LESSONS FROM THE WIZARD OF OZ
The Web of Debt
by Ellen Brown
"The great Oz as spoken! Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain! I am the great and powerful Wizard of Oz!"
In refreshing contrast to the impenetrable writings of economists, the classic fairytale The Wizard of Oz has delighted young and old for over a century. It was first published by L. Frank Baum as The Wonderful Wizard of Oz  in 1900. In 1939, it was made into a hit Hollywood movie starring Judy  Garland, and later it was made into the popular stage play The Wiz. 
Few  of the millions who have enjoyed this charming tale have suspected that  its imagery was drawn from that most obscure and tedious of subjects,  banking and finance. Fewer still have suspected that the real-life folk  heroes who inspired its plot may have had the answer to the financial  crisis facing the country today!
The  economic allusions in Baum's tale were first observed in 1964 by a  schoolteacher named Henry Littlefield, who called the story "a parable  on Populism," referring to the People's Party movement challenging the  banking monopoly in the late nineteenth century.1 Other analysts later picked up the theme. Economist Hugh Rockoff, writing in the Journal of Political Economy in 1990, called the story a "monetary allegory."2 Professor Tim Ziaukas, writing in 1998, stated:
"The  Wizard of Oz"... was written at a time when American society was  consumed by the debate over the "financial question," that is, the  creation and circulation of money... The characters of "The Wizard of  Oz" represented those deeply involved in the debate: the Scarecrow as  the farmers, the Tin Woodman as the industrial workers, the Lion as  silver advocate William Jennings Bryan and Dorothy as the archetypal  American girl.3…
[T]here  was once a time in history when people acted... [F]armers were trapped  in debt. They were the most oppressed of Americans, they experimented  with cooperative purchasing and marketing, they tried to find their own  way out of the strangle hold of debt to merchants, but none of this  could work if they couldn't get capital. So they had to turn to  politics, and they had to organize themselves into a party... [T]he  populists didn't just organize a political party, they made a movement.  They had picnics and parties and newsletters and classes and courses,  and they taught themselves, and they taught each other, and they became a  group of people with a sense of purpose, a group of people with  courage, a group of people with dignity.6
Like  the Populists, Dorothy and her troop discovered that they had the power  to solve their own problems and achieve their own dreams. The Scarecrow  in search of a brain, the Tin Man in search of a heart, the Lion in  search of courage actually had what they wanted all along. When the  Wizard's false magic proved powerless, the Wicked Witch was vanquished  by a defenseless young girl and her little dog. When the Wizard  disappeared in his hot air balloon, the unlettered Scarecrow took over  as leader of Oz.
The Wizard of Oz  came to embody the American dream and the American national spirit. In  the United States, the land of abundance, all you had to do was to  realize your potential and manifest it. That was one of the tale's  morals, but it also contained a darker one, a message for which its  imagery has become a familiar metaphor: that there are invisible  puppeteers pulling the strings of the puppets we see on the stage, in a  show that is largely illusion.
Money in the Land of Oz
The 1890s were plagued by an economic depression  that was nearly as severe as the Great Depression of the 1930s. The  farmers lived like serfs to the bankers, having mortgaged their farms,  their equipment, and sometimes even the seeds they needed for planting.  They were charged so much by a railroad cartel for shipping their  products to market that they could have more costs and debts than  profits. 
The  farmers were as ignorant as the Scarecrow of banking policies; while in  the cities, unemployed factory workers were as frozen as the Tin  Woodman from the lack of a free-flowing supply of money to "oil" the  wheels of industry. In the early 1890s, unemployment had reached 20  percent. The crime rate soared, families were torn apart, racial  tensions boiled. The nation was in chaos. Radical party politics  thrived.
