The Emperor’s Clothes
Cost Twenty Dollars
By Lloyd Darland
Chapter 1: What’s Going On?
Today, just like yesterday, and possibly tomorrow, a thief sneaks into your home,
into your wallet, and takes $5.
No, this isn’t the income tax; that’s bad enough…this is in addition
to that. And it’s not just “your” home… it’s happening in
every home in the country, every day of the year.
This is the average amount taken every day with a little-understood, quiet method
you need to know about. The total amount of the theft currently equals upwards of
$94 trillion!
I hope you’ll keep reading to see how it’s done and why, what it
means to you and your family and what you can do about it.
The thief is your very own Federal government! They have incubated a special cancer
— the same kind that killed Imperial Rome — and have spread it throughout the land.
The Founders of our Country thought they had written the Constitution to shield
us from this disease, but this defense has and continues to be perpetrated. The
Emperor’s Clothes Cost Twenty Dollars is a call to arms to repair
our defenses, lest the thief steals our entire country right before our very eyes.
The process is inadequately called “inflation.” It’s really an
illness. Whether or not the thievery continues until the destruction is complete
depends on what actions are taken.
You can help stop it.
Our national money system is sick with this cancer that is gobbling up our dollars
and everything measured by them. This cancer has been growing for more than 30 years.
It affects and threatens everyone, particularly those who have retired, those who
expect to retire, or those who are saving for the future. This cancer is inflation,
and it’s time to do something about it. You might have falsely thought the
disease was accidental, but you must know it was planned.
Please keep reading this entire text with an open mind so that you can see through
the fog that has been orchestrated to confuse you.
I address this to all concerned citizens who are interested in our Country’s
survival, and their own.
My interest in economics began early. When I was a teenager I earned about $1,500,
which would buy a big Buick. My father urged me not to spend the cash on a car but
to invest it.
I bought war bonds; and in 10 years, my $1,500 had grown to $2,000. But the $2,000
would no longer buy an average Ford. I felt cheated. The value of my war bonds appeared
bigger, but their value was actually smaller.
Something had been taken from me. I decided to see if I could find out who took
it and how it was done and decide if anything could be done about it.
I found out that I had been intentionally cheated, that it had been done with dishonest
money and the one in charge of the money was the government.
Naturally I was angry!
I believe that “we the people,” under our Constitution, have a right
to an honest money system. We do not have it now and have not had it for a very
long time.
But I have discovered a way honest money can be brought back quickly starting in
its simplicity by strictly abiding by the Constitution. Clearly a novel concept
to our elected officials!
The success of this action and the key to correcting the dishonesty in our nation’s
money structure will greatly benefit everyone who works for a living, everyone
who is self-employed and small business owners.
It will benefit those who are trying to save a “buck,” the retired and
those poor souls living on a fixed income.
An honest money system would dramatically reduce taxes and at the same time increase
the effectiveness of government.
Most politicians will not be happy with sound money… especially those that get elected
off of continuing the phony money fraud. They might say, “Are we not our brother’s
keeper?” And each must decide for himself. But in any case, it is not my brother’s
position to make the decision that I must keep him.
Before we continue it’s important to have some understanding of economics.
Consider that we’re all playing in a big game similar to Monopoly®. All the
players turn in pennies to get $100 bills in play money.
In this game you may trade your time to someone else who wants it, and for this
you get some more pay in play money. You use your play money to trade with someone
else who has something that you would like to have.
If you would prefer, you may make something that others would like to have and trade
it to them for some of their play money. The overriding rules of our game will be
the Constitution.
Under it, you decide who is going to be the head administrator of the rules, and
he’s called President. You decide who’s going to work out what the rules
should be, and that group is called the Legislature.
You have some people to keep the fights between players under control, and that
group is called the Police. In case there are disagreements between players that
the police can’t resolve, you have another group, and they are called the
Courts.
You put someone in charge of making sure that no outside bullies break up your game;
they are called “defense.”
In order to pay for the structure, you set up a system so that there’s a “cut”
taken each time you do something for someone else, and that’s called an “income
tax.”
You set up rules that the makers of things have to comply with, and the expenses
of these rules have to be included in their price, so those taxes are “hidden.”
