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Every parent needs to read this...
The Secret to Becoming a MAN | The Glenn Beck Podcast | Ep 270
Future Of Human-Machine Integration
Blue Origin New Glenn 2 Next Launch and How Many Launches in 2026 and 2027
China's thorium reactor aims to fuse power and parity
Ancient way to create penicillin, a medicine from ancient era
Goodbye, Cavities? Scientists Just Found a Way to Regrow Tooth Enamel
Scientists Say They've Figured Out How to Transcribe Your Thoughts From an MRI Scan
SanDisk stuffed 1 TB of storage into the smallest Type-C thumb drive ever
Calling Dr. Grok. Can AI Do Better than Your Primary Physician?
HUGE 32kWh LiFePO4 DIY Battery w/ 628Ah Cells! 90 Minute Build
What Has Bitcoin Become 17 Years After Satoshi Nakamoto Published The Whitepaper?

It was the year Congress passed the Federal Reserve Act and ratified the 16th Amendment to the US Constitution, which authorized a federal income tax.
At first glance, these two unfortunate developments may seem unrelated. Yet what are the odds that the US would adopt both a central bank and an income tax in the very same year?
It seems implausible that this was the result of mere chance.
In fact, upon closer examination, the Federal Reserve system depends on an income tax to function as it does.
Let me put it into the simplest and most concise terms.
1. Central banks create fake money out of thin air.
2. They then loan this "money" to governments at interest by purchasing government bonds with it.
3. The primary asset held by the Fed is government debt. However, what secures and collateralizes this debt? The government's ability to tax its citizens.
4. Governments use violence and threats of violence to extract taxes from average citizens to pay the interest and service the debt owed to the central bank, which created the money it loaned to the government out of thin air.