Monica Harris
2 min readApr 25, 2022

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Hi Krisgronquist,

Thanks for your feedback. I do understand your question, and it’s a good one. Kerry made a similar observation earlier in the comments.

For your convenience, I am re-posting my response here:

The reason I say that banks create money out of thin air is because the money they're introducing into the economy isn't backed by anything of "real" or intrinsic value. Yes, many of the initial recipients of money/debt are creating things of "real" value (whether in the form of goods or services) in exchange for the money they receive, but banks aren't backing that money/debt with anything that can inherently limit the creation of more money/debt.

In theory, this allows banks to produce a near-infinite amount of money -- which is, in fact, what they've done. It's estimated that more than a quadrillion dollars worth of money currently exists in the global banking economy (exacerbated of course, by the existence of derivatives). Now, is there really a quadrillion dollars worth goods, assets, and services on the planet? Is the money created “balanced” out by an equal amount of goods, asset, and services received on the ledger? I highly doubt it.

For example, the amount of precious metals sold on COMEX is 20x greater than the amount of precious metals that physically exists. In the case of $25 silver, this has created a severe disconnect between the price of the metal and its physical availability.

Creating money without backing it up with something of tangible value leads to a situation in which resources are outstripped at an accelerating pace because there is more money in circulation than there are goods and services to support the amount of money in circulation.

Money should always reflect the amount and value of goods, services, and resources available. It should be created at an organic pace that matches the actual growth of labor and resources, and not dumped into the economy in trillion dollar batches in a short period of time.

When there's a disconnect between the amount of money being created and the amount of resources available -- whether silver, real estate, or homes -- we find ourselves in the situation we're in now: extreme inflation and rapidly depleting resources that are funneled to those with the most money.

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Monica Harris
Monica Harris

Written by Monica Harris

Unplugged from our distorted reality. Check out my book: “The Illusion of Division" https://tinyurl.com/2p9c56cz

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