Anonymous ID: 25e828 April 13, 2019, 2:43 p.m. No.6167003   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7026

>>6166980

https://archive.org/stream/pdfy–Pori1NL6fKm2SnY/The%20Creature%20From%20Jekyll%20Island_djvu.txt

Does the world really need another book on the Federal

Reserve System?

 

I have struggled with that question for several years. My

own library is mute testimony to the fact that there has been no

shortage of writers willing to set off into the dark forest to do

battle with the evil dragon. But, for the most part, their books

have been ignored by the mainstream, and the giant snorter

remains undaunted in his lair. There seemed to be little reason to

think that I could succeed where so many others have failed.

 

Yet, the idea was haunting. There was no doubt in my mind

that the Federal Reserve is one of the most dangerous creatures

ever to stalk our land. Furthermore, as my probing brought me

into contact with more and more hard data, I came to realize that

I was investigating one of the greatest "who-dunits" of history.

And, to make matters worse, I discovered who did it.

 

Someone has to get this story through to the public. The

problem, however, is that the public doesn't want to hear it. After

all, this is bad news, and we certainly get enough of that as it is.

 

Another obstacle to communication is that this tale truly is

incredible, which means unbelievable. The magnitude by which

reality deviates from the accepted myth is so great that, for most

people, it simply is beyond credibility. Anyone carrying this

message is immediately suspected of paranoia. Who will listen

to a madman?

 

And, finally, there is the subject matter itself. It can become

pretty complex. Well, at least that's how it seems at first.

Treatises on this topic often read like curriculum textbooks for

banking and finance. It is easy to become ensnared in a sticky

web of terminology and abstractions. Only monetary profession-

als are motivated to master the new language, and even they

often find themselves in serious disagreement. For example, in a

recent letter circulated by a group of monetary experts who, for

years, have conducted an ongoing exchange of ideas regarding

monetary reform, the editor said: "It is frustrating that we

cannot find more agreement among ourselves on this vital issue.

We seem to differ so much on definitions and on, really, an