Thursday, October 21, 2010

Fwd: [bangla-vision] you can't google this -- speech of John C. Calhoun 1837 -- on the banks



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Dick Eastman <oldickeastman@q.com>
Date: Thu, Oct 21, 2010 at 12:11 PM
Subject: [bangla-vision] you can't google this -- speech of John C. Calhoun 1837 -- on the banks
To:


 

"The credit of an individual is his property, and belongs to him as much as his land and houses, to use it as he pleases, with the single restriction, which is imposed on all our rights, that it is not to be used to injure others.  What limitations this restriction may prescribe, time and experience will show ; but, whatever they may be, they ought to assume the character of general laws, obligatory to all alike, and open to all ; and under the provisions of which all may be at liberty to use their credit, jointly or separately, as freely as they now use their land and houses, without any preference by special acts, in any form or shape, to one over another.  Every thing like monopoly must ultimately disappear, before the process which has begun will finally terminate."

                      -- John C. Calhoun,  1837

 

 

Speech on the Bill to separate the Government from the Banks

 by John C. Calhoun
 
On his Amendment to the Bill authorizing the Issue of Treasury Notes, delivered in the Senate, October 3d, 1837.  
 
 From Reports and Public Letters of John C. Calhoun,  (1851-1856)  Pp. 102-133      typed by Dick Eastman  October 20, 2010

______________________________________________
 
Note:  Two terms used by Calhoun:
 "Payment in the dues of the government" means something accepted by government as legal tender -- for payment of taxes etc.
 
"Bank of deposit and discount" means a bank that will lend without the reserves to cover all loans, and furthermore it means a bank will take securites -- like the Fed takes Treasury Notes or Corporation Bonds -- balancing the account with a credit to a checking account which can be used as fresh reserves upon which money can be loaned up to what the reserve requirement allows.  If an short-term treasury IOU pays $10,000 in one year again and the interest rate is 7 percent then its (discounted) price today will be $9,345.79.   The Fed can give a bank that amount of fresh reserves on which to make loans if the bank lends the Fed that bond.  The bank system can then lend a multiple of that amount -- because of non-100-percent reserve requirement.   Or, for the elite financier, the NY Fed will buy the security outright in an Open Market Transaction.  The Fed has two systems for increasing or contracting the money supply, one for the elite international loop of investment bankers and the speculators and the other for the domestic economy.  The Elite Loop is feed big money from open market operations -- the Fed puts money in private Money Power hands by buying some of their bond wealth from them.  This new money then is invested abroad or used to buy up foreclosed factories etc.  Right now the Fed is taking junk bonds in exchange for the dollars it is giving Wall Street, London and Hong Kong etc.   The lower loop is feed by the stingy means of the Fed offering to borrow securities from smaller domestic banks (generally) who do not have the privilege of conducting the open market sales and purchases which is done only from the 9th floor of the New York Federal Reserve Bank.  The lower loop can simply make short term loans of their securities  -- which have a face value of what they will pay at maturity -- they are borrowed at a discount from that price -- the discount being the "interest rate" on the loan  -- that is the interest rate that we always read about the Fed adjusting  -- we never read about the Open Market Operation sales and purchases.  Also, on the elite loop the bonds and commercial paper are bought and sold at prices the bankers dictate.  On the lower loop, the banks have to take what the Fed dictates.  So when you read Calhoun and he talks about discount banks -- he is talking about banks that lend more than they have on deposit and that lend on discounted paper put in their vaults.  Close enough.  (I wish someone explained that to me when I first first found this speech 18 years ago.

Read this and you will see that everything you have been told about John C. Calhoun is either wrong or besides the point.  (After all Jefferson had slaves, and Calhoun's opponents, Biddle, Webster, Clay were all connected to families that traded slaves and opium around the world.  The real reason for the Civil War has been covered up -- Calhoun was really the last of the Founding Fathers, the last, and perhaps the most brilliant of the Jeffersonians.  If you read this and have a comment -- I would love to hear from you. 

Dick Eastman  oldickeastman@q.com

______________________________________________

   "I see, not less clearly, that, in the process, a separation will take place between the use of capital and the use of credit.  They are wholly different, and under the growing intelligence of the times, cannot much longer remain confounded in their present state of combination.  They are as distinct as a loan and an endorsement ;  in fact, the one is but giving to another the use of our capital, and the other the use of our credit ; and yet so dissimilar are they, that we daily see the most prudent individuals lending their credit for nothing, in the form of  indorsement or security, who would not loan the most inconsiderable sum without interest. . . . In the exchange, the bank insures the parties to the note discounted, and the community, which is the loser if the bank fails, virtually insures the bank ; and yet, by confounding this exchange of credit with the use of capital, the bank is permitted to charge an interest for this exchange, rather greater than an individual is permitted to charge for a loan, to the great gain of the bank and loss to the community.  I say loss, for the community can never enjoy the great and full benefit of the credit system, till loans and credits are considered as entirely distinct in their nature, and the compensation for the use of each be adjusted to their respective nature and character.  Nothing would give a greater impulse to all the business of society.  The superior cheapness of credit would add incalculably to the productive powers of the community, when the immense gains, which are now made by confounding them, shall come to the aid of production."

 

The Speech

 
   [Amendment offered by Mr. Calhoun –" Be it further enacted, That from and after the first day of January, 1838, three-fourths of the amount due to the Government for duties, taxes, sales of public lands, or other debts, may be paid in the notes of specie-paying banks; and that from after the first day of January 1840, one-fourth my be so paid; and from and after the first day of January 1840, one-fourth may be so paid; and from and after the fist day of January 1841, all sums due for duties, sales of public lands, or other debts to the Government shall be paid only in the legal currency of the United States, or in such notes, bills, or paper issued under authority of the same, as may be directed to be received by law."]

   MR. PRESIDENT :  In reviewing this discussion, I have been struck with the fact that the argument on the opposite side has been limited, almost exclusively, to the questions of relief and the currency.  These are, undoubtedly, important questions, and well deserving the deliberate consideration of the Senate ; but there are other questions involved in this issue of a far more elevated character, and which more imperiously demand our attention.  The banks have ceased to be mere moneyed incorporations.  They have become great political institutions, with vast influence over the welfare of the community ; so much so, that a highly distinguished Senator (Mr. Clary) has declared, in his place, that the question of disunion of the Government and the banks involved in its consequences the disunion of the States themselves.  With this declaration sounding in our ears, it is time to look into the origin of the system which has already acquired such mighty influence ; to inquire into the causes which have produced it, and whether they are still on the increase ; in what they will terminate, if left to themselves ; and, finally, whether the system is favorable to the permanency of our free institutions ; to the industry and business of the country ; and, above all, to the moral and intellectual development of the community.  I feel that the vast importance and magnitude of these topics, as well as their great delicacy.  I shall touch them with extreme reluctance, and only because I believe them to belong to the occasion, and that it would be a dereliction of public duty to withhold any opinion, which I have deliberately formed, on the subject under discussion.

