ONTARIO
SUPREME COURT INJUNCTION AGAINST BANK OF CANADA
19800918
@PAPER = Ottawa Citizen, Tim Harper
@HEADLINE = Bank of Canada a gaming house?
Stop interest lawsuit
@NEWS = Gerald Bouey's caper may be over.
John Turmel, the Ottawa man
who spends his time gambling, running
for election and planning to rid
the country of inflation and unemployment,
is asking the Supreme Court
of Ontario to order that the governor
of the Bank of Canada stop
charging interest.
@NEWS = Turmel, claims in an affidavit
that Bouey is keeping a common
gaming house, illegal under the Criminal
Code. He likens interest to a
fee for the use of chips (money) in a
game (industrial activity). His
bid for a restraining order will be heard
by a Supreme Court judge in
Ottawa Sept. 29. Bouey's office said today
the notice of motion has
been received.
@NEWS = If the prospect of a set-to before
the Supreme Court excites
no one else, it at least excites Turmel.
"Oh boy, oh boy, oh boy, this
is going to be the move of my career,"
he said Wednesday. "That 1 1/2
hours is going to be the best performance
of my life."
@NEWS = A Supreme Court official in Toronto
said anyone can get a
hearing for more or less any cause for
just $15 to cover the cost of
paperwork. Giving ordinary citizens a
way of bypassing officialdom is
another way of saying justice is accessible
to everyone, he said. But
few "eccentric" requests are granted.
And there are financial risks:
The court may make an applicant pay his
adversary's legal costs and
the adversary may be able to sue for libel
or slander.
@NEWS = Turmel said he should have gone
the legal route rather than
the political route a long time ago. In
his last foray into politics,
he polled 87 votes in a by-election earlier
this month in Hamilton
West. He said his system, in which only
existing money can be paid as
a fee, should earn him a Nobel Economics
prize. But he's not sure he
would accept unless the prize was retired
making him the final
recipient.
19800930
@PAPER = Ottawa Citizen, Lewis Seale
@HEADLINE = Gambler asks court to ban
loan interest
@NEWS = Ottawa gambler-politician John
Turmel had his day in court
Monday and came equipped with a blackboard,
a felt covered table with
sunken chamber for poker chips, a plastic
ship and a tomato. Turmel
was there to ask for a restraining order
forbidding the Bank of Canada
to charge interest on loans. Justice T.P.
Callon listened quietly to
Turmel's 50 minute presentation on how
to end unemployment and
inflation by banning interest and then
reserved judgment.
@NEWS = Turmel used to tomato to illustrate
production and the
blackboard for the charts and formulas
to show how he believes
interest makes the rich become richer
and the poor become poorer. The
chips were to dramatize his point that
anything can be used as a
medium of exchange but they were also
a reminder of his claim that
bank Governor Gerald Bouey is keeping
a common gaming house which is
illegal under the Criminal Code.
@NEWS = His arguments followed Social
Credit lines and he said later
he would seek that party's leadership
at its November convention in
Calgary. He also plans to run for mayor
of Ottawa.
19801002
@PAPER = Ottawa Citizen
@HEADLINE = Gambler loses bid to outlaw
interest
@NEWS = John Turmel said Thursday the
Supreme Court of Ontario has
turned down his bid for an order forbidding
the Bank of Canada to
charge interest. Citing the gambling provisions
in the Criminal Code,
Turmel likens interest to a fee charged
for the use of chips (money)
in a game (industrial activity) and charges
that it leads to
"genocidal inflation and unemployment.
Mr. Justice T.P. Callon ruled
he did not have jurisdiction in the case,
Mr. Turmel reported.
@NEWS = Turmel describes himself as a
professional gambler but he is
also a perennial candidate for political
office as he preaches his
Social Credit views on money. He said
Thursday that he has not given
up on the courts and would consult a lawyer
about further moves he
could make.
