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Re: Monetary enclosures
- Subject: Re: Monetary enclosures
- Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2007 10:43:27 -0800
To: Retort
From: GS
Compare Ellen Brown's diatribe against "international bankers" with Henry Ford's infamous tract, "The International Jew: The World's Foremost Problem" at http://www.jrbooksonline.com/Intl_Jew_full_version/ijtoc_.htm, this edition brought to you by the "literary service" of the white supremacist National Alliance. The original was translated into a dozen languages and disseminated widely by the Nazis (original, not neo).
Consider also that Brown must wrack her brain for some possible reason why the world might have a problem with Iranian nuclear weapons, conveniently overlooking the statement by Ahmadinejad, whom she calls a "populist" (ha!), that Israel should be wiped from the face of the earth. She also ignores the repeated assertions by the late Ayatollah Khomeini that the total destruction of Iran would be acceptable if it served the greater purpose of Islam. Her quotation of IAEA director-general Elbaradei, perhaps the most discredited individual on the planet on subjects ranging from Chernobyl to the Iranian nuclear threat, is astounding. Elbaradei's collusion with Iran IS the reason that individual governments must now organize separately from the offices of IAEA, which was, after all, established by the very international bankers she attacks, in order to facilitate financing for the nuclear industry worldwide. And if the Iranians are so anti-capital, where are they getting the capital to invest in 3,000 spinning uranium centrifuges? Cooperative labor power?
"Just another" member of the nuclear club? Perhaps Brown missed the fact that the international community also organized to eliminate the nuclear threat from North Korea, with embryonic success. Or that nuclear weapons in the hands of the apartheid regime of South Africa were also deemed unacceptable. Or that Israel just took action to eliminate a North Korean nuclear weapons project in Syria, with the tacit approval and to the great relief of every sane head of state in the world. Have even the Syrians voiced a public protest?
The omissions, simplifications, and distortions of Brown's article rival and mimic those of that well-known populist and anti-capitalist, Henry Ford.
GS
In a message dated 11/20/2007 2:57:10 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, retort0 writes:
To: Retort
Via: PT
Behind the Drums of War with Iran: Nuclear Weapons or Compound Interest
Ellen Brown
Global Research
November 13, 2007
On October 25, 2007, the United States announced harsh new penalties on
the Iranian military and its state-owned banking systems. Sanctions,
bellicose rhetoric and the implicit threat of military action are goads
for another war, one that critics fear is more likely to ignite a
nuclear holocaust than prevent one. The question is, what makes Iran
such a serious threat? The official explanation is that it is planning
to develop nuclear weapons, but the head of the UN watchdog agency IAEA
says he has “no concrete evidence” of an Iranian weapons
program.1 Moreover, even if there were one, a number of countries have
tested or possess nuclear weapons outside the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty, including Pakistan, North Korea, India, and probably Israel;
yet we don't consider that grounds for military action. Iran would just
be joining a long list of nuclear powers.
Another theory says the push for war is all about oil; but Iran
supplies only 15 percent of total Persian Gulf oil exports, and its oil
is already for sale.22 We don't need to go to war for it. We can just
buy it.
A third theory says the saber-rattling is all about defending the
dollar. Iran is threatening to open its own oil bourse, and it is
already selling about 85 percent of its oil in non-dollar
currencies. Iran has broken the petrodollar stranglehold imposed in the
1970s, when OPEC entered into a covert agreement with the United States
to sell oil only in U.S. dollars. As Dr. Krassimir Petrov explained
this potential motive in a 2006 editorial in Gold-Eagle.com:
As long as the dollar was the only acceptable payment for oil, its
dominance in the world was assured, and the American Empire could
continue to tax the rest of the world. If, for any reason, the dollar
lost its oil backing, the American Empire would cease to exist. Thus,
Imperial survival dictated that oil be sold only for dollars. . . . If
someone demanded a different payment, he had to be convinced, either by
political pressure or military means, to change his mind.3
An interesting theory, but it still fails to explain all the facts. In
a March 2006 editorial in Asia Times Online, William Engdahl noted that
war with Iran has been in the cards as part of the U.S. Greater Middle
East strategy since the 1990s, long before Iran threatened to open its
own oil bourse.4 And Iran is not alone in wanting to drop the dollar as
its oil currency. To curb currency risks, Russia is planning to open an
Energy Stock Exchange in St. Petersburg next year to trade oil in
rubles, something that will have significantly more impact on the
dollar than Iran's oil bourse. Central bankers in Venezuela, Indonesia,
and the United Arab Emirates have all said they will be investing less
of their reserves in dollar assets due to the dollar's weakening global
position.5 Those countries are liable to switch to other currencies for
their oil trades as well. Will the United States feel compelled to
invade them all?
Each of these theories has some merit, but none of them seems to
adequately explain the war drums. What is so special about Iran that
keeps it squarely in the cross-hairs of the U.S. military? Here is
another possibility: besides oil and the dollar, Iran poses a serious
threat to a secret financial weapon that keeps a global banking empire
in power . . . .
The Bankers' Financial Weapon of Mass Destruction
Around 1980, when interest rates were soaring, Johnny Carson quipped on
The Tonight Show that “Scientists have developed a powerful new weapon
that destroys people but leaves buildings standing - it's called the
17% interest rate.” Compound interest is the secret weapon that has
allowed a global banking cartel to control most of the resources of the
world. The debt trap snapped shut for many countries in 1980, when
international interest rates shot up to 20 percent. At 20 percent
interest compounded annually, $100 doubles in under 4 years; and in 20
years, it becomes a breathtaking $3,834.66 The devastating impact on
Third World debtors was underscored by President Obasanjo of Nigeria,
speaking in 2000 about his country's mounting burden to international
creditors. He said:
All that we had borrowed up to 1985 was around $5 billion, and we have
paid about $16 billion; yet we are still being told that we owe about
$28 billion. That $28 billion came about because of the injustice in
the foreign creditors' interest rates. If you ask me what is the worst
thing in the world, I will say it is compound interest.7
In the late 1970s, the World Bank and International Monetary Fund began
imposing “conditionalities” on loans to Third World debtor countries,
requiring them to open up their capital markets, privatize their
industries, and slash spending on social programs to insure that
international lenders got their interest. By 2001, enough money had
flowed back to First World banks from Third World debtors to pay the
principal due on these loans six times over; but interest had consumed
so much of those payments that the total debt actually quadrupled
during the same period.88 In 1980, median income in the richest 10
percent of countries was 77 times greater than in the poorest 10
percent. By 1999, that gap had grown to 122 times greater. In December
2006, the United Nations released a reported titled “World Distribution
of Household Wealth,” which concluded that 50 percent of the world's
population now owns only 1 percent of its wealth, while the richest 10
percent of adults owns 85 percent. Under current conditions, the debts
of the poorer nations can never be repaid but will just continue to
grow.
Miracle or Crime?
What bankers call the “miracle” of compound interest is called “usury”
under Islamic law and is considered a crime. In the sixteenth century,
Martin Luther redefined “usury” to mean the taking of “excess”
interest; but under Old English law, taking any amount of interest was
a crime. Modern Islamic thinkers are not averse to a profitable return
on investment if it takes the form of “profit-sharing,” with investors
taking some risk and sharing in business losses; but the usurer gets
his interest no matter what. In fact he does better when the borrower
fails. The borrower who cannot afford to pay off his loans sinks deeper
and deeper into debt, as interest compounds annually to the lender. In
The Coming First World Debt Crisis (2006), Ann Pettifor gives this
modernized definition of “usury”:
Usury is the practice of exalting money values over human and
environmental values; of creating money at no cost and lending at rates
of interest intended not to foster and maintain humanity or the
ecosystem, but to
a) accumulate reserves of unearned income;
b) extract wealth from the productive sector in a manner that is
parasitic;
c) extract wealth from those who lack wealth (the asset-less); and
d) make a claim on the future.
It is this debt scheme, with its lethal weapon of interest compounded
annually, that has allowed a small clique of financiers to dominate the
business of the world. In Tragedy and Hope, Professor Carroll Quigley,
Bill Clinton's mentor at Georgetown University, wrote from personal
knowledge of this group, which he called “the international
bankers.” He said their aim was “nothing less than to create a world
system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the
political system of each country and the economy of the world as a
whole,” a system “to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the
central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret
agreements.”99 The key to the bankers' success was that they would
control and manipulate the money systems of the world while letting
them appear to be controlled by governments.
The majority of the world has now been brought into this private
central banking scheme, with private banks creating most of the money
of most countries as interest-bearing loans. In the United States, the
only money created by the government today consists of coins, which
compose only about one one-thousandth of the total money
supply. Federal Reserve Notes (dollar bills) are created by the Federal
Reserve, a private banking corporation, and lent to the government;
while the vast bulk of the money supply is created by commercial banks
when they make loans, something they do by advancing “credit” created
with accounting entries. Similar arrangements prevail in most
countries. Even where the central bank is technically state-owned (as
in the United Kingdom and Canada), it creates only the nation's paper
currency, leaving 95% or more of the money supply to be created by
commercial banks.10
The alternative to this independent “central bank” system is what used
to be called “national banking.” The nation's state-owned central bank
issued the national currency as an agent of the government, and spent
the money or lent it into the economy for internal development and
public needs. The goal of the international bankers was to “privatize”
these state-owned banks and other state-owned or locally-owned assets,
making them available for purchase and control by international finance
capital. At a 1968 meeting in Canada of the secretive globalist group
known as the Bilderbergers, George Ball, U.S. Undersecretary of State
for Economic Affairs, spoke of creating a “world company.” Ball was
also a managing director of banking giants Lehman Brothers and Kuhn
Loeb. The world company of which he spoke would be a new form of
colonialism, in which global assets would be acquired by economic
rather than military coercion. The company would extend across national
boundaries, aggressively engaging in mergers and acquisitions until the
assets of the world were subsumed under one privately-owned
corporation, with nation-states subservient to a private international
central banking system.11
The first step in the process of prying resources loose from local
economies was to induce national leaders to open up their capital and
currency markets. In 1971, President Nixon took the U.S. dollar off the
gold standard, making it the world's “reserve currency” without the
tether of gold. Dollars could then be created and lent to whatever
extent lenders could find borrowers for them. In 1974, OPEC was induced
to enter into an agreement to trade its oil only in U.S. dollars, and
the price of oil then suddenly quadrupled. Countries that did not have
the dollars they needed to buy oil had to borrow them. The IMF then
imposed its “conditionalities,” including the privatization of
state-owned oil industries and banks. In the ensuing decades, this and
other predatory lending schemes brought most of the world under the
heel of the international bankers.11
When Dominoes Won't Fall
Iran was among the few nations to have escaped this global
privatization scheme. Iran had its own oil. It managed to avoid the
trap of letting its currency be devalued by speculators by imposing
foreign exchange restrictions and price controls on its national
currency (the rial), something it could afford to do because it had
adequate foreign exchange reserves from its oil sales.12 Iran's
state-owned oil industry has allowed its economy to perform well,
despite economic sanctions and rumors to the contrary.13 A “reformist”
movement toward increased privatization ended in 2005, when Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad was elected to the presidency. Ahmadinejad is a “populist”
who has promised to redistribute Iranian oil wealth more expansively
and has committed the government to funding public-sector projects and
charitable investments.14
Islamic scholars have been seeking to devise a global banking system
that would serve as an alternative to the usury-based scheme now in
control internationally, and Iran has led the way in devising that
model. Iran is characterized as a democratic Islamic republic, which
enforces Islamic principles not only morally but legally and
politically. The 1979 revolution overthrowing the American-backed Shah
of Iran ended 2,500 years of monarchical rule. All domestic Iranian
banks were then nationalized, and the government called for the
establishment of an Islamic banking system that would replace interest
payments with profit-sharing. Its state-owned central bank issues the
national currency, with the “seigniorage” (the difference between the
cost of producing money and its face value) accruing to the government
rather than to private banks.15 The Iranian government is among the few
to have very little foreign debt. It uses its state-owned banks to make
loans and credits available to industrial and agricultural
projects. The most unique feature of the banking system, however, is
that it follows the Islamic proscription against usury. That means
loans are made interest-free.16
At least, that is true in principle. To make their system work with the
prevailing scheme, Islamic economists have had to come up with some
creative definitions of “interest.” Assuming Iran can develop a
workable alternative model, however, it might well threaten the
usury-based banking system that now dominates international finance and
trade. If governments were to start doing what banks do now - advancing
“credit” created out of nothing with accounting entries - they could
sidestep the hefty interest that is the principal cost of most
government programs today.
Estimates are that eliminating interest charges could cut the cost of
infrastructure, sustainable energy development and other government
programs in half.17 Third World economies might then escape the grip of
the global bankers, bringing a 300-year global banking empire crashing
down.
The size of the stakes was suggested by Tarek El Diwany, a British
expert in Islamic finance and the author of The Problem with Interest
(2003). In a presentation at Cambridge University in 2002, he quoted a
1997 United Nations Human Development Report which said:
Relieved of their annual debt repayments, the severely indebted
countries could use the funds for investments that in Africa alone
would save the lives of about 21 million children by 2000 and provide
90 million girls and women with access to basic education.
