video.google.com — Many Americans will be shocked to discover that the principle business of the Fed is to print money from nothing, lend it to the U.S. government and charge interest on these loans. Who keeps the interest?
Mar 3, 2008 View in Crawl 4
anempressMar 6, 2008
Buried for resorting to ad hominem attacks rather than dissenting from the commentor's point.
nicholaiMar 10, 2008
I think most of the people that defend the fed are paid trolls. I don't see any other reason for why they would spew this mind numbing propaganda.
bc289Mar 10, 2008
why don't you bother to look it up? Well for one, I'll name my professor who taught me this, William Nordhaus. Samuelson also supports this claim, based on his book that he wrote with Nordhaus in intro to macroeconomics. What you say is just not true.
peppermintpigMar 16, 2008
Lincoln was wary of the bankers, despite being an authoritarian assh**e who chose bloody war to solve the problems of the states. He created the greenback and it originally had value backing, and I'm guessing the original bill with Jackson's face on it was a value-backed note, but we've since seen the currency hijacked, while remaining visibly similar. That would be a deception.
peppermintpigMar 16, 2008
Jefferson will do.Jackson and Lincoln, no thanks.:)
Closed AccountJul 13, 2009
On May 23, 1933, Congressman, Louis T. McFadden, brought formal charges against the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Bank system, The Controller of the Currency and the Secretary of United States Treasury for numerous criminal acts, including but not limited to, CONSPIRACY, FRAUD, UNLAWFUL CONVERSION, AND TREASON. The petition for Articles of Impeachment was thereafter referred to the Judiciary Committee and has YET TO BE ACTED ON. So, this ELECTRONIC BOOKLET should be reprinted, re-posted, set up on web pages and circulated far and wide.Check this patriot's remarks here:<a class="user" href="http://www.conspiracyarchive.com/NWO/Federal_Reserve_McFadden.htm">http://www.conspiracyarchive.com/NWO/Federal_Reser ...</a>