  

   The rise and progress of the banking system is one of the most remarkable and curious of the phenomena of modern times.  Its origin is modern and humble, and gave no indication of the extraordinary growth and influence which it was destined to attain.  It dates back to 1609, the year that the Bank of Amsterdam was established.  Other banking institutions preceded it ; but they were insulated, and not immediately connected with the systems which have since sprung up, and which may be distinctly traced to that bank, which was a bank of deposit – a mere storehouse – established under the authority of that great commercial metropolis, for the purpose of safe-keeping the precious metals, and facilitating the vast system of exchanges which then centered there.  The whole system was the most simple and beautiful that can be imagined.  The depositor, on delivering his bullion or coin in store, received a credit, estimated at the standard value on the books of the bank, and a certificate of deposit for the amount, which was transferable from hand to hand, and entitled the holder to withdraw the deposit on payment of a moderate fee for the expense and hazard of safe keeping.  These certificates became, in fact, the circulating medium of the community – performing, as it were, the hazard and drudgery ; while the precious metals, which they, in truth, represented, guilder for guilder, lay quietly in store, without being exposed to the war and tear, or losses incidental to actual use.  It was thus a paper currency was created, having all the solidity, safety and uniformity of a metallic with the facility belonging to that of paper.  The whole arrangement was admirable, and worthy of the strong sense and downright honesty of the people with whom it originated.



   Out of this, which may be called the first era of the system, grew the bank of deposit, discount, and circulation – a great and mighty change, destined to effect a revolution in the condition of modern society.  It is not difficult to explain how the one system should spring from the other, notwithstanding the striking dissimilarity in features and character between the offspring and the parent.  A vast sum, not less than three millions of sterling, accumulated and remained habitually in deposit in the bank of Amsterdam – the place of the returned certificates being constantly supplied by new depositors.  With so vast a standing deposit, it required but little reflection to perceive, that a very large portion of it might be withdrawn, and that a sufficient amount would be still left to meet the returning certificates ; or, what would be the same in effect, that an equal amount of fictitious certificates might be issued beyond the sum actually deposited.  Either process, if interest be charged on the deposits withdrawn, or the fictitious certificates issued would be a near approach to a bank of discount.  This once seen, it required but little reflection to perceive that the same process would be equally applicable to a capital placed in bank as stock ; and from that, to the transition was easy to issuing bank-notes payable on demand, or bills of exchange, or promissory notes, having but a short time to run.  These, combined, constitute the elements of a bank of discount, deposit, and circulation.

   Modern ingenuity and dishonesty, would not have been long in perceiving and turning such advantages to account ; but the faculties of the plain Belgian were with too blunt to perceive, or his honesty to stern to avail himself of them.  To his honor, there is reason to believe, notwithstanding the temptation, the deposits were sacredly kept – and that, for every certificate in circulation, there was a corresponding amount in bullion or coin in store.  It was reserved for another people, either more ingenious or less scrupulous, to make the change.

 



   The Bank of England was incorporated in 1694, eighty-five years after that of Amsterdam, and was the first bank of deposit, discount, and circulation.   Its capital was £1,200,000, consisting wholly of government stock, bearing an interest of eight per cent per annum.  Its notes were received in the dues of the Government, and the public revenue was deposited in the bank.  It was authorized to circulated exchequer bills, and make loans to government.    Let us pause for a moment,  and contemplate this complex and potent machine, under its various characters and functions.

 



   As a bank of deposit, it was authorized to receive deposits, not simply for safe-keeping, to be returned when demanded by the depositor, but to be used and loaned out for the benefit of the institution, care being taken always to be provided with the means of returning an equal amount, when demanded.  As a bank of discount and circulation, it issued its notes on the faith of its capital stock and deposits, or discounted bills of exchange, and promissory notes, backed by responsible endorsers, charging interest something greater than was authorized by law to be charged on loans ; and thus allowing it, for the use of its credit, a higher rate of compensation than individuals were authorized to receive for the use and hazard of money or cap[ital loaned out.  It will, perhaps, place this point in a clear light, if we should consider the transaction in its true character, not as a loan, but as a mere exchange of credit.  In discounting, the bank takes, in the shape of a promissory note, the credit of an individual so good that another, equally responsible, indorses his note for nothing, and gives out its credit in the form of a bank-note.  The transaction is obviously a mere exchange of credit.  If the drawer and indorser break, the loss is the bank's ; but if the bank breaks, the loss falls on the community ; and yet this transaction, so dissimilar, is confounded with a loan, and the bank permitted to charge, on a mere exchange of credit, in which the hazard of the breaking of the drawer and indorser  is incurred by the bank, and that of the bank by the community, a higher sum than the legal rate of interest on a loan ; in which , besides the use of his capital, the hazard is all on the side of the lender.

   Turning from these to the advantages which it derived from its connection with the Government, we shall find them not less striking.  Among the first of these in importance, is the reception of its notes in the dues of the Government, by which the credit of the Government was added to that of the bank, which so greatly increased its circulation.  These, again, when collected by the Government, were placed in deposit in the bank ; thus giving to it, not only the profit resulting from their abstraction from circulation, from the time of collection till disbursement, but also that from the use of the public deposits in the interval.  To complete the picture, the bank, in its capacity of lender to the Government, in fact paid its own notes, which rested on the faith of the Government stock, on which it was drawing eight per cent. ; so that, in truth, it but loaned to the Government its own credit.

   Such were the extraordinary advantages conferred on this institution, and of which it had an exclusive monopoly ; and these are the causes which gave such an extraordinary impulse to its growth and influence, that it increased in a little more than a hundred years – from 1694, when the second era of the system commenced with the establishment of the Bank of England, to 1797, when it terminated – from £1,2000,000 to nearly £11,000,000, and this mainly by the addition to its capital, through loans to the Government, above the profits of its annual dividends.  Before entering on the third era of the system, I pause to make a few reflections on the second.

   I am struck, in casting my eyes over it, to find that, notwithstanding the great dissimilarity of features which the system had assumed it massing from a mere bank of deposit to that of deposit, discount, and circulation, the operation of the latter was confounded, throughout this long period, as it regards the effects of the currency, with the bank of deposit.  Its notes were universally regarded as representing gold and sivler, and as depending on that representation exclusively for their circulation ; as much so as did the certificates of deposit in the original Bank of Amsterdam.  No one supposed that they could retain their credit for a moment after they ceased to be convertible into the metals on demand ; nor were they supposed to have the effect of increasing the aggregate amount of the currency ; nor, of course, of increasing prices.  In a word, they were in the public mind as completely identified with the metallic currency, as if every note in circulation had laid up in the vaults of the bank an equal amount, pound for pound, into which all its paper could be converted the moment it was presented.

