Victory! The Public Banking Act Becomes Law in California

victory in California ab857

10 thoughts on “Victory! The Public Banking Act Becomes Law in California

  1. The new law allows California cities and counties to create their own banks (funded by tax revenue), providing their families and businesses an alternative to borrowing money from Wall Street banks. The Bank of North Dakota, founded in 1919, was the first state-owned bank in the US. Thanks to the Bank of North Dakota, it was the only state that didn’t suffer from budget deficits following the 2008 financial crash.

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      • What I meant was, I really don’t know what “public banks” entails, if it’s like the concept of credit unions which the corporate predators ate up for a light snack some years ago and people lost their savings.

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          • OK, I see. I could have looked it up but I don’t trust much of what I look up. Now the trepidating part: do the same corporate/banksterist predators who ate up our savings and loans and who own all governments in our “democracies” automatically “own” these public banks if not in name, in actual fact? Will they not find a way to syphon the money out of these public trusts as they do of all other public trusts, from the natural environment to parks, to social services to … whatever takes their fancy to exploit for profit at no cost to themselves? How can we “trust” these things? How can we be sure they will not quickly become adjuncts of private banks through wheeling and dealing? Whenever there is any public money in trust somewhere the sharks have always been there to gobble it up and at no time has this been truer than since the Reagonomics trickle-down theory – which the same fools who wear MAGA hats praised in the 80’s. Let’s free enterprise, remember? The “rich” know what freedom means. The fools think it’s “free rewards” at the gas pump.

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            • I tend not to trust “reforms” much either, Sha’Tara. Unless we dismantle capitalism altogether, there’s always a risk they will be gobbled up by a corrupt ruling elite for their own personal benefit. I tend to agree with Mao, though, when he suggested that one of the best ways to build a revolutionary movement was to mobilize people to fight for temporary reforms. Especially in an era when people are so disconnected from the way government really works.

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  2. It does sound good ! The California Public Banking Alliance has been busy educating about the distinct planned possibility, now a fact of life on paper. of getting away from Wall Street Banking … while Holywood steals the thunder on TV and Social Media pushing their Socialist agenda with the green new deal’ and other ‘far outs’ Good for them! Does this mean getting rid of the Federal Reserve? It sounds like a start.

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  3. Good points, Mary Anne. The reforms I really want to see are to end the ability of private banks to create money (they create 98% of our money when they issue loans – that money gets conjured up out of thin air by pressing buttons on a computer) and to either abolish or nationalize (bring under government control) the Federal Reserve.

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  4. Pingback: Public Backlash Against Bovaer-Laced Milk and Meat | Worldtruth

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