Wayne Gretzky for Prime Minister of Canada, and paying off of the national debt of the USA!

Could Wayne Gretzky replicate the 1932 Worgl Austria Local Money Experiment and pay off USA debt?

  • No, how could a Canadian Prime Minister pay off the USA debt?!

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Yes, Canada and the USA both have the same really big problems.

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • I sure do hope so and I would research his platform if he was willing to at least try this?!

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • If President Trump would assist Wayne Gretzky, he could be the best Canadian Prime Minister ever!

    Votes: 1 100.0%
  • Other answer, please be specific in a reply.

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    1

DennisPTate

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Could Mr. Wayne Gretzky, create an alternative currency note,
[perhaps in his own name, perhaps in his dad's name, perhaps in his grandfather's name], and could this alternative currency note set in motion a series of events that could lead to proving that the national debt of the USA has significantly been something of a "practical joke being played on three hundred and fifty million Americans?"

I attempted to rival Mr. Justin Trudeau for the office of national leader of Canada's Liberal Party back in 2011 and 2012 and I would certainly volunteer to help him with this campaign.

I am almost certain that my online friend "The John Turmel" would also assist Mr. Wayne Gretzky with this little project.




Wayne Douglas Gretzky CC (/ˈɡrɛtski/ GRET-skee; born January 26, 1961) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player and former head coach. He played 20 seasons in the National Hockey League (NHL) for four teams from 1979 to 1999. Nicknamed "the Great One",<a href="Wayne Gretzky - Wikipedia"><span>[</span>1<span>]</span></a> he has been called the greatest ice hockey player ever by the NHL<a href="Wayne Gretzky - Wikipedia"><span>[</span>2<span>]</span></a> based on surveys of hockey writers, ex-players, general managers and coaches.<a href="Wayne Gretzky - Wikipedia"><span>[</span>3<span>]</span></a> Gretzky is the leading career point scorer and assist producer in NHL history and has more assists than any other player has total career points.<a href="Wayne Gretzky - Wikipedia"><span>[</span>4<span>]</span></a> He is the only NHL player to total over 200 points in one season, a feat he accomplished four times. In addition, Gretzky scored more than 100 points in 15 professional seasons. At the time of his retirement in 1999, he held 61 NHL records: 40 regular season records, 15 playoff records, and six All-Star records

PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP, FOR ALL OF HIS MANY, MANY, MANY, MANY FLAWS, KNOWS THAT ATHLETES ARE NOT NECESSARILY STUPID OR COWARDLY!

 
Here is a summary of the 1932 Worgl Austria Local Money Experiment. Please notice how this experiment seemed to play a role in assisting President F. D. R. to initiate "The New Deal?"

I am of the belief that all forty five million of us Canadians need to understand this as we begin discussions on how to handle the fact that over the next twenty to thirty years, robotics and Artificial Intelligence could easily replace twenty percent of workers, [or perhaps even far more than that]?


[The Truth About Money: The Money SystemIsnt There a Better Way?
by Francis and Lia Ayley] :

"City in Austria Printed Local Currency
Worgl, like many other European towns and cities, was hit hard by the Great Depression. There was mass unemployment; four of the five local factories had closed, and the people were starving in the streets. Nobody had any money to buy anything. One of the features of an economic depression is that there is not enough money in circulation to ensure that people can meet their basic needs, and in the 1930s, the shortage of currency in many countries of the world became catastrophic.

The mayor of Worgl, together with local businessmen, decided to try to break this economic impasse by creating their own local currency. They printed and issued 60,000 Austrian shillings worth of local currency. These shillings could only be spent in Worgl, so they remained in the local community and were exchanged over and over again.

The positive impact was immediate and surprising to everyone. In only six weeks, unemployment disappeared, all the factories had reopened and everyone had food. For the inhabitants of Worgl, the economic depression was gone. This dramatic transformation became known as the “miracle of Worgl.” Surrounding towns, inspired by the success of Worgl, immediately started printing their own local currencies.

