, was a complete disaster. The colonies were free because they printed their own money WHICH WAS NOT BASED IN DEBT OR INTEREST. They fought the war because England passed laws that took this power away from the colonies throwing it into a depression. After the war, even though some great Americans fought on against the central banks of Europe, they lost the war in the end. The conquest was completed about 85 years ago with the creation of the independent Federal Reserve Bank.  

The money of the American Colonies was the
principal cause of the American Revolution.

      It’s sad really but few people are able to put their finger on the source of the cancer. Nor can they see what is coming even though it is obvious. The early Americans were highly conscious though. The colonies of the United States of America were unique among the nations and nations-to-be of the world, as they modeled their currency in a way that no party extrinsic to any specific trade profited unjustly from it. Which means bankers where not cut into commercial deals. They were excluded from the system of money creation. 

     On behalf of the Bank of England, British Parliament ordered the colonists to give up their interest-free currency. No such system as the colonists had devised could be allowed to demonstrate the impoverishing costs imposed by the plutocrats, of a currency subject to multiplied, unearned profit. By dictate of the plutocracy of England, in America, as everywhere else in the world, debt would be perpetually and irreversibly multiplied upon the unassenting subjects of the system, to their ever-greater detriment. The colonists would pay some thirty-percent annual interest for the imposed currency. Benjamin Franklin reported, "Within a year, the poor houses were filled. The hungry and homeless walked the streets everywhere." He later explained, "We would have gladly borne the little tax on tea and other matters, if it had not been that they took from us our money, which created great unemployment and dissatisfaction."  

     The virtues of the near perfect American Colonial system therefore comprised the greatest possible threat to systems of multiplying indebtedness, because the very complete freedom to prosper without impediment, inherent solely to the perfected attributes exemplified by the American Colonial system, vibrantly demonstrated the iniquities of unjust profit rendered by the multiplication of debt inherent to, and irreversible within, central banking systems.

                                                                                               People for a Perfect Economy

     Today in America taxpayers are facing a decade of under financed programs and irresponsible deficits, and a government floating further adrift on hundreds of billions more in borrowed money each year with that number about to go ballistic. Democrats said it was irresponsible to allow a tax cut at a time of rising deficits, unknown obligations abroad and the impending retirement of the boomer generation. "It is radical, reckless, dangerous and extreme," said Senator Kent Conrad of North Dakota, the top Democrat on the budget committee.

As the system ages, debt multiplies
at an ever escalating rate
.

     It is clear that under the present international financial system that interest multiplies debt in proportion to commerce. When interest bearing loans are widely used to grease the wheels of commerce is follows that as commerce expands so will debt formation. This is fine and good (for some) at the beginning and middle of a cycle but it follows that if commerce cannot grow faster than the ever escalated multiplication of debt there will be a crash. This means, in plain language, that as the international economy slows it has a more and more difficult time to pay off interest and debt. In a contraction or depression it becomes impossible. In today's situation the simple lack of growth is leading to a disasterous situation and millions upon millions are already feeling the pinch.

     President Andrew Jackson, the only one of our presidents whose administration totally abolished the National Debt, condemned the international bankers as a "den of vipers" which he was determined to "rout out" of the fabric of American life. Jackson claimed that if only the American people understood how these vipers operated on the American scene "there would a revolution before morning."

      Of course it is in the best interests of some to extend the life of the system as long as possible and with this in mind it is interesting to have seen the first group conscious communication in the Times written by Bob Kerrey, Sam Nunn and Warren B. Rudman who are former senators, by Peter G. Peterson and Robert E. Rubin who are former cabinet secretaries. And to top the list off is Paul A. Volcker who is the former chairman of the Federal Reserve. These are all prominent men in the know and what they are saying in one loud combined voice is:

Congress must exercise restraint on both revenues and spending to prevent fiscal policy from spiralling out of control.

Long-term budget balance must be re-established.

The fiscal outlook is much worse than official projections indicate.

The deficit projections are cause for alarm.

The deficits over the next 10 years will total $4.2 trillion — even if the Social Security surplus is included. If it is not included, the deficit would be $6.7 trillion.

And all of this happens before the fiscal going gets tough.

