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Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

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  • Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

    Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme by Ellen Brown

    Well worth a read - as another facet of the FIRE economy

    Panic struck on Wall Street, as the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged a thousand points between July and August, and commentators warned of a 1929-style crash. To prevent that dire result, the U.S. Federal Reserve, along with the central banks of Europe, Canada, Australia and Japan, extended a 315 billion dollar lifeline to troubled banks and investment firms. The hemorrhage stopped, the markets turned around, and investors breathed a sigh of relief. All was well again in Stepfordville. Or was it? And if it was, at what cost? Three hundred billion dollars is about a third of the total paid by U.S. taxpayers in personal income taxes annually. A mere $188 billion would have been enough to repair all of the 74,000 U.S. bridges known to be defective, preventing another disaster like that in Minneapolis in July. But the central banks' $300 billion was poured instead into the black hole of rescuing the very banks and hedge funds blamed for the "liquidity" crisis (the dried up well of investment money), encouraging loan sharks and speculators in their profligate ways.

    Where did the central banks find the $300 billion? Central banks are "lenders of last resort." According to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta's Economic Review, "to function as a lender of last resort [a central bank] must have authority to create money, i.e., provide unlimited liquidity on demand."1 In short, central banks can create money out of thin air. Increasing the money supply ("demand") without increasing goods and services ("supply") is highly inflationary; but this money-creating power is said to be necessary to correct the periodic market failures to which the banking system is inherently prone.2 "Busts" have followed "booms" so regularly and predictably in the last 300 years that the phenomenon has been dubbed the "business cycle," as if it were an immutable trait of free markets like the weather. But in fact it is an immutable trait only of a banking system based on the sleight of hand known as "fractional-reserve" lending. The banks themselves routinely create money out of thin air, and they need a lender of last resort to bail them out whenever they get caught short in this sleight of hand.

    Running through this whole drama is a larger theme, one that nobody is talking about and that can't be cured by fiddling with interest rates or throwing liquidity at banks making too-risky loans. The reason the modern banking system is prone to periodic market failures is that it is a Ponzi scheme, one that is basically a fraud on the people. Like all Ponzi schemes, it can go on only so long before it reaches its mathematical limits; and there is good evidence that we are there now. If we are to avoid the greatest market crash in history, we must eliminate the underlying fraud; and to do that we need to understand what is really going on.

  • #2
    Re: Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

    Really good stuff Rajiv.

    I take exception to the “making money out of thin air” dictum. Banks do not create anything out of “thin-air.” What banks do is to fractionalize the whole of the monetary aggregate with their authority to increase the monetary units.

    For example, let’s say there is a pizza with 10 slices that are being used as money. One slice is equals to 1/10 the monetary aggregate. Now, you have one slice to your name, and you have authority to slice the pizza into smaller slices that will be accepted by the others as if the smaller fractions of a slice are the same as the prior slices. Ok, now someone asks you for a loan of 5 pizza slices, and you agree. All you do is slice your present slice into 5 parts and lend them to your client. e.g.:

    1 Whole Pie = 10 Slices

    You have 1 slice = 1/10 of the whole pie.

    You slice your slice into 5 slices and lend them to your client.

    Now your client has 5 slices which consists of 1/10 of the whole pie.

    Here is the tricky part: Although your client has borrowed 1/10 of the whole pie, his 5 slices are given the same value as the other remaining 9 slices of 1/10th of the value. So in aggregate you have a total of 14 slices in the whole pie, except you cannot tell the difference between the 1/10 slices or the 1/50 slices.

    So no, the bankers do not create the money out of thin air, they do it out of fractionalizing everyone’s property. Just replace the word pie for Earth and you get my drift.

    -Sapiens

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

      Originally posted by Sapiens View Post
      Really good stuff Rajiv.

      I take exception to the “making money out of thin air” dictum. Banks do not create anything out of “thin-air.” What banks do is to fractionalize the whole of the monetary aggregate with their authority to increase the monetary units.

      For example, let’s say there is a pizza with 10 slices that are being used as money. One slice is equals to 1/10 the monetary aggregate. Now, you have one slice to your name, and you have authority to slice the pizza into smaller slices that will be accepted by the others as if the smaller fractions of a slice are the same as the prior slices. Ok, now someone asks you for a loan of 5 pizza slices, and you agree. All you do is slice your present slice into 5 parts and lend them to your client. e.g.:

      1 Whole Pie = 10 Slices

      You have 1 slice = 1/10 of the whole pie.

