At the Core of our Political and Economic Dilemmas

To associates of CCMJ,

A succinct response to a letter in the Guardian worth considering in its own basic clarity on the challenge CCMJ is offering through many voices:

“Like so many “experts” this writer in the Guardian can’t see the wood for the trees.
Until one accepts the corrosive, abusive and destructive nature of interest, we are not on the first base to understand the political economy. Simply put, banking is theft and we’re wasting our time, energy and intellect trying to solve the insoluble. Social and economic justice cannot be reconciled with interest.

There is no easy way to persuade people to embrace this fact other than by getting them to open their minds, read Margrit Kennedy’s Interest and Inflation Free Money and think. Having been exposed to empirical evidence which demonstrates that interest is a wealth transfer mechanism, we must then ponder the common sense explanation of why this is so: those with more money than they need exploit those who have none or too little – about 80% of the population.

Interest provides the motivation and means to create money from nothing and has granted the Rothschild family the global money monopoly which means they’ve bought and control the world; the economics curriculum is the product of their foundation funded universities; to ensure money is never explored thereby avoiding discovery; by the supposed experts who’ve been brainwashed (as we all are) out of their ability to think critically. Neat trick on humanity.

X’s article is berating the big accounting firms for their bank audits but it is the practice of double entry bookkeeping which obscures the theft. The evidence is in every bank’s ledgers for all to see. Regards C”

Any reports on your own outreach or observations will be warmly received–

Peter
Democracy is the art of thinking independently together
and in the UK there is a way of making it achievable