| Subject: | Re: [socialcredit] Fw: It's Not Interest, Jim: Wally responds: Again | | Date: | Monday, July 26, 2004 20:21:18 (-0800) | | From: | Javier M. Claparols <jmc1 @......com>
|
| In reply to: | Message 22 (written by Wallace M. Klinck) |
|
Jim - kindly keep me in the list and trust me it is
not at all annoying. Thanks...Javier
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, July 25, 2004 11:23
PM
Subject: [socialcredit] Fw: It's Not
Interest, Jim: Wally responds: Again
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, July 25, 2004 1:05 AM
Subject: Re: It's Not Interest, Jim: Wally responds:
Again
Jim, did you receive my recent attachment being a
rebuttal by A. Hamilton McIntyre, C.A. to the British Labor Committee's
criticism of Social Credit? I have not seen any response to it. --
Wally
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Saturday, July 24, 2004 10:49
AM
Subject: Re: It's Not Interest, Jim:
Wally responds
I'll respond in blue Joe,
but if I don't get responses from anyone else, I'm going to take them off
the list, as it is probably annoying them to get all these
messages.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Saturday, July 24, 2004 1:56
AM
Subject: Re: It's Not Interest, Jim:
Wally responds
I'll go back to
responding in 'maroon'. ~Joe
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, July 23, 2004 8:50
PM
Subject: Re: It's Not Interest,
Jim: Wally responds
Hi Joe:
I'll post some comments and respond in turn
in red.
(Joe) A 'debt' is still a
'debt', whether it has interest appended to it or not. It is
a 'call' by the lender upon the borrower for that borrower to 'do'
something, and as such is an external means of control over one
individual by another.
(Jim) But a bank loan isn't just
a debt, it's also a credit. Let's look at a mortgage. When
you buy a house, the bank loans you $100,000, say, and the house become
collateral for that loan. The "loan", or the money loaned, is
owned by you and the bank. When I buy the
house the money is 'owned' by the seller. This
is true, and perhaps I should of clarified a little further. Let's
start again. I want to buy a brand new house. I go to the
bank for a loan. I offer the house as collateral, the bank
looks at my employment history, and ability to pay, and determines
I should get the loan. They create at that moment a debt (or a
credit to them, but I'm looking at it from my point of view so
actually a debit to me), and a credit (the money they deposit in my
account). At this moment, both the bank and I "own" that
money. I then write a cheque to the builders of the house, and I
have the house, with a debt, and the builders of the house have a credit
with costs to clear. Less any amount of it he may
still owe on the house. I 'own' the house, my name is on the
title. And the bank 'owns' my loan. Secured by a charge
on that title. If I don't
repay as I've contracted to do, the bank will 'own' my house. And
my 'equity' in it, such as may initially be required as a 'down
payment' nowadays, plus any payments on the principle I've made in the
interim, will be lost. Again, this is
absolutely true. Like I stated, you own the house up until such a
time as you can't make your loan repayments. However; usury
ensures there is always more debt than credit, so the fact is that it's
guaranteed a certain percentage of the population will lose their assets
because there's not enough money to pay back the banks - unless, the
economy continously grows bringing more goods, and loans, into the
system.The bank creates it as as debit (debt, or iou), and a
credit (deposit). The actual house is owned by you, and can only
become the property of the bank if you fail to meet your loan repayment
schedule. Now the new money has value because it's attached to
some asset - the house. But as the house depreciates over the
course of it's existence, then the money for the loan should be paid
back over the "life" of the house, so that the money in existence has
something tangible to back it up. And how is
this to be determined? How does anyone know what the
actual 'life expectancy' of any house is going to be? The factors
involved in making such a determination would be impossible to quantify
accurately. Absolutely, but it's the best we
got. Accoountants do this all the time when they depreciate
buildings or equipment. I agree that more work needs to be done in
this area to more closely match real depreciation with what accountants
depreciate. But I can guarantee you this, it will never be
perfect. This would be a logistical nightmare to try to
determine for each individual dwelling. Which would need an
'individualized' repayment schedule, in some cases stretching out over
100 years. Who's going to be around that long to keep up the
payments?The bank would own the house at that
point. In other cases, with the way some homes are being
built here nowadays, the life expectancy might be
shorter than
what mortgages are usually taken out for. Shorten the mortgage. It often would be
in my view anyway. How could any bank ever keep on
top of all that? And then there's the change in 'property values'
themselves to consider.
When the house ceases to exist, so
should the loan. So the home'owner' will never
be out of debt? And the home owner's payments
would be much less. Although, I doubt there's a house that lasts
100 years anymore without major renovation. There will be
no incentive for him to pay off his house, to save interest
charges, so he'll just let the debt ride? Remember what I'm saying here. There should be
no interest charged, or if there is, a dividend equal to that amount
should be given to everyone. Either way, it's not a factor.
