All money is not created equal. For thousands of years monetary systems of all kinds have existed and like other historical events or systems we can study, evaluate and compare how one system compares to another. The fruit will speak for itself. Important, basic questions include: what does this system incentivize? Who benefits? Who gets destroyed?
With even a cursory analysis it quickly becomes clear that, over the long-term, our current debt-based fiat monetary system incentivizes debt and punishes saving (in dollars). Through the relentless artificial inflation of central banks the purchasing power of the average American is destroyed while their earnings are primarily redistributed to well-connected elites. This is not merely a financial issue, it is primarily a moral issue. All money is not created equal. For thousands of years monetary systems of all kinds have existed and like other historical events or systems we can study, evaluate and compare how one system compares to another. The fruit will speak for itself. Important, basic questions include: what does this system incentivize? Who benefits? Who gets destroyed?
All money is not created equal. For thousands of years monetary systems of all kinds have existed and like other historical events or systems we can study, evaluate and compare how one system compares to another. The fruit will speak for itself. Important, basic questions include: what does this system incentivize? Who benefits? Who gets destroyed?
With even a cursory analysis it quickly becomes clear that, over the long-term, our current debt-based fiat monetary system incentivizes debt and punishes saving (in dollars). Through the relentless artificial inflation of central banks the purchasing power of the average American is destroyed while their earnings are primarily redistributed to well-connected elites. This is not merely a financial issue, it is primarily a moral issue. All money is not created equal. For thousands of years monetary systems of all kinds have existed and like other historical events or systems we can study, evaluate and compare how one system compares to another. The fruit will speak for itself. Important, basic questions include: what does this system incentivize? Who benefits? Who gets destroyed
All money is not created equal. For thousands of years monetary systems of all kinds have existed and like other historical events or systems we can study, evaluate and compare how one system compares to another. The fruit will speak for itself. Important, basic questions include: what does this system incentivize? Who benefits? Who gets destroyed? With even a cursory analysis it quickly becomes clear that, over the long-term, our current debt-based fiat monetary system incentivizes debt and punishes saving (in dollars). Through the relentless artificial inflation of central banks the purchasing power of the average American is destroyed while their earnings are primarily redistributed to well-connected elites. This is not merely a financial issue, it is primarily a moral issue. All money is not created equal. For thousands of years monetary systems of all kinds have existed and like other historical events or systems we can study, evaluate and compare how one system compares to another. The fruit will speak for itself. Important, basic questions include: what does this system incentivize? Who benefits? Who gets destroyed