   All this was a great delusion.  The issues of the bank never did represent from the first, the precious metals.  Instead, of the representatives, its notes were, in reality, the substitute for coin.  Instead of being the mere drudges, performing all the outdoor service, while the coins reposed at the ease in the vaults of the banks, free from wear and tear, and the hazard of loss or destruction, as did the certificates of deposit in the original Bank of Amsterdam, they substituted, degraded, and banished the coins.  Every note circulated because the substitute of so much coin dispensed with it in circulation, and thereby depreciated the value of the precious metals, and increased their consumption in the same proportion ; while it diminished in the same degree the supply, by rendering mining less profitable.  The system assumed gold and sliver as the basis of its circulation ; and yet, by the laws of its nature, just as it increased its circulation, in the same degree the foundation on which the system stood was weakened.  Thus the germ of destruction was implanted in the system at its birth, has expanded with its growth, and must terminate, finally, in its dissolution – unless, indeed, it should, by some transition, entirely change its nature, and pass into some other and entirely different organic form.  The conflict between bank circulation and metallic (though not perceived in the first stages of the system, when they were supposed to be indissolubly connected) is mortal ; one of the other must perish in the struggle.  Such is the decree of fate – it is irreversible.

   Near the close of the second era, the system passed the Atlantic, and took root in our country, where it found the soil still more fertile, and the climate more congenial than even in the parent country.  The Bank of North America was established in 1781, with a capital of $400,000, and bearing all the features of its prototype, the Bank of England.  In the short space of a little more than half a century, they system has expanded form one bank to about eight hundred , including branches (no one knows the exact number, so rapid the increase), and from a capital of less than half a million to about $300,000,000, without, apparently exhausting or diminishing its capacity to increase.  So accelerated has been its growth with us, from causes which I explained on a former occasion, that already it has approached a point much nearer the limits beyond which the system, in its present form, cannot advance, than in England.


   During the year 1797, the Bank of England suspended specie payments – an event destined, by its consequences, to effect a revolution in public opinion in relation to the system, and to accelerate the period which must determine its fate.  England was then engaged in that gigantic struggle which originated in the French Revolution, and her financial operations were on the most extended scale, followed by a corresponding increase in the action of the ban, as her fiscal agent.  It sunk under its over-action.  Specie payments were suspended.  Panic and dismay spread through the land – so deep and durable was the impression that the credit of the bank depended exclusively on the punctuality of  its payments.

   In the midst of the alarm, an act of Parliament was passed making the notes of the bank a legal tender ; and, to the surprise of all, the institution proceeded on, apparently without out any diminution of its credit.  It notes circulated freely as ever, and without any depreciation, for a time, compared with gold and silver ; and continued so to do for upwards of twenty years, with an average diminution of about one per cent. Per annum.  This shock did much to dispel the delusion that bank notes represented gold and sliver, and that they circulated in consequence of such representation, but without entirely obliterating the old impression which had taken such strong hold on the public mind.  The credit of its notes during the suspension was generally attributed to the tender act, and the great and united resources of the bank and the Government.

   But an event followed of the same kind, under circumstance entirely different which did more than any preceding to shed light on the true nature of the system, and to unfold its vast capacity to sustain itself without exterior aid.  We finally became involved in the mighty struggle that had so long desolated Europe and enriched our country.  War was declared against Great Britain , in 1812, and in the short space of one year our feeble banking system sunk under the increased fiscal action of Government.  I was then a member of the other House, and had taken my full share of responsibility in the measures which had led to that result.  I shall never forget the sensation which the suspension, and the certain anticipation of the prostration of the currency had for the country, as a consequence, excited in my mind.  We could resort to no tender act ; we had no great central regulating power, like the Bank of England ; and the credit and resources o f the Government were comparatively small.  Under such circumstances, I looked forward to a sudden and great depreciation of bank-notes, and that they would fall speedily as low as the old continental money.   Guess my surprise  when I saw them sustain their credit, with scarcely any depreciation, for a time, from the shock.  I distinctly  recollect when I first asked myself the question, What was the cause?  and which directed my inquiry into the extraordinary phenomenon.  I soon saw that the system contained within itself a self-sustaining power ; that there was between the banks and the community, mutually, the relation of debtor and creditor – there being at all times something more due to the banks and from the community than from the latter to the former.  I saw, in this reciprocal relation of debts and credits, that the demand of the banks on the community was greater than the amount of their notes in circulation could meet , and that, consequently, so long as their debtors were solvent, and bound to pay at short periods, their notes could not fail to be at or near a par with gold and silver.  I also saw that, as their debtors were principally merchants, they would take bank-notes to meet their bank debts, and that that which the merchant and the Government, who are the great money-dealers, take, the rest of the community would also take.  Seeing all this, I clearly perceived that self-sustaining principle which poised they system, self-balanced, like some celestial body, moving with scarcely  a perceptible deviation, from its path, from the concussion it had received.



   Shortly after the termination of the war, specie payments were  coerced  with us by the establishment  of a National Bank, and a few years afterwards, in Great Britain, by an act of Parliament.  In both countries the restoration was followed by wide-spread distress, as it always must be when effected by coercion ; for the simple reason that banks cannot pay unless their debtors first pay, and that to coerce the banks compels them to coerce their debtors before they have the means to pay.  Their failure must be the consequence and this involves the failure of the banks themselves, carrying with it universal distress.  Hence, I am opposed to all kinds of coercion, and am in favor of leaving the disease to time, with the action of public sentiment and the States, to which the banks are alone responsible.

    But to proceed with my narrative.  Although specie payments were resorted, and the system apparently placed where it was before the suspension, the great capacity it proved to possess of sustaining itself without specie payments, was not forgot by those who had its direction.  The impression that it was indispensable to the circulation of bank-notes that they should represent the precious metals, was almost obliterated ; and the latter were regarded rather as restrictions on the free and profitable operation of the system, than as the means of its security.  Hence a feeling of opposition to gold and silver gradually grew up on the part of the banks, which created an espirt du corps, followed by a moral resistance to specie payments, if I may so express myself, which in fact suspended, in a great degree, the conversion of their notes into the precious metals, long before the present suspension.  With the growth of this feeling, banking business assumed a holder character, and its profits were proportionably enlarged, and with it the tendency  of the system to increase kept pace.  The effect of this soon displayed itself in a striking manner, which was followed by very important consequences, which I shall explain next.

   It so happened that the charters of the Bank of England and the late Bank of the United States expired about the same time.  As the period approached, a feeling of hostility, growing out of causes just explained, which had excited a strong desire in the community, who could not participate in the profits of these two great monopolies, to throw off their restraint, began to disclose itself against both institutions.  In Great Britian it terminated in breaking down the exclusive monopoly of the Bank of England, and narrowing greatly the specie basis of the system, by making the notes of the Bank of England a legal tender in all cases, except between it and its creditors.  A sudden and vast increase of the system, with a great diminution of the metallic base in proportion to banking transactions followed, which has shocked and weakened the stability of the system there.  With us the result was different.  The Bank fell under the hostility.  All restraint on the system was removed, and banks shot up in every direction almost instantly, under the growing impulse which I have explained, and which with the causes I stated when I first addressed the Senate on this question, as led to the present catastrophe.

