Thursday, April 8, 2021
3086-3087: Blood Money 2 from Lincoln County Watch
By Anna Von Reitz
Think
of it this way --- you go to work and exchange your labor (energy and
skills) for $2000. You take the $2000 symbolizing the value of the
work you contributed to the electric company and deposit this in your
account, after having already paid your bill for the month. This
creates what? A pre-paid $2000 credit on the account, paid in blood
money --- your energy, your skills, your time on Earth.
Pre-paid credit can be a very tempting thing for bankers.
On
one hand, it's pre-paid. It's standing there on the books as a credit.
It has some of the same liability characteristics of any other kind of
deposit for a banker, but because its credit the whole picture gets a
little stranger and fuzzier.
Think
of it this way --- if someone deposits ten one-ounce gold Canadian
Maple Leaf coins in a bank box in your bank, you are responsible for
returning those same coins, unharmed, on demand. While in your
"custody", those coins are a liability for you. You have to keep them
safe, provide a vault, a security system, etc., so, how are you to pay
for this service?
It
used to be that depositors simply agreed to pay a deposit fee --- a
service fee for the service of safe-keeping someone else's gold, until
the rats, acting under the demand for new sources of money and credit
described in the first Blood Money article, began the practice of
"fractional reserve banking".
Under
that system, the bank became the title owner of the assets deposited
with the bank, and used those assets as the basis of investment
capital. Your twenty silver dollars allowed the bank to loan out
between 140 and 200 "silver dollars-worth" of credit.
When
you add in the interest fees (usury) on the loan of this much credit
issued in excess of the asset base, the bank is enabled to generate a
very, very handsome profit for the bank on the basis of someone else's
assets ---all without any actual risk of bank assets, and without
cutting the actual owner of the silver dollars in on the deal.
Heck,
that bumpkin, the original depositor, is on vacation in the Poconos and
what he doesn't know won't hurt him, right? ----or so thinks Mr.
Banker.
And only one element is needed to make this set up "legal"---- insurance.
So,
the bank needs to insure the original depositor against loss of those
silver dollars, and Mr. Banker hires and pays a willing insurance
company to do that part of it, out of the profits he is raking in. He
also starts insuring his loans for a small fee, to cover those loans
that don't "produce" the anticipated profit.
Okay,
this is how all this corruption got started -- bankers chiseling to use
other people's assets for their benefit, and "scraping the margins" in
collusion with willing insurance brokerages.
And
then, unavoidably, the bank regulatory "agencies" and politicians
figured out what was going on, but instead of stopping it or regulating
it or forcing any full disclosure, they shrugged and said, "Hey, what's
the harm? Dumb Bunny is insured. Where's our share of the pot?"
The
only difference between small banks and big banks in this system is the
size of the insurance companies backing this con game --- and the
source of the money they use to back it.
Private
insurers have to come up with their own capital to gamble when they
back small local banks, but when it comes to Big Business, private
insurers can't hack it, so Uncle Sam, in the form of the Territorial
U.S. Congress comes to the rescue and says, "We'll guarantee the bank's
deposits using Public Money!"
And
where does that "public money" come from? Why, lo and behold, it comes
from ole Dumb Bunny in the Poconos, who is the source of the asset
backing all this loan activity in the first place, and now also paying
to insure the banks from any losses resulting from their loan
activities, too.
It's
all win-win-win for the bankers and still, ole Dumb Bunny is smiling
and trusting and taking it in the shorts, content that at least the
assets he has on deposit are safe, and he's getting a whole 2.3%
interest on it.
The
bankers are now in the Ultimate Sweet Spot, with the insurance
companies and politicians all lined up behind them, milking Dumb Bunny
both fore and aft, coming and going, day and night.
They
are not only pulling off all this totally outrageous loan activity and
the usury profit from it---- at no expense or risk to themselves---- but
they are getting the depositors, whose assets they are leveraging to do
all this in the first place, to pay for their insurance costs!
The
bankers and their insurers are totally insulated from any kind of loss
and just sitting in the middle of the web like spiders, raking in the
profits from their insured ponzi loan scheme.
And
where are the politicians we hired to protect ole Dumb Bunny, Joe
Public, from this kind of exploitation? Where are all the "Regulatory
Agencies" we hired --the SEC, the FBI, the Treasury Agents (Secret
Service) and the State Banking Commissions?
All
out enjoying a champagne brunch together, slapping each other on the
backs, snorting cocaine, thinking that they are sooooo smart and
everyone else is sooooo stupid and talking about the gigantic bonuses
they will be paid this year for their performance in behalf of their
shareholders.
