Logo Background RSS

Should we work for love or money

  • Post to MySpace!

    Over the last five years I have had more than just a few challenge the idea that giving is a higher frequency of living than selling. I can certainly understand that idea as I was convinced of it also for the better part of my adult life. As I have said before in business we lived by the motto, “you will never be free until you are financially free”. This kind of thinking always seemed to put the cart in front of the horse since it started with the success formula that we taught which was define the dream, plan your work, and work your plan etc. What made this thinking backwards was it started with what I wanted and then went to what I had to do then to get it. In the commercial world you have to find something that you can get everyone to buy or first tell them why they cannot live without it and then proceed to give examples of people that have gone without and what happened to them. The initiative is based on the fear of not having what you need or the fear of going without, or the fear of not being part of the “in” group. While this formula does work it is also based on giving the illusion of scarcity which of course adds perceived value to it by creating our old nemesis, fear.

    One of my friends and our wives were driving from Seattle recently and he and I were talking about different things we had done in life, mostly our business ventures and how well they did or did not do. One comment he made to me over and over again was I tried this kind of a business or I tried that kind of business and let it go because there was no money in it. One of the businesses he was referring to was farming in Florida years ago. I said to him that I did not think that is what he meant to say but rather while there was money in it but little to no profit. So I asked him, “I thought the goal of farming was to grow food”. He laughed and said, “well that might be true but if there was no profit in it then he was not interested in doing it”.

    Right now, even not using hidden Illuminati technology, we have the ability to go to Mars. Anyone one of us could go but most of us are not able because of the money it would take to get there. How silly, to be able but can’t because of money which of course their could never be enough of since everyone usually does as little as possible not to get fired and most pay everyone as little as possible so you won’t quit. That kind of thinking will always cause a lack of money which in turn means their will always be a lack of everything on the planet so most will never do all the things they would love to do. The truth is the only lack we have on the planet is love because fear is too great. Where there is love there is abundance, where there is fear there is great lack.

    As long as other people want money in exchange for their products, services, or things then money will stay in the equation on this planet. Or in other words as long as the fear of going without is at large then money will be needed to keep score. This is fine and there is nothing inherently wrong with that other than it causes a few problems for anyone in that mode. The first one is that it simple does not diminish the fear which causes the need for it and the second thing it tends to drive people away from their true gifts or talents and moves them towards the things that pay well in the market place. This also leads to paying for educations that don’t necessarily promote or enhance our true talents.

    On the other hand for everyone that is ready to make the change and move into listening to their higher self, guides, or spirit the benefits are immeasurable as everyone will be provided for in keeping with their life plan and their needs. The whole idea of working to eat is just foreign to higher frequency beings as they have long departed from that. When we realize that we will be taken care of it just opens so many very exciting vistas in our imagination. Our imagination can then be used to create things in keeping with our true calling or our true gifts. It also gives us time to enjoy life and being able to enjoy the greater good of serving others to meet their needs. When you just have time to think, imagine, and meditate we move into realms that being concerned with money never gives us the space or time to do. Moving into the higher realms makes money and the desire for a lot of it go down to a very low level until we see the day when our frequency is so high that the desire/need for it is completely gone.

    The dark cabal really depends on us not to move into the higher frequencies since the only thing they control, as least for a short time longer, is the commercial world of trade, exchange, and money. When we move away from putting any importance on it then their grip is broken in our lives. All of their news stories, advertising, and education is based on keep fear alive and well so many won’t try to make the shift away from their illusionary thinking.

    With the advent of a new age opening up to all of us along with our planet going into a corresponding frequency increase we are poised to make huge shifts in our consciousness and our perceptions of how life truly is to be lived and enjoyed. All anyone needs is the assurance that they will be all right and the fears that have been sold to everyone just will not come true. It is truly a glorious time to step out in trust and take the next steps forward to the lives we have all dreamed, hoped, and imagined could be. In a word our higher friends have surrounded us with love and have done a fine job of curtailing the deeds of the dark ones. This gives us a clear path to move up and on like we have never had in millenia.

    So it just all goes back to the question, should we work to meet a another’s need or to make money or in other words do we do it for the love or money. I can say in my experience working for the love has been a bright joy of light and has just changed every aspect of my life for the better. Others may say that being able to travel to a new resort or get the latest 72 inch high def TV is the good life but in my eyes while I used to think that way I don’t see it the same now. For those that have been excited about this and have given much thought and have felt led to do so consider taking steps that way. You have a new and exciting adventure waiting for you that will amaze, excite, and show you things that eyes have not seen, ears have not heard, and the mind has only imagined when you are ready.

    Let there be a new peace of love, respect, and giving on earth and it starts with those ready to start.