   With it commences the fourth era of the system, which we have just entered – an era of struggle , and conflict, and change.  The system can advance no further in our country, without great and radical changes.  It has come to a stand.  The conflict between metallic and bank currency, which I have shown to be inherent in the system, has, in the course of time, and with the progress of events, become so deadly that they must separate, and one or the other fall.  The degradation of the value of the metals, and their almost entire expulsion from their appropriate sphere, as the medium of exchange and the standard of value, have gone so far, under the necessary operation of they system, that they are no longer sufficient fo form the basis of the widely extended system of banking.   From the first, the gravitation of the metals ; and hence the descent from a bank of deposit to one of discount ; and hence from being the representative, their notes have become the substitute for gold and silver ; and hence, finally, its present tendency  to a mere paper engine, totally separated from the metals.  One law has steadily governed the system throughout – the enlargement of its profits and influence ; and, as a consequence, as metallic currency because insufficient for the basis of banking operations ; so much so that, if specie payments were restored, it would be but nominal, and the system would in a few years, on the first adverse current, sink down again into its present helpless condition.  Nothing can prevent it but great and radical changes, which would diminish its profits and influence, so as effectually to arrest that strong and deep current which has carried so much of the wealth and capital of the community in that direction.  Without that, the system, as now constituted, must fall ; unless, indeed, it can form an alliance with the Government, and through it, establish its authority by law, and make its credit, unconnected with gold and silver, the medium of circulation.  If the alliance should take place, one of the first movements would be the establishment of a great central institution ; or, if that should prove impracticable, a combination of a few selected and powerful State banks, which sustained by the Government, would crush or subject the weaker,  -- to be followed by an amendment of the constitution, or some other device, to limit their number and the amount of their capital hereafter.  This done, the next step would be to confine and consolidate the supremacy of the system over the currency of the country, which would be in its hands exclusively, and, through it, over the industry, business, and politics of the country ; all of which would be wielded to advance its profits and power.

   They system having now arrived at this point, the great and solemn duty devolves on us to determine, this day, what relation this Government shall hereafter bear to it.  Shall we enter into an alliance with it, and become the sharers of its fortune and the instrument of its aggrandizement and supremacy?  This is the momentous question on which we must now decide.  Before we decide, it behooves us to enquire whether they system is favorable to the permanency of our republican institutions, to the industry and business of the country, and, above all, to our moral and intellectual development, the great object for which we were placed here by the Author of our being.

   Can it be doubted what must be the effects of a system, the operations of which have been shown to be so unequal on free institutions, whose foundation rests on an equality of rights?  Can that favor equality which gives to one portion of the citizens and the country such decided advantages over the other, as I have shown it does in my opening remarks?   Can that be favorable to liberty which concentrates the money power, and places it under the control of a few powerful and wealthy individuals?  It is the remark of profound statesmen, that the revenue is the state ; and , of course, those who control the revenue control the state ; and those who can control the money power can the revenue, and through it the state, which the property and industry of the country, in all its ramifications.  Let us pause for a moment, and reflect on the nature and extent of this tremendous power.

   The currency of a country is to the community what the blood is to the human system.  It constitutes a small part, but it circulates through every portion, and is indispensible to all functions of life.  The currency bears even a smaller proportion to the aggregate capital of the community than the blood does to the solids in the human system.  What that proportion is, has not been, and perhaps cannot be, accurately ascertained, as it is probably subject to considerable variations.  It is, however, probably between twenty-five and thirty-five  to one.  I will assume it to be thirty to one.  With this assumption, let us suppose a community whose aggregate capital is $31,000,000 ;  its currency would be, by supposition, one million, and the residue of it capital thirty millions.   This being assumed, if the currency be increased or decreased, the other portion of the capital remaining the same, according to the well-known laws of currency, property would also rise or fall with the increase or decrease ; that is, if currency be increased to two millions, the aggregate value of property would rise to sixty millions ;  and , if the currency be reduced to $500,000, it would be reduced to fifteen millions.  With this law so well established, place the money power in the hands of a single individual, or a combination of individuals – and they, by expanding or contracting the currency, may raise or sink prices at pleasure ; and, by purchasing when at the greatest depression, and selling at the greatest elevation, may command the whole property and industry of the community, and control its fiscal operations.  The banking system concentrates and places this power in the hands of those who control it,  and its force increases just in proportion as it dispenses with the metallic basis.  Never was an engine invented better calculated to place the destiny of the meny in the hands of the few, or less favorable to that equality and independence which lie at the bottom of our free institutions.

   These views have a bearing not less decisive on the next iniquity – the effects of the system on the industry and wealth of the country.  Whatever may have been its effects in this respect in its early stages, it is difficult to imagine any thing more mischievous on all the pursuits of life than the frequent and sudden expansions and contractions, to which it has now become so habitually subject, that it may be considered its ordinary condition.  None but those in the secret know what to do.  All are pausing and looking out to ascertain whether an expansion or contraction is next to follow, and what will be the extent and duration ;  and if, perchance, an error be committed – if it expands when a contraction is expected, or the reverse – the most prudent may lose, but they miscalculation, the fruits of  a life of toil and care.  The consequence is, to discourage industry, and to convert the whole community into stockjobbers and speculators.  The evil is constantly on the increase, and must continue to increase just as the banking system becomes more diseased, till it shall become utterly intolerable.

   But its most fatal effects originate in its bearing on the moral and intellectual development of the community.  The great principle of demand and supply govern the moral and intellectual world no less than the business and commercial.  If a community be so constituted as to cause a demand for high mental attainments, or if its honors and rewards are allotted to pursuits that require their development, by creating a demand for intelligence, knowledge, wisdom, justice, firmness, courage, patriotism, and the like – they are sure to be produced.  But if, on the contrary, they be allotted to pursuits that require inferior qualities, the higher are sure to decay and perish.  I object to the banking system, because it allots the honors and rewards of the community, in a very undue proportion, to a pursuit the least of all favorable to the development of the higher mental qualities, intellectual or moral = to the decay of the learned professions, and the more noble pursuits of science, literature, philosophy, and statesmanship, and the great and more useful pursuits of business and industry.  With the vast interests of its profits and influence, it is gradually concentrating in itself most of the prizes of life – wealth, honor, and influence – to the great disparagement and degradation of all the liberal, and useful, and generous pursuits of society.  The rising generation cannot but feel its deadening influence.  The youths who crowd our colleges, and behold the road to honor and distinction terminating in a banking-house, will feel the spirit of emulation decay within them, and will no longer be pressed forward by generous ardor, to mount up the rugged steep of science as the road to honor and distinction, when, perhaps, the highest point they could attain – in what was once the most honorable and influential of all the learned professions – would be – the place of attorney to a bank.