      You slice your slice into 5 slices and lend them to your client.

      Now your client has 5 slices which consists of 1/10 of the whole pie.

      Here is the tricky part: Although your client has borrowed 1/10 of the whole pie, his 5 slices are given the same value as the other remaining 9 slices of 1/10th of the value. So in aggregate you have a total of 14 slices in the whole pie, except you cannot tell the difference between the 1/10 slices or the 1/50 slices.

      So no, the bankers do not create the money out of thin air, they do it out of fractionalizing everyone’s property. Just replace the word pie for Earth and you get my drift.

      -Sapiens
      i always hated that 'making money out of thin air' mantra. it's silly. doing away with fiat and using gold instead makes no difference unless you also do away with fractional reserve banking. the fractioning is more obvious under a gold standard, tho. under a gold standard for transactions between nations when one nation started to steal from another's treasury by currency debasement it was obvious. now all of the rulers that are used to measure the theft are made of rubber. in your pizza analogy, a person might ask, hey am i getting a smaller slice of pizza even though it's still called a "US Slice"? and they hand that person a stretched out rubber ruler so he can measure it for himself. see? it's still a slice. thanks, i feel better now.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

        Originally posted by Sapiens View Post
        Really good stuff Rajiv.

        I take exception to the “making money out of thin air” dictum. Banks do not create anything out of “thin-air.” What banks do is to fractionalize the whole of the monetary aggregate with their authority to increase the monetary units.

        For example, let’s say there is a pizza with 10 slices that are being used as money. One slice is equals to 1/10 the monetary aggregate. Now, you have one slice to your name, and you have authority to slice the pizza into smaller slices that will be accepted by the others as if the smaller fractions of a slice are the same as the prior slices. Ok, now someone asks you for a loan of 5 pizza slices, and you agree. All you do is slice your present slice into 5 parts and lend them to your client. e.g.:

        1 Whole Pie = 10 Slices

        You have 1 slice = 1/10 of the whole pie.

        You slice your slice into 5 slices and lend them to your client.

        Now your client has 5 slices which consists of 1/10 of the whole pie.

        Here is the tricky part: Although your client has borrowed 1/10 of the whole pie, his 5 slices are given the same value as the other remaining 9 slices of 1/10th of the value. So in aggregate you have a total of 14 slices in the whole pie, except you cannot tell the difference between the 1/10 slices or the 1/50 slices.

        So no, the bankers do not create the money out of thin air, they do it out of fractionalizing everyone’s property. Just replace the word pie for Earth and you get my drift.

        -Sapiens
        Surely I am the exception on this forum but this reads to me as unintended sarcasm.

        To bad you did not use tulip bulbs instead of pizza.

        Give me one valid reason why we need all this fuzz in a computerized society where we have no problem to track a few numbers.
        How about some direct real time quotes from the fed homepage? Should not be hard right?
        No? Why not?
        Perhaps that information should only be accessible to qualified high priests who then can pull the wool over people's eyes?
        Last edited by Tulpen; November 11, 2007, 05:25 PM.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

          Tulpen,

          Your sentiment is admirable, but your assertion is wrong.

          It is the very computer systems and software itself which is enabling these activities.

          Before computers, you pretty much had to print money to really inflate.

          You could still do inflate with fractional banking, but inflation is much more difficult ad slow when there's all this paper and hand-accounting to perform.

          Just imagine creating a CDO or MBS with just a pen and paper!?!

          I'm not saying that we should go back to the pencil age, but it is computer enhanced productivity coupled into normal banker greed which has resulted in the present situation.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

            You entirely miss the point I am making clue.
            And then you attempt to ridicule me with your paper and pen nonsense.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

              Originally posted by Tulpen View Post
              Give me one valid reason why we need all this fuzz in a computerized society where we have no problem to track a few numbers.
              How about some direct real time quotes from the fed homepage? Should not be hard right?
              No? Why not?
              Perhaps that information should only be accessible to qualified high priests who then can pull the wool over people's eyes?
              Your implication is not clear here. Are you saying that bankers should/should not be able to issue money on the basis of a fractional reserve system? Or that there should be an alternative to Bank Notes as currency?

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

                You seem to have missed my point as well.

                Yes, your point is that we can all directly access the Fed via the Internet to get the most up to date rates.

                But the 'data' is not based on any particular reality - it is just blips in computer memory and/or pulses of light going through a fiber optic cable.

