The Great Deception
WorldNetDaily writer and talk-show host Geoff Metcalf recently
interviewed veteran journalist Anne Williamson about her eleven
thousand word exposé on the Federal Reserve Bank. To coin
a phrase,"We've been had."
Geoff Metcalf: This is a complex
issue, which is why I have been encouraging people to read your
piece in WorldNet Magazine. Can you start us out with a basic "The
Fed 101"?
Anne Williamson: OK. Eustace Mullins
has a wonderful line in which he says the Federal Reserve System
is not federal; there are no reserves; and, he says, "It is
not a system, but a criminal syndicate." That is one of the
more vituperous summations of the institution. And it's not unfair
because there is a lot of truth in it.
GM: It's a cool scam!
AW: Oh, it's the ultimate scam.
This was a brilliant, brilliant swindle. That it has been so long-lived
is remarkable, as are the results of what they have achieved with
it. In the article, I try to walk the reader through the most basic
elements of money, his property, money and banking, and then finance
and currencies generally. But the real point that I hope readers
will take with them is an understanding that this institution has
cheated all of us of our citizenship.
GM: Why?
AW: Because the Federal Reserve
Bank gives the government the power to create unlimited debt.
GM: For those people who listen
to my program on the Internet, I do a four-minute commentary at
the top of each hour. This week I kind of cheated, and, to promote
your visit, I have been reading from Congressman Louis McFadden's
litany of rants in 1933. I had forgotten that he actually brought
charges that are still sitting in limbo somewhere; on which nobody
ever acted.
AW: That's right. He was a grand
old gentleman, and it is a pity we don't have legislators today
of his calibre or his determination to protect this country and
our liberties. He was nearly the last of a breed, I am afraid.
GM: The Fed is one of several pet
peeves we have given voice to on my radio program. Another is the
16th Amendment, and I've interviewed Bill Benson and Joe Banister,
who, while still a badge carrying/gun carrying IRS agent, had his
epiphany listening to me interview Devvy Kidd. All this bad stuff
happened around the same time. I don't think that was mere coincidence.
AW: No, it wasn't. John Maynard
Keynes played a large role in the establishment of the International
Monetary Fund, which is the international satellite of the Fed.
This quote is from a book Keynes wrote after World War I called
"The Economic Consequences of the Peace." In talking about
a fiat money system, he had this to say: "Should government
refrain from regulation/taxation, the worthlessness of the money
becomes apparent, and the fraud can no longer be concealed."
You see, it is a brilliant move psychologically, because we get
our money, even though the notes are coloured tickets with no inherent
value. Nonetheless, it is our money. We receive money from our work
and our investments, and it is the natural course of human beings
to protect what they have. When the government wants some of our
money in the form of taxes, we try to defend against that, and we
are thereby, in that act, giving value to the money that it really
doesn't have.
GM: It was fascinating because
I hadn't read McFadden in probably five or six years, but he was
one ticked-off ole goat when he was talking to Congress.
AW: You bet!
GM: "Mr. Chairman, we have
in this country one of the most corrupt institutions the world has
ever known. I refer to the Federal Reserve Board and the Federal
Reserve Banks, hereinafter called the Fed. The Fed has cheated the
government of these United States and the people of the United States
out of enough money to pay the nation's debt. The depredations and
iniquities of the Fed have cost enough money to pay the national
debt several times over." And that was just his warm-up. He
was really upset, and obviously, he had cause to be. The huge frustration
now is, with the exception of Rep. Ron Paul, does anyone really
have a clue?
AW: Some do. Sen. Phil Gramm does,
for instance. He's head of the Banking Committee in the Senate.
But really, the citizens' best bet is Ron Paul, who understands
this issue top to bottom and always crosses swords with Mr. Greenspan
in his annual testimonies. He is a brilliant gentleman and a great
defender of the Constitution, and really, American citizens would
not be able to own gold today were it not for Ron Paul.
GM: You touch on some of it in
your WorldNet piece, and I remember it from reading "The Creature
from Jekyll Island." Some of the games that went on with the
framers of the Fed are frankly right out of an old dime-store novel.
