Sign up now for a
Free Email Account &
your own Online
Writing Portfolio!
Username:
Password:  
Sponsored Items

Click Here To Bid  

Read a Newbie
Badges
Congratulations
Presented To:
Monty

Testimonials
Tell a Friend
Know someone who'd
like this page?

Email Address:

Optional Comment:

Who's Online?
Members: 529    
Guests: 1997    

   
Total Online Now: 2526    
Writing.Com Time

Wednesday
May 30, 2012
5:26pm EDT


  >> Static Item >> Article >> Political >> ID #1778213  |   Show DetailsPrinter Friendly Page Tell A Friend
The Federal Reserve And The Constitution
A study of how the Federal Reserve contributes to homelessness by maneuvering the economy.
Rated:
E
by
Avg Rating: (1)
In a speech supposedly made to Columbia University on Nov. 12, 1963, ten days before 
his assassination, President John Fitzgerald Kennedy is quoted as saying: “The high office
 of the President has been used to foment a plot to destroy the American's
 freedom and before I leave office, I must inform the citizen of this
 plight.’”

Though no evidence exists that this speech ever happened, JFK did make it clear he was against secret societies and the Federal Reserve is certainly a secretive group.

G. Edward Griffin in The Creature From Jekyll Island outlines the creation, strategies and evolution of the Federal Reserve:
“The secret meeting on Jekyll Island in Georgia at which the Federal Reserve was conceived; the birth of a banking cartel to protect its members from competition; the strategy of how to convince Congress and the public that this cartel was an agency of the United States government.--...were seven men who represented an estimated one-fourth of the total wealth of the entire world.
1. Nelson W. Aldrich, Republican ‘whip’ in the Senate, Chairman of the National Monetary Commission, business associate of J.P. Morgan, father-in-law to John D. Rockefeller, Jr. [Aldrich had led the members of the Commission on a two-year tour of Europe, spending some three hundred thousand dollars of public money. He had not yet made a report on the results of this trip, nor had he offered any plan for banking reform.];
2. Abraham Piatt Andrew, Assistant Secretary of the United States Treasury;
3. Frank A. Vanderlip, president of the National City Bank of New York, the most powerful of the banks at that time, representing William Rockefeller and the international investment banking house of Kuhn, Loeb & Company;
4. Henry P. Davison, senior partner of the J.P Morgan Company;
5. Charles D. Norton, president of J.P. Morgan's First National Bank of New York;
6. Benjamin Strong, head of J.P. Morgan's Bankers Trust Company; and
7. Paul M. Warburg, a partner in Kuhn, Loeb & Company, a representative of the Rothschild banking dynasty in England and France, and brother to Max Warburg who was head of the Warburg banking consortium in Germany and the Netherlands.”

The Jekyll Island meeting was so secret last names were forbidden and new servants who did not know the group were brought in. The official biography of Senator Nelson Aldrich states:
"In the autumn of 1910, six men went out to shoot ducks, Aldrich, his secretary Shelton, Andrews, Davison, Vanderlip and Warburg. Reporters were waiting at the Brunswick (Georgia) station. Mr. Davison went out and talked to them. The reporters dispersed and the secret of the strange journey was not divulged. Mr. Aldrich asked him how he had managed it and he did not volunteer the information.” 

After nine days of plotting and planning, the Federal Reserve System was born – “a legal private monopoly of the money supply operated for the benefit of the few under the guise of protecting and promoting the public interest.—“

The first draft of the Federal Reserve Act presented to Congress was called the Aldrich Bill named after the sponsor, Senator Nelson Aldrich and was not passed. It was later introduced as the Glass-Owen bill after rearranging paragraphs and adding a few provisions people would better accept. December 22, 1913, Congress passed the bill and activated the Federal Reserve System. The Federal Reserve Act has been amended over 100 times since and the added provisions were all removed as well as new ones added to greatly expand the power and reach of the Federal Reserve System.

The signing of the Federal Reserve Act by Woodrow Wilson represented the day the Constitution ceased to be the governing covenant of the American people, and our liberties were handed over to a small group of international bankers.

Benjamin Strong, president of the Bankers Trust (J.P. Morgan) was selected as the first Governor of the New York Federal Reserve Bank.  Under him, the Reserve System was brought into interlocking relations with the Bank of England and the Bank of France. Strong held his position as Governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York until his sudden death in 1928. His death came during a Congressional investigation of the secret meetings between Reserve Governors and heads of European central banks that brought on the Great Depression of 1929-31.

