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The sale of securities circumvented the standard process, flooding the market with money that doesn't exist, causing an inflationary crisis. This is essentially like printing money. The speaker clarifies that "printing money" doesn't mean physically printing bills. The Bank of Canada made an initial statement about printing money.

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Speaker 0 describes a deliberate effort to push retail investors toward crypto and programmable money to prototype and profit from it, while keeping them away from “real assets.” The idea is that if retail participants buy into programmable money, they will not compete with the equity holders, managers, and central banks who want to acquire gold and land without retail interference. By drawing retail money into the financialized system, those in power can build a “control grid” and limit retail influence over real assets. Speaker 1 reacts, noting the emphasis on “printed so much money” and asking why this leads to control of real assets. Speaker 0 explains that there has been a continuous expansion of paper, debt, derivatives, and financial assets, even as real asset creation—via new businesses and technology—also grows. The acceleration of financial assets outpaces real asset creation. A reference is made to a 2018 remark by the German finance minister at a Shanghai meeting: “the debt growth model is over,” and that there are “no reforms now that are not real reforms.” This is interpreted as signaling an end to the game of expanding debt, with everyone scrambling to gain control of real assets. In this context, huge profits begin to attract participants into distributive ledger programmable money, with the aim of pulling retail money away from real assets to build a control grid, while those who control programmable money simultaneously position themselves to seize real assets.

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Peter Schiff argues that the economic crisis ahead will be much bigger than 2008 and will center on a dollar and sovereign debt crisis. He says gold’s rise to and beyond $5,000 (and his longer-term view that it will go much higher) signals that the problems that previously led him to forecast $5,000 gold are now much larger. The core issue, he says, is not just a mortgage crisis but a loss of confidence in the United States’ ability to repay its debt and manage deficits and inflation. He contends that the problems were delayed for over a decade by policy “kicking the can down the road,” but have grown more severe, making the coming crisis broader and more damaging. On the dollar and U.S. debt, Schiff contends that the world is moving away from the U.S. dollar as a reserve currency. He notes foreign central banks are buyers of dollars, but argues the United States has alienated many nations and created incentives for diversification away from the dollar. He predicts gold will become the primary reserve asset for foreign central banks to replace U.S. treasuries. He emphasizes that the U.S. economy relies on the world supplying goods and saving money, and without that external support, the U.S. economy would not function as it currently does. Regarding housing and wealth creation, Schiff dismisses the idea that housing-price gains create true wealth if buyers cannot afford to purchase at inflated prices. He accuses former President Trump of aiming to sustain or enlarge a housing bubble through inflation, noting that the only way to keep home prices from falling would be higher inflation. He distinguishes between genuine wealth and artificial price levels created by monetary policy. Inflation is presented as a consequence of expanding money supply and credit. Schiff points to the dollar’s four-year low and a record low against the Swiss franc as signs that the dollar will depreciate further, leading to higher consumer prices in the U.S. He expects a protracted downturn accompanied by high inflation and higher interest rates, with the dollar at the epicenter of the crisis. On timing, Schiff believes the crisis will unfold differently from 2008 because the U.S. government cannot bail itself out in the same way. He foresees a dollar crisis that benefits other nations through a realignment of purchasing power: as the dollar weakens, prices rise in the U.S. while goods become relatively cheaper elsewhere. He foresees increased demand for gold and possibly other currencies as the dollar declines, with central banks more inclined to hold gold. Regarding policy distortions, Schiff argues that current fiscal and monetary policies distort markets beyond Keynesian ideals, with deficits seen as perpetual. He critiques GDP as an imperfect measure, noting that it includes expenditures many would rather avoid, such as disaster-related spending, health care costs, and crime prevention expenses, and excludes beneficial aspects like leisure time. On the political economy, he suggests that the U.S. debt problem will worsen as long as there is no political will to cut spending, predicting creditors will increasingly stop funding the U.S. debt. He cites Japan as a potential large seller of Treasuries, which would push interest rates higher. He says that if the dollar falls, Americans will lose purchasing power while the rest of the world gains access to cheaper goods, and global investment will shift away from the U.S. In summary, Schiff foresees a coming, substantial dollar and sovereign-debt crisis, with gold and other real assets serving as refuges as the U.S. economy confronts devaluation, rising prices, and a reconfiguration of global reserve currencies.

