The Stark Truth
Anthony Migchels Returns to Discuss Monetary Reform
Posted By
Counter-Currents Radio
On
In
Counter-Currents Radio
| Comments Disabled
54:13 / 256 words
[jwplayer file=”https://counter-currents.com/radio/StarkTruth-2014-01-03-Anthony Migchels-1.mp3″ streamer=”rtmp://s3cxt7hxkp9tvh.cloudfront.net/cfx/st” provider=”rtmp” duration=”3253″]
To download the mp3, right-click here [2] and choose “save target or link as.”
To subscribe to our podcasts, click here [3].
Dutch-based financial reformer Anthony Migchels returns to The Stark Truth. His blog is http://realcurrencies.wordpress.com/ [4]. Topics discussed include:
- Banking reform in Ireland
- Immigration and the premeditated destruction of western civilization
- The real estate boom in Ireland
- The Winged Lion Award
- Hitler’s economic policies
- Gottfried Feder and National Socialism
- National Socialism vs. decentralism
- Capitalism and usury
- Capitalism and the concentration of wealth and power and the globalist agenda
- Ending usury as the key to preserving a middle class society with wide distribution of wealth
- G. Edward Griffin’s admission that most of the world’s gold is owned by banks
- Brother Nathaniel Kapner’s recent repudiation of libertarianism, Austrian economics, and the gold standard
- How money creation by banks undermines the “time preference” argument for usury
- Why money should not be scarce. Why money should be part of the commons.
- How ending usury makes socialist redistribution schemes unnecessary and superfluous
- Debt-free money vs. interest-free credit
- Why interest-free credit is superior to debt-free money
- Interest strike versus debt repudiation
- How money scarcity is caused by usury
- William Jennings Bryan
- Hungarian monetary policy: goodbye to the International Monetary Fund, no to the Euro
- How usury creates mass starvation in poor countries
- Education loans in the United States
- How usury is a driving force behind environmental devastation
- How usury is connected to cultural degeneracy and hedonism
- Usury and war