We're not bickering over semantics. We're talking about you trying to making sweeping statements about monetary policy and not even knowing the Fed is. I think it's pretty fundamental to any discussion about monetary policy that the parties involved know what the Federal Reserve is first.
The Fed is not "a private bank," it's a central banking system comprised of a Board of Governors appointed by the President, the 12 regional Fed banks and all the banks that comprise them...I think something like 40% of all U.S. banks are part of the Federal Reserve system, and the Federal Open Market Committee that's made up of some of the 12 regional bank presidents and some of the Board of Governors.
I know you don't know shyt about what you're talking about at the most basic level because of those comments likening the Fed to a bank charging a customer 6.25% interest. The Federal Reserve sets the federal funds rate, which is the rate at which banks in the Federal Reserve system lend to each other to. It's not a bank that gives out personal loans to American citizens charging interest.
You're all over the place. You started off talking about quantitative easing, now I guess we're talking about whether the Federal Reserve system should exist period. But we can't talk about QE, monetary policy, the economy going off a cliff or any sort of Fed policy until you educate yourself on the very basics of what the Federal Reserve system is and what it does.
i used the loan scenario as an example. in reality the one being charged interest is the GOVERNMENT. which then translates onto the people because WE FINANCE THE GOVERNMENT.
and the federal reserve banks are STILL private banks, something you refuse to address. you said the fed isnt private and i showed you it was private.
and there is still little to no oversight and absolutely NO accountability or transparency for the feds activities, which is something else you are refusing to address.
instead you want to bicker over nothing. people use the term "the fed" to refer to the network of central banks that comprise the fed.
so continue to avoid the points above while convincing yourself that im the one that knows nothing about the fed.
pitiful.