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G. Edward Griffin, author of The
Creature from Jekyll Island, has
publicly stated opposition to NESARA. Yet, as you will discover, many of
the proposals made by Griffin in his book are remarkably similar to
elements of the NESARA proposal. What follows is a comparison of the two
proposals. Griffin’s reform proposal is provided in bold font, with a
comparison to NESARA immediately following.
- Repeal the legal-tender laws. Both plans repeal legal-tender
laws. In addition to replacing Federal Reserve Notes (FRNs) with U.S.
Treasury Credit-Notes, NESARA also restores gold and silver coin to
circulation [Part I, Section 4(G)(3)]. People will be free to
use any of the three currencies. In private exchanges, buyers and
sellers are free to contract in the medium of exchange they wish to
use, including currencies other than the new Treasury credit-notes,
gold or silver coin. With respect to government exchanges, one of the
three currencies must be used, but no government can refuse payment in
any of the established currencies. With respect to adjudication of
contractual disputes regarding currency, NESARA establishes
credit-notes as a default currency only if the parties to a
contract failed to negotiate and establish the form and substance of
the medium of exchange [Part I, Section 4(C)]. Furthermore,
NESARA prohibits depository institutions from commingling currency
types without a depositor’s affirmative permission [Part I,
Section 7(E)]. Lastly, the old federal tax on state-bank notes was
repealed several years ago. Thus, theoretically state and private
banks already may issue their own currency. The gold-clause
restrictions also were repealed several years ago, therefore consumers
may already use gold and silver in private contracts.
- Freeze the present supply of Federal Reserve Notes, except for
what will be needed in step number eleven. Both plans halt the
introduction and circulation of interest-bearing Federal Reserve Notes
(FRNs). NESARA replaces FRNs with debt-free U.S. Treasury Credit-Notes
[Part I, Section 4(A) and (B)]. The portion of the national
debt held and “owned” by the Federal Reserve System is paid
for in full with credit-notes and the Fed System is effectively
abolished [Part I, Section 5(F) and
6(C)].
With respect to FRNs remaining in circulation, they will be replaced
one-for-one as new credit-notes are introduced into circulation [Part
I, Section 4(D)].
- Define the “real” dollar in terms of precious-metal
content. Both plans restore ties between circulating currencies
and the physical world. NESARA retains the original statutory
definition of a dollar, that is, 371.25 grains of silver [Part
I, Section 4(G)(1)].
- Establish gold as an auxiliary monetary
reserve. Both plans
restore gold coin to circulation [Part I, Section 4(G)(2)]. NESARA
does not place gold and silver on a fixed bimetallic exchange standard
[Part I, Section 4(G)(6)]; that was one of the flaws of the
original coinage acts—fixed ratios do not work. By statute NESARA
establishes the definition of a dollar as a specific weight of silver
[Part I, Section 4(G)(1)]. Gold coins will circulate containing
a known fixed weight of gold, but the market will determine the
exchange value of that gold coin with respect to silver and Treasury
credit-notes. In fact, the exchange values of all three currencies
float in a free market because the paper currency is not compelled to
be exchangeable one-for-one but is determined by the market [Part
I, Section 4(B)(7)].
- Restore free coinage at the U.S. Mint.
Both plans restore
free coinage. NESARA not only restores free coinage of gold and silver
at the U.S. mints [Part I, Section 4(G)(5)], but also permits
the minting of private stocks of silver and gold into lawful coin [Part
I, Section 4(H)] which will help to keep both the U.S. and private
mints honest. The metal content of the various coins is established by
statute [Part I, Section 4(G)].
- Pay off the national debt with Federal Reserve
Notes. Both
plans eliminate the debt held by the Fed by eliminating the Fed. Under
NESARA, the abolished Federal Reserve Banks are resurrected as U.S.
Treasury Reserve Banks [Part I, Section 5(F) and
6(A)], but under a different nature. All assets of the Federal
Reserve System are purchased with newly printed Treasury credit-notes
at the original nominal stock price of $100 [Part I, Section 6(B)].