    Nicholas Grachanin

    www.facebook.com/nfgrachanin3

  1. #1 Stick
    November 10, 2010 pm30 3:04 pm

    —————Time for a New Theory of Money——————-

    *By understanding that money is simply credit,
    we unleash it as a powerful tool for our communities*

    by Ellen Brown: The reason our financial system has routinely gotten into trouble, with periodic waves of depression like the one we’re battling now, may be due to a flawed perception not just of the roles of banking and credit but of the nature of money itself. In our economic adolescence, we have regarded money as a “thing”—something independent of the relationship it facilitates. But today there is no gold or silver backing our money. Instead, it’s created by banks when they make loans (that includes Federal Reserve Notes or dollar bills, which are created by the Federal Reserve, a privately-owned banking corporation, and lent into the economy). Virtually all money today originates as credit, or debt, which is simply a legal agreement to pay in the future.

    ~Money as Relationship

    In an illuminating dissertation called “Toward a General Theory of Credit and Money” in The Review of Austrian Economics, Mostafa Moini, Professor of Economics at Oklahoma City University, argues that money has never actually been a “commodity” or “thing.” It has always been merely a “relation,” a legal agreement, a credit/debit arrangement, an acknowledgment of a debt owed and a promise to repay.

    The concept of money-as-a-commodity can be traced back to the use of precious metal coins. Gold is widely claimed to be the oldest and most stable currency known, but this is not actually true. Money did not begin with gold coins and evolve into a sophisticated accounting system. It began as an accounting system and evolved into the use of precious metal coins. Money as a “unit of account” (a tally of sums paid and owed) predated money as a “store of value” (a commodity or thing) by two millennia; the Sumerian and Egyptian civilizations using these accounting-entry payment systems lasted not just hundreds of years (as with some civilizations using gold) but thousands of years. Their bank-like ancient payment systems were public systems—operated by the government the way that courts, libraries, and post offices are operated as public services today.

    In the payment system of ancient Sumeria, goods were given a value in terms of weight and were measured in these units against each other. The unit of weight was the “shekel,” something that was not originally a coin but a standardized measure. She was the word for barley, suggesting the original unit of measure was a weight of grain. This was valued against other commodities by weight: So many shekels of wheat equaled so many cows equaled so many shekels of silver, etc. Prices of major commodities were fixed by the government; Hammurabi, Babylonian king and lawmaker, has detailed tables of these. Interest was also fixed and invariable, making economic life very predictable.

    Grain was stored in granaries, which served as a form of “bank.” But grain was perishable, so silver eventually became the standard tally representing sums owed. A farmer could go to market and exchange his perishable goods for a weight of silver, and come back at his leisure to redeem this market credit in other goods as needed. But it was still simply a tally of a debt owed and a right to make good on it later. Eventually, silver tallies became wooden tallies became paper tallies became electronic tallies.

    ~The Credit Revolution

    The problem with gold coins was that they could not expand to meet the needs of trade. The revolutionary advance of medieval bankers was that they succeeded in creating a flexible money supply, one that could keep pace with a vigorously expanding mercantile trade. They did this through the use of credit, something they created by allowing overdrafts in the accounts of their depositors. Under what came to be called “fractional reserve” banking, the bankers would issue paper receipts called banknotes for more gold than they actually had. Their shipping clients would sail away with their wares and return with silver or gold, settling accounts and allowing the bankers’ books to balance. The credit thus created was in high demand in the rapidly expanding economy; but because it was based on the presumption that money was a “thing” (gold), the bankers had to engage in a shell game that periodically got them into trouble. They were gambling that their customers would not all come for their gold at the same time; but when they miscalculated, or when people got suspicious for some reason, there would be a run on the banks, the financial system would collapse, and the economy would sink into depression.

    Today, paper money is no longer redeemable in gold, but money is still perceived as a “thing” that has to “be there” before credit can be advanced. Banks still engage in money creation by advancing bank credit, which becomes a deposit in the borrower’s account, which becomes checkbook money. In order for their outgoing checks to clear, however, the banks have to borrow from a pool of money deposited by their customers. If they don’t have enough deposits, they have to borrow from the money market or other banks.

    As British author Ann Pettifor observes: “the banking system… has failed in its primary purpose: to act as a machine for lending into the real economy. Instead the banking system has been turned on its head, and become a borrowing machine.”

    The banks suck up cheap money and return it as more expensive money, if they return it at all. The banks control the money spigots and can deny credit to small players, who wind up defaulting on their loans, allowing the big players with access to cheap credit to buy up the underlying assets very cheaply.

    That’s one systemic flaw in the current scheme. Another is that the borrowed money backing the bank’s loans usually comes from shorter-term loans. Like Jimmy Stewart’s beleaguered savings and loan in It’s a Wonderful Life, the banks are “borrowing short to lend long,” and if the money market suddenly dries up, the banks will be in trouble. That is what happened in September 2008: According to Rep. Paul Kanjorski, speaking on C-Span in February 2009, there was a $550 billion run on the money markets.

