Re: Are you foolish to pay your mortgage?
I get it. Trust me lol. Just don't get your post.
Originally posted by ricket
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It's all based on the money creation system of the United States (that most people do not get).
We all know how banks create money out of thin air, most people just dont realize exactly what theyre doing or how theyre doing it.
Take a pool of 10 mortgages, each with a one time fixed interest rate (this is to demonstrate what Im talking about, the same rules obviously apply with compound interest as well):
100,000 + 5% = 105,000 that has to be paid back
150,000 + 6% = 159,000
200,000 + 3.5% = 207,000
175,000 + 4% = 182,000
125,000 + 7% = 133,750
Now, in the FIAT money creation ponzi scheme, the banks wont actually have this money. They will create this out of thin air. But the key is that they only create the principal and do not create the interest. In a small enough system (say all the loans at one particular bank), it is a mathematical impossibility for every loan holder to pay off every mortgage plus interest based off of the original dollar amounts created in the loans. In the example above the banks only created $750,000, but the combined obligation with interest that has to be paid back by all of the borrowers is $786,750. The remaining $36,750 simply does not exist, because it was never created. In the US, 100% of all money is created by extending loans, as that is the only way that money "enters" into the system.
What this does is it requires a small percentage of people in this loan pool to be forced into default, because there simply isnt enough money to go around to pay everything off. It's kind of like a game of musical chairs where there is only 1 chair left, but 2 people remaining. When you signed your mortgage contract, there is not a single clause in there anywhere that says you could be forced into default (because it's a mathematical inevitability for a percentage of the participants as proven above). Since this language was not in the contract, it makes the contract no longer valid because contractual performance is no longer guaranteed. It becomes fraud.
ASH and others have stated "money circulates" and that's how the "impossibility" is actually "possible", but I disagree. Money does not circulate when it comes to banking transactions. It's either being created (by extending a loan), or it's being destroyed (by paying off a loan). There *is* no circulation in a banking transaction. All other money transactions that circulate outside of banking are irrelevant to the overall equation. It's kind of like integration in calculus where you add the "+C" to the end because you really dont care what that value is because it doesnt affect the overall outcome.
We all know how banks create money out of thin air, most people just dont realize exactly what theyre doing or how theyre doing it.
Take a pool of 10 mortgages, each with a one time fixed interest rate (this is to demonstrate what Im talking about, the same rules obviously apply with compound interest as well):
100,000 + 5% = 105,000 that has to be paid back
150,000 + 6% = 159,000
200,000 + 3.5% = 207,000
175,000 + 4% = 182,000
125,000 + 7% = 133,750
Now, in the FIAT money creation ponzi scheme, the banks wont actually have this money. They will create this out of thin air. But the key is that they only create the principal and do not create the interest. In a small enough system (say all the loans at one particular bank), it is a mathematical impossibility for every loan holder to pay off every mortgage plus interest based off of the original dollar amounts created in the loans. In the example above the banks only created $750,000, but the combined obligation with interest that has to be paid back by all of the borrowers is $786,750. The remaining $36,750 simply does not exist, because it was never created. In the US, 100% of all money is created by extending loans, as that is the only way that money "enters" into the system.
What this does is it requires a small percentage of people in this loan pool to be forced into default, because there simply isnt enough money to go around to pay everything off. It's kind of like a game of musical chairs where there is only 1 chair left, but 2 people remaining. When you signed your mortgage contract, there is not a single clause in there anywhere that says you could be forced into default (because it's a mathematical inevitability for a percentage of the participants as proven above). Since this language was not in the contract, it makes the contract no longer valid because contractual performance is no longer guaranteed. It becomes fraud.
ASH and others have stated "money circulates" and that's how the "impossibility" is actually "possible", but I disagree. Money does not circulate when it comes to banking transactions. It's either being created (by extending a loan), or it's being destroyed (by paying off a loan). There *is* no circulation in a banking transaction. All other money transactions that circulate outside of banking are irrelevant to the overall equation. It's kind of like integration in calculus where you add the "+C" to the end because you really dont care what that value is because it doesnt affect the overall outcome.
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