I am unable to physically join the OWC movement but I was reminded that there are still things I can do to show solidarity with the protesters. One way is to furnish food or blankets for the protesters . Blogging, Tweeting, and Facebooking are others. Call your local protest group and ask what they need. I will write a blog.
I want to point out one other thing. To discredit any uprising the opposition will create havoc and chaos (sometimes violently) and do it from within. Thereby discrediting the peaceful aspect of the movement. Beware of such news and be skeptical of it.
Before I posted on this subject knew I needed to inform myself. One thing I discovered was just how little I knew about the Federal Reserve and how it works.
Alternet had the following article by Jake Blumgart on the subject. I decided that I might not be the only one who is uninformed about our central bank. I am copying excerpts from the article. It's rather 'wonky' but important to understand. To read the entire article go here:
http://www.alternet.org/story/152810/four_things_occupy_wall_street_should_know_about_the_federal_reserve?akid=7763.177389.hTX1gk&rd=1&t=12
1. “Ending the Fed” is a Terrible Idea
First, a quick primer on what the Fed is and what it does. The
Federal Reserve is America’s central bank, which means that it
supervises the banking system and controls the supply of money. The
Fed has a dual mandate “to promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates.”
There are many legitimate reasons to critique the Fed and how it
fulfills its mandate. But the “End the Fed” movement isn’t interested in
reform. As one popular Youtube occupier/ranter puts
it, “this is all because our government prints too much money...that's
fake money that they printed out of thin air...there’s not going to be a
middle class in ten years, end the federal reserve...get corporations
out of our politics!”
(My comment: He's an idiot and even I can see that we need the Federal Reserve. We need to fix it and not abolish it. He doesn't understand how it works. I am trying to.)
“The United States used to have a gold
standard instead of discretionary monetary policy. That meant that the
value of a dollar would ebb and flow with the discovery of gold mines.
The problem with [this] kind of setup...is that you can't respond to
economic shocks, and when depressions happen they're really severe.”
2. The Gold Standard is an Awful Idea
We left the gold standard in the 1930s because it greatly exacerbated
the Great Depression. As deficits ballooned, people feared the dollar
would be worthless and began exchanging their cash for gold, which the
government had to provide under the rules of the gold standard. The
nation’s dwindling gold supply became policymakers’ first
concern—instead of, say, unemployment levels of over 20 percent—and they
decided to balance the budget to restore confidence. Taxes were raised,
spending slashed, and the depression grew even worse. The dollar wasn’t
able to react to the needs of the economy: It could only be responsive
to the whims of the gold supply.
3. The Good and Bad of Modest Inflation
Ron Paul and those who think like him hope the gold standard would
serve as a hedge against inflation, -- right now America is suffering from the opposite problem.
The problem isn’t inflation, it’s unemployment, crushing debt and
stagnant growth: issues that can be assuaged through monetary stimulus.
-- core inflation levels—the kind that exclude food and energy—are currently at record lows and have been for quite some time.
In fact, one of the easiest ways to achieve the Occupy movement’s goals
of lower unemployment and household debt would be to use monetary
stimulus to mildly increase this measure inflation.
“The Fed can target higher rates of inflation which would be very
effective in lowering the real interest rate and reducing people’s debt
burden,” says Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and
Policy Research, a progressive think tank.
American corporations are currently sitting on massive cash reserves.
If the Fed announced a higher inflation target those horded assets
would soon be worth less, thus incentivizing spending. -- mild inflation would ease the debt loads crushing many
Americans.
Household debt is currently
90 percent of GDP.
As nominal wages and incomes rise, debt amounts would remain stable
(and drop in real value), easing the path to solvency for many and
freeing up money for spending, and growth.
inflation is good for debtors and bad for creditors.
4. Don’t End the Fed, Make it Accountable to the Needs of the 99 Percent
The Federal Reserve needs an Occupy Wall
Street-shaped wake up call. Instead of waving nonsensical “End the Fed”
signs and aping the talking points of a reactionary Republican,
occupiers should demand that the Fed be made more democratically
accountable and that policymakers seriously execute its dual mandate to
maintain stable prices and full employment.
One significant step toward these goals would be the democratizing of
the Fed’s Open Market Committee (OPM), which controls interest rates,
the nation’s money supply—the monetary policy side of the institution.
There are 12 seats on the OPM: one for the Fed chairman, one for the
vice-chairman, and five for the other Fed governors selected by the
president and approved by Congress. Then there is the president of the
New York Fed and a rotating cast of four of the 11 other regional
Federal Reserves. Regional fed presidents are appointed, in large part,
by representatives of the banking industry who want to keep inflation low to preserve the value of the debt it holds. True to form, many of the mostreactionary voices on the OPM are regional Fed presidents. (My take: It's like putting the fox in charge of the hen house.)
Barney Frank is working on legislation to
remove the regional Fed presidents from the OPM and replace them with
presidential appointees who would be more democratically accountable.
Part of the reason the Fed has been so subdued in its pursuit of
monetary stimulus is that the right has been so fierce in fighting
against it. (Remember when Rick Perry called Bernanke’s policies “almost treasonous”?)
It is long past time that the left started taking an interest in the
Federal Reserve and pushing for monetary stimulus to ease unemployment
and the debt burden. Ignore the siren song of Ron Paul and other “End
the Fed” types. Occupy Wall Street should fight to ensure that the
Federal Reserve works for the many, not the few.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
After I posted this RonW commented on the ownership of the Federal Reserve. This information took me to Fact Check on the Federal Reserve and this is what I found:
Federal Reserve Board: As the nation’s central bank,
the Federal Reserve derives its authority from the U.S. Congress. It is
considered an independent central bank because its decisions do not
have to be ratified by the President or anyone else in the executive or
legislative branch of government, it does not receive funding
appropriated by Congress, and the terms of the members of the Board of
Governors span multiple presidential and congressional terms. However,
the Federal Reserve is subject to oversight by Congress, which
periodically reviews its activities and can alter its responsibilities
by statute. Also, the Federal Reserve must work within the framework of
the overall objectives of economic and financial policy established by
the government. Therefore, the Federal Reserve can be more accurately
described as "independent within the government."
The twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks, which were established by
Congress as the operating arms of the nation’s central banking system,
are organized much like private corporations–possibly leading to some
confusion about "ownership." For example, the Reserve Banks issue shares
of stock to member banks. However, owning Reserve Bank stock is quite
different from owning stock in a private company. The Reserve Banks are
not operated for profit, and ownership of a certain amount of stock is,
by law, a condition of membership in the System. The stock may not be
sold, traded, or pledged as security for a loan; dividends are, by law, 6
percent per year.
Listen to Representative DeFazio. It's short and worth your time.