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Hi Martin
Your reasoning is sound, but, attempting to change the world's thinking pattern
from the iniquitous "work ethic" that pervades the economic guru's, and the
consequent "growth ethic" to sustain an economy financed
by borrowing from the banking system, is difficult. As I commented to Wally
the present world leaders are either unable or unwilling to change their thinking patterns. We have to accept that we
are radicals whose views on finance are serious threat to the International
financiers. The fact that our predictions about the prognosis of a nation's
economy using our principles, are inevitably far nearer the truth than the
"orthodox" economists, does not endear us to the financial and economic guru's.
Unlike them we haven't needed to continually make excuses about why we "got
it wrong", because we don't "get it wrong". Unfortunately the prophet who
predicts "doom" is never popular. It seems that a messenger bringing
bad news in financial circles is inevitably shot.
Bill McG ----- Original Message
-----
Sent: Sunday, June 04, 2006 8:38 AM
Subject: Re: [socialcredit] the "effect"
of interest ~ back to Peter
To put the situation in a nutshell - the
problem of production has been essentially solved. Currently, we solve the
problem of paying for that production, that we cannot otherwise afford, by
employing ourselves on even more production, often on things like
armaments or bureaucratic endeavours, that do the world either little good or
positive harm.
Liam Ferguson, in one of his books, points our
that the most advanced nations industrially are those with the largest
National Debts - obviously since governments borrowing and spending new money
will in the long run stimulate consumer demand. Aren't we in Social Credit
really just saying that it's possible to get the credit to consumers without
going through these highly inefficient hoops?
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Saturday, June 03, 2006 5:29
AM
Subject: Re: [socialcredit] the
"effect" of interest ~ back to Peter
Hi Wallace
Could you amplify your comment about full employment? I think maybe my mind
set is still thinking in terms of the "work ethic" concept despite my
previous comments. Please correct me if I am misinterpreting your axiom.
Namely that the concept of Social Credit is a social order whereby everyone
is eventually freed from the drugery of "work" as a the sole means of
suppying the necessities of life, and is enabled to follow a life path
persuing their own direction of fulfilment. Useless competition would be
eliminated, and the concept of economic growth for the sake of economic
growth would become redundant. This is a very radicle thinking pattern, and
makes a mockery of the concepts of "Conservatism" and "Socialism". It is
outside and probably beyond the political thinking of today. It is however
an concept to which I would have great affinity.
Bill McG
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Saturday, June 03, 2006 3:10
PM
Subject: Re: [socialcredit] the
"effect" of interest ~ back to Peter
But surely, if Government is to spend none of the new money to be
issued into circulation, it will be faced for ever with the
choice of taxation and/or borrowing for its expenditure? And
policicians in need of popularity will borrow rather than tax, and
government debts will continue to rise? Sounds as if the BC
administration was going right along Douglas' lines in this particular, if
not in others! "Let them borrow, but give the (people) the money to
pay the interest."?
And how does this gel with the atitude of some Social Crediters that
most or all taxation is unnecessary?
Seems to me like wanting to have the cake and eat it too.
Regards. John
R.
From: "Wallace M. Klinck" <wmklinck@shaw.ca> Reply-To:
socialcredit@elistas.com To:
socialcredit@elistas.com Subject: Re: [socialcredit] the
"effect" of interest ~ back to Peter Date: Fri, 02 Jun 2006
03:06:07 -0600
Thanks for the comments, Joe.
There is no such thing in Social Credit
thought as a "positive contribution to keeping unemployment down" (see
Bill McGunnigle's comments below). Properly understood, our aim is
progressively to release mankind from necessary work. We wish to
promote conditions which are conducive to an increasingly leisured and
civilized society--and the moreso the better. "Full employment" as
a social policy is fundamentally NOT a Social Credit objective and until
this is clearly comprehended beyond all doubt, one can never get "off
the ground" toward becoming a Social Crediter in any meaningful way
whatsoever. Absolute economic security IS a Social Credit
objective and is to be pursued, in the financial realm, essentially
by means of the Social Credit National (Consumer) Dividend and the
Compensated Price.
