Is The Fed Reserve Running Out Of Time?

You pay more interest on the Federal Reserve Note than you pay on the United States Note?

How much interest do you pay? Who collects it? How?
US notes have no interest.

The government pays the interest on Fed notes with your taxes.
 
Sorry Todd, but it's neither federal, nor a reserve......~S~

It is Federal.

It has almost $7 trillion in assets.

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You pay more interest on the Federal Reserve Note than you pay on the United States Note?

How much interest do you pay? Who collects it? How?
There was a time when the Federal Reserve kept tabs on the total of the GNP and kept the total money greasing the wheels not much more than that. It was called M3. M3 was removed a couple of decades or so ago. Interest rates were made on how business went. With a smaller government it was kept much more controlled. Then we added more and more in government programs. And once started, they do not seem to be eliminated. And they can go up the following year more than the inflation rate the previous year. Look at the costs of services in our nation. A telling tale. The costs of fast food of all types. Services of all kinds are more and more expensive. And we purchase products made overseas that most likely would be more expensive and possibly much more expensive with many of them made here and we took care of ourselves like we used to. A massive downside. We are making other nations richer, and it is coming from us. We are building things slower, and it is much more expensive as we lose our competitive ways. That bridge in Baltimore should already be getting rebuilt and done quickly. In another era it was "can do". Each fiat dollar can be lent out 9 times. Losing 10% each time lent out. The currency depends on loans and the speed of them called "velocity". A lot of people collecting checks and benefits. It has to come from somewhere. And other nations can suffer from it also.
 
Each fiat dollar can be lent out 9 times. Losing 10% each time lent out. The currency depends on loans and the speed of them called "velocity". A lot of people collecting checks and benefits.
fractional reserve banking has it's pros and cons 22

~S~
 
There was a time when the Federal Reserve kept tabs on the total of the GNP and kept the total money greasing the wheels not much more than that. It was called M3. M3 was removed a couple of decades or so ago. Interest rates were made on how business went. With a smaller government it was kept much more controlled. Then we added more and more in government programs. And once started, they do not seem to be eliminated. And they can go up the following year more than the inflation rate the previous year. Look at the costs of services in our nation. A telling tale. The costs of fast food of all types. Services of all kinds are more and more expensive. And we purchase products made overseas that most likely would be more expensive and possibly much more expensive with many of them made here and we took care of ourselves like we used to. A massive downside. We are making other nations richer, and it is coming from us. We are building things slower, and it is much more expensive as we lose our competitive ways. That bridge in Baltimore should already be getting rebuilt and done quickly. In another era it was "can do". Each fiat dollar can be lent out 9 times. Losing 10% each time lent out. The currency depends on loans and the speed of them called "velocity". A lot of people collecting checks and benefits. It has to come from somewhere. And other nations can suffer from it also.

With a smaller government it was kept much more controlled.


Yes, the government is much, much too big, inefficient and incompetent.

Each fiat dollar can be lent out 9 times. Losing 10% each time lent out.

You'll have to show me what you mean here.
 
I've got $20 in my wallet.
Which is a piece of paper Todd, there is no earthly connection to it since Nixonian times , and so it is worth exactly what the consortiums of world governance (World Bank, IMF, special drawing rights ......etc) declares it's worth along with any debt due
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~S~
 
I don't pay interest to the Fed for my $20?
in a roundabout way , yes we do Todd, basically the 'house' never looses....
How does one of those private bankers get hired as a Fed Governor?
well that gets into the whole Jekyll Island thing Todd , it's over a century old now

But liking to keep things simple i'll ask why do the rich get richer, the poor poorer in the most prosperous country on this rock?

Think on it , for referral >>>


~S~
 
Which is a piece of paper Todd, there is no earthly connection to it since Nixonian times , and so it is worth exactly what the consortiums of world governance (World Bank, IMF, special drawing rights ......etc) declares it's worth along with any debt due
View attachment 1045414
~S~

Correct, my $20 has no connection to gold.
 
in a roundabout way , yes we do Todd, basically the 'house' never looses....

well that gets into the whole Jekyll Island thing Todd , it's over a century old now

But liking to keep things simple i'll ask why do the rich get richer, the poor poorer in the most prosperous country on this rock?

Think on it , for referral >>>


~S~


in a roundabout way , yes we do Todd, basically the 'house' never looses....

Roundabout? What does that even mean?
I don't pay interest on my FRNs. Do you? Who do you pay?
How much do they charge you? How do you pay them?
In reality. Spell out the steps.
Thanks!

well that gets into the whole Jekyll Island thing Todd

What whole Jekyll Island thing?

But liking to keep things simple i'll ask why do the rich get richer

Does it have anything to do with the interest you feel the Fed is charging for my $20?
 
in a roundabout way , yes we do Todd, basically the 'house' never looses....

Roundabout? What does that even mean?
I don't pay interest on my FRNs. Do you? Who do you pay?
How much do they charge you? How do you pay them?
In reality. Spell out the steps.
Thanks!

well that gets into the whole Jekyll Island thing Todd

What whole Jekyll Island thing?

But liking to keep things simple i'll ask why do the rich get richer

Does it have anything to do with the interest you feel the Fed is charging for my $20?
Roundabout? What does that even mean?
I don't pay interest on my FRNs. Do you? Who do you pay?
How much do they charge you? How do you pay them?
In reality. Spell out the steps.
Thanks!
The U.S. government for the first time has spent more than $1 trillion this year on interest payments for its $35.3 trillion national debt, the Treasury Department reported Thursday.

With the Federal Reserve holding benchmark rates at their highest in 23 years, the government has laid out $1.049 trillion on debt service, up 30% from the same period a year ago and part of a projected $1.158 trillion in payments for the full year.


The government pays this interest with your taxes.

If we printed our own money, there would be no debt.
 
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