A Little History

I’ve been reading and learning about economics on the internet now for at least 10 years. Mish Shedlock, Steve Keen, others. Then I discovered Social Credit and I learned a great deal from a group of man on a Google group dedicated to keeping Social Credit alive and its policy framework that is necessary to bracket, encompass and interpenetrate the economy and thus control it. I owe a great debt to these individuals and to C. H. Douglas for their penetrating understanding of the modern economy’s actual problems and the philosophy behind its correction.  Compared to all of the other knowledge about the economy Social Credit is a gem, a clarifying insight that places all other theorist’s “insights” in the category of erudite duncery. And yet I sensed there was more to be derived from those insights. In my contemplation of the concept behind Social Credit, grace, I gained additional insights into its character and nature that would further strengthen and extend its dual policies. Several seminal personal experiences and my studies of certain wisdom traditions and philosophies also aided my insights into the extensions of Social Credit policies.

As time has gone by I’ve realized just how bereft of deep and genuine insight even the smartest and most iconoclastic of economists actually possess, and how blinded by orthodoxy even the best of reformers also are. I feel incredibly blessed to have discovered Social Credit and its policies and philosophy, and I intend to discover even better and deeper ways to make its policies more effective and freeing for both the individual and the system.

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