“The Federal Reserve Bank, a.k.a Federal Reserve System, is a Private
 Corporation. Black's Law Dictionary defines the ‘Federal Reserve System’ as: 
’Network of twelve central banks to which most national banks belong and to
which state chartered banks may belong. Membership rules require investment
 of stock and minimum reserves.’
 Privately-owned banks own the stock of the FED.” 

“Each Federal Reserve Bank is a separate corporation owned by commercial
 banks in its region. The stock-holding commercial banks elect two thirds of
 each Bank's nine member board of directors.’
The Federal Reserve Banks are locally controlled by their member banks. 
Once again, according to Black's Law Dictionary, we find that these
 privately owned banks actually issue money:
 ‘Federal Reserve Act. Law which created Federal Reserve banks which act
 as agents in maintaining money reserves, issuing money in the form of bank
notes, lending money to banks, and supervising banks. Administered by
 Federal Reserve Board (q.v.).”


A board of directors chosen, directly or indirectly, by the association banks represents the government. The President of the United States appoints the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. The Federal Advisory Council (chosen by the directors of the 12 banks) controls the work of the Board of Governors. Identity of Council members remains unknown to the public.  This had proven to be an ideal instrument for the purposes of the Federal Reserve and the Council has performed in almost complete anonymity until recent years..

Morgan-Kuhn, Loeb alliance purchased the dominant control of stock in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, with almost half of the shares owned by the five New York banks under their control, First National Bank, National City Bank, National Bank of Commerce, Chase National Bank and Hanover National Bank. The alliance dominated the initial composition of the Federal Reserve System. They persuaded President Woodrow Wilson to appoint one of the Jekyll Island group, Paul Warburg, to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.
Each of the twelve Federal Reserve Banks elects a member of the Federal Advisory Council, that would meet with the Federal Reserve Board of Governors four times a year in Washington, in order to advise the Board on future monetary policy. These small banks of the twelve Federal Reserve districts exist only as satellites of the big New York financial interests, and are completely at their mercy. The Morgan-Kuhn, Loeb interests boldly selected the members of the Federal Advisory Council from their correspondent banks and from banks in which they owned stock.

J.B. Forgan president of First National Bank of Chicago, was elected as the first president of the Council. Rand McNally Bankers Directory for 1914 lists the principal correspondents of the First National Bank of Chicago as the First National Bank of New York. Some members of the Federal Advisory Council included Daniel S. Wing, president of the First National Bank of Boston, W.S. Rowe, president of the First National Bank of Cincinnati, and C.T. Jaffray, president of the First National Bank of Minneapolis  - all correspondents of the five New York banks that controlled the money market. E.F. Swinney, president of the First National Bank of Kansas City was another member of the initial Federal Advisory Council. Archibald Kains represented the San Francisco district. Levi L. Rue, represented the Philadelphia district. J.P. Morgan maintained correspondent relationships with many small banks all over the country and was one of the 12 Council members as representative of the New York Federal Reserve.

Alexander Hamilton, at the behest of European bankers, formed the first Bank of the United States.  More than a century later, the foreign influences behind this bank were able to get the Federal Reserve Act through Congress. Known as the London Connection, these European bankers became the arbiter of policy of the United States. Though the original European bankers are no longer alive, their heirs and protégées still direct the finances of our country.          

Perhaps because of the Freedom of Information Act, the Advisory Board is not so anonymous now. http://www.federalreserve.gov/aboutthefed/fac.htm lists the following as current members:

Joseph L. Hooley, First District - Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer State Street Corporation. State Street is listed among the top 50 largest banks / bank holding companies in the United States as of March 31, 2011 according to http://www.ffiec.gov/nicpubweb/nicweb/Top50Form.aspx

Robert P. Kelly, Second District - Robert (Bob) Kelly is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of BNY Mellon, a global financial services growth company operating in 36 countries and serving institutions and high-net-worth individuals in more than 100 markets worldwide. Mr. Kelly was born and raised in Nova Scotia and educated in London. He served as chairman, president and chief executive officer of Mellon Financial Corporation until its merger with The Bank of New York Company, Inc.

