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           |  | 
 As Schools Crumble:
 Quiet Call for 
	  Revolution in Philadelphia
 
 By Ellen Brown
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 23, 2012
 
 
 
 “You will not be able to plug in, turn on and cop out.You will 
	  not be able to skip out for beer during commercials,
 Because the 
	  revolution will not be televised. . . .
 The revolution will be live.”
 
 --From the 1970 hit song by Gil Scott-Heron
 
 
 Last week, 
	  the city of Philadelphia's school system announced that it expects to 
	  close 40 public schools next year, and 64 schools by 2017. The school 
	  district expects to lose 40% of its current enrollment, and thousands of 
	  experienced, qualified teachers.
 
 But corporate media in other 
	  cities made no mention of these massive school closings -- nor of those in 
	  Chicago, Atlanta, or New York City. Even in the Philadelphia media, the 
	  voices of the parents, students and teachers who will suffer were omitted 
	  from most accounts.
 
 It’s all about balancing the budgets of 
	  cities that have lost revenues from the economic downturn. Supposedly, 
	  there is simply no money for the luxury of providing an education for the 
	  people.
 
 Where will those children find an education? Where will 
	  the teachers find work?  Almost certainly in an explosion of private 
	  sector “charter schools,” where the quality of education -- from the 
	  curriculum to books to the food served at lunch -- will be sacrificed to 
	  the lowest bidder, and teachers’ salaries and benefits will be sacrificed 
	  to the profits of the new private owners, who will also eat up many 
	  millions of dollars of taxpayer subsidies.
 
 Why does there 
	  always seem to be enough money for military expansion, prisons, bank 
	  bailouts and tax cuts for the wealthy, but not enough for education—or for 
	  jobs, housing, healthcare, or old age pensions?  These are not 
	  “welfare” but are part of the social contract for which we pay taxes and 
	  make social security payments.
 
 In an
	  
	  article reprinted on Truthout on May 10th titled “Why Isn't Closing 40 
	  Philadelphia Public Schools National News?,” Bruce Dixon posed this 
	  answer:
 
 The city has a lot of poor and black children. Our ruling 
	  classes don't want to invest in educating these young people, preferring 
	  instead to track into lifetimes of insecure, low-wage labor and/or prison. 
	  Our elites don't need a populace educated in critical thinking. So 
	  low-cost holding tanks that deliver standardized lessons and tests, via 
	  computer if possible, operated by profit-making "educational 
	  entrepreneurs" are the way to go.
 
 “Lifetimes of insecure, 
	  low-wage labor or prison”—this is very close to the “indentured servitude” 
	  that was abolished along with slavery by the 13th Amendment to the 
	  Constitution, ratified in 1865.  The freed slaves are being 
	  recaptured by debt, beginning with the debt of school loans, followed by 
	  credit card debt, mortgage debt, and healthcare costs.
 
 As 
	  was cynically observed in a document called the Hazard Circular, allegedly 
	  circulated by British banking interests among their American banking 
	  counterparts in July 1862:
 
 [S]lavery is but the owning of labor 
	  and carries with it the care of the laborers, while the European plan, led 
	  by England, is that capital shall control labor by controlling wages. This 
	  can be done by controlling the money. The great debt that capitalists will 
	  see to it is made out of the war, must be used as a means to control the 
	  volume of money. . . . It will not do to allow the greenback, as it is 
	  called, to circulate as money any length of time, as we cannot control 
	  that.  [Quoted in Charles Lindburgh, Banking and Currency and the 
	  Money Trust (Washington D.C.: National Capital Press, 1913), page 102.]
 
 The quotation may be apocryphal, but it graphically conveys the fate 
	  of our burgeoning indentured class.  It also suggests the way out: we 
	  must recapture the control of our money and banking systems, including the 
	  issuance of debt-free money (“greenbacks”) by the government.
 
 Meanwhile, in Other Unreported News . . .
 
 That 
	  alternative vision was put before a conference in Philadelphia in late 
	  April that drew delegates from all over the United States.  The theme 
	  of the first Public Banking in America conference, held at the Quaker 
	  Friends Center on April 28-29th, was that to fix the economy, we first 
	  need to take back the “money power”—the power to create currency and 
	  credit.
 
 Led by keynote speakers Gar Alperovitz and Hazel 
	  Henderson and highlighted in an 
	  electric speech by twelve-year-old Victoria Grant, the conference was 
	  all about solutions.  As
	  
	  summarized by OpEdNews editor Josh Mitteldorf:
 There were 
	  two visions expressed . . . . The first is the very practical idea that 
	  states and cities around America could be rescued from insolvency if they 
	  had their own banks, instead of relying on commercial banks to borrow 
	  money through bonds. Tax-exempt bond issues supply money to states and 
	  municipal governments typically at 5 or 6% interest, while banks these 
	  days are able to borrow from the Fed at 1/4% per year.
 The second 
	  vision is . . . the radically-subversive idea that the system we have for 
	  introducing money into the economy is a boon for the banks, but perhaps a 
	  major drag on our economy. Perhaps a simple, direct system of money 
	  creation by the Treasury Dept instead of the Fed would put an end to 
	  cycles of recession, and create a foundation for long-term prosperity.
 Banking is a huge leech on our economy. 40% of every dollar we spend on 
	  goods and services -- 40% of all that we create and all we consume -- is 
	  siphoned off the top as bank interest in one form or another. (Calculations 
	  of Margrit Kennedy) The US Government is in the absurd position of 
	  paying interest to a private bank for every dollar that is put into 
	  circulation. The Federal Reserve system has privatized the power to create 
	  money, which, according to the Constitution, ought to belong to Congress 
	  alone. Presently, interest on the national debt costs the Federal 
	  government $500 billion in 2011, and (because of structural deficit 
	  spending) it is the fastest-growing portion of the Federal budget.
 Five hundred billion dollars could be saved annually just by refinancing 
	  the federal debt through our own central bank, interest-free.  This 
	  is not an off-the-wall idea but has actually been done, very successfully.  
	  Among other instances, it was done in Canada from 1939 to 1974, as was 
	  detailed by the youngest and oldest speakers at the conference, 
	  12-year-old Victoria Grant and former defense minister Paul Hellyer, 
	  founder of the Canadian Action Party.  Another Canadian at the 
	  conference, Toronto Councillor Kristyn Wong-Tam, has proposed that the 
	  Toronto city council could improve its finances by forming its own bank.
 The direct solution to the economic crisis, urged by veteran money 
	  reformer Bill Still, would be for the federal government to simply create 
	  the money it needs, as the American colonists did by printing paper scrip 
	  and Abraham Lincoln did by printing greenbacks.
 