Now,
with this firmly in view, go back to our original situation, where you
have "overpaid" your account at the electric company, creating a $2000
credit..... being a Dumb Bunny and having done something so novel as to
try to protect yourself from future billings, that credit becomes a
"deposit" on the books of the electric company.
And the same thing happens all over again, with this important difference.
A credit is immaterial.
There
is no specific non-fungible deposit liability, just a pre-paid credit
to be accounted for on a different ledger--- the electric company's
ledger.
This
makes the Big Bank Rip Off even easier. The electric company banks your
credit with their bank, their bank benefits from the fractional reserve
system leverage just the same, but this time there is nothing specific
to be returned or insured.
For
the bank, there is more pure profit to be realized from a pre-paid
credit deposit than any other kind of deposit, and balancing the books
with pre-paid credit becomes ultimately attractive. So, how to up the
number of people clueless and responsible enough to issue pre-paid
credits?
Millions
upon millions of Americans provide pre-paid credits to the IRS and
Internal Revenue Service every year, as well as voluntarily donating a
large percentage of their private earnings as a gift. It's clear that
most of them have no income from federal sources, and therefore owe no
federal income taxes. There's no Public Law requiring them to pay.
What else could it be, but a gift?
And
that is in fact how the IRS/Internal Revenue Service both account for
all your non-resident alien contributions----- as gift and estate
taxes.
Many
insurance and utility and rental property management organizations do
the same thing when they "pre-bill" for a month before providing the
service, or insisting that you post a hefty down payment or service
deposit --- see?
They
even call it a "deposit" as in "bank deposit" -- you simply aren't
thinking of it in those terms. These practices post a constant pre-paid
credit on your account, which rolls over month to month to month,
generating all sorts of yummy investment capital without any need to
insure it for your protection.
And
the worst that can happen to the banks, the utility corporations, and
property management service companies gouging you? They have to honor
your pre-paid credit and cancel out all or part of current billings, or
do what the US, INC. recently did --- declare bankruptcy and throw your
pre-payment into the pot along with their other liabilities for
discharge.
It's
a good thing your Grandma was looking out for you, but now you have to
start looking and thinking for yourselves. None of this is rocket
science, but it does demand your attention and action going forward.
Paying
for things you don't owe, like paying for goods and services you
haven't received yet, creates massive uninsured pre-paid credit on your
accounts. Counting future liabilities like pensions that won't pay out
for fifty years as current liabilities and deducting them "as if" they
were current costs, creates more pre-paid credit. Paying escrows you
don't owe on house mortgages and property taxes you don't owe, either,
generates absolutely massive amounts of pre-paid credit that is all
actually owed to you, but which is instead being used by the banks as
their investment capital.
All
you get is a snide wink and once in a while, someone will say, "Good
ole Dumb Bunny....we wouldn't have all this without him."
Obviously,
the politicians you hired have failed you, the regulatory agencies you
pay for are a joke, the banks owe you a heap of money and pre-paid
credit, too---and the insurance companies and securities brokerages that
went along with and insured all of this graft deserve a legendary arse
whupping.
They aren't going to discipline themselves, so, who is going to do it for them?
Now,
look at who is coming down the road? Hopping and snorting like a
whirling dervish crossed with a fire engine? It's ole Dumb Bunny, back
from his vacation at last! Hello, Philadelphia! Good-bye, Poconos!
----------------------------
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Blood Money
By Anna Von Reitz
First, let's review what actual money is.
Actual
money has value in its own right ---- meaning intrinsic value. Gold has
value based on what it is, so does silver. Coinage made of these
metals has intrinsic value as a result, and that value can be determined
and unitized based on how much of the metal is used to make the coin,
the purity of the metal, and so on. This is called the bullion value.
There
is also the face value, which is stamped on the coinage. The two
things, bullion value and face value, may or may not be closely
associated depending on market fluctuations, inflation, reputation of
the issuing authority, and other less tangible factors.
A coin may also have numismatic value, which is its value as a collector's item.
These three values taken together establish the Market Value of a coin.
Any
of the other things that we use "as" money, including paper notes and
credit cards and bitcoin-type digital currencies, are not money. They
are certificates representing actual gold or silver assets held in a
repository, or they are notes amounting to "promises to pay" or other
forms of Commercial Script. Paper has no significant intrinsic value,
so must be "accepted" as having whatever face value is printed on it.
The act of accepting it gives it value.
Understandably,
people resist accepting "paper for gold" ---or oil, or silver, or any
other actual commodity, and must usually be imposed upon by Legal Tender
Laws before they will do so.