   Nearly four years since, on the question of the removal of the deposits, although I was opposed to the removal, and in favor of their restoration, because I believed it to be illegal, yet, foreseeing what was coming, and not wishing there should be any mistake as to my opinion on the banking system, I stated here in my place what that opinion was.  I declared that I had long entertained doubts, if doubts they might be called, which were daily increasing that the system made the worst possible distribution of wealth of the community, and that it would ultimately be found hostile to the further advancement of civilization and liberty.  This declaration was not lightly made ; and I have now unfolded the grounds on which it rested, and which subsequent events and reflection have matured into a settled conviction.

    With these consequence before us, shall we restore the broken connection?  Shall we again united the Government with the system?  And what are the arguments opposed to these high and weighty objections?  Instead of meeting them, and denying their truth, or opposing others of equal weight, a rabble of objections (I can call them by no better name) are urged against the separation:  "one currency for the Government, and another for the people ;"  "separation of the people from the Government ;" "taking care of the Government, and not the people ;" and a whole fraternity of others of like character.   When I first saw them advanced in the columns of a newspaper, I could not but smile, in thinking how admirably they were suited to an electioneering canvas.   They have a certain plausibility about them, which makes them troublesome to an opponent, simply because they are merely plausible , without containing one particle of reason.  I little expected to meet them in discussion in this place ; but since they have been gravely introduced here, respect for the place and company exacts a passing noticed, to which, of themselves, they are not at all entitled. 

   I begin with that which is first pushed forward, and seems to be most relied on – one currency for the Government and another for the people.  Is it meant that the Government must take in payment of its debts whatever the people take in payment of theirs?  If so, it is a very broad proposition, and would lead to important consequences.  The people now receive notes of non-specie-paying banks.  Is it meant that the Government should receive them?  They receive in change all sorts of paper, issued by we know not whom.  [So does the Federal Reserve in 2010  take corporation bonds at the discount window for collateral on loans of fresh reserves. --DE]   Must the government also receive them?  They receive the notes of banks issuing notes under five, ten, and twenty dollars.  Is it intended that the Government shall also permanently receive them?  They receive bills of exchange.  Shall the government too receive them?  If not, I ask the reason.  Is it because they are not suitable for a sound, stable, and uniform currency?  The reason is good ; but what becomes of the principle, that the Government ought to take whatever the people take?  But I go further.  It is the duty of Government to receive nothing in its dues that it has not the right to render uniform and stable in its value.  We are, by the constitution, made the guardian of the money of the country.  For this, the right of coining and regulating the value of coins was given ; and we have no right whatever to receive or treat any thing as money, or the equivalent of money, the value of which we have no right to regulate.  If this principle be true, and it cannot be controverted, I ask, What right has Congress to receive and treat the notes of the State banks as money?  If the States have the right to incorporate banks, what right has Congress to regulate them or their issues?  Show me the power in the constitution.  If the right be admitted, what are its limitations, and how can the right of subjecting them to a bankrupt law in that case be denied?  If one be admitted, the other follows as a consequence ; and yet those who are most indignant against the proposition of subjecting the State banks to a bankrupt law, are the most clamorous to receive their  notes, not seeing that the one power involves the other.  I am equally opposed to both, as unconstitutional ad inexpedient.

   We are next told, to separate from the banks, is to separate from the people.  The banks, then, are the people, and the people the banks – united , identified, and inseparable ; and as the Government belongs to the people, it follows, of course, according to this argument, it belongs also to the banks, and, of course, is bound to do their biddings.  I feel on so grave a subject, and in so grave a body, an almost invincible repugnance in replying to such arguments : and I shall hasten over the only remaining one of the fraternity which I shall condescend to notice with all possible dispatch.  They have not right of admission here – and, if I were disposed to jet o n so solemn an occasion, I should say they ought to be driven from this Chamber, under the 47th rule.  [* The rule regulating the admission of persons into the lobby of the Senate.  –DE] 

   The next of these formidable objections to the separation from the banks is, that the Government, in so doing, takes care of itself, and not of the people.  Why, I had supposed that the Government belonged to the people ; that it was created by them for their own use, to promote their interest, and secure their peace and liberty ; that, in taking care of itself, it takes the most effectual care of the people ; and in refusing all embarrassing, entangling and dangerous alliances with corporations of any description, it was but obeying the great law of self-preservation.  But enough ; I cannot any longer waste words on such objections.  I intend no disrespect to those who have urged them ; yet these, and arguments like these, are mainly relied on to countervail the many and formidable objections, drawn from the highest considerations that can influence the action of governments or individuals – none of which have been refuted, and many not even denied.

   The Senator from Massachusetts (Mr. Webster) urged an argument of a very different character, but which, in my opinion, he entirely failed to establish.  He asserted, that the ground assumed, on this side, as an entire abandonment of a great constitutional function conferred by the constitution on Congress.  To establish this, he laid down the proposition, that Congress was bound to take care of the money of the country.   Agreed : -- and with this view the constitution confers on us the right of coining and regulating the value of coins, in order to supply the country with money of proper standard and value : -- and it is an abandonment of this right to take care, as this bill does, that it shall not be expelled from circulation, as far as the fiscal action of this government extends?  But have taken this unquestionable position, the Senator passed (by what means he did not condescend to explain) from taking care of the money of the country to the right of establishing a currency, and then to the right of establishing a bank currency, as I understood him.  On both of these points I leave him in the hands of the Senator from Pennsylvania (Mr. Buchanan), who, in an able and constitutional argument, completely demolished, in my judgment, the position assumed by the Senator from Massachusetts.  I rejoice to hear such an argument from such a quarter.  The return of the great State of Pennsylvania to the doctrines of rigid construction and State Rights, sheds a ray of light on the thick darkness which has long surrounded us.

   But we are told that there is not gold and silver enough to fill the channels of circulation, and that prices would fall.  Be it so.  What is that, compared to the dangers which menace from the opposite side?  But are we so certain that there is not a sufficiency of the precious metals for the purpose of circulation?  Look at France, with her abundant supply, with her channels of circulation full to overflowing with coins, and her flourishing industry.  It is true that our supply is insufficient at present.  How could it be otherwise?  The banking system has degraded and expelled the metals – driven them to foreign lands – closed the mines, and converted their products into costly vases, and splendid utensils and ornaments, administering to the pride and luxury of the opulent, instead of being employed as the standard of value, and the instrument of making exchanges, as they were manifestly intended, mainly, to be by an all-wise Providence.  Restore them to their proper functions, and they will return from their banishment ; the mines will again be opened, and the gorgeous splendor of wealth will again reassume the more humble, but useful, form of coins.

