Author Topic: Ron Paul's Hour of Power  (Read 572 times)

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Offline Matt

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Ron Paul's Hour of Power
« on: December 11, 2009, 09:47:53 AM »
The decades-long campaign of Ron Paul to have the Government Accountability Office do a full audit of the Federal Reserve now has 313 sponsors in the House.

Sometimes perseverance does pay off.

If not derailed by the establishment, the audit may happen.

Yet, many columnists and commentators are aghast.

An auditors’ probe, they wail, would imperil the Fed’s independence and expose it to pressure from Congress to keep interest rates low and money flowing when the need of the nation and economy might call for tightening.

They cite Paul Volcker, who to squeeze double-digit inflation out of the economy in the late Carter and early Reagan years, drove the prime rate to 21 percent, causing the worst recession since the Depression. Volcker, they claim, prepared the ground for the Reagan tax cuts and seven fat years of prosperity.

That decade, America created 20 million jobs — and another 22 million in the Clinton era. Without Volcker putting the economy through the wringer, it could not have happened. And had he been forced to explain his decisions, Congress would have broken his policy.

Such is the cast for Fed independence.

But if true, what does this say about our republic?

Is it not an admission that, though Congress was created by the Constitution, and the Fed is a creation of Congress, our elected representatives cannot be trusted with the money supply, cannot be trusted with control of the nation’s central bank? To have decisions made in the national interest, we need folks who do not have to answer to voters.

If this be true, the republic is closer to its end than its beginning, when Thomas Jefferson said, “In questions of power, let us hear no more of trust in men, but rather bind them down from mischief with the chains of the Constitution.”

Others contend that were it not for the independence and vision of Fed Chair Ben Bernanke, the economy might have gone over the cliff and into the abyss after the Lehman Brothers collapse in October 2008.

What opponents of Paul’s audit are thus saying is that elected legislators must be kept out of the temple where the great decisions about the economy are made, that these decisions must rest with bankers and economists answerable, as is the Supreme Court, to themselves and no one else.

But has the performance of the Fed been so brilliant any intrusion upon its privacy is sacrilege?

Among the failures of the Fed is the Great Depression. As Milton Friedman related in his Monetary History of the United States, for which he won a Nobel Prize for Economics, the Fed hugely expanded the money supply in the mid-to-late 1920s.

Following a path of least resistance, the money flowed into the equity markets, where stocks could be bought on 10 percent margin. The market soared, and a huge bubble was created. When it popped, scores of thousands of investors conducted a run on the banks to get their money out to meet their margin calls.

Thousands of banks, short on cash, closed. One-third of the money supply was wiped out, and the Fed failed to replenish the lost blood. Thus did the Fed cause the Great Depression.

Smoot and Hawley were framed.

Moreover, every bubble from the dot-com of the late 1990s to housing this decade is a result of Fed policy. For unless there is an excess of money sloshing around, funds that surge into one market, be it housing, stocks or Third World loans, have to come out of another.

Moreover, if the Fed has not failed dismally in its duty to keep prices stable, how come candy bars and Cokes that cost a nickel in the 1950s cost 50 or 75 cents today, and new Cadillacs that sold for $3,200 in the late 1940s cost $55,000 or $60,000 now? Who is responsible for inflation, if not the Fed?

Moreover, it is now conceded that the Fed, in the early years of this 21st century, kept interest rates near 1 percent for too long, and created the bubble that popped in 2008 and almost brought down our own and the global economies.

Because the Fed can create money out of thin air, we have been able to wage wars on credit, shovel out trillions in foreign aid, World Bank and International Monetary Fund loans, and run humongous budget and trade deficits that have brought our country to the brink of ruin.

And if Bernanke is a genius, how is it he didn’t see the train wreck coming and had to double-time it to the Hill with Hank Paulson to plead for $700 billion to bail out AIG, Fannie and Freddie, and buy all that rotten paper on the books of Citibank & Co.?

The greatest economy the world had ever seen has been horribly mismanaged and virtually ruined by the decisions of presidents, Congress and the Federal Reserve. Main Street has been wiped as Wall Street was bailed out. Why?

Bring on the auditors!

Source : http://buchanan.org/blog/ron-pauls-hour-of-power-3232
Any fool can know. The point is to understand.”
― Albert Einstein

Offline Dee

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Re: Ron Paul's Hour of Power
« Reply #1 on: December 11, 2009, 10:54:29 AM »
I listened to an interview a few hours ago, of Paul regarding this topic. I started a thread on it about the auditing of the Fed. It will be interesting to see if it happens.
You may all go to hell, I will go to Texas. Davy Crockett

Offline Heather

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Re: Ron Paul's Hour of Power
« Reply #2 on: December 11, 2009, 10:55:41 AM »
This is one of those obviously non important topics that most wont bother to read an few will bother to respond.  It will most likely fall off this page some time today.  I know it is long folks, but please try!

Heather
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A closed mind is often closed to the truth!

Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and loose both...Ben Franklin

Offline torpedoman

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Re: Ron Paul's Hour of Power
« Reply #3 on: December 11, 2009, 12:07:57 PM »
They already have the AUTHORITY and the DUTY to conduct an inventory of Ft Knox every year and it has been 40 years since this was done.
the nation that forgets it defenders will itself be forgotten

Offline Yankee1

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Re: Ron Paul's Hour of Power
« Reply #4 on: December 11, 2009, 12:24:08 PM »
Mr Rothschild most likely would not like an audit to happen.
This would interfere with his private piggy bank.
JP Morgan has been his agent in this country for years who just happens to control most of the banks in our Federal Reserve ( what a misnomer). No Sir the puppet master  would frown on this.
                                   Yankee1

Offline billy_56081

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Re: Ron Paul's Hour of Power
« Reply #5 on: December 11, 2009, 12:31:43 PM »
They already have the AUTHORITY and the DUTY to conduct an inventory of Ft Knox every year and it has been 40 years since this was done.

I would imagine Ft. Knox has been empty fpr many many years.
99% of all Lawyers give the other 1% a bad name. What I find hilarious about this is they are such an arrogant bunch, that they all think they are in the 1%.

Offline williamlayton

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Re: Ron Paul's Hour of Power
« Reply #6 on: December 11, 2009, 12:31:59 PM »
Accountability is a good thing.
It will be interesting to see how many and whom fold under pressure concering this.
I wish---but won't hold my breath.
Blessings
TEXAS, by GOD

Offline beerbelly

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Re: Ron Paul's Hour of Power
« Reply #7 on: December 11, 2009, 12:45:45 PM »
Congress is no longer relative. They seeded their power of the purse to the federal Reserve, their athorty over most ever thing else to one bureaucracy or another.
 Right now the EPA is openly threatening the senate that if they don't pass cap and trade , they will do the dirty work them selves!
  All these  bureaucracies are part of the Administrative branch of government. So what we have is a ruler in B Obama. And no one in the media is saying a word. Should Paul get his bill passed Obama will veto it. End of game.
   He has a plan to completely take over this country and it is working beautifully.
                                 Beerbelly

Offline Redtail1949

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Re: Ron Paul's Hour of Power
« Reply #8 on: December 11, 2009, 04:42:27 PM »
i have said it before i do not believe they will do it. i hope they do.

Offline Squib

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Re: Ron Paul's Hour of Power
« Reply #9 on: December 11, 2009, 08:10:37 PM »
all the federal agencies get the credit for doing all the nasty stuff going on that congress doesn't implicityly authorize but remember who can hire and fire those people in most cases, the president.  if the epa does it, obama did it.  same for anti-gun regulations in parks and transportation- obama did it.  hilary clinton w/bill cutting dirty deals with foreigners, she's a proxy of obama.

I hope Paul takes them (federal reserve)down.  he's got what it takes to smash them right now, and the voters are gonna turn and go red next election.  the democrats have to blame something other than their party, and the republicans can only grow stronger by attacking the fed right now (big business be damned, they need to look "tough").  I think the democrats will have to support it in action at least (who knows/cares what they actually want to do at this point?).

Offline Squib

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Re: Ron Paul's Hour of Power
« Reply #10 on: December 12, 2009, 07:17:10 AM »
TM7 I do have to question the terror plotting of 9/11.  I do believe it was a greenlight for imperialism, but i don't believe our own government did it.  the muslims in particular hate the interest/bondage and striking the world trade center was a blow to it.  no it didn't destroy it but it was a victory for the muslims and a strong one too.  I'm pretty sure they DID plan that one themselves.  all the dirty stuff after the fact probably is a conspiracy that turns citizens post 9/11 hysteria on themselves though.  just my opinion though.

Offline Squib

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Re: Ron Paul's Hour of Power
« Reply #11 on: December 12, 2009, 08:57:22 AM »
WOW!  I said it's all dirty, know that.  my problem is believing that all the top officials were in on it.  yes the cia was playing games with the muslims overseas, have for a long time.  yes tim osman/osama was a double agent- that's why the muslims love him, he played the americans against themselves by being one.  yes the invasion of iraq and afghanistan was founded on more than a war on terror. 

I think that if a few people "let it happen" it was because the cia thought they had osama on a much shorter leash than he was.. he slipped the whole collar.  no truely "deep" investigations because doing so would allow blame on the us government, which is a no-no.  let's be honest here, no one wanted that blame and all parties that could concieveably be involved were too busy making excuses and blame to ever look for the real cause or perpetrators---- during this blame game chaos the puppeteers said to go get them in iraq and people ate that up.

you think that it was all actually co-ordinated, I believe it was more a phenomena of idocy and greed.  no I don't want to talk sarah into putting that bridge up.

Offline Redtail1949

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Re: Ron Paul's Hour of Power
« Reply #12 on: December 12, 2009, 04:57:37 PM »
i simply do not believe that our government played any role in it.

Offline Squib

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Re: Ron Paul's Hour of Power
« Reply #13 on: December 12, 2009, 05:07:19 PM »
I think that the power-players who try to manipulate allies and enemies overseas got more stirred up than they intended... I'm pretty skeptical about any actual participation.  I'm not saying a faction of radicals didn't have a hand in it(in an executive fashion), I'm just saying I don't believe it.

Offline jk3006

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Re: Ron Paul's Hour of Power
« Reply #14 on: December 12, 2009, 08:11:42 PM »
"I'm pretty skeptical about any actual participation."

"i simply do not believe that our government played any role in it."


And you guys will forever be in ignorance if you do not take the time (yes, it's work) to study the events of 9/11 for yourself.  Opinons are worthless.  Facts are where it's at!!  And the evidence speaks for itself.