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Sunday, February 5, 2012

LaRouche Firewall: In Defense of the Nation State

Posted by The Interest on February 6, 2009

Watched the LaRouchePAC.com and the Firewall: In Defense of the Nation State.

The film talks at the end about a two tier credit system. Directed government credit for certain activities. Loans are provided at 1% or 2%. All other debt is performed privately in the second tier.

Other provisions of the Homeowners and Bank Protection Act of 2007 included:

1. Congress must establish a Federal agency to place the Federal and state chartered banks under protection, freezing all existing home mortgages for a period of how ever many months or years are required to adjust the values to fair prices, restructure existing mortgages at appropriate interest rates, and write off all of the cancerous speculative debt obligations of mortgage-backed securities, derivatives and other forms of Ponzi Schemes that have brought the banking system to the point of bankruptcy.

2. During this transitional period, all foreclosures shall be frozen, allowing American families to retain their homes. Monthly payments, the effective equivalent of rental payments, shall be made to designated banks, which can then use the funds as collateral for normal lending practices, thus recapitalizing the banking system. Ultimately, these affordable monthly payments will be factored into new mortgages, reflecting the deflating of the housing bubble, and the establishment of appropriate property valuations, and reduced fixed mortgage interest rates. It is to be expected that this process of shakeout of the housing market will take several years to achieve. In this interim period, no homeowner shall be evicted from his or her property, and the Federal and state chartered banks shall be protected, so they can resume the traditional functions, serving local communities, and facilitating credit for investment in productive industries, agriculture, infrastructure, etc.

3. State governors shall assume the administrative responsibilities for implementing the program, including the “rental” assessments to designated banks, with the Federal government providing the necessary credits and guarantees to assure the successful transition.

The film is worth the historical review which is the first hour or so, but if you want to hear more about just the reforms on banking and lending, just skip the first hour.

Adrian Rogers: What one person receives without working

Posted by The Interest on February 5, 2009

Received this quote in my email today. I know it is referencing taxes, but the same could be applied to usury.

You cannot legislate the poor into freedom by legislating the wealthy out of freedom. What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving.

The government cannot give to anybody anything that the government does not first take from somebody else. When half of the people get the idea that they do not have to work because the other half is going to take care of them, and when the other half gets the idea that it does no good to work because somebody else is going to get what they work for, that my dear friend, is about the end of any nation. You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it.

~ Adrian Rogers, 1931 – 2005

The author of this quote was a famous Baptist minister who probably knew full well the meaning of usury. If one is reminded of the banker or investor who does no work yet insists on being paid for doing no work, the above quote fits quite nicely. Think of the “What one person receives without working” as the person who thinks his money is “working” for him. What that really means is that he’s enslaved someone else to do the “working” for him.

As for the worker, maybe he needs to ask the “What one person receives without working” this question: “Where’s the Interest?”

H.R. 833: To abolish the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

Posted by The Interest on

Here’s a step. That wacky Congressman from Texas, Ron Paul, sponsoring legislation in the House of Representatives to End the Fed!

H.R. 833: To abolish the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal reserve banks, to…

This would be one major step to end our debt based money.

The Gig Is Up: Money, the Federal Reserve and You

Posted by The Interest on February 2, 2009

Another lecture discussing our banking system. Good review for those who know the story.

Why is this worse than expected: Spending/Income Down

Posted by The Interest on

Here’s the news this morning from December spending and income:

Spending:
Expected: Down .9 %
Actual: Down 1 %

Income:
Expected: Down .4%
Actual: Down .2%

Now, you’re probably thinking isn’t that good? After all incomes didn’t fall as much as expected and people are saving more instead.

Wrong, this is not good for the economy. If spending was down because incomes were down, that would be one thing. But what these numbers say is that people aren’t taking on new debt. That says deflation and contraction of the economy.

Let’s review. Money=Debt. Less debt on the right side of the equation means less money on the left side of the equation. Less money, falling prices. Falling prices, loss of jobs until we implode.

Tell your friends about this problem. Point them to this website. We need to educate people and get them to ask, “Where’s the Interest?

Aún Estamos Vivos: Is it time to look at usury as a sin

Posted by The Interest on February 1, 2009

Excellent post located over at the Aún Estamos Vivos blog titled Is it Time to Look at Usury as a Sin Again?

If you want a pretty thorough wrap-up of the history of usury throughout the Church, then I suggest you start here. I’ll be referring to many of the topics, sources, etc. that Jeff brings up here.

Minn. AG sues Allina for violating state usury laws

Posted by The Interest on

A difficult concept to understand is the idea of usury.  Over time we’ve adopted the idea that usury is charging an excess of interest in a transaction.  But as you learn more about usury, you discover that any amount of interest is the siphoning of wealth from one person to another.

This article talks about Allina Health System charging 18% interest for medical debts where Minnesota state law limits this charge to 8%.  This is one example of how we continue this idea that usury is just high interest.

Let’s crunch some numbers.  Say you have $10,000 in medical debt at 8% interest and you agree to pay this off in 10 years.  You’ll pay $4559.31 in interest over that time.  Now, how about we change the terms to 18% interest for 4 1/2 years.  The amount of interest paid will be $4661.75.

So, is the amount of interest really the problem?  Sure, the payment will be larger for the shorter term, higher interest rate loan, but does that really mean that 18% is that much worse or more usurious then 8%?  No.

TIME: The Financial Crisis Blame Game

Posted by The Interest on

Here we go again.  Time has an explanation of the financial crisis.  Blaming all the wrong things…

  1. Good Times
  2. Alan Greenspan
  3. Twisted Regulation
  4. Wall Street
  5. The Homeownership Obsession
  6. Too Much Money
  7. The Myth of the Rational Market
  8. You and Me
  9. George W. Bush
  10. Commodity Futures Modernization Act
  11. The Rating Agencies
  12. Letting Lehman Go

What about the siphoning off of wealth from the workers and people who produce to those people who create money from money through the use of usury?  Why isn’t that idea on the top of the list?  Maybe we should ask, “Where’s the Interest?”