tailieunhanh - salvation through inflation the economics of social credit phần 3

chẳng hạn như một nồi giặt, máy, tủ lạnh, thường được sơn màu trắng. 2 hộ gia đình lanh (nghĩa gốc của thuật ngữ này). Xem thêm: màu nâu tốt, người tiêu dùng bền hiệp sĩ trắng (G3) thân thiện từ một ngân hàng ở một quốc gia không dưới một chính phủ tín dụng xã hội. Nó sẽ có nghĩa là phá sản của tất cả các ngân hàng Scotland, | 36 SALVATION THROUGH INFLATION a week in 1907 to 2 250 in 1918. 16 17 18 19 20 Yet it gained considerable influence. Why Because of the influence of Orage. Orage was a disciple of the atheist philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. Nietzsche s philosophy has been described as follows by Cambridge University historian David Thomson . . . an anti-intellectual revival of paganism a frontal attack on the teachings of Jackson had introduced to Nietzsche s writings. Orage wrote two books on Nietzsche in 1906 and 1907 introducing British readers to the man who called for a new world order governed by supermen. It was in 1907 that Jackson and Orage persuaded the Fabian socialist and atheist playwright George Bernard Shaw to put up the money to buy New Jackson departed from the project in 1908 leaving Orage as the dominant force. For fifteen years until he left the magazine Orage attracted some of the most talented authors in Britain to write for New Age although he paid them little or nothing for the privilege. Orage was intellectually a socialist but his commitment to Nietzsche made him anti-democratic and intolerant of the From on Orage was a a defender of the need for revolutionary violence by trade He be- came a disciple of his old friend A. J. Penty who preached the necessity of a restoration of medieval guild socialism. Orage called for a new epoch new not only in social and economic structure but new spiritually. 21 This new spirit was Eastern mysticism not Christianity. Because of Douglas influence Orage came to believe that the manipulation of the national currency was the principal 16. Ibid. p. 64. 17. David Thomson Europe Since Napoleon 2nd cd. New York Knopf 1965 p. 405. 18. Finlay Social Credit p. 66. 19. Ibid. p. 69. 20. Ibid. p. 74. 21. Ibid. p. 75. The Origins of Social Credit 3 7 cause of economic hardship. It was this idea that also stirred Ezra Pound a frequent contributor to New 23 24 They both regarded Social Credit as a means of destroying the power .

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