In  every presidential election between 1872 and 1896, there was a third  national party running on a platform of financial reform. Typically  organized under the auspices of labor or farmer organizations, these  were parties of the people rather than the banks. They included the  Populist Party, the Greenback and Greenback Labor Parties, the Labor  Reform Party, the Antimonopolist Party, and the Union Labor Party. They  advocated expanding the national currency to meet the needs of trade,  reform of the banking system, and democratic control of the financial  system.7
Money  reform advocates today tend to argue that the solution to the country's  financial woes is to return to the "gold standard," which required that  paper money be backed by a certain weight of gold bullion. But to the  farmers and laborers who were suffering under its yoke in the 1890s, the  gold standard was the problem. They had been there and done it and knew  it didn't work. 
William  Jennings Bryan called the bankers' private gold-based money a "cross of  gold." There was simply not enough gold available to finance the needs  of an expanding economy. The bankers made loans in notes backed by gold  and required repayment in notes backed by gold; but the bankers  controlled the gold, and its price was subject to manipulation by  speculators. Gold's price had increased over the course of the century,  while the prices laborers got for their wares had dropped. People short  of gold had to borrow from the bankers, who periodically contracted the  money supply by calling in loans and raising interest rates. The result  was "tight" money – insufficient money to go around. Like in a game of  musical chairs, the people who came up short wound up losing their homes  to the banks.
The  solution of Jacob Coxey and his Industrial Army of destitute unemployed  men was to augment the money supply with government-issued United  States Notes. Popularly called "Greenbacks," these federal dollars were  first issued by President Lincoln when he was faced with usurious  interest rates in the 1860s. Lincoln had foiled the bankers by funding  the government with U.S. Notes that did not accrue interest and did not  have to be paid back to the banks. 
The  same sort of debt-free paper money had financed a long period of  colonial abundance in the eighteenth century, until King George forbade  the colonies from issuing their own currency. The money supply had then  shrunk, precipitating a depression that led to the American Revolution.
To  remedy the tight-money problem that resulted when the Greenbacks were  halted after Lincoln's assassination, Coxey proposed that Congress  should increase the money supply with a further $500 million in  Greenbacks. This new money would be used to redeem the federal debt and  to stimulate the economy by putting the unemployed to work on public  projects.8 The bankers countered that allowing the government to issue money would be dangerously inflationary. 
What  they failed to reveal was that their own paper banknotes were  themselves highly inflationary, since the same gold was "lent" many  times over, effectively counterfeiting it; and when the bankers lent  their paper money to the government, the government wound up heavily in  debt for something it could have created itself. But those facts were  buried in confusing rhetoric, and the bankers' "gold standard" won the  day.
The Silver Slippers: The Populist Solution
to the Money Question
The Greenback Party was later absorbed into  the Populist Party, which took up the cause against tight money in the  1890s. Like the Greenbackers, the Populists argued that money should be  issued by the government rather than by private banks. William Jennings  Bryan, the Populists' loquacious leader, gave such a stirring speech at  the Democratic convention that he won the Democratic nomination for  President in 1896. Outgoing President Grover Cleveland was also a  Democrat, but he was an agent of J. P. Morgan and the Wall Street  banking interests. Cleveland favored money that was issued by the banks,  and he backed the bankers' gold standard. Bryan was opposed to both. He  argued in his winning nomination speech:
We say in our platform that we believe that the right to coin money and issue money is a function of government.  . . . Those who are opposed to this proposition tell us that the issue  of paper money is a function of the bank and that the government ought  to go out of the banking business. I stand with Jefferson . . . and tell  them, as he did, that the issue of money is a function of the government and that the banks should go out of the governing business.  . . . [W]hen we have restored the money of the Constitution, all other  necessary reforms will be possible, and . . . until that is done there  is no reform that can be accomplished. 