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The transcript presents a sweeping critique of the modern monetary system, arguing that money is created not by governments but by private banks through debt, with consequences that affect the entire world. The speakers outline a long historical arc in which banking interests, central banks, and debt-based money have steadily gained power, eroded public sovereignty, and produced recurring crises, while the general population bears the costs. Key claims and points - The root problem: The money supply is created by the community of money users through borrowing from commercial banks. The bulk of money creation originates with banks, which decide when and how much money to produce, leading to an out-of-control system. Governments borrow money from banks, which effectively enslaves the broader economy. - Concept of the debt-money system: The money system is described as a global Ponzi scheme, in which new money comes into existence as debt with interest. Because interest must be paid, the system requires ever more debt to be sustained, and people and nations are drawn into a cycle that benefits banks at the expense of the public. - Historical pattern of private control: The narrative traces a long history in which private banking families (notably the Rothschilds, Rockefellers, and Morgans) and allied financiers manipulated governments to borrow and to reward speculative advantage. It alleges that private central banks and debt-based money systems sought to consolidate power in private hands, sometimes by fomenting or exploiting crises. - Tally sticks and early monetary control: In medieval England, tally sticks were used as money and as a way to keep money power out of bankers’ hands. Their suppression by bankers in 1834 is described as a revenge of a debt-free money system that had empowered the public for centuries. - Goldsmiths, fractional reserve lending, and counterfeiting: The text explains fractional reserve lending as a historic means by which goldsmiths expanded the money supply beyond real reserves, enabling them to profit from interest and to influence economies; this practice is labeled a form of counterfeiting and a source of systemic instability. - The rise of central banking and central control: The transformation from debt-free or government-issuing money to privately controlled central banks is traced from the Bank of England (1694) to the U.S. National Banking Act (1863) and the creation of the Federal Reserve System (1913). The Aldrich Plan, the Jekyll Island meeting (1910–1912), and the public relations campaign to popularize a central banking system are described as pivotal steps toward centralized control over the money supply. - Lincoln’s greenbacks and the political fight over money: The narrative emphasizes Abraham Lincoln’s issuance of greenbacks during the Civil War as debt-free money created by the government. It claims bankers reacted defensively (Hazard Circular) and moved to undermine greenbacks through bonds and later the National Banking Act, which made private banks central to the money supply. Lincoln’s assassination is linked to the broader battle over monetary policy. - Civil War, the rise of debt, and depressions: The text links episodes such as the Panic of 1837, the Coinage Act of 1873, and the Panic of 1893 to deliberate contractions or manipulations of money supply by banking interests. It argues these episodes were engineered to force or normalize debt-based monetary arrangements and central banking. - The 20th century and the Federal Reserve: The Great Depression is attributed to deliberate contraction of the money supply by the Federal Reserve. The text argues that the Fed, a privately owned central bank, has operated to protect the banking sector at the public’s expense, with the 2008 financial crisis cited as confirmation of this dynamic. - Political economy and influence: The narrative contends that politics and academia have been co-opted by moneyed interests. It asserts that large campaign contributions from banks shape policy, and that many economists are funded or controlled by the Reserve and major banks, limiting critical debate about monetary reform. It also claims media and public discourse are constrained by debt relationships and corporate power. - Proposed reforms and principles: Across speakers, a consensus emerges around three core reforms: - Forbid government borrowing as a mechanism for money creation; return to debt-free, government-created money that serves the public interest. - Put money creation under public control, not private banks, with national or local sovereign authority issuing debt-free currency. - End fractional reserve lending and ensure robust competition among banks so that money is created in the public interest and channeled into productive real-economy lending rather than financial speculation. - Practical implementation ideas offered by some speakers: - Government to issue debt-free sovereign currency directly; private banks would compete to lend government-approved money to the public. - Eliminate consolidated currencies (e.g., the euro) in favor of national sovereignty over money creation. - Use monetary policy to match money supply with real productive activity, controlling inflation by adjusting the money supply through public channels rather than debt-based credit expansion. - Repeal or reform existing central banking structures to reestablish a Bank of the United States owned by the people rather than by private banks. - Promote transparency, reduce the influence of special interests in academia and media, and educate the public about money creation. - Enduring critique and warning: If the status quo persists, the system is said to threaten Western civilization and global freedom, with potential for continued debt-serfdom and systemic collapse if debt-based money and private central banks remain in control. - Concluding perspective: The speakers urge decisive reform, emphasizing that the truth about money creation is accessible to the public and that collective political will can restore monetary systems to serve the people. They conclude with a call to remember Margaret Mead’s idea that a small group can change the world, and exhort listeners to pursue debt-free monetary reform as a path to greater production, independence, and freedom.