Bharat B. Masrani, Third District - Chief Executive Officer of TD Banknorth Inc. (a/k/a, TD Bank, N.A.), since March 1, 2007 and its President since January 1, 2007. Mr. Masrani serves as the Chief Executive Officer and President of Commerce Bank, National Association; as the Chief Executive Officer and President of TD Bank and as Group Head of U S Personal and Commercial Banking at Toronto-Dominion Bank; Executive Vice President of Risk Management Officer of Toronto Office of TD Mortgage Investment Corp. He served as Vice Chairman and Chief Risk Officer of TD Bank Financial Group, a holding company of Td Banknorth Inc. Prior to that, he served as an Executive Vice President, Risk Management of The Toronto-Dominion Bank, and as Executive Vice President of The Toronto-Dominion Bank and Vice Chair, Credit Asset Management of TD Securities. Prior to that he served as Executive Vice President of The Toronto-Dominion Bank and President and Chief Executive Officer of e.Bank and TD Waterhouse International, Senior Vice President of The Toronto-Dominion Bank and President and Chief Executive Officer of TD Waterhouse International, Vice Chair, President and Chief Executive Officer of TD Waterhouse Europe and Senior Vice President of The Toronto-Dominion Bank. Mr. Masrani serves as Vice Chairman of TD Waterhouse Group Inc., and TD Ameritrade. He has been Vice Chairman of Toronto-dominion Bank. He has been Member of Advisory Council of Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Inc. since 2011. Mr. Masrani has been a Director of Td Banknorth Inc. He served as Director of The Risk Management Association. He began his banking career with TD Bank Group.

James E. Rohr, Fourth District - chairman and chief executive officer of The PNC Financial Services Group and is a director of BlackRock, Inc., Allegheny Technologies Incorporated, EQT Corporation, Inc., RAND Board of Trustees and the International Monetary Conference. He is chairman of The Financial Services Roundtable and a member of the Federal Advisory Council of the Federal Reserve System. He is a past chairman of the Pennsylvania Business Roundtable, former director of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland.

Richard D. Fairbank, Fifth District - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer of Capital One Financial Corporation. Mr. Fairbank also serves as Chairman of Capital One Bank (USA), National Association and Capital One, National Association.. Mr. Fairbank was appointed as the Fifth Federal Reserve District’s representative on the Federal Advisory Council, effective January 1, 2010.

Daryl G. Byrd, Sixth District - President and Chief Executive Officer of IBERIABANK Corporation, IBERIABANK and IBERIABANK fsb. He serves on the boards of directors for all three entities and is an officer and/or director for multiple subsidiaries.

David W. Nelms, Seventh District - Director since 1998 and Chairman since 2009 of Discover Financial Services, served as chief executive officer, president and chief operating officer. He was also Chairman until the spin-off from Morgan Stanley. Prior to joining Discover, Mr. Nelms worked at MBNA America Bank.


[D.} Bryan Jordan, Eighth District- President and Chief Executive Officer and a director of First Horizon National Corporation and First Horizon Bank. Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer at Regions Financial Corporation and its subsidiary Regions Bank. He held various finance and accounting related positions at Wachovia Corporation.

Richard K. Davis, Ninth District - chairman, president and chief executive officer of U.S. Bancorp, the parent company of U.S. Bank. He is a member of the Financial Services Roundtable, the Financial Services Forum and the International Monetary Conference (IMC), and is the representative for the Ninth District of the Federal Reserve serving on its Financial Advisory Committee.

Stanley A. Lybarger, Tenth District - President and Chief Executive Officer of Bank Of Oklahoma, National Association: also serves as President and Chief Executive Officer of BOK Financial Corp., BOK. He served as the President and Chief Executive Officer of Bank Of Kansas City, National Association. He served as President of BOk Oklahoma City Regional Office and Executive Vice President of BOk with responsibility for corporate banking and serves as Director of Bank of Texas N A and Bank Of Oklahoma, National Association. He served as a Director of Bank Of Kansas City, National Association.

Richard W. Evans, Jr., Eleventh District - CEO of Cullen/Frost Bankers

Russell Goldsmith, Twelfth District - chairman and chief executive officer of City National Bank and also serves as president and chief executive officer of its publicly held parent company, City National Corporation.

