Sorry catherine . . . the quotes are false.catherine wrote:Hi Furstentum Liechtenstein, I've been checking up on the 'president quotes' I provided earlier. By typing in the first few words of each quote I was able to find out lots of info and some possible sources of where they come from:
Jefferson's quote: 'a letter that Jefferson wrote to a man named John Taylor in 1816, Jefferson thanked Mr. Taylor for sending him a copy of a publication that he wrote titled Enquiry into the principles of our government.'
http://www.truthorfiction.com/rumors/j/ ... anking.htm
Lincoln's Quote: 'Nov. 21, 1864 (letter to Col. William F. Elkins) Ref: The Lincoln Encyclopedia, Archer H. Shaw (Macmillan, 1950, NY). http://www.ratical.org/corporations/Lincoln.html
For for those more interested in verifying these quotes it is somewhere to start from at least.
You quote more of Lincoln: '......it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off [...], and provide new guards for their future security.'≠
I think you are preaching to the converted. The quotes I provided were interesting in that they were supposed observations or warnings of what could happen in the future if the banking systems got too powerful. And we are seeing these very things happening in front of our eyes! If those quotes turn out to be false (although from what I have researched I'm sure they are not) then I apologise whole- heartedly for using them. It still doesn't alter the fact that the banking systems have acted in the most reckless, dishonest, greedy way. Going on to your quote: it is advocating something that could result in us going against God's laws. (e.g there are Christians who are conscientious objectors as they do not believe in killing for political purposes). We have to be careful with our involvement with politics as this world is governed by the god of this world, the devil. B.W has posted something about 'going against the grain'. I believe the grain, to be the spirit of this world, the spirit that pervades politics and which is at enmity with God.
On the Lincoln quote, see Snopes. The letter to Elkins was a forgery. On Jefferson, see this book. In short, the word the first time the word "deflation" was used was in 1920; "inflaction" didn't appear in Webster until 1864. Besides that, I went through all the 1802-1803 letters I could find from Jefferson to Gallatin and simply couldn't find that quote . . .
Bubbles burst . . . sorry . . .