Saturday, July 30, 2011

The Arbitrary Dollar

A minute has sixty seconds. Sixty minutes make an hour, twenty-four hours make a day, and seven days make a week. We can count on this, and we do, absolutely, all the time. Imagine a world without time standards, or with time standards changed arbitrarily according to relative standards set by a governmental agency empowered with adjusting the length of days, months, seasons and years. Unthinkable you say?
 
We count on twelve inches to a foot, three feet to a yard, 5280 feet to a mile, and 100 centimeters to a meter. These are standards, scientific units of measurement the world accepts as true, without which we would not enjoy laptops, i-pods, HDTVs. The world of architecture, engineering, mathematics, and science would be quite different without standard units of measurements. Imagine a construction crew building a house, one carpenter using a tape measure with a ten-inch foot, another with an eleven-inch foot and a third with a twelve-inch foot. Would this whole situation not be ludicrous?
 
Why then is the lack of a standard not as equally unthinkable and ludicrous when it comes to money? Why do people willingly accept the lack of an absolute standard to measure the value of money?  Most economists and politicians deliberately choose to ignore that a “Dollar,” not unlike the British “Pound,” is a standard of weight, a unit of measurement.  If they do know, by their silence they consent to the charade called government as it embarrasses itself by making a theatrical show ostensibly to resolve what is truly an unsolvable problem. As an inch is to length, so too a dollar is a measure of value. Though we dismiss as ridiculous the idea of a governmental agency regulating the length of an inch, we are slow to dismiss a privately owned corporation sanctioned to dictate the value of the American dollar.
 
The Federal Reserve Bank, a privately owned corporation empowered by the Federal Reserve Act in 1913, is authorized to arbitrarily determine the value of a dollar. Thus, it is no wonder there is mayhem in the American economy. Now reaping the consequences of accepting an arbitrary standard as an absolute, it should be no surprise that the world economy teeters on the brink of collapse. The charade that there is a “budget problem” is not only an understatement, the facade is a nonsensical delusion! Everyone who buys into the theatrical sideshow to fix the economy empowers this delusion.  The budget crisis at its root is a dollar crisis; smoke and mirrors to cover the economic treason of bankers and their complicit, compliant politicians. Throughout history countries have fallen time after time again because of this ruse. It now appears to be America's turn. Will we too fall victim to this oldest banking trick in the book, or are we finally going to see through the lie and address the real issue?
 
 
When faced with a dilemma, the premise is necessarily flawed. The solution to any dilemma is not to move forward but to move backward through the logic train. Yahshua said that "If the blind follow the blind, they both fall into the pit." We must out of necessity reconsider the premises leading up to this dilemma, rather than continuing forward perpetuating this delusion that will invariably lead to the collapse of not only the American economy, but that of the whole world. We must immediately abolish the laws that brought us to this point, charge with treason and seize the gold and silver assets of the Federal Reserve and all major banks, and then audit and abolish the same, and all the officers and majority shareholders thereof. But we must first abandon trying to maintain control over a delusion that violates the principles of not only common sense and constitutional law, but the very laws of nature herself.
 
President Andrew Jackson considered “killing the bank” as his greatest achievement during his two terms as president. We are now experiencing the very reason why Jackson believed this was his  top priority. We are experiencing first hand the means by which a centralized bank falls its host nation.

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