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“According
to the measure of a man, that is, of the angel”

Silver Coin - Apollo
Introduction
This
will be the final conclusion to the series Silver Is Money.
Several different topics will be discussed, and at times one may
find themselves wondering what the topic under discussion has to
do with silver being money. There is however, an
interconnectedness to all things, including the various issues
provided herein with the basic purpose and theme of this series
– that silver is money.
By
the end, such will be readily apparent. A bit of patience is
required as I can get a bit long winded at times and tend to go
off on little tangential digressions, but really they’re not, as
all things truly are connected. But I digress – already.
We
are going to once again revisit the deflation versus inflation
debate as well as the synthetic dollar short thesis. Certain
opinions will be questioned, but in the pursuit and tenor of
learning. All other opinions and comments are invited. It is only
by such discussion and questioning that learning can take place.
Next
will follow commentary on present goods versus future goods, as
related to bank notes, both when backed by specie and not backed
by silver and gold. This issue is obviously very germane to the
main theme of silver is money.
Hyperinflation
will be revisited one last time as well, with some interesting
discussion, historical references, and thought provoking pictures.
Some of the pictures speak volumes.
Lastly
we will discuss paradigms, and paradigm shifts, trying to get a
handle on what may or may not be occurring now, and in the future.
I
can remember discussing this topic with a good friend Eric King,
who has written articles for this website in the past. He is one
of a few people, along with Jim Puplava, that understands the big
picture in regards to what is occurring, not only in the markets,
but in the world as well.
Part
of this discussion will include some sacred geometry as well,
which ties in perfectly with the topics under discussion. So
fasten your seat belts and let’s begin.
Inflation and Deflation
This
will be the last attempt at trying to explain what has become
quite the popular topic de jour. If I had a dollar for every
opinion on this subject, I’d be poor if they were paper dollars,
but rich if they were silver dollars. Which statement, on its own
merits, almost explains the issues under question. I will attempt
to elaborate.
When
talking about economics, or finance, or monetary theory, it is
always a good idea to make sure what everyone’s idea of money
is, as money is the basis of the monetary system, which in turn is
the basis of the financial system, and the economy as well.
As
society grows and expands, the direct exchange of barter evolves
into indirect exchange, which uses the most widely accepted common
medium of exchange for the trading of goods. The common medium of
exchange is called money. This is the economic definition of
money.
Besides
the economic definition of money, there is the legal or juristic
definition of money as well. This is what the legal system of the
land, especially the government, accepts for payment of debt; and
most significantly debt as in the form of taxes owed to the
government. This is called legal tender.
It
is also a good idea to have a definition of what debt is. Debt is
an obligation, it is something that is owed, that has not yet been
paid for, but is obligated to be paid for – in the future. Debt
is a future obligation. Many very astute writers are of the
opinion that debt is not a good thing. Maybe yes, maybe no. Maybe
a little of both. Hear is why.
Savings and Credit
I
have earned and saved 1000 silver dollars. They are mine to do
with as I please. You come to me and say, I need to borrow some
money, I need a loan – I need some credit.
Because
the 1000 silver dollars are mine, if I lend them to you this does
not create more money in the economy. Money that already existed
is being lent out or borrowed. Nothing wrong with that. It is a
good thing. As long as the rate of interest is honest and just.
So
what’s the big deal about all this debt being accumulated that
everyone is always talking about that’s going to be the downfall
of our monetary system? Well it’s one of those little secrets of
the temple that the temple guys, who used to be called priests,
but now go by other names, don’t like you to know about.
The
secret is that there is nothing wrong with honest debt, based on
honest credit, using an honest rate of interest, based on honest
money – money that is real, has been earned, and has been saved.
It is a good thing. It facilitates commerce.
But
when the money hasn’t been earned, hasn’t been saved, and then
is loaned out as credit, the extension of such credit is not only
creating a debt that didn’t exist prior to the transaction, but
it is also creating money that didn’t previously exist.
How
can that be, how can an individual or institution loan money that
they do not have? That is absurd. Yes, in deed it is absurd, as
well as few other superlatives we will politely not mention. As
Murray Rothbard said:
“The
problem, therefore, is not debt but credit, and not all credit but
bank credit financed by inflationary expansion of bank money
rather than by the genuine savings of either share holders or
creditors. The problem in other words, is not debt but loans
generated by fractional-reserve banking.” [Rothbard]
What Side of The Line?
Obviously
to do such lending borders very close to being fraud, and at the
least it is dishonest, as it hides what is actually taking place,
as opposed to providing full disclosure and honesty as to what is
occurring.
Money
is being created by the mere act of lending, expressly so that the
new money can be lent out as credit by using fractional reserve
lending policies.
This
allows the lender to lend that which they did not earn or save.
That which they did not already have as savings, but simply
created when the desire beckoned. And to then make a profit on
lending that which had not previously existed. The supply of money
is being increased without labor or savings. This is not a good
thing.
This
is the creature brought forth by the unholy wedlock of the beast
of dishonest credit with the beast of fractional reserve lending.
Born is the creature known as paper fiat. It is a vile and
despicable thing – an abomination that walks upon the face of
the earth, doomed to a perpetual life of a continual feeding
frenzy. It facilitates two things, both of which are less than
desirable: more debt and wealth transference.
When
money is allowed to be created without effort, without work,
without savings, all for the sake of the profit of the few that
are allowed to create the dishonest money, by the extension of
credit of that which they do not have, and to then make a profit
or interest on the dishonest act – such is not a good thing.
The
extension of credit should only come from the savings pool. If the
money or credit does not already exist in the savings pool, the
money that is created by the extension of credit is not real. It
is merely being spoken into existence by fiat. Illusion and
delusion become the twisted sisters of fate.
This
is why in paper fiat land, the motto of the day is inflate or die.
More and more money has to be created just to pay the interest on
the money previously created and then lent out. It is a vicious
and terrible circle that never ends. It is a mad dog, chasing his
tail. But it does keep the bankers healthy, wealthy, and wise. On
second thought, it keeps them wealthy.
Why Debt?