AW: (laughing) Some of it is. There's
a fascinating detail that shows just how determined these people
were. Jekyll Island was a private reserve of J.P. Morgan. They had
built a club on the island, and a lot of Manhattanites would go
down there in the winter for duck hunting. Later, several of the
robber baron families built their private homes there. But in 1913,
only J.P. Morgan's spread was located on this island off the coast
of Georgia. They were so determined to maintain secrecy that every
servant on the island was removed, and an entirely new staff of
servants was hired out of Atlanta and brought to the island.
GM: About the only thing they didn't
do was cut their tongues out after the meetings.
AW: That's right. They didn't want
them to be able to recognise the people there and to be confused
about where they were and so forth. Those are the lengths they went
to, the sort of extremes that they felt necessary to protect their
scheme from exposure.
GM: A few days before the Fed passed,
Sen. Root denounced the Fed as an outrage on our liberties. He predicted:
"Long before we wake up from our dream of prosperity through
an inflated currency, our gold, which alone could have kept us from
catastrophe, will have vanished, and no rate of interest will tempt
it to return."
You talk about prophetic!
AW: We're on the verge of that
today, I think sometimes. It's a fantastic scheme. It's just so
fantastic. There have been other paper-money schemes throughout
history, and all of them have collapsed. But because the United
States was a young, dynamic country, we were able to fund this system
off the prosperity and wealth that our ancestors created in the
19th century. Then, when we became a world power, we were able to
keep this game going by exporting the inflation.
GM: We had central banks prior
to the Fed. I remember President Jackson got rid of one of them.
AW: That's right. In a titanic
battle, he brought that to a conclusion. There was the First Bank
of the United States founded by Alexander Hamilton, and that was
succeeded by a Second Bank of the United States. That's the one
that Andy Jackson put the kabosh on.
GM: Nikolai Lenin once said, "The
best way to destroy the capitalist system is to debase the currency."
Anne, please explain what fiat money is all about?
AW: Fiat money is money that derives
its value from a government edict.
GM: I'm king and say this piece
of paper is worth something because I say so.
AW: Right. And the first step to
getting there is: I will accept this currency as "legal tender"
for tax payments; then I move to making the issuance of the legal
tender a monopoly, my government's monopoly.
GM: Here's the weird thing. Congress
has the authority to coin and mint money. Why would they give up
something that powerful to the Fed?
AW: Because the Fed gives them
a scapegoat. We are constantly told it is so excellent that the
Fed is independent because that way, the financial system does not
become politicised. And just think, citizens, how terrible it would
be if all those politicians were handling the money. We have our
disappointments with the political class, so that makes sense, but
it really doesn't. The Fed allows the political class to use a private
structure, which is the banking consortium that actually owns the
Fed, as a scapegoat. No matter what happens, they can blame the
Fed when times turn bad. And any action that the Fed takes, depending
on whose ox is gored amongst the public; exporters, importers, farmers,
whoever, their champions in the legislature can curse the Fed while
their opposition cheers it.
GM: Congress is really a co-conspirator
with the Fed.
AW: Oh, sure!
GM: There are two things I want
us to try to cover for sure. Readers can hopefully read the rest
in your WorldNet Magazine piece. First, what the Fed is, and what
it does and doesn't do, and secondly, how this fiat money works.
Fiat money is designed to fail.
AW: It is designed for inflation.
And that's another shibboleth we constantly are confronted with,
that the Fed is a "hawk" on inflation. This statement
is risible because … what is inflation?
GM: It is too much money chasing
too few goods.
AW: And the only issuer of money
in the United States is the Federal Reserve System. So, of course
the Fed is the source of inflation. It is not a hawk against inflation,
it is only a means to control inflation for the benefit of the financial
elite.
GM: Allegedly, just before John
F. Kennedy was killed, he had ordered the printing of a whole bunch
of U.S. Notes that would not be Federal Reserve Notes. Would you
care to comment on that?
AW: That is the only conspiracy
theory behind the assassination that makes
complete sense to me; the others do not. When I heard it, I thought,
yeah, that would do it, because of the power of the Fed. It is very
hard for the citizen to imagine the power of this institution. And
for the financial elite to be threatened, if indeed they were, it
would then probably be worth knocking off a U.S. president.