Regarding a "balanced budget":
The Douglas analysis explicitly demonstrates the impossibility
of a balanced budget under the orthodox financial
regime. Debt can at times be shifted from one jurisdiction or
social or governent stratum to another but in order to carry on as
a society we must, as a society, go increasingly into
debt--unrepayable except by periodic refinancing
(i.e., borrowing). Essentially, the "floating" debts of
society are converted into expanding "fixed" debt of senior
governments. Under the orthodox, or existing, system of banking
and finance, a "balanced budget" (see Douglas in The Alberta
Experiment) means:
1. That the economy is
static
2. That we consume all of our real
(i.e., physical) capital currently, and
3. That the issuer of credit (i.e.,
the banking system) owns, in final analysis, all real
capital
Comment on the above points:
1. We should never be physically
limited in economic activity, whether in production or
consumption, by artificial financial constraint. Physical
potential for production and consumption should always be financially
accommodated, i.e., finance should always reflect physical
reality.
2. Obviously we do not consume our
capital currently inasmuch as it clearly accumulates and lasts into the
future. Unfortunately under orthodox financial rules money in
respect of real capital charges is withdrawn prematurely via the price
mechanism, i.e., long before the physical capital is actually
worn out or obsoleted.
3. Productive capital is created by
society at large and banking institutions have no right to
appropriate effective ownership of it. The Social Credit
National (Consumer) Dividend and Compensated Price would confer
beneficial ownership of the communal capital upon individual
citizens.
Actually, Douglas declared, and effectively
demonstrated, that a "balanced budget" is actually a bankers'
policy. That should be obvious from a Social Credit
standpoint. I agree that the "Social Credit" administration in
British Columbia was anything but Social Credit--and you provide an
excellent account of the financial policies they actually followed in
your Province. It is a confirmation of Douglas's "thesis" that
even though British Columbia "enjoyed" a vigorous export
trade, the de facto Provincial debt still
continued to escalate.
Sincerely
Wally
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, May 31, 2006
2:22 PM
Subject: RE: [socialcredit] the
"effect" of interest ~ back to Peter
Hi
Bill (McGunnigle),
The
original BC Social Credit League Government did, as you say, “run in
the black.” The experience of ‘political Party’
‘Social Credit in BC was substantially different from that in
Alberta.
While the original ‘League’ government won election after
election here for 20 years, I don’t believe they ever achieved over
50% of the ‘popular vote’. There was never an
overwhelming majority voting for ‘social credit’, (or some version of
it), as there had been in Alberta.
Consequently,
Premier WAC Bennett, who was ‘fiscally conservative’, (and a
Conservative before joining Social Credit) could run ‘balanced
(surplus, actually) budgets’, something which is not consistent with
original ‘Social Credit’ doctrine, on the claim that by doing so he
was “keeping the Province out of the clutches of the
moneylenders.”
What
enabled him to do so was the tremendous growth in the BC economy in
that era through ever expanding resource exploitation.
We had, at that time, markets literally beating a
path to our doors. At the same time, his government
engaged in what might be called some ‘creative
accounting’. They off-loaded some items which had
been ‘direct’ Provincial Government debt onto various Crown
Corporations and ‘Authorities’, which were ‘guaranteed’ as to payment
by the Province, but could then be classed as ‘contingent liabilities’
on the Province’s books. Much in the manner of
someone ‘co-signing’ a loan ~ the debt isn’t their’s, it’s the ‘borrower’s ~ unless the
borrower defaults. In actual fact, real overall
Provincial debt (in total) continued to grow all through the WAC
Bennett years.
‘Inflation’,
which caught up to and
surpassed the seemingly never ending
‘prosperity’ by the early 1970’s, was their
eventual undoing. Was a good run while it lasted,
but still fell far short of what could have been had some greater
attention been paid to ‘real’ Social Credit.
Regards,
Joe
-----Original
Message----- From: W.
McGunnigle [mailto:wmcgunn@maxnet.co.nz]
Sent: May 31,
2006 6:26
AM To:
socialcredit@elistas.com Subject: Re: [socialcredit] the
"effect" of interest ~ back to Peter
You have forgotten that since then there has been a vast proliferation
of government departments and consequently the number of
administrators needed to operate them "efficiently". The classic
example is the onshore administration for the British Navy. In 1919
when the British Navy had more ships than any two other navies
compined well over 400 vessels it managed with an administrative staff
of approximately 8000-10000. I believe today when its number of active
vessels can be counted on two hands it requires an admin. staff
of around 100000. Apparently all Western nations suffer from this
disease every civil service increases by approximately 12% per
year irrespective on the work load. There are more administrators on
most armed forces budgets than service personelle. When we add
Social welfare, Judiciary, and political administration
costs for parliamentary staff all of whom have proliferated like the
proverbial maggots you can see why governments needed all that extra
revenue. On the other hand perhaps by employing all these extra staff
the government is making a positive contribution to keeping
unemployment down. I know that in the UK many offices were
decentralised and transferred to areas of high unemployment. A
great pity that BC lost its Socred government, From my reading it
appears to only BC government that actually ran consistently "in
the Black". I know the NZ government hasn't done this
consistently for many years.
