Portugal - Same Folly Again: Common Sense Is In
Particularly Short Supply
10 April 2011By Mustaqim Sahib Bleher
Another European country is
declaring bankruptcy and asking for a bail-out,
yet the real issues remain hidden from the public eye.
All nations of the world are deeply in debt, so it
would be legitimate to ask who this fantastic lender
is, who owns more assets than all the peoples of the
world put together. There isn't one, of course.
Fractional reserve banking by the banks or debt
merchants is the greatest fraud ever committed in
recent history. In the case of
Portugal,
we are told the state can only raise more money on the
financial markets by paying higher interest rates. Why
should the state have to pay anything for money which
the banks issue as credit without anything to
underwrite its value other than the creditworthiness
of the nation itself? The state should issue its own
currency and the function of the banks should be
restricted to accounting and book-keeping.
What happens, when a state like Portugal raises money?
They issue government securities which are bought by
the banks. A government security is a promise to pay,
in other words, a promise that the banks will have a
claim on
tax revenue collected from the working
population. The banks add these securities to their
assets as deposits and, by the ludicrous system of
fractional reserve banking, they are permitted to
issue tenfold of their deposits in new credits. And it
is this new money, created out of nothing on the basis
of the state's promise to pay them back, which they
then land to the government for its expenditure and
charge interest on top of it! And so the vicious cycle
continues: The state allows the banks to create credit
and charge the cost to the state until the state can
no longer bear the costs. Now if a bank overstretches
itself and goes broke, the state (through the national
bank as
lender of last resort) bails it out. If the
state consequently goes broke, as it must, other
states in the
Confederation, in this case the
European
Union, come to its rescue. They attach
so-called
austerity measures, measures designed to make
sure that the banks get their illegitimate gain for
the money they never had, no matter how tough it will
be for the people to raise the revenue.
In the UK we had the same twisted logic: banks were
failing. In the past it was always justified that they
charge interest because of the risks they take. In
fact, they take no risks at all as every credit they
issue is new money at no cost to them. So what did the
government do? It bailed out the banks with a rescue
package. Where did it get the money from for bailing
out the banks? By borrowing from those very same
banks! Makes sense, doesn't it? And then there was
quantitative easing, in other words, expanding
the
money supply. But instead of injecting new cash
in the economy pay for education or health care, the
government gave the increase to the banks as
government securities to allow them to issue the very
same money and multiples of it with an interest charge
attached to it. Heads, the people loose and the banks
win. Tails, the banks win and the people loose.
For centuries now, governments have been the servants
not of the people but of the banks. They have
permitted those
financial institutions to defraud whole nations
for their private gain, laying claim to a nation's
resources and real assets through foreclosures on
loans they issued without putting up any real assets
of their own. Portugal is not needing a bail-out
because of some natural disaster, or having lost all
its working manpower in a war, or having had a bad
harvest or lost all its natural resources. It is going
to the wall because the banking system of compound
interest on credit created based on the empty promises
of repayments of earlier credits is bound to
self-destruct, and instead of taking the blame, the
banks want the government to carry the can. We're
going to see a lot more misery until common sense
returns and governments represent their own people and
issue their nations' money supply free of interest
charges to facilitate trade, ultimately to be
cancelled out again by taxation. But then, common
sense is in particularly short supply at the moment,
whereas bank-created money abounds.
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