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Steve Bannon: The Federal Reserve Is the Biggest Scam They Have
"0.5% of the citizens of this country own more assets than the bottom 90%. That's all happened over the last ten years since 2008."
"We don't need to audit the Fed; we need to end the Federal Reserve! The Federal Reserve has usurped its power and the power of the American people and our elected representatives. And no, they do not have the consent of the governed. We will not comply, we will not submit, and it must be ended."
Another very illuminating interview with former Fed trader Joseph Wang…
"They're definitely in their own world. The Fed does have a small army of economists. The typical Fed senior economist career path is kindergarten to PhD to the Fed, and become a Fed lifer."
"Everyone who said inflation would be transitory and contributed to these policy errors - I'm sure they all work at the Fed still, so there's really no accountability."
"The people who have a lot of influence on monetary policy and research - these people don't really have any real-world experience. They've never traded anything, they've never worked in the private sector, they've never ran anything..."
"Their experience is limited. It comes through textbooks mostly, so that's part of the reason why I think that some of the research and some of the things that come out of the Fed don't seem to make a lot of sense..."
"The incentives aren't there - ever - to do a very good job. That's kind of what happens at the Fed."
"Many smart & motivated people join & learn a ton & then they leave. The bottom line is that if you're a company that doesn't have profit or loss & can never fail, there's really no point in trying to retain people. You become a place where people sit around & collect paychecks."
"The people who eventually rise up to decision levels at the Fed, they tend to be there almost completely on the strength of tenure, whereas everyone else who could leave would go into the private sector and make a lot more money and be judged by what they can do."
"There's this huge negative selection there [at the Federal Reserve] & I think it's really concerning because the Fed is such a powerful institution, yet many of the people who make these decisions don't really seem to have the knowledge or expertise that is suitable to the job."
Gordon Johnson: "Is there a fear of inflation at the Fed, or do you think they just don't care?" Wang: "Well, they say they care a lot, but I don't know what's in their head."
“Everyone who said inflation would be transitory and contributed to these policy errors - I'm sure they all work at the Fed still, so there's really no accountability."
Without accountability, "from an incentive perspective there's no reason to really care whether or not you're doing a good job. So if we have high inflation, if we have to induce a recession to get inflation under control, that really doesn't affect anyone at the Fed." - Wang
"They'll still have their jobs. They'll still get their increases, they'll still have their guaranteed pension, so there's an incentive problem here that's not easy to solve."
In our age of paper money with its accompanying kaleidoscope of paper, plastic, and electronic credit instruments, it is difficult to imagine an industrial society, like the German Empire before 1914, in which 52 to 65 percent of monetary circulation consisted of coinage. The daily transactions of most Germans were conducted with ten- and twenty-mark gold coins; one- to five-mark silver coins; five-, ten-, and twenty-five-pfennig nickel coins, and one- and two-pfennig copper coins. The Reichsbank, which had been assigned the task of “regulating the circulation of money in the entire territory of the Reich, facilitating currency transactions, and caring for the utilization of available capital,” viewed this dependence on coinage with increasing disapproval. The dependence on coins and even on cash transactions with paper money was proving to be an ungainly way of doing business. As international tensions mounted in the prewar years, the Reichsbank also considered the excessive circulation of coinage dangerous because it could act as an extreme brake on the Reichsbank’s ability to satisfy government liquidity requirements in the event of war. Thus, economic and military considerations went hand in hand as motives for Reichsbank policy…
By the end of 1914, the Reichsbank gold holdings reached two billion marks, but Germany’s citizens were reminded by a broadsheet that five billion in gold had been coined and that it was their “holy duty” to give their gold to the Reichsbank. The public was also reminded that “every pfennig that is cleared without the use of cash is a weapon against the economic war of annihilation conducted by our enemy.” [Note that FDR’s Executive Order 6102 banned private gold ownership and defaulted on gold certificates in 1933 - RH[
A particular effort was made to get schoolchildren to campaign among parents and their elders and thus assist in the national quest for gold. Instructive little brochures were produced with stories illustrating how bright children, properly instructed by their teachers, could extract the golden treasures hidden by shortsighted adults. Reading a brochure like “The Goldseekers at Work,” one wonders if the famed authoritarian upbringing of German children was not being sacrificed to Mammon by the Reichsbank.
