I think that it is pretty safe to assume that we all dislike the institution that is the Federal Reserve.
Funny thing about how it came to be though.
It took more than a few tries to make this thing stick and at one point we had actually abolished it, so how is it here now?
They will not stop. It took them a while to finally get their institution in charge of our money, YEARS! it wasn't over night.
The first time they tried it they had backlash like no ones business, everyone but them seemed to know what was up and hated it. It didn't have a chance. They never ceased seizing every opportunity that they could to get in, though. A little while after the initial attempt, and a few favors later they tried it again..... More people were interested and it looked like they had it. I believe that the second attempt is when they said NO and tried to make sure it couldn't happen. So they waited a while longer and did a few more favors....
Liken this to an employer that is trying to mandate vaccines. These people are sick and will stop at nothing to get what they want. Leave now, while you still can.
Yes, exactly. Fiat money is corruption, fractional reserve banking is also corruption, and that monetary corruption causes no end of further corruption throughout society. And again you're right: Christ (and others, let's be fair) taught that corruption and evil should be opposed, and we listened only occasionally and can now barely remember that we did so once, or why.
It was one hell of a ride!
The older population need to speak up, there was a time when everything the younger population wanted was being achieved. It was just lost in the middle. We are never that far away from certain destruction as a functioning society and for whatever reason we like to be reminded of that every 30 or so years, in terrible ways. I am at a loss for the people that cannot see what the United States had set out to achieve only to be attacked at every opportunity. No one knows what it represents because it largely lost sight of the big picture as a whole. The promise of profit for less to no work was far to much, apparently.