Thank you so much for posting this video of G. Edward Griffin. His book "The Creature from Jekyll Island" was the first book I read on the Federal Reserve and I couldn't put it down. I carried it with me everywhere. I was telling people that it was the definitive book on the history of money, bragging about the bibliographic reference to Groseclose, Rothbard, Anthony Sutton, and Sennholz, whom I formed in my mind prior to reading them as the intellectual gladiators of history. It was a terrific shift in my thinking, one that energized me and made me feel lucky to be alive at this point in history. It is satisfying to me to see Griffin get his due recognition. When Tom Woods spoke a couple years ago in his first congressional hearing on the Fed with Dr. Paul Chairing, Woods alluded, metaphorically of course, to the Fed as a creature, which I thought was a terrific nod to Griffin and his work. Thank you, Wenzel.
Thank you so much for posting this video of G. Edward Griffin. His book "The Creature from Jekyll Island" was the first book I read on the Federal Reserve and I couldn't put it down. I carried it with me everywhere. I was telling people that it was the definitive book on the history of money, bragging about the bibliographic reference to Groseclose, Rothbard, Anthony Sutton, and Sennholz, whom I formed in my mind prior to reading them as the intellectual gladiators of history. It was a terrific shift in my thinking, one that energized me and made me feel lucky to be alive at this point in history. It is satisfying to me to see Griffin get his due recognition. When Tom Woods spoke a couple years ago in his first congressional hearing on the Fed with Dr. Paul Chairing, Woods alluded, metaphorically of course, to the Fed as a creature, which I thought was a terrific nod to Griffin and his work. Thank you, Wenzel.
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