He concluded with these famous lines:
You shall not press down upon the brow of labor this crown of thorns, you shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold.9 
Since  the Greenbackers' push for government-issued paper money had failed,  Bryan and the "Silverites" proposed solving the liquidity problem in  another way. The money supply could be supplemented with coins made of  silver, a precious metal that was cheaper and more readily available  than gold. Silver was considered to be "the money of the Constitution"  although the Constitution only referred to the "dollar," because the  dollar was understood to be a reference to the Spanish milled silver  dollar coin then in common use. The slogan of the Silverites was "16 to  1": 16 ounces of silver would be the monetary equivalent of 1 ounce of  gold. Ounces is abbreviated oz, hence "Oz." The Wizard of the Gold Ounce  (Oz) in Washington was identified by later commentators as Marcus  Hanna, the power behind the Republican Party, who controlled the  mechanisms of finance in the administration of President William  McKinley.10 (Hanna was reportedly admired by Karl Rove, who followed the model as political adviser to President George Bush Jr.11)
Frank Baum, the journalist who turned the politics of his day into The Wonderful Wizard of Oz,  marched with the Populist Party in support of Bryan in 1896. He is said  to have had a deep distrust of big-city financiers. But when his dry  goods business failed, he bought a Republican newspaper, which had to  have a Republican message to retain its readership.12 That  may have been why the Populist message was so deeply buried in symbolism  in his famous fairytale. Like Lewis Carroll, who began his career  writing uninspiring tracts about mathematics and politics and wound up  satirizing Victorian society in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, 
Baum  was able to suggest in a children's story what he could not say in his  editorials. His book contained many subtle allusions to the political  and financial issues of the day. The story's inspirational message was  evidently a product of the times as well. Commentators trace it to the  theosophical movement, of which Baum was an active member.13  Newly-imported from India, it held that reality is a construct of the  mind. What you want is already yours; you need only to believe it, to  "realize" it or "make it real."
Looking at the plot of this familiar fairytale, then, through the lens of the contemporary movements that inspired it..
An Allegory of Money, Politics
and Believing in Yourself
The story began on a barren Kansas farm,  where Dorothy lived with a very sober aunt and uncle who "never  laughed" (the 1890s depression that hit the farmers particularly hard). A  cyclone came up, carrying Dorothy and the house into the magical world  of Oz (the American dream that might have been). The house landed on the  Wicked Witch of the East (the Wall Street bankers and their man Grover  Cleveland), who had kept the Munchkins (the farmers and factory workers)  in bondage for many years.
For  killing the Wicked Witch, Dorothy was awarded magic silver slippers  (the Populist silver solution to the money crisis) by the Good Witch of  the North (the North was then a Populist stronghold). In the 1939 film,  the silver slippers would be transformed into ruby slippers to show off  the cinema's new technicolor abilities; but the monetary imagery Baum  suggested was lost. The silver shoes had the magic power to solve  Dorothy's dilemma, just as the Silverites thought that expanding the  money supply with silver coins would solve the problems facing the  farmers.
Dorothy  wanted to get back to Kansas but was unaware of the power of the  slippers on her feet, so she set out to the Emerald City to seek help  from the Wizard of Oz (the apparently all-powerful President, whose  strings were actually pulled by financiers concealed behind a curtain).
"The  road to the City of Emeralds is paved with yellow brick," she was told,  "so you cannot miss it." Baum's contemporary audience, wrote Professor  Ziaukas, could not miss it either, as an allusion to the gold standard  that was then a hot topic of debate.14 Like the Emerald City  and the Great and Powerful Oz himself, the yellow brick road would turn  out to be an illusion. In the end, what would carry Dorothy home were silver slippers.
On  her journey down the yellow brick road, Dorothy was first joined by the  Scarecrow in search of a brain (the naive but intelligent farmer kept  in the dark about the government's financial policies), then by the Tin  Woodman in search of a heart (the factory worker frozen by unemployment  and dehumanized by mechanization). Littlefield commented:
The  Tin Woodman . . . had been put under a spell by the Witch of the East.  Once an independent and hard working human being, the Woodman found that  each time he swung his axe it chopped off a different part of his body.  Knowing no other trade he "worked harder than ever," for luckily in Oz  tinsmiths can repair such things. Soon the Woodman was all tin. In this  way Eastern witchcraft dehumanized a simple laborer so that the faster  and better he worked the more quickly he became a kind of machine. Here  is a Populist view of evil Eastern influences on honest labor which  could hardly be more pointed. 
The  Eastern witchcraft that had caused the Woodman to chop off parts of his  own body reflected the dark magic of the Wall Street bankers, whose  "gold standard" allowed less money into the system than was collectively  owed to the banks, causing the assets of the laboring classes to be  systematically devoured by debt.
