Recently, I
mused about some of the 3-word phrases of instruction and encouragement uttered
by Prime Minister Boris Johnson, and others among his playmates. The most
recent is: ‘Stay at Home’. Repeat them often enough and they become a mantra to
be repeated without thinking. “What do we want?” “When do we want it?”.
Idly, I mused about the
expressed urgency to have the whole nation connected to broadband internet and
the money government was putting into private companies, such as Openreach, to
obtain this result. Why would government choose to spend taxpayer’s money to
hurry up private companies to do what they would get around to doing anyway in
the fullness of their own commercial time? Why? Surely, there are more important
things to spend it on. I see the ‘hurry-up’ related to ‘Stay at Home’? As in,
we need the hurry up first before we can get to promoting Stay at Home.
(For those who are unaware, Openreach is a
functional division of telecommunications company BT plc, that maintains the telephone
cables, ducts, cabinets and exchanges that connect nearly all homes and
businesses in the United Kingdom to the national broadband and telephone
network).
Before drifting to sleep, I wondered if I could create a
three-word mantra to throw back at the chanters. I came up with “Money, money,
money.”
Money, money, money
Must be funny
In the rich man's world
Money, money, money
Always sunny
In the rich man's world
Aha-ahaaa
All the things I could do
If I had a little money
It's a rich man's world
Must be funny
In the rich man's world
Money, money, money
Always sunny
In the rich man's world
Aha-ahaaa
All the things I could do
If I had a little money
It's a rich man's world
Ah, money. In Jewish and Christian tradition, the love of
money is condemned as a sin primarily based on texts such as Ecclesiastes 5.10
and 1 Timothy 6:10. The Jewish and Christian condemnation relates to avarice
and greed rather than money itself. Wikipedia
And that led me to ‘The
Power of M’. Everything in life seems to be ‘Monetarized’; or ‘Militarized’;
and then ‘Monopolized’. And ‘Magnified’. I Mused.
Beginning with money. Was it just
chance that among my reading that morning included:
"The fact that these foolish
people are often stubborn must not blind us to the fact that they are not
independent. In conversation with them, one virtually feels that one is dealing
not at all with them as a person, but with slogans, catchwords, and the like
that have taken possession of them. They are under a spell, blinded, misused,
and abused in their very being.
Having
thus become a mindless tool, the foolish person will also be capable of any
evil and at the same time incapable of seeing that it is evil. This is where
the danger of diabolical misuse lurks, for it is this that can once and
for all destroy the human soul.” (meaning = having the qualities of a devil; devilish; fiendish; outrageously
wicked: a diabolic plot; pertaining to or actuated by a devil.) - Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Letters and
Papers From Prison
And: "The
sense of responsibility in the financial community for the community as a whole
is not small. It is nearly nil. Perhaps this is inherent. In a community
where the primary concern is making money, one of the necessary rules is to
live and let live. To speak out against madness may be to ruin those who have
succumbed to it. So, the wise in Wall Street are nearly always silent. The
foolish thus have the field to themselves. None rebukes them." - John Kenneth Galbraith, The Great Crash of 1929
Or, as noted above, the love of money
is a root of all evil.
Monetarized (or do I mean Monetized?)
If
there were to be no ‘money’ it is likely there would be no reward system
involving competition. We would revert to barter which, stripped down, means
‘you do this for me, and I’ll do that for you. Deal?’ Or, as the Book of Genesis puts it: Genesis 3:19 By the sweat of your face you shall eat
bread, till you return to
the ground, for out of it you were taken; for you are dust, and to dust you
shall return.”
Not much room for freebies and
handouts there. If you don’t work, you don’t eat.
Militarized
There
were no standing armies in days gone by. Roughly armed men of the land were
assembled by the King to fight on his behalf as and when the need arose. Some
were paid with salt – salarium – salary. Salārium n (genitive salāriī or salārī); second
declension
But that is schoolboy stuff and
philosophers and soldiers have thought much on these things.
“Every gun that is made, every
warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft
from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and not clothed. This
world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its labourers,
the genius of its scientists, the hope of its children.” - — Dwight D.
Eisenhower
So, money and military
go hand in hand, it seems. Aha-ahaaa!
All the things I could do If I had a little money, says the politician. I can
help you there, says the banker.
Monopolized
Everyone should understand that
almost everything that a government spends money on is part of an enormous
Ponzi scheme.
(Ponzi Scheme = A fraudulent investment plan in which the contributions
of later joining members are used to pay earlier contributors, giving the
appearance that the contributors ‘investment’ dramatically increases in value
in a short period of time. A pension scheme can be a Ponzi scheme when it is
run by government because usually incoming funds (tax income) involves no long-term
investment. When income (tax) falls below outgoings, the shortfall is made up
by borrowing from central banks which happily provide interest-bearing credit.)
Illegal if YOU do it. Perfectly OK if government and banks do it.
Magnified
Now a question. Do all of us understand compound interest? It is the
mathematics of a banker. Compound interest
(or compounding interest) is interest calculated on the initial principal,
which also includes all the accumulated interest of previous periods of a
deposit or loan.
Compound interest
can significantly boost investment (lending) returns over the long term. While
a £100,000 deposit that receives 5% simple interest would earn £50,000 in
interest over 10 years, compound interest of 5% on £10,000 would amount to £62,889.46
over the same period. That’s why credit cards and mortgages are so expensive no
matter what you are told about the interest rate.
What could we do to overcome or avoid the Power of M? Good question. We
couldn’t go back to simple barter. It is difficult to imagine how we could obtain
anything beyond our daily bread if the basis of exchange is barter.
We could take away from private bankers the right to print interest-bearing
credit ‘money’– hear them weep at the very idea – and have our own government
provide the needed liquidity. It has been done before!
“In
August 1914, at the outbreak of the First World War, to avoid the imminent
collapse of the private banks and the Bank of England itself, Parliament passed
a Bill through Parliament in two days which authorised HM Treasury – not the
Bank of England – to create, issue and control money that was debt-free and
interest-free because it was based entirely on the wealth and potential of the
British nation. The high-street banks reopened and people who had planned to
withdraw their savings in gold were more than happy to accept these new
Treasury notes created by HM Government and there were no problems at all
concerning inflation. The private banking system was saved from collapse but
unfortunately the politicians (who were, and still are,
subservient to the wishes of the City of London) went back to borrowing
debt-laden ‘money out of thin air’ from the private financial sector which
resulted in the bankers being able to make a killing out of the killing on the
Western Front. And it also meant that the National Debt went up
unlawfully from £650 million in 1914 to £7,500 million in 1919.” – Justin Walker. www.britishconstitutiongroup.com
and www.newchartistmovement.org.uk
That must be worth thinking about. Mmmm!