TODAY WE'RE ALL IRISH:
DEBT SERFDOM
COMES TO AMERICA
Ellen Brown
March 15th, 2008
http://www.webofdebt.com/articles/debt-serfdom.php
March 17 is St.
Patrick's Day, when people of all national origins raise
a glass and declare, "Today we're all a bit Irish!" This
may be truer than we know. The Irish were driven to
America by debt, and they are leading the Western world
in household debt today. The London Daily Telegraph
reported on March 13, 2008 that household debt in
Ireland has reached 190 percent of disposable income,
the highest in the developed world; and that the Irish
banking system is suffering such acute strains from the
downturn in the housing market that it may have to
nationalize its banks.1 The
same may soon be happening in the United States, and for
much the same reasons.
Debt Drives
the Irish to America
A short review
of the history of the Irish in North America reveals
that few were here before 1845, when a disease struck
the potato crops of Ireland, wiping out the chief or
only source of food for many poor farmers. Famine
continued for the next five years, killing over 2.5
million people. "God put the blight on the potatoes,"
complained the Irish farmers, "but England put the
hunger upon Ireland." Farmers who were heavily in debt
were shipped to England to pay the rent owed to their
landlords. Impoverished Irish immigrants saved what
little money they could to send family members across
the Atlantic, traveling on overcrowded ships on which
many died of disease or hunger on the way. When they
arrived, the Irish men had to fight – often physically –
to get labor jobs involving long hours and low pay;
while the women worked mainly as servants (called "Brigets")
to upper-class families. Despite their very low wages,
they managed to send a bit of money back to their
families, until other family members had enough to buy
the ship tickets to America. In the American South
(mainly New Orleans), the Irish lived in swamp land
infested with disease. Here, Irish men were looked upon
as actually lower than slaves. As one historian
put it, if a plantation owner lost a slave, he lost an
investment; if he lost a laborer, he could always get
another. Because the Irish workers were plentiful and
expendable, they were often sent in to do dangerous jobs
for which the slave-owners were reluctant to send their
valuable slaves.2
"Debt
Slavery" Replaces Physical Slavery
This form of
"debt slavery" or "debt peonage" was not just an
accidental development of history. It was a
deliberately-planned alternative to the slave
arrangement in which owners were responsible for the
feeding and care of a dependent population, and it is
still with us today. Although European financiers were
in favor of an American Civil War that would return the
United States to its colonial status, they admitted
privately that they were not necessarily interested in
preserving slavery. They preferred "the European plan":
capital could exploit labor by controlling the money
supply, while letting the laborers feed themselves. In
July 1862, this ploy was revealed in a notorious
document called the Hazard Circular, which was
circulated by British banking interests among their
American banking counterparts. It said:
Slavery is
likely to be abolished by the war power and chattel
slavery destroyed. This, I and my European friends
are glad of, for slavery is but the owning of
labor and carries with it the care of the laborers,
while the European plan, led by England, is that
capital shall control labor by controlling wages.
This can be done by controlling the money. The great
debt that capitalists will see to it is made out of
the war, must be used as a means to control the
volume of money. To accomplish this, the bonds
[government debt to the bankers] must be used as a
banking basis. . . . It will not do to allow the
greenback, as it is called, to circulate as money
any length of time, as we cannot control that.3
A system of
"debt peonage" is inextricably linked to a banking
system in which money is issued privately by bankers and
lent to the government rather than being issued
as "greenbacks" by the government itself Today the
"European plan" has evolved into the private central
banking system, and it has come to dominate the
economies of the world. A private central bank creates
money simply by printing it or entering it as an
accounting entry, then lends it to the federal
government in exchange for government bonds or debt.
Private commercial banks create many more dollars in the
same way, advancing money created as accounting-entry
loans without even incurring the cost of a printing
press. Except for coins, the entire U.S. money
supply is now created as a debt to private bankers.4
Banks create the principal but not the interest
necessary to pay back their loans, so more money is
always owed back than was put into the money supply in
the first place. More loans must therefore continually
be taken out to cover the interest, spiraling the
economy into increasing levels of debt and inflation, in
a futile attempt to repay principal and interest on a
debt that is actually impossible to repay. The result is
"debt peonage," and it has systematically reduced the
people to working for the company store, bound to their
corporate masters for the food, shelter and health care
formerly provided by slave owners under the old
physical-slave system.