Sadly, the miracle did not last long. When the Austrian Central Bank heard about Worgl’s local currency, they initiated legal proceedings against the mayor and local businessmen. According to Austrian banking law, it was illegal for anyone except the Austrian Central Bank to issue money. The bank won the court case, and the mayor was ordered to shut down the local currency, which he did, under threat of imprisonment. The town then returned to the devastating economic depression of the 1930s, with all the human pain and suffering associated with this catastrophe. Factories closed, and once again, the people starved.

Alternative Currency in the U.S.
Irving Fisher, an American professor of economics at Yale University, visited Worgl before the local currency was suppressed and witnessed the ‘miracle’ firsthand. When he returned to the United States, Fisher spread the word by traveling and lecturing across the country, advocating the use of the Worgl ‘scrip’ everywhere. Inspired by his vision, hundreds of communities began issuing their own currency, and by 1934 there were over 1,000 local communities using ‘scrip’ throughout the U.S.

Every one of these communities experienced a tremendous rejuvenation of their local economies. They thrived while others suffered. Fisher then met with President Franklin D. Roosevelt, proposing the implementation of government-sanctioned local ‘scrip’ in every community in America. When FDR consulted with his top financial advisors and bankers, however, he was advised to shut all the ‘scrip’ systems down, which he did. Instead, he borrowed large amounts of money from bankers, at interest, and used it to pay for the Reconstruction Finance Corporation and the other work-creation projects, which collectively came to be known as the ‘New Deal.’ So ended the last widespread use of a local currency within the U.S.

This pattern of economic collapse and re-emergence of local currencies has occurred thousands of times in many parts of the world. When these currencies have failed or have been suppressed, banks have not always been to blame. Sometimes, local currencies fail because they have been badly designed or implemented. Sometimes, people lose interest in them when the mainstream economy recovers. But they have always returned in one form or another during times of economic failure.

Our present world situation is uniquely different. Despite a relatively prosperous and stable world economy, a quiet monetary revolution has been occurring around the globe over the last 20 years. Awareness is growing about the flaws in our current monetary system, and people are re-creating viable alternatives. We are witnessing for the first time the worldwide creation of money systems designed by the people who use them, instead of by central banks.

Time Dollars in Whatcom County"

[ The Truth About Money: The Money SystemIsnt There a Better Way?
by Francis and Lia Ayley}


Being the Change | Francis Ayley Interview | Fourth Corner Exchange​



Now I would like to fill you in on details of what could be considered one of the most critical secrets about Canadian history that BigMedia seem determined to hide from ordinary Canadian citizens and legal residents.


[Ms. Betty Krawczyk] :
The Bank of Canada was first established by Prime Minister Richard Bennet in 1935 as a private central bank, but was then nationalized by William Lyon Mackenzie King in 1938. By nationalizing the bank, Mackenzie King meant for it to belong to the people so the Canadian government could borrow funds with little or no interest for capital expenditures. The mandate of the newly nationalized Bank of Canada was to act as the banker to the government and to manage the public debt. As Mackenzie King famously said: “Once a nation parts with the control of their currency and credit, it matters not who makes that nation’s laws. Usury, once in control, will wreck any nation. Until the control of the issue of currency and credit is restored to government and recognized as its most sacred responsibility, all talk of sovereignty of parliament and of democracy is idle and futile.”

So the Bank of Canada was nationalized in 1938 and the government could now borrow money with little or no interest. And it worked. The Canadian government built freeways, public transportation systems, subway line, airports, the St. Lawrence Seaway and funded a national health care system and the Canada Pension Plan. But then Trudeau, under the influence of the international financial group called Basel’s
Committee’s Recommendations (The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision) made the decision to halt the borrowing of money from the Bank of Canada, and instead, chose to borrow from the private banks who instead of lending to the government at no interest, or low interest, introduced higher interest rates along with compound interest.

