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Robert Arnold Money Reform Activist in Britain |
Robert, you're the Chairman of the British Association of Monetary Reform, (BAMR) please tell us a little about yourself and how you became involved in money reform....
Born in 1935 in south London, the war years dominated
my childhood and it is likely that the seeds of an insatiable,
inquiring mind were sown. From a very early age, with bombs and
'doodlebugs' dropping all around, this was very much a 'kids
should be seen and not heard' period. Finding out the basic
'why' of so many non-optimum and confusing phenomenon (which
seemed to spin-off from war) became what I now recognise as a
life-long pursuit if not obsession. I would never be
'fobbed-off' with platitudes or answers which I considered
irrational. I initially went into engineering and, by nature,
that is still where my heart lies. But my predilection for
uncovering the 'whys' of so many non-optimum situations helped
me develop communication skills which I eventually put to use in
sales and marketing. And much of my working life was spent
selling electrical switch-gear to industry and then building
materials to construction companies.
Two horrendous tragedies in the family, the second of which got
me investigating first a psychiatrist, and then psychiatry as a
'profession'. I very soon found myself confronted with a very
big 'why'. Why does a 'profession' with such a grotesquely
negative success rate -- thousands dead or vegetablised per year
and none made well -- enjoy similar respect to the medical
profession?
I researched the whole evolution of psychiatry and discovered
that it is in fact all about social control. I discovered that
the Rockefeller Foundation played a key role in making
respectable this fraternity by setting up the World Federation
of Mental Health, and not for benevolent reasons. This was just
after WW2.
I very quickly found myself heading up a human rights
organisation for 'mental patients' specifically to expose
psychiatry for the charlatanry that it is. It was during this
time 1992-1997 that I got to know Dr Edward Hamlyn, who had
already been researching the money system for many years and was
already well aware of psychiatry's real purpose.
He would constantly urge me to get an understanding of the money
system as it 'underpinned psychiatry'. I eventually took the
good doctor's advice, and read his book Money or Your
Life and I began to see more of the big picture. I then
began reading everything I could get on the subject, and quickly
realised that virtually every social and global ill is either
created by, or exacerbated by, the present money system.
After becoming pretty 'au fait' with the subject, I set about
getting some colleagues interested who were not entirely
uninitiated and eventually we decided to set up
BAMR for the express purpose of disseminating what we
now know, to as wide a public as possible. Much time in that
first year was spent examining all the obstacles that prevented
the truth becoming common knowledge. Our prime focus today is
streamlining methods of breaking through those obstacles. BAMR's
contention is that without a groundswell of outrage from the
grassroots there ain't gonna be no monetary reform.
What is the BAMR approach to money reform?
The BAMR approach to monetary reform is
perhaps unique in that we approach it as an engineer would
approach a technical problem. That is: we have looked at what
is, and discovered that we have a horrendously unjust monetary
system. Then we look for the why and discover
that King William sold out the responsibility of creating and
issuing our currency 300 years ago, and since that time the banks
have slowly but surely gained control of the whole world.
Then we look for the why governments are not
repealing the Act of King William and restoring unto themselves
the right and duty to create and issue their nation's money....
We discover that governments, particularly of the 'Western
World' are unwilling to initiate any change in the system or
even discuss it. This presents another why?
BAMR members will not get embroiled in discussions
as to how the transition from bank created credit
to government created money (whatever shape and form this takes)
will be implemented, because such discussions pander to the
absurd notion that the why is lack of know-how,
and not lack of willthrough demand.
Unwillingness by politicians can only be reversed by a
demand from the electorate. So why is there no
demand from the electorate? There is no demand from the
electorate because they have no knowledge of how they and the
rest of the world are being defrauded by the banks....
And why have they no knowledge?
The electorate has no knowledge because no one is telling them,
and they are educated in the belief that the monetary system is
far too complex to be understood by anyone but the 'experts'.
This perceived complexity is the present system's greatest
protection against exposure.
BAMR is changing that. With our dissemination methods and
in language that the average person understands, the grossly
unjust monetary system, which underpins virtually all social and
global ills from 'inflation' to genocide, is now rapidly being
exposed for the gargantuan fraud that it is.
What does the BAMR aim to achieve?
To bring an end to monetary illiteracy by making the
word 'economics' socially acceptable by making it rational.
Highlighting the absurdity of antiquated and unrealistic
paradigms that outlived their dubious usefulness generations ago.
BAMR publishes booklets. What titles have appeared so far?
Thus far we have published six booklets :
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The Spoils of War in Yugoslavia
Frankenstein Foods
(includes Dismantling of UK, Farming
Third World Debt, Commercial Warfare)
Monetary Reform Not Monetary Union |
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Money Or Your Life
Monetary Reform Or Else Armageddon
Your Business Under Siege
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Soon to come is a booklet primarily focussing on
fuel prices and where the money (tax) goes, and Kieron
McFadden is currently working on The Prize, which will
be a conceptual scenario of what might be expected after MR.
What is the role of your booklets?
Our original intention was, of course, to get 'ordinary'
peoples' interest and awaken them to the fact that
'something is seriously wrong', and to get them reaching out to
complete their education in the subject. All the booklets
contain enough data to present the essence of the problem in
plain language but hopefully not so long as to become tedious.
This is now working well.
The advocacy of money reform has a long history. Do you think we are entering a new stage in the campaign?
I certainly do -- and, of course, the Internet is
playing a key role in this. There is a growing awareness amongst
people and this is fuelled by their inherent scepticism about
single currencies and the drift toward 'globalisation'. How long
can the mainstream media continue avoiding the subject with the
growing mountain of Internet pages spelling out the truth?
What's your advice to help us win?
The Monetary Reform fraternity in the UK -- indeed, the world --
is fragmented into small groups of very worthy people, each
playing their own, but similar, tunes. Bringing all of our
collective energy together and speaking with one voice on the
central issue, makes us infinitely more effective. We are
all agreed that 'Joe Blow' has to know, and Joe has a short
attention span.
The Bromsgrove Group meeting this year could be an
excellent starting point for a more unified approach. The MR
movement in the UK and elsewhere is now awash with brilliant,
even inspired, works on this subject and it is gratifying to know
we have such great education tools. I think our attention should
now be on creating the learning curve from monetary illiteracy
to full conceptual understanding, and the beginning is the
toughest part.
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