Money Powers and Bankers
The Money Powers Taken and Held by the Privately Owned Central Banks is Destroying the Average Person. We Are Enslaved to Debt and Must Abolish the Federal Reserve System.
Today, we’ll provide you with a few facts, quotes and excerpts regarding the money powers held by the fraudulent and corrupted banking cabal.
The banking cabal hit the mother lode in 1913 when it was able to foist the Federal Reserve fraud upon America.
With this private central bank, the Banksters were able to take the issuance out of the hands of Congress. This gave them utter and complete control of the nation.
Because they now controlled the real money, GOLD, they were able to buy new laws and systems (such as Roosevelt’s New Deal, a RAW DEAL for Americans).
An excerpt from Protocol #1 offers us more on this.
“Our triumph has been rendered easier by the fact that in our relations with the men whom we wanted we have always worked upon the most sensitive chords of the human mind, upon the cash account, upon the cupidity, upon the insatiability for material needs of man; and each one of these human weaknesses, taken alone, is sufficient to paralyses initiative, for it hands over the will of men to the disposition of him who has bought their activities.”
This continues to this day through the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) and the way it inserts world government patsies into the U.S. Government, media, and school system.
Money Powers: Relevant Quotes
“Those who create and issue money and credit direct the policies of government and hold in the hollow of their hands the destiny of the people.”
– Reginald McKenna, former Chancellor of Exchequer, England.
“When you or I write a check there must be sufficient funds in our account to cover the check, but when the Federal Reserve writes a check there is no bank deposit on which that check is drawn.
“When the Federal Reserve writes a check, it is creating money.”
– Putting It Simply, Boston Federal Reserve Bank.
“How pale is the art of sorcerers, witches, and conjurers when compared with that of the government’s Treasury Department!”
– Ludwig von Mises.
“I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies.
“Already they have raised up a monied aristocracy that has set the government at defiance.
“The issuing power (of money) should be taken away from the banks and restored to the people to whom it properly belongs.”
– Thomas Jefferson.
“Thus, our national circulating medium is now at the mercy of loan transactions of banks, which lend, not money, but promises to supply money they do not possess.”
– Irving Fisher, 100% Money.
Money Powers: Do You Know Money?
Do Federal Reserve notes fit the bill when you read what money is below?
“Until the 1860s, “legal tender” applied only to coin, yet even then we used more private bank notes and bank deposits as money than coin.
“Legal tender designation was given to certain government-issued paper currency during the Civil War to win public confidence in the paper money.
“However, there has been no meaningful distinction between “legal tender” and other U.S. money since 1933, when Congress made all coins and currencies legal tender for all public and private debts.
“Regardless of what any government says, money must have certain characteristics that make it acceptable.
“Without those traits, even “legal tender” cannot be successful as money. Governments did not issue most early monies.
“They were commodities, such as salt, cattle and rum that were widely known and easily sold or used.
“But commodities proved less than perfect monies. The tobacco used by the early Virginia settlers is an example.
“The leaves weren’t easily divisible, causing difficulty in “making change”.
“The varying prices for different grades of tobacco made value difficult to determine. It also was hard to carry and store.
“Temperature and humidity changes caused flaking, which “devalued” the leaves.
“In short, tobacco lacked many characteristics needed to make it work well as money.
“For an item to perform successfully as money it must be durable, divisible, portable and difficult to counterfeit.
“More important, as the Virginians’ experience shows, while any item can serve as money, it won’t work well or last long unless it can also serve well as a standard and store of value.
“People’s willingness to accept money, in any form, is rooted not in the law but in money’s ability to effectively measure and hold value.”
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