   But, Mr. President, I am not driven to such alternatives.  I am not the enemy, but the friend of credit – not as the substitute, but the associate and the assistant of the metals.  In that capacity, I hold credit to possess, in many respects, a vast superiority over the metals themselves.  I object to it in the form which it has assumed in the banking system, for reasons that are neither light nor few, and that neither have been nor can be answered.  The question is, not whether credit can be dispensed with, but what is its best possible form – the most stable, the least liable to abuse, and the most convenient and cheap.  I threw out some ideas on this important subject in my opening remarks.  I have heard nothing to change my opinion.  I believe that Government credit, in the form I suggested, combines all the requisite qualities of a credit circulation in the highest degree, and also that Government ought not to use any other credit but its own in its financial operations.  When the Senator from Massachusetts made his attack on my suggestions, I was disappointed.  I expected argument, and he gave us denunciation.  It is often easy to denounce, when it is hard to refute ; and when that Senator gives denunciation instead of argument, I conclude that it is because the one is at his command, and the other is not.



   We are told the form I suggested is but a repetition of the old Continental money – a ghost that is ever conjured up by all who wish to give the banks an exclusive monopoly of government credit.  The assertion is not true : there is not the least analogy between them.  The one was a promise to receive in the dues of Government when there is an abundant revenue.

   We are also told that there is no instance of a Government paper that did not depreciate.  In reply, I affirm that there is none, assuming the form I propose, that ever did depreciate.  Whenever a paper, receivable in the dues of Government, had anything like a fair trail, it has succeeded.  Instance the case of North Carolina, referred to in my opening remarks.  The drafts of the treasury at this moment, with all their encumbrance, are nearly at par with gold and silver ;  and I might add the instance alluded to by the distinguished Senator from Kentucky, in which he admits that, as soon as the excess of the issues of the Commonwealth Bank of Kentucky were reduced to the proper point, its notes rose to par.  The case of Russia might also be mentioned.  In 1827, she had a fixed paper circulation, in the form of bank-notes, but which were inconvertible, of upward of $120,000,000, estimated in the metallic ruble, and which had for years remained without fluctuation, having nothing to sustain it but that it was received in the dues of the Government, and that, too, with a revenue of only about $90,000,000 annually.  I speak on the authority of a respectable traveler.  Other instances, no doubt, might be added, but it needs no such support.  How can a paper depreciate which the Government is bound to receive in all its payments, and while those to whom payments are to be made are under no obligation to receive it?  From its nature, it can only circulate when at par with gold and silver ; and if it should depreciate, none could be injured but the Government.

   But my colleague objects that it would partake of the increase and decrease of the revenue, and would be subject to greater expansions and contractions than bank-notes themselves.  He assumes that Government would increase the amount with the increase of the revenue, -- which is not probable, for the aid of its credit would be then less needed ; but if it did, what would be the effect?  On the decrease of the revenue, its bills would be returned to the treasury, from which, for the want of demand, they could not be reissued ; and the excess, instead of hanging on the circulation, as in the case of bank-notes, and exposing it to catastrophes like the present, would be gradually and silently withdrawn, without shock or injury to any one.  It has another and striking advantage over bank circulation – in its superior cheapness, as well as greater stability and safety.  Bank paper is cheap to those who make it, but dear, very dear, to those who use it – fully as much so as gold and silver.  It is the little cost of its manufacture, and the dear rates at which it is furnished to the community, which give the great profit to those who have a monopoly of the article.  Some idea may be formed of the extent of the profit, by the splendid  palaces which we see under the name of banking-houses, and the vast fortunes which have been accumulated in this branch of business ; all of which must ultimately be derived from the productive powers of the community, and, of course, adds so much to the cost of production.  On the other hand, the credit of Government while it would greatly facilitate its financial operations, would cost nothing, or next to nothing both, both to it and the people, -- and , of course, would add nothing to the cost of production, which would give every branch of our industry, agriculture, commerce, and manufactures, as far as its circulation might extend, great advantages, both at home and abroad.



   But there remains another and great advantage.  In the event of war, it would open almost unbounded resources to carry it on, without the necessity of resorting to, what I am almost disposed to call a fraud – public loans.  I have already shown that the loans of the Bank of England to the Government were very little more than loaning back to the Government its won credit ; and this is more or less true of all loans, where the banking system prevails.  It was pre-eminently so in our late war.  The circulation of the Government credit, in the shape of bills receivable exclusively, with gold and silver, in its dues, and the sales of public lands, would dispense with the necessity of loans, by increasing its bills with the increase of taxes.  The increase of taxes, and, of course, of revenue and expenditures, would be followed by an increased demand for Government bills, while the latter would furnish the means of paying the taxes, without increasing, in the same degree, the pressure on the community.  This, with a judicious system of funding, at a low rate of interest, would go far to exempt the Government from the necessity of contracting public loans in the event of war.

   I am not, Mr. President, ignorant, in making these suggestions (I wish them to be considered only in that light), to what violent opposition every measure of the kind must be exposed.  Banks have been so long in the possession of Government credit, that they very naturally conclude they have an exclusive right to it, and consider the withdrawal of it, even for the use of the Government itself, as a positive injury.  It was my fortune to take a stand on the side of the Government against the banks during the most trying period of the late war – the winter of 1814 and 1815 – and never in my life was I exposed to more calumny and abuse – no, not even on this occasion.  It was my first lesson on the subject.  I shall never forget it.  I propose to give a very brief narrative of the scenes  through which I then passed ; not with any feeling of egotism, for I trust I am incapable of that, but to illustrate the truth of much I have said, and to snatch from oblivion not an unimportant portion of our financial history.  I see the Senators from Massachusetts (Mr. Webster) and of Alabama (Mr. King), who ere then members of the House or Representatives, in their places, and they can vouch for the correctness of my narrative, as far as the memory of transactions so long passed will serve.

   The finances of the country had, at that time, fallen into great confusion.  Mr. Campbell had retired from the head of the treasury, and the late Mr. Dallas had succeeded – a man of talents, bold and decisive, but inexperienced in the affairs of the department.  His first measure to restore order, and to furnish the supplies to carry on the war, was to recommend a bank of $50,000.000, to be constituted almost exclusively of the new stocks which had been issued during the war, to the exclusion of the old, which had been issued before.  The proposed bank was authorized to make loans to the Govemrnetn, and was not bound to pay specie during the war, and for three years after its termination.

