Looting
the National Treasury
By Alan Caruba
In the
November issue of The DeWeese Report, published by the American Policy Center,
Tom DeWeese provides one of the most cogent explanations for the current financial crisis
that you will read anywhere. You can read it online at http://www.americanpolicy.org/more/market.htm.
For a decade I was the Director of Communications for the Center and remain affiliated. In
a time when the need for truth and straight talk is critical, you might well want to join
and support the Center.
The November issue contains a speech that was made on the floor of the House of
Representatives by Louis McFadden, Chairman of the House Banking and Currency Committee.
The year was 1934 in the midst of the Great Depression. Here are some excerpts:
We have in the country one of the most corrupt institutions the world has ever
known. I refer to the Federal Reserve Board and the Federal Reserve Banks, hereinafter
called the FED. The Fed has cheated the government of these United States and the people of
the United States
out of enough money to pay the nations debt
many times over.
How timely this is as the U.S. treasury is being raided to bail out banks, an insurance
company, investment firms, and possibly individual auto companies and others to the tune
of billions.
In 1934, McFadden noted that This evil institution has impoverished and ruined the
people of the United States, has bankrupted itself and has practically bankrupted our
government. What we are witnessing, of course, is the devaluation of the U.S. dollar
and this must be laid at the feet of the Fed, the institution that was created to protect
its value.
Some people think that the Federal Reserve Banks are United States government
institutions, said McFadden. They are private monopolies which prey upon the
people of the United States for the benefit of themselves and their foreign customers: foreign
and domestic speculators and swindlers; and rich and predatory money lenders.
Consider how the present financial crisis was the direct result of government mandates
that banks and other lending companies had to provide mortgage loans to people that
otherwise would never have received them had prudent banking practices been allowed to
function.
The United States has been ransacked and pillaged. Our structures have been gutted
and only the walls are left standing
What we need to do is send the reserves of our
national banks home to the people who earned and produced them, and who still own them,
and to the banks which were compelled to surrender them to predatory interests.
This is precisely why banking and investment institutions bundled and sold
mortgage loans as alleged assets for which no value could be assigned, knowing
that Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae were backed by the U.S. government. As Tom DeWeese says in his commentary, These
were worthless loans to satisfy politically correct motives, and worthless money to pay
for it all.
The global impact of the U.S. financial crisis was anticipated by McFadden who called the Fed
a public trough of American wealth in which the foreigners claim rights to or
greater than Americans
All this is done at the expense of the United States government and at
a sickening loss to the American people.
For those who might be tempted to dismiss those remarks from 74 years ago, I can tell you
that I recently talked with a former Fed auditor who confirmed that its oversight of banks
was and is farcical. We were dealing with people who knew the regulations inside and
out, who knew all the loopholes. It was not unusual for us to spend our days working The
New York Times crossword puzzle to pass the time.
The current Secretary of the Treasury, Henry Paulson, who announced a financial crisis
rather conveniently for Barack Obama just before Election Day has now announced that plans
for the $700 billion bailout money have changed.
No more buying of toxic paper because, after all, it is worthless. The
taxpayers money will now be redirected. Where? We have not been informed. The nation
is being run these days by Goldman Sachs.
The Fed is a quasi-government institution. It is a consortium of twelve regional banks
that is presumed to be answerable to the federal government. Under the regime of Alan
Greenspan, its former chairman, it permitted, indeed, encouraged this debacle to occur. It
is time to end the reign of the Federal Reserve. It was time in 1934.
Americans are watching the plundering and looting of the U.S. Treasury for political and
private gain. Apparently, there is nothing we can do about it.