Anytime the players want, they can turn in their play money and get a penny back
for each $100 bill. Thus, the stage is set.
Let’s make you President
One of the first things you, as President, notice is that the people who don’t
have anything to sell or don’t do anything don’t have any money. That
doesn’t seem fair because, after all, everyone wants to play.
Since everyone has a say in who is to be in the various positions, including yours,
you want everyone to be as happy as possible. You ask the people who have some cash
and who are earning more to give you some extra so that you can give some to the
people who don’t have any.
Sure enough they do. But pretty soon the people you have given money to have spent
it and are again without any. So you ask for an increase in the income tax so you
can give even more to the others.
But then a couple of things happen.
First, there was someone who was working, but he didn’t have very much and
he saw that you were giving people who didn’t work as much money as he was
making. He quickly figured out that if he wasn’t working, then he would be
better off. He quit working, and sure enough he was better off.
Further, the people who were making more than that noticed that what they had left
wouldn’t buy as much as before, so they complained about the high taxes.
So everyone voted for a system that takes more from the people who could best afford
it: the rich ones. You called this a “progressive tax.”
Now, a greater number of people are happy.
The only ones who were less happy were the rich; and not only could they afford
it, but when all the votes were counted, the rich lost anyway.
Things were going along about like you would expect for a while. But then the rich
people got together and came to you and said they felt the taxes were too high.
You paid attention, because it looked like if you didn’t, you might not get
re-elected.
Then you noticed you had some extra cash on hand just in case someone else wanted
to enter the game.
You thought no one would notice if you gave some of that to the people who needed
it. And anyway, since the game started, people had been checking in and out — all
the players never checked out all at once — so you always had plenty of pennies.
But somebody did notice and called your attention to the fact that the basic rules
prohibited your spending anything you hadn’t gotten from the players. (Article
I, Section 9, Paragraph 7 of the Constitution).
What you, as President, were doing was “inflating” the currency in the
game.
Since you couldn’t continue to inflate directly, you had the Legislature
create a new group, called the Federal Reserve Board (FRB), to be in charge of the
cash. You told the FRB it really had to be honest with the cash system because it
was so important.
But then you set it up so that no one could check and see how it was doing. A few
complained, but not too many people had read the rules. So it seemed to work pretty
well.
Once in a while, someone who you didn’t even know was in the game came to
the FRB with $100 and asked for a penny. You found out that some of the players
were having outsiders do some things for them.
They were giving play money to the outsiders but told them that the FRB would give
them a real penny if they had enough of the cash. And sure enough, it was true.
And the FRB really didn’t care too much because they had lots of pennies that
had been turned in. And so goes the game.
This helps give a quite accurate definition of inflation. It is the increase of
cash in the game for which no pennies have been turned in and for which no goods
and services are coming to market.
Inflation is a problem caused by cheating.
Dear Curious Friend,
Please excuse my brief interruption.
In a moment you’ll be presented with the opportunity to finish reading,
The Emperor’s Clothes Cost Twenty Dollars, written by
Lloyd Darland.
But first I’d like to share a little back story behind
the book, the man who wrote it, and what he could have possibly put down in writing
that made our government fear him.
You’ve probably heard the story — or at least some of it.
About how, in the dead of night in 1913, a group of United States lawmakers met
with top executives from the world’s biggest banks and corporations on a remote
island off the coast of Georgia and laid the groundwork for a central bank…
About how those lawmakers and President Woodrow Wilson conspired to deceive the
American people, using a banking crisis created by the big banksters as a backdrop,
to sell them on the need for a central bank…
And about how some of those same lawmakers lied and used doublespeak to convince
Americans they were against the very law they were writing in order to trick Americans
into believing the bill would be beneficial, ensuring its passage.
Although this happened over 100 years ago, the impact is still felt today…
That’s because The Federal Reserve, the central bank created out of that meeting
so long ago, is directly responsible for the economic situation we now find ourselves
in.
The Rosetta Stone of American Politics
Lloyd Darland first learned about finance as a young boy in Depression era America.
He became a cost and economic analysis expert for the military and later taught
basic economics to first year college students.
