Crime Against Humanity: the Holy GAAP, 43

Now we can differentiate between the case of active occurrence or contingent asset and the fact of the creation of purchasing power out of nothing in the hands of the banker under the form of scriptural money created contextually to its first lending: one is unpredictable, the other is premeditated; one’s causes are unforeseen, the other’s are planned; one’s main cause is external, the other’s is internal; one is random, the other is systematic; one is sporadic, the other is continuous; one is collateral, the other is intrinsic; one is unrelated to the management, the other is the core of the business.
Is there another term for the case in law and accounting? Donation, act of generosity, acquisitive prescription all imply a pre−existing asset.
Maybe, income? Income is defined as the profit resulting from a work or from an employment of capital, and also as the money, goods, services received. It’s true that the banker creates his own money, but then he receives the rest in exchange for it; if we consider this creation as part of his “work”, then I’d say there definitely is an income.
From this point forward, in my humble opinion, if there are other terms for the case at all, they ough to be found within the field of criminal law.

The PERSISTENCE of scriptural, bank “money” enjoys the same Holy GAAP legal coverage as its birth, projected from the inception into eternity: once set the wheels in motion, it’s just a matter of keeping them turning by legally backing up banking reflux, clearing houses and the spell of the promise of payment pretending to be payment for ever.

Even though rapidly recapped, the issue of persistence gives us a good starting point to put in perspective the whole subject of legal coverage. If the birth is a crime, then the persistence is a criminal conspiracy, put into action by means of clearing houses and systems, and using the law to back it all up is as much a crime and a criminal conspiracy, too – in addition to being a betrayal of one’s mandate, mission and people… as usual.

Crime Against Humanity: the Holy GAAP