Why
is such a dishonest system allowed to exist?
Because
it creates a perpetual interest rate stream of wealth transference
for the few elite puppet masters of the universe who can create
their own money and lend it out on interest to the rest of We The
People.
And
since they rule, the rest of us have been played for fools. Most
of us do not even know how the system actually works. But we do
not have to accept the unacceptable – a dishonest monetary
system of paper fiat. Knowledge is power. Learn how it works.
Empower yourself.
We
do not have to accept the Bureau
of the Public Debt : The Debt To the Penny.
There
is the choice of Honest Money of silver and gold, as stated in the
Constitution. Remember, and vote accordingly. This is why the
money-masters fear honest money of silver and gold, it keeps them
under control. It almost makes them honest.
Help
silver and gold to keep them honest. Demand that it be so done.
Exert your constitutional freedom and rights. Exert your
sovereignty. See that the Constitution is followed as the Supreme
Law of the Land. See justice prevail. See truth triumph. See that
the untruth is no more.
One More Time
The
following will discuss a recent article by one of the stock
markets living legends on the deflation versus inflation debate,
and on the synthetic short dollar thesis. I have chosen this
particular piece as it covers several very critical points of a
complex issue. The article was posed in the format of questions
and answers.
“May
13, 2005 --
Question -- If deflation is almost impossible, since the
Fed can neutralize any deflation simply by increasing the money
base, why is the Fed so worried about deflation -- or, as the Fed
puts it, "insufficient inflation"?
Answer
-- If there's a credit collapse, it seems to me that the situation
could change very quickly and soon get out of hand -- in which
case we'd have deflation.
The
fact is that the stock market has been deflating all year. Now the
stock market has been joined by oil, commodity prices, copper,
steel, aluminum, gold, Goldman Sachs Natural Resources Index,
materials in general. I don't know what you want to call it, but I
call it some kind or variety of deflation.
You
want proof? OK, check the daily chart of the CRB Commodity Index
below. I'd call this a breakdown, wouldn't you? It sure isn't an
inflation in commodities.” [Richard Russell]


[chart included in quoted
article]
Here
is another chart of the CRB, with a different view and timeframe
not provided in the above article.

[chart provided by Gnazzo courtesy of bigcharts.com]
Two
different charts showing two different views, one the trees, the
other of the forest. Continuing on with the quoted article:
“In
the meantime, the hottest item around is the US dollar. Why is the
dollar at a high for the year? Good question, and I haven't read
about or seen the definitive answer yet. Of course, the market
answer is "more buyers than sellers," but how does that
help us?
I've
been saying all along that when everybody is invested on one side of
the equation -- watch out. And it's true, the biggest
"given" around a month or so ago was that "shorting
the dollar was the guaranteed path to profits." And it's true,
even Buffett and Gates announced to the world that the dollar had
nowhere to go but down.
In
this business, when everybody agrees on one thesis, it's almost a
certain that this "thesis" has been fully discounted by
the market. Thus everybody followed what was "agreed upon"
and took a position against the dollar. So yes, the dollar's
strength could simply be a matter of driving the dollar shorts to
the wall.
The
other thesis that comes to mind is something I've talked about
before. All debt must be paid off, some debt paid off in a hurry and
some paid off over time. But you pay off debt with dollars, and if
there's too much debt outstanding and there's pressure to pay off
that debt -- that's going to create a demand for dollars.
The
greater the debt, the greater the potential demand for dollars to
pay off that debt. Which is why I
said that massive debt amounts to a massive synthetic short position
against the dollar.
Now
I'm wondering if what we're seeing is a sudden demand for dollars.
I'm wondering if what we're seeing is a short squeeze against the
dollar brought on by hints of deflation. Remember, in deflation
dollars become scarcer -- and in deflation debt becomes a dirty
word.
If,
in fact, deflation is in the wind, there's going to be a mad rush to
pay off debt, and that's going to generate an urgent demand for
dollars. Could that be what we're seeing now, as the dollar rises to
a high for the year? It's sure got me wondering.
So
do we have the two worst combinations -- a deflationary squeeze on
debt and a huge short position against the dollar? Whew” [Richard
Russell]


[chart in quoted article]
Now
here’s another chart of the dollar, with a somewhat different view
and timespan. Note that charts are kind of like statistics, they can
be presented to say just about whatever one wants to say, especially
if taken out of context and or applied out of context. Note: I am
not saying that such is the present situation within the article
under discussion. Only that it that it can easily be done and does
occur quite frequently.


[chart provided by Gnazzo courtesy of stockcharts]
Different
views. Neither is wrong or right. One is a view of the trees, the
other of the forest. It is always a good idea to keep both in
perspective. One never knows if the forest is going to turn into the
trees, or the trees into the forest – or neither.
But
usually it is the long term primary trend that is most important,
not the shorter term noise and confusion that can lead one astray.
At least that is what I was taught, but perhaps things have changed.
Now
that the overall article and charts have been presented, let’s
take a closer look. All differing opinions are welcome and invited.
Questions
Anyone
who thinks that deflation is nigh impossible is badly mistaken, it
is quite possible. With this we are in agreement with the above
quoted article. As to why the Fed might be worried about deflation
occurring, regardless as to their ability or disability to inflate
the monetary base, I can think of a few good reasons, as noted
below.
Also,
the monetary base is not the important nor the intended target. The
credit market is where the action is. But that will be covered a bit
later, as it is an important distinction not generally understood or
recognized. At least so it seems.
-
The
Fed knows that deflation would not make anyone very happy, not
to mention the economy and the people would suffer great
hardships and pain.
-
The
reputation and future job prospects of the responsible officials
would suffer accordingly.
-
Deflation
is probably not what the powers that be want to see occur, and
you don’t want to get the powers upset – with or at you
because of your mistakes that then reflect on them.
-
The
Fed knows that it is the inherent nature of a paper fiat system
to inflate or die. They have been inflating like crazy, but they
also know that deflation is still a possibility.
-
The
Fed is in a delusional state of megalomania, especially Sir
Alan, who is on a personal quest to overcome and defeat the laws
of economics, as well as his own personal demons.