Many, no doubt, would like that nowadays. But how, in
any practical sense, could this ever be accomplished? I can
see the 'administration' costs, just keeping track of the 'life
expectancy' of every house, and at what rate the 'loan' against it
should be amortized so that both 'disappear' together, being absolutely
horrendous. Who pays for that? And how? You're paying for that cost right now.
However; more loans can be made to "spruce up" the
house to extend it's life span. However; as I've always
stated, the loan itself, or who owes who, is a question of ownership,
and not a question of balance. I agree that banks can exert alot
of control via their power to create money at will. As I've already stated, a 'debt' is still a 'debt'.
Under such a scheme as you've described above, it is a
furtherance of 'external' control over the individual by an
organization. Something I believe is incompatible
with 'true' Social Credit. I
agree. Something that should be the exclusive control of the
government acting on behalf of the citizens within that community.
How do you know the 'government' is going to
act that way, Jim? Just because a 'debt' is owed to the
'government' instead of a 'bank' doesn't make it any less a 'debt', does
it? Social Credit, at least as far as I understand it, seeks
to 'de-centralize' the powers of 'government' and 'banks'. Not
combine them, and make them absolute. If you decentralize the government, then you've
decentralized the ability to create credit. But I'd rather have
that ability in control of the government, who I can elect, than in
control of banks, where I have absolutely no say.
This reminds me again of the type of
deductive reasoning expressed in 'Zeno's problem'. You may not
have seen it, Jim, so I'll reproduce it here. Maybe you can see
the similarities.
A classic example is the problem of
Achilles and the tortoise. In its classical form, with the classical
pre-suppositions, the problem is insoluble. As stated by William
James, the problem, or paradox as it is usually known, runs:
"Give that reptile
ever so small an advance and the swift runner Achilles can never
overtake him, much less get ahead of him; for of space and time are
infinitely divisible (as our intellects tell us they must be), by the
time Achilles reaches the tortoise's starting point, the tortoise has
already got ahead of that starting point, and so on ad infinitum, the
interval between the pursuer and the pursued growing endlessly minuter,
but never becoming wholly obliterated," The modern mind can "see through" the problem at
once because we are the possessors of new points of view to encompass
such paradoxes; the problem has in fact vanished, and we concern
ourselves with the more practical problem: "Given that the tortoise and Archilles have such
and such speeds, and start with such and such a distance between them,
how long will it take Achilles to overtake the
tortoise?"
Actually I'll respond as I did to Bill. It's a
non-sequitur in regards to what I'm saying. I'm saying that
because of usury, the debt is achilles, and the credit is the
tortoise. Because of interest, the only way to pay back loans is
by access to more loans, but those other loans also have interest, and
it is because of this that the rate of growth of the debt is greater
than the rate of growth of the money supply. Douglas himself
saw this, although perhaps he did not see the logical conclusion when he
states, " The debt differs in nature from the
debt created by private finance in exactly the same way that a debt to
foreigners differs from an internal debt-its repayment actually takes
money out of the country. If a rise of prices has occurred, it is repaid
twice over, once in increased prices and again on redemption.
Secondly, there is no provision in this method of financing for the
money required to pay the interest on the debentures, which, in fact,
can only be paid, if it is paid, by the issue of fresh money to
pay it, which, under existing circumstances, comes from the same source,
that is to say, the financial system." The facts speak for themselves Joe, because of
usury, the debt is 2.5 times the money supply, and as time goes on, this
figure will get worse because debt is growing faster than credit, and
this is a result of usury.But this is so even
if there were no 'usury'. As soon as a loan of bank-created credit
is called back, and 'cancelled' by the bank; or 'sold' to the public in
an exchange for 'pre-existing money' for securities of some
type; PREMATURELY, while there are still COSTS that same
sum of money originally created still outstanding on anyone's books,
those COSTS can't be met. Joe, go back to
my example about the butcher and the baker that Douglas used. If a
credit is cancelled pre-maturely, without covering certain costs, then
another loan is needed. With this I agree, but this does not
increase the aggregate debt. A dollar of debt was cancelled, and a
dollar created. So what? The debt hasn't increased.
Without usury, I can choose to increase the debt if I want more
consumption, or decrease the debt if I want more leisure.
However; with usury I am FORCED to increase the debt to pay
interest on a loan which only created enough money to pay back the
principle, so my options are economic growth, or financial
collapse. I cannot choose more leisure, because that would
collapse the financial system. Without a further debt being incurred, or 'money'
supposedly being 'imported' from another credit area through
'exports' or 'foreign investment', or a write-off of these costs
somehow, as in a bankruptcy. All things which add to the overall
problem. 'Usury', detest it though we may, has no direct
bearing on this problem. It would exist even if there were
'interest-free money'. And it will get worse as incomes through
wages are increasingly displaced by technology. And those incomes,
as a percentage of overall costs, are diminishing and less and less able
to amortize overall debt. But wages are not the
only incomes we have, and this has been my contention with Douglas' A+B
theorem. Someone gets income from profit and someone gets
income from "book costs". All these incomes still go to clear
the market. Interest might make this debt grow faster
when the principle isn't being paid, but it isn't the CAUSE of the
problem. And 'eliminating' it, won't cure it.
