The History of Banking Control in the United
States
The dictatorship of the bankers and their debt-money system are not
limited to one country, but exist in every country in the world. They
are working to keep their control tight, since one country freeing itself
from this dictatorship and issuing its own interest- and debt-free currency,
setting the example of what an honest system could be, would be enough to
bring about the worldwide collapse of the bankers’ swindling debt-money system.
This fight of the International Financiers to install their fraudulent
debt-money system has been particularly vicious in the United States of America
since its very foundation, and historical facts show that several American
statesmen were well aware of the dishonest money system the Financiers wanted
to impose upon America and of all of its harmful effects. These statesmen were
real patriots, who did all that they possibly could to maintain for the USA an
honest money system, free from the control of the Financiers. The Financiers
did everything in their power to keep in the dark this facet of the history of
the United States, for fear that the example of these patriots might still be
followed today. Here are some facts that the Financiers would like the
population not to know:
The happiest population
We are in 1750. The United States of America does not yet exist; it is the 13
Colonies of the American continent, forming “New England”, a possession of the
motherland, England. Benjamin Franklin wrote about the population of that time:
“Impossible to find a happier and more prosperous population on all the surface
of the globe.” Going over to England to represent the interests of the
Colonies, Franklin was asked how he accounted for the prosperous conditions
prevailing in the Colonies, while poverty was rife in the motherland:
“That is simple,” Franklin replied. “In the Colonies we issue our own money. It
is called Colonial Scrip. We issue it in proper proportion to make the products
pass easily from the producers to the consumers. In this manner, creating
ourselves our own paper money, we control its purchasing power, and we have no
interest to pay to no one.”
The English bankers, being informed of that, had a law passed by the British
Parliament prohibiting the Colonies from issuing their own money, and ordering
them to use only the gold or silver debt-money that was provided in
insufficient quantity by the English bankers. The circulating medium of
exchange was thus reduced by half.
“In one year,” Franklin stated, “the conditions were so reversed that the era
of prosperity ended, and a depression set in, to such an extent that the
streets of the Colonies were filled with unemployed.”
Then the Revolutionary War was launched against England, and was followed by
the Declaration of Independence in 1776. History textbooks erroneously teach
that it was the tax on tea that triggered the American Revolution. But Franklin
clearly stated:
“The Colonies would gladly have borne the little tax on tea and other
matters, had it not been the poverty caused by the bad influence of the English
bankers on the Parliament: which has caused in the Colonies hatred of England,
and the Revolutionary War.”
The Founding Fathers of the United States, bearing all these facts in mind,
and to protect themselves against the exploitation of the International
Bankers, took good care to expressly declare, in the American Constitution,
signed at Philadelphia in 1787, Article 1, Section 8, paragraph 5:
“Congress shall have the power to coin money and to regulate the value
thereof.”
The bank of the bankers
But the bankers did not give up. Their agent, Alexander Hamilton, was named
Secretary of Treasury in George Washington’s cabinet, and advocated the
establishment of a federal bank to be owned by private interests, and the
creation of debt-money with false arguments like: “A national debt, if it is
not excessive, will be to us a national blessing… The wisdom of the Government
will be shown in never trusting itself with the use of so seducing and
dangerous an expedient as issuing its own money.” Hamilton also made them
believe that only the debt-money issued by private banks would be accepted in
dealing abroad.
Thomas Jefferson, the Secretary of State, was strongly opposed to that project,
but President Washington was finally won over by Hamilton’s arguments. A
federal bank was thus created in 1791, the “Bank of the United States”, with a
20 years’ charter. Although it was termed “Bank of the United States”, it was
actually the “bank of the bankers”, since it was not owned by the nation, but
by individuals holding the bank’s stocks, the private bankers. This name of
“Bank of the United States” was purposely chosen to deceive the American
population and to make them believe that they were the owners of the bank,
which was not the case. The charter for the Bank of the United States ran out
in 1811, and Congress voted against its renewal, thanks to the influence of
Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson:
“If Congress,” Jackson said, “has a right under the Constitution to issue paper
money, it was given them to use by themselves, not to be delegated to individuals
or corporations.”