   It so happened that I did not arrive here till some time after the commencement of the seesion, having been detained by an attack of bilious fever.  I had taken a prominent part in the declaration of war, and had every motive and disposition to sustain the administration, and to vote every aid to carry on the war.  Immediately after my arrival, I had a full conversation with Mr. Dallas, at his request.  I entertained very kind feelings towards him, and assured him, after he had explained his plan, that I would give it my early and favorable attention.  At that time I had reflected but little on the subject of banking.  Many of my political friends expressed a desire that I should take a prominent part in favor of the proposed bank.  Their extreme anxiety aroused my attention, and, being on no committee (they had been appointed before my arrival), I took up the subject for a full investigation, with every disposition to give it my support.  I had not proceeded far before I was struck with the  extraordinary character of the project ; a bank of $50.000.000, whose capital was to consist almost exclusively of Government credit in the shape of stock, and not bout to pay its debts during the war, and for three years afterward, to furnish the Government with loans to carry on the war!  I saw, at once, that the effect of the arrangement would be, that the Government would borrow back its own credit, and pay sex per cent. Per annum for what they had already paid eight or nine.  It was impossible for me to give it my support under any pressure, however great.  I felt felt the difficulty of my situation, not only in opposing the leading measure of the administration at such a crisis, but, what was far more responsible, to suggest one of my own,that would afford relief to the embarrassed treasury.  I cast my eyes around, and soon saw that the Government could use its own credit directly, without the intervention of a bank ; which I proposed to do in the form of treasury notes, to be issued in the operations of the Government, and to be funded in the subscription to the stock of the bank.  Treasury notes were, at that time, below par, even with bank paper.  The opposition to them was so great on the part of the banks, that they refused to receive them on deposit, or payment, at par with their notes ; while the Government, on its part, received and paid away notes of the banks at par with its own.  Such was the influence of the banks, and to such degradation did the Government, in its weakness, submit.  All this influence I had to encounter, with the entire weight of the administration thrown into the same scale.  I hesitated not.  I saw the path of duty clearly, and determined to tread it, sharp and rugged as it was.  When the bill came up, I moved by amendment, the main features of which were, that, instead of Government stock already issued, the capital of the bank should consist of funded treasury notes ; and that, instead of a mere paper machine, it should be a specie-paying bank, so as to be an ally, instead of an opponent, in restoring the currency to a sound condition on the return of peace.  These were, with me, indispensable conditions.  I accompanied my amendment with a short speech of fifteen or twenty minutes, and so overpowering was the force of truth, that, notwithstanding the influence of the administration, backed by the money power, and the Committee of Ways and Means, which was unanimous, with one exception, as I understood, my amendment prevailed by a large majority ; but it, in turn, failed – the opposition, the adherents of the administration, and those who had constitutional scruples, combining against it.  Then followed various, but unsuccessful, attempts to charter a bank.  One was vetoed by the President, and another was lost by the casting vote of the Speaker (Mr. Cheves).  After a large portion of the session was thus unsuccessfully consumed, a caucus was called, in order to agree on some plan, to which I, and a few friends who still adhered to me after such hard service, were especially invited.    We, of course, attended.  The plan of compromise was unfolded, which approached much nearer to our views, but which was still objectionable in some features.  I objected, and required further concessions, which were refused ; and we were told the bill could be passed without us l at which I took up my hat and bade good-night.  The bill was introduced in the Senate, and speedily passed that body.  On the second reading, I rose and made a few remarks, in which I entreated the House to remember that they were about to vote for the measure against their conviction, as had been frequently expressed ; and that , in so doing, they acted under a supposed necessity, which had been created by those who expected to profit by the measure.  I then reminded them of the danger of acting under such pressure ; and I said that they were so sensible of the truth of what I uttered, that, if peach should arrive before the passage fo the bill, it would not receive the support of fifteen members.  I concluded by saying that I would reserve what I intended to say on the question of the passage of the bill, when I would express my opinion at length, and appeal to the country.  My objections, as yet, had not gone to the people, as nothing that I had said had been reported – such was my solicitude to defeat the bill without extending our divisions beyond the walls of the House, in the then critical condition of the country.  My object was to arrest the measure, and not to weaken confidence in the administration.

   In making the supposition, I had not the slightest anticipation of peace.  England had been making extensive preparations for the ensuing campaign, and had made a vigorous attack on New-Orleans, which had just been repelled ; but , by a most remarkable coincidence, an opportunity (strange as it may seem) was afforded to test the truth of what I said.  Late in the evening of the day I met Mr. Sturges, then a member of Congress from Connecticut.  He said that he had some information which he could not withhold from me ; that a treaty of peace had been made ; and that it had actually arrived in New-York, and would be there the next day – so that I would have an opportunity of testing the truth of my prediction.  He added, that his brother, who had a mercantile house in New-York, had forwarded the information ot him by express, and that he had forwarded the information to connected houses in the Southern cities, with directions to purchase the great staples in that quarter, and that he wished me to consider the information as confidential.  I thanked him for the intelligence, and promised to keep it to myself.  The rumor, however, got out, and the next day an attempt was made to pass through the bill ; but the House was unwilling to act till it could ascertain whether a treaty had been made.  It arrived in the course of the day – when on my motion, it was laid on the table ; and I had the gratification of receiving the thanks of many for defeating the bill, who, a short time before, were almost ready to cut my throat for my perseverating opposition to the measure.  An offer was then made to me to come to my terms, which I refused, declaring  that I would rise in my demand and would agree to no bill which should not be formed expressly with the view to the speedy restoration of specie payments.  It was afterwards postponed, on the conviction that it could not be so modified as to make it acceptable to a majority.  This was my first lesson on banks.  It was made a durable impression on my mind.

Nicholas Biddle, monetary agent to the Rothschilds after Hamilton -- with his two lawyers, Daniel Webster and Henry Clay, "on retainer" to argue the Rothschild cause with some of the greatest rhetoric in history -- although Calhoun and Hane and Benton bested all of their arguments.  Rule of thumb:  If an economist or would-be reformer has high praise for Hamilton, Webster or Clay, proceed with extreme caution.

    My colleague, in the course of his remarks, said, he regarded this measure as a secret war waged against the banks.  I am sure he could not intend to attribute such motives tome.  I wage no war, secret or open, against the existing institutions.  They have been created by the legislation of the States, and are alone responsible to the States.  I hold them not answerable for the present state of things, which has been brought about under the silent operation of time, without attracting notice or disclosing its danger.  Whatever legal or constitutional rights they possess under their characters ought to be respected ; and, if attacked, I would defend them as resolutely as I now oppose the system.  Against that, I wage, not secret, but open and uncompromising hostilities, originating not in opinions recently or hastily formulated.  I have long seen the true character of the system, its tendency and destiny, and have looked forward for many years, as many of my friends know, to the crisis in the midst of which we now are.  My ardent wish has been to effect a gradual change in the banking system, by which the crisis might be passed without a shock, if possible; but I have been resolved for many years, that should it arrive in my time, I would discharge my duty, however great the difficulty and danger.  I have thus far faithfully performed it, according to the best of my abilities, and, with the blessing of God, shall persist, regardless of every obstacle, with equal fidelity to the end.

