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Book Reviews Books Media

The History of the Federal Reserve 514

Michael J. Ross writes "Money plays a key role in modern life; in fact, for some people, nothing is more important than acquiring more of it. Yet most people do not know what money really is, how it is created, how its supply is expanded and contracted, and who benefits from those changes. In the United States, the central figure in this ongoing drama, is our central bank, the Federal Reserve, whose history, power, and effects are explored in G. Edward Griffin's fascinating book The Creature from Jekyll Island: A Second Look at the Federal Reserve." Read on for the rest of Michael's review.
The Creature from Jekyll Island
author G. Edward Griffin
pages 624
publisher American Media
rating 9
reviewer Michael J. Ross
ISBN 0912986212
summary A compelling history and indictment of the Federal Reserve system
For the citizens of the United States and several Latin American countries, the "coin of the realm" is the US dollar, which is, in simple terms, created by the Federal Reserve, a.k.a., the Fed. But who created the Federal Reserve, and why? The subjects of banking in general, and the Federal Reserve in particular, would be considered by most Americans to be dry, boring, and of little importance to their day-to-day life. But those same people are endlessly fascinated by how to make more money (with minimal effort, such as the lottery), how to spend as little of it as possible (coupons never go out of style), and how to maximize one's investment returns. Why this disconnect? Why do Americans care so little about the origins of that which they spend a third of their time pursuing, and seemingly another third spending?

Some of these "salary slaves" may understand that their money serves as a store of wealth and a medium of commercial exchange, which makes possible their daily financial transactions without the need for bartering. But, for the most part, they do not understand the critical importance of what is backing that money, if anything; how that money comes into existence, and what debt offsets it; what entities control the supply and distribution of that money; and how those changes can be used to legally steal purchasing power from victims who may not be entirely unsuspecting, but do not truly comprehend how they are getting ripped off.

The typical American, if he or she has given any thought to the matter, would consider the following statements to be true: The Federal Reserve is federal, i.e., a part of the US government. The Federal Reserve is a reserve, i.e., it has monetary savings of real value. The Federal Reserve serves the public, and is not a cartel of private banks serving itself. The US dollar has real value, i.e., it represents tangible wealth, such as gold securely stored at Fort Knox. Inflation is an increase in prices. Inflation is caused by greedy companies, not the US government or the Federal Reserve.

As G. Edward Griffin makes clear in his book, none of these beliefs are true — regardless of how well entrenched they are in our conventional "wisdom." He also explains why the US government and the Federal Reserve have their own reasons for being in no hurry to eliminate this ignorance. Yet these topics are just a small portion of what is covered in his far-ranging discussion of the theory and history of money and banking, particularly within the United States.

Spanning 624 pages, the material is organized into 26 chapters, which are grouped into six sections: "What Creature Is This?" (the Federal Reserve's shameful birth, and the shenanigans of the Fed, S&Ls, the IMF, and the World Bank), "A Crash Course on Money" (money, gold, debasement, fiat money, fractional-reserve banking, and money creation), "The New Alchemy" (the Rothschilds, J.P. Morgan, and banker financing of wars and revolutions), "A Tale of Three Banks" (America's failed experiments with central banking, and the American Civil War), "The Harvest" (the unconstitutional creation of the Federal Reserve, and its dreadful effects, including the Crash of 1929), "Time Travel into the Future" (current crises caused by central banking, how they can be reversed, future scenarios, and what the individual can do regardless). Every one of the six sections begins with a brief summary, as does every chapter, with every chapter wrapped up with a more extensive summary.

The section summaries also appear in the table of contents, which precedes a preface and the author's acknowledgments. These are followed by a delightful introduction — a piece from the British humor magazine Punch, comprising a rather telling exchange between an unusually honest banker and a soon-to-be-disillusioned bank customer. The book contains three appendices: a summary of the structure and function of the Federal Reserve system; natural laws of human behavior in economics; and whether the M-1 measure of money is subtractive or accumulative. The author also provides an index, as well as an impressive bibliography, reflecting his extensive research on the topics. In addition, the author invites readers to join Freedom Force, an organization dedicated to increasing liberty in the United States, curbing federal totalitarianism, and abolishing the Federal Reserve — all through peaceful participation in government, and the shaping of public policy starting at the grassroots level.

The Creature from Jekyll Island is published by American Media, under the ISBNs 0912986212 and 978-0912986210. It first came out in July 1994, and is now in its fourth edition, and its 19th printing. It also has Japanese and German editions, published in February 2005 and August 2006, respectively. On the book's Web page, visitors will find testimonials and comments from readers, updates to the book, a review of the book by Jane H. Ingraham of The New American, and G. Edward Griffin's response to a critique of his book by Edward Flaherty, who holds a Ph.D. in Economics. On that Web page, interested readers can order audio cassettes or CDs of the author's lecture, based upon this book, and produced in 1998.

