By
Steven Yates When we read some of Ben S. Bernanke’s recent
writings, it becomes clear why he was picked to succeed Alan Greenspan as
Chairman of the Federal Reserve Corporation.
First, unlike Greenspan, Bernanke is a good
writer who expresses himself clearly. An academic by inclination, his essays
are sprinkled with citations and endnotes. There are bibliographies at the
end. Greenspan’s remarks (except, perhaps, for “irrational exuberance”)
often elicited, “Huh?” Bernanke leaves few doubts where he is coming from.
On August 25, Bernanke made a presentation to
the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City’s 30th Annual Economic Symposium at
Jackson Hole, Wyoming—one of this country’s prime hideaways for the elite,
with tracts of real estate priced out of the reach of lesser mortals. The
title of Bernanke’s presentation: “Global Economic Integration: What’s
New and What’s Not.” (It’s on the Federal
Reserve website). In this lecture—which appears
tailored as much for outsiders who follow such things as for the Insiders
likely to be seen at Jackson Hole—Bernanke adopts a familiar ploy: to depict
global economic integration as an exclusively technology-driven process. Thus
the section entitled “A Short History of Global Economic Integration”
which traces the process to the Romans who “unified their far-flung empire
through an extensive transportation network and a common language, legal
system, and currency.” (The Roman Empire grew increasingly barbaric and
decadent and finally collapsed from within—a little detail of history
Bernanke neglects to note—but never mind that for now.)
There are three possible implications of this
one remark. One, the current wave of the New International Economic
Order is at base an exercise in building an empire owing more to the Romans
than its purveyors care to admit. Two, when America’s borders with Mexico
and Canada are effectively eroded and the North American Community comes into
being, do not be surprised if NAFTA Chapter 11 tribunals so far limited to
judging trade disputes evolve into a full-fledged North American legal system
that can override
our courts and render our Constitution null and
void—very possibly with the full cooperation of globalist-leaning Justices
such as Stephen Breyer. Three, despite the belligerent
denials that anything of the sort is on the drawing
board, do not be shocked when, a few years down the road, the Council on
Foreign Relation’s (CFR’s) Building
a North American Community lead author Robert
Pastor’s proposal for a North American currency,
the Amero,
becomes a live option somewhere down the pike.
A collapse of the dollar would definitely
hasten this last. The Federal Reserve, by arranging for the printing of
unbacked currency (fiat money) at an unprecedented rate, is hastening the
collapse of the dollar. Since the unheralded end of M3 reporting in March of
this year, no one knows for sure how much fiat money is in circulation
generating real inflation (as opposed to the cooked “core inflation rate”
the Fed pawns off on the public through the controlled news media). The
contrarian International
Forecaster estimates the actual inflation rate
at 10.9 percent!
What is clear is that Bernanke’s Federal
Reserve is following the agenda of Alan Greenspan’s Federal Reserve without
significant change. What the Fed has done is create what author and contrarian
economist Gary North describes as an “international
time bomb.” The time bomb has two components: (1)
the huge accumulation of fiat money; (2) the massive build-up of debt to
foreign countries, some of whom (like China) surely do not have our best
interests at heart! If the bomb goes off all at once, it will precipitate a
global economic collapse that will make the Great Depression look like a bad
day at the races by comparison.
Bernanke’s essay also weighed in against
protectionism—always safe, since few economists consider protectionism a
good idea. The problem here: arguments against protectionism are invariably
presented as part of a false dichotomy with the globalist-managed trade being
sold as “free trade.” Bernanke’s reasoning is fallacious because of the
third alternative: the real thing, allowed to develop on its own rather than
orchestrated through economic social engineering. It is difficult to know for
sure what real free trade would look like right now, but since genuine free
markets operate to enable all to pursue their needs, wants and interests
unhampered by government interference and not bankrolled by government,
central banks or foundations, it would probably reflect a mixture of the small
and local with the large and international. But I digress. Bernanke’s
argument is invalid, if its aim is to establish the necessity of global
economic integration by making a case against protectionism.
Bernanke sees global economic integration as
stemming from technological change. Following World War II, he states,
“Technological advances further reduced the costs of transportation and
communication… . Telephone communication expanded, and digital electronic
computing came into use….” At first glance, this sounds reasonable. But it
reflects ignorance of the elites’ long term motives and efforts to integrate
the planet having integrated financial and economic systems.
In 1931—well before the explosion of
developments Bernanke invokes (except for the telephone)—Arnold Toynbee,
Fabian socialist, Rhodes Round Tabler and court historian for the British
Royal Institute for International Affairs (counterpart to our CFR) gave a
speech to the Conference of Institutions for the Scientific Study of
International Affairs in Copenhagen entitled “The Trend of International
Affairs Since the War” He told his fellow globalists of the day:
“If we are frank with ourselves, we shall
admit that we are engaged on a deliberate and sustained and concentrated
effort to impose limitations upon the sovereignty and independence of the
fifty or sixty local sovereign independent States which at present partition
the habitable surface of the earth and divide the political allegiance of
mankind.”
