As I tried to show in my recent blog entry on “Social Credit and Usury”, the claim that usury, defined as the charging of interest on loans, is THE problem and that Social Credit means nothing more than “usury-free money” is a serious but all too common misrepresentation of the Social Credit diagnosis and remedial proposals.

Friday, 07 November 2014 14:44

Social Credit and Usury

One of the most common misunderstandings where Social Credit is concerned is the notion that the Social Credit diagnosis can be adequately summarized along the following lines: "The problem with the existing financial system is that the banks create money out of nothing in the form of bank credit and then proceed to charge interest on the money that they loan out. Unfortunately, they do not create the money to pay the interest and this leads to a continual build-up of unrepayable debts, etc., etc." This popularized interpretation of Social Credit is erroneous.

Latest Articles

  • The Health Care Barrier: How Canada’s “Socialized Medicine” Protects Its Sovereignty
    Written on Monday, 27 October 2025 10:32 Read more...
  • Dr. Oliver Heydorn's address to the 21st AMI Conference (Sept. 28th, 2025)
    Dr. Oliver Heydorn, founder of the Clifford Hugh Douglas Institute for the Study and Promotion of Social Credit, introduces Douglas Social Credit as a comprehensive monetary reform model that addresses both justice and functionality in the financial system: "Douglas Social Credit: Restoring Honesty and Functionality to the Financial System".
    Written on Friday, 17 October 2025 18:26 Read more...
  • Three Paths at the Automated Crossroads
    Rapid advances in Artificial Intelligence as well as progress in robotics in the first quarter of the 21st century increasingly justify using the term ‘Automation Revolution’ given the speed and scale of the changes taking place. To give three examples of these developments: i) 'The new global average robot density reaches a record 162 units per 10,000 employees in 2023 - more than double the number measured only seven years ago (74 units). This is according to the World Robotics 2024 report, presented by the International Federation of Robotics (IFR).’ Source: https://ifr.org/ifr-press-releases/news/global-robot-density-in-factories-doubledin- seven-years
    Written on Sunday, 14 September 2025 13:35 Read more...