James E. Annable, Secretary - Previously, Dr. Annable served as Economic Advisor to the Chief Executive Officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co. Prior to his retirement in June 2001, Dr. Annable served as Senior Vice President and Director of Economics for Bank One Corporation.

So how does the Federal Reserve work? The government gave its power to create money to the Federal Reserve banks -12 privately owned monopolies. The banks print money based on nothing of intrinsic value (unbacked paper, fiat money) then loan it to the government and charges interest on the loan. The government collects income tax (the 16th Amendment was passed the same year as the Federal Reserve Act) to pay the interest on artificially created debt and the people also pay a hidden tax called inflation. In other words, they write checks against money they print -  "paper issued against paper" , so that bookkeeping entries comprise the only values that change hands. By first causing inflation then raising the discount rate, the Federal Reserve System sets up depressions just as they did following World War I and again in 1929-31.   

The revelation of the Federal Reserve Board’s final decision to trigger the Crash of 1929 appeared in The New York Times on April 20, 1929.  This report describes a mystery meeting where resolutions to bring down the curtain on the greatest speculative boom in American history were adopted by the Federal Advisory Council.  The New York Federal Reserve Bank rate, which dictated the national interest rate, went to six percent on November 1, 1929. After the investors had been bankrupted, it dropped to one and one-half percent on May 8, 1931. “Thus we find that not only was the Federal Reserve System responsible for the First World War, which it made possible by enabling the United States to finance the Allies, but its policies brought on the world-wide depression of 1929-31,” Governor Adolph C. Miller stated at the Senate Investigation of the Federal Reserve Board in 1931.

Though he would later co-sponsor the Glass-Owen Bill that was really a mirror image of the Aldrich Bill, Carter Glass listed the following in his House Report in 1913:
“We object to the Aldrich Bill on the following points:
Its entire lack of adequate government or public control of the banking mechanism it sets up.
Its tendency to throw voting control into the hands of the large banks of the system.
The extreme danger of inflation of currency inherent in the system.
The insincerity of the bond-funding plan provided for by the measure, there being a barefaced pretense that this system was to cost the government nothing.
The dangerous monopolistic aspects of the bill.”

From the very beginning, the Federal Reserve System was based on manipulation, obfuscation and lies. In actual fact, the Federal Reserve System is not federal; it has no reserves; and is not a system. It is in direct opposition to Section 8, paragraph 5 of the Constitution and it destroys the systems of checks and balances of power set up by Thomas Jefferson in the Constitution.  In my estimation, The Federal Reserve is no better than a Ponzi Scheme and our government should immediately act on Executive Order 11110 signed by President John F. Kennedy on June 4, 1963.

Executive Order 11110

                       
AMENDMENT OF EXECUTIVE ORDER NO. 10289
                   
AS AMENDED, RELATING TO THE PERFORMANCE OF
 CERTAIN FUNCTIONS AFFECTING THE DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

By virtue of the authority vested in me by section 301 of title 3 of the
 United States Code, it is ordered as follows:

SECTION 1. Executive Order No. 10289 of September 19, 1951, as amended, is 
hereby further amended -
     
(a) By adding at the end of paragraph 1 thereof the following 
subparagraph (j):
      ‘(j) The authority vested in the President by paragraph (b) of section
 43 of the Act of May 12, 1933, as amended (31 U.S.C. 821 (b)), to issue
 silver certificates against any silver bullion, silver, or standard silver
 dollars in the Treasury not then held for redemption of any outstanding 
silver certificates, to prescribe the denominations of such silver
 certificates, and to coin standard silver dollars and subsidiary silver
 currency for their redemption,’ and

(b) By revoking subparagraphs (b) and (c) of paragraph 2 thereof.

SECTION 2. The amendment made by this Order shall not affect any act done, 
or any right accruing or accrued or any suit or proceeding had or commenced 
in any civil or criminal cause prior to the date of this Order but all such 
liabilities shall continue and may be enforced as if said amendments had not 
been made.

JOHN F. KENNEDY

THE WHITE HOUSE,

June 4, 1963


This Order was said to be revoked by Executive Order 12608 and U.S. Title Code 31 but I thoroughly searched both on the Library of Congress and Cornell University sites  and could find absolutely no mention of E.O. 11110. The
 Christian Common Law Institute has exhaustively researched this matter
 through the Federal Register and Library of Congress and can now safely
conclude that this Executive Order has never been repealed, amended, or
superseded by any subsequent Executive Order.