   He who does not see that the credit system is on the eve of a great revolution, has formed a very imperfect conception of the past and anticipation of the future.  What changes it is destined to undergo, and what new form it will ultimately assume, are concealed in the womb of time, and not give us to forsee.  But we may perceive, in the present, many of the elements of the existing system which must be expelled, and others which must enter it in its renewed form.

   In looking at the elements at work, I hold it certain, that in the process there will be a total and final separation of the credit of the Government and that of individuals which have been so long blended.  The good of society, and the interests of both, imperiously demand it, and the growing intelligence of the age will enforce it.  It is unfair, unjust, unequal, contrary to the spirit of free institutions, and corrupting in its consequences.  How far the credit of the Government may be used in a separate form, with safety and convenience, remains to be seen.  To the extent of its fiscal action, limited strictly to the function of the collection and distribution of its revenue, and in the form I have suggested, I am of the impression it may be both safely and conveniently used, and with great incidental advantages to the whole community.  Beyond that limit I see no safety and much danger.

   What form individual credit will assume after the separation,  is still more uncertain – but I see clearly that the existing fetters that restrain it will be thrown off.  The credit of an individual is his property, and belongs to him as much as his land and houses, to use it as he pleases, with the single restriction, which is imposed on all our rights, that it is not to be used to injure others.  What limitations this restriction may prescribe, time and experience will show ; but, whatever they may be, they ought to assume the character of general laws, obligatory to all alike, and open to all ; and under the provisions of which all may be at liberty to use their credit, jointly or separately, as freely as they now use their land and houses, without any preference by special acts, in any form or shape, to one over another.  Every thing like monopoly must ultimately disappear, before the process which has begun will finally terminate.

   I see, not less clearly, that, in the process, a separation will take place between the use of capital and the use of credit.  They are wholly different, and under the growing intelligence of the times, cannot much longer remain confounded in their present state of combination.  They are as distinct as a loan and an endorsement ;  in fact, the one is but giving to another the use of our capital, and the other the use of our credit ; and yet so dissimilar are they, that we daily see the most prudent individuals lending their credit for nothing, in the form of  indorsement or security, who would not loan the most inconsiderable sum without interest.  But, dissimilar as they are, they are completely confounded in banking operations, which is one of the main sources of the profit, and the consequent dangerous flow of capital in that direction.  A bank discount, instead of a loan, is very little more, as I have shown, than a mere exchange of credit – an exchange of the joint credit of the drawer and indorser of the note, discounted for the credit of the bank in the shape of its own note.  In the exchange, the bank insures the parties to the note discounted, and the community, which is the loser if the bank fails, virtually insures the bank ; and yet, by confounding this exchange of credit with the use of capital, the bank is permitted to charge an interest for this exchange, rather greater than an individual is permitted to charge for a loan, to the great gain of the bank and loss to the community.  I say loss, for the community can never enjoy the great and full benefit of the credit system, till loans and credits are considered as entirely distinct in their nature, and the compensation for the use of each be adjusted to their respective nature and character.  Nothing would give a greater impulse to all the business of society.  The superior cheapness of credit would add incalculably to the productive powers of the community, when the immense gains, which are now made by confounding them, shall come to the aid of production.

   Whatever other changes the credit system is destined to undergo, these are certainly some which it must ;  but when, and how the revolution will end – whether it is destined to be sudden and convulsive, or gradual and free from shock, time alone will disclose.  Much will depend on the decision of the present question, and the course which the advocates of the system will pursue.  If the separation takes place, and is acquiesced in by those interested in the system, the prospect will be, that it will gradually and quietly run down, without shock or convulsions, which is my sincere prayer ; but if not – if the reverse shall be insisted on, and, above all, if its should be effected through a great deal of struggle (it can only be so effected), the revolution would be violent and convulsive.  A great and thorough change must take place.  It is wholly unavoidable.  The public attention begins to be roused throughout the civilized world to this all-absorbing subject.  These is nothing left to be controlled but the mode and manner, and it is better for all that it should be gradual and quiet than the reverse.  All the rest is destiny.

   I have not, Mr. President, said what I intended, without reserve or disguise.  In taking the stand I have, I change no relation, personal or political, nor alter any opinion I have heretofore expressed or entertained.  I desire nothing from the Government or the people.  My only ambition is to do my duty – which I shall follow wherever it may lead, regardless alike of attachments or antipathies, personal or political.  I know full well the responsibility I have assumed.  I see clearly the magnitude and the hazard of the crisis, and the danger of confiding the execution of measures in which I take so deep a responsibility, to those in whom I have no reason to have any special confidence.   But all this deters me not, when I believe that the permanent interest of the country is involved.  My course is fixed.  I go forward.  IF the administration recommend what I approve on this great question, I will cheerfully give my support ; if not, I shall oppose ; but, in opposing, I shall feel bound to suggest what I believe to be the proper measure, and which I shall be ready to back, be the responsibility what it may – looking only to the country, and not stopping to estimate whether the benefit shall inure either to the administration or the opposition.

(end of speech by John C. Calhoun)

 

==========================

 

While I don't believe the above speech has been made available on the internet -- here is the URL for one of Calhoun's books on political theory -- Disquistion on Government:  http://www.constitution.org/jcc/disq_gov.htm

Twenty four years after this speech was delivered, Abraham Lincoln chose to fund the American Civil War Calhoun's way (above) -- much to the chargin of the City of London lenders.    It is also noteworthy, that Karl Marx was still eleven years from penning his contribution to the Communist Manifesto -- sending humanity on a wrong turn away from the liberalism and the Declaration  of Jefferson, from Madison and Paine.   The name Calhoun has been buried in the 20th century, stricken from our history books, except in the issue of slavery, and one speech made at the end of his life  -- he is unknown outside this country and he is known for none of the ideas and political battles that he should be remembered for.     Note too that 49 years after Lincoln was shot, Great Britain also took the same route to financing World War One. 

 

 

 

The three articles below seem to underscore all of John C. Calhoun's points and predictions.

1. Stephen Zarlenga: http://www.monetary.org/houseoflordstalk.pdf  Speech before UK House of Lords

2. Margit Kennedy:  http://www.margritkennedy.de/index.php?id=105&ord=56

3. Anthony Migchels: http://www.monetary.org/houseoflordstalk.pdf

 

Here is a monetary reform policy that seems to be gaining support:

From: Ellen Brown   "Time to Break Up the Too-Big-to-Fail Banks?"
 
 
I have the worst cold I can remember -- and typing this in a cold basement has not helped -- if you enjoyed Calhoun's article, drop me a line and say so:
 
 
 
 
Dick Eastman
Yakima, Washington
 
 
Populist Nationalist Social Credit Brotherhood of American Citizen Peacemakers of All Races and Creeds  -- This is our Common Ground!!!
__._,_.___


__,_._,___



--
Palash Biswas
Pl Read:
http://nandigramunited-banga.blogspot.com/

No comments: