Monday, February 29, 2016

MONEY (or the lack thereof)




What is our current money?
Let's recap, shall we.....

Within the U.S. there is a debt-free money already available that circumvents bank lending, it's called "legal tender".  Legal tender is not borrowed, loaned or spent into circulation.  The only way it gets into circulation is by your demonstrated productivity and by your demand for the medium.

Another interesting thing, neither the Fed or the banks possess the legal authority to create money, and they don't.  What they do create is asset-backed, debt-based private credit, which is not designated or acknowledged in law as being a money, or a currency, or a medium of exchange, with the only legal aspect associated with it, residing in the debts incurred with its use.

You see, ours is a Legal Tender Monetary System. This means that our money is not defined by Ludwig von Mises, John Maynard Keynes, Murray Rothbard, Milton Friedman, Joseph Salerno, Paul Krugman, Mike Maloney, Peter Schiff, Ron Paul or any other economist or talking head.  Nor is it defined by Austrian Economics, Keynesian Economics, Monetarist Economics, Capitalist Economics, Socialist Economics, the Federal Reserve, the U.S. Banking system, IAS-IFRS, US GAAP, conventional wisdoms, esoteric blather or what people may use.  It means our money is defined by law.  And nowhere in law does it designate or even acknowledge Fed and bank generated asset-backed, debt-based private credit as being a legal tender, or money, or currency, or a medium of exchange, it is 100% Bank Debt, even when it comes from the Fed.

The legal tender in use today is provided as a duty, an obligation of the U.S.G., born from the outlawing and confiscation of gold as money back in 1933. People with and without bank accounts surrendered their gold property and received the legal tender as replacement property. The legal tender system today is an extension of that time. That time has obscured the legal tender's gold origins, existing as the people's property first, makes the legal tender no less our property in the present, and the banking system's legal obligation to provide either upon demand or over time, the fruits of our labor as represented by those deposit accounts, our legal tender property. It was our money/property first.

People are confusing a means of payment, the transfer of a debt obligation (credit), for the medium of exchange, what is owed as payment (an asset).  By legal definition, United States coins and currency, including Federal reserve notes, are legal tender money, the medium of exchange (the asset) by law. Checks as well as debit cards, credit cards, money orders, etc., are a means of payment, referred to as a generally accepted (institutional) arrangement or method that facilitates the delivery of money from one to another. Payment has not been made unless or until actual money proper has changed hands. All credit is debt outstanding.

All you’re doing when you use a debit card (credit) to make a purchase is, transferring your obligation to pay the vendor, to the bank, payment has yet to be made. The bank deducts the amount from its debt to you, as represented by your account with them, and adds that amount to the debt it owes to the vendor, as represented by his account with the bank. There was no money or currency of any type, digital, electronic or otherwise, used or exchanged in that transaction, it's just the banks transferring their legal obligations to pay from one account to another.

The notion that we’re using ‘digital money’ or ‘digital currency’ or ‘digital dollars’ or 'credit dollars' or 'credit money' (terms made-up by ignorant people who believe in magic) as a medium of exchange is nothing more than a trick of the mind, a figment of our overactive imaginations, a deception, it’s how we rationalize the transaction, and it's how the banksters get away with stealing our labor and wealth.

Note: Bank deposit accounts are nothing more than bank managed records of legal claims held by account holders against the legal tender money that is supposed/assumed to be in the bank's vault.  That's why deposit accounts are categorized as liabilities of the banks, why account holders are designated as "the creditor" and banks are designated as "the debtor" in all deposit account contracts, and it's why the FDIC was created.  A deposit account (a.k.a. record of bank debt, a legal liability) is not, and cannot be money in and of itself.

When you write a check or use a debit card you are directing the bank to transfer a specified amount of 'money proper' to a designated recipient. Debiting your account signifies that the transfer of money has been made, and crediting the recipient's account signifies that the money has been received and is available for immediate withdrawal or for use in other bank administered transactions.

That the banks resort to debiting and crediting user accounts with the amounts without effecting the transfer of money as directed, is perpetrating a fraud upon the account holders. That the banks do not have the money and do not possess the means to get the money, and referring to that condition of insolvency as 'fractionally reserved banking', only compounds the fraud.

Regardless of anyone's acceptance of a bank crediting their account in the amount as payment, by law, claimed or not, money is still owed to the account holder by the bank.  Crediting a deposit account with the amount and payment are two separate events, especially so in a banking system that is chronically necessitous of the money it owes, in other words, institutionally bankrupt.