ONTARIO SUPREME COURT MANDAMUS AGAINST CROWN
19801003
@PAPER = Ottawa Citizen
@HEADLINE = Now it's a charge of murder
@NEWS = The Ontario Supreme Court has
turned down John Turmel's bid
for an order forbidding the Bank of Canada
to charge interest so
Turmel has decided to charge the bank
with murder. He said today he
would be filing with the court clerk today
a request for a writ of
mandamus to force the Crown attorney to
proceed with two charges
against the Bank of Canada, genocide and
keeping a common gaming
house.
@NEWS = Citing the gambling provisions
of the Criminal Code, Turmel
likens interest to a fee charged for the
use of chips (money) in a
game (industrial activity). Turmel asked
the SCO last Monday to "cease
and desist the genocidal banking practice
of interest and switch to a
pure service charge."
19801015We
@PAPER = Ottawa Citizen, Dennis Foley
@HEADLINE = Judge's advice: go home
Picture of me from when I had been attacked
by a robber.
@NEWS = John Turmel was ingloriously shot
down in Ontario Supreme
Court as he attempted to push his
fight against the Bank of Canada
through the courts. Turmel was asking
the court to force the Crown
attorney to charge the federal bank with
advocating genocide and
keeping a common gaming house. He contends
that the bank's interest
rates are strangling people. An earlier
motion was dismissed without
reasons after a judge patiently listened
to Turmel's theories for 50
minutes.
@NEWS = As the second hearing opened,
Richard Mosley, who had the task
of opposing the motion, asked that it
be postponed. Mr. Justice Mayer
Lerner ignored the request saying the
matter wouldn't take long and
then asked Turmel if he was a lawyer.
When Turmel said he was not, the
judge said "Oh, just a concerned citizen."
@NEWS = Lerner the repeatedly asked if
Turmel had any basis in law for
making the motion, interrupting every
time Turmel tried to digress
into his theories. "I've read your papers
and there's no merit in
them. Motion denied." the judge said bluntly.
(No jurisdiction) Turmel
then asked the judge where he could go
next implying a continuation of
his legal battle. "Home" the judge succinctly
replied. (The joke is
really on him because he did have authority
for a mandamus order)
FEDERAL COURT INJUNCTION AGAINST BANK OF CANADA
19810227Fr
@PAPER = Ottawa Citizen, Lewis Seale
@NEWS = Federal Court has taken under
advisement a new bid by John
Turmel to stop the Bank of Canada from
charging interest. There was no
indication how long Justice Louis Marceau
would take to give a ruling.
The bank did no bother putting up a defence.
When Turmel took his case
to Ontario Supreme Court last fall, he
was brought up by a ruling that
the court did not have jurisdiction. That's
why he's trying his luck
in Federal Court.
19810303Tu
@PAPER = Ottawa Citizen, Lewis Seale
@HEADLINE = John Turmel loses round in
Bank of Canada case
@NEWS = Gambler-politician John Turmel
has lost yet another round in
court as he tries to stop the Bank of
Canada from charging interest.
"Beyond the powers of the court," was
the crisp ruling from Justice
Louis Marceau of Federal Court. He went
on to label Turmel's
application for an order banning interest
"frivolous" and an "abuse"
of the court process. Undaunted, Turmel
says he will appeal. (final
edition)
19820511Tu
@PAPER = Ottawa Citizen Charles
Gordon
@HEADLINE = Interest high as world record
captured on tape
@NEWS = What the sound truck announced
as "the longest row of quarters
in the world, we hope," began behind the
Bank of Canada building with
the Governor of the Bank of Canada sticking
the first coin. The timing
was especially good because, just moments
earlier, the notorious
Social Credit Turmel brothers had dashed
off in the other direction
with their usual signs condemning interest
rates in strong terms and
the Governor in even stronger ones. They
may have thought the Governor
was at the other end of the mall, where
in fact, Harry Belafonte would
be appearing to stick the last quarter
on. Told that the Governor
would be at this end and Harry Belafonte
would be at the other, a
passer-by said "I'll go to the other end."