JFK’s Executive Order gives the U.S.A. the
 ability to, once again, create its own money backed by silver and real value worth something. The government would have the ability to repay its
 debt without going to the private Federal Reserve Banks and being charged 
interest to create new ‘money.’ This will help destroy the profits and control by the cartel calling itself the Federal Reserve Bank.

In November 1998, I was studying for my degree to become a Social Worker.  One of our assignments was to write an article on some aspect of the job we could expect to encounter. I chose the topic of homelessness since I had spent some time working with the homeless living in the Hammondville area of Pompano Beach, Florida. I updated and revised the article around 2007 and again with 2010 updates and revisions. The face of homelessness has drastically changed and alarmingly increased.

The Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance Act of 1987 defines a homeless person as "one who lacks a permanent nighttime residence or whose nighttime residence is a temporary shelter, welfare hotel, or any public or private place not designed as sleeping accommodations for human beings."  "The terms 'homeless' and 'homelessness' did not become common until the recession of 1981-82."  DiNitto (1995, 45-46) quotes Ellickson, "The term 'homeless' is now used to describe people in two quite different situations on a given night.  First, it applies to the street homeless - people who sleep in vehicles, parks, bus stations, and other places not designed as residences.  Second, it includes the sheltered homeless - those who obtain temporary housing either in shelters that local governments or charities operate, or in rooms that can be rented with emergency housing vouchers supplied by welfare agents."

The education subtitle of the McKinney-Vento Act includes a more comprehensive definition of homelessness. This statute states that the term ‘homeless child and youth’ (A) means individuals who lack a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence... and (B) includes: (i) children and youth who lack a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime residence, and includes children and youth who are sharing the housing of other persons due to loss of housing, economic hardship, or a similar reason; are living in motels, hotels, trailer parks, or camping grounds due to lack of alternative adequate accommodations; are living in emergency or transitional shelters; are abandoned in hospitals; or are awaiting foster care placement; (ii) children and youth who have a primary nighttime residence that is a private or public place not designed for or ordinarily used as a regular sleeping accommodation for human beings... (iii) children and youth who are living in cars, parks, public spaces, abandoned buildings, substandard housing, bus or train stations, or similar settings, and (iv) migratory children...who qualify as homeless for the purposes of this subtitle because the children are living in circumstances described in clauses (i) through (iii). 

Most literature and statistics of that day agree that a large portion of the homeless have either substance abuse problems or are mentally ill.  DiNitto iii says, "Two groups have comprised most of the homeless population.  One is alcoholics and drug addicts. …The second group is those with serious mental illness. Deinstitutionalization of people with mental health problems beginning in the 1970s, combined with the lack of community-based mental health services, adds to the number who live on the streets.  But today homelessness has a third face – [one and two-parent families] with young children.  Given high housing costs, unemployment, and low-paying jobs, some families no longer have a place to call home.  Spousal violence also contributes to the need to seek shelter, and some children are homeless because they have run away as a result of abuse, neglect, or other family problems.  Another group of homeless young people have been released from foster care on reaching adulthood without an appropriate transition to independent living." Families with children are among the fastest growing segments of the homeless population. 

The official national estimate of the homeless in 1997 was approximately 575,000 and this number was increasing in both urban and rural communities in this country. .  "Early estimates ranged from a low of about 250,000 in a 1984 study by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to suggestions of 3 million in a 1983 report published by the Community for Creative Non-Violence.  In an analysis of homelessness in America, social worker Joel Blau suggests that the best estimates come from the National Alliance to End Homelessness.  Using the HUD data, the alliance estimated that 735,000 people were homeless on a given day and that 1.3 to 2 million were homeless at some time during that year."  Others indicate that the best available estimate probably comes from the Urban Institute's 1987 study which arrived at a figure of between 500,000 to 600,000 during a week's time, with more homeless generally found in urban areas."  In 2004, the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty states that approximately 3.5 million people, 1.35 million of them children, are likely to experience homelessness in a given year. They found that, on a given night in October 1996, 444,000 people (in 346,000 households) experienced homelessness – which translates to 6.3% of the population of people living in poverty. On a given night in February 1996, 842,000 (in 637,000 households) experienced homelessness – which translates to almost 10% of the population of people living in poverty. Converting these estimates into an annual projection, the numbers that emerge are 2.3 million people (based on the October estimate) and 3.5 million people (based on the February estimate). This translates to approximately 1% of the U.S. population  experiencing homelessness each year, 38% (October) to 39% (February) of them being children (Urban Institute 2000).