Interest is the CAUSE of B
in A+B, but that is not the only problem. You've identified many
that do not relate to A+B. Douglas spoke on many issues. And
actually I agree with them all, even A+B if you consider that B is
usury. If you look at what I'm really arguing, it's a minutia in
the details of A+B, but I think that by arguing about that minutia,
you're assuming that I'm disregarding everything Douglas said, or that I
have to believe in everything Douglas said in order to believe in Social
Credit. I don't believe that's true. And, personally, I
think it's a dangerous mindset, because it's makes Douglas out to be a
"demi-god" beyond criticism. I understand what has happened to
Social Credit in the course of it's existence, and also understand why
Social Crediters are leery of ideas different from Douglas being deemed
"Social Credit". But you have to be able to seperate the wheat
from the chaff. I will give you a line by someone who wrote me a
private email, but since it was private, I won't give his/her
name. He/she said, "There has been a
huge debate on the role of interest with, unfortunately, a prevailing
consensus by the hard-line ideologues on this list that interest is only
a minor contributor to the tendency for debt to grow faster than money.
I have been particularly ridiculed and lampooned by Bill Ryan for
having the impertinence to display such views over his list. It is
indeed very sad to see people with closed minds seeking to censor other
points of view in this way. I think your analysis helps to redress
the balance, and to establish interest (and particularly usury, although
they seem to regard "usury" as a dirty and ideologically inspired word)
as a factor which greatly exacerbates this tendency, whatever might be
the fundamental causes. And I also recognize and respect your view
that it is THE fundamental cause, even though I personally feel that
there are other contributing causes."
That is why I'm not interested in
"debating" Bill Ryan, and personally don't care if the Social Crediters
in the forum, or anywhere else, are interested in actual debate. I
think there's far more we agree on than disagree Joe, but I think we
should have a vehicle for expressing our disagreements and learning from
each other. I always enjoy talking to you, and I learn a great
deal in the process. We both have different backgrounds and have a
lot to share.
We might say that 'interest' and
'profit' are synonomous. They are necessary in our present system
as 'inducements' to produce. But which came
first, the chicken or the egg? The only real profit that a company
earns, because as I've stated before, from an economic point of view, if
you own the company and administer it, then the administration
charge needs to be taken out of the profit as a wage to yourself (even
if it's unwise to actually do so for tax purposes), is a return on
capital - and the opportunity cost of capital is INTEREST. If
it weren't for interest, there would be no drive for more and more
profit. If we did away with either, in our 'imperfect',
actual world, the alternative to them would be stark 'compulsion'.
The triumph of the power of 'fear' over the power of 'love'.
Neither interest nor profit should be particular problems
when Social Credit is properly applied. And if either were, they
could be easily dealt with. You're right,
properly applied Social Credit eliminates the problems of usury as I see
it, so in essence, we agree with the solution. It is in the pre-mature return and cancellation of
'bank-created' credit while the 'costs' it created haven't been fully
liquidated that the larger problem lies. I disagree. This does not create "more" debt, it
leaves the aggregate debt untouched, because it just forces someone else
into debt by the same amount. Interest is what grows the debt
faster than the money supply.
Since it's Bill Ryan's 'accounting
proof' you take such exception to, would it not be better to at least
allow him a chance to respond, too?
Two points Joe. 1) It's actually not Bill Ryan's
proof, it's a "proof" offered up by the banks, and I've seen it
long before I met Bill Ryan. 2) I've had this debate with Bill
before, but instead of debating me, he resorted to ad hominem attacks,
and I have no interest to engage in any discussion about anything with
Bill Ryan.
You, on the other hand, I like and respect very much.
And will debate anything with you, or any of the others on this
list.Thanks, Jim. It's too bad that we all
can't talk to one another in a civilized and respectful way, and not
have to engage in juvenile name calling when there isn't
agreement. My hide is thick, maybe my skull is too, so it doesn't
really bother me too much if someone calls me names. It doesn't bother me either Joe, but I don't have time to
engage in that sort of thing. I work, as do you, and have things
to do. So when I do find time to engage in debate, I seek actual
debate, and sharing of ideas, not personal attacks. (I get
far worse every time the price of lumber goes up a few cents!).
You know the old saying, "To err is human, to forgive divine." Even
Richard Nixon, who should know, said words to the effect that
''Hate always hurts the hater more than the hated". Well,
you'll all do as you please, but real progress would be far better
served by open discussion in my view. It
would be, but unfortunately, that won't happen.
Take care,
Jim
Best wishes,
Joe

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