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ADDENDUM
Ten Humans and a Banker

Ten humans decide they want to start their own community, but they have no common "money" to build their economy on. A banker from a nearby town agrees to help them out. He loans each person $10 (money that he simply prints up in his basement) and agrees to accept interest-only payments on the loans at a rate of 10%. (A tiny $1.00 interest payment per person, per year.)

So, the new community begins with a total money supply of $100. Prices in the community are set according to this money supply, and everything seems fine.

At the end of the first year, the banker gathers everyone together to collect his interest. Each of the 10 people surrenders their $1 interest-only payment, but none of them stops to consider that, after making the payment, all ten of them still owe the banker $10 each. How can everyone pay their debt if the community's total money supply is now only $90? There are no longer enough dollars in circulation to pay the banker the $100 he is owed.

SIDE NOTE: The banker could spend the $10 worth of interest payments back into the economy, and this would raise the community's money supply back to $100, but he won't do that. For now, the people will be left with only $90 to pay $100 in debt.

Although the common people might not have figured out their debt predicament, they have noticed that getting a "fair price" for their products and services seems a little tougher than the year before. Prices seem to be dropping. But the banker understands why. He knows that there are fewer dollars in circulation, and this raises the value, or purchasing power, of each dollar.

As the value of each dollar goes up, the number of dollars a customer is willing to pay (in exchange for another person's products or services) goes down.

By the end of the second year, one of the borrowers (a successful businessman who has managed to accumulate $15) makes his interest payment and pays off his debt in full. So, as everyone else makes their second $1.00 interest-only payment, he pays both the interest due and the $10 he originally borrowed. This reduces the community's total money supply by another $20 ($10 in interest payments plus the businessman's $10 principal payment).

There are now only $70 (to be shared by all 10 people in the community), and nine people still owe the banker the full $10 ($90 in total debt).

Two more years pass, and two more people manage to earn enough to pay off their debts. So, by the end of the fourth year, the money supply is reduced by another $38 ($18 in "interest" payments plus another $20 from the two individuals who, despite the difficulty, earned enough from the shrinking money supply to pay off their loans).

There is now only $32 left in the community to be shared among all 10 people — and seven of those people still owe the banker $10 each ($70 total).

At this point, it will be nearly impossible for those who are still in debt to make their $1.00 interest payments, let alone pay off their debt. (Where once there was $10 for each person in the community, there is now only $3.20.) With so few dollars left in circulation, the purchasing power of each dollar has gone through the roof.

Prices have fallen drastically, and the economy is in shambles. If the banker does not help the people out (by putting more money back into the community), bankruptcies are inevitable. Bank seizure of property is inevitable. Financial ruin is inevitable.[1]

The businessman (who paid his debt off first) approaches the banker. He explains to the banker that the people want to work; it's just that times are tough. At its height, his business employed half the town. Now, he is down to just a couple employees, and he has had to cut their pay. He just can't afford the $2.00 per year salary anymore, and even at that rate, half of their pay is being eaten up by their annual interest payment. They can barely feed themselves!

He points out, if the banker agrees to fund a new/ambitious project, the town will spring to life. There will be jobs for all, and the suffering will end. But he also points out, without the project, many people are likely to default on their loans. The businessman just doesn't see how the people will be able to continue making their payments in such a depressed economy. "Please, Mr. Banker," he says, "You've got to help us out."

The banker agrees to the loan, and it's a whopper ($100). The businessman is ecstatic. Shaking the banker's hand, he promises to make good on the loan. He's not only certain his new venture will be profitable, he's certain the whole town will benefit. "Oh, thank you, Mr. Banker," he says sincerely, "You have done a good thing here!"

But nobody stops to think that there is now $132.00 in the economy to cover $170.00 of debt. And each year, $10 in interest will be due on the new $100 loan, and $7 will be due on the $70 that was unpaid from before. The banker knows the math, and with a smile, he creates the $100 out of thin air, and the cycle starts over.

Welcome to the debt-based monetary system. Whether it is a small community or a powerful nation, any economy built on this fraudulent system is doomed. Its debt is mathematically inescapable, and if the people start paying down their debts (or if the banks simply refuse to renew loans), the money supply will evaporate, and financial ruin will follow.

When the federal government talks about paying off the national debt, it is lying to you. It cannot do this without destroying our economy. The bankers that created our Federal Reserve Bank in 1913 built "dependency" into the system. It was designed to create ever-expanding, inescapable debt. And at the national level, that means ever-expanding control over the political and bureaucratic institutions that feed, and depend on, dishonest money.

ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!

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For a deeper dive into those who created and/or infiltrated the "instruments" that are being used against us, check out Tragedy & Hope 101.

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Notes

[1] Again, the banker could technically spend all of the interest he has collected back into the economy to ease the pressure (quite a deal for him since the dollars he has "earned" will now be worth a small fortune), but this does not change the fact that the debt is inescapable. As the debts are paid, the money supply shrinks. Without new loans (new debt), the economy will grind to a halt, and those still holding debt will have no choice but default.

--Introduction
--Acknowledgement
--Chapter 0 - Enough is Enough
--Chapter 1 - Money is Power
--Chapter 2 - Something for Nothing
--Chapter 3 - The Bailout
--Chapter 4 - Dreaming of a New World Order
--Chapter 5 - BUILDING a New World Order
--Chapter 6 - Honest Money
--Chapter 7 - Dishonest Money
--Chapter 8 - A Central Banking is Born
--Chapter 9 - How They Do It
--Chapter 10 - How We Stop Them
--Ten Humans and a Banker