There are many reasons I hope many of you will take a look at the "Money Trust."
There is a belief; that bush caused all this, that what we are living through today began in 2000 or during reagan or because of nixon, or that it is in some other manner, recent in history and can be attributed to but one person or one small group of people
specific to this time, or that it is the result of one or another political party.
That belief, regardless of the form, is simplistic at best, dangerous at worst.
What is finally being exposed is part of a cycle in human history in which, those who have power over their fellow humans, will exert their power to the detriment of their fellow humans. This latest cycle involves capital, that is, currency as the tool/representation of power. During other times in history the tools/representations of power have included, cattle, land, title (landLORD), "religious" position, weaponry/arms/armies, and so on. As you can see, I'm focused primarily on "western" or "European" history though I think we can extrapolate from "western" to "eastern" history without much effort.
The way these tools of power and control have been wielded are myriad and I won't go into them here. The latest incarnation of these "power brokers" can be seen in the "Money Trust." Suffice it say, each tool of power buttresses and
validates the others. The use of these tools has created a web of interconnected systems used by a minority to control the majority. It does not matter if the systems put into place are capitalistic, communistic, or socialistic. In each, those who would use power over others to the detriment of humans/humanity and the planet as a whole, frequently (always? to date) rise to the top of what ultimately becomes a toxic system. The idea that any of these systems can be "well regulated," and therefore less toxic, may be seen as the hopeless case it is when one stops to think that the very ones to be regulated are the very ones to do the regulating.
The accompanying idea that it has always been thus and must always be thus, combined with the "common knowledge" that traveling forward in time means, by default, that it is
progress has led many to accept these cycles as "natural" occurences of human "progress." We adopt or absorb our "values" accordingly. Many times we do not question those "values" or their source. Many times, we do not even question if they are...ooooo, the English language makes the selection of this next word tough. We do not even question if they are right(?), correct(?), ethical(?), moral(?), valuable(?), valid(?), accurate(?)...maybe, healthy(?).
Some questions I think are worth asking of ourselves. Is hierarchy the only viable structure for institutions and systems? Is an authoritarian "mind set" the only way we are capable of thinking? Is it possible to effect change without punitive measures? Is the framework in which we currently live healthy? Yeah, I'm trying to get you to think...here it comes..."outside the box," or to use a pop-cuture reference, I encourage you to "take the red pill."
Will you continue to pursue the "American Dream," and work hard and "play by the rules" and teach your children and their children to do the same? Will you continue to support and perpetuate "what has 'always' been?" Or will you consider...an alternative?
Without further ado, I bring you, direct from the
Federal Reserve Archival System for Economic Research, the
"Money Trust"In 1912, a special subcommittee was convened by the Chairman of the House Banking and Currency Committee, Arsene P. Pujo. Its purpose was to investigate the "money trust," a small group of Wall Street bankers that exerted powerful control over the nation's finances. The committee's majority report concluded that a group of financial leaders had abused the public trust to consolidate control over many industries. The Pujo Committee report created a climate of public opinion that lead to the passage of the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 and the Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914.
The hearings were conducted between May 16, 1912 and February 26, 1913. The transcript of the hearings was published in three volumes. It is presented in the original 29 parts with the index, a table of interlocking directorates of 18 financial institutions, and the majority/minority report of the committee.
***DIAL-UP Warning for the following .pdf documents. They are protected pages so copy and paste is not possible for me.***
The report from the committee (.pdf protected)
{Beginning middle of page 159}
We are not unmindful of the important and valuable part that the gentlemen who dominate this inner group and their allies have played in the development of our prosperity....
It is also recognized that cooperation between them is frequently valuable, and often essential to the public interest as well as their own...
But these considerations do not involve their taking control of the resources of our financial institutions or of the savings of the people in our life insurance companies nor that they shall be able to levy tribute upon every large enterprise: nor that commercial credits or stock exchange markets and values shall wait upon their beck and call. Other countries finance enterprises quite as important as our own without employing these methods.
{much more at link}
"Agents of Concentration" begins on page 6. (.pdf protected)
A diagram of the interconnected web of "power brokers." (.pdf protected)
Another diagram showing more threads of the web. (.pdf protected)
Wiki-links to background on the "Agents of Concentration".
JP Morgan & Co.Kidder, Peabody & Co.Kuhn, Loeb & Co.The First National Bank of New York and
First National City Bank today known as
CitibankLee, Higginson & Co.Bank mergers since 1930 to help track where the institutions of the "money trust" are today.
Click around the Wiki-links provided to see the history of families and family names that will sound familiar even today.
