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Topic: Economics, Matches 52 quotes.
We are overdone with banking institutions, which have banished the precious metals, and substituted a more fluctuating and unsafe medium.... These have withdrawn capital from useful improvements and employments to nourish idleness.... [These] are evils more easily to be deplored than remedied.
Source: Thomas Jefferson The Writings of Thomas Jefferson, 12:379-80
Topics: Economics
All the perplexities, confusions, and distresses in America arise, not from defects in the Constitution or confederation, not from want of honor or virtue, as much as from downright ignorance of the nature of coin, credit, and circulation.
Source: John Adams Works 8:447
Topics: Economics
I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. Already they have raised up a monied aristocracy that has set the government at defiance. The issuing power (of money) should be taken away from the banks and restored to the people to whom it properly belongs.
Source: Thomas Jefferson, U.S. President
Topics: Economics
The few who understand the [banking] system, will either be so interested from its profits or so dependant on its favors, that there will be no opposition from that class.
Source: Rothschild Brothers of London, 1863
Topics: Economics
The Federal Reserve banks, while not part of the government,...
Source: United States budget for 1991 and 1992 part 7, page 10
Topics: Economics
Where The Bondage Of Debt Falls.
I know of no other factor which has had such potent influence, in the dissolution of nations which have flourished and passed away, as has the bondage of debt. When nations become debtors the only means of providing revenue with which to meet their obligations is by taxation. This burden falls heaviest upon the masses, the common people, who are the producers of the indispensable necessities of life.
The men who till the soil, who tend the flocks and herds, who dig from the earth the treasures which are hidden there, the men who take the raw materials which are provided by nature and convert them into the things which man requires for his convenience and comfort, who are real producers, they are the people who do the worlds work, fight the worlds battles, and pay the worlds taxes.
I know there are those who will not agree with me in this statement, and I shall not discuss it with them at this time, only to say that I have given the subject as careful study as I am capable of doing, and have concluded that commerce, the professions, and the great industrial systems of our country find means by which the burden of taxation may be shifted until in the last analysis it falls heaviest on the classes to which I have referred.
Source: President Anthony W. Ivins General Conference, October 1921
Topics: Debt; Economics
The fostering of full economic freedom lies at the base of our liberties. Only in perpetuating economic freedom can our social, political, and religious liberties be preserved.
Source: David O McKay Church News, 12 Mar. 1952, p. 2
Topics: Economics; Free Agency
May I add again an admonition: Live within your means. Get out of debt. Keep out of debt. Lay by for a rainy day which has always come and will come again. Practice and increase your habits of thrift, industry, economy, frugality. Remember that the parable of the ten virgins, the five that were wise and the five that were foolish, can be just as applicable to matters of the temporal world as those of the spiritual.
Source: President J. Reuben Clark, Jr. General Conference, October 1937
Topics: Debt; Economics
Medium Of Exchange Created
In the beginning, trade was carried on by exchange of commodities, rather than by purchase and sale, with a recognized medium of exchange. In fact, in my time I have been in countries where this was almost the universal custom.
As civilization developed it became apparent that for the convenience of commerce and trade some medium of exchange, with a fixed and recognized ratio of value, must be created; and at a very early date gold and silver were used in the beginning counted by weight, as dust or in bars, as shown in the scripture which I have quoted, when Abraham weighed to Ephron, the son of Zohar, 400 shekels of silver, about $250.00, 3,800 years ago. At a later date minted coins, of specific weight, came into use.
Source: President Anthony W. Ivins General Conference, April 1932
Topics: Economics; Free Market
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