The only reason(s) their fraudulent system gives the appearance (perception) of working is the Fed ran interbank settlements system which allows the use of securities as a means to settle accounts between banks instead of the legal tender, which bolsters the perception that their debt-based system works. And I find it puzzling that people claim a credit to a deposit account is money/payment when the Fed ran interbank settlements system conclusively demonstrates that it is not.


.....


Correcting a few reassuring lies.

The Federal Reserve has to be one of the most talked about and least understood institutions on the face of the planet.  It's attributed with powers it does not possess and functions that it does not do, and the majority of the misunderstanding stems from the profound and systemic conflation of money, credit and asset values, which is exacerbated by an apparent systemic inability to discern the difference between theory and factual reality.

The "Money Multiplier" theory, is pure fiction.

Does the Money Multiplier Exist?
“The role of reserves and money in macroeconomics has a long history.  Simple textbook treatments of the money multiplier give the quantity of bank reserves a causal role in determining the quantity of money and bank lending and thus the transmission mechanism of monetary policy.  This role results from the assumptions that reserve requirements generate a direct and tight linkage between money and reserves and that the central bank controls the money supply by adjusting the quantity of reserves through open market operations.  Using data from recent decades, we have demonstrated that this simple textbook link is implausible in the United States for a number of reasons.   First, when money is measured as M2, only a small portion of it is reservable and thus only a small portion is linked to the level of reserve balances the Fed provides through open market operations.  Second, except for a brief period in the early 1980s, the Fed has traditionally aimed to control the federal funds rate rather than the quantity of reserves.  Third, reserve balances are not identical to required reserves, and the federal funds rate is the interest rate in the market for all reserve balances, not just required reserves.  Reserve balances are supplied elastically at the target funds rate.  Finally, reservable liabilities fund only a small fraction of bank lending and the evidence suggests that they are not the marginal source data for the most liquid and well-capitalized banks.  Changes in reserves are unrelated to changes in lending, and open market operations do not have a direct impact on lending.  We conclude that the textbook treatment of money in the transmission mechanism can be rejected.  Specifically, our results indicate that bank loan supply does not respond to changes in monetary policy through a bank lending channel, no matter how we group the banks."
Please Note: This also debunks the myth of "Base Money", "Central Bank Money", and "High Power Money" as well.


Note: This paper is a neat piece of work.  They go about debunking one theoretical fiction "the money multiplier" while promoting another theoretical fiction, "bank deposit liabilities are money".  There is nothing in law that designates bank deposit liabilities as being "money" so, when they use the term "money", think "bank managed debit/credit".
Banks do not loan money.


Working Paper No. 529: Banks are not intermediaries of loanable funds
Note: Banks are not intermediaries between borrowers and savers (because there's no money), they originate pseudo-loans as pseudo-deposits, irrespective of credited savings accounts or current reserves held.
Banks do not loan money.


Note: Legal tender money (cash) is not borrowed or loaned into circulation.
Banks do not loan money. 
** They are attempting to remove this information, read it while you can.


Applicable Laws and Information.


Added to provide a different perspective and tone


** They are attempting to remove this information, read it while you can.


Legal tender Law


Payment of obligations and interest on the public debt
"The faith of the United States Government is pledged to pay, in legal tender, principal, and interest on the obligations of the Government issued under this chapter."

Seigniorage in the United States
How Much Does the U. S. Government Make from Money Production?

All profits obtained by the Fed's monetary activities and surrendered to the Treasury are counted as seigniorage interest payments on the notes issued (rent).  In other words, the Fed is paying the Treasury interest on the notes it puts into circulation, and that interest rent is all of the Fed's profits minus dividend payments and expenses.

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Now, we can observe in the Treasury's Legal Tender Status, (a brief synopsis of Section 16 of the F.R.A.) that the Fed must pay for the production of notes (FRNs), and they must post collateral of equal value to the notes it then issues into circulation.  (The Fed assets used as the collateral mentioned, have expanded to include Mortgage-Backed Securities and Special Drawing Rights Certificates, along with Treasuries and Gold Certificates.  This collateral backs the issue of the notes to the Fed, regulating the Fed's access to the legal tender money.)   Also noteworthy is that member banks must buy the notes at face value from the Fed by drawing down their accounts with the Fed and that, Federal Reserve notes represent a first lien on all the assets of the Federal Reserve banks and on the collateral specifically held against them.

Taking that into consideration along with Congress's right to take possession of the notes and collateral upon the dissolution of the Fed, the seigniorage interest payments on the note issue made by the Fed to the Treasury and the fact that the U.S.G. can pay its debts with U.S. legal tender, we can infer that, the Fed does not own the legal tender Federal Reserve notes.  Combining that with the New York Fed's explanation of how FRNs get into circulation, we can also infer that FRNs are neither borrowed, loaned, or spent into circulation.