All banks know very well the magic of compound interest. And Pierre Trudeau must have known that the mounting compounded national debt would lead to Canadians eventually owing a dollar fifty for every dollar of their disposable incomes. After all, he studied economics at the London School of Economics. Surely the professors there knew about compound interest.

So Pierre Trudeau, instead of feeling blessed that Canada, unlike the US, had a nationalized central bank, signed our bank away to the private banks. Couldn’t Trudeau, such an educated man, surmise that citizens in a few years would be struggling to make car payments and meet rent and mortgages and student loans and to buy healthy food while last year’s profits for the big five (that’s Royal Bank, TD Bank, Scotiabank, Bank of Montreal and CIBC amounted to $31.7 billion?) If he did, he didn’t care. But it doesn’t have to be this way. It really doesn’t. Our Bank of
Canada is still there. Next time." (Ms. Betty Krawczyk)


Our elected officials in Ottawa tend to lack the political courage to explain to Canadians how serious the situation is that we are now facing but I believe that Mr. Wayne Gretzky could easily grab the attention of a significant percentage of us if he would openly and honestly discuss how serious a situation we Canadians are actually facing?






This is an excellent message on this topic but that is not exactly the situation that I believe Canadian and American workers are facing. We are dealing with C. E. O's that are so intelligent that they will figure out how to train one or two humans to intervene and make a judgment call that will slightly modify the types of errors that Artificial Intelligence will tend to make.

C. E. O's of a publicly traded company that have more than a certain number of workers earn on average eleven point seven million dollars in salary plus benefits. A. I. and robotics, [backed up by several well trained humans], can begin to replace the highest paid managers in this modern economy.

The eight thousand five hundred wealthiest people on this planet are far too intelligent to think that they need to develop Artificial Intelligence and robotics to be so good that they do not supply them with well trained humans who can deal with the inevitable glitches that will occur.

I would suggest doing a search for the lecture "Innovating to zero" by Bill Gates and really listen to this lecture and ask yourself, [would Bill Gates fire me if he could replace me with a combination of Artificial Intellince, robotics and well trained humans? OBVIOUSLY THE ANSWER IS YES!]

 
Secretary of Defense

Marty McSorely or Charlie Huddy?
 
Secretary of Defense

Marty McSorely or Charlie Huddy?

I love that idea!

Not only should "The Wayne Gretzky" take over the office of Prime Minister of Canada but he should organize the replacement of all major Ministerial positions in Ottawa, [because in my opinion the only real competition that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has for being "Canada's Worst Ever Prime Minister" would be his dad, Prime Minister Pierre E. Trudeau who made an off the scale error back in 1974]!?

[Ms. Betty Krawczyk] :
HOW PIERRE TRUDEAU TURNED US INTO DEBT SLAVES
Click on the link above to watch Part 3 of my video series on the Canadian Banking System. Please also read accompanying text below.

Trudeaumania was just gearing up when I immigrated to Canada in late 1966. I, too, was impressed with Trudeau. He was intelligent, articulate, with liberal ideas. And as Prime Minister, Trudeau repatriated the Canadian Constitution and told the morals’ police to stay out of people’s bedrooms. But then…but then. As Anthony’s famous speech in Shakespeare’s play Julius Caesar reminds us… “the evil that men do live after them while the good is often interred with their bones. So let it be with Caesar.”

But somehow this worked backward for Trudeau. Many Canadians still think highly of Pierre Trudeau, but in 1974 he did one terrible thing that changed the lives, for present and future, of all Canadians, for the worse. Trudeau gave the leading operations of the Bank of Canada over to the private banks operating in Canada.