As it turned out, hundreds
of others did too. If that was too bad
for the Governor of the Bank of
Canada, at least he didn't have to put
up with signs quoting the Bible
against his interest rates. And it would
be another half hour before a
New Democrat rose in Parliament to demand
his resignation. The
Governor appeared walking out of his bank
with some other bankers, one
of whom immediately tripped over the sticky
tape. There was some time
taken to repair it. Finally, the governor
announced that the longest
row of quarters in the world, we hope,
was officially opened and stuck
the first quarter.
jct: I bid $10
and got the quarter. And Ottawa was applying for
the Guinness Book of World Records.
19820522Sa
@PAPER = Hamilton Spectator, Denis Leblanc
@HEADLINE = John thinks he has the right
formula
@SUBHEAD = Any bets?
Picture of me in hard-hat captioned "Back
Again"
@NEWS = The Hamilton West by-election
got its fourth candidate
yesterday. Ottawa's professional and convicted
gambler, John Turmel,
indicated he'll try and grab the vacant
provincial seat again. Two
years ago, the 31 year-old graduate engineer
failed to convince voters
that his platform was the soundest of
all. He finished last. Undaunted
by that set-back -- and others before
it -- Independent John -- or The
Engineer as his white hard-hat reminds
-- is back, only this time his
philosophy has an equation behind it and
proves the workability of his
idea: the elimination of interest.
@NEWS = He opened his campaign for the
Christian Credit program at the
corner of James St. S. and Main St. on
the door-step of the riding's
returning officer. Returning officer Paul
Drage did not permit John to
stage a press conference in the room.
"This is neutral territory,"
said Mr. Drage "Out." And so at the intersection
where lumbering
tractor trailer units often drowned his
never-stopping verbal
outpouring and where only two passers-by
stopped to listen, John
launched into the Bank of Canada and its
Governor, Gerald Bouey,
against whom he is locked in legal battle.
As his Notice of
Application for Leave to Appeal in the
Supreme Court of Canada states
"... and take notice that the said application
shall be man shall be
made upon the grounds that the usury rake-off
set by Gerald Bouey,
Governor (Keeper) of the Bank (Gaming
house) of Canada creates a
genocidal gamble, aptly named mortgage
(death-gamble) for its
requirement that the participants in the
death-gamble repay both the
principal and the usury when the banks
only created and loaned out the
principal..."
@NEWS = OTTAWA
@NEWS = For those who may have difficulty
in comprehending John's
platform, he has come up with a simple
electrical blueprint. Any
electrical engineering student, having
looked at the diagram, would
agree with its workability and capabilities.
For the more advanced,
there's the Laplace variable and the interest
rate which can be
reduced to a workable equation when determining
either the purchasing
power 1/(s(Laplace variable) + i(interest
rate)) or loss of purchasing
power i/s(s+i) (? - ?). Nothing to it.
@NEWS = Whether or not voters will get
to closer examine the candidate
and his theory that would do away with
unemployment and inflation
remains cloudy. John returned to his Ottawa
home after unveiling
himself yesterday. "There's no point in
coming here and standing on a
street corner trying to talk to people.
There should be some all-
candidates' meetings. Talk to the union
people here. They'll organize
them, they'll tell about the ones we had
last time." Should he
campaign locally, the Hamilton West riding
could be lively with John's
high-tech approach. With a diskette in
his back pocket (it contains
the cure for our economic and social woes)
and his formula written
down, he is ready to go. The one formula
he has to worry about is
where x equals votes. In 1980, that calculated
to 77 or, for him, two
votes for every thousand cast. And if
John fails here, there is his
mother, Theresa, and brother, Raymond,
who accompanied him yesterday
and who are considering two other ridings.
On the same platform, of
course.
@PAPER = Hamilton West Journal, Diana Burri
@HEADLINE = Candidate carries solution
in pocket
Picture of me talking to Denis Leblanc
captioned "IT REALLY WORKS:
John Turmel explains his platform to passers-by.
