Posted on 10 March 2011
Tags: account, Amazing, amazing facts, average, card holder, credit, credit card, credit card bill, credit card bills, credit card debt, credit card fee, credit card fees, Credit card fraudCredit card fraud, credit card score, Credit cardCredit card, Credit Cards, Credit cardsCredit cards, credit history, Credit Report, Credit Score, CreditÂ, CreditCredit, credits, Debit cardDebit card, Debt, debts, dollars, fast food chains, Finance, Finance charges, FinanceFinance, first credit card, France, Frank, Frank X.McNamara, Germany, germany france, home, hotels, industry, information, ISA, Italy, loan, magnetic strip, magnetic tape, national debt, national debts, one billion dollars, parking, parking tickets, pay, Personal financePersonal finance, plastic, Ralph Schneider, Smart cardSmart card, task, the United States, top 10, trillion, Type of cards, United Kingdom, united state, united states, United States of America, united states population, USA, using credit cards, utility bills, Visa Card
A credit card comprises of a small plastic card, with a magnetic tape which is readable. By using credit cards the consumers are used to pay credits, buy items, give their utility bills etc. Basically credit cards are for the convenience of the people. In today’s society every person haves a credit card and knows very much about it .It is very easy to carry and very secure also.

Amazing Facts about Credit Card Debt:
Some of the amazing facts of credit card debt are as under:
Every person knows about the credit card and it is usually use for debt.
- The dues which are left with the library or the unpaid parking tickets can hurt your credit history. You must have to be aware of all the things and when you have to pay and where you have to pay, you must have the information. If you don’t think about it will ruin your credit card score.
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Posted on 02 January 2009
Tags: America, bank, banker, banknotes, basis of all money is gold, benevolent banker, big and energetic, bundles of new banknotes, Canada, cancer, carpenter, Christian Centre, Christian Democrats, Christian Party, Civilization, confiscation of property, cost of living, Credit Office, debt by private banks, debt-money system, depression, Economy without inflation, elementary accounting, exchange of goods for goods, farmer, Finance, financial credit, financial system, financier, financier and a banker, food, Frank, great banker, Great high priest, How money is created, how to produce money, kindly banker, kindly financier, Louis Even, mineralogist, monetary system, Money, money derives its value from gold, Myth, origin of money, paper bank notes, Political Party, press, printing press, private banks, providential island, public debt increases, Real credit, Salvation Island, serious inconvenience, Shipwreck survivors, simple economic system, So Oliver, So Tom, surgery, surplus products, system of money, Teacher, The First Year of Social Credit, The Star, The Sun, the things and services, Then Paul, True wealth, true wealth goods, unbearable cost of living, united states, Who owns money, wretched financial tool, yellow god
“The Money Myth Exploded” was one of the first articles of Louis Even, and to this date it remains one of the most popular illustrated story to explain in layman’s language how money was and still is created by private banks as a debt.
1. Shipwreck survivors
An explosion had blown their ship apart. Each one grasped the first bit of wreckage that came to hand. And when it was over, there were five left, five huddled on a raft which the waves carried along at their will. As for the other victims of the disaster, there was no sign of them.
Hour after long hour their eyes searched the horizon. Would some passing ship sight them? Would their make-shift raft finds its way to some friendly shore?
Suddenly a cry rang out: “Land! Look! Over there, in the direction the waves are carrying us!”
And as the vague silhouette proved itself to be, in fact, the outline of a shore, the figures on the raft danced with joy.
They were five. There was Frank, the carpenter, big and energetic. It was he who had first cried, “Land!”.
Then Paul, a farmer. You can see him, front and left in the picture, on his knees, one hand against the floor, the other gripping the mast of the raft.
Next is Jim, an animal breeder; he’s the one in the striped pants, kneeling and gazing in the direction of land.
Then there is Harry, an agriculturist, a little on the stout side, seated on a trunk salvaged from the wreck.
And finally Tom, a prospector and a mineralogist; he is the merry fellow standing in the rear of the picture with his hand on the carpenter’s shoulder.
2. A providential island
To our five men, setting foot on land was like returning to life from the grave.
When they had dried and warmed themselves their first impulse was to explore this little island on to which they had been cast, far from civilization.
A quick survey was sufficient to raise their spirit. The island was not a barren rock. True enough, they were the only men on it at the moment. But judging from the herds of semi-domesticated animals they encountered, there must have been men here at some time before them. Jim, the animal breeder, was sure he could completely domesticate them and put them to good service.

Paul found the island’s soil, for the most part, to be quite suitable for cultivation.
Harry discovered some fruit trees which, if properly tended, would give good harvests.
Most important were the large stands of timber embracing many types of wood. Frank, without too much difficulty, would be able to build houses for the little community.
As for Tom, the prospector, well, the rock formations of the island showed signs of rich mineral deposits. Lacking the tools, Tom still felt his ingenuity and initiative could produce metals from the ores.
So each could serve the common good with his special talent. All agreed to call the place Salvation Island. All gave thanks to Providence for the reasonably happy ending to what could have been stark tragedy.
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