A History of Central Banking and the Enslavement of Mankind
~Stephen Mitford Goodson
I picked up a copy after reading this review on SOTT:
http://www.sott.net/article/291745-Book-review-A-History-of-Central-Banking-and-the-Enslavement-of-Mankind
It appears to be one of those self-limiting efforts. That is, Goodson offers a compelling and detailed historical account of how money and banking have been corrupted over the centuries, presenting two sides of a battle, (with one side mandating state-ownership of banking with extremely limited or no interest charges allowed, and privately owned banking which makes usury its central defining feature.)
It's an easy read, there are lots of little facts I'd never heard before and his notes are well-annotated. Goodson shows very clearly that periods where money is used without interest charges, countries and populations prosper enormously, versus times where private bankers gain control, (always through scheming and murder), lead almost immediately to prolonged periods of war and vast suffering. The contrast is very stark, and the reader quickly recognizes that how we employ money is truly the prime engine which defines the shape of history.
Of the 15th Century, he writes:
"With tolerable taxes, no state debt and no interest to pay, England enjoyed a period of unparalleled growth and prosperity. The average labourer worked only 14 weeks and enjoyed 160 to 180 holidays. According to Lord Leverhulme, a writer of that time, "The men of the 15th century were very well paid", in fact so well paid that the purchasing power of their wages and their standard of living would only be exceeded in the late 19th century. A labourer could provide for all the necessities his family required. They were well clothed in good woollen cloth and had plenty of meat and bread."
(How does that hold with recorded history?)
However...
A bit of Googling around reveals that Goodson is a white South African with feet in the political world, and he is apparently an outspoken proponent of Hitler, (He liked Hitler for maintaining state-owned banking and debt forgiveness schemes), but he claims that the Holocaust never happened and is part of a scheme to fleece the German government via war crime compensations.
It's hard to take him straight after that.
Has anybody else read this book?
~Stephen Mitford Goodson
I picked up a copy after reading this review on SOTT:
http://www.sott.net/article/291745-Book-review-A-History-of-Central-Banking-and-the-Enslavement-of-Mankind
It appears to be one of those self-limiting efforts. That is, Goodson offers a compelling and detailed historical account of how money and banking have been corrupted over the centuries, presenting two sides of a battle, (with one side mandating state-ownership of banking with extremely limited or no interest charges allowed, and privately owned banking which makes usury its central defining feature.)
It's an easy read, there are lots of little facts I'd never heard before and his notes are well-annotated. Goodson shows very clearly that periods where money is used without interest charges, countries and populations prosper enormously, versus times where private bankers gain control, (always through scheming and murder), lead almost immediately to prolonged periods of war and vast suffering. The contrast is very stark, and the reader quickly recognizes that how we employ money is truly the prime engine which defines the shape of history.
Of the 15th Century, he writes:
"With tolerable taxes, no state debt and no interest to pay, England enjoyed a period of unparalleled growth and prosperity. The average labourer worked only 14 weeks and enjoyed 160 to 180 holidays. According to Lord Leverhulme, a writer of that time, "The men of the 15th century were very well paid", in fact so well paid that the purchasing power of their wages and their standard of living would only be exceeded in the late 19th century. A labourer could provide for all the necessities his family required. They were well clothed in good woollen cloth and had plenty of meat and bread."
(How does that hold with recorded history?)
However...
A bit of Googling around reveals that Goodson is a white South African with feet in the political world, and he is apparently an outspoken proponent of Hitler, (He liked Hitler for maintaining state-owned banking and debt forgiveness schemes), but he claims that the Holocaust never happened and is part of a scheme to fleece the German government via war crime compensations.
It's hard to take him straight after that.
Has anybody else read this book?