Mr. Turmel was in
town May 20 to campaign for the June 17
Hamilton West by-election. His
platform is simple: the elimination of
interest.
@NEWS = The solution to Canada's economic
problems was in John
Turmel's back pocket last week. Mr. Turmel,
Ottawa's professional
gambler and fourth candidate in Hamilton
West's by-election stood on
the corner of James and Main explaining
his platform to passers-by.
His platform is simple: eliminate interest
on loans. With a small
disc in his pocket and an equation, Mr.
Turmel said, his formula will
abolish interest overnight -- a feat he
claims -- will make him more
famous than Albert Einstein. Mr. Turmel
is no newcomer to Hamilton.
Two years ago, he placed last in the mayoralty
race. Undaunted, he is
back, this time with the equation behind
his philosophy. The Christian
Credit program, as he calls it, will destroy
the usury banking system
"The greatest sin in the world." "Credit
should be based on human
ability and not on collateral. If I'm
better than the next guy, but
ability is based on collateral and if
I have none, I don't get the
credit. That's unfair. People are losing
their homes, their farms
because of interest," he said. "With my
system, there is no interest.
Why should there be interest? Why do we
have to pay back money we
never borrowed?" Two years ago, Mr. Turmel
told the banks he would be
"taking down the systems." "This will
be the major revolution in
history. People are being conned. They
strike for more money for food
but they should be fighting for more food
for their money. The
politicians don't know what to do. History
will prove that I have the
answer."
19820604Fr
@PAPER = Vancouver Sun, Jamie Lamb
@HEADLINE = Good times and bad times
@NEWS = You're on the third floor, West
Block, home of the House of
Commons Committee investigating and assessing
the profitability of
chartered banks. This morning's witness
is Bank of Canada Governor
Gerald Bouey. With interest rates about
to rise almost a half
percentage point to 15.87%, and the chartered
banks about to raise
their prime lending rates, and the Canadian
dollar under siege, and
the country in an economic tailspin, the
Committee and press alike
were looking forward to Mr. Bouey's appearance.
Besides, with the
Prime Minister and the Finance Minister
away at the Economic Summit,
the committee proceedings are the only
game in town.
@NEWS = So, high noon on the hill? Would
the MPs tell the Governor to
board the out-bound stage or elect him
Sheriff? Nothing so dramatic,
unfortunately. In fact, the proceedings
began on a comic note. As
Committee members and reporters filtered
into the Committee room, they
were greeted by the self-proclaimed saviour
of the economy, John C.
Turmel. Mr. Turmel is a fixture on the
Ottawa scene in his white hard
hat and his bag of mimeographed cures
for the economy. You can find
him parading in front of the Bank of Canada
building every Thursday
always with a sign which reads "Bouey
is a Crook." Mr. Turmel has a
knack for crashing meetings. During last
year's economic summit in
Ottawa, a group of 14 high-powered U.S.
journalists were in a hotel
room waiting for a private briefing by
a very senior American
official. Into their midst shimmered Mr.
Turmel, handing out tracts,
informing all that it would be a good
thing if Mr. Bouey were sent to
a leper colony. The look of puzzlement
on these heavyweight media
faces was priceless. Mr. Turmel was more
sedate on this occasion,
handing out his "Blueprint for banking"
which he, as a "Banking
Systems Engineer" and soldier for Christ,
has designed.
@NEWS = I chuckled when I read it and
he said that I may be laughing
now, but in 10 years, I'd be sorry about
missing my chance for an
interview. (Not to worry said a colleague;
he had been told to expect
a Nobel prize if he wrote about Mr. Turmel's
blueprint, and so far,
there hasn't been any telex from Stockholm.)
@NEWS = Wheeling away to shout cheery
greetings to committee chairman,
Liberal John Evans -- "Hey John Evans,
you low-tech MP, how are you?"