Bill
McGOriginal Message -----
Sent:
Wednesday, May 31, 2006 4:39 PM
Subject:
RE: [socialcredit] the "effect" of interest ~ back to
Peter
Hello
Bill (McGunnigle),
Thanks
for an interesting history and overview of taxation.
I didn’t know ‘income tax’ dated back to Pitt.
Taxes seem to be demarcated into ‘temporary’ and ‘permanent’
categories here, too. And many ‘temporary’ ones
seem to become more or less ‘permanent’ after they’ve been
established. Most politicians, once
elected, seem to be convinced
that they know how to spend your money for you better than you know
how to spend it yourself. Especially around
election time.
Here
in BC, the original Social Credit League Government did remove
‘tolls’ on various major bridges once they were paid
for. And generally attempted to keep taxation low
for everyone quite successfully. Later
governments weren’t so dedicated. And still toll
one major arterial highway that was paid off a decade or more ago,
along with what’s suspected to be a pretty substantial ‘sinking
fund’ to cover maintaining it. The current mob in
charge tried to peddle that road and its toll
booth off to a private operator for an immediate multi-million
dollar cash infusion to the Crown’s coffers, and the opportunity to
share in future revenues through taxing the operator’s
profits.
The
normally passive BC public, in one of the most
interesting examples of what can be done when truly non-partisan
‘people-power’ is constructively exercised, revolted.
Two Government MLAs whose Ridings the road traversed, one of
them the normally ‘impartial’ Speaker of the Legislative Assembly,
the other an important Cabinet Minister, got a lesson that wasn’t
lost on them in ‘yielding to pressure’. Massed
public pressure.
Which
completely overrode ‘Party’ affiliations, Cabinet solidarity,
ancient British Parliamentary precedents regarding what a Speaker is
supposed to say and do, and, eventually very substantial ‘Premier’
pressure from a normally unmoveable dictatorial
ideologue. The Speaker had to
speak. Against what his
Government was planning to do. The road
wasn’t ‘privatized’. But the ‘public pressure’
wasn’t sustained, unfortunately, and too quickly
dissipated. And when it did, the Government
raised the ‘toll’ ! But, the road is still
‘ours’, and it did illustrate what IS possible,
and could be done if the public wants something bad enough and their
determination and pressure could be focussed in a way to get
it.
Hard
to believe sometimes that only 100 years ago many
National governments seemed to be
funding almost their entire operations, including
infrastructure construction costs, mainly through
Customs and Excise duties on Imports. And today we embrace
‘Free-trade’, and wallow deeper in debt.
Joe
-----Original
Message----- From:
W. McGunnigle [mailto:wmcgunn@maxnet.co.nz] Sent: May 30,
2006 5:40
AM To:
socialcredit@elistas.com Subject: Re: [socialcredit] the
"effect" of interest ~ back to Peter
Noted your comment on tax. Do you demarcate taxes into "Temporary"
taxes created to fund a particular publically incurred debt e,g, a
war, and "permanent" taxes designed to fund the general revenue for
government expenditure? I ask this because there is a particular
temporary tax introduced in 1793 to fund William Pitt the Younger's
war against France
and eventually Napoleon. It was called, surprise, surprise, INCOME
TAX. I think that 213 years for a "temporary tax" is a pretty good
innings don't you. Or are we looking at the political expediency and
duplicity practiced by rulers and politicians since time immemorial?
I have the jundiced view that a politician does not have the moral
capability of distiguishing between the two type of revenue
gathering exercises once he or she gets their paws on the money.
Indeed I think they devise ways of accounting to deliberately
concealing funding sources so that they can avoid fiscal
responsibility for borrowing funds on the international money
market.
Money
laundering scams originated at government level to confuse everyone
into believing our taxes are being responsibly managed. In New
Zealand the scam is called the "Consolidated Fund" all taxation,
revenue dues, road fines and overseas borrowing disappears into this
great black hole, and no one can determine who is entitled to what
because no government funding has been previously earmarked for a
particular purpose.The government SAYS that funds are earmarked,
but, if you attempt to trace the financial direction taken by any
peice of taxation or overseas borrowing, you find it is impossible
to tie down.The "Consolidated Fund" pays everything. What a
magnificent way to conceal financial fiddling and all perfectly
legal. How do you combat this sort of contrived creative
accounting?
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