Winsmith
09-11-2005, 01:44 AM
Monetary Realism4
Merrill M.E. Jenkins Sr. (1919-1979) was the first Monetary Realist. He was the inventor of the dollar bill changer that some erroneously call a currency changer. I knew him well. His first of 7 books was: "Money", The Greatest Hoax On Earth. His last book was: Aeonic Delusions of Money, which I published for him posthumously. All but the first are free on the web.
Jenkins studied literature of the Federal Reserve and found that they reveal much. They admit in Modern Money Mechanics that they operate a confidence game and that the history of banking is a history of fraud. It does not matter what they admit when less than one percent read it and the few who recite it are sdubject to ridicule. They prefer healthy money to healthy people and published a booklet titled Keeping Our Money Healthy where they said that their system "works only with credit" that would keep its value "if there were fewer people bidding against each other."
Nobel Laureate, Paul Samuelson, described the Federal Reserve as an "omnipotent counterfeiter" in his Economics, Fourth Edition.
Economist, John Maynard Keynes wrote in Economic Consequences of The Peace: "If governments should refrain from regulation...the worthlessness of the money becomes apparent and the fraud upon the public can be concealed no longer."
We should have no greater concern than the many ways our consumption is regulated to conceal the fraud of counterfeiting which is necessary to insure the permanence of the Fed's omnipotence. I have much info on this. :cool:
Merrill M.E. Jenkins Sr. (1919-1979) was the first Monetary Realist. He was the inventor of the dollar bill changer that some erroneously call a currency changer. I knew him well. His first of 7 books was: "Money", The Greatest Hoax On Earth. His last book was: Aeonic Delusions of Money, which I published for him posthumously. All but the first are free on the web.
Jenkins studied literature of the Federal Reserve and found that they reveal much. They admit in Modern Money Mechanics that they operate a confidence game and that the history of banking is a history of fraud. It does not matter what they admit when less than one percent read it and the few who recite it are sdubject to ridicule. They prefer healthy money to healthy people and published a booklet titled Keeping Our Money Healthy where they said that their system "works only with credit" that would keep its value "if there were fewer people bidding against each other."
Nobel Laureate, Paul Samuelson, described the Federal Reserve as an "omnipotent counterfeiter" in his Economics, Fourth Edition.
Economist, John Maynard Keynes wrote in Economic Consequences of The Peace: "If governments should refrain from regulation...the worthlessness of the money becomes apparent and the fraud upon the public can be concealed no longer."
We should have no greater concern than the many ways our consumption is regulated to conceal the fraud of counterfeiting which is necessary to insure the permanence of the Fed's omnipotence. I have much info on this. :cool: