If you've been reading this site, then you know that the
FED and Fractional Reserve Lending are contrary to how God describes
honest or righteous money.
The article below gives some additional explanation as to why. So you know that the FED and Fractional Reserve Lending are fraudulent and unrighteous, my question now is...how will that knowledge alter your financial decisions in the future? Here's how they have altered mine:
I will abstain from borrowing unrighteous money from secular institutions.
I will abstain from being in debt to an unrighteous system and/or secular lenders.
I will abstain from investing the money God has entrusted me with into a secular, corrupt and unrighteous system (Wall Street, Stocks, Bonds, Mutual Funds, IRA's, 401K's, etc.) and/or company.
I will seek to rid myself as much as I feasibly can from the bondage of our unrighteous and dishonest monetary system.
Here's the article reprinted for your convenience.
Here
goes: Denninger does not phrase my arguments correctly on points 2-5,
however he thinks they are immaterial so the points are somewhat moot.
The crux of the matter is not whether assets are backed by collateral
as Denninger suggests, but rather whether the same money has been lent
out multiple times.
Let's follow through with a real life example.
Fannie
Mae makes a loan of $1,000,000. Let's be more than reasonably fair and
assume Fannie Mae issued bonds for the entire amount, not borrowing a
single cent into existence. So far there is no fraud.
$1,000,000
goes to the home builder. That home builder deposits $1,000,000 into a
Bank of America checking account. Ignoring sweeps that would allow Bank
of America to loan out every cent, let's assume BofA keeps 10% in
reserves and lends out $900,000 to a new furniture store on the corner
strip mall.
The furniture store owner buys $900,000 of furniture
from a wholesaler. The wholesaler deposits $900,000 into a Citigroup
checking account. Again, ignoring the likelihood Citigroup sweeps the
whole amount into a savings account thereby able to lend out the entire
amount (savings accounts have no reserve requirements), let's assume
that Citigroup keeps 10% in reserves and lends out $810,000 to a High
Roller who takes out a home equity loan on his house that is supposedly
worth $3,000,000.
High Roller buys a yacht from a boating
manufacturer for $810,000. The yacht manufacturer deposits $810,000 in
a checking account at Wells Fargo. Following the same pattern, Wells
Fargo keeps 10% in reserves and lends out $729,000 to a plumbing supply
company, because home sales are going gangbusters and the plumbing
supplier needs more supplies.
I think you can see where this is headed.
On the original $1,000,000 this is what FRL allows to be lent out.
See where this is going? I am going to arbitrarily stop the chain right there, but the total so far is $5,511,000 out of $1,000,000 was lent out.
Karl claims this is not fraudulent because "it's all backed by assets".
Well
for starters the value of those assets backing the loans is
questionable. Clearly it does not take much of a decline in asset
prices to cause some major writeoffs. But let's get to the crux of the
matter with a simple example.
Imagine I had gold depository with
$1,000,000 in gold and lent out receipts for $10,000,000 in gold for
people to buy things. Think that is not fraud whether or not those
receipts were backed by pledges (assets) to pay back the gold?
Of
course it's fraud, and so is lending out $5,511,000 when only
$1,000,000 really exists. By lending out more money or gold than
exists, asset prices reach unsustainably high levels before they crash.
Sound familiar?
This is where the Libertarian argument "it's OK
if two people agree" falls flat. It is not OK because it cheapens the
dollar, thereby robbing everyone saving dollars via theft of inflation
(making those dollars worth less over time).
Greenspan
compounded this already massive problem in 1994 by allowing banks to
"sweep" checking accounts (unknown to customers) into savings accounts.
This made the problem worse because savings accounts have no reserve
requirements at all.
Is it any wonder credit exploded?
For more on the case against Fractional Reserve Lending please see
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