 But cities 
	  and states don’t need to wait for a deadlocked federal Congress to act.  
	  As Wong-Tam has proposed for Toronto, they can divest their public 
	  revenues from the too-big-to-fail banks and put them in their own 
	  publicly-owned banks.  These banks could then do
	  
	  what all banks do: leverage capital, backed by deposits, into money in 
	  the form of bank credit.
 
 This newly-created bank money 
	  would then be available for the use of the local government interest-free 
	  (since the government would own the bank and would get the interest back 
	  as dividends).  Among other possibilities, the money could be used to 
	  restore the schools.  This would not be an expenditure but an 
	  investment, as
	  
	  illustrated by the G.I. Bill, which provided education and 
	  low-interest loans for returning servicemen after World War II.  
	  Economists have determined that for every 1944 dollar invested in the G.I. 
	  Bill, the country received approximately $7 in return, through increased 
	  economic productivity, consumer spending, and tax revenues.
 
 Legislation for public banks has now been introduced in 18 U.S. states, on 
	  the model of the highly successful Bank of North Dakota (BND).  
	  Elaborated on at the Public Banking conference by Ed Sather and Rozanne 
	  Junker, the BND is currently the country’s only state-owned bank and has 
	  been a major factor in allowing the state to escape the recent credit 
	  crisis.  North Dakota is the only state to boast a significant budget 
	  surplus every year since the economic downturn of 2008.
 
 Ellen Brown noted that 40% of banks globally are also publicly-owned.  
	  These are largely in the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India, and 
	  China), which also escaped the credit crisis, largely because their public 
	  banks did not rely on derivatives and, unlike private banks, lent 
	  counter-cyclically to cushion their economies from the downturn.
 
 Conference speaker Samuel Giles proposed that even public 
	  universities could set up their own banks, which could then leverage 
	  university monies for the university’s own use, rather than giving those 
	  assets away to Wall Street to be speculated with and lent back at much 
	  higher interest rates.
 
 Innovative Solutions for Pennsylvania
 
 Speakers Michael Sauvante and Mike Krauss noted that efforts are underway 
	  in several Pennsylvania and Ohio municipalities to create public banks. 
	   One possibility is for public banks to take an aggressive role in ending 
	  the foreclosure crisis by acquiring abandoned and foreclosed homes by 
	  eminent domain.  These homes could be added to the asset base of the 
	  bank, which could extend credit to restore them and then sell or rent them 
	  at reasonable rates.
 
 Krauss noted that Philadelphia already 
	  has a strong effort underway to create a “land bank”—a bank to acquire, 
	  rehabilitate and create productive uses for the city's more 
	  than 40,000 vacant properties—and legislation (HB 1682) has been 
	  introduced in the state legislature to enable this effort.  But the land 
	  bank proposed is not designed to function as a depository bank that 
	  leverages funds into credit.  Rather, it would simply work with 
	  appropriated funds or bond revenue. This is a positive step toward 
	  addressing a real need, but it could be enhanced by turning the land bank 
	  into a public bank—a chartered bank having the power to create money as 
	  credit on its books.
 
 The efforts for developing public 
	  banks in Pennsylvania are being led by the Pennsylvania Project, which was 
	  a co-sponsor of the Philadelphia conference and is supported in its work 
	  by the Public Banking Institute and the Center for State Innovation.  
	  The Pennsylvania Project is creating partnerships with other Pennsylvania 
	  public policy organizations to introduce legislation for a state Bank of 
	  Pennsylvania in 2013, after elections are held and a strong foundation of 
	  support has been laid.
 
 Revolution Without Bloodshed or War
 
 
 We live under a tyranny today that is just as intolerable and unjust 
	  as that in 1776, but violent revolution is no longer an option.  Our 
	  oppressors own the military and the media, and their FEMA camps are 
	  waiting for us.
 
 If change is to come, it must be peaceful 
	  and legal, beginning with a revolution in the minds and hearts of the 
	  people.  The message of the Public Banking in America Conference was 
	  that we can throw off the yoke of the financial elite by making money and 
	  credit a public utility; and the most feasible place to start is at the 
	  local level, with publicly-owned banks.
 
 For videos of some 
	  of the speakers, see
	  
	  http://www.publicbankinginamerica.org/speakers.htm.  More to 
	  come.  The Victoria Grant video has gone viral, approaching half a 
	  million hits, including copies.
 
 
 Ellen Brown 
	  is an attorney and president of the Public Banking Institute,
	  
	  http://PublicBankingInstitute.org.  In Web of Debt, her latest of 
	  eleven books, she shows how a private cartel has usurped the power to 
	  create money from the people themselves, and how we the people can get it 
	  back. Her websites are http://WebofDebt.com 
	  and http://EllenBrown.com.
 
 
 
 
 
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