Article Image

IPFS News Link • Political Theory

The Insanity In Our World Is Driven By Money Printing

• https://www.zerohedge.com, by Marty Bent

This chart has been making the rounds on Twitter this week and I think it's a good image to send you freaks into the weekend with.

It's easy to get swept up in the chaos of the day-to-day volatility that exists in our world. Recently, our minds have been inundated with headlines about illegal immigration, squatters and the degradation of private property rights, war across the world, small battles within the larger "culture war", increasing prices, and the decisions made by central banks around the world. In the midst of all of this chaos it is important to take a step back and remind yourself of what lies at the core of most of these issues; the fact that we've completely broken money.

When you break money, the most important tool humans use to facilitate economic activity, a ripple effect of negative consequences begins to emanate from the root of the world's engine. Those ripples create the momentum that leads to chaos that we are witnessing today.

Broken money leads people to store their value in sub optimal vehicles like housing. This drives the cost of real estate up unnaturally and increases the gap between the "haves" and the "have nots". Sowing seeds of animosity. Seeds that, when left to germinate and grow via the further degradation of the money people use, blossom into ugly flowers of Anarcho Tyranny.

This has manifested in the trend of people claiming other's houses by squatting in them when they are left unattended for an extended period of time. The preferential treatment that has been given to squatters over homeowners in recent years can be seen as the regime which controls the money printers throwing the plebs a bone as they struggle to get by, an attempt to push the productive class to violence against a state unwilling to respect private property rights, or a combination of the two.

1 Comments in Response to

Comment by PureTrust
Entered on:

Banking laws are very exact. They only allow printing money based on certain activities between banks and people/governments. These activities include contracts, especially loan agreements. In other words, printed money is simply the representations of the contracts between the banks and people/governments.