Crime Against Humanity: Banking Reflux, Clearing House, Criminal Conspiracy, 2
However, objective reality itself takes care of proving wrong in facts this thesis, which would be nothing more than an attempt at a mitigating circumstance for an undeniable and admitted crime anyway.
And the facts are in the banker’s financial statement. (Later on I’ll give you a simple explaination of it, suffice here to say that any economic entity is periodically required to publicly report its economic facts measured in money in this document, made up of various elements.)
When the banker creates and loans his “money”, he materially does so by creating a book entry in the account of the borrower; that entry states that the borrower is the creditor and the banker is the debtor of that sum. In addition, and in exchange for the “money” created and loaned, the banker creates another book entry in his own accounts, under loans, for the credit, stating that the borrower owes him the loaned sum.
When the borrower repays that sum, usually by instalments, what happens in the borrower’s account depends on whether he repays it in cash, from that account or from another account, and we’re not interested in that because it’s not relevant here; what we’re interested in is that the banker transforms his credit into cash. The banker materially does so by creating two book entries in his own accounts: one, under loans, states that the borrower has repaid the sum or an instalment and reduces the banker’s credit of that amount; the other, under cash, states that the amount received from the borrower has entered and increased the banker’s cash.
If the “ashes to ashes”, “I made you, I can crush you!” thesis were true, when the borrower repays the sum or an instalment, the banker would create ONLY the first book entry that reduces his credit of that amount, and would NOT create the second book entry that transfers that amount to his cash. That would be how the banker would materially delete his “money” back into nothingness. Created out of nothing upon loaning it, deleted into nothingness upon repayment.