|
|
Uncle Sam Talks with a Master Banker, Mr. Feddy R. Banks
It is the early 1940's. The Second World War is raging. Patriotism is in
high pitch in the U.S. There is an Internal Revenue Service somewhere, but
few people know or care about it. A few years back the government “purchased” almost
all the gold owned by the people of the U.S. Your grandfathers sold their
gold to the government in order to avoid going to prison. The currency is still gold backed,
sort of, but there are wrenching problems in the banking industry. How to scrape
together enough money to support the war is a big issue. At least, that's
the way the public saw the issue. A more serious problem for the owners of the twelve Federal Reserve banks was that they had promised their new system would provide a flexible currency -- and they promised the value of our money would not decrease. How could they keep their promise to protect the value of the U.S. dollar but not lose control of their newfound way to increase their personal wealth? The U.S. Constitution could not force a mandatory income tax on people without violating the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. People could not both be "secure in their papers and property" and also be required to report their income. Further, any report could turn out to be self-incriminating. It was a tough nut to crack. This conversation was never held; but it happened. You
know who Uncle Sam is. Feddy R. Banks is one of the owners of the twelve
privately owned Federal Reserve banks. Feddy's middle name (of course)
is "Reserve." Feddy R. Banks: Uncle Sam, you know we can't do this Federal Reserve thing for you for nothing. We don't mind helping you, but you have to help us too.
Uncle Sam: You can create money at will. What else do you want?
Feddy R. Banks: I don't have to tell you that if we just keep doing that, the day will come when the dollar will have no value at all. We have to match the creation of money to the creation of goods and services. Otherwise, you know the routine: “Too many units of currency chasing too few goods means inflation.” Money may be easy to create, and that's good. But to prevent price inflation we have to sop up some of the surplus.
Uncle Sam: I am not a grade school student. I understand economics. Tell me what you
have in mind. Feddy R. Banks: We want you to collect an income tax and use it to feed back to our Federal Reserve System the money we will charge you for interest on the money we create for you and lend to you.
Uncle Sam: Let me get this straight. You are going to use MY printing press to create dollar bills and you will pay me a couple pennies for the printing costs. Then you will allow my Treasury Department to print thousands of checks on our government accounts. Those dollars will be chalked up as loans from you to my government and you will charge me the current interest rate for my use of my own money. Then, you want my people to pay a tax on their income in order to pay you interest on money that was mine in the first place. Is that what you want?
Feddy R. Banks: Exactly. I think you understand.
Uncle Sam: I know how powerful you are. Power goes where money blows. But how can I justify charging income tax? Have you ever read the Fourth Amendment to my Constitution?
Feddy R. Banks: You mean the part about (chuckle) people being able to hide their paperwork, so-called being “secure in their papers?”
Uncle Sam: That's not a laughing matter. That Constitution was intended to be an ironclad contract.
Feddy R. Banks: Maybe, but that's no problem.
Uncle Sam: Well, before you tell me why it is not a
problem, let me just mention the Fifth Article to the Amendments of the Constitution.
Feddy R. Banks: I knew you would say that. Your problem is that in order to collect income tax you have to know how much income a person earned. Right? And they would have to tell you. Right? And if they told you and made a mistake, they would be committing a crime. Right? And if you have a document from them signed under perjury – that means they testified against themselves. Right?
Uncle Sam: Yes, and in order to be able to have confidence in the information reported we will have to collect it under penalty of perjury. Anybody who signed a report like that would be testifying against himself even if he told the truth, because the result would mean he would have to pay a tax – all acts prohibited by the US Constitution. That's exactly why Congress has never been able to write a law demanding that our people send in information about their income. We have to use other devices.
Feddy R. Banks: Sam, you have been living in the clouds
too long. I have just the device to solve all your problems. The Constitution established three branches of government. Right?
Uncle Sam: You keep doing that. I am not a school kid. Yes, we have the Executive, the Legislative and the Judicial branches. They balance each other. That's the way the Constitution structured my government.
Feddy R. Banks: Exactly. Under Justice Marshall wasn't it made clear that the court system has the authority to tell us what the law is?
Uncle Sam: Well, yes, but that doesn't solve the problem with the Constitution.
Feddy R. Banks: Yes, it does. It's easy. You just dodge the whole issue. You can't allow Congress to pass a law that says, “Show me your papers.” That would violate the Constitution. I agree. Congress can't do that. You also cannot have Congress pass a law that says, “People must testify under oath about the accuracy of some elusive mathe matical calculations involving their income and expenses.” So, you dodge those issues.
Uncle Sam: Dodge the issue? I don't get it. You have defined the issue very well. How would I possibly get around it?