To eliminate the portion of the national debt held by the Fed, all
securities and debt instruments held by the Fed system are exchanged
for Treasury credit-notes [Part I, Section 6(C)]. By statute,
the U.S. Government debt instruments must then be destroyed [Part
I, Section 6(C) and (D)]. As the exchange is
made, the new U.S. Treasury Reserve System replaces the abolished Fed
and those new credit-notes immediately become property of the people
via the Treasury; thereby eliminating the quasi-public, quasi-private
nature of the monetary system. That currency is placed into the newly
created Treasury Reserve Account [Part I, Section 5(D)], a
currency shock absorber, and is not introduced into circulation, thus
is not inflationary. Likewise, all member and non-member reserve banks
must exchange their government debt instruments for credit-notes [Part
I, Section 7(B)]. Under NESARA, all fractional reserve banks are
prohibited from using anything other than the new Treasury
credit-notes as reserves [Part I, Section 7(C)]. Because
government debt instruments were used as reserves, credit-notes
exchanged for those government debt instruments will be held as
reserves, will not be introduced into general circulation, and
therefore are not inflationary. However, NESARA does not force private
investors (that is, insurance companies, union retirement funds,
fractional reserve banks who hold government bonds in trust for their
consumer accounts or as security against customer loans, that little
old lady down the street with her U.S. Savings Bonds, etc.) to sell
that part of the national debt they own privately. However, the NESARA
plan does allow for the newly created Treasury Reserve Board to buy
back privately-owned public debt. Ideally, buying back this debt is a
sound idea. However, unlike buying back the debt owned by the Fed system
and financial institutions, buying back debt from private owners is
inflationary and the new Treasury Reserve Board will have to exercise
caution as they buy and cancel that debt. Regardless, the entire
national debt can never be eliminated as long as Congress possesses
constitutional authority to borrow (Article I Section 8 Clause 2). The difference under NESARA is
that such borrowing occurs only with currency already in circulation,
and is therefore not inflationary.
- Pledge the government’s hoard of gold and
silver. With
respect to the remaining FRNs in circulation, after eliminating the
Fed’s portion of the national debt, Griffin’s plan requires all
FRNs to be “redeemable,” that is, exchangeable one-for-one
in gold and silver coin. This requirement contradicts Griffin’s own
statement that fixed ratios do not work. NESARA does not require new
credit-notes to be “redeemable” in specie [Part I,
Section 4(B)(7)], nor is that desirable—the market only should
determine the exchange rates of the various currencies in circulation.
NESARA prohibits commingling of currency types [Part I,
Section 7(E)], and provides a nationally published exchange index
[Part I, Section 4(G)(6) and 9(A)] so that
people will know the exchange rate of credit-notes, gold, and silver
coin.
- Determine the weight of all the gold and silver coin owned by the
U.S. government and then calculate the value of that supply in terms
of real (silver) dollars. Calculating the amount of currency in
circulation based upon total commodity metals essentially forces the
currency to a fixed exchange value, contradicting Griffin’s own
observation that fixed ratios do not work. Fixed exchange values among
lawful currencies have often been tried and have always ultimately
failed. Under NESARA, the government only establishes monetary
standards (that is, the fundamental currency unit—a dollar—is
defined as a specific weight of silver), but the people acting through
a free market establish the exchange value of the three types of
currencies.
- Determine the number of all the FRNs in circulation and then
calculate the real-dollar value of each one by dividing the value of
the precious metals by the number of Notes. NESARA requires no
such calculations. Free markets best determine the exchange value of
the circulating currencies.
- Retire all FRNs from circulation by offering to exchange them for
dollars at the calculated ratio. NESARA requires that all FRNs be
retired [Part I, Section 4(A), (B), and
(D)], but compels no
affirmative schedule or deadline. FRNs are merely replaced and removed
from circulation as the new credit-notes are introduced into
circulation. Notice that at the instant NESARA becomes law, the
character of the existing FRNs changes into the character of the new
credit-notes [Part I, Section 4(D)]. That is, both types of
notes will be equal in exchange value and neither is issued at
interest [Part I, Section 4(B)(4)]. In addition, notice that
large amounts of FRNs are currently held in foreign accounts both by
individuals and governments. The NESARA Institute sees no compelling
reason to exchange FRNs for gold or silver coin at a fixed
pre-calculated rate. Foreigners may exchange their FRNs for gold and
silver coin at the market rate, the same as U.S. citizens. Better yet,
they should be encouraged to spend those FRNs in the American markets
for American goods and services. Regardless, both plans remove FRNs
from circulation.
