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Title: LIVING IN THE U.X.A.
Source: red-coral.net
URL Source: http://red-coral.net/UXA_Article.html
Published: May 12, 2010
Author: John Curl, Introduction by Bernard Marsz
Post Date: 2010-05-12 01:11:21 by GreyLmist
Keywords: Economy
Views: 111
Comments: 4

LIVING IN THE U.X.A.

At the height of the Great Depression, a group of unemployed Oakland workers decided to take matters into their own hands. The system wasn’t working, so they set up their own system. Money was nearly worthless, so they decided to live by barter. They called themselves the Unemployed Exchange Association and they soon went on to write a remarkable chapter in American economic history. This is their story.

At the height of the Great Depression, a group of unemployed Oakland workers decided to take matters into their own hands. The system wasn’t working, so they set up their own system. Money was nearly worthless, so they decided to live by barter. They called themselves the Unemployed Exchange Association and they soon went on to write a remarkable chapter in American economic history. This is their story.

Ju1y 1932. The economy has stopped-cold. Factories are locked, money is scarce. One out of seven Californians is unemployed. Social welfare programs are almost non-existent. Large numbers are destitute, hungry. Buildings stand vacant, boarded up. Food prices are next to nothing, but many thousands have nothing at all. California fields are rotting with tons of fruit and vegetables. Few farmers have money to pay harvesters; there is no market; many small farmers are losing their land. Thousands of children, women, and men have taken to the highways and rails, searching for survival.

"Hoovervilles," shantytowns of the homeless, have sprung up around the country over the past three years. The largest in the Bay Area is "Pipe City," near the railroad tracks by the East Oakland waterfront, where hundreds live in sections of large sewer pipe that were never laid because the city ran out of money. One of Pipe City's frequent visitors is Carl Rhodehamel, once an electrical engineer at GE, a cellist, an inventor of several key technological developments in radio and early “talkies," an orchestra conductor, a composer whose "Little Symphony" had once been a favorite with KGO fans. But now Rhodehamel is unemployed and down on his luck.

But not for long. There is a streak of genius in him that will sweep him out of Pipe City and into the leadership of an organization that will stir California and the country.

Rhodehamel and two others find an abandoned grocery store not far away, in Oakland’s Dimond-Allendale district that can be used for meetings. Soon a group of six unemployed men begin to meet and discuss ways out of their problems. All are skilled and experienced workers, but all realize it could be years, if ever, before they'll find work in their fields again. Since the system isn't working to provide their needs, they decide to form their own system. Since money is scarce, they dispense with money altogether. From now on they will try to provide themselves with everything they need to live by barter.

They begin by going door-to-door in the neighborhood, offering to do home repairs in exchange for "junk" from people's basements and garages. But to make their system really work they realize they'll have to grow larger. They distribute fliers, trying to gather all the unemployed in the neighborhood into the group.

On the evening of July 20, 1932, some twenty people meet at the Hawthorne School and organize the Unemployed (or Universal, as they'd later call it) Exchange Association, a title they immediately abbreviate to UXA. The X stands not only for exchange, but also for the "unknown factor" in an algebraic equation.

The UXA offers a new social equation to one neighborhood in Oakland – one whose echoes will soon be heard around a nation desperate for change. [cont.]

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Poster Comment:

The article is long but educational. Worth the read, imo, if only to see how illegal aliens weren't needed by farmers or anyone else. FDR wanted to shut down the self-help orgs like U.X.A, which is something of an indication that he viewed such endeavors as obstacles to his Communistic designs.

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#1. To: All (#0)

Wrong Published date. Sorry. This info is listed at the site:

From the East Bay Express, Friday, November 11, 1983 - Volume 6, Number 5

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"They're on our left, they're on our right, they're in front of us, they're behind us...they can't get away this time." -- Col. Puller, USMC

GreyLmist  posted on  2010-05-12   1:15:17 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: GreyLmist (#0) (Edited)

In the long run we must realize that the international bankers and their political whores will always join forces to manipulate the people's condition downward and their own upwards.

Secondly, sheer manipulation of economic conditions might be tolerable but the cabalists want to micro manage life itself including population control that some estimate would require a 5 billion person reduction.

Whether the programs created by the UXA are feasible today is unknown, but the fact that we're approaching similar circumstances that have occurred due to banker and political malfeasance is undeniable.

We are going to change. Our choice to determine our own destiny by creating a system that works for us is here. If we could get organized, and I mean really fucking organized ... I think that we could use the foreclosed housing market that we could take over / confiscate from the CRIMINAL BANKERS that have frauded the world ... and re-capitalize a system free of shysters to fund the rebuilding of a world economy.

My opinion is this: If these criminal bankers can create the (commercial paper) money (out of thin air) that is allegedly LOANED to people in order to purchase a home that they will NEVER EVER REALLY OWN (Taxes) ... why shouldn't we place claims on these properties foreclosed upon by the criminals, give them back to the dispossessed at a realistic (very low) price to be paid into a treasury owned and operated by an elected consortium of THE PEOPLE in each COUNTY across America.

I haven't worked out the details but think that it has merit because those having been GIVEN authority over monetary policy by government edict have colluded with government to defraud everyone else.

Creating an independent and honest entity to oversee the monetary system is imperative and something that needs to be worked out regardless of anything else.

"The smallest of frauds such as Santa Claus are perpetrated upon children by criminals in order that the largest of frauds such as the FEDERAL RESERVE may be had upon them as adults."

noone222  posted on  2010-05-12   4:16:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: noone222 (#2) (Edited)

I think you're on the right track.

Anyone who thinks bankers lost money by mortgage defaults isn't doing the math right. Every house loan made that got depostited back into their bank before the transaction was complete got multiplied by 9, all of it accruing interest for the bankers until they make another loan that gets deposited and multiplied by 9 with more interest accruing for the bankers, as well as interest on the "bailout" money they've held onto or invested for themselves. They also hold the value of the houses on their books as collateral assets, no doubt with more interest accruing so for the banks, while the buyers are expected to pay back 3 times or more the amount of the loan in addition to all of the other profits the bankers made on the deal. On a default, they profit by getting the market value of the house + all the payments with interest that were made + all the profits with interest from each x9 deposit at their disposal for other investments. I know of one house repossesed for probably less than $2,000 after about 30 years of payments with interest. The banks' projected earnings might be somewhat less than they wanted but that doesn't mean they actually incurred any losses from foreclosures.

On working out the details of permanent housing for the homeless among us, let's keep in mind as a backup option that our parks do not belong to "the government" or any financiers that were suckered into believing they could be used as collateral instead of dealing with the transient employees in D.C. on their good faith alone. All of America's land and all of its resources are the private property of Constitutionalists, whether or not some of it is being rented or "leased". No politician of any rank is authorized to destroy our general welfare by gambling with our property. Some of our parks have fine campsites and some have cabins, too, already built with our money. Lots of room, with sanitation facilities and kitchens even, that could serve all across our nation as shelters for multi-millions of us, if need be.

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"They're on our left, they're on our right, they're in front of us, they're behind us...they can't get away this time." -- Col. Puller, USMC

GreyLmist  posted on  2010-05-15   10:08:56 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: GreyLmist (#3)

No politician of any rank is authorized to destroy our general welfare by gambling with our property.

Exactly Right !!!

"The smallest of frauds such as Santa Claus are perpetrated upon children by criminals in order that the largest of frauds such as the FEDERAL RESERVE may be had upon them as adults."

noone222  posted on  2010-05-15   10:45:46 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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