My only criticisms of the book concern not the material itself, but its production — more specifically, the printing and layout, presumably chosen and thus fixable in the future by the publisher. The generous font size used throughout the volume, makes it easy to read; but the bold text, such as the subheads found in every chapter, is a bit rough-edged — on some pages worse than others. The subheads, already bolded, do not need to be in all uppercase; the publisher should choose one or the other. In addition, the inside margin length is a bit too small, forcing the reader to crack open the book more than should be needed, in order to comfortably read the text closest to the binding. In future editions, some of the space in the outer margin could be used to solve the problem, without any change to the words on each page, and thus the length of the book.

But aside from these minor flaws, this book is to be highly recommended. The Creature from Jekyll Island is a remarkably thorough, detailed, and challenging critique of central banking and America's latest incarnation of it, the Federal Reserve. G. Edward Griffin's precision of language, and his interweaving of the major players and their motives, makes for a most compelling historical study.

Michael J. Ross is a Web developer, freelance writer, and the editor of PristinePlanet.com's free newsletter.

You can purchase The Creature from Jekyll Island from amazon.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
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The History of the Federal Reserve

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 26, 2007 @04:00PM (#20759321)
    Jekyll Island is in fact a peninsula.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 26, 2007 @04:25PM (#20759649)
    What should money be based on then, the promise of future labor or exchange of goods as rationed by a single central authority?
  • by prxp ( 1023979 ) on Wednesday September 26, 2007 @04:33PM (#20759731)
    Where does money come from? It depends on your currency. In the case of Dollar, it comes from the FED, the one and olnly source for dollar bills. How does money get distributed among the nation? Through the Baning infrastructure which lends money to people and companies and gets interest in return. How banks get money? From the FED! And not the magic happens: Summing up: 1) FED prints money (the paper itself is legal tender, no need for gold to back it up) 2) FED lends this paper to the Banks 3) FED gets the interest from the paper loan from the Banks How do the Banks pay the interests to the FED? Getting new loans! From who? From the FED! So, the FED prints worthless money that is turned into debt that is only payable through new debt! And the thing goes on and on! Basically, THE FED is MAGICAL MONEY MACHINE! Awesome!
  • by metlin ( 258108 ) on Wednesday September 26, 2007 @04:34PM (#20759751) Journal
    The promise by the government that they will accept it as payment for taxes. ...in exchange for services, infrastructure and governance.

    There, fixed that for you.

    (Disclaimer - your definition of what government should do may vary.)
  • by ShatteredArm ( 1123533 ) on Wednesday September 26, 2007 @04:45PM (#20759945)
    I think you're wrong. Clearly he does support his position by proclaiming that his opponents are ignorant.

    Now whether it is a valid argument is an entirely different story...
  • by Lord Ender ( 156273 ) on Wednesday September 26, 2007 @05:50PM (#20760941) Homepage
    Looking at your website, it seems you publish some sort of gold newsletter. Surprise, surprise.

    First, your physics is completely wrong. Radioactive elements are the only ones that decay.

    Second, your assertion that all new gold is used in industry is highly questionable. Most gold is hoarded underground and not used for ANYTHING--a senseless waste of resources.

    You are correct that my one-sentence definition of "value" is an oversimplification. But your assertion that ANY physical object has some sort of inherent value is wrong. Nothing has value unless people want it and are willing to sacrifice for it--including gold.

    Your claim that the poor choose not to save because they understand and fear inflation is laughable. Anybody with a checking account can use scottrade, etrade, or whatever and transfer their assets from currency to revenue-generating businesses, REITs, or even gold ETFs if they are so inclined. Inflation isn't stopping the poor from saving. Living hand-to-mouth is.

    Your don't seem to have made a point when you stated that real-estate and securities can fluctuate in value ("bubble" in your terms). Averaged out, these things grow in value faster than inflation, and much faster than gold. The minor corrections in these assets are just static. Gold goes up and down in value over the short term, too. On top of that, it doesn't generate any new value, as a business (stock investment) does. What is your point again?

    I'm not an economist, so I can't compare the value of hoarding to investing with great accuracy, but I can say that countries which adopted banking (aka lots of investment, hardly any hoarding) did FAR better off economically than countries that didn't.

    Finally: If paper money is a scam, then please explain why the countries with fiat currency have dramatically better standards of living than barter societies. My understanding is that paper money benefits everyone, but it benefits some disproportionately. It doesn't bother me. I direct deposit into an investment brokerage.

    And you are right that you do desperately need a web designer; but you probably will have to pay him in "scam" money. Not many web designers are willing to take metals and kooky newsletters as payment, because they don't value those things as much as they value fiat currency.
  • by markov_chain ( 202465 ) on Wednesday September 26, 2007 @11:19PM (#20763575)

    1) Under a gold standard, the (very high) volatility of gold is imposed on the general price level, making it that much harder to plan economic activity, and magnifying negative events.
    Dude what are you talking about, gold is not volatile--it's a metal, and highly inert one, at that.

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