- Convert all contracts based on FRNs to dollars using the same
exchange ratio; including mortgages and government bonds. NESARA
does not force the rewriting of any private contracts. NESARA does
change the accounting practices for secured loans obtained from
fractional reserve banks [Part I, Section 7(F)]. Congress has
the unquestioned authority to do this because most banks operate under
federal license and the terms of that license are subject to legal
change at any time (see FAQ). NESARA encourages that parties of
any future exchange contracts stipulate the form of currency they use.
However, if the parties fail to stipulate a form of currency, by
statute, Treasury credit-notes will viewed by the courts as the
default currency [Part I, Section 4(C)]. With respect to buying
back government debt, more than likely governments will use
credit-notes and not gold and silver coin. However, that should not be
an issue for people who do not want to accept credit-notes. They need
only read the latest published market exchange index [Part I, Section 4(G)(6)]
and then proceed
to any financial institution to exchange those credit-notes for gold
and silver coin.
- Issue silver certificates. Both plans encourage silver
certificates. NESARA allows for—but does not demand—the printing of
silver and gold certificates [Part I, Section 4(I)].
Additionally, to help facilitate the transfer of payments in gold and
silver coin, NESARA requires the postal service to print silver and
gold money orders [Part I, Section 11]. Many years ago, when
the government quit issuing notes in denominations larger than $100,
some of the old cattlemen, who had always dealt in cash, bought and
traded unsigned large denomination Postal Money Orders so they wouldn’t
have to carry a large wad of paper money. Paper currency had been more
convenient than gold coin and large denomination Postal Money Orders
proved more convenient than small denomination paper currency. Some
people today still use this practice. In a
free society, there is always a way to exchange goods and services.
Furthermore, nothing in NESARA prevents the private issue of silver or
gold certificates. If the government fails to recognize a legitimate
need, private companies might fill that void.
- Abolish the Federal Reserve System. Essentially, both plans
abolish the Federal Reserve System. NESARA removes the Fed—and
government—from the currency creation process, but maintains some of
the former Fed’s duties under the new Treasury Reserve System, such as check clearance, currency exchange
value monitoring, etc., and
under new rules [Part I, Section 5(F)
and 6(G)]. Congress still will have constitutional authority to
borrow money (Article I Section 8 Clause 2), but must do so
only from currencies already in circulation. Their profitable business
of creating and obtaining first use of currency out of government debt
in collusion with the former Fed comes to an abrupt end.
- Introduce free banking. Both plans encourage free banking.
Furthermore, NESARA restores banking to its original public service
role. That is, banks will exist to serve consumers, and not the other
way around. Because of the way NESARA restructures loan equations for
secured loans made on a fractional reserve basis [Part I, Section
7(F)], both lenders and borrowers win (see Imagine Legislation
That…, FAQ). Lenders see principal repaid in entirety before
being allowed to collect contracted monetization fees. This simple
change helps borrowers create equity much faster, reducing debt loads
and reducing risk of defaults. Because risk is greatly reduced, the “need” for FDIC and other
“insurance” programs
disappears (Imagine Legislation That…). Perhaps we could then
find a good use for that several billion of dollars earmarked for such
use that would no longer be needed as federal insurance against bank
failures. Financial institutions will be prohibited from commingling
currency types [Part I, Section 7(E)], ensuring safety for
depositors. Gold and silver deposits are not allowed to be used in
reserve calculations [Part I, Section 7(C)], nor can any demand
deposits be loaned to bank customers [Part I, Section 7(G)(6)],
nor can checkbook accounts be offered on those gold and silver
deposits [Part I, Section 7(G)(4)]. Gold and silver deposits
will be strictly custodial in nature [Part I, Section 7(G)(3)].