Toynbee went on, “It is just because we are
really attacking the principle of local sovereignty that we keep on protesting
our loyalty to it so loudly. The harder we press our attack upon the idol, the
more pains we take to keep its priests and devotees in a fool’s
paradise—lapped in a false sense of security which will inhibit them from
taking up arms in their idol’s defense.”
Toynbee then launched into an attack on
national sovereignty of the sort reserved for his fellow elitists: “The
local national state, invested with the attributes of sovereignty—is an
abomination of desolation standing in the place where it ought not. It has
stood in that place now … for four or five centuries. Our political task in
our generation is to cast the abomination out….”
Finally: “… I will not prophesy. I will
merely repeat that we are at present working, discreetly but with all our
might, to wrest this mysterious political force called sovereignty out of the
clutches of the local national states of our world. And all the time we are
denying with our lips what we are doing with our hands, because to impugn the
sovereignty of the local national states of the world is still a heresy for
which a statesman or a publicist can be—perhaps not quite burnt at the
stake, but certainly ostracized and discredited....” (Italics mine.)
This was well before Richard Gardner’s much
more often cited remark in a 1974 issue of the CFR’s flagship journal Foreign
Affairs that “the 'house of world order' will have to be built from the
bottom up rather than from the top down ... an end run around national
sovereignty, eroding it piece by piece, will accomplish much more than the
old-fashioned frontal assault.”
There is thus every reason to believe that
dissolving national borders and working in the direction of a global state was
on the agenda all along. The effort was intended to sail under the radar until
it was too late; obviously, most Americans would reject it if they knew about
it, since globalism both has and will mean a serious diminishing of the
American standard of living through lost jobs; lowered wages; unchecked
immigration; and massive debt (consumer, national and foreign).
Given all this evidence, attributing global
economic integration to advancing technology commits a different fallacy, post
hoc ergo prompter hoc (“after this, therefore because of this”).
Technological change did not “cause” global economic integration, but
happened alongside of it, and was perhaps encouraged as a path to eroding
borders, undermining sovereignty, and setting us on course to regional political
and bureaucratic integration, ending U.S. independence and paving the
way first to regional government and then to world government.
David Rockefeller, international banker and
archglobalist, stated back in 1993 following the passage of NAFTA:
“Everything is in place—after 500 years—to build a true 'new world' in
the Western Hemisphere.” Rockefeller and his colleagues in the CFR and the
Trilateral Commission had a name for this new world: the New International
Economic Order.
Ben Bernanke has sold his soul to this, else he
would not have been appointed to one of the most powerful positions in this
country, Chairman of the Federal Reserve Corporation.
Bernanke came to his home state of South
Carolina two weeks ago, visiting his rural home town of Dillon (population
6,800), one of many rural towns in the Carolinas devastated by plant closings
since the passage of NAFTA. The official unemployment rate in Dillon in
June was 9.7 percent! Bernanke delivered remarks under the title
“Productivity” (also available
on the Fed website), again pushing
globalization.
His message to the ordinary mortals struggling
to survive in post-NAFTA South Carolina: change is going to be forced on you
whether you like it or not. Recommendation: tailor your education to
technology-driven economic development and become good little worker bees. Now
I’ve nothing against learning new technology. What bothers me acutely: from
the purveyors of education tailored to economic development we hear not a word
about the Constitution or history or the economics of private property rights
or critical thinking or other skills appropriate for citizens of a free
society. What we heard instead from Ben Bernanke was a thinly veiled warning:
you backward South Carolinians are dragging your feet on joining the New
International Economic Order. Either get with the program or expect even worse
unemployment, underemployment and abject poverty.
Author’s note: this is a slightly
lengthened version of an article published on September 6, 2006 in the
Greenville, S.C.-based Times-Examiner. © 2006 Steven Yates - All Rights Reserved Steven Yates earned his Ph.D. in Philosophy in 1987 at
the University of Georgia and has taught the subject at a number of colleges
and universities around the Southeast. He currently teaches philosophy at the
University of South Carolina Upstate and Greenville Technical College, and
also does a little e-commerce involving real free trade. He is on the South
Carolina Board of The Citizens Committee to Stop the FTAA.
He is the author of Civil Wrongs: What Went Wrong With
Affirmative Action (1994), Worldviews: Christian Theism Versus Modern
Materialism (2005), around two dozen philosophical articles and reviews in
refereed journals and anthologies, and over a hundred articles on the World
Wide Web. He lives in Greenville, South Carolina, where he writes a weekly
column for the Times Examiner and is at work on a book length version of his
popular series to be entitled The Real Matrix (hopefully!) to be completed
this summer.
E-Mail: freeyourmindinsc@yahoo.com.
Ben
Bernanke and the New International Economic Order
September 11, 2006
NewsWithViews.com
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