Crime Against Humanity: Banking Reflux, Clearing House, Criminal Conspiracy, 7

This is what the concept of clearing house applied to scriptural money is: a criminal conspiracy thanks to which the bankers’ promises of payment can last forever as no one will ever call them to keep them. This closes the cycle in what is called banking reflux: the scriptural money, after having been simultaneously created out of nothing and lent by the banker, and then repaid to the banker, from then on never ceases to exist, and the biggest scam in history with it.

Materially, the clearing house was born as a lousy back room where banks’ emissaries exchanged data physically, and now it is implemented by means of information technology tools in various ways, at various levels, covering various scopes. There are clearing house systems between two banks, a group of banks, a nation’s banks, scopes above the national level; some banks participate directly, some indirectly through other banks or parent banks; some systems communicate with one another, some don’t, some interlace with one another, some merge, and so on.
Central banks as well participate into these systems, for the obvious reason that they are the issuers of the “legal” money with which bank clearing must be paid. Whenever a bank has to clear in excess of its reserves of “legal” money, it can borrow from the central bank and the other banks. This makes for a fluid and intricate labyrinth of mutual relations among banks, but its complexity is beside the point.

The point is the purpose; the purpose of the criminal conspiracy is the purpose of the whole system: maximising the “efficiency”, that is, the most “benefits” – the most scriptural “money” everywhere forever – with the least “costs” – the least “legal” money needed – for everyone. All the intricacies of clearing house systems point in that direction; as an example, if with a bank clearing interval of 24 hours banks build up an excessive amount to be compensated in “legal” money, then the clearing is triggered by a shorter time interval so that such amount won’t get that high, or by the beneficiary bank building up a corresponding amount to compensate so they cancel one another.