THE FRAMEWORK OF THE MONSTER
ERE'S the idea. Were you one of a coterie of multi-millionaires lusting for the control of American industry and finance—exclusively for pillage—you would, if necessary, join in providing any amount of capital necessary to obtain the result. You could afford to provide it for it would make you one of a coterie enabled to loot the richest prizes on this planet. Any system which could at will open or shut the valves of American credit, stage an orgy of "inflation" or stage a debacle of "deflation," increase or decrease the money supply, make the tide of employment flow to prosperity's height or ebb to despair's depths, create a "bull" or a "bear" market at will—would justify the investment of hundreds of millions or even billions of capital! Its power would be practically boundless, its profits be fabulous and from its coign of vantage it could coin the sweat of scores of millions of toilers into its coffers of greed.
But if you could do this very same thing and obtain precisely the same results and reap exactly the same harvest in power and pelf without investing one thin dime or one plugged nickel you wouldn't put up the money, would you? That is just exactly what these Federal Reserve highbinders did and this is just exactly how they did it. There lay fair to their hands the most successful banking system in the world's annals—the National Banks.
Here was the core and center of their pillage. Here was the capital ready to their hands. They proceeded to levy upon, to appropriate and to commandeer their capital from the National Banks of the United States. They divided the U.S.A. into twelve financial satrapies or dependencies or loot areas with centers of pillage thusly: New York, Chicago, Atlanta, San Francisco, Boston, Minneapolis, Kansas City, St. Louis, Cleveland, Philadelphia, Richmond, and Dallas. Upon every National Bank in the U.S.A. there was levied a capital tribute of six per cent of their capital and surplus account for subscribed capital to the Federal Reserve Bank set over them. Of this amount one-half or three per cent was required to be immediately paid in and the other half was held subject to call if required.
Take a look at this first step on the stairway of pillage. Without the investment of one copper cent, of one plugged nickel or of one thin dime and by one stroke of the pen when this infamous law was passed practically one hundred millions of capital was commandeered into the coffers of Federal Reserve banditry. Without the risk of one penny of their own money the Federal Reserve plunderbund seized in its talons of greed the hugest banking capital in the U.S.A.—practically two hundred millions of dollars with one-half of it immediately payable and the other half subject to call! It was the most daring financial high-bindery ever enacted on earth.