Crime Against Humanity: the Holy GAAP, 5

And so it goes with the Fathers of the Country drawing up a Constitution in which they bestow monetary sovereignty upon a legislative assembly, which is led to establish a central bank, that fifth column we now know well, and bestow upon it, both unfettered and unaccountable, monetary sovereignty and the power to delegate it in its turn to commercial banks through the power to grant lawfulness to practices such as privileged accounting principles, fractional reserve and clearing houses.

Technically speaking, we’re entering a minefield here: where moneypulators have to state their three−card trick in such a form as to conceal it so as to allow them to play it, while pretending to get it all out on the table to prove there is no three−card trick whatsoever in the first place, a minefield is what you have to expect – and where you have to look into –.

This minefield is semantics and grammar, the meanings and uses of words, the mines are the words, and the related human reactions are at the same time its camouflage and its soundboard.
It has been said that the single most important factor in study is the misunderstood word or symbol.
You can easily imagine the consequences should people driving motor vehicles, ships and airplaines not know the meaning of such words as “left”, “right”, “start” and “stop”; but these are the easy ones. The point is, there is much, much more about the misunderstood words or symbols than meets the eye. Let’s suppose some people that design buidings, bridges, motor vehicles, ships and airplanes had just a tiny, negligible misunderstood symbol: the decimal separator, and imagine the consequences.
I will discuss later on how there’s even many a way to misunderstand words and symbols, and how most of these ways go rather unnoticed; suffice to say now that it is not true that the smaller a misunderstood word or symbol is, the less important it is, oh no. Quite definitely the contrary is true. The more basic, and the more destructive; the more basic, and usually the tinier.

Crime Against Humanity: the Holy GAAP