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The Canadian Federal Debt Debate: Auditor General Numbers, Framing, Causality, and a Social Credit Lens
Understanding this question concerning federal debt in precise terms matters. It moves us beyond simplistic "debt trap" stories or denials of fiscal pressures toward a nuanced recognition of trade-offs, agency, and alternatives. Sustainable fiscal policy requires primary balance discipline, growth-enhancing reforms, and — in line with the Douglas Social Credit monetary reform proposals — exploration of more direct, less burdensome mechanisms to ensure adequate purchasing power. Canada's experience from 1974 onward offers lessons in both the power and perils of relying on debt-financed demand management.
Written on Tuesday, 30 June 2026 10:25
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Debt Finance and the Apocalyptic Propensity
"Given the foregoing analysis, one may well be inclined to think that at least a few apocalyptic narratives are deliberate psychological operations designed to demoralize, terrorize and ultimately subjugate the public. Nonetheless, they cater to a genuine psychological need - the need for an explanation for the sense of foreboding and unease that so many feel. Thus, in order to drive these doomsday dogmas out of the minds of men, it is not sufficient to simply expose and discredit them: it is necessary to construct an alternative narrative that meets the psychological need, but also provides something they cannot: hope.""It is here that Douglas Social Credit becomes invaluable as the Trinitarian solution that explains our predicament, exposes the apocalyptic narratives and expounds an alternative worthy of a species whose members are meant for more than to merely live in fear and die in pain." Read the full article in the…
Written on Monday, 06 April 2026 11:37
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The Accounting of Abundance: A Structural Critique of Inflationary Theory
Mainstream economic thought treats inflation as a phenomenon of monetary volume—the "Too Much Money" paradigm. However, by applying the engineering logic of C.H. Douglas’s A+B Theorem, we can deduce that inflation is not primarily a result of consumer behaviour, but a mathematical consequence of debt-based cost accounting in an industrial society.
Written on Saturday, 14 February 2026 12:56
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