-
The
Fed is walking a tight-rope. There is no margin for error, as
either deflation and or hyperinflation can result in a flash. In
mountain climbing it is called a knife-edge. Very dangerous.
With
all due respect, the author of the quoted article provides the
caveat that the importance of the exact definition and meaning of
deflation is not of as great of import as are the charts, yet the
statement is made that “if there's a credit collapse, it seems to
me that the situation could change very quickly and soon get out of
hand -- in which case we'd have deflation”.
This
is a distinct possibility, however, isn’t the statement also
providing what the author says appears to be the definition of
deflation, i.e. credit collapse, which is the classical definition
of deflation..?
But
that’s the rub, which very few seem to get, even those that use
the correct words: credit contraction.
Credit
contraction does not mean falling prices of goods, that is price
deflation.
Credit
contraction does not mean the deflating prices of copper or other
commodities, once again that is price deflation.
Credit
contraction does not mean the deflating price of the stock market,
that is asset deflation.
Credit
contraction means just what is says – credit contraction.
These
distinctions are not just about semantics or the splitting of hairs.
They are about critical distinctions of very important issues
intricately involved in understanding monetary theory.
When
one is trying to provide explanations, or make pronouncements of
certain economic variables, let alone the economy in aggregate, as
to the preponderance for deflation or inflation, such distinctions
are of an even greater magnitude. One most not forget that
hyperinflation is also a possibility as well.
As
was shown earlier, honest credit is the extension of money that
exists in the savings pool as a loan. In paper fiat land, the
extension of credit creates money and debt – simultaneously.
That’s the dishonest, nasty and ugly part – the abomination.
How
can one pay off debt, if the money itself is the same as the debt,
and only comes into “being” by the extension of credit, which is
the owing of debt? A more sinister state of affairs is hard to
conjure up, and leaves the taste of wormwood on the palate, and the
smell of brimstone in the air. Whew indeed.
The Dollar
The
question was posed, why is the dollar at its high for the year?
Perhaps because it is undergoing an intermediate term counter-trend
rally. Perhaps not. But there are those that have railed against the
viability of the dollar for years, and rightfully so. And yet...
The
long term chart provided above doesn’t look too healthy as well.
Why focus on the short term chart and noise when the long term
primary trend is what matters the most? Not to forget the
fundamentals for the dollar are absolutely horrendous. Those
deficits are looming large and getting larger by the day.
Many
have said that the dollar is the biggest con game around. With that
I agree. Many have also said that the dollar is ultimately destined
to become worth less and less, until worthless. I agree with that as
well. That’s the long term trend. The shorter term trend is up, as
the short term chart clearly shows.
It
also appears that an intermediate term counter-trend rally is
occurring as well. However, the dollar is not up as in a new bull
market, not that the author of the article is calling for that,
which then begs the question – what’s all the fuss over a
counter-trend rally about? The primary trend is what counts.
The
article goes on to offer various possible explanations as to why the
dollar may be at new yearly highs. The first offered is that “So
yes, the dollar's strength could simply be a matter of driving the
dollar shorts to the wall.” I agree that this is a very distinct
possibility.
Next
the article offers “the other thesis that comes to mind is
something I've talked about before. All debt must be paid off, some
debt paid off in a hurry and some paid off over time. But you pay
off debt with dollars, and if there's too much debt outstanding and
there's pressure to pay off that debt -- that's going to create a
demand for dollars.” That sounds about right, but just exactly
does that mean, in paper fiat land?
Earlier
we saw that debt is not a bad thing if the debt is based on honest
credit that in turn is based on honest money. However, we also saw
that if the debt is based on dishonest credit, as is the case with
fractional reserve lending of paper fiat, then money is actually
created by the mere extension of credit – dishonest money. The
whole paper fiat system is dishonest.
Now
understand the implications of fractional reserve lending in a paper
fiat system:
-
Credit
is the extension of a loan – a loan of the monetary unit or
currency.
-
The
monetary unit that is presently accepted and in use is the
Federal Reserve Note.
-
The
true monetary unit is the Silver Dollar of the Constitution,
which has been buried beneath mountains of debt by lies and more
lies.
-
However,
in our monetary system, what is called the money supply is much
more than the number of paper Federal Reserve Notes or dollar
bills as in cash on deposit or reserve.
-
The
total “money supply” in paper fiat land is now composed of
computer entries that exist only in cyberspace. There are
various measures of the money supply, the M – 1, 2’s, and
3’s, etc.
-
And
even more critical is the fact that the total amount of credit
in our economy is way, way, way beyond any measure of the money
supply, and only exists as computer entries as well.
-
This
larger total credit number of computer entries is in the
illusionary ledger of double-entry bookkeeping, which floats
around in cyberspace [if it sounds like a bad dream that’s
because it is].
As
Jim Puplava clearly elucidates in his Storm Watch Update
article Tipping
Points:
“Last
year the US economy added $2,718 billion in debt. However, the
broadest measure of the money supply (M3) expanded by only $587.5
billion. For those who are relieved that money supply growth has
slowed down, as shown in the table below, take no comfort. Credit
expansion in the US is rampant as reflected in last year's total
credit expansion of $2,718 billion.”
“While
the monetary base grew by only $33 billion, Federal Reserve Credit
and Foreign central bank purchases of Treasuries grew by $42 billion
and $207 billion respectively.”
“Credit
expansion in the US is hyperinflating.”
“Outstanding
debt in the US has grown by 38% over the last four years to $36.2
trillion, an increase of over $10 trillion in the last four years.
Last year alone consumer borrowing expanded by $1,017.9 billion, up
from $839.4 billion the prior year.”
“New
mortgage borrowing surged 87% to $884.9 billion as more Americans
bought McMansions in the suburbs. The whole US economy is turning
into a hedge fund with national savings of only $133 billion against
national borrowing of $2,718, a 20-1 leverage factor.” [Storm
Watch Update Tipping
Points by Jim Puplava]
What
this means is that a demand for dollars or Federal Reserve Notes is
meaningless in today’s bubble world in paper fiat land. The
monetary base only increased by $33 billion last year, total credit
expansion was $2,718 billion.