GM: What if Congress were to disenfranchise
the Fed and just take back the power to mint and coin money? What
would happen?
AW: If they were acting in unison,
an effective method could be devised. But I don't think you can
ever get to the point where a debate could lead to a consensus to
act.
GM: Frankly, I don't think this
Congress could agree on the sun rising in the morning.
AW: Right. And you know, there
were three attempts on McFadden's life.
GM: Only three?
AW: Yes, and he died under mysterious
circumstances, according to Eustace Mullins.
GM: I remember once upon a time
I asked someone how come no one tried to take out Andrew Jackson,
and I was told there had been an assassination attempt against him
I wasn't aware of at the time.
AW: So much motive. It was Rothchild
who said, "I care not for a nation's laws, if you give me control
of the money," because the money will drive everything. Nothing
can touch you if you have control of the money. And this is why
we are cheated as citizens, because we cannot discipline or control
our government. Through the use of fiat money, the government has
the power to create unlimited debt. All we are reduced to doing
in elections is deciding whether the blue team or the red team is
going to get the patronage.
GM: I don't mean to get too professorial
here, but what was John Locke's view of money?
AW: John Locke's view was that
money is property. And, therefore, since in the normal course of
business a man lends money, his property, he must receive in return
money of equal value, if justice and commerce were to flourish.
So this was a huge step historically because the people immediately
agreed. In those days, the king would debase the currency by calling
it in and reminting it, and each time he reminted it, he would take
about 10 percent and replace it with a base metal in the coin. So
the crown gained 10 percent, and the people lost 10 percent. Merchants
would shave the coins and melt
down the shavings.
GM: Actually, that's one of the
reasons we have those ribs around our coins now.
AW: That's right. The milled edge
was to stop the coin shaving by merchants.
GM: You could end up with a quarter
the size of a dime.
AW: Right. (laughing) And if you
examine old coins, you'll see where they were chipped away for whatever
precious metal they contained. It was very common. In fact, the
Fed is really exactly that same system in a modern dress, and institutionalised.
GM: Explain how wealth moves and
is transferred. What actual function does the Fed have besides having
Alan Greenspan scaring people once a quarter?
AW: The Fed actually emits the
money.
GM: How does it do that?
AW: Usually by buying up old government
bonds. The Treasury will issue bonds; people buy the bonds, and
money comes into the treasury. That transaction takes money out
of circulation. In order to emit money, the Fed reverses the action
and buys back bonds. These transactions are done under the Fed's
Open Market Operations.
The Fed controls discount rates. The discount rate is what the Fed
charges banks for loans, and thereby controls short-term rates for
the economy. Long-term rates are set by the market. Even though
setting the discount rate is said to be a relatively small tool,
it is enough most usually to control the market, and more. When
the Fed inflates or emits money, you have a lag before that effect
hits the market or the economy of about 18 months. In the presidential
cycle, the ideal situation is to start printing the money 18 months
before Election Day. That way, you have a nice robust economy before
the voters go to the polls.
GM: Give us a few examples.
AW: Back in '75 when President
Ford was told it was time to start printing money, being an estimable
man, he said no; we don't have to. We've got a pretty good economy.
I don't want to inflate. It will create a problem later. But Jimmy
Carter came in and he wasn't going to make Ford's mistake, so he
started printing money right away. He printed and printed money,
and he got the system completely out of whack.
GM: Twenty-one percent interest
rates.
AW: Right. And there would be a
point where you could actually see a headline in the Wall Street
Journal that said, "Fed to expand money supply/Interest rates
rise." That's how goofy it got. Then look at what George Bush
did. George Bush thought he had victory in hand because he had a
90 percent approval rating after the Gulf War. So he didn't need
to inflate. Late in '92, he saw he was in trouble, finally, and
he called in Jimmy Baker. Jimmy Baker got hold of the Fed and told
them to start printing money. But unfortunately, it was too late.
The beneficial effects started hitting the economy in January, just
in time for Clinton's inauguration. So we see that the three men
in recent history who chose not to inflate for their own re-elections
all lost. That's the power of the Fed. That's the way in which we
are manipulated as voters.