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All banks, including Bank Santander, Deutsche Bank, and Royal Bank of Scotland, are broke due to the system of fractional reserve banking. This system allows banks to lend money they don't actually have, which is a criminal scandal. The political sphere and central banks contribute to the problem with moral hazard and counterfeiting, also known as quantitative easing. Central banks manipulate interest rates, not retail banks. Additionally, deposit guarantees are often discussed casually, but they ultimately result in taxpayers bearing the burden when banks fail. The speaker believes that until bankers, including central bankers and politicians, are held accountable and sent to prison, this unjust situation will persist.

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The financial system is the main problem, creating debt and control. Mortgages symbolize this control, where banks own your home until paid off. The system benefits a small group who manipulate finance to gain power. Money is used to buy influence and control everything.

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All banks, including Bank Santander, Deutsche Bank, and Royal Bank of Scotland, are broke due to the concept of fractional reserve banking. This system allows banks to lend money they don't actually have, which is a criminal scandal. The political sphere and central banks contribute to the problem with moral hazard and counterfeiting, also known as quantitative easing. Central banks manipulate interest rates, not retail banks. Additionally, deposit guarantees are discussed casually, but when banks fail, taxpayers bear the cost. The speaker believes that bankers, including central bankers and politicians, should be sent to prison for this theft from the taxpayer.

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The speaker argues that a fifty year mortgage is a mathematical scam designed to normalize multigenerational debt because the system is broken. They state, “Fifty year mortgage is a mathematical scam. They are trying to normalize multigenerational debt because the system is broken. Do the math.” They illustrate with a standard example: “On a standard $400,000 loan at 7%, a fifty year term means you pay over $1,400,000 total. You pay three times the value of the house.” The speaker exposes what they call “the dirty secret they hide in the amortization schedule.” They claim, “For the first twenty five years, 90% of your monthly payment goes to interest. You build almost zero equity. You are a glorified renter paying the bank while you pay for the repairs.” They question the timing of promoting this scheme: “Why push this now?” The answer, according to the speaker, is that “if they don't, the bubble bursts.” They argue that “Institutional investors hold billions in inflated real estate,” and if prices drop to affordable levels, “the elites lose money.” The speaker contends that a tool was invented to “keep prices artificially high by enslaving you for half a century.” They attribute the push to “the official pushing this is an heir to a real estate dynasty.” The broadcast personifies the motive, stating, “This isn't public service. It is a bailout for his rich friends paid for by your life.”

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Banks create money out of nothing and lend it at interest, a legal form of fraud. The banking lobby blames inflation on high wages and speculation, not on the money creation by banks. This practice leads to economic problems that cannot be solved.

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The financial system is the "head of the snake" and its purpose is to enslave through debt. A mortgage is a "death grip," as the bank owns the house until the mortgage is paid. Even buying a house outright does not guarantee ownership due to government taxes. The system is based on financial fraud, which takes power and gives it to a small group who control the world through finance. This group has an infinite supply of money and has used it to buy everything and everyone who can be bought.

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The speaker believes that banks and governments act nefariously by taking risks with people's money while avoiding real consequences due to bailouts or bail-ins. They argue that the current inflation is a result of massive quantitative easing during COVID, which is essentially a tax on the people. They reference Henry Ford's statement about a potential revolution if Americans were aware of the banking system's workings.

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The Rothschild family's wealth and influence grew significantly through government lending and bond speculation, often backing multiple sides in conflicts. Fractional reserve lending, where banks lend out more money than they have in reserves, is described as counterfeiting and grand larceny. This system, along with national debt, allows banks to control the economy and politicians. The Federal Reserve is portrayed as a private monopoly that enables banks to create money out of nothing, leading to a debt-based system. Critics argue that the Fed dominates the economics field, suppressing dissenting views through funding and control of academic journals. The media is accused of being controlled by banks due to debt, preventing them from exposing the truth about the monetary system. The solution, according to the speaker, involves stopping fractional reserve lending and reclaiming the power to create money for a public body. The current system is described as a Ponzi scheme based on ever-increasing debt, where interest cannot be repaid without taking from others or borrowing more. The key is controlling the quantity of money in the public interest, rather than allowing banks to maximize profits.

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Banks are broke due to fractional reserve banking allowing lending money they don't have. Central banks engage in counterfeiting through quantitative easing, manipulating interest rates. Politicians and central banks create moral hazard. Taxpayers bear the burden when banks fail. Without consequences, this cycle will persist.

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The New Zealand Central Bank head admits to creating money out of nothing and people believing it, calling central banking a great business. The speaker highlights the absurdity of this practice, emphasizing how people struggle to afford necessities while banks create money with a keyboard.

