19 September 2008

I'll show you the money!

Candidates had no answers for the Priority One audience at Bay Court in Tauranga this week. Colour me surprised to find that all five just kept to the usual platitudes.

They promise growth and infrastructure for Tauranga of course, but without a whisper of how to pay for it. Well, why would they campaign for more debt? Unless they are standing for National...

Huge global financial companies are toppling one after another, the world economy is going down the gurgler, and none of the parties in or out of Parliament will face up to what is really wrong. None but Democrats for social credit (DSC), that is. And what is wrong? Debt, greed and more leveraged debt.

DSC has the mechanism to free New Zealand from the world's financial turmoil. And more specifically, we can provide cities like Tauranga with sustainable growth, fully funded public transport, education, health and a clean green environment. But not under the present, very dodgy economic system.

Currently, for Tauranga to have the infrastructure to cope with a huge projected growth in the next few decades, the usury attached to commercial finance will mean paying for each project two and three times over, a debt burden that will enslave generations to come. Rates will go up, prices will go up, businesses will go under and everyone loses.

DSC has an alternative - create the credit needed for public works, at cost (less than 1%), by using our own Reserve Bank of New Zealand. Unlike the privately-owned Federal Reserve (USA), The RBNZ is owned by you and me. Why pay billions of dollars a year in interest to overseas banks when we could be running our own money supply?

No currency exchange costs, no interest, no ties to rocky overseas banking interests - just the good old Kiwi dollar created and spent the way we want it! Rates will go down, prices will go down, business will thrive because people will have more money to spend, and everyone wins.

What's that whine in the corner? "We won't attract foreign investment" you say? We need foreign investors buying our houses, our farms and our companies like we need a hole in the head. Since when did those greed merchants ever put any money into actual production?

If I am elected to Parliament as the member for Tauranga, I'll show you the money: Community credit from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand.

Choose real domocracy. Choose real freedom. Choose Democrats for social credit.

BTW, this was authorised by Mark Atkin, 5 Tarras Grove, Lower Hutt.


07 September 2008

New Zealand is a colony

As most of us know, New Zealand was once a colony.

A powerful force from the other side of the world claimed ownership of these islands, and sent soldiers, settlers and fortune hunters to take possession. The indigenous people were robbed of their lands and livelihoods by overwhelming numbers of foreigners. They became impoverished second-class citizens in their own country. Their populations were decimated by war and disease, and at one time it was assumed that they would die out - conveniently for some.

You might think this is just history. But it has happened all over again. New Zealand has been colonised by powerful forces - big overseas banks and their cohorts, the multinational corporations.

Think about it. Kiwis work harder, longer and smarter than just about anyone, but we are only running to stay in place - if we're lucky. Too many of us are slipping further into poverty, along with a quarter of our nation's children.

Land ownership has passed more and more into foreign hands. Mortgages on family homes are mostly held by overseas banks. Every day, small business are forced into bankruptcy by larger, overseas-owned chains, and more successful Kiwi companies get sold off to become merely branch offices of huge multinationals. Those companies not sold are forced off shore, looking for cheaper labour and cheaper finance. Even our largest daily newspaper is the flagship of a media fleet owned and controlled by overseas interests. 

And what do these overseas interests care about? They care about milking the cash cow that is New Zealand.

We, the multi-coloured peoples of New Zealand, are being milked of everything we have. We  are slipping into debt slavery. We are being conquered, robbed and enslaved - without a shot being fired.

It doesn't have to be this way. 

We, the electors of New Zealand, still have the power to decide who will run our government. We can turn away from Tweedledumb and Tweedledumber, the two major parties who are the political lackeys of the economic powers that be. Neither one has any intention of changing our economic system and releasing the people from slavery.

In fact, no party in Parliament has such an intention. The smaller parties campaign on narrow agendas, refusing to accept that what they want to achieve is impossible without a major change to the monetary system.

ACT's call for individual responsibility would leave most individuals even more vulnerable to the rapacious economic colonists, allowing only a few to strike it rich through speculation. The Greens will never save Hector's Dolphin or the native snail while we have to borrow from commercial banks at compounding interest to fund those projects.

United Future bangs on about families, with no financial policy to help more than the middle class. The worthy Maori Party will continue to see it's constituency struggling in the current economic system. Too many Maori still endure the double whammy of colonisation - then and now.

Most reprehensible are NZ First and Progressive. Both leaders understand the need for monetary reform, and both have skirted close to advocating aspects of that reform. However, neither have found it politically expedient to adopt the needful measures that will not only pull this country out of the world recession (as was done in the 1930s) but will benefit Kiwis for generations to come. Both leaders take the specious attitude that staying in power (with weak, timid policies) is better than campaigning for what is right. Shame.