Thus ended the history of the first Bank of the United States. But the bankers
did not play their last card.
The bankers launch the war
Nathan Rothschild, of the Bank of England, issued an ultimatum: “Either the
application for the renewal of the charter is granted, or the United States
will find itself involved in a most disastrous war.” Jackson and the American
patriots did not believe the power of the international moneylenders could
extend so far. “You are a den of thieves-vipers,” Jackson told them. “I intend
to rout you out, and by the Eternal God, I will rout you out!” Nathan
Rothschild issued orders: “Teach these impudent Americans a lesson. Bring them
back to Colonial status.”
The British Government launched the War of 1812 against the United States.
Rothschild’s plan was to impoverish the United States through this war to such
an extent that the legislators would have to seek financial aid… which, of
course, would be forthcoming only in return for the renewal of the charter for
the Bank of the United States. Thousands were killed, but what does that matter
to Rothschild? He had achieved his objective; the U.S. Congress granted the
renewal of the Charter in 1816.
Abraham Lincoln is assassinated
Abraham Lincoln was elected President of the United States in 1860, under the
promise of abolishing the slavery of the blacks. Eleven southern States,
favourable to the human slavery of the black race, then decided to secede from
the Union, to withdraw from the United States of America: that was the
beginning of the Civil War (1861-1865). Lincoln, being short of money to
finance the North’s war effort, went to the bankers of New York, who agreed to
lend him money at interest rates varying from 24 to 36 percent. Lincoln
refused, knowing perfectly well that this was usury and that it would lead the
United States to ruin. But his money problem was still not settled!
His friend in Chicago, Colonel thingy Taylor, came to his rescue and put the
solution to him: “Just get Congress to pass a bill authorizing the printing of
full legal tender treasury notes, and pay your soldiers with them, and go ahead
and win your war with them also.”
This is what Lincoln did, and he won the war: between 1862 and 1863, in full
conformity with the provisions of the U.S. Constitution, Lincoln caused $450
million of debt-free Greenbacks to be issued, to conduct the Civil War. (These
Treasury notes were called “Greenbacks” by the people because they were printed
with green ink on the back.)
Lincoln said: “Government, possessing the power to create and issue currency
and credit as money, and enjoying the right to withdraw both currency and
credit from circulation by taxation and otherwise, need not and should not
borrow capital at interest as the means of financing governmental work and
public enterprise… The privilege of creating and issuing money is not only the
supreme prerogative of Government, but it is the Government’s greatest creative
opportunity.”
Lincoln called the Greenbacks “the greatest blessing the American people have
ever had.” A blessing for all, except for the bankers, since it was putting an
end to their racket, to the theft of the nation’s credit and issuing
interest-bearing money. So they did everything possible to destroy these
Greenbacks and sabotage Lincoln’s work. Lord Goschen, spokesman of the
Financiers, wrote in the London Times (Quote taken from Who Rules America by C.
K. Howe, and reproduced in Lincoln Money Martyred by Dr. R. E. Search):
“If this mischievous financial policy, which has its origin in North America,
shall become indurated down to a fixture, then that Government will furnish its
own money without cost. It will pay off debts and be without a debt. It will
have all the money necessary to carry on its commerce. It will become
prosperous without precedent in the history of the world. That Government must
be destroyed, or it will destroy every monarchy on the globe.” (The monarchy of
the money lenders.)
First, in order to cast discredit on the Greenbacks, the bankers persuaded
Congress to vote, in February of 1862, the “Exception Clause”, which said that
the Greenbacks could not be used to pay the interest on the national debt, nor
to pay taxes, excises, or import duties. Then, in 1863, having financed the
election of enough Senators and Representatives, the bankers got the Congress
to revoke the Greenback Law in 1863, and enact in its place the National
Banking Act. (Money was then to be issued interest-bearing by privately-owned
banks.)