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Speaker 0 discusses books and hidden perspectives on economic power. He says the Federal Reserve runs the economy, noting they “increase the interest rates and tank the economy whenever they feel like.” He links Social Security, income tax, and Karl Marx, suggesting origins of Social Security. He questions why all parties are taking over in complete control of policy based on the Federal Reserve, calling attention to a “great one” about the sudden death of 1928 leading to the Great Depression by bankers, president of Banker Trust. He lists prominent banking families and firms—Rothschilds, Lazards, Loebs, Warburgs, Lehmans, Goldman Sachs, Rockefeller family—and includes a check of JP Morgan, stating that all books like this came out and were burned. He asks, “Why is your country at war?” and claims Woodrow Wilson ordered government agents to seize and destroy the printing plates and copies of this book in 1918. He mentions “the price of gold is set by the Rothschilds” and refers to “their plan of action” with “10 steps to destabilize economies and create … a new world order under one government.” He recalls Germany and the arrest of the Rothschilds, then references the Bolshevik revolution, claiming it was “orchestrated by bankers,” naming a specific banker, and continues to discuss who has stock in the Federal Reserve by listing names. He notes that many of these are connected to the Rothschilds and the Bank of England. Overall, the speaker asserts that a network of prominent banking families controls the Federal Reserve and global policy, alleges historical manipulation of economic events (including the 1928 crash and the Bolshevik revolution), and points to a coordinated plan involving well-known financial dynasties to destabilize economies and establish a new world order under a single government.

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All banks, including Bank Santander, Deutsche Bank, and Royal Bank of Scotland, are broke due to the system of fractional reserve banking. This system allows banks to lend money they don't actually have, which is a criminal scandal. The political sphere and central banks contribute to the problem through moral hazard and counterfeiting, also known as quantitative easing. Central banks manipulate interest rates, not retail banks. Additionally, deposit guarantees are often discussed casually, but they ultimately result in taxpayers bearing the burden when banks fail. The speaker suggests that bankers, including central bankers and politicians, should be sent to prison to address this ongoing issue.

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Banks create money out of nothing and lend it at interest, which is legal but akin to counterfeiting or cooking the books. The banking lobby avoids changing the system by blaming inflation on high wages or housing speculation, not acknowledging the root cause of money creation by banks.

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Speaker 0: So who are the people that actually get to be inflation? Well, they're the ones that are climbing up the network. They're the compromised ones. Why? What do they get? They get 0% money. The most corrupt money in the world is quantitative easing. Right? You essentially get the banks to buy the government's debt, and then central banks, put it on their balance sheet. So this is just pure corruption. This is below interest money. What about the banks? They get to create it for free. You know, they actually get to create it. They get a thousand decks on you you're paying 10%. They get they get to lever that up a 100 times. They get a thousand percent. And remember, this is all a debt based Ponzi scheme. The money to pay the interest doesn't exist, so you gotta find another person to take on the debt. You're either if you have a positive money in your in your bank balance, it's because somebody else is in debt. The money doesn't exist unless somebody else is in debt, and the money to pay the interest doesn't exist. So we create this economic environment where your money is continually being debased, and then you need to speculate in order to beat inflation. Now if you do a bit of speculation and you just invest some of your money in stocks, what happens? You're suddenly like, I don't know what stock to buy. I'm I'm not a professional trader. So there's a company out there, BlackRock, that will just buy all the stocks for me, and I just can give them a £100 a month or something. And, now I don't need to figure out what stock to buy. Okay. So now BlackRock is taking everyone's investment money that can't be bothered to figure out what stock through ETFs and index ones. Then they're taking everyone's pension. Then they're taking everyone's insurance contributions because you're trying to hedge some of the risk. And then when you get your house, you have to have insurance. And so where did BlackRock and all the asset managers in this financial industrial complex get all the money? It's your money. You paid for it. So then what do they do? Well, the banks create all of these. They they create new money every time they issue a mortgage. And then they say, do you know what? I don't even wanna take the risk of these mortgages anymore. What if can I just package it up and give it to someone else? So Larry Fink says, yeah. I've got all this money. All these people are putting these pension money in. Why don't we create something called a mortgage backed security? Let's package up all of these mortgages. Just put them into one product. And then what I can do is we can slap a credit rating on it. And if everyone complies, then they get this credit rating. Credit rating is not it's about compliance with the network. So now you've got all the banks are creating the money, and then they create these mortgage backed securities that allows them to control effectively all the real estate and transfer it. But who do they sell it to? They sell it to you. And so they created the money. They created the mortgage backed security, and then they sold it to your pension. So you paid for the very system for them to get the 0% money in the first place, and they're charging a fee for it. And what else do they get? They get a board seat on every company.

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The speaker discusses the concept of money and its creation by bankers, particularly in the Federal Reserve System. They highlight that money has no inherent value and that printing different denominations costs the same. The speaker argues that bankers can create vast amounts of wealth for themselves by printing money, unlike other industries that have profit limits. They explain how reducing the money supply can lead to a depression and reference the Great Depression as an example. The speaker also mentions how the bankers caused the stock market and bank collapses during that time. They assert that World War 2 ended the Great Depression and that the same banks that previously refused money suddenly provided it. The speaker claims that wealthy bankers manipulate the economy by creating recessions, depressions, inflations, and panics. They mention JPMorgan and the Rothschild family's involvement in establishing a central bank, and how they caused the first major panic in 1893.

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The speaker argues that central banks should not be given more power, asserting that the answer is a resounding no. They claim that the high inflation beginning in 2021 was created by central banks, regardless of any explanations about wars, and assert that the economics are clear. The speaker states they could forecast from May 2020 onwards that eighteen months later there would be significant inflation because the money creation was “massive off the charts.” They allege that central banks “imposed a fake pandemic,” referencing a conspiracy-like claim about a manufactured crisis. The speaker asserts that people such as Jeffrey Epstein are part of this narrative and that Epstein, in public records, was involved as early as 2017 in “setting up the scheme of this great pandemic for some investors to make a fortune,” naming Bill Gates as an example. The statement continues, claiming that “we can also make money injecting people with stuff and solve the problem” as discussed by Epstein and Bill Gates, and characterizes this as a matter of public record about how to “get rid of the poor people.” Finally, the speaker contends that this was used “at the same time to push digital ID.”

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Banks are broke due to fractional reserve banking allowing lending of money they don't have. Central banks engage in counterfeiting through quantitative easing. Governments and central banks manipulate interest rates, not retail banks. Taxpayers bear the cost of bank failures. Without consequences for bankers and politicians, this cycle will persist.

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The speaker claims that high taxes are not the core financial problem in the United States. They argue that taxes don't truly fund the government, which is instead financed by treasury bonds purchased by the Federal Reserve. The Fed buys these bonds by printing money, which is backed by the bonds themselves. Taxes exist, according to the speaker, to maintain the illusion of government funding. The speaker contends that the government is funded by printing money backed by paper, creating a bubble. If the public were to realize this, confidence in the dollar would collapse, potentially leading to the fall of Western civilization. The speaker urges the next president to implement necessary policy and structural changes to avoid this outcome.

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The financial system is seen as the main problem, with finance meant to enslave through debt like mortgages. Even if you buy a house, the bank technically owns it. This system benefits a small group controlling everything with money.

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The financial system is the "head of the snake" and its purpose is to enslave through debt. A mortgage is a "death grip," because the bank owns the house unless you can buy it outright. Even then, the government can seize the property for unpaid taxes. The system is based on financial fraud, which gives power to a small group who control the world through finance. They have an infinite supply of money, and from their "psychopathic point of view," they have bought everything and everyone who can be bought.

PBD Podcast

The Father Of Quantitative Easing - Richard Werner | PBD Podcast | Ep. 161
Guests: Richard Werner
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In this episode, Patrick Bet-David interviews Richard Werner, an economist known for coining the term "quantitative easing" in 1995. Werner discusses his background, including his education in economics and his extensive experience in Japan, where he observed the country's economic challenges and the banking system's role in creating money. He emphasizes that banks create money through loans, a process often misunderstood by the public, who typically believe that central banks or governments are the primary creators of money. Werner explains that the dominant theories of banking—financial intermediation and fractional reserve banking—are incorrect. Instead, he argues that banks are money creators, generating new money when they issue loans. This understanding is crucial for grasping the dynamics of economic growth and inflation. He highlights the importance of small, local banks in fostering economic stability and growth, contrasting them with larger banks that often engage in riskier lending practices. The conversation shifts to the economic situation in Japan during the 1990s, where excessive bank lending for real estate led to a significant asset bubble and subsequent recession. Werner warns that similar patterns could emerge in the U.S. if current monetary policies continue unchecked. He expresses concern over the centralization of banking and the influence of large banks on economic policy, advocating for a return to a decentralized banking system that supports small businesses. As the discussion progresses, they touch on inflation, the impact of government interventions, and the potential for a recession in the U.S. Werner predicts that if no further monetary expansion occurs, inflation could stabilize within 18 months. He stresses the need for accountability in economic policy and the importance of creating a banking environment that prioritizes productive lending. The episode concludes with a discussion on gold and cryptocurrencies, with Werner suggesting that gold is undervalued and that decentralized cryptocurrencies could provide an alternative to central bank digital currencies. He emphasizes the need for a financial system that empowers individuals and small businesses rather than concentrating power in the hands of a few large institutions.
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