"Children are often the hidden, silent homeless. Nonetheless they constitute the largest and fastest growing segment of the homeless population."ii In 2003, children under the age of 18 accounted for 39% of the homeless population; 42% of these children were under the age of five (National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty,
2004). For approximately one year, I worked with the First Christian Church of Margate's "The Lord's Homeless Mission" and our focus was the homeless in the Hammondville area of Pompano Beach.  My experience was that the children in that group are indeed the "hidden homeless".  For many weeks we were with these people every Sunday morning.  The majority of the forty or so who came for the food and clothing we distributed were males.  There were approximately six females but we saw no signs of children for several months. When the group felt more comfortable with us, they brought two children one Sunday.  Once we were aware that there were children involved, we began asking questions and finally learned that there were at least 11 children in this one group though we never saw more than five of them the entire time that I was there.

The average number of children per homeless family in 1992 was two, with an average age of three years.  In 1987, there was an average of one child with an average age of seven years.iv This again reflects a growth in the number of homeless children and a drop in the median age of those children.

“In 1987, the profile of a homeless family revealed ninety-two percent of heads of household was female with an average age of thirty-five years.  Sixty percent of the heads of household were single and forty percent were married.  Sixty-two percent were high school graduates with sixty percent having had some work experience.  Twenty-three percent had a history of substance abuse.  Thirty-two percent had a history of domestic violence and five percent had been in foster care as a child.”ii

In 1992, this profile had changed.  There were “ninety-seven percent female heads of household with an average age of twenty-two years.  Eighty-seven percent were single and only thirty-seven percent had a high school degree.  Past work experience dropped to forty percent while substance abuse rose to seventy-one percent and a history of domestic violence rose to forty-three percent.  Twenty percent had been in foster care as a child.  Almost forty-five percent had never lived in their own apartment.... the homeless family population was growing at a rate faster than that of the homeless single population."ii

In 2010, a four-hour survey of 646 homeless by the Homeless Issues Partnership in the Corpus Christi, Texas area was taken. The largest homeless increase is families, and young single people aging out of foster care or runaways escaping domestic abuse.

"The rate of poverty for the working poor is driving people into homelessness. "It's going to rise because poverty is rising," Linda McKamey, executive director of Catholic Charities said Those surveyed range from 17 to 85, and the majority were white and non-Hispanic single males, average age 46, with 72 percent having a high school education or more. Nearly half, 49.7 percent, reported mental illness or substance abuse. Their top two reasons for being on the streets: Unemployment and inability to pay rent. Other reasons given include having been incarcerated, having a disability or addiction and domestic violence in their families. Children were 17 percent of the count, mostly male. … About one third of those surveyed are currently employed yet can't afford a place to live.”

Media reports of a growing economy and low unemployment mask a number of important reasons why homelessness persists, and, in some areas of the country, is worsening. These reasons include stagnant or falling incomes and less secure jobs which offer fewer benefits.
While the last few years have seen growth in real wages at all levels, these increases have not been enough to counteract a long pattern of stagnant and declining wages. Low-wage workers have been particularly hard hit by wage trends and have been left behind as the disparity between rich and poor has mushroomed. To compound the problem, the real value of the minimum wage in 2004 was 26% less than in 1979 (The Economic Policy Institute, 2005). Although incomes appear to be rising, this growth is largely due to more hours worked – which in turn can be attributed to welfare reform and the tight labor markets. Factors contributing to wage declines include a steep drop in the number and bargaining power of unionized workers; erosion in the value of the minimum wage; a decline in manufacturing jobs and the corresponding expansion of lower-paying service-sector employment; globalization; and increased nonstandard work, such as temporary and part-time employment (Mishel, Bernstein, and Schmitt, 1999).