These requirements ensure that all demand deposits, regardless of the
substance of the currency, are 100% secured. Time deposits, of course,
are contracts of a different nature. With respect to free banking, the
old federal tax on state-bank notes was repealed several years ago.
Therefore, theoretically state banks could issue their own currency
and thereby introduce another form of currency not dependent upon the
federal government. Their challenge would be to achieve a numerical
advantage over an honest nationally recognized currency.
Without possibility of gain, they have no incentive to proceed. Still,
circumstances might change. Several years ago, California issued state
“warrants” in payments of its debts which the local banks
accepted as money—discounted for a fee of course.
- Reduce the size and scope of
government. NESARA initially
offers a politically doable, revenue neutral proposal. However, the
key word is initially. NESARA eliminates a large portion of the
national debt and discourages Congress from creating currency out of
thin air and backed by no wealth. Additionally, American
consumers will find themselves with more purchasing power as 1) the
currency becomes more stable (less inflation/deflation), and 2) debt
loads change as NESARA restructures secured loans made on a fractional
reserve basis. As Americans become debt-free they will rediscover
ownership of resources, and will become less dependant upon government
welfare programs, thereby reducing the size of government. NESARA also
replaces the federal income tax with a national retail sales and use
tax, and, to eliminate any concerns of regressive taxation, exempts
many categories of necessities from the tax. [Part II, Section 5(A)
and (C)]. Without the hidden, embedded cost of
the income tax, consumers again win and discover stronger purchasing
power with their hard-earned dollars. However, like Griffin’s plan,
NESARA does not provide solutions for all categories of social
problems. NESARA does very much open the doors to changes, but
unfortunately most of the government welfare is now on auto-pilot, and
changes to those “entitlement” programs will not result
directly from NESARA, but indirectly. Returning resources to the
people must be established before cutting government assistance, not
vice-versa. Cutting assistance first likely would create political
backlash, encouraged by the politicians, and resulting in the
restoration of that assistance plus additions and further increases of
federal authority. History demonstrates that most failures of the
federal government result in a bigger, more powerful and intrusive
federal government. The key then is first returning and
restoring resources to the people, then dismantling the social
welfare mind-set. The rest will follow.
- Restore national independence. Like Griffin’s plan, NESARA
provides no specific mechanisms to withdraw from various international
political fronts, but certainly opens the doors for such transitions.
As the American economy booms from the changing character of debt,
other nations will be forced to join the parade or fall behind. After
NESARA is enacted the need for wealth redistribution on an
international scale will follow the same path as nationally.
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As you have noticed, the two plans are remarkably similar. What then,
are the key differences between Griffin’s plan and NESARA? There are
chiefly two differences.
One difference is that Griffin requires all paper currencies be
redeemable in specie, that is, gold and silver coin. Yet, in Griffin’s
own words, fixed ratios do not work. NESARA provides for gold and silver
coin to circulate, as well as a paper currency; but does not require that
paper currency to be redeemable one-for-one. Instead, NESARA allows
the free market to determine the exchange rate of that new paper
currency.
Griffin’s concern for one-for-one redeemability is commendable. His
concern is based upon Congress’s ability to use the current
system to create currency out of thin air, via the “Mandrake
Mechanism” of the Fed. However, reviewing the NESARA plan reveals
that Congress is deprived of that “hidden” ability. Under NESARA,
the Treasury Reserve Board can buy debt; but unlike the current Fed which
holds that debt for later sale to the public, must cancel and destroy
those debt instruments [Part
I, Section 6(C) and (D)]. Therefore, the “Mandrake Mechanism” is
effectively quashed. Eliminating the “Mandrake Mechanism” is one
of the goals of Griffin’s plan and NESARA effectively accomplishes that.
Some people might ask then, if the “Mandrake Mechanism” is
eliminated, how does the Treasury create or extinguish the paper currency,
as needed to maintain an inflation of zero? The simple answer is that
under NESARA the Treasury has no authority to create currency. Currency
creation occurs only at the local community level, and is determined by
the free market. However, the Treasury, using the new mechanism known as
the Treasury Reserve Account [Part I,
Section 5(D) and 9(B)(4)], can and will regulate the amount of
credit-notes in circulation. The Treasury has no authority to control or
regulate the gold or silver in circulation.
