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Well Maintained Economic

What would happen to economies and general socio-economic trends if governments printed more money for things?
I have no idea about economics in general let alone the consequences of such an unconventional method to combat poverty and to that end to make a countries infrastructure more sustainable, as well as including workforces average wages increases more inline with cpi, and used the extra money to develope and maintain health and education sectors and other larger national welfare programs/elements to make them more viable in the longer term, that would be my intention if it could be done. can someone who knows alot more about this issue please explain why we dont or why this isn't done generally?
You are not alone. Less than 5% of the population really knows what goes on with our money and the Federal Reserve, and if they did, there'd be an overnight American revolution against the government.
First, we assume the government is always thinking about our best interests. Wrong.
Put simply: A group of men, comprised of 13 Family dynasties, own the world. They are the International bankers, with direct links to many of our presidents, and officials throughout our government and the world. They own the Media, and control the puppet strings.
Why? They create money out of thin air, and loan it to our banks at interest. Our banks take that money and loan it to us for a slightly higher interest to make money. .
These families are not on the forbs list of richest people, because despite being worth trillions, they are like a mafia that keeps a low profile. Literally every country in the world owes them money that combines in the several trillioins.
They own the media, our politicians, and so forth. George Bush Sr's father was one in the banking circle (New york bank) later found out to have laundered Nazi money for Hitler during WWII. These are vicious people who see us as "ants" who have fed both sides of every major war you know of. War costs money, and gov'ts need to borrow more of it. Lots more. Trillions more, as in the Iraq war.
So why? Why don't we print our own money? Why let someone print it out of thin air? Who is the Federal Reserve?
The federal reserve is no more federal than federal express, part of the PRIVATLY owned banking dynasties that prints money out of thin air, and loans it to us at interest.
They decide what the interest rate will be, and control our entire economies. They have the power to raise it to 20% tomorrow, and would buy up bankrupted companies for pennies on the dollar (like they did in the crash of 29, and the great depression to follow.)
To give you an idea of their power:
Abraham lincoln was the last president next to JFK that wanted america to produce its own money. Both were assinated shortly after. From memory, lincoln produced 20 million, and JFK produced about 4 Billion in silver backed dollars that were fed into the economy.
By simple economic principal, if president Woodrow Wilson blocked the formation of the federal reserve in 1913, there would be No american deficit and our living standards would be 100 years into the future. He is quoted saying something to the effect that "had I known the intention of the federal reserve, I would have never allowed it, for america has fallen victim to a small group of tyranical men who enslave the population without their knowledge."
The best and simplest video to explain this is the last half of http://zeitgeistmovie.com
If you watch it, you'll never be the same.
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Economic Restructuring $82.85 Economic restructuring refers to the phenomenon of Western urban areas shifting from a manufacturing to a service sector economic base. This transformation has affected demographics including income distribution, employment, and social hierarchy; institutional arrangements including the growth of the corporate complex, specialized producer services, capital mobility, informal economy, nonstandard work, and public outlays; as well as geographic spacing including the rise of world cities, spatial mismatch, and metropolitan growth differentials. Author: Miller, Frederic P./ Vandome, Agnes F./ McBrewster, John Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 120 Publication Date: 2010/11/29 Language: English Dimensions: 9.02 x 5.98 x 0.28 inches |
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Economic Growth and Development (Paperback) $177 This textbook covers the full range of topics and issues normally included in a course on economic growth and development. Both mainstream economic perspectives as well as the multi-paradigmatic, inter-disciplinary, and dynamic-evolutionary perspectives from heterodox economics are detailed. Economic development is viewed in terms of the long-run well-being of humanity, social stability, environmental sustainability, and just distribution of economic gains, not simply as the growth of GDP. Furthermore, this textbook explicitly recognizes the complexity of economic development by linking economic activity to our broader social and natural environments.The textbook`s unique feature is its focus on the natural environment. Both the historical effects of economic development on the environment and the environmental constraints on future economic development are thoroughly discussed in two chapters on environmental issues and policies. In fact, because economic development is defined in terms of economic, social, and environmental sustainability, the natural environment is included in discussions throughout the book.The textbook is inter-disciplinary: knowledge from fields such as sociology, psychology, political science, economic history, and ecology is called on to enhance the economic analysis. A thorough historical account of the development of the principal paradigms of economic development is also included, and the important issues of institutional development and cultural change merit their own chapters. Two chapters on technological change holistically focus on production technologies as well as the dynamic performance of entire economic, social, and ecological systems. Also, the important relationship between economic development and globalization is presented in three chapters on international trade, international finance and investment, and immigration from both orthodox and heterodox perspectives. |
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Friends in Action Intl-Well Drilling #1
How can us little people use this economic collapse as an opportunity? ?
I can't help but feel like there is someway the common person can use this as an oppurtunity to ban together and take control of their lives, rather than sit by and hope our benevolent masters come up with a convoluted solution that will maintain their standard of living and perhaps help us maintain our well-being. Any ideas?
Even though the economic crisis is going to be painful, I think it can be a wake up call. It can make people realize that the government cannot protect the people from cradle to grave. It just goes to show that the best way is to go back to personal responsibility.
If you look at the policies enacted by the government, you will see that we are over regulated, we have a monolithic government, and that the government is intruding too much in our personal lives (welfare, healthcare, even forcing people to wear helmets for their protection - and putting them into jail if they don't).
The crisis we are having right now is exactly because of bad monetary policy. Instead of allowing the free market to regulate itself, the government, for whatever reason, regulated the market with the arrogant thought that they know better than the aggregate supply and demand decision making of the people. They have resorted to central planning. Their actions also included creating different moral hazards that did not give people incentives to save. Instead, they were given incentives to spend, consume, and borrow money (to consume more!). Even enticing them to buy houses that they cannot even afford, with the assurance that the government will bail them out if things get a little tight.
Where did personal responsibility go?
Depressions/recessions are the necessary cycle that washes away all the malinvestments created in the boom cycle. That is the reason why the government should stop with all the meddling in the market (it should stop bailing out all these institutions). By intervening, the government is only prolonging the necessary correction needed to get us back to prosperity.
So I think this is an opportunity for people to really wake up and realize that personal responsibility is a value. It also will show them that we should not look up to the government to save us even though that is what they promise to do.
The government that governs best, is the one that governs least.
I think it is a time for We The People to realize that we are getting screwed by those we appointed to serve us.
Tags: well maintained economic
