'The Bank Was Saved, and the People Were Ruined.'
by
Jeff Thomas
International
Man
Recently
by Jeff Thomas: Manipulation
of the Gold Price
The above quote
is from William Gouge, commenting on the Panic of 1819. The panic
had been caused when the First Bank of the United States had first
expanded the money supply dramatically by offering loans, then contracted
the money supply by tightening its requirements for new loans, causing
a crash.
This is a useful
quote, as, in its simplicity, it states the very nature of crashes
brought on by irresponsible banking practices. In every case in
which this occurs, it is possible through the complicity of the
government of the day.
The origin
of this syndrome goes back to Mayer Rothschild, a very clever fellow
who, in the late 18th century, offered financial benefits to politicians
in Germany in trade for political support for whatever activities
his bank might practice. Rothschild was a long-term thinker; his
method involved the offering of regular emoluments to politicians
without their having to provide him with anything immediately. Then,
when he needed a large favour, he would call it in.
Movie buffs
may see a similarity between Rothschild's method and the deals made
by Don Corleone in The Godfather. "Some day and
that day may never come I'll call upon you to do a service
for me."
Rothschild
created boom-and-bust cycles which were highly profitable for his
bank, but depended upon the support of the government when the "bust"
part came along.
As described
above, the bank would offer loans to the public on generous terms,
then suddenly rein in those terms on all future loans. The claim
the bank would make would be that inflation was taking place and
the bank was taking action to control that inflation. (Of course,
Rothschild did not bother to mention that it was the bank itself
that had caused the inflation.)
The net result
would be a "panic," or, in today's terms a "depression."
Everyone involved would be harmed by the event except the politicians
and the bank.
This scheme
was accurately and succinctly described by G. Edward Griffin in
1994:
"It
is widely believed that panics, boom-and-bust cycles, and depressions
are caused by unbridled competition between banks; thus the need
for government regulation. The truth is just the opposite. These
disruptions in the free market are the result of government prevention
of competition by the granting of monopolistic power to the central
bank."
Mayer Rothschild's
five sons followed in his footsteps and would go on to control much
of the banking in Europe. The Rothschilds are perhaps best known
for the Bank of England, which is still in operation today as one
of the world's most powerful banks.
So, let's have
a brief look at central banking in America.
In 1782, the
Bank of North America was opened in America during the infancy of
the United States. It was modelled after Rothschild's Bank of England.
It operated as a central bank and, as it was organised by Congressman
Robert Morris, it was intended from the start to serve both its
directors and the politicians of the day.
The bank did
indeed serve the bankers and politicians at the expense of
the depositors. Although the bank lost its charter in 1783, an effort
was soon afoot to create a virtually identical bank, called, "The
Bank of the United States." The proposal was backed by the
Rothschilds, who intended to control it.
Having just
seen, first hand, how much damage a central bank, with a fascist
relationship to the government could do, a terrible (and ongoing)
row took place within the Cabinet of President George Washington
as to whether another potentially disastrous bank should be allowed.
The main protagonist was good Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson,
who said,
"The
system of banking [is] a blot left in all constitutions, which,
if not covered, will end in their destruction... I sincerely believe
that banking institutions are more dangerous than standing armies;
and that the principle of spending money to be paid by posterity
is
but swindling futurity on a large scale."
On the other
side, Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton led the argument
in favour of the creation of a second central bank. Incredibly,
even though Congress had just seen what a disaster this could be,
they approved the charter for the new bank in 1791. It opened with
less than nine percent of the private funds required by its charter.
A primary object
of the bank was to provide fiat currency for the government, whilst
collecting deposits from the public. Immediately, the new bank began
to print money and to lend it, with predictable results. By 1811,
it had closed its doors, having rewarded only its directors and
some politicians, whilst the depositors lost their money.
This, surely,
would be the end of the failed concept of a central bank, a fascist
partnership between financiers and politicians. However, in 1816,
Congress granted a charter to the second "Bank of the United
States." Within three years, the bank had caused the Panic
of 1819, as stated in the opening paragraph of this article and,
again, as Gouge said, "the bank was saved and the people were
ruined."