 Looming at the end of the decade is a demographic transformation that threatens to swamp the budget and the economy with unfunded benefit promises, like Social Security and Medicare, of roughly $25 trillion in present value.

Congress cannot simply conclude that deficits don't matter. Over the long term, deficits matter a great deal. They lower future economic growth by reducing the level of national savings that can be devoted to productive investments. They raise interest rates higher than they would be otherwise. They raise interest payments on the national debt. They reduce the fiscal flexibility to deal with unexpected developments. If we forget these economic consequences, we risk creating an insupportable tax burden for the next generation.

     Unfortunately these men are not free to speak out the real truth that it does not really matter for the fundamentals of the system itself have built in factors that will destroy the system. It is only a matter of when. Fiscal responsibility will possibly delay the time of reckoning, especially because it hides the destructiveness and complete selfishness of the system. The world debt is already out of control as is American fiscal policy. There is no return; the bridges were burnt behind us a long time ago. The only variable is what will be constructed over the ashes of all that will fall. Will we let the big men in dark suits yet again create a system of mass rape or will we somehow return to the wisdom of America's founding fathers who knew and used a better way of handling money and finance.  

     Congressman Louis T. McFadden who, for more than ten years, served as chairman of the Banking and Currency Committee, stated that the international bankers are a "dark crew of financial pirates who would cut a man's throat to get a dollar out of his pocket... They prey upon the people of these United States."  

     The real America died a long time ago and what we see today hides behind the greatness that was left behind. Mean little ignorant boys like Bush hide behind the skirts of great men like Lincoln,  Jefferson, Franklin, Jackson and many others. America used to have great leaders who really cared about what was best for America, now it has spoiled rich boys who were raised on "oily" silver spoons. He knows the score, he knows how to count and so do the men around him.  

[The war in Iraq is] a rare opportunity to move
toward an historic period of cooperation.
Out of these troubled times...a new world order can emerge.

                                                                                             George Bush
 

     I wonder if anyone can invision this new world order he imagines as benefiting the common men and women of humanity. A man who condems even American youth to sexual ignorance and high rates of sexually transmitted diseases, by denying them proper sexual education, is not a man who cares about people. He obviously cares about power and his beliefs and the system that benefits him and his friends. If we are to believe the press most Americans are fast asleep in their Matrix beds, cheering on the madman from Texas thinking he is the good guy shooting it out at the OK Coral. The most dangerous man on earth is having a field day but the peoples of our earth are waking up.   

     So we should have hope and even be glad that such a leader has stepped onto the world stage to make it obvious what it is that has been plaguing the world. John F. Hylan, then mayor of New York, said in 1911 that "the real menace of our republic is the invisible government which, like a giant octopus, sprawls its slimy length over our city, state and nation. At the head is a small group of banking houses, generally referred to as 'international bankers.'"  Obviously oil interests have merged with banking and arms industries and with God knows with who else to great a monster that we cannot even imagine.  

     In the end it all comes down to money. "The modern Banking system manufactures money out of nothing. The process is perhaps the most astounding piece of sleight of hand that was ever invented. Banks can in fact inflate, mint and unmint the modern ledger-entry currency" stated Major L. B. Angus. Will the people of earth let them do this for eternity? There would not be a problem with this if they did not charge interest on the process but unfortunetly we live in a world where they do.  

     This is the Matrix nightmare that we do not wish to wake from and like in the film, like human batteries, we feed the system that feeds the rich and powerful over truth, justice, and the 'original' American way. Bush and his friends are making sure that the original beautiful vision of America is destroyed around the world. It is going up in the flames of hate and deep disgust. Its seems like we need this to wake up out of our sleep. Can we find the courage of America's founding fathers, men who championed freedom to the best of their ability? No they were not perfect men, many owned slaves and were men of rich property, but they were alive in a new land of opportunity and they rebelled against financial slavery. Eventually they succeded in throwing off the hypocrisy of their own Declaration of Independence which stated that all men were created equal. They abolished slavery a hundred years later. But they failed to protect the population from financial slavery to a select group of men who controlled the flow of money around the world.

     The few who understand the system, will either be so interested in its profits, or so dependent on its favors that there will be no opposition from that class. The great body of people, mentally incapable of comprehending the tremendous advantages will bear its burden without complaint.
                                                                                                    Rothchild Brothers

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