Back in 1969, a Disney cartoonist sat down at his story board
and produced a booklet that the Disney organization never saw:
The Official Counterfeiter. It was a presentation of fractional
reserve banking and the role of the Federal Reserve System.
His name
was Vic Lockman. As far as I know, he was the first cartoonist
ever to do a booklet based on the Austrian theory of the business
cycle. He revised the booklet in 1974. It
is now back online.
It is a shame
that he did not do a version of this booklet for one of the Scrooge
McDuck comic books. He wrote stories for Uncle Scrooge. Of course,
the Disney organization would not have released it. Too controversial.
In 1974,
let alone 1969, Lockman's version of how the banking system works
was confined to the fringe: Austrian economics. Because he was
a gold coin standard advocate, the Greenbackers did not respond
favorably to his booklet. They are committed to fiat money.
In 1969,
Ben Bernanke was 15 years old.
It was a
different world in 1969. Nixon had just taken office. A stock
market crash began in 1969, and a recession followed. There was
a small surplus in the federal budget in fiscal 1969 the
last time for three decades. Nixon then ran back-to-back deficits
in the $23 billion range unheard of at the time.
The Federal
Reserve inflated. Gold began to be redeemed by foreign central
banks at the fixed price (ever since 1934) of $35 per ounce. Nixon
unilaterally closed the gold window on August 15, 1971. That ended
the last traces of the gold standard.
Ron Paul
was elected to Congress in the spring of 1976. This was a special
election. I went to work on his staff. He lost in November by
about 268 votes out of 180,000. I went off his staff.
Bernanke
was 22 years old in November 1976.
Paul was
re-elected in 1978. It took him from then until 2008 to get a
hearing for his explanation of the Federal Reserve System. It
took the crash of 2008 to get him this hearing, months after he
had called off his run for the Republican nomination for President.
It has taken
a long time almost a century from the founding of
the Federal Reserve to the beginning of public awareness about
the way that the FED works and the enormous harm that it causes.
Bernanke
is now 58. He is the world's premier counterfeiter.
LEGALIZED
COUNTERFEITING
Counterfeiting
is universally defined as a crime against the state. That is because
states want to defend their turf. When you have a monopoly, you
want to keep competitors out.
The Federal
Reserve System was granted a monopoly over paper money creation.
There used to be a legal competitor issued by the U.S. Treasury.
We read on Wikipedia:
A United States Note, also known as a Legal Tender Note, is a
type of paper money that was issued from 1862 to 1971 in the U.S.
Having been current for over 100 years, they were issued for longer
than any other form of U.S. paper money. They were known popularly
as "greenbacks" in their heyday, a name inherited from the Demand
Notes that they replaced in 1862. Often called Legal Tender Notes,
they were called United States Notes by the First Legal Tender
Act, which authorized them as a form of fiat currency. On the
back, they give notice that:
This
Note is Legal Tender for All Debts Public and Private Except
Duties On Imports And Interest On The Public Debt; And Is
Redeemable In Payment Of All Loans Made To The United States.
They were
taken out of circulation in 1971, the year that Nixon took the
country off the gold exchange standard. Today, we still see these
words on Federal Reserve Notes: "This note is legal tender for
all debts, public and private." This is the power of legal tender.
It applies only to paper notes. It does not apply to digital money.
So, the Federal
Reserve is not breaking the law. The Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System is a government agency, unlike the 12 Federal
Reserve Banks.
The Federal
Reserve's Notes looked very much like the Treasury's greenbacks
until the U.S. Notes were taken out of circulation. The government
did not sue the FED for trademark violation. That was because
the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 authorized the FED as a central
bank that would act with the authority of the U.S. government.
The traditional
counterfeiter before 1914 printed bills that looked like Treasury
notes. He spent them into circulation. Then, after 1913, when
Federal Reserve Notes also looked like United States Notes, counterfeiters
had a choice: imitate Federal Reserve Notes or imitate U.S. Notes.
The preference was for Federal Reserve Notes, which steadily replaced
U.S. Notes.
The Secret
Service enforces the laws against counterfeiting. It has always
gone after counterfeiters of Federal Reserve Notes.
Why should
private counterfeiting be illegal? Because the government recognizes
that pieces of paper with ink do not create value. They merely
enable the counterfeiters to persuade sellers of valuable goods
and services to transfer ownership of these assets to people who
have printed up pieces of green paper with politicians' pictures
on them. Privately printed paper bills constitute a drain of those
assets away from the government and its beneficiaries and its
clients. This leaves fewer assets for the clients of the official
counterfeiter to purchase. The government shouts: "Unfair!"
The government
recognizes that, with open entry into the counterfeiting market,
paper money would be reduced to the market price of pieces of
paper within a few years. This would bring the government into
disrepute. Politicians fear this. If the public were ever to recognize
that the power to inflate is the power to transfer valuable assets
to people who have merely printed up pieces of paper, the voters
might demand a return to a gold standard, where counterfeiting
is more difficult to pursue without getting caught.
WORD
MAGIC
The politicians
are involved in a form of word magic. They pretend that the ownership
of a printing press by the U.S. government endows this press with
magical properties. The press creates great wealth out of inexpensive
paper and ink. We might call this the Rumpelstiltskin effect,
except that old Rump actually had to work from dawn to dusk to
spin all that gold.
With a modern
printing press, plus some special paper purchased from a company
that retains the longest-running monopoly in America, plus some
special ink, Congresspersons think the government can create wealth.
This is the heart of Keynesianism. It is also the heart of monetarism,
supply-sidism, and all of the other schools of opinion except
the Austrians.
