That is simply not true. Governments are not ALWAYS corrupt. Until we get a critical mass of people to unlearn that lie our liberty will be elusive. Power comes from authority. If a big brute claims to be in charge, then he may be in charge until somebody comes along with a weapon. Then the person with the weapon is in charge, until somebody comes along with a bigger badder weapon... on and on, etc. Then it becomes whoever has the most weapons, biggest military, or police state. That takes money. Fiat money is tyrannical while sound money is liberating.
Which world do you live in? Look at the world, there are so many democracies around & people nearly always elect corrupt people into government because
1) because people at large are self-interested like everyone so they don't care about mundane ideas like "liberty", if someone tells them that they'll give them "free" stuff by stealing it from "those rich evil bastards" then they're all on-board because they see it in their self-interest, they don't care if a rich person has earned his money legitimately or not - even Founders had realized this that's why they'd limited the voting rights to only propertied people
2) Since the government is a coercive monopoly with power to rob, it necessarily attracts people who want to use that power to their benefit while honest people stay away mostly because they aren't interested in using the coercive monopoly to their benefit & besides, they know they're going to get flogged by majority of the dishonest people within the government, just look at Ron Paul - even Founders knew that governments are ALWAYS corrupt that's why they argued for a limited one but they didn't go far enough with the concept by still allowing it the power to rob, which takes away government's incentives to provide a good service
In a sound money system, (separation of money and government) government power is limited to whatever the taxes will buy. Power brokers can't inflate their way to tyranny. That is why counterfeiters take-over governments. Governments without money are small. Power is elusive. Rulers with the power to create unlimited amounts of money are tyrannical. That's what happened in 1861. In order to transform the great experiment in liberty into a tyrannical Union/Empire, they had to subvert the government (the constitution) and start printing money. Debasement of currency usurped the constitution. Not all by itself; however, it was the principle factor. The bankers risked being hanged for their conspiracy. I don't know why they weren't.
What incentive would government have if they can just STEAL money from people by way of taxes? What if, a milkman could extract "milk-taxes" from you at the barrel of a gun, would he have much incentive to provide a good service? What if a grocer could extract "grocery-tax" from you at the barrel of a gun, would he have much incentive to provide a good service? And so on for all the other goods - the answer is NO, that's why we believe that nobody should be able to steal from anybody because then they don't need to provide a good service!
Here are the facts: Governments are simply a means to order. Laws of the land are required if landownership is allowed. There is no escaping that fact in the 21st century. Laws of the land create governments. There is no way around it. So, if property ownership is to be embraced, then government must be embraced. There is no way around it. The trick is to keep it as honest and lest oppressive in people's lives as possible. That's the hard part. Keeping the bankers mitts out of it is the key. Unfortunately, statelessness is a lie that stands in the way of liberty, peace, and prosperity. Sadly, now it is even a fad.
Well, I'm a minarchist & have NEVER been an anarchist so I'd agree to that extent BUT if you don't address the universal that people are driven by perceived self-interest & incentives then you're disregarding the whole free market theory because self-interest principle is what all free-market theories are based upon. Under the free markets, people provide good services, not necessarily because they're honest & angelic but because that's what allows them to make money & serve their self-interest so if someone can ROB others at the barrel of a gun then they have little incentive to provide a good service
Even in the video you posted earlier in the thread, Rothbard said that the 20 years prior to Lincoln's war was a time of free banking. So, Rothbard doesn't even agree with you on that point.
Yeah, there was supposedly free-banking but how does that prove government wasn't corrupt? That's like saying US government isn't corrupt & Chinese government is because in US, you don't necessarily get thrown into jail for reproaching the government
Again, if government "can" be so "good" & it can be "tricked into being honest" then why not allow it to issue money? Why not let it produce all the goods & services in the economy instead of the "evil businesses"?
The bankers are unlawful. They do not obey the supreme law of the land ... the constitution. They are pretending to be legitimate. They have the power of printing money (unconstitutionally), the military industrial complex (unconstitutionally), CIA, FBI, IRS, etc. (all unconstitutional) and the power of media which they own.
What allows them to pass themselves off as legitimate - government
Of course Ron Paul doesn't go on public rants about "evil bankers." He is trying to get elected. He doesn't go around saying 9/11 was an inside job either, but he knows it was. Separating the language is tough while telling the truth. A lot of people can't handle the truth. When Ron Paul talks about the government being the problem, he means the illegitimate unconstitutional government.
Well, he rants all the time in public about government, government, government so sure as hell he can do thatwith banks too BUT he does NOT because he understands that the banks are able to do what they can because government legitimizes their activities & hence he focuses on the ROOT OF THE PROBLEM - government
And no, he isn't a truther, if he was then he'd openly admit it - if he can take on Fed, openly support legalization of drugs, prostitution, gay-marriage then sure he can be candid about his feelings on 9/11 - he's never been a man who'd hide his views just so that he could get elected (unless you believe he's lying to get elected) I think he's a reasonable man & understands that sweeping assertions like that can't be made
Not to mention, he FIRMLY believes that 9/11 was a result of US involvement overseas so how can he be a truther?
Ron Paul is one of the strongest advocates for government in the world today. The U.S. Constitution formed our republics. Ron Paul - "I am an advocate a very strong advocate of following very strictly the rule of law the Constitution of the United States." It doesn't get much clearer than that.
