Social Credit News

Friday, 17 October 2025 18:26

Dr. Oliver Heydorn's address to the 21st AMI Conference (Sept. 28th, 2025) Featured

Rate this item
(0 votes)

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. He argues that while equity in money creation is important, functionality—ensuring that the system accurately reflects the real economy—is the true foundation of fairness. The talk explores the chronic “price-income gap,” where production costs outpace consumer income, causing artificial scarcity, debt dependence, and instability. Heydorn outlines how the Douglas model proposes solutions through a National Credit Office, national dividend, and compensated price system—mechanisms designed to inject debt-free credit, ensure honest accounting, and decentralize economic power. He contrasts Douglas’s approach with the AMI and NEED Act proposals, advocating for a balance between public oversight and private initiative. The presentation ends with a discussion on restoring honesty, stability, and freedom in economics by aligning finance with physical reality and empowering individuals as as true economic participants.

 

true economic participants.

Leave a comment

Make sure you enter all the required information, indicated by an asterisk (*). HTML code is not allowed.

Latest Articles

  • The Accounting of Abundance: A Structural Critique of Inflationary Theory
    Mainstream economic thought treats inflation as a phenomenon of monetary volume—the "Too Much Money" paradigm. However, by applying the engineering logic of C.H. Douglas’s A+B Theorem, we can deduce that inflation is not primarily a result of consumer behaviour, but a mathematical consequence of debt-based cost accounting in an industrial society.
    Written on Saturday, 14 February 2026 12:56 Read more...
  • A Douglas Social Credit Critique of Gesell’s Monetary Analysis and Proposals
    Silvio Gesell believed that the two great economic evils were stagnation and inequality. He attributed stagnation to hoarding (the “retention” of money that slows circulation) and inequality to both hoarding and the payment of interest on money. His remedies were therefore twofold: demurrage (a carrying charge that makes money lose value if held, forcing it into rapid circulation) and interest-free credit. From a Douglas Social Credit standpoint, Gesell’s take on monetary reform rests on a fundamentally flawed diagnosis and thus the remedies he proscribes are inadequate, in addition to being coercive and counterproductive.
    Written on Tuesday, 10 February 2026 14:00 Read more...
  • THE THEOLOGY OF THE INHERITANCE: A Social Credit Synthesis of Patristic Thought and Economic Reality
    Social Credit stands alone in its pursuit of the Economics of Grace. It recognizes that the "price" of our life has been paid by the gifts of God and the genius of our ancestors. By replacing the bondage of the gold standard and the indignity of the Job Guarantee with the National Dividend and the Price Discount, we move from an "Economics of Toil" to an Economics of Leisure.
    Written on Tuesday, 10 February 2026 07:54 Read more...