The
classic example we have just used to describe actual money must be
amended somewhat due to the advent of other asset-backed currencies,
such as the "Petrodollar". The value of such currencies is also
"pegged" and related to a unitized value of a specific commodity, such
as one gallon of grade A crude oil. There is no theoretical end to the
variety of such asset-backed currencies.
We could trade, to a limited extent, in Strawberry Dollars.
In addition to all these commodity-based currencies, there's "blood money".
Most
Americans recognize this term as being related to bounty-hunting, where
a reward is posted for the apprehension of an outlaw. The reward in
this instance is called "blood money" as it involves exchanging money
for a living (or sometimes dead) body.
Judas's
thirty pieces of silver represent blood money -- a reward paid for the
"service" of betraying Jesus to the authorities of the day.
These
examples, however, may give you the wrong idea that blood money is
restricted to these sorts of sordid and specific kinds of performance
rewards. In fact, blood money is far more common in other contexts and
represents the value of human life energy --- that is, the value of your
labor, your thoughts, your patents, copyrights, and trademarks, all
those "intellectual properties" that are yours by nature --- make up
another whole trading sector and form of money.
This is because we not only trade money for goods, we trade money for services.
We
unitize the value of services much as we unitize the value of gold. We
establish hourly wages and minimum wage standards, which then peg in a
very general sense, the value of labor being traded for money. A
skilled laborer simply commands more of the "units" per hour.
Herr
Hitler demonstrated how simple and arbitrary this is, when he famously
defined the new post-World War I Deutsche Mark as being equal to either
one hour of labor or one loaf of bread. This established the exchange
rate of the DM in one stroke, for both commodity purposes (bread) and
labor purposes (basic hourly wage).
To the amazement and chagrin of all the money snobs paying attention, it worked like a charm.
German
productivity soared and the DM, set free of all the contrived
manipulation of the European monetary regulators, soared also. If
nothing else, this foray into simplified monetary policy proved that the
value of a currency increases to a natural settling point and
stabilizes by itself once it is properly defined.
People
can have faith in it, because they know, for sure, the value of a
Dollar --- or a Deutsch Mark, both in terms of trading commodities and
trading labor.
Beginning
in the 19th century we began bumping into the ceiling of currency
values on a worldwide basis. There simply wasn't enough gold or silver
in this world to backstop the burgeoning demand for currency needed to
build industry and fuel the demand for infrastructure and government
services. Even when they added the value of the blood money --- the
labor commodities --- into the equations, there still wasn't enough
"basis" to issue enough currency.
This
demand for money as a commodity coupled with the physical limits of
both the trading value of commodities and labor (the "believability"
factor) led to the demand for both: (1) extreme exercise of all assets
to provide basis for currencies, and (2).....credit. Lots of it.
Credit,
unlike any form of money --- either commodity-based or labor-based
blood money --- does not exist in the actual world. It has no basis but
faith in a future ability to pay, and as we all know, the future does
not exist in the present---sic., "good faith and credit".
This
all results in a situation in which we have borrowed the assets of a
projected future, including future labor assets, to pay for otherwise
insupportable economic expansion today. This, combined with the money
commodity rigging scheme known as the Economic Stabilization Fund (ESF)
has allowed us to proceed without currency wars that would otherwise
naturally erupt as each country battled to preserve its own living
standards and more efficiently and completely sell-out future
generations in exchange for more comforts and bigger welfare payments
today.
It
seemed innocent enough at the time. After all, it's all "in the
future" and the future isn't actual. It's theoretical. And once we
begin dealing in such theory, we have left Earth behind and entered the
Never-Never Land, where both Peter Pan and the Land of Oz exist.
This
fundamental unreality and the "theoretical" consequence is what drives
the increasing disconnection between fact and fiction.
In
the construct concocted by Bretton Woods and more recently by the World
Economic Forum, average people counted as "citizenry" of each country
are born as the carriers of a completely insurmountable debt and exist
only as debt slaves. This, while these same people are in fact the
owners and possessors of everything of actual value on this planet,
including the value of their labor.
The
world of monetary theory and future indebtedness in the form of credit
has created a head-on collision between fact and fiction, and everywhere
you turn, you hear the whispered and horrified refrain, "Somebody's got
to pay for this!"
Let's begin with the fact that you can't in-debt something that doesn't exist, but you can honor credit that is pre-paid.
----------------------------
See this article and over 3000 others on Anna's website here: www.annavonreitz.com
To support this work look for the PayPal buttons on this website.
How do we use your donations? Find out here.


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