For additional names involved with and manipulated by, the "money trust," get out your old Monopoly™ game and look at the board. B&O Railroad, Reading Railroad, Pennsylvania Railroad. Add to your Monopoly™ board names some of those late, great names such as, United Fruit, AT&T, Western Union, Amalgamated Copper. Mix in some Drexel, Chemical, and grab a life insurance company or two. If you're into "old timey" music, you might want to groove to the tune, "On the Atchison, Topeka, and the Santa Fe."
Railroads, communications, copper, banks, Wall Street, "blind pools," steel, oil, stock exchanges, clearing houses, government. These guys were there "first" and their legacy continues. Do you honestly expect that to change simply by changing the "players?"
A bit of background on the
Panic of 1907 that, in part, prompted the committee to investigate.
In the summer of 1907, the American economy was showing signs of weakness as a number of business and Wall Street brokerages went bankrupt. In October, the respected Knickerbocker Trust in New York City and the ¹Westinghouse Electric Company both failed, touching off a series of events known as the Panic of 1907.
Please notice this tidbit that mentions what may have been a contributing factor to
the Panic.
1: Westinghouse Electric was the victim of foul business practices by J.P. Morgan. Morgan controlled General Electric and Thomas Edison’s Direct Current, (DC) electrical patents. He contended with Westinghouse Electric, who controlled Nicola Tesla’s Alternating Current, (AC) electrical patents. Morgan and Edison strove for control of all electrical power in America. Edison used deceptive demonstrations of the supposed increased dangers of AC and Morgan had spread rumors in Wall Street that Westinghouse was insolvent, causing Westinghouse stock to collapse, along with the stock of the Westinghouse backers. {Note: this site may have a left-leaning (or maybe right-leaning?) bias. Take with as many grains of salt as you see fit.}
Trusts versus the Clearing Houses as viewed in an article at the
NY Times. (.pdf scanned image and another dial-up warning)
The
Panic of 1907 and the commission's report led, in part to
Owen-Glass Federal Reserve Act.
Public sentiment had been supportive of national monetary reform since the Panic of 1907. The National Monetary Commission, created under the Aldrich-Vreeland Act, issued a report in 1912, which called for creation of what many regarded as a third to the string of Banks of the United States. All major European powers had developed centralized controls over their banking systems, but the U.S. remained alone in failing to do so. Full centralization of banking had not proved popular earlier in the country's history, but the recurring bank panics and instability of the currency clearly pointed to the need for major reform.
Following Wilson’s victory in 1912, Arsène P. Pujo of Louisiana, chairman of the House Banking Committee, led the so-called Pujo Commission in a wide-ranging examination of the nation’s financial ills. Among other actions, Pujo brought in J.P. Morgan to testify and eventually came to the conclusion that a “money trust” existed in the country and the central banking solution offered by the Monetary Commission would not work.
In 1913, the Democrats controlled both houses of Congress and crafted a regional, rather than fully centralized, approach to banking reform. Carter Glass of Virginia headed matters in the House and Robert L. Owen of Oklahoma did so in the Senate. The final legislation created 12 Federal Reserve Banks* that would act as central banks for all national banks and other member state institutions. The Banks would not be federal bodies, but private ones owned by the member banks. A Federal Reserve Board was formed to oversee the system and establish policy. Members of the Board would be appointed by the president, providing a considerable measure of federal direction over the system. {more at link and notice previous disclaimer about site's potential bias.}
More on the Federal Reserve from the same site that may deny (or confirm) previous claims of bias. :D
Stabilizing America's economy
The central banking system in the U.S. is the Federal Reserve System, commonly known as "The Fed".*
The Fed's creation was controversial. The Owen-Glass Federal Reserve Act of 1913 created an institutionalized monopoly of special-purpose banks located in major cities throughout the country. 12 Federal Reserve Banks are led by the Bank of New York, which is a publicly traded corporation started by New York businessmen and Alexander Hamilton on June 9, 1784.
As America's central banking system, the Fed is a system of banks for bankers. The Federal Reserve Board (board of governors) members are appointed by the U.S. president. The Regional Federal Reserve Banks are corporations whose stock is owned by member banks located within the region of each branch Fed bank. The Fed is highly regulated and thus has great credibility.
There is a brief snapshot of the "money trust" and some of its more famous or notorious "players" and the system(s) they put in place.
If we keep in place that which is there and only change the names and players, do we change anything? If "my" whole plan is to continue banging a nail into the wall, will calling my hammer a shoe make it any less a hammer? Though it may slow it down, will using a shoe change the end result?