In 1910, a handful of bankers, a U.S. Senator, and the
Treasury Secretary devised a plan to wrest control of the money supply from
Congress and give it to the banks. Three years later, on December 23, 1913,
with many elected officials home for the Christmas holidays, the Federal
Reserve Board (Fed) was created. The legislation took from Congress and gave to
the new central bank the power to print money. Hailed as a means to take
politics out of financial policy and stabilize the economy, in reality, the aim
of the central bank was to make a profit. It was no coincidence that the same
year the Federal Reserve was created, Federal Income Tax was imposed. The tax
was needed to pay interest on the money that the government could no longer
mint itself, but now had to borrow from the Fed. We pay tax, in part, to pay
interest on free money the Fed creates out of thin air. (For an excellent
history of the Fed see: The
Creature from Jekyll Island, by G. Edward Griffin.)
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