GM: Back in 1941, there were some
hearings in Congress, and Congressman Patman was talking to one
of the Fed governors, and he asked him, "How'd you guys get
that $2 billion to buy these government securities back in '33?"
And the response was, "Out of the right to issue credit money."
So Patman says, "And there's nothing behind it except our government
credit?" And the answer was, "Yeah. That's what our money
system is. If there were no debts in our money system, there wouldn't
be any money."
AW: Yes, and that is where people
are confused, because we are taught in our economics classes that
money is a store of value, a unit of account and a means of exchange.
But the Federal Reserve Note, which is what a so-called dollar is,
is an instrument of debt, not of value.
GM: What ever happened to gold
in Fort Knox?
AW: No one is entirely sure. Fort
Knox hasn't been audited in a very long time. Actually, most of
the gold is kept in Manhattan underneath the New York Fed, and you
can tour the vaults and see the gold holdings therein. When FDR
confiscated all private gold in the United States, that gold eventually
went to form the gold quota for the United States in the
International Monetary Fund, and also in something called the Exchange
Stabilisation Fund, which is under the control of the treasury secretary.
GM: Slow down a moment. Who is
the sheriff who establishes the quota?
AW: That happened originally at
Bretton Woods in 1944 at a multinational
conference, which was called in order to restructure the international
financial system. The United States has the largest membership in
the IMF. We control about 18 percent, but it's enough for us to
control the entire institution. And each nation, when they join
the Fund, has to put in so much gold and so much currency. So, the
gold that the United States contributed was provided by our ancestors,
after FDR confiscated it from them.
GM: I have been talking to assorted
experts about this stuff for over a decade, and the one thing I
have never fully understood is why the political leadership, who
care more about power than anything else, would give up Article
I, Section 8, Paragraph 5? That's a heavy hammer.
AW: Yes, but it is an opportunity
also, because by having given it up they can now dream up programs
to benefit their particular constituencies, which all taxpayers
end up funding. All they have to do is have Treasury sell government
bonds. The politicians get votes from their respective client groups,
and the entire population gets the debt. They don't have to come
to us, the citizens, anymore, and ask for funding.
GM: How did they sell this snake
oil to the American people?
AW: After Andy Jackson finally
shut down the Second Bank of the United States, the bankers did
not stop scheming, nor did the financiers. Throughout the Civil
War there was great profiteering, as one might expect. Lincoln brought
in a greenback that was a just a fiat money, but the nation returned
to the gold standard some years after the Civil War. There was an
ineffective system instituted. It was sort of a halfway house to
central banking, called the National Banking System. The idea was
that big national banks would police the smaller state banks. Of
course, no one policed anyone, and because of dishonest banking,
panics and breakdowns were rampant in the system. This was very
unsettling to the population.
GM: So the people would rather
have managed panics and breakdowns?
AW: They thought, and they were
told, they would escape this because of the Fed's managed system,
and even better, they would get an "elastic" currency
that could accommodate America's dynamic business development. In
fact, it's interesting that because on the gold standard, prices
actually fall year to year as economic development occurs. The "static
money" argument is a red herring. In the late 19th century,
we were on the gold standard and there was an explosion of wealth
and prosperity for people. So the bankers stepped in, and, it is
believed, they organised the panic of 1907 to bring back the bad
memories, just as they began a campaign to establish the Fed.
GM: It's beyond "believed."
Isn't it pretty clearly documented?
AW: Yes. And by the way, one reason
Congressman McFadden was so exercised in those congressional hearings
you've been quoting from, is because when the Fed was established,
not all banks belonged to it. There were still independent country
banks. In 1920, the Fed raised interest rates unexpectedly and unnecessarily
with the result that the artificial contraction of credit put thousands
of banks out of business, and bankrupted thousands of formerly prosperous
farmers. That was to coerce independent people and banks into the
system.
GM: Some folks ask if it is better
to have a government-controlled system or a privately controlled
system.
AW: What you want is a private
banking system. You don't really want the government in it. The
government should be responsible for fulfilling the biblical edict
of "ye shall have honest weights and measures." Government
should set the standards, and then let the private bankers compete
for market share within the confines of the gold standard. We, the
customers of those banks, should be responsible to being attentive
to our banks' business and bottom line. And as the banks compete
against one another, under the natural restrictions of the gold
standard, honesty and sound banking are rewarded by an increasing
market share.