El Diwany commented, “The UNDP does not say that the bankers are
killing the children, it says that the debt is. But who is creating the
debt? The bankers are of course. And they are creating the debt by
lending money that they have manufactured out of nothing. In return the
developing world pays the developed world USD 700 million per day net
in debt repayments.” He concluded his presentation:
But there is hope. The developing nations should not think that they
are powerless in the face of their oppressors. Their best weapon now is
the very scale of the debt crisis itself. A coordinated and
simultaneous large scale default on international debt obligations
could quite easily damage the Western monetary system, and the West
knows it. There might be a war of course, or the threat of it,
accompanied perhaps by lectures on financial morality from Washington,
but would it matter when there is so little left to lose? In due
course, every oppressed people comes to know that it is better to die
with dignity than to live in slavery. Lenders everywhere should
remember that lesson well.18
That could explain the big guns trained on Iran. The intent may not be
to thwart the development of nuclear weapons so much as to pluck a
budding economic alternative out by its roots before it has a chance to
spread. Dominoes that won't fall into the debt trap must be
pushed. Like in the brutal attacks in Lebanon in July 2006, the
military targets in Iran are liable to be economic ones - ports,
bridges, roads, airports, refiners.1920 The threat posed by Iran's
economic model will be obliterated by blasting it back into the Stone
Age.
Ellen Brown, J.D. is the author of Web of Debt, an analysis of the
Federal Reserve and "the money trust".
Notes
1. “U.S.: Iran Seeks Nuclear Weapons,” http://news.yahoo.com (October
31, 2007).
2. Rob Kirby, “The Looming Fiat Currency Train Wreck,”
www.financialsense.com (January 16, 2006).
3. Krassimir Petrov, “The Propose Iranian Oil Bourse,”
www.gold-eagle.com (January 15, 2006).
4. William Engdahl, “Why Iran's Oil Bourse Can't Break the Buck,” Asia
Times Online (March 10, 2006).
5. Julian Phillips, “Gold Positive: Iran Wants Yen from Japan Not the
U.S. $ for Oil,” www.goldseek.com (July 27, 2007).
6. “Compound Interest Week,” www.lazymanandmoney.com; Fido Compound
Investment Tool Kit, www.fido.asic.gov.au.
7. Rodney Shakespeare, The Modern Universal Paradigm (2007), pages
63-64.
8. Achin Vanaik, “Cancel Third World Debt,” The Hindu (August 18,
2001), www.hindu.com.
9. Carroll Quigley, Tragedy and Hope: A History of the World in Our
Time (New York: Macmillan Company, 1966), page 324.
10. See Ellen Brown, “Dollar Deception: How Banks Secretly Create
Money,” www.webofdebt.com/articles (July 3, 2007); Ellen Brown, Web of
Debt (2007), chapter 2.
11. Daniel Estubin, “Bilderberg 2007 - Towards a One World
Government?”, Nexus Magazine (August-September 2007).
11. E. Brown, Web of Debt, op. cit.
12. Taylor & Francis Group, The Middle East and North Africa (2003),
pages 405-07; “Iran's Exchange Rate Freeze,”www.farsinet.com (July
2003).
13. Kelly Campbell, “Is Iran Facing an Economic Crisis?”, www.usip.org
(May 2007).
14. “Iran Profile,” www.austrade.gov.au (July 2007).
15. Kamran Dadkhah, “Reform of Exchange Market in Iran,”
www.economics.northeastern.edu/papers/documents/03-015.pdf (2003), page
4 (“Seigniorage”); Clifford Thies, “Radioactive Money,” www.mises.org
(March 2007).
16. “Economy of Iran,” http://en.wikipedia.org; “Iran Banking,”
www.photius.com (2004).
17. Margrit Kennedy, Interest and Inflation-free Money (1995),
discussed in Deidre Kent, “Margrit Kennedy Inspires New Zealand Groups
to Establish Regional Money Systems,” McKeever Institute of Economic
Policy Analysis, www.mkeever.com (2002).
18. Tarek El Diwany, “Third World Debt,” presentation at Cambridge
University's “One World Week” in February 2002, citing UNDP Human
Development Report (1997), page 93; “A Debate on Money,”
www.islamic-banking.com (July 2001).
19. “Lebanon's Infastructure Dismantled,” www.democracynow.org (July
17, 2006). See John Perkins, Confessions of an Economic Hit Man (San
Francisco: Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc., 2004).
luddnet,
retort