The Bank of Canada was first established by Prime Minister Richard Bennet in 1935 as a private central bank, but was then nationalized by William Lyon Mackenzie King in 1938. By nationalizing the bank, Mackenzie King meant for it to belong to the people so the Canadian government could borrow funds with little or no interest for capital expenditures. The mandate of the newly nationalized Bank of Canada was to act as the banker to the government and to manage the public debt. As Mackenzie King famously said: “Once a nation parts with the control of their currency and credit, it matters not who makes that nation’s laws. Usury, once in control, will wreck any nation. Until the control of the issue of currency and credit is restored to government and recognized as its most sacred responsibility, all talk of sovereignty of parliament and of democracy is idle and futile.”


So the Bank of Canada was nationalized in 1938 and the government could now borrow money with little or no interest. And it worked. The Canadian government built freeways, public transportation systems, subway line, airports, the St. Lawrence Seaway and funded a national health care system and the Canada Pension Plan. But then Trudeau, under the influence of the international financial group called Basel’s
Committee’s Recommendations (The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision) made the decision to halt the borrowing of money from the Bank of Canada, and instead, chose to borrow from the private banks who instead of lending to the government at no interest, or low interest, introduced higher interest rates along with compound interest.

All banks know very well the magic of compound interest. And Pierre Trudeau must have known that the mounting compounded national debt would lead to Canadians eventually owing a dollar fifty for every dollar of their disposable incomes. After all, he studied economics at the London School of Economics. Surely the professors there knew about compound interest.

So Pierre Trudeau, instead of feeling blessed that Canada, unlike the US, had a nationalized central bank, signed our bank away to the private banks. Couldn’t Trudeau, such an educated man, surmise that citizens in a few years would be struggling to make car payments and meet rent and mortgages and student loans and to buy healthy food while last year’s profits for the big five (that’s Royal Bank, TD Bank, Scotiabank, Bank of Montreal and CIBC amounted to $31.7 billion?) If he did, he didn’t care. But it doesn’t have to be this way. It really doesn’t. Our Bank of
Canada is still there. Next time." (Ms. Betty Krawczyk)

In my opinion Prime Minister Mark Carney is making an error so serious that he is turning his administration into a laughingstock in front of the Trump administration in the USA.


 
  • Thanks
Reactions: EMH
I love that idea!

Not only should "The Wayne Gretzky" take over the office of Prime Minister of Canada but he should organize the replacement of all major Ministerial positions in Ottawa, [because in my opinion the only real competition that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has for being "Canada's Worst Ever Prime Minister" would be his dad, Prime Minister Pierre E. Trudeau who made an off the scale error back in 1974]!?


In my opinion Prime Minister Mark Carney is making an error so serious that he is turning his administration into a laughingstock in front of the Trump administration in the USA.



So the Bank of Canada was nationalized in 1938 and the government could now borrow money with little or no interest. And it worked. The Canadian government built freeways, public transportation systems, subway line, airports, the St. Lawrence Seaway and funded a national health care system and the Canada Pension Plan. But then Trudeau, under the influence of the international financial group called Basel’s
Committee’s Recommendations (The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision) made the decision to halt the borrowing of money from the Bank of Canada, and instead, chose to borrow from the private banks who instead of lending to the government at no interest, or low interest, introduced higher interest rates along with compound interest.


How much did they borrow, interest-free, by year? Link?
 
Secretary of Defense

Marty McSorely or Charlie Huddy?

So the Bank of Canada was nationalized in 1938 and the government could now borrow money with little or no interest. And it worked. The Canadian government built freeways, public transportation systems, subway line, airports, the St. Lawrence Seaway and funded a national health care system and the Canada Pension Plan. But then Trudeau, under the influence of the international financial group called Basel’s
Committee’s Recommendations (The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision) made the decision to halt the borrowing of money from the Bank of Canada, and instead, chose to borrow from the private banks who instead of lending to the government at no interest, or low interest, introduced higher interest rates along with compound interest.