So
when one speaks of demand for dollars, what do they mean? Is there
going to be a need to actually print $2,718 billion dollar bills or
Federal Reserve Notes? I think not. It is all a game of double-entry
bookkeeping in cyberspace. The figures already exist. They need not
be created anew.
However,
more can be created at will. As helicopter pilot extraordinaire and
Fed Chairman apparent Ben Bernanke states:
“But
the U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or,
today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many
U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost. By increasing the
number of U.S. dollars in circulation, or even by credibly
threatening to do so, the U.S. government can also reduce the value
of a dollar in terms of goods and services, which is equivalent to
raising the prices in dollars of those goods and services. We
conclude that, under a paper-money system, a determined government
can always generate higher spending and hence positive inflation.”
[Remarks by Governor Ben S. Bernanke before the National Economists
Club, Washington, D.C., November 21, 2002:
Deflation:
Making Sure "It" Doesn't Happen Here.
Also,
myself and others have shown, in paper fiat land debt does not, and
it cannot be – paid off. Debt can only be offset, or defaulted on.
Some also include inflated away, but that in my opinion comes under
the heading of offset. The point being, it isn’t going to get paid
off. There is no such thing as payment within the dishonest system
of paper fiat. Such is wishful thinking, the stuff of fairy tales.
If
debt were to be paid off in our system of paper fiat, as every unit
of debt were paid off, a unit of money would disappear. To pay off
debt would be the end of the system. They who receive the perpetual
interest rate stream do not want that to occur. That would be
the end of their golden cow that they have so painstakingly bred,
raised, and nurtured – their creature of wealth transference.
Any
short dollar thesis based on the demand for dollars to pay off debt
with is a bit of a stretch to say the least. The demand and supply
of dollars to service the debt with is what is most crucial. The
debt is never going to be paid off. Period. End of story.
As
mentioned in part four of Silver
IS Money the
Monetary Act of 1980 Depository
Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980
allows the Fed to
buy any asset it so desires at full face value. Which is a fair size
caliber weapon against deflation. But deflation is a very serious
opponent.
Any
thesis of deflation taking place, without the contraction of credit
is also a bit of a stretch. The monetary base doesn’t quite cut
it. Prices of stuff falling doesn’t cut it. Prices of assets
doesn’t cut it. They all may contribute to what does count, which
is the contraction of credit, which last year expanded by $2,718
billion. So, as of now, there is no contraction of credit. Just the
opposite is occurring.
Credit
is presently hyperinflating. When credit starts contracting, then
one can talk deflation.
This
was clearly explained and illustrated by Jim Puplava in his
Storm Watch Update article Tipping
Points.
However,
this in no way means that deflation cannot occur, it can. But
let’s at least be clear as to what it means, and what it is and
what it isn’t. It is a credit contraction that leads to credit and
debt default. And yes it can occur. And yes it may occur. But it is
not presently occurring, just the opposite is occurring.
“And
the moral of that is
The more there is of mine, the less there is of yours.”
The Twisted Irony of It All
Now
here is where it really gets twisted, and thus a bit confusing. It
does appear plausible to assume that an increased demand for dollars
would take place during a deflationary contraction. It also seems
plausible that a shortage or scarcity of dollars could therefore
take place during an episode of deflation.
But
the real exponential increase in the demand for dollars,
and the resulting scarcity of dollars does not occur in a
deflationary contraction,
it occurs during an episode of runaway
inflation – of hyperinflation.
How Can That Be?
It
sounds twisted because it is. Our entire monetary system has been
turned on its head and is upside down, inside out. Black is white
and white is black. Originally silver and gold defined the dollar.
Now silver and gold are priced in paper dollars – Federal Reserve
Notes, notes of confiscation and wealth transference.
Try
to find a definition as to what a dollar is anywhere in the United
States Code, you can’t, it ain’t there.
When
the silver and gold monetary system of the Constitution is debased
the way that ours has been plundered, the result is the mess we now
have before us, and all its twisted brothers and sisters that have
been bred and fostered along the way. It is a sad state of affairs
that need not be.
The
United States is the greatest country on the face of the earth,
which is why we have probably prevailed against such a
self-destructive monetary system for as long as we have. But the
stress and imbalances are beginning to show. Cracks are evident.
Even the systems generals are becoming worried:
“The
world is increasingly alarmed by America’s profligacy. It’s not
just the staff of the International Monetary Fund who lecture us as
if we were a banana republic. Global leaders at the Davos World
Economic Forum and other venues speculate openly about how long the
dollar will remain the world’s reserve currency, and about whether
the U.S. financial system will take down the global economy when it
implodes.” [Peter G. Peterson, former Chairman of the Council on
Foreign Relations and former Chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York]
Imagine
the opportunities available for all if we had a sound monetary
system based on savings, or the accumulation of excess production as
profits – the accumulation of wealth instead of debt. It can be
easily obtained, all we need to do is to follow the Constitution and
the Original Coinage Act of 1792.
Return Silver and Gold to their rightful place as the Sovereign of
Sovereigns
Think
about what those last three words mean – the Sovereign of
Sovereigns. They explain the inherent strength and soundness of
silver and gold, as they are powerful enough to keep sovereigns in
line, hence they are the Sovereign of Sovereigns. They are the
keepers of the temple.
They
have an innate ability of self-discipline and self-control. Silver
and gold cannot be printed up, or created by a computer – they
must be mined using hard labor from the bowels of the earth. The
supply of silver and gold cannot be instantaneously increased as if
one is going through the McDonald’s fast money supply window for a
quick fix.
Hyperinflation
So
is this thing called hyperinflation truly a pale horse that hell
follows after, an abomination and pestilence, the scourge of
mankind? A description follows, the reader can judge for themselves.
Hyperinflation
is inflation that has run amuck, the creature that is no longer
under the master’s restraint. Others have called it runaway
inflation, which is very apropos. We will now take a closer look at
this creature, for a detailed study of the issues see: Scylla
& Charbydis: The Scourge of Mankind.
