The
Ron Paul Federal Reserve Abolition Act
By Stephen Lendman
ccun.org, December 26, 2008
On June 15, 2007, Ron Paul introduced HR 2755: Federal
Reserve Abolition Act. There were no co-sponsors, no further action was
taken, and the legislation was referred to the House Committee on
Financial Services and effectively pigeonholed and ignored.
It's a bold and needed measure to "abolish the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System and the Federal reserve banks, to repeal the
Federal Reserve Act, and for other purposes."
The bill provides
for management of employees, assets and liabilities of the Board during
a dissolution period, and more as follows:
-- it designates the
Director of the Office of Management and Budget to liquidate Fed assets
in an orderly and expeditious manner;
-- transfer them to the
General Fund of the Treasury after satisfying all claims against the
Board and any Federal reserve bank;
-- assume all outstanding
Board and member bank liabilities and transfer them to the Secretary of
the Treasury; and
-- after an 18-month period, submit a report
to Congress "containing a detailed description of the actions taken to
implement this Act and any actions or issues relating to such
implementation that remain uncompleted or unresolved as of the date of
the report."
On November 22, "End the Fed" protests were held in
39 or more cities nationwide (including New York, Chicago, Los Angeles
and Washington, DC), but you'd hardly know it for lack of coverage.
Attendee demands were simple and emphatic:
-- end a
private banking cartel's illegal monopoly control over the nation's
money supply and price;
-- return that power to the US Treasury
as the Constitution mandates;
-- end a fiat currency system
backed by the waning full faith and credit of the government; and
-- return the country to a sound, hard currency monetary system.
"End the Fed! Sound Money for America!" is their slogan, and writer and
US policy critic Webster Tarpley puts it well:
"....the
privately owned central bank....has been looting and wrecking the US
economy for almost a hundred years. We must end a system where
unelected, unaccountable cliques of bankers and financiers loyal to
names like Morgan, Rockefeller, and Mellon set interest rates and money
supply behind closed doors, leading to de-industrialization, mass
impoverishment, and a world economic and financial depression of
incalculable severity."
In theory, the Fed was established to
stabilize the economy, smooth out the business cycle, manage a healthy,
sustainable growth rate, and maintain stable prices. In fact, it failed
dismally. It contributed to 19 US recessions (including the Great
Depression) and significantly to the following equity market declines
that accompanied them as measured by the Dow or S & P 500 average - the
S &P's inception was 1923; it became the S & P 500 in 1957:
--
40.1% (Dow) from 1916 - 1917;
-- 46.6% (Dow) from 1919 - 1921;
-- the 1929 (Dow) crash in two stages - 47.9% in 1929
followed by a strong, temporary rebound; then - 86%; an 89% peak to
trough total from October 1929 to July 1932;
-- 49.1% (Dow) from
1937 - 1938;
-- 40.4% (Dow) from 1939 - 1942;
-- 25.3%
(S & P) from 1946 - 1947;
-- 19.8% (S & P) in 1957;
--
26.8% (S & P) from 1961 - 1962;
-- 19.3% (S & P) in 1966;
-- 32.7% (S & P) from 1968 - 1970;
-- 45.1% (S & P) from 1973 -
1974;
-- 20.2% (S & P) from 1980 - 1982;
-- 32.9% (S &
P) in 1987;
-- 19.2% (S & P) in 1990;
-- 18.8% (S & P)
in 1998;
-- 49.1% (S & P) from 2000 - 2002; and
-- about
50% (S & P) and counting (excluding a bear market rebound) from October
2007.
The Fed is also directly responsible for monetary
inflation and the decline in the US standard of living since its year
end 1913 inception and especially since the 1970s. From the late 18th
century to 1913, virtually no inflation existed under the gold standard
except during times of war. Using government data, it now takes over
$2000 to equal $100 of pre-Fed purchasing power. In other words, a 1913
dollar is worth about a nickel today.
At that time, a dollar was
defined as 1/20 of an ounce of gold or about an ounce of silver. The Fed
then changed the standard away from precious metals to the full faith
and credit of the government. Ever since (except for periods such as the
1930s) inflation eroded the currency's value and (more than ever)
continues to do it today.
It's why one analyst calls the dollar
"nothing more than a popular symbol for the tangible substances it once
represented - gold and silver." Its true value represents the world's
waning confidence in America's ability to honor its debt obligations,
and with good reason.