How much did they borrow, interest-free, by year? Link?
I don't know for certain what the link is but I had an online friend who could answer questions like that. Several online writers argued that the BAnk of Canada was used to create significantly less than fully fifty percent of the total money supply of Canada during those years but I personally believe that those who felt that way were NOT taking into consideration the long term effect of "The Clawback Effect of Compound Interest Owing Over Time on the Principle" amounts of the original loan.

I can tell you for certain that the Bank of Canada was being used to make loans to ALL CANADIAN PROVINCES, [not to big companies]. The provinces borrowed money from the BAnk of Canada at one or two percent interest depending on the specific projects that they were financing]. All the jobs created as these infrastructure projects were being done in those provinces led to an increase in provincial income tax, [so voila, the provinces made all payments to the National Treasury on time and the total cost of the interest to Canadian taxpayers was virtually zero."
 
Little Sister Canada still trying to escape the US shadow.
 
Could Mr. Wayne Gretzky, create an alternative currency note,
[perhaps in his own name, perhaps in his dad's name, perhaps in his grandfather's name], and could this alternative currency note set in motion a series of events that could lead to proving that the national debt of the USA has significantly been something of a "practical joke being played on three hundred and fifty million Americans?"

I attempted to rival Mr. Justin Trudeau for the office of national leader of Canada's Liberal Party back in 2011 and 2012 and I would certainly volunteer to help him with this campaign.

I am almost certain that my online friend "The John Turmel" would also assist Mr. Wayne Gretzky with this little project.






PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP, FOR ALL OF HIS MANY, MANY, MANY, MANY FLAWS, KNOWS THAT ATHLETES ARE NOT NECESSARILY STUPID OR COWARDLY!

This is a troll thread, right?

There's no way you think this shit is real
 
I don't know for certain what the link is but I had an online friend who could answer questions like that. Several online writers argued that the BAnk of Canada was used to create significantly less than fully fifty percent of the total money supply of Canada during those years but I personally believe that those who felt that way were NOT taking into consideration the long term effect of "The Clawback Effect of Compound Interest Owing Over Time on the Principle" amounts of the original loan.

I can tell you for certain that the Bank of Canada was being used to make loans to ALL CANADIAN PROVINCES, [not to big companies]. The provinces borrowed money from the BAnk of Canada at one or two percent interest depending on the specific projects that they were financing]. All the jobs created as these infrastructure projects were being done in those provinces led to an increase in provincial income tax, [so voila, the provinces made all payments to the National Treasury on time and the total cost of the interest to Canadian taxpayers was virtually zero."

Sounds like more baloney.

Without the real numbers, I can't say that those claims are correct.
 
Little Sister Canada still trying to escape the US shadow.
Why? They`re one of the most admired countries in the world? Since the end of WW2 our reputation has taken a nose dive.
 
Why? They`re one of the most admired countries in the world? Since the end of WW2 our reputation has taken a nose dive.
List25. A big lol. Anyway, the link does not work.
 
Sounds like more baloney.

Without the real numbers, I can't say that those claims are correct.
My Mac at home is fourteen years old but now that I am at the library I might be able to find something interesting for you?

My search was for ; "How much money was created through the BAnk of Canada from 1938 to 1973"

The Bank of Canada's money supply, including notes in circulation, increased by approximately $9.5 billion between 1938 and 1945, from $203.7 million to $9,695 million. Specific data for the entire period of 1938 to 1973 is not available in the provided search snippets, which focus on a smaller, war-time period.
  • Money Supply Growth (1938-1945):The total amount of money in circulation, consisting of notes and coins, saw a significant increase during this period, primarily due to war financing.
    • 1938: The Bank of Canada had about $203.7 million in notes.
    • 1945: This figure rose to $9,695 million.
  • Total Increase (1938-1945): The net increase during this specific timeframe was approximately $9,695 million - $203.7 million = $9,491.3 million.