The
accumulation of an excess production of goods, over the consumption
of goods, is called savings, the accumulation of wealth. Money, as
the common medium of exchange for all goods, is stored or hoarded
for future use, to transfer from savings into income, to exchange
for what is needed.
As
there is a limit to what man can produce, there is a corresponding
limit of excess production over consumption or savings that can
occur. The savings pool and hence credit are limited – in natural.
The
word credit is derived from the Latin creditum [a loan] and
from credere [to trust or believe in]. As covered in an
earlier paper, Gold:
Sovereign of Sovereigns money fulfills several roles, one of
them being the standard by which value is transferred through time.
Certain
individuals desire to borrow money on credit, which is the trust and
belief that they will repay the borrowed money. Other individuals
desire to loan their accumulated and excess savings to those in need
of money, and to charge a fee for doing so, in order to derive
interest from the employment of their savings.
As
long as the money is honest money, and the credit comes from out of
the savings pool already in existence, and the rate of interest is
honest, the transaction to lend and to borrow is honest and
justified.
In
an honest or sound monetary system, credit is taken from the pool of
savings and lent out as a loan. The cost of borrowing money or the
price of credit is the interest rate. Because the pool of savings
is limited, the amount of credit that can be lent out from it is
limited as well.
The
greater the demand for credit the greater is the interest rate that
is charged to borrow the savings. As the savings pool is drawn down
through lending, savings become scarcer, hence a higher rate of
interest is needed to convince savers to part with their savings.
But
that is in an honest or sound monetary system, not in a fraudulent
paper fiat system. In paper fiat land just the opposite takes place.
If the credit came from the savings pool, interest rates would rise
as the savings pool was drawn down.
Instead,
the Fed manipulates interest rates to keep them below the natural
rate of interest that would exist if credit came from savings,
which would limit the available amount of credit. This is one of
those dirty little secrets the keepers of the temple don’t want us
to know about, as it is how they manipulate the system. Or what they
call – fine tune. Euphemistically put, of course.
“The
issuers of the fiduciary media are able to induce an extension of
the demand for them by reducing the interest demanded to a rate
below the natural rate of interest, that is below that rate of
interest that would be established by the supply and demand if the
real capital were lent in natura without the mediation of money
(central banks), whereas on the other hand the demand for fiduciary
media would be bound to cease entirely as soon as the rate asked by
the bank was raised above the natural rate.” [Ludwig von Mises –
The Theory of Money and Credit]
Inflation
is the modis operandi of a paper fiat currency; it must inflate or
die. Inflation is the increase of the supply of money [quantity]
greater than the corresponding demand for money. Such behavior
results in a loss of the objective exchange value or purchasing
power [quality] of the currency.
As
monetary inflation continues, debasement of the currency continues
to takes place, and the loss of purchasing power increases. Our
money is continually becoming worth less and less. It requires more
units of money to buy the same amount of goods. This is the quality
aspect of money – its purchasing power.
However,
a funny thing happens on the way to the market. Because the
purchasing power of our money has been going down, the demand for
more quantities of money, to make up for the loss of purchasing
power, keeps increasing. No problem says the Fed, you want more
money, we will give it to you; and they do.
But in
the process of giving us more money, to meet the greater demand,
more purchasing power [quality] is lost, which then requires more
units of money [supply] to make up for the loss. Again the demand
rises for more supply. And so the process keeps repeating, it is a
vicious circle.
As the
purchasing power of money keeps lessening it creates a greater
demand, soon it is discovered that the purchasing power of the money
is falling faster and faster, faster than the demand is
rising.
What
was an unlimited supply of money meeting a limited demand for money
suddenly becomes an unlimited demand for money meeting a limited
supply of money, as the money can’t be created fast enough to keep
up or make up for the loss of purchasing power.
Suddenly
interest rates start to rise, as do prices. But the rise in interest
rates does not support the currency. The purchasing power of the
currency falls in spite of higher interest rates.
Slowly
panic starts to set in. People can’t spend their money fast enough
– before it looses more purchasing power.
Now
the monetary beast of inflation turns upon itself to feed. Suddenly,
what was an unlimited demand for money meeting a limited, although
ever-increasing supply of money, now becomes no
demand for money, as the market correctly perceives that
no amount [quantity] of money can make up for the loss of the
purchasing power [quality] of the money caused by the debasement of
the currency.
The
gig is up. The fraud is seen for what it is. The
currency is no longer accepted as
the common medium of exchange. The use of the currency ends.
The creature they created destroys itself by suicide – by runaway
inflation called hyperinflation. Hyperinflation
is the death-knell of all paper fiat currencies.
Staring Into The Abyss
Deflation
and hyperinflation are different in form, but they are identical in
substance – two opposite sides of the razor sharp edge of debt. On
either side lies the abyss. Deflation destroys the value of debt
through defaults and bankruptcies, hyperinflation by debasement and
loss of purchasing power.
The
decision as to the use of money and credit is no longer in the hands
of the producers in the economy, as it should be, it now rests with
the financial sector, with the bond market, as the bond market is
the debt market; and in paper fiat land we live and breathe and have
our being by debt.
Which
path we take at the fork is anyone’s guess, but is does appear
that the bond market will have a big vote in the choice. Will greed
of profit prevail, or will fear cause them to cut bait and run? Or
might honest money be reinstated? This also goes towards explaining
the action in the bond market of late.
Present
Goods Versus Future Goods
By
monetizing government debt, Federal Reserve Notes, which are
irredeemable promises to pay, circulate as the currency. This is a
diseased system, its cancer daily growing, draining its life away.
Consequently,
Federal Reserve Notes must be realized for what they are: future
goods being exchanged for present goods. A mechanism of wealth
transference that takes from the future to obtain in the present.
Most
are of the opinion that bank notes are present goods. But how can
that be? Even when backed by gold they were future goods, as they
represented an obligation that had not been meant.