Outside of Parliament, again the focus is so narrow as to ignore the glaringly obvious. Certainly Direct Democracy's BCIR policy is a good one - Democrats for social credit had it first! But without public control of the nation's money supply, we can vote on any number of binding referenda and it will make very little difference. 

The Libertarianz and their ilk advocate a dog-eat-dog principle, but the big dogs are already feasting. "You own your own life!" they cry. Sorry guys, right now the banks own your life. And so it goes on.

Only one political party, Democrats for social credit, has the intention, the policies and the financial mechanism to establish a new economic paradigm in this country. To secure our independence from colonising powers, we will take public control of the money supply. 

DSC says: stop borrowing from commercial banks - step away from the evil that is usury. Instead make use of a cheap, efficient source of money from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand. Only then will this country return to a free and just society, an equitable distribution of wealth that all work for, and a land that is really clean and green.

New Zealand has a history of leading the world. Here's another chance: to show other countries a viable way out of that debt trap that grips us all. 

Vote Democrats for social credit this election.

BTW, this was authorised by Mark Atkin, 5 Tarras Grove, Lower Hutt.

Our Big Fat Debt

I have a question. As consumers, business owners and ratepayers, why do we borrow from foreign-owned commercial banks - at high rates of interest - when we could be creating our own money supply and lending it into the economy at nil interest? We have the publicly owned Reserve Bank all ready to do the job.

And we have done it before - decades of state housing were funded with Reserve Bank credit. Farmers enjoyed great prosperity (and passed it on to consumers) through interest-free overdrafts from the Rural Bank (a branch of the Reserve Bank.) Ditto for the various Marketing Boards.

Right now, as I write this, New Zealand has a total debt of more than four hundred billion dollars. Both major parties have made a big deal about how the government's overseas debt has been wiped out. The reality is, debt has been transfered to the private sector - household and mortgage debt, business and corporate debt - which is growing more quickly than any of the parties in Parliament know what to do about.

This frightening total means an average of almost $100,000 of debt for every man, woman and child in New Zealand.

You might be thinking, "I'm all right, Jack, I haven't got any debt." Well, congratulations, but you are still paying for it. We all pay, with every litre of milk and loaf of bread we buy. We pay with our taxes, our rates and our insurance premiums. The price of every good and every service is loaded with that debt burden.

Dang. And you thought you were sweet. And it gets worse.

The compounding interest on that humongous debt, billions every year, is siphoned out of our hard-earned wages and mostly sent off overseas, into the pockets of the already obscenely rich.

And the Leader of the Opposition wants to borrow more money to build toll roads. Excuse me? If he and his Money Market Mates get into power this election, we will all be going down the toll road of borrowing ourselves to death.

If you are like me, and you don't like the road we're going down, have the courage to change direction. Turn off, get out of the car and get into public transport. Vote Democrats for social credit  this election, and get out of debt.

BTW, this was authorised by Mark Atkin, 5 Tarras Grove, Lower Hutt.

Community credit

Voting for parties currently in Parliament hasn't seemed to make any real improvement in our lives. None of those parties has answers to rising debt, rising prices, rising unemployment and crashing money markets.

The publicly owned Reserve Bank of New Zealand could create and spend or lend money into the economy - interest-free. Interest on debt - the billions of dollars that go off overseas to line the pockets of the already rich - will then stay in New Zealand for the benefit of all.

This is true Community Credit. Public assets such as schools and hospitals can be built and funded, and paid for only once. We could afford important projects such as public transport or repair of the damaged environment. We could fully fund education and health, with plenty left over.

Please don't listen to that old chestnut "Inflation!" as an argument against Community Credit. Compounding interest is one of the major causes of inflation.

Compounding interest is also called usury, and for centuries was against the law. Interest is an absolute evil which robs and enslaves people, destroys economies and poisons our planet host - to pay profits to the shareholders of overseas banks.

The people of New Zealand are being robbed, our economy destroyed and our beautiful country poisoned right now.

Here's an idea: let's stop borrowing ourselves to death. Let's have the courage to change. Vote Democrats for social credit this election. I know I will.

BTW, this was authorised by Mark Atkin, 5 Tarras Grove, Lower Hutt.

A Better Future

I am standing for the Democrats for social credit  this election, because I want a better future for my children and grandchildren.

Most of us want that, but most of us don't know where to start.

Let me make a suggestion: check out Democrats for social credit (DSC). We have been around for over half a century. We were the first party to advocate environmental policies. We were first to push for a nuclear-free NZ. We were first to call for and work for reform of the political system.

Now, when financial markets are crashing all over the world, and people are hurting but don't know where to turn, DSC has a plan.

The plan is simple: the public creation, ownership and control of our money supply through the Reserve Bank of New Zealand.

This one vital act of democracy will have complex and far-reaching benefits for the people, the economy and the environment of New Zealand.

It's a very good place to start.

BTW, this was authorised by Mark Atkin, 5 Tarras Grove, Lower Hutt.