To Preserve…

We saw similar patterns with American Puritans and US Presidents who opposed private US Central Bank usury and taxation.

The owner of the first US Central Bank from 1791 to 1811 was the private Bank of England. Madison and the US Congress refused to renew its 20-year charter due to the Bank’s foreign interference in domestic affairs.

Recall US Constitution Article I Section 9 forbids foreign emoluments, sometimes described as bribes, for good reason. Public servants cannot well serve two masters.

http://ofacp.od.nih.gov/ethics/EmolClause.html

Those opposed to an extra-Constitutional Central Bank included Jefferson and Madison, until Madison, tired of war expense, supported the Second US Central Bank after the War of 1812.

Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln and JFK all made end-runs around private Central Bank taxes and usury, which nearly or actually lead to their demises. Jackson was saved from assassination only when his assailant’s two point-blank pistols misfired and he was able to knock him off with his Hickory Stick knob cane.

Old Hickory Jackson was a British POW during the Revolutionary War. As an underage POW with his brother, AJ contracted small pox. He lost his brother and mother who freed and cared for them. AJ successfully defended New Orleans during the War of 1812 and was Military Governor of Florida.

AJ called the Second Bank of the US a devil’s den of vipers and thieves, enumerating these now familiar complaints about the Bank:

  • It concentrated the nation’s financial strength in a single institution.
  • It exposed the government to control by foreign interests.
  • It served mainly to make the rich richer.
  • It exercised too much control over members of Congress.
  • It favored northeastern states over southern and western states.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Jackson

The War of 1812 and Civil War were yet further attempts by the Bank of England to collect war debts due from the American Revolution, collapsed South Seas and Mississippi Company Schemes and Slave trade.

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This entry was posted on Monday, February 1st, 2010 at 5:14 pm and is filed under Financial Planning. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

4 Responses to “To Preserve…”

  1. Richard Weddle Says:

    Holy Smokes Rich….
    Now that was a handful.
    This article should be published in the NY Times.
    Certainly we are seeing a ground swell in this country stirred by an irate citizenry.
    Perhaps it is not to late to take our country back.
    God have Mercy.
    Keep up the good work Rich, you are a true Patriot.
    Thank you. Richard

  2. Rich Says:

    Mahalo Richard:

    Henry Paulson acknowledged 93% of Americans opposed TARP and he did it anyway, bailing out himself and his firm Goldman Sachs with Ben Bernanke and Timothy Geithner’s help.

    No wonder the majority of Americans want a full Audit of the Fed and Treasury, including the Mints and Bullion Vaults.

    If we:

    A) turn off government monopoly media making heroes out of bums,
    B) share the truth which sets us free,
    C) help family friends and neighbors vote for Patriotic Constitutional Independents who truly serve US this Fall,

    then we may in fact take our country back from bonus banksters and their government corporate welfare pimps.

    The alternative is watching the Jericho Wall of debt crush our country and lives like Financial Armageddon.

    Uncle Sam owes more than we own. That cannot last much longer.

    We must pay down or forgive our debts with a spending freeze on deficits and earmarks and the 1% Transaction Tax on a quadrillion in voluntary transactions.

    Andrew Jackson paid off the public debt in 1835. So can we…

    Regards*Rich

  3. clicks Says:

    Rich,

    Like the website and all, but a reader needs to click 22 separate times simply to read the content of this entry. Perhaps a different format would be better?

    Cheers.

  4. Rich Says:

    Thanks clicks.
    Took it up with the management.
    Regards*Rich

 

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