This Act also provided that the Greenbacks should be retired from circulation
as soon as they came back to the Treasury in payment of taxes. Lincoln heatedly
protested, but his most urgent objective was to win the war and save the Union,
which obliged him to put off till after the war the veto he was planning
against this Act and the action he was to take against the bankers. Lincoln
nevertheless declared:
“I have two great enemies, the Southern army in front of me and the bankers in
the rear. And of the two, the bankers are my greatest foe.”
Lincoln was re-elected President in 1864, and he made it quite clear that he
would attack the power of the bankers, once the war was over. The war ended on April 9, 1865,
but Lincoln was assassinated five days later, on April 14. A
tremendous restriction of credit followed, organized by the banks: the currency
in circulation in the country, which was, in 1866, $1,907 million, representing
$50.46 for each American citizen, had been reduced to $605 million in 1876,
representing $14.60 per capita. The result: in ten years, 56,446 business
failures, representing a loss of $2 billion. And as if this was not enough, the
bankers reduced the per capita currency in circulation to $6.67 in 1887!
William Jennings Bryan: “The banks ought to get out”
Lincoln’s example nevertheless remained in several minds, as far along as 1896.
That year, the Presidential candidate for the Democrats was William Jennings
Bryan, and once again, history textbooks tell us that it was a good thing that
he did not succeed in his bid for the Presidency, since he was against the
bankers’ “sound money”, the money issued as a debt, and against the gold
standard. Bryan said:
“We say in our platform that we believe that the right to coin and issue money
is a function of Government. We believe it. Those who are opposed to it tell us
that the issue of paper money is a function of the bank, and that the
Government ought to get out of the banking business. I tell them that the issue
of money is a function of Government, and that the banks ought to get out of
the Government business… When we have restored the money of the Constitution,
all other necessary reforms will be possible, but until this is done, there is
no other reform that can be accomplished.”
The Fed: The most gigantic trust
Finally, on December 23, 1913, the U.S. Congress voted in the Federal
Reserve Act, which took away from Congress the power to create money, and which
handed over this power to the Federal Reserve Corporation. One of the rare
Congressmen who had understood all the issue at stake in this Act,
Representative Charles A. Lindbergh Sr. (Rep-Minnesota), father of the famous
aviator, said:
“This Act establishes the most gigantic trust on earth. When the President
(Wilson) signs this bill, the invisible government of the Monetary Power will
be legalized… The worst legislative crime of the ages is perpetrated by this
banking and currency bill.”
The education of the people
What allowed the bankers to finally obtain the complete monopoly of the control
of credit in the United States? The ignorance among the population of the money
question. John Adams wrote to Thomas Jefferson, in 1787:
“All the perplexities, confusion and distress in America arise, not from
defects in the Constitution, not from want of honor or virtue, so much as
downright ignorance of the nature of coin, credit, and circulation.”
Lincoln’s Secretary of Treasury, Salmon P. Chase, stated publicly, shortly
after the passage of the National Banking Act, in 1863:
“My agency in promoting the passage of the National Banking Act was the
greatest financial mistake of my life. It has built up a monopoly which affects
every interest in the country. It should be repealed, but before that can be
accomplished, the people will be arrayed on one side, and the banks on the
other, in a contest such as we have never seen before in this country.”
Automobile manufacturer Henry Ford said:
“If the people of the nation understood our banking and monetary system, I
believe there would be a revolution before tomorrow morning.”
The education of the people, that’s the solution! It is precisely the method
advocated by the “Michael” Journal: to build a force in the people through
education, so that the sovereign government of each nation will have the
courage to stand up to the bankers and issue its own money, as President
Lincoln did. If only all those in favour of an honest money system understood
their responsibilities for spreading the “Michael” Journal! Social Credit,
which would establish an economy where everything is organized to serve the
human person, is precisely aiming to develop personal responsibility, to create
responsible people. Each mind won over to Social Credit is an advance. Each
person formed by Social Credit is a force, and each force acquired is a step
towards the victory. And for the last seventy years, how many forces have been
acquired!… If all of them were active, it is really before tomorrow
morning that we would obtain the implementation of the Social Credit
proposals!
