By Anna Von Reitz Remember Glinda, the Witch of the North, the glittery fairy-like being that first greets Dorothy when she arrives in the Land of Oz, and who saves the day when opium poppies threaten everyone, and who also comes in at the end of the story to give Dorothy the Key to returning home? There's a very crucial point left out of the movie, but not out of the book: in the movie, Dorothy's slippers are made out of ruby, but in the book her slippers are made out of silver. She just clicks her silver slippers three times and recites a little doggerel, prayer or spell, and she is finally back home in Kansas. You, too, can be transported home using your silver slippers. In fact, the half billion United States Silver Dollars still in circulation have prevented the Perpetrators from succeeding in their evil aims, and the vast, unpaid and unpayable amount of silver that the guilty Principals owe you stands against any claim that you have ever been a debtor. You are still a Kansan and Kansas is still yours. Remember Glinda dismissing the bad guys with a tut-tut, begone, you have no authority here? That's me. Remember, also, the Jimmy Stewart Movie, "It's a Wonderful Life"? Here we see the crisis of faith of one George Bailey, just at Christmas time, too, a small town operator of a Credit Union, who is attacked by the venomous and evil Mr. Potter from the local bank, who seeks to bankrupt George Bailey and the good common people of Bedford Falls who have joined together to build a Credit Union that competes with the bank. Review George Bailey's impassioned explanation of what a Credit Union is and how it works. Everyone pools their credit and loans it out to the other members of the credit union and together they all walk forward, depending on each other's good faith to succeed. At the end of the bank-caused run on the Credit Union, George and his wife had exactly two dollars --- and the love of their community --- left. We are seeing the same thing now. A man whose entire experience has been with commercial banks, Eddie Valesquez, has acted as Mr. Potter, hoping that there will be a run on the fledgling Credit Union that George Bailey (Hunter) won't be able to weather. Why? Because it competes with the banks. If people follow the principles of Ubuntu, there will shortly be no need for banks. Banks will not be able to charge usury if usury-free loans are available, and that will kill the whole business opportunity. It will leave the Rothschilds and other Middlemen (also called "Mediums" because they traverse between the world of the living and the dead--ha!) without a way to siphon wealth, too. So, old Mr. Potter has called the card on George Bailey (Hunter Aki) and he is betting that George (Hunter) won't have enough money to clear the demand on the traditional Credit Union. That's because in Potter's bank and all the banks that Mr. Potter (Eddie) is used to, the depositors money is counted as a liability for the bank-- not a credit-- at the same time that bank loans out ten times more "credit" based on the blocked assets of the depositors. (This is a form of gambling enforced under color of law so that the "house" always wins.) Imagine that I give you a secured ownership interest in my car worth $35,000, and you use that as collateral to loan out $350,000 worth of credit without paying me a dime. From the first receipts you set aside $35,000 to give me as a "loan", and with all the rest, you benefit yourself with my credit and hold me responsible for paying you back $35,000, plus interest --- of my own credit, based entirely on my assets. That's what they've been doing. With car loans. With house loans. With business loans. No wonder the banks are rich and their customers are poor. Of course, the banks in such a system are all bankrupt and "floating" on "margins" of leveraged usury. They could never survive a real bank run. So, they assume that George (Hunter) can't survive, either. And they start this ugly little rumor campaign to kill off their competitor. So far, all the people who have been helped and who have helped others via their little Credit Union are scared like stampeding cattle, with no clue that they are only hurting themselves and giving away control of their lives and their credit. Mr. Potter is sitting in the background, gloating over their stupidity. It remains to be seen if they will remember George Bailey and finally understand what a traditional Credit Union is all about. And who underwrites it all, either way. ---------------------------- See this article and over 3900 others on Anna's website here: www.annavonreitz.com To support this work look for the Donate button on this website. How do we use your donations? Find out here.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorAnna Von Reitz Archives
December 2022
Categories |