From this, we can objectively conclude that Federal Reserve notes are a debt-free legal tender currency, issued into circulation through the Fed and the banking system, in compliance with their legal obligation to supply that money property, as represented by the credited deposit accounts, to the account holders upon their demand.

As I cannot prove a negative, the next three assertions require a little bit of effort, they require disproving.

1) There is no law anywhere that grants to the Federal Reserve or the banking system the authority to create US money or any money of any type, and they don't.

2) There is no law anywhere that designates or acknowledges the debt-based credit generated by the Fed or the banking system as being a legal tender, or money, or currency, or even a medium of exchange.

3) The only legal validity associated with the debt-based private credit, is held by the debts incurred with its use. 

The takeaway from all of this should be the realization that, there are two Federal Reserve administered systems in operation and running concurrently within the U.S.:
1) The legal tender monetary system. - Implemented by U.S. Law.
2) The Fed and Banks' asset-backed, debt-based private credit system.. - Implemented by the FOMC as Fed "Monetary CREDIT Policy" and Rote Hearsay.

Currently, There is a total of *$2.23-Trillion in U.S. legal tender money/currency in circulation around the globe. Of that, there is an estimated total of *$210-Billion in circulation within the U.S. Of that, there is *$94-Billion held in bank vaults.  (*updated)

That $94-Billion held in bank vaults backs the $4.9-Trillion in credited demand deposit accounts. It also backs the $13.5-Trillion in credited savings accounts. It also backs the $100s of billions in bank mediated credit transactions that occur on a daily basis. It also backs all government expenditures.

And that, is the stark reality of the Fractionally Reserved Banking Fraud.

Please note, they're counting $18+Trillion in bank debt to deposit account holders as being the "money supply".  Yes, that's right, The bank's debt to you is your money.

How the Debit/Credit Card System Actually Works

Note: The U.S.G. is under no legal obligation to make good on Fed and bankster generated debt-based private credit.  They proved that point in the 1930's and again in 2008, so the notion that the U.S.G. will simply print to cover, is erroneous.


100% of ALL Monetary Theories are Pure Bullshit





To Be Continued......


Feel Free To Comment

8 comments:

  1. Well explained. Will be useful for an amateur and another, indeed.
    My AOL Mail Login

    ReplyDelete
  2. I agree with most of what you wrote, but I think there are a few misconceptions. After reading this I think you'll understand which. I will only touch on some of what I feel are basic concepts about money, since to fully divulge my thoughts will neccesitate about ten pages. I feel that the average person gets turned off by financial labels that they have to look up--many of which are vague, anyway. It would be more comprehensible if the processes's involved were mentally illustrated. I am not studied in economics, but I'll give it my shot.
    I think money started as unwritten contracts. When one part of the contract was unfulfilled, one (UOMe) was left. After having various of these in a society, they were standardized by a value measuring instrument, and then generalized; wherein, they became (I AM OWED's) "money." These were placed in a secure place "bank", but as you know, the bank loaned out these I AM OWED's (debt)....then fractional reserve started and so on.
    If you keep these (hopefully correct) fundamentals in mind as you reread your article I believe you'll get a clearer perspective and be able to connect the dots easier. Thanks for the great info.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I appreciate your input. The instrument promising to pay money became the legal tender money promised as payment in 1933 and to this day, it is what the banks are legally obligated to pay to every deposit account holder, upon their demand. A large segment of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act is dedicated to that legal requirement.
      No theories, just facts (it's a "rule of law" thing).

      Delete
  3. So FDIC means nothing except if my bank gets robbed? It's not Depression exempt? Do I need to withdraw all my cash today?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The FDIC is a deposit insurance program paid into by the banks with a $500-Billion line of emergency credit with the Treasury. If bank failures do not exceed what the FDIC has on hand and its line of credit with the U.S.G. and you don't mind being reimbursed in bank debt/credit instead of cash, you should be alright.

      Delete
    2. But being reimbursed from a line of credit from a bankrupt bank sounds like I wouldn't get nearly the dollar amount (if any) and that money wouldn't be very liquid? Also, 500 billion does not seem like enough to cover every bank account. Forgive me if I misread the post but it doesn't sound like it would be alright? Thank you for your insight, I had no idea prior to this how banks operated.

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  4. I guess my real question is what do you do with your money? Is it tied up in stocks? Do you hide cash in the "mattress"? Are you buying up californium? The last was a bit of a joke. I am not a person with a ton of cash by any means but I guess it would really suck if I lost even the pitiful bit I have now. Thank you for your help!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's not about what I or anyone else does with their money, basically, it's about property rights as it applies to money and banking, and the rule of law.

      Delete

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