Born in the worst years of the Great Depression, and guiding Canada's economy ever since, the Bank of Canada celebrates its 75th year starting on 11 March 2010. The Bank of Canada was created by an Act of Parliament to foster the economic and financial well-being of all Canadians and is considered the country's pre-eminent macroeconomic institution. The central bank has sole authority to conduct monetary policy, working to preserve the value of money by keeping inflation low and stable.


Bank of Canada History 1935 - 2023​

Last Updated: January 24, 2024
Highlights

  • The Bank of Canada is the nation’s central bank and their main purpose is to promote the economic and financial welfare of Canada.
  • Currently, the Bank of Canada is maintaining its policy rate at 5.00%
  • The next Bank of Canada announcement will be on March 6, 2024.

The background of the Bank of Canada​

The Bank of Canada is a crown corporation that serves as the country’s central bank. It was established in 1934 by the Bank of Canada Act and is responsible for monetary policy and financial system regulation in Canada. Its primary mission is to “promote Canada’s economic and financial well-being.” Its principal tool for implementing monetary policy, led by a governing council, is the overnight rate target also known as the key policy rate. By adjusting this rate, it is possible to influence the supply of money circulating in the Canadian economy. It is also entirely responsible for Canadian currency issuance and distribution, as well as the control of foreign currency reserves.

  • 1935 (The beginning of the Bank of Canada)​

    The Bank of Canada was founded as Canada’s central bank in 1934 and opened their doors and began operations, following the granting of royal assent to the Bank of Canada Act in March 1935. The Bank of Canada was privately owned at first, but became majority owned by the federal government in 1936 and fully nationalized in 1938. The main purpose of the Bank of Canada was “to regulate credit and currency in the best interests of the economic life of the nation, to control and protect the external value of the national monetary unit and to mitigate by its influence fluctuations in the general level of production, trade, prices and employment, so far as may be possible within the scope of monetary action, and generally to promote the economic and financial welfare of the Dominion”.
  • 1935 – 1955 (The Great Depression, World War II, Post-war period)​

    In 1935, the Bank of Canada rate started at 2.50% and by 1945 it was at 1.50%. Canada played a vital role in supplying natural and manufactured resources to the Allies which helped the economy strengthen during the war. Employment of women also increased and the drop in the Bank rate encouraged people and businesses to borrow money to invest in new manufacturing plants and housing. After World War II, the Bank of Canada rate didn’t rise until October 1955 to 2.00%. This promoted investment in infrastructure, manufacturing, housing and consumer goods. When inflation began to rise in the early 1960s, then-Governor James Coyne ordered a reduction in the Canadian money supply.
  • 1977-1991 (Stagflation)​

    After the rate raise in 1955, the Bank of Canada rate continued to rise throughout the 1960s and early 1970s. The benchmark rate hit double digits for the first time at 10.25% in October 1978. In August 1980, oil prices hit a record high and the Bank of Canada hit an all time high of 20.03% in August 1981.
  • 1991 – 2008 (Recovering economy)​

    After the 1980s recession, the Bank of Canada rate went downwards between 1991-2009. The inflation target rate was introduced at the beginning of this period.
  • 2009 – 2017 (The Great Financial Crisis)​

    Following the 2008 recession, the central Bank of Canada lowered interest rates to stimulate the economy and for the first time ever, the rate dipped below 1% to 0.5% in March 2009. There was a minor recovery in 2014 however oil prices dropped 60% which caused a recession in Canada’s export economy. In 2015, the Bank of Canada rate then dropped from 1.25% to 0.75%.

 
My Mac at home is fourteen years old but now that I am at the library I might be able to find something interesting for you?

My search was for ; "How much money was created through the BAnk of Canada from 1938 to 1973"

Thanks.

You have no info about the amount created by the bank to fund government spending up through 1974.
No evidence that something changed in 1974, the reason for the change or that the change was a bad idea.
 
15th post
Thanks.

You have no info about the amount created by the bank to fund government spending up through 1974.
No evidence that something changed in 1974, the reason for the change or that the change was a bad idea.