The  fourth petitioner to join the march on Oz was the Lion in search of  courage. According to Littlefield, he represented the orator Bryan  himself, whose roar was mighty like the king of the forest but who  lacked political power. Bryan was branded a coward by his opponents  because he was a pacifist and anti-imperialist at a time of American  expansion in Asia. The Lion became entranced and fell asleep in the  Witch's poppy field, suggesting Bryan's tendency to get side-tracked  with issues of American imperialism stemming from the Opium Wars. Since  Bryan led the "Populist" or "People's" Party, the Lion also represented  the people, collectively powerful but entranced and unaware of their  strength.
In  the Emerald City, the people were required to wear green-colored  glasses attached by a gold buckle, suggesting green paper money shackled  to the gold standard. To get to her room in the Emerald Palace, Dorothy  had to go through 7 passages and up 3 flights of stairs, an allusion to  the "Crime of '73," the congressional Act that changed the money system  from bimetallism (paper notes backed by both gold and silver) to an  exclusive gold standard. The Crime of '73 proved to all Populists that  Congress and the bankers were in collusion.15
Dorothy  and her troop presented their requests to the Wizard, who demanded that  they first vanquish the Wicked Witch of the West, representing the  McKinley/Rockefeller faction in Ohio (then considered a Western state).  The financial powers of the day were the Morgan/Wall Street/Cleveland  faction in the East (the Wicked Witch of the East) and this  Rockefeller-backed contingent from Ohio, the state of McKinley, Hanna,  and Rockefeller's Standard Oil cartel. Hanna was an industrialist who  was a high school friend of John D. Rockefeller and had the financial  backing of the oil giant.16
Dorothy  and her friends learned that the Witch of the West had enslaved the  Yellow Winkies and the Winged Monkeys (an allusion to the Chinese  immigrants working on the Union-Pacific railroad, the native Americans  banished from the northern woods, and the Filipinos denied independence  by McKinley). Dorothy destroyed the Witch by melting her with a bucket  of water, suggesting the rain that would reverse the drought, and the  financial liquidity that the Populist solution would bring to the land.  As one nineteenth century commentator put it, "Money and debt are as  opposite in nature as fire and water; money extinguishes debt as water  extinguishes fire."17
When  Dorothy and her troop got lost in the forest, she was told to call the  Winged Monkeys by using a Golden Cap she had found in the Witch's  cupboard. When the Winged Monkeys came, their leader explained that they  were once a free and happy people; but they were now "three times the  slaves of the owner of the Golden Cap, whosoever he may be" (the bankers  and their gold standard). When the Golden Cap fell into the hands of  the Wicked Witch of the West, the Witch had made them enslave the  Winkies and drive Oz himself from the Land of the West.
Dorothy  used the power of the Cap to have her band of pilgrims flown to the  Emerald City, where they discovered that the "Wizard" was only a smoke  and mirrors illusion operated by a little man behind a curtain. A  dispossessed Nebraska man himself, he admitted to being a "humbug"  without real power. "One of my greatest fears was the Witches," he said,  "for while I had no magical powers at all I soon found out that the  Witches were really able to do wonderful things."
If  the Wizard and his puppet were Marcus Hanna and William McKinley, who  were the Witches they feared? Behind the Wall Street bankers were  powerful British financiers, who funded the Confederates in the Civil  War and had been trying to divide and conquer America economically for  over a century. Patriotic Americans had regarded the British as the  enemy ever since the American Revolution. McKinley was a protectionist  who favored high tariffs to keep these marauding British free-traders  out. When he was assassinated in 1901, no conspiracy was proved; but  some suspicious commentators saw the invisible hand of British high  finance at work.18
The  Wizard lacked magical powers but was a very good psychologist, who  showed the petitioners that they had the power to solve their own  problems and manifest their own dreams. The Scarecrow just needed a  paper diploma to realize he had a brain. For the Tin Woodman, it was a  silk heart; for the Lion, an elixir for courage. The Wizard offered to  take Dorothy back to Kansas in his hot air balloon, but the balloon took  off before she could get on board. Dorothy and her friends then set out  to find Glinda the Good Witch of the South, who they were told could  help Dorothy find her way home.