It tells the story of three Gymnasium students who verbally harass a fictional elderly grain merchant, Bernhard Lehmann, into turning in his gold for paper money and perform this patriotic deed during school hours with the approval of their teacher. It had apparently become acceptable, even charming, to tell Herr Lehmann that he was a “betrayer of the Fatherland” and “unthinking” because of his reluctance to part with the precious metal…[Nothing new under the Sun - RH]
The plot thickens as Lehmann asks, “Actually, what prevents the Reichsbank from printing more money than three times its gold holdings?” but remains unconvinced when he is told that this would violate the law. He argues skeptically that, “If the law does not suffice anymore, then another will be made, as now occurs with fabulous speed. And then the Reichsbank will give out four or five times as much paper with all the advantages you mentioned also being there.” Undaunted, Schonfeld rises to the challenge, asking Lehmann if he would lend his money to someone with insufficient resources, even at a high interest rate. When Lehmann responds in the negative, his mind is prepared for the crucial lesson in the higher realms of state finance:”
You see, Herr Lehmann, that’s the way it is. And it is just that way with paper money. Why does everyone take paper just as readily as gold, although, for example, even a thousand mark bill is nothing more than a scrap of paper? Because he knows that the Reichsbank is in a position to give gold for it at any moment, because he knows that he can count on the Reich. What would happen if the Reich began to print notes without paying attention to its gold stock? It would immediately suffer a loss of confidence. The notes would no longer be accepted, especially abroad, or if accepted, then it would be like those profiteers who supply 750 marks or less worth of goods for the 1000 marks you pay them. A mark would only be worth 75 pfennig abroad or, as one would say, the mark has a low value (exchange rate). Every trading operation with foreign nations for such a state, therefore, means a huge loss. So it is with Russia now, which has frequently made a law like the one you have proposed and has printed banknotes without restraint…[Think about this passage, and then think about today’s monetary system, where no one any longer even pretends money is backed by anything except force - RH]
“As one might expect, the story ends with Lehmann cheerfully and appreciatively surrendering his hard-earned gold and the youngsters getting the next day off from school for their achievement…
What would happen if the Reich began to print notes without paying attention to its gold stock?
no one any longer even pretends money is backed by anything except force
@Onvacation - BTW - do you teach the Rust programming language? Somebody convinced me to get into it, it's really not terrible which I can't say about many languages.
richwicks says
Lincoln. Basically, he was not the great liberator, the civil war really had nothing to do with slavery, and he was extremely corrupt.
I'd like to see that evidence.
He was an abolitionist, because he didn't believe the negro should live among civilized men.
That changed when Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation. And it also changed with African Americans joined the Union Army.
However, Lincoln suggested before that and during his first two years as President that freed Africans could voluntarily move to Africa, Brazil, etc.
I just hope they can pull that off without the economy crashing and I hope the economy cannot sustain itself without ZIRP and quantitative easing.
You hope the economy cannot sustain itself without ZIRP and quantitative easing? What?
The Fed is our real rulers, and I KNOW people think that'
Patrick says
Huh, you can clearly see that inflation really took off after the US dollar was delinked from gold in 1971.
Patrick says
Patrick says
Huh, you can clearly see that inflation really took off after the US dollar was delinked from gold in 1971.
It took off with the MIC and endless war.
The national debt is so high that each worker owes about 1/4 million bucks.
I'm not 100% sure if this includes those who don't actually pay income taxes (just 43% of people in the USA pay them).