Because under NESARA the “Mandrake Mechanism” no longer
exists, Congress must borrow only currency already in circulation. NESARA
restores respectability to the word “borrow.” More importantly,
with respect to the circulating paper currency, understand that inflating
the currency occurs largely through the “Mandrake Mechanism,”
not at the local commercial bank level. The reason is that the Fed creates
currency out of thin air, and that newly created currency is backed by no
goods and services. All currencies, regardless of form or substance, are
fundamentally backed by goods and services. Therefore, the major mechanism
of the currency inflation machine is dead.
Yet, students of the NESARA proposal will notice that banks (and some
credit unions [Part I, Section 10]) continue to operate on a fractional reserve basis. That is,
such institutions will be able to create currency out of thin air.
Although Griffin’s plan requires no fractional reserve operations,
first notice how NESARA greatly impedes the usual mischief that occurs in such
systems. First, no commercial paper may be used as reserves, but only
Treasury credit-notes [Part
I, Section 7(B) and (C)]. This eliminates the motivations to influence
national monetary policy. Second, notice that NESARA provides new lending
equations [Part
I, Section 7(F) and What’s In It For Me?]. Those new equations provide tremendous stability to the lending
system—both borrowers and lenders benefit. Most importantly, the
trickle-down pyramid effect of fractional reserve banking that starts with
the Fed is destroyed. That is, the multiplication factor caused by the Fed
pumping currency into the economy no longer exists. Therefore, currency creation will
be greatly regulated by the reserve amounts at each lending institution.
That is, although lenders may still operate on a fractional reserve basis,
with no multiplier effect from the Fed, the rate at which reserves grow
will be impeded.
NESARA allows currency creation to continue, but only at the local
level. The fundamental thesis behind that reason is a concept called virtual
wealth. Virtual wealth is defined as “potential wealth to be
created through future production and assumed to currently exist for
accounting purposes; wealth that could be created provided all
requirements for its production existed.”
Consider an application for a new home loan. That home does not yet
exist; but within a few weeks or months after the currency is created,
that home (wealth) soon exists. The concept of virtual wealth allows a
productive society to tap into the future of productive labor. Most
importantly, unlike under the current system with the Fed, notice how that
locally created new currency is backed by goods and services.
Yet, sharp students will notice that even locally the instantaneous
creation of currency is inflationary.
With respect to the micro level, that is, if observed only on a
case-by-case basis, yes, allowing lenders to create new currency on a
fractional reserve basis is inflationary. All currency created at the
local level is always inflationary at the very instant the currency is
created, because that currency represents an element of demand that did
not exist a moment ago. However, when that currency is used to buy goods
and services and the very act of its creation makes the production of
those goods and services possible, you have an example of virtual wealth.
More importantly, stating that such currency creation is inflationary and
implying great damage by such acts is looking only at half the picture.
You have to distinguish between micro and macro changes to
the aggregate system. At a macro level, that is, in the aggregate,
local currency creation (inflation) will be offset at the same instant
elsewhere in the aggregate by currency elimination (deflation) because
another person is repaying a similar loan. As long as the aggregate
Supply
= Demand there is no problem; in fact, exactly the opposite, something
real is created out of a pure concept.
The other difference between Griffin’s plan and NESARA is that
Griffin has publicly stated that he believes the NESARA proposal merely
shifts from the Fed system to politicians the ability to create currency
out of thin air. Yet, as we have shown here and throughout the web site,
under NESARA Congress no longer has that hidden power. Currency creation
can occur only at the local community level and Congress can borrow only
existing currency already in circulation.
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Notice: This document was created without any direct
contribution from Mr. Griffin. The information we have posted was done
strictly through reading Mr. Griffin’s book, The Creature from Jekyll
Island. We will heartily update this page based upon any meticulous
and well-pleaded response that Mr. Griffin might provide.
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