On  the way they faced various challenges, including a great spider that  ate everything in its path and kept everyone unsafe as long as it was  alive. The Lion (the Populist leader Bryan) welcomed this chance to test  his new-found courage and prove he was indeed the King of Beasts. He  decapitated the mighty spider with his paw, just as Bryan would have  toppled the banking cartel if he had won the Presidency.
The  group finally reached Glinda, who revealed that Dorothy too had the  magic tokens she needed all along: the Silver Shoes on her feet would  take her home. But first, said Glinda, Dorothy must give up the Golden  Cap (the bankers' restrictive gold standard that had enslaved the  people).
The  moral also worked for the nation itself. The economy was deep in  depression, but the country's farmlands were still fertile and its  factories were ready to roll. Its entranced people merely lacked the  paper tokens called "money" that would facilitate production and trade.  The people had been deluded into a belief in scarcity by defining their  wealth in terms of a scarce commodity, gold. The country's true wealth  consisted of its goods and services, its resources and the creativity of  its people. Like the Tin Woodman in need of oil, all it needed was a  monetary medium that would allow this wealth to flow freely, circulating  from the government to the people and back again, without being  perpetually drained into the private coffers of the bankers.
Sequel to Oz
The Populists did not achieve their goals,  but they did prove that a third party could influence national politics  and generate legislation. Although Bryan the Lion failed to stop the  bankers, Dorothy's prototype Jacob Coxey was still on the march. In a  plot twist that would be considered contrived if it were fiction, he  reappeared on the scene in the 1930s to run against Franklin D.  Roosevelt for President, at a time when the "money question" had again  become a burning issue. In one five-year period, over 2,000 schemes for  monetary reform were advanced. 
Needless  to say, Coxey lost the election; but he claimed that his Greenback  proposal was the model for the "New Deal," Roosevelt's plan for putting  the unemployed to work on government projects to pull the country out of  the Depression. The difference was that Coxey's plan would have been  funded with debt-free currency issued by the government, on Lincoln's  Greenback model. Roosevelt funded the New Deal with borrowed money,  indebting the country to a banking cartel that was surreptitiously  creating the money out of thin air, just as the government itself would  have been doing under Coxey's plan without accruing a crippling debt to  the banks.
After  World War II, the money question faded into obscurity. Today, writes  British economist Michael Rowbotham, "The surest way to ruin a promising  career in economics, whether professional or academic, is to venture  into the 'cranks and crackpots' world of suggestions for reform of the  financial system."19 Yet the claims of these cranks and  crackpots have consistently proven to be correct. The U.S. debt burden  has mushroomed out of control, until just the interest on the federal  debt now threatens to be a greater tax burden than the taxpayers can  afford. The gold standard precipitated the problem, but unbuckling the  dollar from gold did not solve it. Rather, it caused worse financial  ills. 
Expanding  the money supply with increasing amounts of "easy" bank credit just put  increasing amounts of money in the bankers' pockets, while consumers  sank further into debt. The problem proved to be something more  fundamental: it was in who extended the nation's credit. As long as the  money supply was created as a debt owed back to private banks with  interest, the nation's wealth would continue to be drained off into  private vaults, leaving scarcity in its wake.
Today's  monetary allegory goes something like this: the dollar is a national  resource that belongs to the people. It was an original invention of the  early American colonists, a new form of paper currency backed by the  "full faith and credit" of the people. But a private banking cartel has  taken over its issuance, turning debt into money and demanding that it  be paid back with interest. Taxes and a crushing federal debt have been  imposed by a financial ruling class that keeps the people entranced and  enslaved. 
In  the happy storybook ending to the tale, the power to create money is  returned to the people, and abundance returns to the land. But before we  get there, the Yellow Brick Road takes us through the twists and turns  of history and the writings and insights of a wealth of key players.  We're off to see the Wizard...
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