As Louis Even wrote in 1960: “The obstacle is neither the financier, nor the
politician, nor any avowed enemy. The obstacle lies in the passivity of too
many Social Crediters who hope for the coming of the triumph of the Cause, but
who leave it up to others to promote it.”
In short, it is our refusal to take on our responsibilities that delays the
implementation of Social Credit, of an honest money system. “Much will be asked
of the man to whom much has been given” (Luke 12:48). Examine your consciences,
dear Social Crediters; personal conversion, one more step, let us take on our
responsibilities: the victory has never been so close! Our responsibility is to
make Social Credit known to others, by having them subscribe to the “Michael”
Journal, the only publication that makes this brilliant solution known.
Social Credit bill passed by the US Congress in 1932
It is the education of the people that is necessary. Once the
pressure from the public is strong enough, all the parties will agree with it.
A fine example of this can be found in the Goldsborough bill of 1932, which was
described by an author as a “Social Credit bill” and “the closest near-miss
monetary reform for the establishment of a real sound money system in the
United States”:
“An overwhelming majority of the U.S. Congress (289 to 60) favored it as early
as 1932, and in one form or another it has persisted since. Only the futile
hope that a confident new President (Roosevelt) could restore prosperity
without abandoning the credit-money system America had inherited kept Social
Credit from becoming the law of the land. By 1936, when the New Deal (Roosevelt’s
solution) had proved incapable of dealing effectively with the Depression, the
proponents of Social Credit were back again in strength. The last significant
effort to gain its adoption came in 1938.” (W.E. Turner, Stable Money, p. 167.)
Even the dividend and the compensated discount, two essential parts of Social
Credit, were mentioned in this bill, which was the “Goldsborough bill”, after
the Democratic Representative of Maryland, T. Allan Goldsborough, who presented
it in the House for the first time on May 2, 1932.
Two persons who supported the bill especially hold our attention: Robert L.
Owen, Senator of Oklahoma from 1907 to 1925 (a national bank director for 46
years), and Charles G. Binderup, Representative of Nebraska. Owen published an
article, in March of 1936, in J. J. Harpell’s publication, “The Instructor”, of
which Louis Even was the assistant editor. As for Binderup, he gave several
speeches on radio in the USA during the Depression, explaining the damaging
effects of the control of credit by private interests.
Robert Owen testified in the House, April 28, 1936:
“…the bill which he (Goldsborough) then presented, with the approval of the
Committee on Banking and Currency of the House — and I believe it was
practically a unanimous report. It was debated for two days in the House, a
very simple bill, declaring it to be the policy of the United States to restore
and maintain the value of money, and directing the Secretary of the Treasury,
the officers of the Federal Reserve Board, and the Reserve banks to make
effective that policy. That was all, but enough, and it passed, not by a
partisan vote. There were 117 Republicans who voted for that bill (which was
presented by a Democrat) and it passed by 289 to 60, and of the 60 who voted
against it, only 12, by the will of the people, remain in the Congress.
“It was defeated by the Senate, because it was not really understood. There had
not been sufficient discussion of it in public. There was not an organized
public opinion in support of it.”
Once again, education is the main issue: Republicans and Democrats alike
supported it, so there was no need for a third party or any sort of “Social
Credit” party. Moreover, Owen admitted that the only thing that was lacking was
the education of the population, a force among the people. That confirms the
method used by the “Michael” Journal, advocated by Clifford Hugh Douglas and
Louis Even.
The Goldsborough bill was titled: “A bill to restore to Congress its
Constitutional power to issue money and regulate the value thereof, to provide
monetary income to the people of the United States at a fixed and equitable
purchasing power of the dollar, ample at all times to enable the people to buy
wanted goods and services at full capacity of the industries and commercial
facilities of the United States… The present system of issuing money through
private initiative for profit, resulting in recurrent disastrous inflations and
deflations, shall cease.”