Feddy R. Banks: Have you ever heard of Walt Disney?
Uncle Sam: Yes. Feddy R. Banks: Good. Here's my idea. What is distasteful about the idea of the income tax?
Uncle Sam: Obviously, people don't want to give up money they had to work to earn.
Feddy R. Banks: Of course. What if the income tax meant that people would GET MONEY instead of giving it up?
Uncle Sam: Now that is just plain crazy talk. You'd better explain yourself.
Feddy R. Banks: Crazy stuff is Walt Disney's business. It is what he does for a living. So, have Disney studios educate people. Produce a brief cartoon featuring Donald Duck. You could call the first movie, "The New Spirit." It would tell people how important it is to pay their income tax on time in order to help the government buy guns, ships and planes. Then, have Congress pass a law demanding that employers deduct money from all paychecks. The idea would soon get across that not enough people pay promptly. So, taking money in advance is the logical solution. Have Disney produce a cartoon called "The Spirit of '43" to sell that idea. Just think, you will be seting up a plan that will allow people to get a big wonderful surprise in the mail each year -- their tax refund: money they never saw, so didn't miss, coming to them like a gift.
Uncle Sam: Tax refund? How does that put money in your pocket?
Feddy R. Banks: Easy. Here's how it works. Employers will send to your Treasury Department a slice of every employee's
paycheck. Then, you tell people they should fill out a report every year
that will help them get back some of that money. Some of it. Chuckle. Not all.
Most of it will be paid to our Twelve Federal Reserve Banks. Uncle Sam: I get it. The boss takes money out of their check – money they won't miss because they never see it. Then once a year they can get a bonus from the government. Great idea.
The boss is not paying an income tax for the employee. He is just sending in a deposit. The employee will want that yearly bonus, so he will be glad to volunteer to fill out our tax forms, even though the law does not require him to do it. What a genius you are! We will do it. But there is still a problem.
Feddy R. Banks: What's that?
Uncle Sam: It won't be Constitutional and it won't be legal.
Feddy R. Banks: Not to worry. Haven't you noticed how
the courts have been making decisions lately? The law is irrelevant in court.
Instead, judges make decisions based on two broad concepts; “The interest of justice,” and “Public
Policy.” In a short while, what began as a refund celebration will be enforced by the courts as a mandatory obligation. You just watch. I know what I'm talking about. Throughout history fashion and tradition have always had more power than law. Uncle Sam: You are a genius. You are right. Nobody will look for the law, anyhow. They will be too busy keeping their books straight so they can get that annual refund. If you research the life of that great entertainer Walt Disney,
you will find that just after he produced that Donald Duck cartoon that played
repeatedly
in the theaters in the 1940's he developed a dream. He wanted to buy a large
parcel of land in Anaheim, California, and construct a very expensive entertainment
park. We know it as Disneyland. Disney's biographies make it clear that the
task was difficult. I have spoken personally with one of the original
animation artists who worked with Disney. She makes it clear that the financial
challenges
were immense. Disney even secured a second mortgage on his home. However, a
recent biography opens a new door of understanding. A major banker, a man who
could have been the hypothetical banker talking to Uncle Sam, then served
on the Board of Directors of ABC. That banker arranged for ABC
to provide critical major
funding
for Disneyland. Ironically, Walt Disney's genius has now overwhelmed that benefactor.
Disney now owns ABC.
The point is that the Federal Reserve was granted the greatest gift
of free capital in the world's history through the artistry of Walt Disney.
Disney's Donald Duck cartoon opened the minds of the US public to the joys
of the withholding
tax. Disneyland is a monument to the Master Bankers' warm-hearted
gratitude for Walt Disney's artistic salesmanship. Today Disneyland is a memorial
to
the acceptance by the U.S. public of the need to file an annual 1040 form.
There is only the
benefit
of
the
refund. That benefit was sold to your fathers by none other than Donald Duck in the propaganda movie "The Spirit of '43," produced to sell the "merits" of the 1943 Congressional Act called "The Current Tax Payment Act." That law is a mandate to employers, not to ordinary people. The law demanding the filing of a tax return remains missing. Think about the word "Return." The 1040 is a "Tax Return." Countless thousands of people are asking the IRS and their Congress members
to "show the law" demanding that we file 1040's. There can be no
law. Such a law would violate the US Constitution. Instead of a law, we have
mandatory voluntary compliance. Yes, Donald and Mickey are crazy. Their little minds are capable of any stretch of imagination possible to the artist's pen. He structured a volunteer job that we are forced to do. Happy April 15. Want to "go crazy" reading more questions about the IRS?
|