Hang
Parliament! All British Politicians Hanging In The Pocket
Of The Bankers
13 May 2010By Mustaqim Sahib Bleher
As the UK public is going to cast their votes at
polling
stations around the country, there has been, as
in previous general elections, much talk of a "hung
parliament" or the fear of the two main parties that
neither of them might manage to get an
absolute majority in spite of the unique
British "first-past-the-post"
electoral system usually resulting in a sizable
majority for a party who only has a minority backing
amongst the population. This whole discussion misses
the crucial point that neither of the parties
potentially forming a government after today will have
a popular mandate, because they are not bound to
listen to the voice of the people, but rather carry
out the policies of their paymasters, the banks.
Each of the parties contesting the current UK
elections have already made it clear that there will
be "cuts" in spending, "austerity" measures in order
to pay back the large deficit amassed by bailing out
the banks whose profiteering charges were in the past
justified by the suggestion that they took a
commercial risk when lending. Instead, it is the
people who take the risk and the people who pay the
price.
None of the parties have dared looking at alternatives
to the current madness, because questioning the
supremacy of
private
banks as the originators of the nation's
money
supply is heresy. Hence it will not make an
iota of difference who gets elected today.
Only a year ago we had the bizarre scenario that we
were told that the banks did no longer have the funds
to lend money, therefore governments had to bail them
out by lending the money to them, but in order to do
so, they first had to raise those funds on the
money markets, in other words, obtain them from
those same banks that didn't have the funds in the
first place. The real problem is that governments do
not supply the currency they issue, but borrow the
money they put into circulation from private banks,
who in turn have been given the right to issue those
loans without any material backing - out of thin air
as it were - and then charge for it. In this crazy
system of
fractional reserve banking, banks are allowed
to issue a multiple of their asset base in credits,
that is lend money that they do not have nor doesn't
in fact exist, and charge for the privilege. Yet,
governments are denied to put money into circulation
by the same means, clearly indicating that we are
governed by banks, not governments.
Were our governments to issue the necessary credit
directly into circulation, saving the high cost of
interest on borrowing, there would be no need for cuts
and austerity measures. This argument has been put to
the treasury countless times, and the replies and
excuses have been as ingenious as that there was "not
enough demand" for this kind of government-issued
money (known to economists as M0), or that the
Maastricht treaty prevented European
governments from doing so.
Hence, the best course of action for troubled
countries like Greece, Portugal, Spain,
Ireland
and sooner or later the UK would be to leave the Euro
and the restraints imposed by the
European Union, issue their own interest-free
currency to facilitate trade and prosperity, and
preventing banks from continually creaming off the
lion's share of our tax payments. Don't bother voting
for UKIP as an alternative though, or the SNP, they're
no more wanting to upset the status quo than the rest.
When it comes to political parties and their MPs,
they're all in the pocket of the bankers. A hung
parliament wouldn't be too bad, provided they hang
them all properly.
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