The bill also made provision for a discount on prices to be compensated to the
retailer, and for a national dividend to be issued, beginning at $5 a month (in
1932) to every citizen of the nation. Several groups testified in support of
the bill, stressing the bill provided the means of controlling inflation.
Ignorance among the population
The most ardent opponent in the Senate was Carter Glass, a fierce partisan of
the Federal Reserve (private control of money) and a former Secretary of the
Treasury. Besides, Henry Morgenthau, then Roosevelt’s Secretary of Treasury, who
was strongly opposed to any monetary reform, said that Roosevelt’s New Deal
should be given a trial first.
What mostly helped the opponents to the bill was the near ignorance of the
money question among the population… and even in the Senate.
Some Senators, knowing nothing about the creation of money (credit) by banks,
exclaimed: “The Government cannot create money like that! That will cause
runaway inflation!” And others, while admitting the necessity for debt-free
money, questioned the necessity for a dividend, or the compensated discount.
But all these objections actually disappear after a serious study of Social
Credit.
Quotes on money
“Let me issue and control a nation’s money and I care not who writes its laws.”
— Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1744-1812), founding father of international
finance.
“History records that the money changers have used every form of abuse,
intrigue, deceit, and violent means possible to maintain their control over
governments by controlling money and its issuance.” — US President James
Madison.
“The money power denounces, as public enemies, all who question its methods or
throw light upon its crimes.” — William Jennings Bryan.
“Whoever controls the volume of money in any country is absolute master of all
industry and commerce.” — US President James A. Garfield.
“Banking was conceived in iniquity and born in sin. Bankers own the earth. Take
it away from them, but leave them the power to create money and control credit,
and with the flick of a pen, they will create enough money to buy it back
again. Take this great power away from the bankers and all the great fortunes
like mine will disappear, and they ought to disappear, for this would be a
better and happier world to live in. But if you want to continue the slaves of
bankers and pay the cost of your own slavery, let them continue to create money
and to control credit.” — Sir Josiah Stamp, Director, Bank of England, 1940.
“The process by which banks create money is so simple that the mind is
repelled.” — John K. Galbraith, in “Money: Whence it came, where it went“, p.
29.
“The banks do create money. They have been doing it for a long time, but they
didn’t quite realise it, and they did not admit it. Very few did. You will find
it in all sorts of documents, financial textbooks, etc. But in the intervening
years, and we must all be perfectly frank about these things, there has been a
development of thought, until today I doubt very much whether you
would get many prominent bankers to attempt to deny that banks create credit.”
— H. W. White, Chairman of the Associated Banks of New Zealand, to the New
Zealand Monetary Commission, 1955.
Thomas Edison and Henry Ford
Let us bring an end to this lesson with the quotations of two great American
citizens.
Thomas Edison: “Throughout our history some of America’s greatest men have
sought to break the Hamiltonian imprint (Alexander Hamilton’s debt-money
policy) on our monetary policy in order to substitute a stable money supply
measured to the nation’s physical requirements. Lack of public and official
understanding, combined with the power of banking interests who have imagined a
vested interest in the present chaotic system, have so far thwarted every
effort.
“Don’t allow them to confuse you with the cry of `paper money.’ The danger of
paper money is precisely the danger of gold — if you get too much it is no
good. There is just one rule for money and that is to have enough to carry on
all the legitimate trade that is waiting to move. Too little and too much are
both bad. But enough to move trade, enough to prevent stagnation, on the one
hand, not enough to permit speculation, on the other hand, is the proper ratio…
“If the United States will adopt this policy of increasing its national wealth
without contributing to the interest collector — for the whole national debt is
made up of interest charges — then you will see an era of progress and
prosperity in this country such as could never have come otherwise.”
And a call from Henry Ford: “The youth who can resolve the money question will
do more for the world than all the professional soldiers of history.”
Written by Alain Pilote on Saturday, 31 August 1985.