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1/2/99

KNOW YOUR BANKER CAMPAIGN--NOTICE #2

Money Masters - In Their Own Words

Your about to see--BY THEIR OWN PRINTED WORD--that the Federal Reserve
Banks have engaged in a well-planned, well-thought-out, KNOWING
campaign to deceive the American people regarding the nature and history
of our money. Practiced at the art of deception, these particular
bankers know that by sprinkling some axioms of universal acceptance
throughout a package of misinformation and disinformation, often times
the perpetrator can hawk his seasoned offerings as plausible reality.
Not unlike a magician proficient in slight-of-hand, using a developed
technique of hiding the truth--by intentionally leaving off important
portions of it--the artisan can easily fool even the most astute
observer. As you are about to discover, these are some of the same
techniques that have been successfully used in the methodical
subjugation of our country's most valuable asset--our money.

The Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago publishes a booklet entitled "Money
Matters, The American Experience With Money." It's freely distributed
in paper form, but it's also available on the Internet. The booklet
is intended as a tool for use in educating the public about the nature
and history of "money" in the U.S., particularly with regard to the
Constitution; gold and silver; and Federal Reserve bank notes. The book
begins with comments about the intent of the Framers with regard to
Article 1, Section 8, of the U.S. Constitution:

 "After long debate, the framers of the Constitution permitted the
federal government 'to coin money, (and) regulate the value thereof
and of foreign coins ...'"

Here, they have told us the truth. The Constitution did permit the
federal government to "coin money, and regulate the value thereof and
of foreign coins." This is a good start--to state the truth. But watch
this next "slight-of-hand" very closely:

 "They also declared that 'no state shall ... coin money, [nor] emit
bills of credit [i.e., paper currency] ...'"

Did you catch it? I bet if I didn't point it out, you would not see
any Thing (yes, capital "T") wrong with the above excerpt. The problem
is, this particular section of the Constitution has much more to say
on the subject of money. In fact, they have left off the most important,
most relevant section of the paragraph as it concerns money. What we've
been given above is "HALF TRUTH."

Let's uncover what the Federal Reserve Bank OMITTED from their exhibit.
The Constitution, Article 1, Section 10, paragraph 1, actually says:

 "No State shall ... coin Money; emit Bills of Credit; make any Thing
but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debt."

Did you catch what had been omitted from the FRB version? Did you notice
what the Federal Reserve Bank left off? They removed the Constitutional
prohibition against using "any Thing but gold and silver" as money.

Even little children learn early on in life that bald-face lies are
quickly found out. But, by conveniently omitting relevant portions of
the truth, well, if the perpetrator is ever caught, they just claim: "It
was unintentional." Was the Federal Reserve's omission an unintentional
oversight? Or a deception?

Why do you suppose the prohibition against using "any Thing but gold
and silver coin" as money was removed from the bankers' version of the
Constitutional cite? Could it be that the Federal Reserve Bank is
perpetuating an un-Constitutional monetary system known as fractional
reserve banking using un-backed Federal Reserve notes? And, that if they
came right out and told us that the Constitution prohibited "bank note
paper money"--such as the system they have fostered upon us--we just
might OBJECT?

They go on to admit that (regarding the Constitution):

 "Significantly, no mention was made of a national currency nor
federally
chartered banks."

And:

 "The Constitution specified little involvement for the federal
government in our financial system. Congress was expressly permitted
only the right to mint metal coins, regulate the percentage of precious
metal in those coins, and determine the metallic content of the many
kinds of foreign coins that circulated throughout the states. In other
words, Congress' involvement in the financial system focused on the
intrinsic value of coins, which was determined by the amount of precious
metal in the coin."

Fortunately, we have additional authority with which we can form our own
conclusions regarding the intent of the Framers. Again, this extremely
relevant material relating to the history of money is missing from Money
Matters. We have included it here for your consideration.

In his Eighth Annual Message to Congress, on December 5, 1836--just 47
years after the Constitution was ratified--President Andrew Jackson
commented regarding the Constitutional Convention:

 "...It was the purpose of the Convention to establish a currency
consisting of the precious metals. These were adopted by a permanent
rule excluding the use of a perishable medium of exchange, such as of
certain agricultural commodities recognized by the statutes of some
States as tender for debts, or the still more pernicious expedient of
paper currency."

President Jackson explained why the Framers gave Congress only the power
to "Coin Money." Why is this important authority missing from the
Federal Reserve Bank's treatise on money? The reason is: in the eyes of
the Federal Reserve, the intent of the Framers is no longer relevant.
"That was the way it USED to be," we are effectively told. "That was the
OLD Constitution." You see, over a period of time that old Constitution
has been subverted--re-written, as it were--by various courts at the
urging of some very influential bankers. The courts' actions effectively
served to "amended" the Constitution. Oh, it was no easy task to amend
the Constitution in this fashion--without a public vote. But, with
enough time, influence, power and--of course, MONEY--it can be done.