Under the Federal Reserve System (besides
inflation), we've had rising consumer debt; record budget and trade
deficits; a soaring national debt; a high level of personal and business
bankruptcies; today, millions of home foreclosures; high unemployment;
the loss of the nation's manufacturing base; growing millions in
poverty; an unprecedented wealth gap between the rich and all others;
and a hugely unstable economy now lurching into crisis mode.
In
a November 24 Wall Street Journal op-ed, Hong Kong-based author and
equity strategist Christopher Wood believes "The Fed Is Out of
Ammunition." With trillions in personal wealth erased, "there is little
doubt that we are witnessing a classic debt-deflation bust at work,
characterized by falling prices, frozen credit markets and plummeting
asset values."
He notes how "over-investment and
over-speculation" on borrowed money got us here. Today, the Fed can
control the supply of money but not its velocity or the rate it turns
over. The current collapse set it in reverse with no signs of an
impending turnaround.
Wood believes monetary and fiscal measures
won't work. There are no easy solutions - "not as long as politicians
and central bankers (won't) let financial institutions fail," and let
market forces wash out excesses over time.
The Fed and
Treasury will spend trillions of dollars to correct things, "but will
merely compound (the problem) by adding debt to debt." The current
crisis will end up "discrediting mechanical monetarism - and with it the
fiat paper-money system....The catalyst will be foreign creditors
fleeing the dollar for gold. That will in turn lead to global
recognition of the need for a vastly more disciplined global financial
system" with gold very likely playing a part.
Absent a hard
money currency has led to the kind of monetary madness that Nouriel
Roubini calls "crazy" policy actions - an explosion of quantitative
easing in the trillions with no end of it in sight.
Roubini:
"The Fed Funds rate has been abandoned...as we are already effectively
at (zero interest rates) that signal a liquidity trap....Even (a sharp)
fall in mortgage rates....will be of small comfort to debt burdened
households as only those (that) qualify for refinancing will be able to"
net out a "modest" monthly mortgage saving of about $150.
The
Fed's "desperate policy actions....will eventually lead to much higher
real interest rates on the public debt and weaken the US dollar (the
result of a) tsunami of implicit and explicit public liabilities and
monetary debt." It will get foreign investors to "ponder the long-term
sustainability of the US domestic and external liabilities," and why
not. They keep growing exponentially, and with nothing restraining a
runaway Fed, dollar debasing may continue to the point where no one will
want to hold them. It's gotten some analysts to recommend moving a
portion of savings out of them into gold - the ultimate safe haven in
times of crisis.
Abolish the Fed and Return the Nation's Money
Creation Power to Congress Where It Belongs
Ron Paul has been in
the vanguard of the Abolish the Fed movement, and on September 10, 2002
on the House floor said:
"Since the creation of the Federal
Reserve, middle and working-class Americans have been victimized by a
boom-and-bust monetary policy. In addition, most Americans have suffered
a steadily eroding purchasing power because of the Federal Reserve's
inflationary policies. This represents a real, if hidden, tax imposed on
the American people...."
"It is time for the Congress to put the
interests of the American people ahead of the special interests.
Abolishing the Federal Reserve will allow Congress to reassert its
constitutional authority over monetary policy."
"Abolishing the
Federal Reserve and returning to a constitutional system (as mandated)
will enable America to return to the type of monetary system envisioned
by our nation's founders: one where the value of money is consistent
because it is tied to a commodity such as gold....I urge my colleagues
(to co-sponsor) my legislation to abolish the Federal Reserve."
Paul introduced his legislation in the 106th, 107th, 108th, and 110th
Congresses. Each time, it died in committee. On November 22, he attended
the End the Fed rally in Houston and addressed the crowd.
He
called the current economic crisis as bad or worse than in the 1930s and
said: "we know who caused it. It was the Federal Reserve that gave us
all this trouble." He explained that we had a "free ride for decades
because we've had a system that was devised where the dollar could act
as if it were gold."
Not after August 1971 when Nixon closed the
gold window, ended the 1944 Bretton Woods Agreement, and no longer let
dollars be backed by gold or converted into it in international markets.
A "new economic system" was created. It let us "spend beyond our means,
live beyond our means, print money beyond our means," and it caused our
current dilemma.
We created "an appearance of great wealth. But
it was doomed to fail," and it became apparent in the past year: "the
failure of the dollar reserve standard that was set up in August of
1971. It has ended. The only question" is what will replace it?
There's all kinds of talk, including setting up a new international fiat
currency "with the loss of US sovereignty in total. We have to stop this
move towards one world government and a one world currency." Otherwise
our freedom and Constitution will be lost. When it was written, it
contained prohibitions.
