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Debt Serfdom Comes to America

By Ellen Brown  Posted by Ellen Brown (about the submitter)       (Page 3 of 3 pages) Become a premium member to see this article and all articles as one long page.   3 comments

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Benjamin Franklin and others maintained that the chief reason for the American Revolution was that Parliament forbade the colonies from issuing their own money. Paper money issued by the Revolutionary government got the colonists through the Revolutionary War, but the British heavily counterfeited this money as a deliberate war tactic, and by the end of the war it had been inflated so much that it was nearly worthless. Fear of inflation led the Continental Congress to completely omit paper money from the Constitution, which does not say who can issue paper money or under what circumstances. The private banks filled the breach, and by 1913 the United States had the same private central banking system that England had.

 

Today, the pyramid scheme of lending 10 dollars and requiring 11 back has resulted in the very inflationary spiral the Founding Fathers feared. The money supply is inflated with more and more debt, shrinking the value of the dollars paid to workers and propelling larger and larger portions of the population into debt peonage. If the government were to issue its own money rather than borrowing from banks that issued it, and if this money were used to pay for real goods and services (roads and bridges, sustainable energy development, health services, and the like), demand and supply would remain in balance and inflation would not result.

 

A government with a properly designed and monitored system of publicly-issued money could fund itself without taxes, inflation or debt.

 

Publicly-owned banks are also called "national" banks or "nationalized" banks – the very thing that threatens the private banking system in Ireland today. We have come full circle: a system of national banks is what used to be called "the American system." This may be what we actually need – a public banking system operating for the benefit of the public. The private European system of debt peonage has failed.

 

On this 2008 St. Patrick’s Day, we the modern-day Irish of all persuasions can raise a glass to the possibility of being freed from the debt peonage that has kept us wage-slaves for most of our national history.

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Ellen Brown is an attorney, founder of the Public Banking Institute, and author of twelve books including the best-selling WEB OF DEBT. In THE PUBLIC BANK SOLUTION, her latest book, she explores successful public banking models historically and (more...)
 

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