War and who profits from war is a central question in Why We Are Always Broke:
    Things We need To Know About The Economy.  The book looks at some
    underlying institutions which promote wars. Who finances wars? Who profits from
    wars? It looks at several financial and political organizations created in the last 100
    years as a result of war. Several treaties signed at the end of wars and the
    economic impact of those treaties are examined. A central thesis of the book is that
    individuals and nations are controlled by keeping them in debt. War is a principal
    means of creating debt.

    President Eisenhower, a great military hero, warned us before leaving office in 1961
    that every dollar spent on war or defense ultimately was money taken from
    education, health care, and other
    needs of our people.

    The book looks at the national debt which has grown immensely in recent years.
    The debt is due in large part to war. The book describes the influence of America's
    central bank, the Federal Reserve, on this country and others. The author tells how
    this system of private bankers has manipulated the U.S. Government by
    propagating debt. He details a major purpose of  Federal Reserve issued money,
    which he says is to fund weapons manufacturing and U.S. Military activity.

    He discusses John F. Kennedy's attempts to loosen the Federal Reserve's grip on
    the government. Crumley shares his research on the United Nations, the Bank for
    International Settlements and NATO, and shows how these organizations have
    influenced global interactions. He writes how, after years of being manipulated,
    some nations in the Middle East are fighting back by implementing new economic
    systems.

    The book contains almost 250 quotes from notes and materials of persons directly
    involved in decisions which led us to war.

    The book looks at the radical economic reforms President Kennedy was
    implementing in the summer of 1963, prior to his assassination. JFK took steps to
    restore economic stability to the USA and cut our military, especially foreign
    military, expenses. Kennedy attempted to stop the flow of gold from the USA and to
    put control of our money back in the hands of government. No one looked at these
    economic forces in investigating his death. These reforms were the most radical
    and far reaching acts of his abbreviated administration. They were abandoned
    immediately after his death.

    It looks at the Egyptian constitution, a decision of the Pakistan Supreme Court
    outlawing usury, and the attempt of several Islamic nations to form a coalition and
    create their own central banks based on real resources rather than on debt.

    The book examines how war played a central role in creating the international
    monetary system in place today. One chapter looks at the evolution of central
    banks. These banks are almost always private institutions owned and run by
    bankers. These central banks take over the role of creating money. They determine
    the economic policy of nations. Our own central bank, the Federal Reserve,
    performs these duties in violation of our constitution.

    The author examines The Bank For International Settlements set up at the end of
    World War 1.  The stated intention of the bank was to create a fund to enable
    Germany/European nations to pay off debts they incurred because of World War 1.
    A large portion of that debt was owed to the USA. According to the plan agreed
    upon, the USA was to put up the bulk of the money. These funds would form the
    capital of the bank. Interest accruing from this money would pay off the debt, most
    of which was owed to the USA.

    The book describes how Britain began and took over the process of creating a
    Zionist state. Britain was interested in obtaining control of Near East shipping. In
    the 1940's the state of Israel was created. Britain agreed to ensure the rights of the
    Muslims and other non Jews in the area but did not. In the first three years 700,000
    Israelis entered the new state. Over 600,000 Arabs were expelled from the area and
    had to seek homes in refugee camps. The situation became worse. The United
    States was forced to try and pick up the pieces. Two major attempts (The Camp
    David Accord 1979 and the Oslo Agreement 1993) tried to bring order into the area.
    Neither succeeded.

    Underlying the book is social justice, a prominent issue in Christian churches the
    last 50 years. The book looks at the breakdown of some religious values, in
    particular church attitude toward usury. Originally usury was condemned and
    outlawed by Jewish, Christian, and Islamic teaching. Today only Islam maintains a
    strict condemnation of usury. Jewish opposition to usury began to wane when
    large central banks become controlled by Jewish bankers.

    Christian opposition (especially Catholic opposition) began to wane when the
    Vatican formed its own international bank. Usury is still a system contrary to the
    Old Testament and the Gospel of
    Jesus Christ. The book looks at contemporary Islamic teaching which forbids
    usury also Islamic policy which is setting up economic systems which forbid
    usury. The book helps the reader understand the gap between Islamic and Judeo-
    Christian thought. It offers an insight into underlying issues behind many present
    days Middle East conflicts.

    A year before World War 2 ended a conference was held at Bretton Woods, New
    Hampshire. It set up some tools eventually used by the United Nations. The
    structure of the World Bank was set up at this conference. It took a different spin
    than the Bank For International Settlements. Instead of settling war debts this bank
    loaned money to third world nations for "development" . This so called
    development allowed mega-corporations to come into third world nations and set
    up large industrial complexes.

    This "development" had several consequences. 1) It destroyed local and native
    land use patterns. 2) It forced people off of land they used to sustain existence. 3) It
    brought in outside corporations who took over land and evicted people from it. 4) It
    created large debts owed by the governments of these nations.

    These are some of the issues the book addresses.

  If you would like to learn more about why Crumley wrote
  the book hit WHY

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  To communicate more directly with the author use his
  email  bcrumley1936@yahoo.com

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        bcrumley1936@yahoo.com

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