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To: flatsville who wrote (107834)6/9/2001 10:35:53 AM
From: Ilaine  Respond to of 436258
 
Good find, Flats. Excellent article. Impeccable statement of facts, sound reasoning.



To: flatsville who wrote (107834)6/9/2001 10:44:06 AM
From: Ilaine  Respond to of 436258
 
Oooo, this Edward Flaherty fellow is way cool. He's got a website devoted to debunking popular economic myths. I love it! -g-

members.home.net

Lots and lots of debunking of myths about the Federal Reserve. He's already done a lot of work explaining the conspiracy culture surrounding the Federal Reserve, too. I am glad someone's done it.

members.home.net

>>

This series of essays is dedicated primarily to investigating the Federal Reserve conspiracy theories. It would be a
mistake, however, to ignore the context in which many of these theories exist. To the conspiracy culture, the Fed
is a vital player in the plot to enslave the world. George Johnson (1984) summarized the conspiracy world view
with this following passage:

Over the last hundred years, [the] world view in which bankers, Communists, and Jews are twisted
into a single enemy has become so engrained in the minds of some right-wingers that it is difficult to
unravel the threads and explain exactly how they are supposed to fit together. The connections are
more emotional than rational, but the purpose of a conspiracy theory is to impose a system of
inchoate hate. To Liberty Lobby, the world works something like this:

By promoting U.S. involvement in foreign wars, the bankers force the federal government into debt.
To cover its mounting deficit, the country must borrow money from the Federal Reserve System --
which is supposedly run by the international bankers -- or tax citizens through the Internal Revenue
Service, another element of the plot. The Soviets benefit because the United States is so distracted
by its various foreign ventures that it has no time to oppose the Communist plan to enslave the world
with a Marxist superstate.

According to the theory, Communists and capitalists only seem to be competitors, while, in truth,
they are working toward the same goals: socialism and one-world government. Expensive federal
social programs increase government borrowing, enriching the bankers. Taxes and government
regulation oppress small-scale entrepreneurs and businessmen, keeping them from challenging the
bankers' wealth. In a one-world government, this power over the people would be extended to
every continent, strengthening the bankers' stranglehold on the planet (Johnson, pp. 104-105).

Johnson wrote this in 1984 when the Soviet threat was still with us. If you strike the words "Soviet" and
"Communists" from the text and simply replace them with "socialists," then the plot still retains a fresh relevance for
the modern conspiracy believer. Of course, much of this conspiracy theory cannot be falsified -- there's no way to
prove there isn't a conspiracy, much like there's no way to prove Santa Clause doesn't exist. This is the reason
why the Fed essays on this site deal only with those which can in principle be falsified. This does not preclude the
possibility, however, true believers will simply ignore the evidence against the conspiracy theory or just rewrite it a
bit so as to make it unfalsifiable. In this respect conspiracy believers are very much like believers in the
paranormal. <<