Offprint
of the Michael Journal
THE
MONEY MYTH EXPLODED
The Financial Enigma Resolved
A debt-money system
4. A
serious inconvenience
Our men often got together to talk about their affairs.

Under the simple economic system which had been developed, one
thing was beginning to bother them more and more; they had no
form of money. Barter, the direct exchange of goods for goods,
had its drawbacks. The products to be exchanged were not always
at hand when a trade was discussed. For example, wood delivered
to the farmer in winter could not be paid for in potatoes until
six months later.
Sometimes one man might have an article of considerable size
which he wished to exchange for a number of smaller articles
produced by different men at different times.
All of this complicated business, and it laid a heavy burden
on the memory. With a monetary system, however, each one could
sell his products to the others for money. With this money,
he could buy from the others the things he wanted, when he wished,
and when they were available.
It was agreed that a system of money would indeed be very convenient.
But none of them knew how to set up such a system. They knew
how to produce true wealth - goods. But how to produce money,
the symbol of this wealth, was something quite beyond them.
They were ignorant of the origin of money, and needing it, they
didn't know how to produce it. Certainly, many men of education
would have been in the same boat; all our governments were in
that predicament during the ten years prior to the war. The
only thing that the country lacked at that time was money, and
the governments apparently didn't know what to do to get it.
5. Arrival of a refugee
One evening, when our boys were sitting on the beach going over
their problem for the hundredth time, they suddenly saw approaching
a small boat with a solitary man at the oars.
They learned that he was the only survivor of a wreck. His name:
Oliver.

Delighted
to have a new companion, they provided him with the best that
they had, and they took him on an inspection tour of the colony.
"Even though we're lost and cut off from the rest of the
world," they told him, "we haven't too much to complain
about. The earth and the forest are good to us. We lack only
one thing - money. That would make it easier for us to exchange
our products."
"Well you can thank Providence," replied Oliver, "because
I am a banker, and in no time at all, I'll set up a system of
money guaranteed to satisfy you. Then you'll have everything
that people in civilization have."
A banker!... A BANKER!... An angel coming down out of the clouds
couldn't have inspired more reverence and respect in our men.
For, after all, are we not accustomed, we people in civilization,
to genuflect before bankers, those men who control the lifeblood
of finance?
6. Civilization's god
"Mr. Oliver, as our banker, your only occupation on this
island will be to look after our money; no manual labour."
"I shall, like every other banker, carry out to complete
satisfaction my task of forging the community's prosperity."
"Mr. Oliver, we're going to build you a house that will
be in keeping with your dignity as a banker. But in the meantime,
do you mind if we lodge you in the building that we use for
our get-togethers?"
"That will suit me, my friends. But first of all, unload
the boat. There's paper and a printing press, complete with
ink and type, and there's a little barrel which I exhort you
to treat with the greatest care."
They unloaded everything. The small barrel aroused intense curiosity
in our good fellows.
"This barrel," Oliver announced, "contains a
treasure beyond dreams. It is full of... gold!" Full of
gold!

The
five all but swooned. The god of civilization here on Salvation
Island! The yellow god, always hidden, yet terrible in its power,
whose presence or absence or slightest caprice could decide
the very fate of all the civilized nations!
"Gold! Mr. Oliver, you are indeed a great banker!"
"Oh august majesty! Oh honorable Oliver! Great high priest
of the god, gold! Accept our humble homage, and receive our
oaths of fidelity!"
"Yes, my friends, gold enough for a continent. But gold
is not for circulation. Gold must be hidden. Gold is the soul
of healthy money, and the soul is always invisible. But I'll
explain all that when you receive your first supply of money."
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