If private
counterfeiters enter the market, they are implicitly making a
statement: "There is no magic here. There is just illusion." The
more counterfeiters who practice their trade, the more price inflation
there will be. This would reduce the number of voters who believe
in word magic. It would force governments to tax directly (income
taxes) and indirectly (VAT taxes) through tax collectors. This
creates political resistance. It is so much easier to print money.
No one saw
this more clearly than Beardsley Ruml, the Rockefeller agent who
was the head of the New York Federal Reserve Bank during World
War II. He had started out as the head of the Laura Spelman Rockefeller
fund. He invented withholding taxation, which was imposed in 1943.
In 1945, he gave a speech to the American Bar Association. He
told the assembled lawyers this.
If
we look at the financial history of recent years it is apparent
that nations have been able to pay their bills even though their
tax revenues fell short of expenses. These countries whose expenses
were greater than their receipts from taxes paid their bills by
borrowing the necessary money. The borrowing of money, therefore,
is an alternative which governments use to supplement the revenues
from taxation in order to obtain the necessary means for the payment
of their bills.
A government
which depends on loans and on the refunding of its loans to
get the money it requires for its operations is necessarily
dependent on the sources from which the money can be obtained.
In the past, if a government persisted in borrowing heavily
to cover its expenditures, interest rates would get higher and
higher, and greater and greater inducements would have to be
offered by the government to the lenders. These governments
finally found that the only way they could maintain both their
sovereign independence and their solvency was to tax heavily
enough to meet a substantial part of their financial needs,
and to be prepared if placed under undue pressure
to tax to meet them all.
In other
words, the government becomes dependent on private, profit-seeking
lenders. This is bad from the government's point of view.
Then he made
this statement: "The necessity for a government to tax in order
to maintain both its independence and its solvency is true for
state and local governments, but it is not true for a national
government." Why isn't it true of a national government?
Final
freedom from the domestic money market exists for every sovereign
national state where there exists an institution which functions
in the manner of a modern central bank, and whose currency is
not convertible into gold or into some other commodity.
The United
States is a national state which has a central banking system,
the Federal Reserve System, and whose currency, for domestic
purposes, is not convertible into any commodity. It follows
that our Federal Government has final freedom from the money
market in meeting its financial requirements.
Or, paraphrasing
another important social commentator, "Free at last! Free at last!
Thank Ben Almighty, we're free at last!"
BENPELSTILTSKIN
If you picture
Bernanke as a bald troll seated in front of a spinning wheel,
with a pile of straw next to him and a pile of gold in front of
the spinning wheel, you would have the correct image of real magic.
Instead, picture him seated in front of a printing press with
paper and ink on one site and Federal Reserve Notes pouring out
of the press. This is the correct image of word magic.
If Bernanke
could do real magic, he would not be a salaried employee of the
federal government. He would not be a tenured professor at Princeton,
either. He would be laboring as an independent contractor in luxurious
obscurity, working with a team of ex-CIA agents, who would have
him under house arrest a very nice house. He would be working
out of Panama, maybe, or perhaps the Bahamas. Next to him on his
desk would be a large pile of copies of a children's book: The
Goose That Laid the Golden Eggs. He would greet every
visitor by giving him a copy of the book. "You really should read
this."
He is not
in the Bahamas. He is in Washington, D.C. This is because he can
do only word magic. Examples:
Your
hometowns may be struggling with foreclosures. You may have had
difficulty getting a loan to buy a car or a house. You may have
family members who have had trouble finding employment in a tough
job market. You may be worried about your own job prospects when
the time comes for you to leave the military. So this morning
I thought I'd first say a few words about what the Federal Reserve
is doing to help strengthen our economy and increase economic
opportunity.
And this:
At
the Federal Reserve, we are working hard both as central
bankers and as financial regulators to help restore our
nation's prosperity.
And this:
The
Federal Reserve will certainly do its part to help restore high
rates of growth and employment in a context of price stability.
This is the
central banker's equivalent of the time-honored promise, "Let
mommy kiss it, and the pain will go away." Then after mommy kisses
it, she gets out the alcohol, and says, "This is going to sting."
Bernanke
is in "let mommy kiss it" mode. He knows he will soon move to
"this is going to sting." He will blame Congress when that time
comes.
CONCLUSION
It is a lot
easier for critics of the Federal Reserve today than it was in
1969, when Vic Lockman printed up the first edition of The
Official Counterfeiter. We have had Nixon's two recessions,
Ford's recession and price inflation, Carter's price inflation
and recession, Reagan's recession, Bush I's recession, Bush II's
recessions, and a 6-to-one increase in consumer prices. Gold is
up by a factor of 49 to one. But we still have the Federal Reserve
in charge. We still have not had an independent audit of the FED,
especially of the gold in the vault of the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York.
In short,
word magic still is the ace-in-the-hole of the U.S. government
and most of the world's governments.
The
official counterfeiters still run the world. So, when the debt-based
monetary system finally goes belly-up as word magic systems
always do they will get all the blame they deserve.
You may not
think the system will go belly-up. Most people don't. That is
why the official counterfeiters are still in charge. But if the
secret of perpetual wealth is pieces of paper with dead politicians'
pictures on them, consider this: the last politician to make it
onto a coin was Dwight Eisenhower, and we never see the coins
(dollars). On paper, the last one to make it was McKinley: the
$500 bill. Have you ever seen a $500 bill?
If you believe
in word magic, think of a $100,000 bill with a picture of George
W. Bush on it, in front of a sign that says: "Mission Accomplished."