By Anna Von Reitz
When the Europeans showed up hunting for gold, the Native Americans were confused, even amused.
The Indians used gold and silver for jewelry, the only obvious use, and thought nothing more about it.
Indeed, what more was there to think?
It turns out that both gold and
silver are excellent electrical conductors, a use that wouldn't occur to
anyone for another three hundred years, but even then, so what? Copper
gets the job done. We don't need gold or silver for that purpose.
So, ask yourselves--- if gold was so
very important and valuable, why are there vast storehouses of the
stuff, millions of tons of it, stockpiled in the Philippines, sitting
around doing nothing?
The obvious answer is that gold is
really quite useless and should, as a result, have little value. It's
only tradition ----a tradition of human stupidity in this case--- that
assigns gold any great value at all.
I call it the Magic Beans Phenomenon.
A guy with a lot of beans (and a big
imagination) dyes his naturally white beans red and green and purple---
and starts telling people that his beans are magic beans, offering
their color as proof. And the people buy into this clap-trap. Soon
his Magic Beans are selling like wildfire and people are ascribing all
sorts of benefits and wonders to these beans.
So a guy with a lot of gold (and a
big imagination) takes the metal and shapes it into uniform round flat
pieces and stamps a fancy image of an eagle on the front and the image
of a woman on the back, and starts telling people that the coin he made
"represents" the value of all other things. It's a Magic Metal Bean.
And the people buy into this clap-trap and start believing that these
little round pieces of metal are equivalent in value to bushels of
apples and bushels of wheat and barrels of oil.
Because the people have been duped
into trading actual, needful commodities for useless little pieces of
gold, gold acquires value --- in a completely backhanded way--- not
because it actually has any great value of its own, but because people
give it a value by being willing to trade their labor and goods for it.
Objectively, the whole premise is ridiculous.
Objectively, we are acting like
little children pretending that rocks are dinner plates and paper cups
are fine wine glasses---- and taking it seriously, too.
We actually think that there is such
thing as "real money" and that it is different from "Monopoly Money",
but in fact, they are all exactly the same kind of commodity, and at the
end of the day, all we are arguing over is the brand name and form.
U.S. Mint versus Hasbro Brothers. Little gold coins versus fancy pieces
of paper. Fancy pieces of paper versus digits in a bank ledger.
It's all Magic Beans and nobody
above the age of five should be fooled by this at all, yet here we all
sit, seven billion people unable to face the fact that we are,
ourselves, the source of all "value".
Read that over and over until it sinks in not only to your brain, but your soul.
We are the source of all value.
If we don't give something a value, it has none.
What you value defines who you are. It sets you free, or, it enslaves you.
And it is all your choice.
It is only because of our needs and
our often ridiculous beliefs that things are assigned a "marketplace
value" in the first place.
Don't believe that? Just imagine the Earth without people on it.
There is no consumer to buy bananas,
so the monkeys eat their fill and throw away the peels and scamper away
on little monkey feet. And God smiles because He made bananas for just
such a purpose and gave them away for free.
Everything that we trade is given to
us for free--- even our ability to do work and to think creatively is a
gift. That, and the trees and plants and waters and rocks and minerals
and metals --- all the raw materials are given to us, collectively, for
free.
But then, arbitrarily and often
stupidly, we begin assigning "values" to everything, according to our
actual (food) or perceived (gold) need for whatever it is, the scarcity
of whatever it is, and so on.
If we had our heads screwed on and
weren't deluded by the Fakirs and all their Magic Beans, we would
realize that the most important job in the world --- bringing up
healthy, happy, wise children --- is disrespected and unpaid. We would
know with great certainty that love is the ultimate Standard Commodity,
and that the only way to obtain it, is to give it.
If we all just stopped and really
thought about money and Magic Beans for ten minutes the world and
everything in it, would change, because we would all know that this
current situation is beyond silly and stop chasing after gold, which in
turn would render it without value.
And then, maybe, we could turn our
attention back to the things that really do matter: sharing and caring
and enjoying all that has already been given to us for free.
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See this article and over 700 others on Anna's website here:www.annavonreitz.com
2 comments:
Wednesday, September 13, 2017
The Magic Beans Phenomenon
TRIBUTE to the Great German Spirit – Anna von Reitz, who is telling us the most and only important true values in the world – LOVE (as the only ultimate value) and raising good children (our future)!
I would go one step further – DO NOT PURCHASE GOLD any more in order to lower its value!
Lets began appreciate the true values from now on!
Then we‘ll not need any money and gold, and everything on the planet will be for free, so like God give it to us!
To Judge Anna
Please advise me where to find the protection knowledge against IRS and government instances, which you mentioned. I like to suscribe for this info but I could not find the link. Olthough I live in Germany, would be useful to me, since I know that in the whole world there are government-corporations. May I have your personel email address because I have also other questions. Thank you very much! Catherine
My email address: kalina@hispeed.ch
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