He's the strongest
OPPONENT of governments in the world, there's no politician out there who opposes government as much as he does - because he doesn't conflate
"need for governance" with
"need for government" - most people make that mistake & it's like conflating "supporting wars" with "supporting the troops"
Rothbard agrees,
Separating the money from the State (getting rid of the central bank) is the key to liberty. Separation of money and government ends the tyrannical abusive power of the State. That's what Rothbard is saying and that is what Ron Paul is working towards.
Here is how it is done. Not by hating the State but by embracing it.
The Purse & The Sword by Dr. Edwin Vieira Jr.
So now you're going to bring in Rothbard to justify the problems caused by the State?

He was an anarchist (which I'm NOT as such) but here's the deal - since you believe that government can be "tricked into being honest" then why don't you trust them with issuing money? Why not trust them to produce all the goods & services people need?
I do not think courts have always been honest. At least they haven't been honest since the people quit enforcing Article VI Clause 3 on the judges, but I think there is a way to force honesty into the court system. The solution is to enforce Article VI Clause 3 again.
What incentive would they have to be honest if they're run on stolen money? And whom do you expect to enforce the said clause? Rest of the thieves???
I find the United States to be a great experiment in liberty, peace, and prosperity, but it wasn't perfect. It needs to be obeyed to be effective and amended to meet the challenges of the 21st century. That is the only reason I support Ron Paul, "The Champion of the Constitution." If he believed that all governments were corrupt, then I would not support his bid for president.
I feel the same way about democracies, but in this case it was simply the name of his book.
When I say all governments are corrupt, it's NOT to be taken as if each & every person in it is corrupt but that vast majority of them are because that's how markets work, coercive monopolies attract those who want to use coercive monopolies to their advantage
I think you far underestimate the role of government in creation of Fed, because again, it's the government that legitimizes it BECAUSE government greatly benefits from them, by way of bribes, financing their election-campaigns & without Fed, government would be handicapped as it wouldn't be able to keep issuing debt but having Fed allows them keep on doing that while Fed monetizes it & government gets to make all the grandiose promises to BUY VOTES - be it welfare or warfare
Again, it's not JUST about bankers, it's a symbiotic relationship between the government & bankers
That's not quite what the monetary base is. Assuming that there are no central bank reserves, the monetary base is the total value of all bills and coins that have been issued.
I'll try to explain in a different way.
No more dollars. No central bank. You and I are going to create a new currency tomorrow. PaulBux. We get to decide how big of a monetary base to print/mint. No matter if we have fractional reserve banking or not, we have just as much control over the total size of the money supply.
So we do some math, and we decide that based on the number of people we expect to use our currency, and the area we are supplying with currency, and the amount of gold we have in our vaults, that 5,000 PaulBux (PB) will give us the quantity and value (PB / oz) we want. We print it.
If the required reserve ratio is 100% (no fractional reserve banking), then 5,000 PB is both the monetary base (total currency) and the total size of the money supply. There's no expansion, and there are no 'electronic PaulBux.' Every person or bank that has a PaulBux on their books has one in their hand/safe/etc.
If the required reserve ratio is 20%, then 5,000 PB is the monetary base, but once that's in our banking system, the total size of the money supply is limited to 25,000 PB. It can never get any bigger than that. If we still wanted that 5,000 PB number as the size of our total money supply, we would have only issued 1,000 PB instead of 5,000 PB.
My point is that we, as the currency issuer, know both of those numbers. No matter what the reserve ratio is, we know both how big the monetary base is and how big the money supply is. We control it, still. We know what needs to be in our vaults to back that money.
It all sounds so fine & dandy, doesn't it! That these omniscient, angelic people bereft of any self-interest work the moneysupply "just right"
You miss the fact that these omniscient angelic people don't have all the information needed to central-plan the price of money & that's precisely why centrally planning ALWAYS fails because prices are products of the market, of interaction between supply & demand & perceptions of millions & billions of people, central-planners sitting in their AC rooms can't do that
Let's for the sake argument, say that Fed determines a certain moneysupply to be "just right" with magic crystal-ball, they issue 1/10th of it & of course, then expect banks to pyramid it BUT as "Gold Standard" has said, pyramid doesn't always stretch itself completely because it depends on how much people are willing to borrow & how much banks are willing to lend, & as I've said before, central-banks can't always make them do that (& for good reasons

) Just like how the good ol' Ben wants to increase moneysupply, he's even paying interest on excess reserve but the market is overburdened with debt & therefore doesn't want to pyramid anymore & hence the moneysupply is collapsing
Another reason FRB causes boom-bust-cycles is because market-participants are fooled into believing that there's more money than there ACTUALLY is. Because when someone puts money in a demand-deposit, they believe they can get ALL of ANY TIME they want but of course, that is lent out so it's not there. Now, if the depositor had known that his spending habits would be different, for example, in case of a time-deposit, he knows he can't access that money immediately so he'll be spending more cautiously while if it's a demand-deposit then he thinks it'll be available any time he wants so he spends more lavishly pushing up the demand & prices for goods/services & of course, on the other side, the person who has received that demand-deposit as loan spends that money & causes the demand & prices of goods/services to rise as well & this whole process is what leads to inflationary boom where people THINK they're much better off than they ACTUALLY are & of course, sooner rather than later, the reality start setting in which results in deflationary bust, until the process starts once again from square one on its way to the next boom-bust-cycle.
This is exactly how FRB fools the market-participants & that's why it's important to stop the lending of demand-deposits if we're to work towards a more stable economic model.
If you don't have fractional reserves, then the interest rate is not based on real savings, because those savings are not available to be loaned.
*facepalm* YES, savings ARE available to be loaned as time-deposits!