Article I, Section 8 gives Congress
alone the right to coin (create) money and regulate the value thereof.
The founders also wanted gold and silver to be legal tender, not fiat
money, nor should there be a central bank. In 1935, the Supreme Court
ruled that Congress cannot constitutionally delegate this power to
another body. By creating the Federal Reserve System in 1913, Congress
violated the Constitution it was sworn to uphold and defrauded the
American public. Today's crisis is the fruit of its action, but watch
out.
"The writing is on the wall, and the end of this system"
approaches. "They cannot patch it up, they can't up it back together
again. They know it and we know it. The only argument is what is it
going to be replaced with?"
For now, "Central banks in the West
especially have been dumping gold to artificially lower (its price) to
pretend the dollar is of great value. They're still doing it, but
they're running out of time (and) out of gold." It's shifting to
stronger economic powers, ones who've been saving money, loaning it back
to us, "and are ready to buy up America if we continue to do this. So it
is a contest (between fiat) money and hard money, and that is such an
important issue." It reflects what Daniel Webster once said:
"There can be no legal tender in this country....but gold and silver.
This is a constitutional principle....of the very highest importance."
Gold, however, wasn't the original monetary system standard. Silver was,
the silver dollar, and only a constitutional amendment can change it.
Paper currency as well, whether backed by gold or not, wasn't
the hard money authorized by the Constitution. Honest money is honest
weights and measures of silver and gold. Federal Reserve Notes are paper
fiat debt obligations. Fiat currency of any kind is a mechanism of
wealth transference from the public to a privileged elite - through
inflation and loss of purchasing power. It creates debt for the many and
wealth for the few, especially when a private banking cartel controls
it.
Our existing monetary system combines money, credit and debt
into a dishonest system of empty promises in exchange for future ones.
There is no eventual payment, only unfulfillable assurances to new
generations that will be forced to pay for the debt now accumulated.
It's a moneychangers dream - ever-expanding debt and a continuing
interest rate stream, masquerading as wealth creation for the people.
It's in fact a system of bondage and indebtedness benefitting the few at
the expense of the many, a modern-day feudalism. It's how an elite 1%
got to own 70% of the nation's wealth.
In the 1920s, Josiah
Stamp, Bank of England president said:
"Banking was conceived in
iniquity and was born in sin. Bankers own the earth. Take it away from
them, but leave them the power to create deposits, and with a flick of
the pen (today a computer keyboard) they will create enough deposits to
buy it back again. However, take it away from them, and all the great
fortunes like mine will disappear, and they ought to disappear, for this
would be a happier and better world to live in. But if you wish to
remain the slaves of Bankers and pay the cost of your own slavery, let
them continue to create deposits."
Creating the Federal Reserve
System to let bankers and not the government control the price and
amount of fiat money debased the currency and is the root cause of
today's financial problems. A return to honest gold and silver weights
and measures is needed. The Constitution states that nothing but these
metals are money and that paper bills of credit (like Federal Reserve
notes) aren't allowed. Even ones backed by gold as the Constitution
doesn't grant Congress the power to be bankers. It may only coin
(create) and borrow money, not loan it out or give it away - and
certainly not to bankers at the expense of the public interest.
Further, the Constitution contains no provision allowing Congress to
enact legal tender laws. Article I, Section 10 forbids the individual
states from making "anything but gold and silver coin a legal tender in
payment of debts." However, US Code, 31 USC 5103, establishes US coins
and currency, including Federal Reserve notes, as legal tender and has
been used to debase the currency ever since - the way Gresham's Law
works: bad (or debased) money drives out good (the kind with little
difference between its nominal and commodity values).
For
example, until 1964, US coins (except pennies and nickels) contained 90%
silver. Starting in 1965, dimes and quarters were converted to their
current nickel - copper composition. Half-dollars (now produced in
limited quantities) had 90% silver. It then dropped to 40% in 1965 and
by 1971 all US coins (except pennies and commemorative mintings)
contained nickel and copper and no silver - a good example of debasing.
As for paper currency, it's just paper.
Under a private banking
cartel's control, it's been misused, stolen, and corrupted the way New
York Times columnist Floyd Norris suggests in his November 24 article
headlined: "Another Crisis, Another Guarantee." First the banks, then
the auto companies, and who knows who's next in line for theirs. "As the
nation's obligations rise into the trillions, at some point investors
(and the public) may begin to question whether a government running huge
deficits can also credibly promise that the dollar will not lose its
value." How can there be any faith and credit left when it's vanishing
and the Fed and Treasury operate like giant hedge funds.