Three economists risked their careers to write up an article on the full topic. They knew that the "Ottawa Swamp" would crucify each one of the separately if they did not combine their efforts.

If some of what I have found out so far is accurate these economists may well be teaching only about half an hour to an hour away from where Wayne Gretzky grew up.

Economist John Hotson, Economist Harold Chorney, Economist Mario Seccareccia:

by Harold Chorney, John Hotson, and Mario Seccareccia

“Governments these days find it easy to defend cuts in services and programs. All they have to do is point to their annual deficits and their total accumulated debts. (As of March, 1994, Canada's public debt was about $546 billion.) This public debt provides the politicians with a convenient excuse for cutting spending or raising taxes. Or both. «We're broke,» they tell us plaintively. «We can't afford to increase public services, or even keep them at their present level.»​

A lesson of war​

“As the deep recession dragged into 1992, Finance Minister Don Mazankowski said he couldn't do anything about it. His hands were tied, he said. The federal government was broke. The cupboard was bare. The deficit and accumulated national debt were so enormous that his first priority had to be to reduce them — even if that meant prolonging the recession and making it even worse.

“So his budget contained almost nothing to revive the sick economy. With interest payments on the debt gobbling up one-third of tax revenue, his response was to keep taxes high and axe more public services and agencies. Like Martin Luther before him, Mazankowski in effect proclaimed: «Here stand I. I cannot do otherwise.»

“But it doesn't take an economist to see that in fact he could. All you have to do is imagine what the government would do if it got involved in another Gulf War — or if that war were still raging. Would the Finance Minister have brought down the same kind of budget? Would he have said, «We'd like to keep on fighting, but we're broke, so we're calling our troops back»? Not on your life!

“Did Canada surrender half way through World War II because the national debt had grown even larger than the Gross Domestic Product (GDP)? Of course not! Somehow the extra money was found. If it wasn't by raising taxes or borrowing from the private banks, why, the Bank of Canada simply created all the money the government needed — and at near-zero interest rates, too!


“When World War II ended, the national debt relative to the national income was more than twice as large as it is now. But was the country ruined? Did we have to declare national bankruptcy? Far from it! Instead, Canada's economy boomed and the country prospered for most of the post-war period.​

The Bank of Canada has failed in its duty​

“Why isn't the same thing happening today? Why was a much larger national debt shrugged off in 1945, while today's much smaller debt (as a percentage of GDP) is being used as an excuse to let the economy stagnate?

“The answer can be found at the Bank of Canada. During the war, and for 30 years afterward, the government could borrow what it needed at low rates of interest, because the government's own bank produced up to half of all the new money. That forced the private banks to keep their interest rates low, too.


“Since the mid-1970s, however, the Bank of Canada, with government consent, has been creating less and less of the new money, while letting the private banks create more and more. Today «our» bank creates a mere 2% of each year's new money supply, while allowing the private banks to gouge the government — and of course you and me, as well — with outrageously high interest rates. And it is these extortionate interest charges that are the principal cause of the rapid escalation of the national debt. If the federal government were paying interest at the average levels that prevailed from the 1930s to the mid-1970s, it would now be running an operating surplus of about $13 billion!”

The updated version (January, 1996) of the pamphlet expresses the same ideas:

“The Bank of Canada was established in 1935 by an Act of Parliament. In its legislative mandate, it is directed to promote economic growth and employment, as well as preserving the value of the Canadian dollar.

“Shortly after the Bank opened its doors, it was faced with the bankruptcy of provincial governments due to the Depression. Interpreting its mandate widely, as it is supposed to do, it made precedent-setting loans to restore the finances of Manitoba. Generous loans to other provinces followed.​


 
Three economists risked their careers to write up an article on the full topic. They knew that the "Ottawa Swamp" would crucify each one of the separately if they did not combine their efforts.

If some of what I have found out so far is accurate these economists may well be teaching only about half an hour to an hour away from where Wayne Gretzky grew up.