    Securitization: “Monetizing” Loans Not with Gold But with Homes
    The money markets are part of the “shadow banking system,” where large institutional investors park their funds. The shadow banking system allows banks to get around the capital and reserve requirements now imposed on depository institutions by moving loans off their books.

    Large institutional investors use the shadow banking system because the conventional banking system guarantees deposits only up to $250,000, and large institutional investors have much more than that to move around on a daily basis. The money market is very liquid, and what protects it in place of FDIC insurance is that it is “securitized,” or backed by securities of some sort. Often, the collateral consists of mortgage-backed securities (MBS), the securitized units into which American real estate has been sliced and packaged, sausage-fashion.

    Like with the gold that was lent many times over in the 17th century, the same home may be pledged as “security” for several different investor groups at the same time. This is all done behind an electronic curtain called MERS (an acronym for Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.), which has allowed houses to be shuffled around among multiple, rapidly changing owners while circumventing local recording laws.

    As in the 17th century, however, the scheme has run into trouble when more than one investor group has tried to foreclose at the same time. And the securitization model has now crashed against the hard rock of hundreds of years of state real estate law, which has certain requirements that the banks have not met—and cannot meet, if they are to comply with the tax laws for mortgage-backed securities. (For more on this, see here.)

    The bankers have engaged in what amounts to a massive fraud, not necessarily because they started out with criminal intent (although that cannot be ruled out), but because they have been required to in order to come up with the commodities (in this case real estate) to back their loans. It is the way our system is set up: The banks are not really creating credit and advancing it to us, counting on our future productivity to pay it off, the way they once did under the deceptive but functional façade of fractional reserve lending. Instead, they are vacuuming up our money and lending it back to us at higher rates. In the shadow banking system, they are sucking up our real estate and lending it back to our pension funds and mutual funds at compound interest. The result is a mathematically impossible pyramid scheme, which is inherently prone to systemic failure.

    ~The Public Credit Solution

    The flaws in the current scheme are now being exposed in the major media, and it may well be coming down. The question then is what to replace it with. What is the next logical phase in our economic evolution?

    Credit needs to come first. We as a community can create our own credit, without having to engage in the sort of impossible pyramid scheme in which we’re always borrowing from Peter to pay Paul at compound interest. We can avoid the pitfalls of privately-issued credit with a public credit system, a system banking on the future productivity of its members, guaranteed not by “things” shuffled around furtively in a shell game vulnerable to exposure, but by the community itself.

    The simplest public credit model is the electronic community currency system. Consider, for example, one called “Friendly Favors.” The participating Internet community does not have to begin with a fund of capital or reserves, as is now required of private banking institutions. Nor do members borrow from a pool of pre-existing money on which they pay interest to the pool’s owners. They create their own credit, simply by debiting their own accounts and crediting someone else’s. If Jane bakes cookies for Sue, Sue credits Jane’s account with 5 “favors” and debits her own with 5. They have “created” money in the same way that banks do, but the result is not inflationary. Jane’s plus-5 is balanced against Sue’s minus-5, and when Sue pays her debt by doing something for someone else, it all nets out. It is a zero-sum game.

    Community currency systems can be very functional on a small scale, but because they do not trade in the national currency, they tend to be too limited for large-scale businesses and projects. If they were to grow substantially larger, they could run up against the sort of exchange rate problems afflicting small countries. They are basically barter systems, not really designed for advancing credit on a major scale.

    The functional equivalent of a community currency system can be achieved using the national currency, by forming a publicly owned bank. By turning banking into a public utility operated for the benefit of the community, the virtues of the expandable credit system of the medieval bankers can be retained, while avoiding the parasitic exploitation to which private banking schemes are prone. Profits generated by the community can be returned to the community.

    A public bank that generates credit in the national currency could be established by a community or group of any size, but as long as we have capital and reserve requirements and other stringent banking laws, a state is the most feasible option. It can easily meet those requirements without jeopardizing the solvency of its collective owners.

    For capital, a state bank could use some of the money stashed in a variety of public funds. This money need not be spent. It can just be shifted from the Wall Street investments where it is parked now into the state’s own bank. There is precedent establishing that a state-owned bank can be both a very sound and a very lucrative investment. The Bank of North Dakota, currently the nation’s only state-owned bank, is rated AA and recently returned a 26 percent profit to the state. A decentralized movement has been growing in the United States to explore and implement this option. [For more information, see public-banking.com.]

    We have emerged from the financial crisis with new clarity: Money today is simply credit. When the credit is advanced by a bank, when the bank is owned by the community, and when the profits return to the community, the result can be a functional, efficient, and sustainable system of finance.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xl6NfQyNLto
    ~EscapeTheIllusion333————– Yin Yang

    Post ReplyPost Reply
1