It got
UK-based Eclectica Asset Management chief investment officer, Hugh
Hendry, concerned enough to say: "All (US) financials will be owned by
the government in a year. I bet you. It's not good," but it's coming. US
taxpayers will be "paying for this for a long time," and it's deeply
concerning considering the amount of money creation - with no end in
sight as problems keep mounting and limitless amounts keep being thrown
at them.
On November 25 the Financial Times associate editor,
Wolfgang Munchau, also worries about the Fed's "weapon of mass
desperation" (so-called quantitative easing); focusing only on deflation
and risking a currency crisis. He calls it a flawed, dangerous and
shocking oversight - the possibility of "a mass flight out of dollar
assets (at some point) and a large rise in US market interest rates,
followed by a huge recession."
A Bloomberg.com November 24
headline highlights the problem: "US Pledges Top $7.7 trillion to Ease
Frozen Credit," and it might as well have said there's plenty more where
that came from if needed. With another $800 committed to two new loan
programs the total reached $8.5 trillion, according to Bloomberg
or nearly 60% of US 2007 GDP of $14 trillion, and the numbers keep
rising exponentially because the problems continue to mount.
Bloomberg puts it in perspective saying "the (current) commitment dwarfs
(TARP and puts) Federal Reserve lending last week (at) 1900 times the
weekly average for the three years before the crisis," and with the
added $800 billion it's about 2100 times pre-crisis levels.
In
addition, the Fed refuses to identify recipients of about $2 trillion of
emergency handouts or what troubled assets (if any) it's accepting as
collateral. Call it lending or spending. They're public tax dollars
being spread around like confetti and debasing it all as a result.
The Free Lakota Bank
On November 21, this writer discussed how
Lakotahs are treated in an article titled "Fate of Lakotahs Highlights
America's Failed Native American Policies." On November 24, the
following press release and follow-up information announced:
"People of Lakota Launch Private Bank for Only Silver and Gold
Currencies." All deposits are "liquid, meaning they can be withdrawn at
any time in minted rounds. Some may confuse our economic system with
isolationism....which it is not. Since we currently produce much more
than we consume, we have the right to decide what medium of exchange to
accept for our effort. And so we accept only value for value. Across our
great land, over thousands of tribes and merchants participate in our
system of trade. We invite others to trade with us and bring value back
into our transactions."
This is the world's first non-reserve,
non-fractional bank that accepts only silver and gold currencies for
deposit. The Lakotas "invite people of any creed, faith or heritage to
unite in an effort to reclaim control of wealth. It is our hope that
other tribal nations and American citizens recognize the importance of
silver and gold as currency and decide to mirror our system of honest
trade."
The bank states that it issues, circulates and accepts
for deposit "only AOCS - Approved silver and gold currencies." It calls
paper not real money but "merely a promise to pay - a mortgage on wealth
that does not exist, backed by a gun aimed at those who are expected to
produce it. Since we deal only in real money, we do not participate in
any central bank looting schemes." When corruption is rewarded and
"honesty becom(es) self-sacrifice....you may know that your society is
doomed." Even as victims of adversity, Lakotas are working to prevent
it.
End the Fed
Privatized money control is the single
greatest threat to democratic freedom. As former lawyer, economist,
academic, and Canadian prime minister (from 1935 - 1948) William Lyon
Mackenzie King once said:
"Until the control of the issue of
currency and credit is restored to government and recognized as its most
conspicuous and sacred responsibility, all talk of sovereignty of
Parliament and of democracy is idle and futile....Once a nation parts
with control of its credit, it matters not who makes (its) laws....Usury
once in control will wreck any nation," and indeed it has, far more now
than ever.
It worried Thomas Jefferson enough to call banking
institutions "more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies" at a
much simpler time in our history. The right to create and control money
belongs to the people through their elected representatives. For the
past 95 years, powerful bankers accountable to no one have had it. They
effectively run the country (and own it), and unless We the People
change things, we'll continue to be victimized by economic tyranny and
the eventual political kind that's coming.
Stephen
Lendman is a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on
Globalization. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at
sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The Global Research News Hour on
RepublicBroadcasting.org Monday through Friday at 10AM US Central time
for cutting-edge discussions on world and national issues with
distinguished guests. All programs are archived for easy listening.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=11435
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