有声读物: U.S. Money vs. Corporation Currency, "Aldrich plan."
- Download Preface audio
- Download Chapter 1 - Central Money Trust audio
- Download Chapter 2 part i - The Aldrich Plan audio
- Download Chapter 2 part ii - The Aldrich Plan continued. audio
- Download Chapter 2 part iii - The Aldrich Plan continued. audio
- Download Chapter 3 - Fooling the People audio
- Download Chapter 4 - A Discovery audio
- Download Chapter 5 - Inflation and Contraction audio
- Download Chapter 6 - Frenzied Financing audio
- Download Chapter 7 - Confessions of Wall Street audio
- Download Chapter 8 - Wall Street's First ''Plan'' audio
- Download Chapter 9 - A Confidence Game audio
- Download Chapter 10 - A Central Bank to be Bought? audio
- Download Chapter 11 - Wall Street Stock ''Market'' audio
- Download Chapter 12 - Panics Natural or Artificial? audio
- Download Chapter 13 - Money is the Power audio
- Download Chapter 14 - The Slavery of Debt audio
- Download Chapter 15 part i - The National Banking System audio
- Download Chapter 15 part ii - The National Banking System continued audio
- Download Chapter 16 - Bank Graft and Crime audio
- Download Chapter 17 - Crime of Conspiracy audio
- Download Chapter 18 - Bank Credits vs Government Currency audio
- Download Chapter 19 - The Legal Tender ''Joker'' audio
- Download Chapter 20 - Reorganising the Money Supply audio
- Download Chapter 21 - United States Monetary Council audio
- Download Chapter 22 - The Octopus audio
- Download Appendix - Correspondence part i audio
- Download Appendix - Correspondence part ii audio
- Download Appendix - Press Notices of ''The Magnet'' audio
有声读物类型
作者
描述
In 1908, the National Monetary Commission was established by Congress to study financial boom-and-bust cycles. Senator Nelson Aldrich (Republican-RI) was chair of the commission. He, in secret enclave with a group of bankers, drafted what was called The Aldrich Plan, which provided for a central "bank" that would hold funds individual banks could borrow in the case of a bank run, print currency, and act as the fiscal agent of the US government. However, the plan gave little power to the government and seemed to give almost absolute control of the country's currency to Wall Street financiers. This 1912 book outlines the dangers and supposed duplicity of The Aldrich Plan while it was being debated in Congress. (The plan was eventually defeated, but was used as a basis for the Federal Reserve Act, which was signed into law in 1913.) - Summary by TriciaG
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