"Money Matters" (or is it "Money Masters?") lays out the significant
history, or the revision thereof, regarding our nation's monetary
system. We're told that in the case of Hepburn vs. Griswold (1870 and
1871) the United States Supreme Court first ruled on the question of
whether or not Congress could issue "notes" to be used as "money." That
Court concluded that Congress did not have, under the powers vested in
them by the Constitution, any such authority, and that U.S.-issued notes
were not "legal tender."

But read what the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago goes on to say
regarding that first Supreme Court ruling:

 "President U.S. Grant, recognizing the implications of this ruling,
quickly filled the two remaining [vacant] Supreme Court justice
positions with people who favored legal tender laws. In 1871 Hepburn vs.
Griswold was reheard. This time by a vote of five to four the Court
found legal tender laws constitutional. The ruling was based on the
understanding that U.S. notes were necessities of warfare."

O.K., a President favorable to the bankers' agenda stacked the Court and
gerrymandered a Supreme Court ruling to get a decision lending itself
towards the bankers objectives. But even with this help, the resultant
ruling concluded only that the government could issues notes strictly
as a NECESSITY OF WARFARE. That was the best they could do! And here's
where logic (and any remaining link to the Constitution) end. Now, the
bankers had a foothold with which they were poised to implement their
program to control the country using un-backed paper notes. The
Constitution is no longer an issue for the bankers from this point in
history forward. All that matters to the bankers is how to circumvent
the Constitution's prohibitions and to begin to issue un-backed paper
money for which they could charge interest. See if you detect the change
in tone, from one of "This is what the Constitution says" to one of
"This is what we must do":

 "In response to the problems in our economy and financial system,
Congress in 1913 created the Federal Reserve System. The Federal
Reserve, our nation's central bank, is a network of 12 regional Reserve
Banks supervised by a Board of Governors in Washington, D.C."

 "Congress gave the Fed responsibility for providing an elastic
currency,
that is, a currency that could increase and decrease to accommodate the
needs of the economy. To expand the currency, the central bank made
loans to banks and provided them currency, Federal Reserve notes, to
meet their customers' demands."

The Federal Reserve was created--not in response to the Constitution's
immutable edicts, but in response to problems! Congress gave the Fed
responsibility to subvert the Constitution's prohibitions and to create
an "elastic currency" contrary to the intent of the Constitution and its
Framers? Unfortunately, things that are "elastic"--such as balloons and
fluctuating currency--always eventually break. Things that are "solid"--
such as gold and the truth--always retain their sound atributes.

Only one man was so fortunate as to have been a signatory to the four
most important documents in our nation's history--The Association of
1774, The Declaration of Independence, The Articles of Confederation,
and The United States Constitution. The man was Roger Sherman. In fact,
he is credited with authoring the Constitutional paragraph regarding
the nature of money, Article 1, Section 10, paragraph 1, cited at the
begining of the FRB booklet and included above. In 1752, Roger Sherman
wrote a book on money called, "A Caveat Against Injustice, or, The Evils
of a Fluctuating Medium of Exchange." You won't find this book mentioned
in the FRB's version of the history of money. For, "Caveat" lays out the
evils of the very same monetary system the FRB lauds. Sherman wrote:

 "So long as we part with our most valuable Commodities for such Bills
of
Credit as are no Profit; but rather a Cheat, Vexation and Snare to us,
and become a Medium whereby we are continually cheating and wronging one
another in our Dealings and Commerce, and so long as we import so much
more foreign Goods than are necessary, and keep so many Merchants and
Traders employed to procure and deal them out to us ... I say so long as
these Things are so we shall spend great Part of our Labour and
Substance for that which will not profit us."

Roger Sherman understood the evils of a fluctuating medium of
exchange--bank notes--and he along with the other Framers instituted
measures within the body of the Constitution to forever preclude the
issuance of such un-backed bills.

Even the FRB admits that Congress could not Constitutionally issue
U.S. notes--except possibly in times of war. However, we are supposed
to believe that Congress COULD "create" a central bank and COULD then
delegate to that entity authority to "print" money--which the Congress
itself coulld not do.

Those who were working to seize control of our nations life blood--our
money--worked hard to get a central bank instituted. It took years. They
were finally successful when, late on December 23, 1913--after the
majority of Legislators had left for the Christmas Holidays--a handful
of lawmakers approved and secretively implemented the Federal Reserve
Act (which had previously failed when voted on by the full House). The
gives their version of how this transition took place:

 "Since the founding of our country, we have moved from a decentralized
to a fairly centralized monetary system. We started with gold and silver
coins as the chief medium of exchange, supplemented by colonial
currencies and bank notes, and moved to a system of uniform national
currency with legal tender status.

 "As we have seen, the Constitution and gold have played extremely
important roles in this evolution. From the early republic until well
into this century, the Constitution, and how we interpreted it, greatly
influenced the federal government's involvement in monetary affairs."

There you have it, straight from the horse's--uh, mouth. The
Constitution and Gold _USED TO_ play an important role in our nation's
monetary system. That was back when the Constitution mattered. Not any
more. Any influence the Constitution may have had all ended, according
to them, sometime around the turn of the century... probably around
1913, perhaps? To them, the Constitution no longer bears on how our how
our nation's monetary system operates--the Federal Reserve determines
that now.

As recently as the early '50s, Congressman Wright Patman--at the time
the House Banking Committee Chairman--said this about the Federal
Reserve:

 "In the United States today we have in effect two governments... . We
have the duly constituted Government... . Then we have an independent,
uncontrolled and uncoordinated government in the Federal Reserve System,
operating the money powers which are reserved to Congress by the
Constitution."

You won't find Congressman Patman's comments about our nation's central
bank anywhere within the FRB publication.

Here is the FRB's conclusion in Money Matters:

 "[F]or many years, gold played an important role as a regulator of the
money supply. But after many decades of debate on how best to maintain a
healthy financial system, we created the Federal Reserve System in the
early years of this century."

In other words: "WE did away with that old restrictive Constitution and
those extremely limiting provisions about gold and silver--the ones we
conveniently left out from the quote at the beginning of our educational
booklet 'Money Matters.' WE created the Federal Reserve System. The
Constitution is no longer relevant."

---------------------------------------

The on-line copy of Money Matters can be found at:

http://www.frbchi.org/pubs-speech/publications/BOOKLETS/money_matters/money_
matters.html

[At the time of this writing, the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago's web
page
is not accessible due to network problems. Hopefully, it will be back on
line by the time you read this.]
---------------------------------------

Federal Reserve regulators have proposed to begin requiring everyone to
"identify" themselves whenever engaging in banking activities. The
manner of identification has not been unspecified. Eventually, anyone
who conducts banking-related business, will have to submit to some kind
of "biometric identification," such as a fingerprint, voice print, or
retinal scan in order to buy and sell. Bank customers will have to tell
their banker what the sources of their income are and how much they
expect to take in annually. The banks will develop "profiles" based on
that information and will then monitor their customers' financial
transactions to look for deviations from the "projected behavior
patterns." Anomalies will be reported to federal agencies as "suspicious
transactions."

Along with the power to "monitor" comes the inherent power to control.
This particular regulatory banking program described above is called
Know Your Customer, or KYC for short. The pretext for the KYC program is
to crack down on illegal money laundering operations. But we don't
believe that is the actual reason for implementation. It is believed
that the banks desire to go to total electronic banking, and the KYC
program is a precursory foundation for the coming cashless system.

During the last week of January, 1999, the nation's banks and bankers,
in their continuing war on individual privacy, will launch a
multi-$MILLION$-dollar advertising barrage designed to convince you to
accept total electronic banking as a way of life. The effort, called
"Direct Deposit Week," will include newspaper, radio, and TV ads that
incorporate proven, psychologically persuasive sales techniques designed
to make the public give in and switch over--something they have so far
been unwilling to do. This campaign is a follow-through on the Fed's
so-far-disastrous "Know Your Customer" campaign, a thinly disguised
program to accumulate invasively private information on every person who
has a bank account.

The "Direct Deposit Week" is merely the next step: a push toward making
all financial transactions electronic, thereby creating a giant national
database from which no one will be exempt.

But that same week, there will be a counter-campaign running
concurrently with the electronic banking campaign. It will be called
"Know Your Banker Week."

The current budget for this counter-campaign is $0$. Intentionally, NO
MONEY will be spent on the Know Your Banker campaign. It's a grassroots
effort to get the public to focus in on the nature of money--what money
is, where it comes from, what gives it "value," the history of money in
America--and to bring about an understanding of why this push towards
electronic "money" is treasonous.

Notwithstanding our $0$ budget, we are confident the effort will be
extremely successful. Already, over 7,000 comments have been submitted
to various banking regulators in objection to their "Know Your Customer"
program--which serves as the foundational pre-requisite to their total
electronic "cashless" banking system. Hopefully, many more thousands of
comments will be sent in, particularly during the Know Your Banker
campaign. We hope yours will be among them.

More information about both "Know Your Banker and "Know Your
Customer" can be viewed at:

http://www.networkusa.org/fingerprint.shtml

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