Ben Bernanke, Janet Yellen, who took over from Bernanke, and my main man, J. Powell, who took over from Janet Yellen. I'm sure these are all very nice people. I mean nothing against anybody, in terms of who they are, their character, and so forth. But it is, and I think actually if you guys came to the event in Austin, one of the things I actually found so interesting about Dr. Malone's remarks as he was talking about Fauci, was how Fauci wasn't really the problem so much as he is a symptom of the problem, as it was the system itself which was the problem in that it that enabled somebody like that to be able to take this control over everyone and everything. That, in a way, is really what this Federal Reserve situation is. It's not the individuals here.
It's the system itself that has been established since 1913, since they passed the law establishing the central bank in the United States, and ever since then, they've anointed this organization to say, "You're going to run everything in the economy. You have supreme executive authority to do whatever it is that you want to in the economy." And when you step back and consider that, you have to conclude "That's actually insane." It's insane to think that a couple of people can sit in a room and think that something as complex as a 20 plus trillion economy that has literally trillions and trillions of different economic units, businesses, transactions that occur. Every single transaction, every day. When you travel, when you buy food, when you fill up your gas tank, think about the trillions and trillions of those transactions that take place in a given year.
And to think that a handful of people are going to sit in a room, and they're going to push a button and just everything's going to be optimized, it is clearly insane to think that anybody can control that. It is literally insane. But that's the system that we have now with the Federal Reserve. These people are just representative of the system. ...
So what are they doing now? Well, with the interest rate increases, what they're trying to do by raising rates is they are trying to decrease demand, which is working, right? Because when it's more expensive to borrow money, people borrow less, which means they spend less, which reduces demand. That's the theory and, in part, that's actually working. But what they're also doing is that the Fed is also kind of decreasing supply as well, because you've got a lot of businesses that are really over leveraged, a lot of businesses that have a lot of debt.
All of a sudden, the business model for these leveraged companies depends on being able to continually refinance that debt, and suddenly they can't refinance that debt anymore because capital is more scarce, the rates are a lot higher, and these companies suddenly face bankruptcy. As a consequence, you have people that are going out of business, and when companies go out of business or employees get laid off, there is less supply, because there are fewer people and fewer business producing goods and services. So, sure, you have less demand, but you also have less supply. As a result you follow intersection of the supply and demand curves and arrive, more or less, at the same price. Maybe a little bit less, but not a material difference in your price levels, which is why after all of this, we really haven't seen too much in terms of a decrease in our price rates.
Patrick says
What would happen if the Reich began to print notes without paying attention to its gold stock?
They used to pretend that all our paper dollars were backed by a vast hoard of gold in Ft Knox.Patrick says
no one any longer even pretends money is backed by anything except force
yup
How was gold not backed by force?
How was gold not backed by force?
This is the ultimate end-game round of Gresham's law. They will force us to accept fiat until they can't, at which time all fiat will be worthless, and we'll have to start using that "barbarous relic" again. By then, we'll probably be living in a world like Kunstler's "The World Made by Hand."
"Sorry, your note for 100 ounces of Gold at Richie Rich's First Federal Bank cannot be honored. Perhaps once the FDIC/Courts have processed it, you might get 1 ounce of Gold. "
Have a nice day."
There have to be laws requiring salaries and wages to be paid in metal directly, no paper.
Otherwise, like in the 19th and before, the wealthy and banks will have all the physical, and give everybody else banknotes. Then they will SBF the Gold.
AmericanKulak says
There have to be laws requiring salaries and wages to be paid in metal directly, no paper.
Already in the Constitution, just not honored.
AmericanKulak says
Otherwise, like in the 19th and before, the wealthy and banks will have all the physical, and give everybody else banknotes. Then they will SBF the Gold.
Just don't bank there. Gold is worthless if you can't secure storage with people you trust.
AmericanKulak says
There have to be laws requiring salaries and wages to be paid in metal directly, no paper.
Already in the Constitution, just not honored.
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It seems that Fed employees know how to get rich betraying the public.