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Adams, Silas Walter. The Legalized Crime of Banking and a Constitutional Remedy. Omni Publications, 2004. 0849029570 / 9780849029578 Brand new paperback. Reprint of the 1958 ed. Written in 1958 following Adams' eye-opening encounter when writing his commissioned work on the Federal Reserve System. He was astonished by what he unearthed and the title of this book is quite appropriate -- it deals principally with the unconstitutional creation of money and the control of credit by private bankers. The author suggests a concrete, simple solution which Congress could employ, which would make the transition from private banking to the Treasury without injuring anyone enjoying a constitutional right, or without upsetting our normal course of trade, industry and agriculture. 252 pages. Contents: 1. Quotations from official Fed Reserve booklet. 2. What the leaders have said about money. 3. The legalized crime of banking. 4. Bankers want double or nothing. 5. Money, our greatest problem. 6. Simplified mechanics of reserve banking. 7. The hand of the banker tracing a sordid scroll. 8. Some further reasons why banking must be abolished. 9. Some examples of pyramiding of profits. 10. More of the steps in the creation of money. 11. Creditalism vs capitalism. 12. Cash is not a part of our money supply. 13. Congress must regulate the value money. 14. The constitutional solution. 15. Setting up lending agencies. 16. This must be done first. 17. Inflation and featherbedding. 18. Money in the atomic age.
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16.94 USD
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Astle, David. The Tallies, A Tangled Tale and The Begining and the Ending. Omni Publications, 1999. B000MQ682Q Brand new paperback. 70 pages. Part one is a brief study of the Tally Stick as instrument of State Finance and Account without cumulative debt. Part two examines the activities of the Money Changers during the so-called Middle Ages, and at the Acts of the English Parliament which they had influenced into being during the 17th Century. Included is an abridged copy of the Charter of The Bank of England (a virtually suppressed document).
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11.94 USD
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Bakewell, Jr, Paul. What We Are Using For Money. Invictus, 2001. B000BU4FL4 Brand new paperback. Reprint of the 1952 edition. "An expose of economic law and history dealing with the foundations of our currency, and the series of moves which has left us with a managed currency and an economy in which the mere owning of gold has been made illegal." 312 pages.
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17.95 USD
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Coogan, Gertrude M. Money Creators: Who Creates Money? Who Should Create It? Omni, 1998. B0006YF0KA Brand new paperback. Reprint of the 1935 edition. "There can be no liberty without economic freedom -- America can have no economic freedom without an honest money system -- one removed from the controls of the socially irresponsible private Money Creators." Contents: 1. Why? 2. The setting for the "mystery." 3. The origin of the practices. 4. A foreign snare. 5. The "Federal Reserve" snare. 6. The money creators' harvest. 7. "Cooperation." 8. Effects of revaluation. 9. Under the searchlight. 10. The "mysterious" accordion-like promises-to-pay system explained. 11. The historical facts. 12. An honest money system. 13. Power to create money is power to tax. 14. Private property rights or socialism? 15. "Respectable" deception. 16. Precedents. 17. Summary of principles. Bibliography, index. 344 pages.
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15.94 USD
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Coughlin, Rev Charles. The New Deal in Money. Invictus, 2004. Brand new paperback. Reprint of the 1933 edition. 128 pages. "Our Treasury deparment evidently thinks that the money which we spent on the Great War was for a productive purpose. It refuses to admit that every one of us participated in the greatest blunder of history. Now the taxpayer, the poor man, the farmer, can pay for that mistake. But the war profiteers and the bondholders in this nation can keep profiting on it!"
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11.95 USD
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Del Mar, Alexander. Barbara Villiers, or A History of Monetary Crimes. Gordon Press, 1977. 0849003377 / 9780849003370 Hardback without jacket, as published. Fine condition, unused. "The insidious crime of secretly or surreptitiously altering the monetary laws of a state – than which no more dastardly or fatal blow can be dealt at its liberties -- is not a new one . . ." Despite its title, refering to a mistress of Charles II of England, "A History of Monetary Crimes" mainly deals with America. Reprint of the 1899 edition. Contents: 1. The crime of 1666; 2. Silver; 3. The coining mill and press; 4. The East India Company; 5. Barbara Villiers; 6. The Cattle and Coinage Bill; 7. Surrender of the coinage prerogative; 8. Bribery and corruption. 9. The crime of 1742. 10. The crime of 1868. 11. The crime of 1870. 12. The crime of 1873. 13. Equitable money. 102 pages.
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9.95 USD
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Del Mar, Alexander. Roman and Muslem [Muslim] Moneys. Omni, 2007. B000V6YPT0 Brand new paperback. 112 pages. Reprint of the 1950 edition. Contents: 1. Rome: Including the coins of Servius Tullius, the Lex Falminia, Sylla, Julius Caesar, Augustus, Caligula, and Byzantine systems down to the Fall of Constantinople, 1204. 2. The sacred character of gold: including abstention of Christian princes up to Frederick II from coining gold; opinions of Camden, Ruding, Father Joubert; longevity of the myth and its transmission down to the Christian Church of Rome. 3. Moslim moneys: including history of Islamic conquests of Roman provinces and origins of Islamic moneys; legacy of Islamic moneys down to present.
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13.94 USD
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Douglas, C H. Economic Democracy. Bloomfield Books, 1990. 0904656004 / 9780904656008 Brand new paperback. Also includes "The Delusion of Super Production." 166 pages. 5th edition with an introductory chapter by Geoffrey Dobbs.
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14.94 USD
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17 |
Douglas, C H. Social Credit. Gordon Press, 1974. 0879681071 / 9780879681074 Hardback without jacket, as published. Fine condition, unused. Reprint of the revised edition of 1933. "The present edition has been completely revised and new material added to amplify the meaning it was intended to convey . . ." Contents: 1. Static and dynamic sociology. 2. Industry -- government or service? 3. The relation of the group to the individual. 4. Freedom of assocation. 5. Sabotage and the cultural heritage. 6. The theory of the supreme state. 7. The nature of money. 8. The coming of power. 9. The working of the money system. 10. The nature of price. 11. Unemployment -- or leisure? 12. Poverty amidst plenty. 13. Why taxation is heavy. 14. Taxation and servitude. 15. The bid for world power. 16. The strategy of reform. 17. Sound money. 18. The critical moment. Appendix: The draft scheme for Scotland. 212 pages.
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19.95 USD
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18 |
Douglas, C H. The Monopoly of Credit. Bloomfield Books, 1990. 0904656020 / 9780904656022 Brand new paperback. 188 pages. Reprint of the fourth edition with an introduction by Geoffrey Dobbs. The classic work "showing the connection between the chronic shortage of purchasing power in relation to prices and costs of the War and of centralization of power in the postwar world."
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17.94 USD
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19 |
Douglas, C H. Whose Service is Perfect Freedom. Veritas, 1986. 0949667641 / 9780949667649 Brand new paperback. 85 pages. A penetrating analysis of who controls high finance and the objectives they pursue, written at the outset of World War II. Douglas encourages us to first understand policy, then look for the philosophy behind it. A forthright taking of issue, from a Christian, British, "Social Credit" standpoint, with the British Establishment's decision for war against Germany in 1939.
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11.94 USD
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