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OpEdNews Op Eds    H2'ed 12/4/09

Is Sanders' Hold the First Step in Ending the Monetary System?

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News Item--WASHINGTON, December 2 (Press Release)à ‚¬" Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) today placed a hold on the nomination of Ben Bernanke for a second term as chairman of the Federal Reserve.

YAY! I don't know if this hold will have much effect in the long run. But it is good to see a progressive who does SOMETHING besides sigh and roll over when the government gives the moneyed elites yet another gift. It is also encouraging to see that he has bi-partisan support and is not just a voice crying in the wilderness.

The Fed is too secretive an institution and needs to be audited, especially since it has so much of our tax money. We the People have the right to know what it is doing. Bernanke is right that this audit move is the first step in a campaign to destroy the Fed, but this is a good thing. As long as we are going to have a monetary system--remember that I am for abolishing money altogether--we should return to the constitutional system of government-issued money. Right now our money is issued by the Fed--look at a dollar; it says Federal Reserve Note--and lent to the government at interest. The Fed is a private institution owned by its member banks that are also private institutions. Thus, even if the government were not engaged in deficit spending, it would still be paying interest on the money it uses, because it is borrowed from a private entity--The Fed.

It is vital for Americans to understand the private nature of the Fed and its unconstitutional role in our economic system. Because if the Fed ever goes bankrupt, it will be a private institution that has gone bankrupt, not the government.

Bernanke should not be reappointed. By wanting to reappoint him, as by escalating the war in Afghanistan, President Obama has shown himself to be the black (and more articulate) George W. Bush, a servant of the moneyed elite, not the people who elected him because they wanted change.

Once a thorough audit has revealed how the Fed has lined the pockets of its member banks and their friends with our money, it should be dismantled. The monetary policy of the nation should not be in the hands of a bunch of unaccountable privateers. The US Treasury should make our money and distribute it to public and private entities interest-free. States should set up banks, like North Dakota has done, to take care of the business needs of the people of their state. (North Dakota is doing well despite the Depression; let's call a spade a spade here that is what it is).

Money was invented as a convenient medium of exchange. It became a measure of value and a store of wealth. That is what is taught about money in the schools. But as we know, price is a poor measure of value and inflation makes money a poor store of wealth. And what is not taught is money's role a gatekeeper and social control mechanism.

The need for it often forces us to work at unpalatable jobs and is a significant cause of divorce and domestic violence. The need and greed for money is at the root of most criminal behavior. The lack of it often prevents people from doing the work they wish to do because they lack the means of getting costly education/training and "tools of the trade." Lack of money is also an impediment to good nutrition and health care access. When you really think about it, rather than thinking just about how to get more of it, or what you would do with more of it or worrying about how you can make do without it...if you really think about it, money has become more trouble than it is worth and it is high-time we got rid of it.

Of course, that won't be done overnight. But Sen. Sanders and Reps. Ron Paul and Alan Grayson have shown us the starting point. Get rid of Bernanke. Audit and then get rid of the Fed.

Then get rid of interest. Use money as a medium of exchange, like grocery store coupons that have no cash value, while examining ways in which people historically created goods and services for themselves and their communities without creating debt. Examine theories of the gift economy, the open source movement, relocalization and the Do It Yourself movement for contemporary alternatives to the current monetary system that is impoverishing the many to benefit the few worldwide.

Contact your Senators and tell them to support Sanders. Then ask yourself: Why should we pay to live on the planet we were born on?

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Kellia is a freelance journalist in Oakland, CA who left the Pacifica Radio Network in July, 2010 after 11+ years in the KPFA news department and over 10 years with Free Speech Radio News. She is now in the odd position of needing a paid job while (more...)
 
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Is Sanders' Hold the First Step in Ending the Monetary System?

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