Broadcasting on Sirius XM Patriot Radio channel 125, Bannon’s first guest was Craig Smith, CEO of Swiss America and author of the new book The Great Debasement: The 100-Year Dying of the Dollar and How to Get America’s Money Back.
According to Smith, the establishment of the Federal Reserve in 1913 is responsible for the debasement of the American dollar. He argued the Federal Reserve, by printing trillions of paper dollars that are not backed by a gold standard, is effectively counterfeiting and depressing the value of our dollar. Smith specified, “The U.S. Dollar was transformed from being as good as gold to being a mere piece of debased paper with no intrinsic value, issued by a country whose debts now exceed its entire national income.”
In his book, Smith reflects on the fact that before the Federal Reserve was established, there was an “honest measure” of silver or gold to back every dollar that was printed. Moreover, between 1820 and 1913, the dollar actually increased in power, but now the dollar has diminished to only two cents of the 1913 value. Smith referred to our currency now as “elastic money.” Furthermore, he suggested that "the dollar has become a faith-based currency in which fewer and fewer people believe.”
The Keynesian approach of printing money in conjunction with the establishment of the IRS in the same year transformed the country into something other than what our Founding Fathers intended. Smith sees pending disaster for the dollar and America but posited that a return to a gold standard may be the way for America to survive and prosper in the fast-approaching transformed world.
With great prescience, Benjamin Franklin, said at the birth of our Republic, “When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the Republic.”
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2013/12/22/Federal-Reserve-...
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On The 100th Anniversary Of The Federal Reserve Here Are 100 Reasons To Shut It Down Forever
23 December 2013, (Zero Hedge)
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-12-23/100th-anniversary-federal-...
The Federal Reserve is not your friend. The Federal Reserve believes it operates above the law[1], and if looked at with an objective eye, it functions much like a type of banking cartel our founding fathers feared could threaten the concept of a limited government. They were right. The Fed is at the very heart of our financial problems, and until the vast majority of the public becomes aware of this, they will not subside.
The Founding Fathers were very specific about what they wanted when they wrote the Constitution. According to Article I, Section 8, Congress is supposed to have the authority to "coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures.” The government was never supposed to be in the banking business; they were to be in the sound currency business. The problem with this is that a sound currency does not need a bank. And because a sound currency does not lose its purchasing power over time, modern banking is its foe.
The Fed was designed "to provide the nation with a safer, more flexible, and more stable monetary and financial system. Over the years, its role in banking and the economy has expanded."[2] Since 1950, the U.S. has had 10 different recessions, about one every seven years--viewed as a normal business cycle. The Fed oversaw the Great Depression, the “internet bubble,” the “housing bubble,” and now possibly the largest bubble of them all, a “bond” bubble. Additionally, the dollar has lost 95.75% of its purchasing power under its management.[3] How’s that for fulfilling its mission?
The Fed is operated “much like a private corporation”[4] that does not function for a profit and is steered by unelected and unaccountable central planners. Although there may not be direct compensation at the heart of the arrangement, it is an organization run by banks, for banks. If our system was so endangered by the “too big to fail” giants back in 2008, then how has the Fed allowed them to grow even larger? It seems the 47,000 pages of regulation weren’t enough to prevent what amounts to structural fraud.[5] In just the last five years, the six largest banks have grown in asset size by 37% and now control 67% of the pie.[6] We, as a nation, have created an economy based on debt under the Fed--a debt that unfortunately continues to grow.
Some of the most recent moves by the Fed should give every American pause as to what fiscal insanity has been occurring. This includes:
Citigroup - $2.513 trillion
Morgan Stanley - $2.041 trillion
Merrill Lynch - $1.949 trillion
Bank of America - $1.344 trillion
Bear Sterns - $853 billion
Goldman Sachs - $814 billion
JP Morgan Chase - $391 billion
UBS - $287 billion
Credit Suisse - $262 billion
Lehman Brothers - $183 billion
Wells Fargo - $159 billion
Wachovia - $142 billion
(This list doesn’t even reflect the foreign banks’ 3.08 trillion);
Inflation was never really a long-term problem in the U.S. until the creation of the Fed--with a previous annual rate of about a half a percent in the preceding 100 years. Since its formation, the average annual rate of inflation has been about 3.5%. With the Fed’s dual mandate, including the lowering of unemployment, their solutions have left us with more unemployed than the population of Greece (U-6 20.3 million) and more Americans on Food Stamps than the population of Spain (47.2 million).[10] I don’t think the Fed would earn a passing grade, by any stretch of the imagination.
For the last 100 years the U.S. has drifted further and further into a debt-driven economy that is structurally flawed. The constant need to increase the debt load, in and of itself, can’t last without eventually undermining the currency and endangering the entire monetary and financial system. The Fed’s actions have shown that it has NOT prevented the business cycle, and its efforts to correct the economy’s problems (based on Keynesian economic theory) has only led to a world where the economy experiences bubble after bubble, blown larger by the Fed’s own actions. Sound finance? I think not.
The real problem is not the mundane functions of organizing the nation’s payment system, the regulatory oversight, or even the “protecting of the credit rights of consumers.” The problem resides in the false belief that an economy can be managed and that the prime beneficiaries of its actions work against the public at large, enriching the well-connected and wealthy, be they individuals or corporations.
The other day there was a televised ceremony celebrating the Fed’s 100-year anniversary. There were smiles all around as the masters of the universe praised each other and basked in their brilliance at managing the economy during their tenure. The one thing the room lacked was honesty, and with that, practical solutions to future problems. Since they failed to do this, I will briefly outline some simple free market solutions to return sanity to our financial system:
Each of these solutions will reduce the exposure of the American taxpayer to a minimum, while keeping the integrity of the existing system’s settlement mechanisms in place. The heightened transparency, as well as reduction in meddling, will allow the return of a non-manipulated world where borrowers and savers can reach mutually beneficial arrangements. Most importantly, it will break the back of the government’s systematic theft of the public with its continued debasement of the currency, while starving it of the ability to finance the expanding authoritarian state. In short, these solutions will END THE FED as we know it.
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2013/12/23/100-Years-of-Gov...
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“The U.S. Dollar was transformed from being as good as gold to being a mere piece of debased paper with no intrinsic value, issued by a country whose debts now exceed its entire national income.”
When Nixon rejected France to get paid in gold - ending pegging to gold - it was of course because dollar had lost all backing already - dollar value was not real
Starting in the 1959-1969 administration of President Charles de Gaulle and continuing until 1970, France reduced its dollar reserves, exchanging them for gold at the official exchange rate, reducing US economic influence. This, along with the fiscal strain of federal expenditures for the Vietnam War and persistent balance of payments deficits, led US President Richard Nixon to end international convertibility of the dollar to gold on August 15, 1971 (the "Nixon Shock").
This was meant to be a temporary measure with the gold price of the dollar and the official rate of exchanges remaining constant
"Destroying the New World Order"
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