He was shocked to learn that his students — all of whom were high school graduates
or held high school equivalency certificates — knew little to nothing about money
and how it worked.
It was while teaching these classes that the idea to write The Emperor's
Clothes Cost Twenty Dollars came to him — sparked by a question
from a student who asked Darland: “Does anybody else know this stuff?”
This was all the inspiration Darland needed to create the most eye-opening explanation
of the Fed's sinister inner workings ever published.
Just as the Rosetta Stone helped us finally translate the mysterious hieroglyphs
from ancient Egypt, Darland's remarkable text translates government double-talk
into ordinary English.
He effortlessly demonstrates how the Federal Reserve steals your money through inflation,
describing the mega fraud and illegalities of a Federal Tax system that has been
used to cheat Americans to this very day!
When you read it, our entire economic crisis and today's political propaganda
will make PERFECT sense…
Dangerous words from a dangerous man
The Emperor’s Clothes Darland did such of good job of laying the
whole scam bare that less than 100 hours after his book hit the streets the U.S.
Secret Service was calling him.
What caught their attention was Darland’s description of his own honest,
private currency in Chapter four of The Emperor's Clothes Cost
Twenty Dollars.
The Secret Service “invited” Darland to Baltimore to “talk,”
and suggested he bring an attorney. During that meeting the Secret Service agent
accused Darland of counterfeiting the currency.
They didn’t have a leg to stand on but that didn’t matter. They considered
Darland—or more over the information he’d made publicly available—to be a
danger.
They let him go, but not without a warning. He never heard from them again on
the matter, however, he would remain under a watchful eye...
Years later he began a business filling out tax returns. After several years, the
Federal government came calling again.
This time they charged him with not complying with tax law, even though during the
trial an Internal Revenue Service employee testified that the IRS had reviewed more
than 600 returns Darland had filed for people—and not a single mistake had been
found.
By this time, copies of Darland’s book were few and far to be found. But still,
his oppressors were ever vigilant.
Darland was eventually convicted of failing to pay the proper taxes for his
tax business and spent 21 months in Federal prison.
A legal criminal enterprise: Your government
Mr. Darland was jailed. But it’s the Federal government that is the criminal
enterprise. It has been stealing the wealth of Americans through the unconstitutional
Federal Reserve since 1914.
But the system is rigged. The taxpayer gets his pocket picked, and no one is the
wiser.
The Emperor's Clothes Cost Twenty Dollars is a timeless
tome, and it is even more relevant today than it was 30 years ago. That’s
because the circumstances Darland wrote about are playing themselves out today,
exactly as he described.
And this book is your ONLY key to discovering how to legally work around the
Fed and render it impotent to control your money—and your life!
That’s why when we secured publishing rights, I vowed to print as many as I could
and keep them affordable (you’ll pay upwards of $129 online for the few used copies
you may find).
I’d like to afford you a rare opportunity to read the The Emperor's
Clothes Cost Twenty Dollars in full, today.
Read it from beginning to end. Share the information with friends and family. The
dark underpinnings of government bureaucracy gone awry must be exposed!
Then, take special care to preserve your copy. Because it may be the only one you
ever see.
Just click below to get The Emperor's Clothes Cost Twenty Dollars
for only $19.95 (regularly $39.95!), plus $6.95 shipping and handling. A printed
bound copy will be mailed to the address you provide right away.
But you can begin reading—right where you left off above—in a matter of minutes.
When your transaction is completed, we’ll immediately send you an email containing
a link to access the full book.
Add to cart - $19.95 pus $6.95 S+H
I promise your eyes will be opened wider than ever before.
You won’t be happy with what you find out, but you have a right to understand
the megafraud being perpetrated against you. We must understand the deceit behind
our government before we can demand real change.
I also promise that if you’re not happy with your purchase you can receive
a no-questions-asked full refund. That’s my 100% money back guarantee of satisfaction.
And you don’t even have to return the book.
Sincerely,
Bob Livingston
Editor,
The Bob Livingston Letter™
P.S. A couple of copies of Darland’s book are selling for as much as $129
and upward on a major online book site. But because I feel everyone should
read this priceless information I won’t sell it for more than $19.95 — while
I can. Get your copy today!