If
a bank note is an obligation to be redeemed, it is an obligation
that has not yet been fulfilled or paid. It is waiting to be
fulfilled – in the future, hence it is a future good.
When
one uses bank notes they are exchanging a future good [the bank
note] for a present good [the item they exchange it for]. Federal
Reserve notes are bank notes of the Federal Reserve. They are future
obligations to pay.
Because
of the time preference of a future good to a present good, such a
transaction involves the extension of credit, as a promise to
fulfill a contract or obligation is being offered and accepted.
The
transaction, however, has not been completed – payment has not yet
been made. Goods have been exchanged on credit – they have not yet
been paid for, but simply discharged or offset.
This
is why Robert Hemphill stated the following in the forward of Irving
Fisher’s book, “100% Money,” when he was the Credit Manager Of
the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, Georgia:
“This
is a staggering thought. We are completely dependent on the
Commercial Banks.
Someone
has to borrow every dollar we have in circulation, cash or credit.
If
the Banks create ample synthetic money we are prosperous; if not, we
starve. We are absolutely without a permanent money system.
When
one gets a complete grasp of the picture, the tragic absurdity of
our hopeless position is
almost incredible, but there it is.
It
is the most important subject intelligent persons can investigate
and reflect upon. It is so important that our present civilization
may collapse unless it becomes widely understood and the defects
remedied very soon.” [quote by Robert Hemphill, Credit Manager FRB
of Atlanta]
A
fractional reserve system of money cannot be liquid.
It is without question, undeniably impossible.
If
more depositors demand to redeem more money then the banks have on
reserve, huge problems will occur. Such is what precipitates bank
runs, deflation, depressions, or worse yet – hyperinflation and
the complete destruction of the currency. History is replete with
such events.
The
truth be known – our monetary system is not real, it is one big
illusion, the only thing that holds it together is the confidence of
the people that believe in it, that most people will never want to
take their money out of the banks, because it they do, they will get
a rude awakening – it ain’t there –
it isn’t anywhere – it isn’t. Make no mistake about it, and
vote as your conscience and heart dictate.
Fractional
reserve lending of paper fiat money is
the biggest fraud ever committed by man.
The Weimar Hyperinflation
The
time – the dawn of World War I. The place – Berlin, Germany. The
player – the Reichsbank, the Central Bank of Germany. The
victims – the general populace of the German people. The plot –
the suspension of the rights of the people to convert banknotes to
gold.
The
inevitable result – when the mark fails, the Government has
nothing backing it, paper is paper, as exemplified by toilet paper
which is good for....
When
war broke out in 1914, the German mark was valued at U.S. $1 to 4
marks. By the end of the war, the ratio was U.S. $1 to 18 marks and falling.
The
Weimar Government was born in 1918. The Allies had forced Germany to
sign the Treaty
of Versailles. Among the clauses of the treaty was a demand for
war reparations to the victors: Britain and France, both
of whom needed to repay their loans to the USA.
Naturally,
da boyz from J.P. Morgan were glad to be of service, and were
instrumental in “structuring” all of the financing and
even a good deal (no pun intended) of the terms of the treaty.
May
1921. The war reparations figure arrives: £6,600,000,000 or
132,000,000,000 German marks. Germany comes close to making her
entire first payment of £2 billion. So far, so good.
However,
a few months later people in Germany were beginning to talk, about
the supply of money, the mark, which was becoming scarcer and harder
to get. People
became nervous and tried to redeem their bank notes for gold. They
were not allowed to do so.
Germany
could no longer meet its war reparations payments. It’s default of
reparations payments was used by France, Belgium, and Italy as the
justification to occupy the German territory of the Ruhr. The mark
responded by falling to U.S. $1 to 8,000 marks.
The
German people got a bit ticked off, so they decided not to work and
went on strike. The rest of the world responded in a show of
humanity and brotherhood, calling in all foreign loans and canceling
all foreign investments. The golden rule – inverted. Seems like da
boyz are into inversions and such.
Makes
one wonder if the wiz kids who wrote the Treaty of Versailles knew
what they were doing – or perhaps they knew all too well. J.P.
Morgan never was one to employ dummies, especially in the upper
echelon. The House of Morgan was more into the intelligent, quite,
sly, shrewd type. Unremitting and relentless – all in the pursuit
of profit, kneeling and paying homage before the alter of Lucre.
What
was the German Treasury to do? They did what all treasuries are
created to do, they printed more money, 24 hours a day, 7 days a
week, non-stop. Helicopter pilot extraordinaire Ben Bernanke would
have been envious.
By
1923, “wholesale prices have risen on average 5967 times the
peacetime level, those of foodstuffs to 4902 times, and those for
industrial products 7958 times.” [Franz Bumm of the Reich
Department of Health, quoted in F. K. Ringer, 'The German Inflation
of 1923']
The
value of the mark collapsed. First the Treasury minted 200 mark
coins, then 1,000 cloth notes, then 20,000 mark bonds. All became
worthless. At the pinnacle of the crisis, one American dollar was
worth roughly 4,200,000,000,000 marks.
"By
the end of the 1923 hyperinflation, the total nominal national debt
of Weimar Germany was worth the equivalent of a few pennies or
less." [Jonathan Tennenbaum]
A
loaf of bread cost 200,000,000,000 marks. This is when the stories
of wheelbarrows of paper money being needed to purchase basic
staples abounded, when people would steal the wheelbarrows and leave
the money behind. Incredible but true.
Remember This Well
In
1924, the German currency as represented by the mark was abolished,
it was no more. A new currency was issued called the Rentenmark. One
Rentenmark was worth 1,000,000,000,000 marks.
The
House of Morgan, always willing to give a helping hand, drew up and
initiated the Dawes Plan and the Young Plan, duly named after the
plan’s creators – da boyz, who have recently been reported to be
back in town, but rumors abound that so is Doc. Could get
interesting. Stay tuned.
But
this is a rare occurrence – isn’t it? Maybe, maybe not. The
reader can decide based on the evidence provided. Want more
evidence? No problem.

Then
of course there is our own example of the Continental during the
Civil War. The Continental Congress decided in May 1775 to issue
paper money to finance the war.