Each state, county, and city addresses the problem of homelessness on their own level.  One major federal legislation is the Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance Act of 1987 that provides money for emergency shelters, rehabilitation of single room occupancy dwellings, nutrition assistance, health and mental health care, job training, education for homeless children, and other social services for homeless people.iii

Most social work literature agrees that homelessness is mostly the result of lack of affordable housing, higher unemployment, and lack of education.  DiNitto states that, "Although there are different views of homelessness, perhaps there is more agreement that the United States has a serious shortage of affordable housing. The largest item in most household budgets is housing.  Whether in the form of the monthly rent or mortgage payment, housing consumes an increasing portion of the personal budget.  As far back as the Housing Act of 1949, Congress acknowledged the need for a 'decent home and a suitable living environment for every American family.'  After years of increasing rates of home ownership, it has become more difficult for many Americans to realize the 'American dream' - owning a home.  It is also increasingly difficult to pay the rent.  A 1992 study by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities found that many low-income households are paying half their income for rent and that in thirty-nine of forty-four metropolitan areas studied, housing exceeded the entire grant received by AFDC families."

Senator Gorton (R-WA) offered a floor amendment to the Senate version of Labor-HHS Education FY98 appropriations bill, S. 1061.  The Gorton amendment would eliminate the McKinney Education of Homeless Children and Youth by consolidating most K-12 education programs into a large block grant that would go directly to local education agencies with no requirements or restrictions on how funds are to be spent.  The House Labor-HHS Education FY98 Appropriations bill, H.R. 2264, does not contain such a provision so would support the McKinney Education of Homeless Children and Youth and would increase the program funding by $2,000,000.00.  Both bills provide $826,000,000.00 for the Consolidate Health Centers.  The House bill would increase funding to Projects of Assistance in Transition from Homelessness by  $3,000,000.00 while the Senate bill would increase it by only $2,000,000.00.  The Senate bill increases funding to the Homeless Veterans Reintegration Project by only $2,500,000.00 but the House bill would increase it by $5,000,000.00.  Neither bill would provide funding for the Adult Education for the Homeless Program nor incremental Section 8 vouchers.  Both bills provide $823,000,000.00 for HUD Homeless Assistance Programs and $100,000,000.00 for FEMA Emergency Food and Shelter Program. v This disagreement between House and Senate continues with every bill introduced every year no matter the subject or content. It is not what the people want or really need. It is, “I know what is best for the people and you don’t.”

"The bulk of the ... literature on homelessness fits into two categories, one focusing on the personal problems believed to characterize homeless individuals, and the other on structural conditions believed to increase homelessness. These different perspectives are typically associated with quite different social policies, one seeking to reform social services to better address the implicated pathologies, especially drug abuse or psychiatric impairment, the other focusing on restructuring the labor market, creating low-income housing, and remodeling welfare.  Although these perspectives are in many ways contradictory, they implicitly share an important but usually unaddressed issue: they assume that current policy is a consequence of functioning bureaucracies executing the logic and will of top policy makers and that future policy will reflect government priorities in the same way," Gerstel, et al.vii In my opinion, neither policy is correct. Until we take steps to regain our government and our economy by removing the Federal Reserve from our government and our pockets, we will continue to increase homelessness.

What does the Federal Reserve have to do with homelessness? Everything! The government relinquished its power to create money to the Federal Reserve banks -12 privately owned monopolies. The banks print money based on nothing of intrinsic value (unbacked paper, fiat money,) then loan it to the government and charges interest on the loan. In other words, they write checks against money they print -  "paper issued against paper" .
By first causing inflation then raising the discount rate, the Federal Reserve System sets up depressions just as they did following World War I and again in 1929-31. The revelation of the Federal Reserve Board’s final decision to trigger the Crash of 1929 appeared in The New York Times on April 20, 1929.  This report describes a mystery meeting where resolutions to bring down the curtain on the greatest speculative boom in American history were adopted by the Federal Advisory Council.  The New York Federal Reserve Bank rate, which dictated the national interest rate, went to six percent on November 1, 1929. After the investors had been bankrupted, it dropped to one and one-half percent on May 8, 1931. “Thus we find that not only was the Federal Reserve System responsible for the First World War, which it made possible by enabling the United States to finance the Allies, but its policies brought on the world-wide depression of 1929-31,” Governor Adolph C. Miller stated at the Senate Investigation of the Federal Reserve Board in 1931. From the very beginning, the Federal Reserve System was based on manipulation, obfuscation and lies. In actual fact, the Federal Reserve System is not federal; it has no reserves; and is not a system. It is in direct opposition to Section 8, paragraph 5 of the Constitution and it destroys the systems of checks and balances of power set up by Thomas Jefferson in the Constitution.

