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April 22, 2016

Replacing American Liberty on the $20 bill

By Scott Baker

The replacing of president Jackson on the $20 bill is more than just a re-balancing of history. And it is also less than the populist change than it appears. It has as much to do with supplicating the pro-banker forces as appeasing the anti-racist ones.

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Harriet Tubman on the Money
Harriet Tubman on the Money
(Image by Mike Licht, NotionsCapital.com)
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Yesterday, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew announced that by 2030, president Andrew Jackson would be replaced by slave-freer Harriette Tubman.
Here is Bill Still's 19-minute take on it:


The similarities between the power and corruption of the 2nd Bank of the U.S. (B.U.S.) and today's TBTF banks is profound, though the B.U.S. and its president were a lot more direct and blatant about their hold on the economy, trying and almost succeeding in sinking it into deflation. Only a last-minute populist revolt saved the Republic and ended the B.U.S. by failing to renew its charter. The president of the B.U.S. Nicholas Biddle would later die while battling civil charges of fraud.

Jackson did dissolve the bank but couldn't quite replace it with a working public bank to represent "we the people" and the period from Jackson to Lincoln was more chaotic and inflationary than was healthy or necessary, and Still doesn't quite acknowledge that enough, in my opinion. A somewhat counter-veiling view of this period is provided by Steven Mihm's book "A Nation of Counterfeiters." Despite the chaos and inefficiency of having hundreds of local banks and even local taverns produce the national money supply in the Jackson to Lincoln period, it's certainly true, as Still says, that there was also great industrial progress in this period as well, at least in the northeast. How much of that was due to Jackson's policies is debatable, and Still's claim that the next 77 years of growth was largely due to Jackson's routing of the then-Central Bank and the degree to which banking power was returned to the states and local control over-reaches.

Lincoln and his Greenbacks, issued by the Treasury, debt-free, and amounting to 40% of the government budget at its peak (read "The Lost Science of Money" by Stephen Zarlenga) had at least as much to do with American growth, at least during the period they were allowed to become a major part of the national money supply, as Jackson's semi-successful effort at ridding the nation of debt-creating Central Banks. Unfortunately, the role of the B.U.S. was taken up by several powerful private banks, and the government's role in producing the money supply was diminished by a bribed Congress and the People's inability to establish a true Sovereign Money revolution, though they certainly tried, even to the point of creating a Greenback Party and running Greenbacker Peter Cooper for President in 1876. As Still points out though, we have Alexander Hamilton to thank for both the Constitutional and historical precedent of the nation borrowing what it could create. The Constitution allows for either, but mostly the former has been practiced, to our great national detriment, and, with the exception of Jackson's paying off the national debt in 1835, to our permanent national debt.

It is ironic that a supposedly populist history-reimagined play about Hamilton, by the same name and with a mostly black cast(!) is playing on Broadway at ticket prices very few of Jackson's populist supporters could have ever afforded in their day.

President Obama and Michelle saw Hamilton (and so have Sanders and his wife) on Broadway. And Obama's Treasury Secretary Jack Lew has now scrapped plans to remove Hamilton from the $10 bill and to remove Jackson from the $20 instead. This is a clandestine supplication to the banker elites disguised as bending to the populist will, or perhaps just the reality that replacing either of these men with the unarguably lesser figure of Harriette Tubman, is unpalatable to most Americans. However, the revolt against replacing Jackson, an avowed racist and genocider against the Indians (the Trail of Tears took place under Jackson), may be harder to pull off. Perhaps we need a Broadway musical "Jackson" that few can afford with an all-Indian cast? OK, that is too cynical, maybe, but new history is often produced by inattention to existing history.

Maybe it won't matter in the end, once the money power gets its way and gets rid of all cash anyway, pictures of dead presidents, Treasury Secretaries, and Underground Railroad conductors, and all, and makes us all permanent tithers to the banks, our true rulers today. It may even happen before 2030. You can take that to the bank.



Authors Website: http://newthinking.blogspot.com/

Authors Bio:

Scott Baker is a Managing Editor & The Economics Editor at Opednews, and a former blogger for Huffington Post, Daily Kos, and Global Economic Intersection.

His anthology of updated Opednews articles "America is Not Broke" was published by Tayen Lane Publishing (March, 2015) and may be found here:

http://www.americaisnotbroke.net/

Scott is a former and current President of Common Ground-NY (http://commongroundnyc.org/), a Geoist/Georgist activist group. He has written dozens of articles for Common Ground's national publication, GroundSwell, and has advocated for the Georgist Land Value Tax to public and political audiences.

A complete list of his publications can be found here:

Click Here



He is also New York State Coordinator and Senior Advisor for the Public Banking Institute

Click Here, which seeks to promote Public Banking. The PBI is chaired by another OEN blogger, Ellen Brown.
Scott has appeared on TV/Radio and in in-person Presentations to explain the principles of Georgism, Greenbacking, and State Banking. These may also be found on his personal blog: http://newthinking.blogspot.com/


Scott has a dozen progressive petitions on Change.org which may be found here:

http://chn.ge/10nUAmJ

Scott was an I.T. Manager for a major New York university for over two decades where he earned a Certificate for Frontline Leadership.


He had a video game published in Compute! Magazine: Click Here

Scott is a graduate and adjunct faculty of the Henry George School of Social Science in New York City.


Scott is a modern-day Renaissance Man with interests in economics, science and all future-forward topics.

He has been called an "adept syncretist" by Kirkus Discoveries for his novel, NeitherWorld - a two-volume opus blending Native American myth, archaeological detail, government conspiracy, with a sci-fi flair http://amzn.to/10nUoDV


Scott grew up in New York City and Pennsylvania. He graduated with honors and a Bachelor's degree in Psychology from Pennsylvania State University and was a member of the Psychology honor society PSI CHI.

Today he is an avid bicyclist and ride co-leader in a prominent bike advocacy organization.

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