The
Colonial Alternative: The Pennsylvania System of
Benjamin Franklin's Day
This is not the
only way to run an economy. Until 1913, when the Federal
Reserve Act was passed, the European system of debt
peonage competed with what was called "the American
system" – debt-free government-issued dollars generated
by provincial governments to pay their expenses. This
"greenback" system was not actually used in the United
States after the American colonies became a nation,
except during the Civil War; but the "American system"
flourished for decades in colonial America. Paper money
was issued by local provincial governments not only to
pay their own expenses but as commercial loans. The most
effective and efficient of these government-issued money
systems was in Pennsylvania, where a publicly-owned bank
issued paper notes and lent them to farmers. Since this
money returned to the government, it did not inflate the
money supply; and since the government issued and spent
an additional sum of money on public works, enough money
was kept in the system to pay the interest on the loans
and prevent the debt spiral afflicting the private
banking system. The Pennsylvania system worked so well
that it completely funded the provincial government
without taxes or inflation.
Benjamin
Franklin and others maintained that the chief reason for
the American Revolution was that Parliament forbade the
colonies from issuing their own money. Paper money
issued by the Revolutionary government got the colonists
through the Revolutionary War, but the British heavily
counterfeited this money as a deliberate war tactic, and
by the end of the war it had been inflated so much that
it was nearly worthless. Fear of inflation led the
Continental Congress to completely omit paper money from
the Constitution, which does not say who can issue paper
money or under what circumstances. The private banks
filled the breach, and by 1913 the United States had the
same private central banking system that England had.
Today, the
pyramid scheme of lending 10 dollars and requiring 11
back has resulted in the very inflationary spiral the
Founding Fathers feared. The money supply is inflated
with more and more debt, shrinking the value of the
dollars paid to workers and propelling larger and larger
portions of the population into debt peonage. If the
government were to issue its own money rather than
borrowing from banks that issued it, and if this money
were used to pay for real goods and services (roads and
bridges, sustainable energy development, health
services, and the like), demand and supply would remain
in balance and inflation would not result. A
government with a properly designed and monitored system
of publicly-issued money could fund itself without
taxes, inflation or debt.
Publicly-owned
banks are also called "national" banks or "nationalized"
banks – the very thing that threatens the private
banking system in Ireland today. We have come full
circle: a system of national banks is what used to be
called "the American system." This may be what we
actually need – a public banking system operating for
the benefit of the public. The private European
system of debt peonage has failed. On this 2008 St.
Patrick's Day, we the modern-day Irish of all
persuasions can raise a glass to the possibility of
being freed from the debt peonage that has kept us
wage-slaves for most of our national history.
___________________
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1 |
"Irish
Banks May Need Life-support as Property Prices
Crash,"
www.telegraph.co.uk (March 13, 2008). |
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2 |
"Irish in
America,"
www.essays.cc . |
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3 |
"Hazard
Circular," 1862, quoted in Charles Lindburgh,
Banking and Currency and the Money Trust
(Washington D.C.: National Capital Press, 1913),
page 102. |
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4 |
See
Ellen Brown, "Dollar Deception: How Banks
Secretly Create Money,"
www.webofdebt.com (July 3, 2007). |
Ellen Brown,
J.D., developed her research skills as an attorney
practicing civil litigation in Los Angeles. In Web
of Debt, her latest book, she turns those skills to
an analysis of the Federal Reserve and "the money
trust." She shows how this private cartel has usurped
the power to create money from the people themselves,
and how we the people can get it back. Her eleven books
include the bestselling Nature's Pharmacy, co-authored
with Dr. Lynne Walker, which has sold 285,000 copies.
Her websites are
www.webofdebt.com and
www.ellenbrown.com.
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