More
and more "Continentals" flowed into circulation as the war
progressed, and people realized that Congress could not possibly
redeem them in Spanish dollars, gold, or silver.
This
loss of confidence brought rapid declines in the purchasing power of
the Continental currency. "Not worth a Continental" became
a common place saying.
Continental
currency issued between 1775 and 1779 amounted to some $240 million,
a staggering sum for a new nation.
The
largest denomination banknote ever officially issued for circulation
was in 1946 by the Hungarian National Bank for the amount of 100
quintillion Pengő. image .
There was even a banknote worth 10 times more, that was printed, but
not issued image.
The
Post-WWII hyperinflation of Hungary in 1946 holds the record for the
most extreme monthly inflation rate ever -
41,900,000,000,000,000%. [info and links
courtesy of the Hungarian National Bank].
There
is the example of Bolivia in 1985 when hyperinflation
caused prices to increase 12,000% in less than a year. There are
more examples, but I think the point has been sufficiently made.
Paradigms
Paradigms
are models or examples that represent a fundamental worldview of
large groups of people, as in societies, nations, races, and
civilization itself. They are fundamental views on how man perceives
himself and the world about him, and his interaction with other men
and the world around him. Obviously we are not talking minor issues
here, but major issues.
Paradigms
are the basic belief structures of society, by which man gives
meaning and understanding to his existence, to what he considers to
be reality. One example would be the belief that all men die.
Another would be the belief that the world is round, although at one
time it was believed the world was flat.
This
last example illustrates that paradigms can and do change. Changes
in paradigms are not minor events, they are major invents that
impact on how man views himself and or the world about him. A change
in paradigms is referred to as a paradigm shift, as worldviews are
changing or shifting. Presently man believes he must die. Perhaps
that paradigm will remain. Perhaps it will change. Time will tell.
Paradigm Shift
A
paradigm shift is a radical change in a particular major belief
structure or worldview. Examples are the belief that the world was
flat, to the belief the world was round. Another is the belief that
the earth was at the center of our solar system, to the belief that
the Sun is at the center. As is evident, these are major or radical
changes, not minor ones.
The
above illustrations are examples of paradigm shifts in one
particular field of study or belief systems, that of astronomy.
Paradigms, however, exist in all major aspects of life, basically
they are the major aspects or belief systems of life. Paradigms
exist in economics, finance, and monetary theory for example.
An
example of a paradigm shift in economics is the belief in direct
exchange or barter, to the belief and use of indirect exchange and
money – the common medium of indirect exchange.
Life
is alive, there is a steady flux to life as it constantly changes.
It is a fluid process. Time is the measurement of change.
Consequently, man’s paradigms change as his awareness of himself
and the world about him changes. This is true in all of the many and
varied aspects of life and man’s awareness and understanding of
such.
Monetary Paradigms
As
has been shown by many writers, man first used direct exchange or
barter to trade goods with one another. Hence, direct exchange was a
paradigm. At the time of its use, man believed it was the best
method to exchange or trade for the physical necessities of life:
food, clothing, shelter, water, etc.
As
man and society grew more complex, so too did the need for a
different method of exchange evolve, as society and the trade that
sustained it was becoming more complex and involved. Consequently,
indirect exchange developed along with the use or need of money to
facilitate the indirect exchange.
Throughout
the ages, silver and gold coins were used as money, the medium of
exchange by which indirect exchange took place. For a detailed
discussion see GOLD:
Sovereign of Sovereigns.
Even
though the use of silver and gold coin has an ancient history of
thousands of years, dating back hundreds of years before Christ,
during the sixteenth and seventeenth century a paradigm shift took
place.
Man
developed the idea of using paper money that was to be backed by
silver and gold. The supposed reason being that it would allow for a
more elastic money supply. This was a radical shift that had major
ramifications as can be seen from the examples of hyperinflation
discussed earlier.
But
as all of life is in a constant state of flux, so too were the
beliefs in how paper money should best be issued. Another paradigm
shift took place, one that changed from paper money being backed by
silver and gold, to the belief that it need not be backed by
anything but the promise to pay.
This
would definitely qualify as a radical change or paradigm shift. Debt
was in vogue. Payment was out.
The
new age of borrow, borrow , borrow – so that you can shop to you
drop. Buy first, worry about paying later. Not a very sound
practice, to say the least. But it is making someone wealthy. But
who?
The Age
of Paper
The
age of paper fiat blossomed during the twentieth century. Granted it
had started much earlier, but the advent of the Federal Reserve in
1913 was the defining moment in the annals of paper fiat money. The
Fed and an elastic money supply of paper fiat go hand in hand, sort
of like white on rice – death and taxes.
But
the belief in paper was not limited to just Federal Reserve Notes as
circulating currency or cash. Paper took on a life of its own, as
paper represented the extension of credit or more money.
Unfortunately,
with the extension of credit and money in paper fiat land, debt
expands just as fast.
First
their were notes, bills, and bonds, mortgages of different types,
then interest only loans and principal only loans, collateralized
loans, futures, options, swaps, derivatives, and sdr’s. They are
fast using up the letter combinations available as names for the
paper investment vehicles that are dreamt up by the wizards of
finance.
Perhaps
we will have a paradigm shift to a new alphabet to handle the
profligacy of the financial wizards in the Land of Oz. [good book
the Wizard of Oz – It’s about the silver/gold/paper thingy –
honest, read it, it’s a trip – down the yellow brick road].
The Tides of Time
The
universe evolves and involves according to a plan and design. Some
of the basic elements can be found in sacred geometry, the golden
mean, and the golden spiral.
“Sacred
geometry is the study of geometric forms and their metaphorical
relationships to human evolution as well as a study in fluid
evolutionary transitions of mind, emotions, spirit, and
consciousness reflected in the succeeding transition from one sacred
geometric form (consciousness state) into another.”
“True
sacred geometric forms never fixate or stagnate on one single form.
Instead they are actually in constant fluid transcendence and change
(evolve or devolve) from one geometric form to another at their own
speed or frequency.”