In 1832, President
Andrew Jackson was up for re-election and he risked his success
on a campaign to stop the renewal of the charter of the Bank of
the United States. Although he won both his re-election and his
bid to stop the renewal of the charter, both the Rothschild family
and their American counterparts continued their efforts to create
a central bank that would provide both bankers and politicians with
wealth whilst using depositors as cash cows.
They succeeded
marvelously in 1913 with the creation of the Federal Reserve, a
more sophisticated relationship between bank and State that has
operated ever since. In the boom-and-bust cycles it has created,
the US dollar has been devalued by over 96% and, in 1999, the repeal
of the Glass Steagall Act allowed bankers to create the Mother of
All Loaning Sprees, resulting directly in the collapse of the real
estate bubble in 2007 and the crash of the stock market in 2008.
But the system
today is far more advanced than in the eighteenth century. It is
no longer necessary to fold the banks involved, or at least not
immediately. In the aftermath of the 2007/2008 crashes, Government
has declared that the closing of the central banks would be the
worst catastrophe that could befall the country and therefore, the
country must borrow heavily to re-fund them. No requirement was
made of the banks to actually offer these funds on loan, let alone
to bail out the debtors. The banks have instead been able to absorb
the funds, continuing the massive bonuses to the very directors
who caused the disaster in the first instance.
The above history
is a brief, thumbnail sketch of events relative to central banking
in the US since the formation of the country. It is not meant to
be all-encompassing and the reader is encouraged to study the subject
further. But the sketch does have a purpose.
Today, most
of the First World is in the midst of an economic crisis that has
been caused by debt. That debt has been the product of bankers and
governments working together.
History shows
us that the present situation is not an accident. It is the repetition
of a very successful method by which bankers, with the complicity
of governments, create boom-and-bust cycles; cycles that, whilst
damaging for nearly all citizens of a country, are very profitable
for those who create the cycles.
If we are to
watch the evening news, there are, daily, politicians and pundits
offering "solutions" "Provide quantitative
easing," "tax the one percent," or simply, "kick
the can down the road." Through endless debate, viewers are
encouraged to believe that somehow, the government and the directors
of the banks and the Chairman of the Federal Reserve will come up
with a solution to the problem.
However, a
brief read of the history above suggests that there will be no "solution,"
as no solution is intended by those who have created the problem.
The entire concept is to periodically hang the depositor out to
dry. (It's not done to be purposely unkind; it's done because it's
so very profitable.)
If the reader
has not yet been squeezed to the point that his net worth (value
of assets, minus debt) is under water, he would be well advised
to consider means by which his liquid assets can be removed from
the banking system, a system that, if history repeats, may soon
take those remaining assets, as the second half of the Great
Unravelling unfolds.
Does this mean
that the reader should run right down to the bank and withdraw his
assets? Not necessarily. What it does mean is that it would be best
to recognise that a clear pattern has existed for hundreds of years
regarding boom-and-bust banking and the reader would be well-advised
to ask himself some unpleasant questions. Here are a few:
- Will my
bank be one of those that crashes?
- Will my
savings be lost partially or entirely?
- How much
time do I have before I should remove my deposits?
- Will my
bank honour the agreement of the paper gold that they have sold
me?
- Will I be
able to take delivery of allocated gold that they "hold"
for me?
- What do
I do with my assets if I withdraw them from the bank?
- Will there
be banks that will remain in business? Which ones?
The above questions
should be asked periodically, as events unfold. Doing so may mean
the difference between the retention or loss of assets that the
reader now trusts his bank to hold for him.
If
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Reprinted
from International
Man with permission.
October
10, 2012
Jeff
Thomas [send him mail]
is British and resides in the Caribbean. The son of an economist
and historian, he learned early to be distrustful of governments
as a general principle. He began his study of economics around 1990,
learning initially from Sir John Templeton, then Harry Schulz and
Doug Casey and later others of an Austrian persuasion.
Copyright
© 2012 International
Man
The
Best of Jeff Thomas
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