-- he spun back and handed out an application
-- in forma pauperis --
for an appeal before the Supreme Court.
The appeal reads in part:
(They cut my words right out of the story
right at the colon. Jamie
Lamb says they probably had all of it
in the fourth edition)
@NEWS = Outside the committee room, Mr.
Turmel was still blatting his
own trumpet. "Banking is as banking does;
can you believe it? Don't
you believe it, friend, because I've got
the electrical blueprint for
success right here.
@NEWS = Speaking in grandfatherly tones,
Mr. Bouey offered his
impressions of chartered banks and their
actions in an era of high and
volatile interest rates and recession.
Mr. Bouey, in a patient voice
which might be reserved for a slow but
eager child, offered his usual
defence of the bank's monetary policy.
Inflation and inflationary
expectations must be reduced. A drop in
the dollar would promote
inflation and result in even higher interest
rates than we presently
experience. Nobody likes high interest
rates, but to protect the
dollar and reduce inflation, high interest
rates it is.
CANANA SUPREME COURT MANDAMUS AGAINST CROWN
19820607Mo
@COURT = SUPREME COURT OF CANADA
@STYLE = John Turmel VS Crown
@JUDGES = Justices Ritchie, Dickson, MacIntyre
@MINE = APPELLANT'S MEMORANDUM
@MINE = ----------------------
@MINE = Facts:
@MINE = This is an appeal from the March
15, 1982 decision of Justice
D. Blair of the Ontario Court of Appeal
disallowing an extension of
time to file an appeal against the decision
of Justice Robert F. Reid
of the Ontario Supreme Court Trial Division.
@MINE = On Sept. 28, 1981, a motion was
heard for an order of mandamus
that the Crown enforce the Criminal Code
against Gerald Bouey,
Governor (Keeper) of the Bank (Gaming
House) of Canada on the grounds
that the interest rake-off creates a genocidal
gamble, aptly named
"mortgage" from the French words "mort"
meaning "death" and "gage"
meaning "gamble" by its requirement that
all of the participants in
the death-gamble repay both the principal
and the interest when the
banking system only created and issued
the principal.
@MINE = On March 15, 1982, the day before
the appeal of R. Turmel vs.
Bank of Nova Scotia was to be heard, the
motion for an extension of
time was heard before Justice Blair. Having
read the motion, he
suggested that it be put off until the
next day when the court would
rule on the question. The Crown objected.
@MINE = I proceeded to explain that when
the courts put a farmer out
of production due to the Interest Act
in a world afflicted by
starvation, we'd have to watch more babies
dying on television. Also,
the extra number of souls lost by delaying
implementation of the
solution even one day was equal or greater
than the number who perish
on that day.
@MINE = Given that the money system is
now 90% electronic and
vulnerable at its central computer to
instantaneous correction, I
likened our problem to that of the astronaut
attempting to pull the
plug on the killer computer in the movie
`2001, A Space Odyssey.' I
stated "Here we are sitting in front of
the killer computer's plug.
I'm a scientist and I say "pull the plug."
If it's not pulled today,
tomorrow, I'll be in front of three more
judges with power at the
Court of Appeal, and if no action there,
I will try again soon before
three more judges at the Federal Court
of Appeal.
@MINE = I explained my wish was to demonstrate
my conviction that
pulling the plug on the killer computer
even one day early would
result in the salvation of at least 46,000
people.
@MINE = Justice Blair ruled that though
I had shown intent by filing
the application for leave to appeal on
time but to the wrong court, I
had given up hope after than and that
the time to appeal would not be
extended. No costs were awarded.
@MINE = The next day, the Court of Appeal
ruled that the Criminal
Code, the Bible and Science did not apply
to the Interest Act and
dismissed that appeal.
@MINE = Point of Objection:
@MINE = Given the millions of deaths that
have since occurred, Justice
Blair erred in abiding in procedural limitations
on the time for a
question of mort (death).
@MINE = