Friday, September 11, 2009

How the Federal Reserve Runs the US

By Stephen Lendman

Years ago I read William Greider's excellent book published in 1987 on how the US Federal Reserve System works.  It was detailed and explicit and makes wonderful and informative reading, except for the solution he suggests to a huge problem.  His was far too timid.  This article proposes a much different one.  Greider called his book Secrets of the Temple with a sub-title: How the Federal Reserve Runs the Country.  A better sub-title might have been how the Fed (and other key central bankers) runs the world.  This article attempts to summarize what it does, how it does it, for whose benefit and at whose expense.  For those who don't know, prepare for some stunning information and commentary.

Let's be clear at the outset.  The US Federal Reserve, Bank of England, Bank of Japan and the European Central Bank (for the 12 European countries that adopted the single euro currency in 1999) are institutions with enormous power far beyond what most people everywhere can imagine.  These most dominant of all central banks, as well as most others, have a powerful influence on the financial conditions in virtually all countries including their own, of course, in an increasingly borderless financial world where a significant economic event in one nation can affect most others for better or worse.

One other powerful bank is also part of today's financial world.  It needs mentioning because of its importance, even though it requires a separate article to explain how it works more fully.  It's the secretive, inviolable and accountable to no one Bank of International Settlements (BIS) founded in 1930 and based in Basle, Switzerland.  This bank most people never heard of is the central banker to its member central banks - a sort of banking "boss of bosses" equivalent to what apparently exists in the shadowy world of Mafia dons.  Like most other central banks, including the Federal Reserve (explained below), it's privately owned by its members. 

It's believed by some academicians and others who've studied the BIS that the ruling elite of financial capitalism established this bank of banks to be the apex of power to exercise authority over a world financial system owned and controlled by them.  It's thought their plan was to use this bank to dominate the political system of every country and control the world economy in a feudalistic fashion.  In a word, the thinking goes that these super-elite want to rule the world by controlling its money, and they set up this supranational all-powerful bank of banks to do it.  As important as that is, that discussion remains for another time as the intent of this article is to focus solely on the US Federal Reserve.

The dominant central banks and BIS, together with most others, wield their influence in cartel-like alliance with each other to assure they all benefit more than they otherwise would without such a cozy arrangement.  With their immense power it's no play on words to say these financial institutions do indeed rule the world.  Because they're able to create money, they fund the needs of their governments, their militaries and all business activity that couldn't function without a ready supply of that most needed of all commodities.  It's money, not love, that makes the world go round, and central bankers have the power to create or remove from circulation as much or little of it as they choose and for whatever purpose they have in mind.  That kind of power can move mountains or destroy them.

No nation's central bank is more powerful today than the US Federal Reserve, but it wasn't always that way, and it now has competition for the top spot it hasn't known since WW II.  The Fed, as it's called, has existed since it was first established by an act of Congress in 1913.  But the Bank of England has been around since Britannia ruled the waves beginning in 1694 when King William III needed help funding the kind of escapade that takes lots of ready cash - war.  Back then it was with France, and the king needed a friendly banker to print it up for him to help him fight it.  He also needed financial help to facilitate trade and manage the country's debt that always mounts up when wars are fought.  The Bank of England wasn't the first central bank, but it was the modern world's first privately owned one in a powerful country.  It was called the Bank of England to keep the public from knowing that it, like our Federal Reserve, was and still is privately owned and not part of the government.  It was also the model used in the formation of our own central bank and most others.

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http://www.populistamerica.com/federal_reserve#2

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