GM: The inevitable question that
comes up whenever we talk about the ubiquitous, nefarious and noxious
Fed is: What can we do about it?
AW: It's such a huge system, and
so many people live off of it now. The political class has been
completely corrupted by this ability to spend and spend, and they
are no longer dependent on us to get the money for their operations.
The problem is the same one you have with taxation arguments - complexity.
Both the Fed and the tax code are extremely complex.
GM: They treat us like mushrooms.
They keep us in the dark and feed us B.S.
AW: Right. The public is overwhelmed
with propaganda and conflicting statistics whenever any changes
are proposed. We're a busy people. We can't focus on these issues
to give them their proper due, so when the arguments begin, honest
reformers are easily defeated. My idea of how to end this abusive
system is to end withholding.
GM: Why do you say that?
AW: Because when the citizen has
to sit down once a year and write a cheque to the government himself
directly, you will suddenly change the character of this country.
At that point, people will start paying as much attention to the
cost of government as they do their garbage collection service.
And then people will start asking questions and demanding some results.
GM: Recently, I spoke with a woman
about the national retail sales tax and the figures she offered
about the "imbedded cost" of the government, the key thing
being "imbedded." She claims it's about 23 percent, and
you never see that. People just accept it because they are not compelled
to sit down and write a cheque for it.
AW: In fact, very often they get
a cheque back from the government, so they think of the Internal
Revenue Service as a sort of savings institution, and the government
as their benefactor.
GM: The propaganda the Fed uses
so routinely; this isn't an anomaly that
just happened. Before Jekyll Island, these guys were master propagandists.
AW: Oh, yes. In the late 19th and
early 20th century, not very many of our
universities offered a Ph.D. So many of our academics were actually
completing their education in Germany. Germany had built a great
social state under Bismarck, and these academics became admirers
of Bismarck. When they returned to the United States, they encountered
an economy that needed only so many people who could speak classical
Greek or perform abstract mathematics, for instance. They needed
jobs, so an unholy alliance between tremendous wealth and academia
was formed. These so-called scholars, mostly historians, economists
and social scientists, became the mouthpieces for a "reform"
of the banking system.
GM: I've got to ask you about Alan
Greenspan. I know the guy is a company
guy, bought and paid for. But he used to hang out with Ayn Rand,
and he even wrote an article for one of her books on the gold standard,
about a quarter of a century ago .
AW: He sure did.
GM: So what's the deal with him?
Is he just totally co-opted?
AW: Dr. Gary North wrote a wonderful
piece about Greenspan called "Jazzman." Greenspan is an
improviser. We can see this in his early career. I believe he played
with Benny Goodman.
GM: I didn't know that.
AW: Yes. He studied at Juilliard,
then he moved to economics. He did not finish his doctorate. He
went to work as an economist on Wall Street. He has gotten honorary
doctorates subsequently, of course. While he was on Wall Street,
he came under the influence of a man named Arthur Burns, who was
a former Fed governor under Nixon. He was from the Viennese school
of economics, and he believed that the economy was best controlled
through monetarism, the supply of money. Milton Friedman is the
more famous proponent of monetarism. Alan Greenspan became Burns'
protégé. So I think he got a taste for money and power
and forgot all about the gold standard and Ayn Rand. Although to
this day, he does pay lip service to the gold standard. But it's
like the politician talking about a tax cut; we'll go back to the
gold standard when the debt is paid off, and on that happy day we'll
have a big tax cut, too.
GM: It's like a politician talking
about ethics.
AW: Exactly. When the debt is paid
and we have prosperity for all, then we'll return to the gold standard.
GM: The emperor has no clothes.
Subscribe to WorldNet Magazine to receive Williamson's in-depth
exposé on the Federal Reserve - eye-opening, to say the least
- Ed.
Quotes
"This institution has cheated all of us of
our citizenship."
"We give value to money that it doesn't really
have."
"Fiat money is designed to fail."
"If there were no debts in our money system,
there wouldn't be any money." |