A Study of the Federal Reserve and Its Secrets: A Controversial Critique of Central Banking and Monetary Power - Softcover

Mullins, Eustace Clarence

 
9781617200731: A Study of the Federal Reserve and Its Secrets: A Controversial Critique of Central Banking and Monetary Power

Synopsis

This books explains how the Federal Reserve works, points out that it is not a U.S. Government Bank and that its agenda and policies are designed to profit private citizens and not the American People. It also explains how vehemently opposed to such a system Thomas Jefferson was. "If Congress actually had retained its sovereignty and refused to let Woodrow Wilson and Carter Glass hand over the sovereign right of coinage and the issue of our money to private bankers in 1913, the American people today would not stand on the brink of slavery. The Federal Reserve System has been the death of our Constitution, and the end of our liberties. The Federal Reserve Board of Governors, chosen by and working for the powerful international bankers, have inflicted catastrophe after catastrophe upon our people." -Eustace Clarence Mullins All of our books are printed to order. This reduces waste and helps us keep prices low while greatly reducing our impact on the environment.

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About the Author

Eustace Clarence Mullins Jr. (1923-2010) was an American writer and political polemicist best known for his attacks on the Federal Reserve System, central banking, and what he described as hidden financial power. His work circulated largely outside mainstream academic economics and institutional history, finding readers among critics of central banking, monetary reform advocates, conspiracy theorists, and anti-establishment political audiences. The Secrets of the Federal Reserve became his best-known book and helped define the controversial reputation that followed his later career.Mullins remains a difficult and disputed figure. Supporters have treated his writing as a challenge to official narratives about banking and political power, while critics have identified his broader body of work with conspiracy thinking, extremist politics, and antisemitic themes. For that reason, his books are best approached as controversial documents in the history of American political polemic, not as settled accounts of financial history. His writing is relevant to readers studying Federal Reserve criticism, monetary conspiracy literature, twentieth-century American dissent, political extremism, and the rhetoric of distrust toward public and private institutions.

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