Secrets
of the Federal Reserve by Eustace
Mullins
CHAPTER 2 - The Aldrich Plan |
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Debt Elimination Home Basis for REAL Debt Elimination Mortgage Analysis / Compliance Tax Freedom is Debt Elimination Draft Freedom is Debt EliminationChild Protection is Debt Elimination Credit Repair is Debt Elimination |
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Debt
Elimination |
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The members of the 63rd Congress had no knowledge of a central bank or of its monopolistic operations. Many of those who voted for the bill were duped; others were bribed; others were intimidated. The preface to the Federal Reserve Act reads "An Act to provide for the establishment of Federal reserve banks, to furnish an elastic currency, to afford means of rediscounting commercial papers, to establish a more effective supervision of banking in the United States, and for other purposes." The unspecified "other purposes" were to give international conspirators a monopoly of all the money and credit of the people of the United States; to finance World War I through this new central bank, to place American workers at the mercy of the Federal Reserve system's collection agency, the Internal Revenue Service, and to allow the monopolists to seize the assets of their competitors and put them out of business. - Eustace Mullins |
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Testifying before the Committee on Rules, December 15, 1911, after the Aldrich plan had been introduced in Congress, Congressman Lindbergh stated, "Our financial system is a false one and a huge burden on the people . . . I have alleged that there is a Money Trust. The Aldrich plan is a scheme plainly in the interest of the Trust . . . Why does the Money Trust press so hard for the Aldrich Plan now, before the people know what the money trust has been doing?" Lindbergh continued his speech,
Edward Vreeland, co-author of the bill, wrote in the August 25, 1910 Independent (which was owned by Aldrich),
Vreeland's fantastic claims were typical of the propaganda flood unleashed to pass the Aldrich Plan. Monopolies would disappear, the Government would disappear from the banking business. Pie in the sky. Nation Magazine, January 19, 1911, noted,
After the National Monetary Commission
had returned from Europe, it held no official meetings for nearly two years.
No records or minutes were ever presented showing who had authored the
Aldrich Plan. Since they held no official meetings, the members of the
commission could hardly claim the Plan as their own. The sole tangible
result of the Commission's three hundred thousand dollar expenditure was a
library of thirty massive volumes on European banking. Typical of these
works is a thousand page history of the Reichsbank, the central bank which
controlled money and credit in Germany, and whose principal stockholders,
were the Rothschilds and Paul Warburg's family banking house of M.M. Warburg
Company. The Commission's records show that it never functioned as a
deliberative body. Indeed, its only "meeting" was the secret conference held
at Jekyll Island, and this conference is not mentioned in any publication of
the Commission. Senator Cummins passed a resolution in Congress ordering the
Commission to report on January 8, 1912, and show some constructive results
of its three years' work. In the face of this challenge, the National
Monetary Commission ceased to exist.
Andrew Frame exposed the collusion which in 1911 procured an endorsement of the Aldrich Plan from the American Bankers Association but which in 1912 did not even dare to repeat its endorsement, for fear of an honest and open discussion of the merits of the plan. Chairman Glass then called as witness one of the ten most powerful bankers in the United States, George Blumenthal, partner of the international banking house of Lazard Freres and brother-in-law of Eugene Meyer, Jr. Carter Glass effusively welcomed Blumenthal, stating that "Senator O'Gorman of New York was kind enough to suggest your name to us." A year later, O'Gorman prevented a Senate Committee from asking his master, Paul Warburg, any embarrassing questions before approving his nomination as the first Governor of the Federal Reserve Board. George Blumenthal stated,
Congressman Taylor asked,
A banker from Philadelphia, Leslie Shaw, dissented with other witnesses at these hearings, criticizing the much vaunted "decentralization" of the System. He said,
To promote the Democratic currency bill, Carter Glass made public the sorry record of the Republican efforts of Senator Aldrich's National Monetary Commission. His House Report in 1913 said, "Senator MacVeagh fixes the cost of the National Monetary Commission to May 12, 1911 at $207,130. They have since spent another hundred thousand dollars of the taxpayer's money. The work done at such cost cannot be ignored, but, having examined the extensive literature published by the Commission, the Banking and Currency Committee finds little that bears upon the present state of the credit market of the United States. We object to the Aldrich Bill on the following points:
Glass's denunciation of the Aldrich Bill as a central bank plan ignored the fact that his own Federal Reserve Act would fulfill all the functions of a central bank. Its stock would be owned by private stockholders who could use the credit of the Government for their own profit; it would have control of the nation's money and credit resources; and it would be a bank of issue which would finance the government by "mobilizing" credit in time of war. In "The Rationale of Central Banking," Vera C. Smith (Committee for Monetary Research and Education, June, 1981) writes,
Thus a central bank attains its commanding position from its government granted monopoly of the note issue. This is the key to its power. Also, the act of establishing a central bank has a direct inflationary impact because of the fractional reserve system, which allows the creation of book-entry loans and thereby, money, a number of times the actual "money" which the bank has in its deposits or reserves. The Aldrich Plan never came to a vote
in Congress, because the Republicans lost control of the House in 1910, and
subsequently lost the Senate and the Presidency in 1912.
11 Nathaniel
Wright Stephenson, Nelson W. Aldrich, A Leader in American Politics,
Scribners, N.Y. 1930 |
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