About Our Petition

Violence is not random. It is the natural (biological) response to perceived economic imbalance.
Economic imbalance is not random. It has been purposely built into our “privatized” monetary system, where it cannot help but generate the many forms of Violence we currently experience. Privately created money was first invented by early religious oppressors; it was later adopted by U.S. slaveowners, where it has survived until the present day.
Sign our Petition to help remove this parasitic version of money from our financial “circulatory system.” Your one signature would go toward helping cure every poor health outcome caused by monetarily created imbalance:

This is the “Mother of all Petitions.” Please add your signature to it. Thank you.
1. Economic Disconnection is the root cause of all Violence.
All life must maintain homeostatic balance to survive. Multicellular organisms use a strategy of mutual economic connection to achieve this purpose. Economic disconnection will consequently trigger uncertainty and unleash a cocktail of chemicals designed to correct this perceived danger. When the imbalance is systemic and cannot be stabilized, a toxic amount of chemicals will build up and manifest itself in various forms of internal, external, societal, and planetary violence.
The parasitic economic model we currently use conflicts with the original biological version that built this planet from the ground up. All life reacts to imbalance the same way because all life is made of the same stuff. This is a competition we do not want to win. Life was not built from the top down; predators and parasites are always the first to go in a true “economic downturn.” The pseudo-economics that we practice will not protect us from this reality.
2. Our Monetary System is where Economic Disconnection is generated.
Ever since our U.S. currency was allowed to operate outside the original boundaries set for it by the Constitution, it has forged a parasitic relationship with the American people. This private version of money evolved from the economics of early religious oppressors and is specifically designed to create imbalance.
What originally made America great in the eyes of the world was our attempt to shun the parasitic economics of oppression and reestablish the “Natural Law” of mutual economics. This “enlightenment” resonated with all people because our cellular “insides” are constantly preaching it to us and rewarding us for it, in the hope that we do not destroy ourselves and the three-billion years of hard work it took them to get us to this point.
3. This Petition seeks to reconnect our economics by sewing up the disconnections in our money supply.
The First Bank of the United States was bound by the Constitution to circulate a single “national” currency, as well as hold Congress accountable to Tax and Spend toward the General Welfare and Equal Protection of all Americans. U.S. slaveowners had a different agenda, however. President Andrew Jackson sought to expand America into a nation of slave states; to finance his campaign of territorial annexation, displacement, and oppression, he vetoed the third twenty-year recharter of America’s First Bank, took out all the money from it, then placed it into personally designated private banks, for which Congress censured him.
Jackson then packed the Supreme Court and began walking back all the original Constitutional rulings on money and banking, to further his economic model of oppression. Jackson thus became the catalyst that sped America toward Civil War, without his reputation ever being consumed in the ensuing reaction. Though slaveowners lost the war, it was Jackson’s version of money that survived; it began to carve out enough inequality that by 1913, a new generation of slaveowners was able to purchase our Congressional Money Powers through the Federal Reserve Act of 1913. Today the money is used to pursue a more civilized “financial” form of territorial usurpation, “landlordship,” and debt slavery.
Meanwhile, the ‘First Bank’ remains the only bank that is Constitutional. It is the only bank that can sew up all the disconnections created by the economics of oppression, where a multitude of intermediary profit-seekers have positioned themselves to siphon away the value of American labor.
It is the only bank that could rebuild our economic infrastructure green, clean, smart, and sustainable, and allow the People to finally own the infrastructure their money has built. This would convert taxation—which was originally unconstitutional—into a mutual investment “trust” designed to promote our General Welfare. This “investment” would produce a shared “Return on Investment,” as Americans pay back these infrastructure loans to themselves—through monthly bills—instead of paying it to “privatized” institutions, as they do currently. This one change would consequently lower the price of every essential need, converting even the minimum wage paycheck into a “livable wage.”
Instead of fighting with ourselves, let’s fight our next Civil War against the money which creates the imbalance. There is no other effective avenue available to address violence. We hope you will join us. Thanks for your signature.
The History
Early religious oppressors kickstarted the modern “intermediary economy” by perpetuating the myth of a religious hierarchy, which placed the oppressor as the first economic intermediary between the people and their gods. Early religious priests did all the heavy lifting on this. First, they took over the house the people had built for their gods. Next, they claimed all the land around this house. Finally, they began to collect the people’s crops as tribute, which they traded away to acquire personal wealth. Religious temples thus became the first marketplaces. Crops were often traded for metals, which were of little use to priests, who then peddled it to the people as the “skin of the gods,” exchanging it for even more crops. The people dutifully gave the metals back to the priests in annual tribute; thus began the process by which people gave away the value of their labor for absolutely nothing in return.
The first Oppressor only needed to add the violence: he performed a hostile takeover of this turnkey religious business, transferred all property rights from the gods over to himself, which consequently transferred all the products of the people’s labor over to him as well. These were the first “disconnections” in the natural—or “circular”—flow of economics, where a growing number of intermediaries would eventually attach themselves, to further siphon away the value of people’s labor. The oppressor created the myth of the angry God, who demanded a lifetime of labor to repay the debt of living a lifetime. As our Trust in God was symbolically transferred over to this debt money, a “debt” was now owed to whoever held the mythical power of money creation; “mythical” because no actual value is stored within money. All the value is stored within people: their shared beliefs that drive them to labor, as well as the labor itself, which is the only true source of value creation.
Debt is simply the promise to labor further, and Americans are currently $51 trillion in debt (which represents national, housing, credit card, and student debt). The more we labor, the more debt we create, and thus the more labor we are obligated to perform. If people attempt to “save” their wages in an “intermediary” private bank, the bank will simply leverage it to create more debt; give it up to our “intermediary” government through taxation and the wages still end up in private pockets, through subsidies, grants, tax breaks, “corporate welfare,” “research and development,” trade barriers, bailouts, “privatization,” and various large government contracts. We will never escape this inflation / debt spiral as long as we continue using this version of money.
The right to petition for a redress of grievances was originally the main avenue for disenfranchised groups, who not only listed their grievances, but also suggested a legislative remedy for those grievances; suggestions that early legislators would take very seriously. This form of “unmediated” politics was replaced by the concept of the single vote, to hire “intermediary” representatives to act in our stead.
This concept of economic and governmental “intermediaries” is the root of nearly every problem we face. The disconnection of the People from their Congressional Money Powers, for example, shows the complete ineffectiveness of representative government, as not only did the American People never vote on relinquishing their Money Powers, but not even a majority our Representatives were present to approve or disapprove of it, when the Federal Reserve Act was voted into existence, two days before Christmas, 1913.
Originally, wealthy slaveowners enhanced their “free speech” through the “three-fifths compromise,” where slaves were counted as three-fifths of a person to determine the number of “intermediary” representatives for voting purposes. Today, slaveowner money has replace this “three-fifths compromise,” allowing the enhanced free speech of the wealthy to purchase their own personal Representatives and Senators and have “unmediated” access to their “special interests.”