|
-
8th November 2016, 19:34
#46
Senior Member
Thank you Maggie that is exactly what I was getting at.
The next lesson on the Mystery School of money is the: Parable of the 11th Marble.
Any five-year old child knows that if you put ten marbles into a tin can, you can only take ten marbles back out. No amount of wishful thinking, dreaming, or praying, will yield that eleventh marble from inside that can. That eleventh marble does not exist. It never did, and it never will. All discussions about the eleventh marble are the product of imagination. The eleventh marble is a fantasy.
Private central bankers issuing the public currency as interest-bearing loans operate on the belief that they can put ten marbles (dollars) into a tin can (the world) and magically get 11 marbles back out. Thus, we may conclude that the the bankers are dumber than five-year old children! But unlike five-year old children, the bankers will take your home, your business, and your nation when they don't get that eleventh marble! The spoiled child may cry and throw a tantrum, but that will be the end of their upset. The spoiled banker, however, in his or her arrogant rage that they cannot have the eleventh marble their imagination says must still be in that tin can, may start a war before they will admit that eleventh marble was never really there.
Economies are like tin cans. Before you can take a marble out, you must have put a marble in. Nobody can give you a marble that does not exist, yet this simple reality is lost to the priests of that fantastic religion called banking in that unholiest of temples called the IMF. Their religious doctrine seems to be that there must always be an eleventh marble inside the tin can, and that the tin can unfairly withholds that eleventh marble, indeed cheats them of their right to the eleventh marble, purely out of spite. That faith in the existence of the eleventh marble, unseen and improvable, is the article of faith the religion of banking rests on. It is far easier to burn the heretics than to question the dogma.
Today we see the bankers, having already retrieved their ten marbles from the tin can, flogging the world for that missing eleventh marble. Greece does not have that eleventh marble, so they turn to Germany and ask, "Do you have an eleventh marble", and Germany replies, "Sorry, but the bankers already took the ten marbles they put in our tin can, and we are searching for an eleventh marble ourselves. Try the Americans." The Americans, of course, have only just surrendered the last of their ten marbles back to the bankers and are looking under seat cushions for that missing eleventh marble nobody seems able to find.
But the eleventh marble will never be found. After all that mayhem brought down on the tin can there still will be no eleventh marble. It does not exist. It never did, and it never will.
The problem with all modern reserve banking systems is that the moment the first bank note goes into circulation as the proceed of a loan at interest, more money is owed to the banks than actually exists. Ten marbles have been put into the tin can, but the bankers see 11 marbles owed back to them. Sooner or later the non-existence of that eleventh marble will create a crises of faith. People will stop believing in the religion called private central banking, and that crisis of faith will bring the system crashing down, as did the Temple of Baal in ancient times when the Syrians saw through the priests' trickery. This evil magic of creating money out of debt was a fraud all along, as fraudulent and silly as the idea that one can put ten marbles into a tin can, and take out eleven.
In ages to come economists will look back at this failed experiment in debt-based currency, and dump it into the same category of human folly as Tulip mania, The Nation of Poyais, Credit Mobilier, the Great South Seas Company, and Mortgage-Backed Securities.
Once again we are back on "Ship of Fools" with the farmer being forced to walk the plank for attempting to repay his loan in real goods and not slips of paper. Some defenders of the current paradigm will argue that the economy is not a zero-sum game and that the economy will expand to accommodate the repaying of interest on loans. This argument only holds water if you allow people to repay their loans with tangible goods. Making the "tin-can" bigger does not increase the number of marbles in the can. The number of marbles will remain the same no matter how big the tin can is increased in size. If you make them repay with money it is assuredly still a zero-sum game because you are forcing them to find the proverbial 11th marble that never existed.
The world controllers bank on the modern economy being too complex for the average man to understand so that they can get away with their frauds and then use violence to justify their frauds by making people walk the plank in the form of starting wars.
WALK the plank ye unbelievers of Capitalism.
Last edited by Novusod, 8th November 2016 at 19:40.
-
The Following 6 Users Say Thank You to Novusod For This Useful Post:
Aianawa (9th November 2016), Dreamtimer (10th November 2016), Elen (8th November 2016), enjoy being (8th November 2016), modwiz (8th November 2016), sandy (9th November 2016)
-
8th November 2016, 20:19
#47