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6139008-History-of-Money

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an ever greater rate — as is the present experience. http://www.perfecteconomy.com/principal---probability-<strong>of</strong>-Worldwide-economic-collapse.html.The collapsing <strong>of</strong> the securities market is the same takeover ruse which the proposedAldrich Central Bank was promised to prevent in the propaganda <strong>of</strong> the carefully re-named "Federal Reserve" System. Ashistory continues to prove, a huge volume <strong>of</strong> unrepealed, financial legislative acts were thus based on purposeddeception. Competing in acquisition <strong>of</strong> assets, the same private, international usurers would withdraw or diminish theavailability <strong>of</strong> credit necessary to sustaining a sector <strong>of</strong> commerce. The trade dependent on that circulation could onlycollapse as obligations to pay on existent debt deplete the circulation. Without the re-borrowing vital to maintaining thecirculation, the sector expires as soon as debt obligations cannot be met. The bankers then foreclose on debt, saying thesector over-extended its credit-worthiness. By this ruse, central bankers had already become the real owners <strong>of</strong> most <strong>of</strong>the World's production. Over its first 15 years, up to Black Friday, incredible quantities <strong>of</strong> securities had been traded onshort-term credit provided by the Federal Reserve. With the Federal Reserve's blessing, stocks were typically bought "onmargin" — with the purchaser having only some 10% <strong>of</strong> the funds, and borrowing the remainder from funds provided bythe Federal Reserve. Purchases were necessarily turned over on equally short terms, to repay the debt.If you had $100, you could buy $1,000 worth <strong>of</strong> stock on $900 <strong>of</strong> short-term credit made available by the FederalReserve. On a 15-day promissory note, you sold the stock two weeks later, for perhaps $1,100. Much as today, theFederal Reserve gladly granted another buyer the credit necessary to re-purchase the stocks. Prices were consistentlyelevated by the very proportions <strong>of</strong> credit sanctioned by Federal Reserve policies. In two weeks, after selling your $1,000purchase for $1,100 and paying your $900 debt, you had doubled your $100 savings — which <strong>of</strong> course were immediatelyre-invested on further short-term credit. With a dramatically inflating circulation, no one could truly afford to leave theirmoney outside <strong>of</strong> circles which did not directly swallow this stream <strong>of</strong> credit. The real value <strong>of</strong> money depreciated againsta circulation perpetually inflated in proportion to real production. Obviously, the real value <strong>of</strong> commerce was not doublingor increasing 10% in the same 15 days. And so there were no savings, as no one could truly afford to save. Spare moneyrode the "securities" market. Swelled consistently by this steady stream <strong>of</strong> ever greater credit, the market would repurchasethe stocks. A perpetually inflated circulation alone made this both possible and necessary — to fulfill theobligations <strong>of</strong> the ever greater debt simultaneously incurred.As the exchanges closed one Black Friday however, suddenly the very same bankers who seemed to see fit to inflate thecosts <strong>of</strong> securities upon so much debt, now withdrew further credit from the market. Speculators were advised no moreshort-term credit would be made available to their graft. Stockholders suddenly had the weekend to contemplate theprospect <strong>of</strong> selling their indebted stocks — by necessity liquidated in the least <strong>of</strong> time — to a market which would now bedeprived <strong>of</strong> the credit absolutely necessary to buy them as would fulfill the debt incurred in their purchase. Only 10% <strong>of</strong>the currency necessary to do so existed — and even this was in the hands <strong>of</strong> the same bankers. Tremendous short-termdebt existed — all soon due. Virtually no circulation existed to redeem this debt. Further credit, absolutely necessary toredeem the current debt, would no longer be available. Hence, the following Monday could only see, all at once, theprecipitous crash <strong>of</strong> the market; real ownership <strong>of</strong> commerce and real property fall into the hands <strong>of</strong> the very twelveprivate corporations proposed to stabilize economy by foreclosure and dispossession which ensued; and the initiation <strong>of</strong>the Great Depression.It was mathematically impossible for the market not to crash; it crashed due to manipulation by the BankLords. In theimmediate wake <strong>of</strong> the initial crash followed a vast wave <strong>of</strong> foreclosure — further multiplying the gains <strong>of</strong> the FederalReserve and subordinate banks at an incredible expense to the people. The crash <strong>of</strong> the stock market and the "GreatDepression" however were only initial consequences <strong>of</strong> the bizarre capacities endowed the "Federal Reserve." In the midst<strong>of</strong> the Great Depression — and while he could not yet know "The Federal Reserve" was financing the military expansions<strong>of</strong> Germany and Japan for a World War soon to follow — Congressman Louis T. McFadden asked for repeal <strong>of</strong> the FederalReserve Act and enforcement <strong>of</strong> the Constitution. Congressman Louis T. McFadden served twelve years as Chairman <strong>of</strong>the Committee on Banking and Currency. He was perhaps the foremost expert <strong>of</strong> the time on banking and currencymatters, including the subversive developments creating the Federal Reserve. Two attempts were made to take Mr.McFadden's life, including an attempted poisoning at a Congressional cafeteria. He passed away in 1935 undercircumstances which many still contend are suspicious. With his passing, "somehow", for the while, so too passed seriousopposition to the Federal Reserve."The Federal Reserve definitely caused the Great depression by contracting the amount <strong>of</strong> currency in circulation by onethirdfrom 1929 to 1933." Milton Friedman, Nobel Prize winning economistCurtis Dall, son-in-law <strong>of</strong> FDR: “It was the calculated shearing <strong>of</strong> the public by the World <strong>Money</strong> powers triggered bythe sudden shortage <strong>of</strong> call money in the New York money market”."It was not accidental. It was a carefully contrived occurrence... The international Bankers sought to bring about acondition <strong>of</strong> despair here so that they might emerge as rulers <strong>of</strong> us all." "I think it can hardly be disputed that thestatesmen and financiers <strong>of</strong> Europe are ready to take almost any means to re-acquire rapidly the gold stock which Europelost to America as the result <strong>of</strong> World War I." Rep. Louis T.McFadden (D-PA)And instead <strong>of</strong> lowering interest rates and increasing the money supply, the FED further tightened money supplies. 40billion dollars somehow vanished in the crash into the hands <strong>of</strong> the banking dynasties. It didn't really vanish, it simplyshifted into the hands <strong>of</strong> the money changers. This is how Joe Kennedy went from having 4 million dollars in 1929 tohaving over 100 million in 1935. During this time the Fed caused a 33% reduction <strong>of</strong> the money supply, causing deeperdepression. The Illuminati's two greatest weapons are secrecy and money. Mayer Amschel Rothschild, head <strong>of</strong> the HouseThe Hidden <strong>History</strong> Of <strong>Money</strong> & New World Order Usury Secrets Revealed at last! Page 298

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