This manipulation of interest rates is responsible for the ease or difficulty of affording housing. It also dictates our dollar value based on the “loans” (remember, there is nothing in back of these loans except worthless paper) to our government and the interest rate set for those “loans”. The government then borrows more to cover the costs of providing for the homeless whose numbers keep increasing because there are fewer jobs and the dollars buys less and less.

"The complexities of how to effectively address the changing needs of homeless families set the stage for one of the most challenging public policy and service delivery issues….  One fact remains….  While shelters can provide a clean and safe environment for a homeless family, the shelter system should not simply be a way station until permanent housing is secured.  To truly address the needs of these [homeless], independent living skills, complete their education, and obtain job training before moving to permanent housing."iv

Given the demographic changes that have occurred over the last twelve years, what characteristics will homeless families have twelve years from now?  Will they differ significantly from today?  I believe they will continue increasing with more families unable to afford housing, food, medical and other basic necessities. I believe we will no longer have a middle class. There will be the wealthy class and the homeless unless the Federal Reserve is stopped.

Since homelessness is a combination of problems, will it take a combination of solutions?  Just providing shelter is a stopgap measure and does not offer a long-term solution to the different facets of the problem.  Innovative programs to assist not only in shelter but also in treatment for substance abuse, community-based counseling programs, educational enhancement, employment training, assistance with child care, and training in independent living skills such as parenting, domestic violence, "empowerment to overcome feelings of oppression and to develop personal and interpersonal self-awareness and development of skills for survival and social power,” Applewhite (1992) quoting Gutierrez, GlenMaye, & DeLois, 1995, house keeping and maintenance, and budgeting  "A lack of affordable housing may generate homelessness, but the failure to treat alcoholism, mental illness, drug addiction, physical disability or other problems among those who have become homeless causes these afflictions to worsen, reducing the possibility of simply rehousing them, Gerstel, et al.vii But we must first return to the old way of doing these things.

Help must come from non-government funding – churches, private agencies and community groups. The country’s budget must be balanced and all further borrowing must be eliminated. Our government has to take back its Constitutional right to print our money according to Executive Order 11110. 

         

Resources:

Nathaniel Wright Stephenson, Nelson W. Aldrich, A Leader in American Politics, Scribners, N.Y. 1930, Chap. XXIV "Jekyll Island"

The Creature From Jekyll Island, G. Edward Griffin, Reality Zone, 1998 4th edition, ISBN-13: 9780912986395, ISBN: 0912986395
                   
Lewis v. United States, Federal Reporter, 2nd Series,
Vol. 680, Pages 1239, 1241 (1982)
  SECRETS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE
(link:http://www.apfn.org/apfn/reserve.htm)

(link:http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/D?d097:1:./temp/~bd46zG:@@@L&summ2=m&)

(link:http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=59049#axzz1KGuNzFb4)

(link:http://www.archives.gov/federal-register/executive-orders/1987.html)

Gerstel, N, Bogard, C. J., McConnell, J. J., Schwartz, M. (1996).  “The Therapeutic Incarceration of Homeless Families”.  Social Service Review, December, 1996

McKinney-Vento Act sec. 725(2); 42 U.S.C. 11435(2) 1987.

U.S. Conference of Mayors, 2005

Applewhite, S.L. (1992).  “Homeless Veterans: Perspectives on Social Services Use”.  Social Work 42(1), December 1997.

Homes For The Homeless (1992, June). "The New Poverty: A Generation of Homeless Families" (link:http://www.opendoor.com/hfh/new_poverty.html)

DiNitto, D. M. (1995).  Social Welfare Politics and Public Policy (4th ed.).  Needham Heights, MA: Allyn and Bacon (87)          

Corpus Christi Caller-Times, May 7, 2011

SECRETS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE (link:http://www.apfn.org/apfn/reserve.htm)



© Copyright 2011 Wanda Gray (UN: scarletscribe at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
Wanda Gray has granted Writing.Com, its affiliates and syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.
Log In To Leave Feedback
Username:
Password:
Not a Member?
Signup right now, for free!

All accounts include:
*Bullet* FREE Email @Writing.Com!
*Bullet* FREE Portfolio Services!