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6139008-History-of-Money

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like a sixth or an eighth. The Germans have reduced it by inflation to pretty well nothing, which is the same really asrepudiating the debt altogether. So what we see in a general survey is this:1. Usury is both wrong morally and bad for society, because it is the claim for an increase <strong>of</strong> wealth which is not reallypresent at all. It is trying to get something where there is nothing out <strong>of</strong> which that something can be paid.2. This action must therefore progressively and increasingly soak up the wealth which men produce into the hands <strong>of</strong>those who lend money, until at last all the wealth is so soaked up and the process comes to an end.3. That is what has happened in the case <strong>of</strong> the modern World, largely through unproductive expenditure on war, whichexpenditure has been met by borrowing money and promising interest upon it although the money was not producing anyfurther wealth.4. The modem World has therefore reached a limit in this process and the future <strong>of</strong> usurious investment is in doubt.Though these conclusions are perfectly clear, it is unfortunately not possible to say that this or that is a way out <strong>of</strong> ourdifficulties; that by this or that law we can stop usury in the future and can go back to healthier conditions. Trade is stillspread all over the World. It is still impersonal and money continues to be lent out at interest unproductively, with therecurring necessity <strong>of</strong> repaying the debt and failing to keep up payments which have been promised. Things will not getright again in this respect until society becomes as simple as it used be, and we shall have to go through a pretty badtime before we get back to that. What about that "holiday <strong>of</strong> a lifetime, thanks to a bank loan", or "those presents, boughtwith a credit card", or "your new car, bought on installments", or "your nice home, with the 25 year mortgage"? All Usury.Shocked? Think about this: that it was calculated that as recently as 1989, the average person was spending nearly 80%<strong>of</strong> his income, directly or indirectly, on usurious payments. In other words our society is in the grip <strong>of</strong> an evil that hasbeen condemned from the earliest recorded times. Today it is in a form so refined that most people do not even know it.Does being anti-usury mean, therefore, that we cannot own houses, or buy toys for children, or go on holiday or do the1001 things that all do regularly? Not at all. It is quite the reverse, because in a system free <strong>of</strong> usury, prosperity growsand expands to the benefit <strong>of</strong> all - except bankers, and Stock Exchange swindlers, and loan sharks, and speculators. Inother words, a usury-free society is one in which 99% <strong>of</strong> the people gain at the expense <strong>of</strong> the 1% who exploit; while ausury-dominated society means working for the interests <strong>of</strong> the 1%, and suffering all kinds <strong>of</strong> hardships to make endsmeet.What is this "national debt" <strong>of</strong> which we <strong>of</strong>ten hear, but know little about? Has it ever occurred to you that it is found tobe unusual to have a national debt when you study history? Did you know that from 1931 until 1974 Portugal had nonational debt at all because it followed, between those dates, a usury-free system? The National Debt is largelygovernment debt built up over the centuries because <strong>of</strong> usury. At any given time some 90% or more <strong>of</strong> the debt isusurious. Take, for example, the War loans raised by the British government during the First World War to finance thosebattleships which were lost in the Battle <strong>of</strong> Jutland in 1916 - eighty years on we are still paying interest to the RothschildDynasty bankers who supplied most <strong>of</strong> the 'money'. Or what about the fact that our taxes are still paying a Europeanbanking family interest on a loan <strong>of</strong> a few thousand pounds to the government for a war fought in the 18th century? So ifyou have ever wondered why services are being cut back, or why taxes, direct and indirect, are constantly taking moneyout <strong>of</strong> your purse, or why there is no investment capital available for small and medium sized businesses, look no further.The answer lies in the fact <strong>of</strong> usury. But no political figure, and no journalist, and no "truth-seeker" is prepared to say theword, because he knows it would be the end <strong>of</strong> his career. Why? Because when you grasp the essential message <strong>of</strong> usury- which involves the creation <strong>of</strong> money from nothing - and how it works in the modern World, you will understand thatbooms and depressions, and inflation and deflation, are not freak events, but events that can be socially engineered andscientifically predicted, caused by a handful <strong>of</strong> mega-financiers.Why will no one speak out? Quite simply, fear. Ask any <strong>of</strong> your friendly bank managers over the age <strong>of</strong> 60, whoremember the times when the true meaning <strong>of</strong> usury was still known in certain quarters, about the subject <strong>of</strong> usury, andyou will see fear enter the face <strong>of</strong> a man who only seconds earlier looked so powerful across his leather-topped desk. Fearfor career, for his family and their future. Yes, the truth is known, but who is going to be David against the Goliath thatusury has become? Or do we have to wait until Goliath falls over once his weight has become too much to bear? In thatcase we will have to put society together again - and how much pain, suffering, misery, and death will that necessitate?And will it even be possible? Maybe all this is exaggerated? Maybe the figures show differently? All right, let's look at thefigures. In 1980, according to Nobel Prize Winner for Economics, Maurice Allais, the Foreign Exchange Market registered$94 trillion. That means in simple terms - money making money, financial speculation, usury. By 1986 this had risen to$193 trillion. So in just six years it has almost doubled in volume. But then look in 1989, just three years later - it hasbecome $420 trillion. In other words, in just nine years - and you remember the 1980's, don't you, when it was "time toget tough", and institute "austerity programs" to curb public spending, and mortgage interest rates went up to 20% - bythat time the money markets, the focus <strong>of</strong> international usury, had grown by well over 400%. Note, too, that the rate <strong>of</strong>increase <strong>of</strong> speculation is growing ever more rapidly. Between 1980 and 1986 it grew by nearly 100%, yet in half thattime - 1986-1989 - it has grown by over 200%.Yet when we look at international trade during the same nine-year period - that is, the distribution and exchange <strong>of</strong> realgoods and services - we find that they have grown from $7.6 billion to just $12.4 billion - not even doubled. So usury isgrowing both in volume and proportion, while real trade is declining in proportion. The explanation is simple. Why bothergoing to the trouble to have a good idea, plan it, test it, bring it to production, market it, sell and transport it, when youcan make vast sums, beyond your wildest dreams, sitting in front <strong>of</strong> a computer screen and playing the casino known asthe Stock Exchange ? [Home Rule for BC adds that speculation in money is becoming known as "stratospheric money", fora couple <strong>of</strong> reasons - it moves around the World in a flash, and it is high up out <strong>of</strong> the reach <strong>of</strong> the ordinary person.] SoThe Hidden <strong>History</strong> Of <strong>Money</strong> & New World Order Usury Secrets Revealed at last! Page 97

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