                Just like all those sub-prime and option ARM loan advertisements.

                It is not because access to data is not there, it is because 99% of all people prefer to be told what they want to hear by a live person, even if the person has a conflict of interest.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

                  Originally posted by Rajiv View Post
                  Are you saying that bankers should/should not be able to issue money on the basis of a fractional reserve system?
                  Indeed, I see no reason why money should not be expanded through banks instead of being expanded by banks.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

                    Originally posted by Tulpen View Post
                    Indeed, I see no reason why money should not be expanded through banks instead of being expanded by banks.
                    Because it is stealing, no matter how you paint it. Yes, you can legislate it and sanction it thorough law, nevertheless you are conducting a fraud.

                    Just because the people are ignorant of the mechanics of fractional reserve banking, it does not mean they are immune to the consequences of the practice of it. Witness the present situation.

                    For Pete’s sake, I hope you were joking.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

                      Originally posted by Tulpen View Post
                      Indeed, I see no reason why money should not be expanded through banks instead of being expanded by banks.

                      This thread, http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2251, by Sapiens, has resources which explain the problem. I only read the first one, but found it very helpful.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

                        Originally posted by Andreuccio View Post
                        This thread, http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2251, by Sapiens, has resources which explain the problem. I only read the first one, but found it very helpful.
                        i've been working my way down sapiens' fabulous list of links. followed the second link...


                        it is an anti-gold, anti-fed piece.

                        “The essential evil of gold, in its relation to war, is the fact that it can be controlled. Break the control and you stop war. The only way to break the control of these international bankers, the way to end their exploitation of humanity forever, is to smash gold as a basis for the currency of the world...”

                        a point i make without back slapping from my goldbug pals, sans the "international bankers" stuff.

                        there's no date offered but it's identified as a hank ford quote. hank kicked off in 1947 so i assume this was said before then.

                        what does "international bankers" mean to you?

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

                          From your link, by Thomas Edison.

                          It is absurd to say that our country
                          Can issue $30 million in bonds
                          And not $30 million in currency.
                          Both are promises to pay
                          But one fattens the usurers
                          And the other helps the people.”


                          I think this sums up Chartalism pretty well.
                          "Men, it has been well said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly, and one by one."
                          - Charles Mackay

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

                            Originally posted by Tet View Post
                            From your link, by Thomas Edison.

                            It is absurd to say that our country
                            Can issue $30 million in bonds
                            And not $30 million in currency.
                            Both are promises to pay
                            But one fattens the usurers
                            And the other helps the people.”


                            I think this sums up Chartalism pretty well.
                            due respect to edison's other accomplishments but that's simple minded.

                            i don't want congress printing money directly. even 3rd world countries aren't that stupid. bad enough they have to push the fed through the exec branch to do it.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Financial Meltdown: The End of a 300 Year Ponzi Scheme

                              Originally posted by metalman View Post
                              due respect to edison's other accomplishments but that's simple minded.

                              i don't want congress printing money directly. even 3rd world countries aren't that stupid. bad enough they have to push the fed through the exec branch to do it.
                              The world spins and you seem not to notice what's going on in the world. How does China do it? Slave Labor, Child Beatings, Inhumane Treatment is what our banksters here would have me believe? The Three Gorge Hydro project, the world's largest hydro-electricity project was financed by New York? London? A bond issue of some sort? Nope, Chartalism. China now has a hydro-project even larger than Three Gorges, is this financed by borrowing? Not hardly. As Edison points out so simply these projects just cost the Chinese less than half of what they would cost to build here with usury, is this somehow inflationary to have electricity that you don't need to import oil or gas to produce?

                              This February the trade imbalance is going to almost disappear with China, I guarantee it. It does every January or February depending on the Lunar New Year. Why is this? Is it a strong d0llar or a weak d0llar that causes this? This is how our MSM will report it, now why is that? Tarriffs maybe? Will Congress take credit somehow for China's trade imbalance going to almost nothing this February? Some other Ayn Randian horseshit reason? Certainly too complex for a simple Chinese mind to understand I'm sure.

                              Nope, China's 1.3 billion or 1.5 billion people, even though they are inslaved will take the Chinese/Lunar New Year off, yes that's correct the entire month is a paid holiday? Do you in this Debtors Prison ever get a paid monthly vacation? Now who's simple minded?
                              "Men, it has been well said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly, and one by one."
                              - Charles Mackay

                              Comment

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