Three economists risked their careers to write up an article on the full topic.

Yeah, they sound awesome.

Not a lot of actual backup for their claims.
 
Three economists risked their careers to write up an article on the full topic.

Yeah, they sound awesome.

Not a lot of actual backup for their claims.
True, but anybody who writes on this topic is risking their career path.

Only a small percentage of us are willing to bring down the wrath of the Ottawa Swamp, or the Washington Swamp, on our own heads!
"We never should have privatized our debt and turned it over to the
private banks, we should have kept it in the hands of the Bank of Canada,
at least a major part of it, because then we would have been paying

interest back to ourselves." (NDP Leader Jack Layton)


Oh Canada Movie 6 - Banking - 5
Just after the 2:20 minute mark in this video interview:




[Ms. Betty Krawczyk] :

HOW PIERRE TRUDEAU TURNED US INTO DEBT SLAVES
Click on the link above to watch Part 3 of my video series on the Canadian Banking System. Please also read accompanying text below.

Trudeaumania was just gearing up when I immigrated to Canada in late 1966. I, too, was impressed with Trudeau. He was intelligent, articulate, with liberal ideas. And as Prime Minister, Trudeau repatriated the Canadian Constitution and told the morals’ police to stay out of people’s bedrooms. But then…but then. As Anthony’s famous speech in Shakespeare’s play Julius Caesar reminds us… “the evil that men do live after them while the good is often interred with their bones. So let it be with Caesar.”

But somehow this worked backward for Trudeau. Many Canadians still think highly of Pierre Trudeau, but in 1974 he did one terrible thing that changed the lives, for present and future, of all Canadians, for the worse. Trudeau gave the leading operations of the Bank of Canada over to the private banks operating in Canada.

The Bank of Canada was first established by Prime Minister Richard Bennet in 1935 as a private central bank, but was then nationalized by William Lyon Mackenzie King in 1938. By nationalizing the bank, Mackenzie King meant for it to belong to the people so the Canadian government could borrow funds with little or no interest for capital expenditures. The mandate of the newly nationalized Bank of Canada was to act as the banker to the government and to manage the public debt. As Mackenzie King famously said: “Once a nation parts with the control of their currency and credit, it matters not who makes that nation’s laws. Usury, once in control, will wreck any nation. Until the control of the issue of currency and credit is restored to government and recognized as its most sacred responsibility, all talk of sovereignty of parliament and of democracy is idle and futile.”


So the Bank of Canada was nationalized in 1938 and the government could now borrow money with little or no interest. And it worked. The Canadian government built freeways, public transportation systems, subway line, airports, the St. Lawrence Seaway and funded a national health care system and the Canada Pension Plan. But then Trudeau, under the influence of the international financial group called Basel’s
Committee’s Recommendations (The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision) made the decision to halt the borrowing of money from the Bank of Canada, and instead, chose to borrow from the private banks who instead of lending to the government at no interest, or low interest, introduced higher interest rates along with compound interest.

All banks know very well the magic of compound interest. And Pierre Trudeau must have known that the mounting compounded national debt would lead to Canadians eventually owing a dollar fifty for every dollar of their disposable incomes. After all, he studied economics at the London School of Economics. Surely the professors there knew about compound interest.

So Pierre Trudeau, instead of feeling blessed that Canada, unlike the US, had a nationalized central bank, signed our bank away to the private banks. Couldn’t Trudeau, such an educated man, surmise that citizens in a few years would be struggling to make car payments and meet rent and mortgages and student loans and to buy healthy food while last year’s profits for the big five (that’s Royal Bank, TD Bank, Scotiabank, Bank of Montreal and CIBC amounted to $31.7 billion?) If he did, he didn’t care. But it doesn’t have to be this way. It really doesn’t. Our Bank of
Canada is still there. Next time." (Ms. Betty Krawczyk)

 
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