“The
intangible essence within the sphere can be seen as the seed
within the seed and it lies at the core of the sphere. The
"seed within the seed" essence at the core of the sphere
is called the Golden Sacred Spiral.” [Sacred
Geometry]

Courtesy of Life Resources
“In
general, because the golden mean has no beginning and no end, it
then becomes a fairly good metaphor for spirit in a material
reality.”
“One
of the characteristics of the Golden Mean Spiral is that it
continues on in ever diminishing spirals. The spiral soon becomes so
infinitesimal that, theoretically, it could break the plane of one
dimension and enter another dimension. Once it does this it could
begin again inside another dimension as a comparatively large
spiral, working its way down to becoming smaller yet again until it
would break that dimensional plane and move into another one and
onward into infinity.”
In
contrast to the golden mean (which has no beginning and no end) the
Fibonacci spiral has a definite beginning but not necessarily an
end. Once begun, the Fibonacci spiral can continue on into infinity.
“The
Fibonacci sequence possesses a unique property. Different from the
Golden Mean, the Fibonacci begins at 0 or 1 but quickly approximates
the Golden Mean with ever increasing accuracy. The Fibonacci
sequence seems to be strongly attracted to the Golden Mean Sequence
(phi ratio) and attempts to approximate the phi ratio
(1.6180339…). This accuracy increases until it asymptotically
reaches its limits. At that point, one could not tell the difference
between the two spirals except at or near the beginning points.”
“This
characteristic of the Fibonacci (always attempting to approximate
the Golden Mean with greater accuracy) can be used as a metaphor for
our human condition, which will help us gain deeper insights into
the nature of spirituality.”
“If
the Golden Mean is used as a metaphor for spirit and the Fibonacci
is used as a metaphor for physical incarnation (spirit incarnating
into the physical and attempting to perfect itself to the ideal),
then metaphorically, our physical incarnation begins as a Fibonacci
life form.”
“Without
full memory of the whole and integrated picture of the universe, we
start off our young lives in a seemingly erratic pattern of
identifying ourselves as purely physical beings that are finite and
mortal. As we gain experience and wisdom through the physical
incarnation, we begin to sense and discover our spirit and begin the
process of identifying ourselves more closely with our greater
selves. Our attraction to move closer to God is like Fibonacci’s
attraction for approximating the Golden Mean.” [Sacred
Geometry]
The
reason for digressing into sacred geometry is to show how all of
life is in a state of flux or change and fluidity. Order in chaos
and chaos in order. Change in changelessness and changelessness in
change. Also as it has been written: “that which changes never is,
that which is never changes”.
The New Paradigm
So
we know that change is all around. We see things are born, grow,
deteriorate, and die; and then are reborn to start the process over
again. Evolution and involution – of nature. But that which is
never changes. Hmm.
History
can be seen to be full of change, very fluid in that the past
becomes the present and the present becomes the future and vice
versa. Some call it the eternal now. History has experienced major
paradigm shifts throughout the ages. We have listed and discussed
some of them. So what is the newest paradigm? What might be the
ultimate paradigm?
As
stated earlier, man progressed from direct exchange to indirect
exchange, a paradigm shift. Eventually another shift occurred from
silver and gold as money to paper bank notes as money; first backed
by specie, eventually not backed by anything but the promise to pay.
Credit,
debt, and money morphed into one basic entity. The age of debt was
born – the paradigm of paper was born.
People
are beginning to question the validity of such belief in paper debt
as money. The United States has gone from being the largest creditor
nation in the world to the largest debtor nation in the world.
Now
two parents have to work to provide a living that used to be had by
one parent working.
The
purchasing power of the dollar bill has lost 95% of its value since
the Federal Reserve took control of the monetary reigns in 1913.
A
paradigm shift from the belief in paper debt to the belief in
tangible
assets such as silver and gold is at hand.
The Golden Age or Paradigm
If
the existing problems within society are going to be corrected, such
correction takes hard work and effort. Hard work and effort requires
an honest system of money to allow for the means of honest savings
to provide honest credit, so that the honest accumulation of wealth
can be had by all. Some call it honest and true progress.
Selling
the future of our children and their children, to be condemned to a
life of working to pay off the debt that we are presently
accumulating is not progress, it is the antithesis of progress.
If
we are going to correct the problems of the world and to make the
world a better place, then a system of honest money is imperative,
as all of physical life is based on the money used to exchange the
necessities of life by.
A
return to the honest money of the Constitution of Silver and Gold
Coin is crucial if true progress is to be had. Otherwise we are
condemning ourselves and our progeny to a life of perpetual bondage
and slavery to debt. The time for honest money is now.
The Ultimate Paradigm
What
might be the ultimate or final paradigm or paradigm shift? No one
knows that for sure, as no one knows what the future holds, as the
future is not ours to see. But if we look around the world we move
and have or being in, and if we look within ourselves, perhaps we
can see a glimmer of the truth.
Perhaps
the characteristic
of the Fibonacci sequence or spiral to constantly attempt to
approximate the Golden Mean with greater accuracy or perfection is
the ultimate paradigm. Perhaps the Bible is saying the same thing
when it states:
“Be
ye perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect.”
“And
the perfect becomes yet more perfect.”
The Crossroads
Presently
the world is at a crucial crossroads. Fighting is still occurring in
the Middle East, in Jerusalem where the battle over the Sacred
Ground has taken place since the dawn of man. Have we not learned
from history, from our past? War is not the answer to anything. The
worship of Mars to obtain power over ones fellow man by conquest is
not the way. The worship of Lucre is not the way. These are all
false idols and prophets. Be not deceived, for “when the perfect
comes the imperfect shall cease to be.”
“Then
I saw heaven opened, and behold, a white horse!
He who sat upon it is called faithful and true!”
“I
am the Alpha and the Omega,
the
first and the last, the beginning and the end."
“And night shall be no more”

Honest
Money of Honest Weights and Measures of Silver and Gold Coin


The
Time Is Upon Us – The Reckoning Is Approaching

© 2005 Douglas V. Gnazzo
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