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The following historical story is taken from a radio address given by Congressman Charles G. Binderup of
Nebraska, some 50 years ago and was reprinted in Unrobing the Ghosts of Wall Street: Before the American War for Independence in 1776, the colonized part of what is today the United States of
America was a possession of England. It was called New England, and was made up of 13 colonies, which became the first 13
states of the great Republic. Around 1750, this New England was very prosperous. Benjamin Franklin was able to write: When Benjamin Franklin went over to England to represent the interests of the Colonies, he saw a completely
different situation: the working population of this country was gnawed by hunger and poverty. "The streets are covered with
beggars and tramps," he wrote. He asked his English friends how England, with all its wealth, could have so much poverty among
its working classes. His friends replied that England was a prey to a terrible condition: it had too many workers! The rich said
they were already overburdened with taxes, and could not pay more to relieve the needs and poverty of this mass of workers.
Several rich Englishmen of that time actually believed, along with Mathus, that wars and plague were necessary to rid the
country from man-power surpluses. Franklin's friends then asked him how the American Colonies managed to collect enough money to support their
poor houses, and how they could overcome this plague of pauperism. Franklin replied: His friends could not believe their ears, and even less understand this fact, since when the English poor
houses and jails became too cluttered, England shipped these poor wretches and down-and- outs, like cattle, and discharged,
on the quays of the Colonies, those who had survived the poverty, dirtiness and privations of the journey. At that time, England
was throwing into jail those who could not pay their debts. They therefore asked Franklin how he could explain the remarkable
prosperity of the New England Colonies. Franklin replied: The information came to the knowledge of the English Bankers, and held their attention. They immediately
took the necessary steps to have the British Parliament to pass a law that prohibited the Colonies from using their scrip
money, and then ordered them to use only the gold and silver money that was provided in sufficient quantity by the English
bankers. Then began in America the plague of debt-money, which has never since brought so many curses to the American people. The first law was passed in 1751, and then completed by a more restrictive law in 1763. Franklin reported
that one year after the implementation of this prohibition on Colonial money, the streets of the Colonies were filled with
unemployment and beggars, just like in England, because there was not enough money to pay for the goods and work. The circulating
medium of exchange had been reduced by half. Franklin added that this was the original cause of the American Revolution - and not the tax on tea nor the
Stamp Act, as it has been taught again and again in history books. The financiers always manage to have removed from school
books all that can throw light on their own schemes, and damage the glow that protects their power. Franklin, who was one of the chief architects of the American independence, wrote it clearly: "The Colonies would gladly have borne the little tax on tea and other matters had it not been the poverty
caused by the bad influence of the English bankers on the Parliament, which has caused in the Colonies hatred of England and
the Revolutionary War." This point of view of Franklin was confirmed by great statesmen of his era: John Adams, Jefferson, and several
others. A remarkable English historian, John Twells, wrote, speaking of the money of the Colonies, the Colonial Scrip: "It was the monetary system under which America's Colonies flourished to such an extent that Edmund Burke
was able to write about them: 'Nothing in the history of the world resembles their progress. It was a sound and beneficial
system, and its effects led to the happiness of the people.'" John Twells adds: Another writer, Peter Cooper, expresses himself along the same lines. After having said how Franklin had
explained to the London Parliament the cause of the prosperity of the Colonies, he wrote: Today, in America as well as in Europe, we are under the regime of the Scrip of the Bankers instead of the
scrip of the nation. Hence the public debts, everlasting interest charges, taxes that plunder purchasing power, with the only
result being a consolidation of the financial dictatorship. There is only one cure for America's ultimate financial collapse and that is for Congress to exercise Clause
30 of the "Federal" Reserve Act, buy the outstanding shares of stock, shut down this unconstitutional system and sell off
their assets to reimburse the people of this nation for this unspeakable theft of their wealth. This is the first installment
of postings on this issue, new ones will be put up as soon as manpower allows. |
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