Site icon sheeplywolves

Can the CBDC Be Stopped? – Epoch Times Commentary

This article was copied and pasted from my electronic subscription to the Epoch Times. Subscribe for $1 for two months and $9.99 a month afterwards, cancel anytime; one benefit of subscribing it that you can either choose to read articles or listen to a reader on most articles. I am not able to copy and past the recordings, but usually listen while I am copying and pasting articles.

https://subscribe.theepochtimes.com/p/?page=digitalsub

March 24, 2023Updated: March 24, 2023

biggersmaller

Commentary

In the year 1900, following two decades of debate about the future of American money, L. Frank Baum wrote “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz,” which served as the template for the greatest of all American movies. The story is about much more than it seems. Beneath the surface, it is an attack on ruling-class barons who were pushing the gold standard as the key to sound money and banking. In those days, gold was regarded as an industrial plot whereas silver was regarded as the working man’s specie that favored agricultural interests.

The theory behind the movie is wrong, in my view. The gold standard was in fact sound money while the silver standard was but a stalking horse for the advocates of dovish monetary policy. The debtors, of which there were plenty in agriculture, pushed silver precisely because they favored devaluation. The winners in the debate were of course the partisans of gold.

The victory did not last long. The banking panic of 1907 provided the pretext to reorganize the whole of money and banking in the United States around the German model. We would have a central bank codified in 1913, the purpose of which was to guard against banking panics and crack down on wild-cat inflationism from pop-up banks that had fueled a long series of land bubbles over the previous twenty years.

It did not turn out that way, of course. The central bank became exactly what the skeptics predicted. Instead of sound money, it created a beast with a penchant for lowering rates and fueling money growth. It also became a money printer for government, which was very quickly called upon to support the debt incurred by entry into the Great War. It is entirely possible that the United States would never have entered that ghastly conflict but for the existence of the central bank.

My point in recalling all this deep history is to underscore that issues of money and banking were once absolutely central to American political life. The average person in the 1890s had a strong opinion. Candidates would offer stump speeches on the topic and were expected to weigh in on the great questions of bimetallism, gold standards, and silver standards. Of course there was no one in those days who favored a purely paper money standard like we have today. After all, they were well-educated.

Following the creation of the Federal Reserve, issues of money and banking slipped out of American public life. It was widely assumed that the administrators at the center had it all under control and there was no more need for debate. We had the right system and there was nothing left to reform.

Then came 1929 and the subsequent Great Depression, which kept not going away. Franklin Roosevelt came to power in 1933 with the promise of repealing the much-hated prohibition that created such legal and social chaos in the country. People voted for him because they wanted to be able to get a beer at the bar without facing prosecution. What they got instead was a radical reformer who would use all powers of the federal government, backed by cranky new economic theory, to create a series of industrial cartels plus price controls plus public works plus wage restrictions and welfare, the combination of which prolonged the Depression all the way to the end of World War II.

It’s forgotten now but central to the New Deal was one of his first actions: an executive order that collected all gold in private ownership. Everyone was told to take their gold to the banks to exchange them for dollars. The government printed posters that were distributed to every state and county. They were posted everywhere.

Yes, there were criminal penalties for non-compliance, and, yes, some people went to jail. To be sure, there were plenty of families and estates, particularly in the Northeast. Large amounts were shuffled off to safe locations in a hush-hush way and that secret was kept for generations until gold ownership was relegalized in 1973.

The confiscation of gold, and the subsequent devaluation of the dollar in terms of gold, was an incredibly despotic act over which there was no public debate. It happened suddenly and in the midst of an economic crisis, enacted by a popular president. The confiscation was later challenged in court with mixed results. Essentially, the United States had a new monetary system, one nowhere as good as the old one.

Following the Second World War, we had another monetary reform with Bretton Woods and the global gold-exchange standard. No longer would dollars be convertible to gold domestically but rather all currencies were to be convertible to the U.S. dollar (to the victor go the spoils) and international settlements would be in gold.

That was 1946 but there was simply no way it could last. Having the same monetary policy also requires the same fiscal policy, as Europe has learned the hard way. The entire world on a gold-exchange standard would inevitably face trade imbalances that would drain the gold supply in ways that would panic governments.

That led, of course, to Richard Nixon’s decision to leave the gold standard entirely and embark on yet another experiment, this time with a pure fiat paper money system that economists had warned against for centuries. But this time, they said, the scientists would be in control and do a great job of it. Actually, they did an atrocious job of it and inflation began almost immediately and continued through to 1979. Then the Fed finally cracked down just like Jerome Powell is attempting now.

Now we see new efforts to create a new monetary reform, one that steals the technology of Bitcoin to make a government-owned proprietary cryptocurrency managed by the central bank: a Central Bank Digital Currency or CBDC. Last March, the Biden administration issued an executive order that makes it very clear that this is where we are headed. They supposed that they would get away with this the same way Wilson, FDR, and Nixon did.

But not so fast. We live in a digital age of information sharing and plenty of people know exactly what is going on. We have the example of China to know how control of money through digital technology allows also for full population control. That’s a nightmare and does not belong in the United States. As a result we are starting to see a real populist movement develop against this idea.

In South Dakota, Texas, and Florida, lawmakers are already hardwiring the commercial codes to forestall the creation of a CBDC. And I’m seeing this issue rise higher and higher up the Republican agenda. They are developing some sophistication here to see that the CBDC would be the end of freedom. And people are growing suspicious that the latest banking crisis will be used to bring this system about, just as in the past.

For the first time in my lifetime, issues of money and banking have become major popular issues being discussed in all sectors of society. This takes us back to the way things should be, as it was in the 1880s. It is an issue that affects everyone and therefore should be a matter of grave political concern.

Can the CBDC be stopped? Absolutely it can. Already, it is pretty obvious that the Treasury and the Fed are both very nervous about the growing public opposition to their nefarious plans. It is working. It needs to be intensified. We have to say no to the CBDC. All we need to do is pull back the curtain and take a careful look at who is really running the system and who favors this supposed reform.

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.

Featured Image: A scene from the movie “The Wizard of Oz” (1939) revealing the man behind the curtain. (Public Domain)

Exit mobile version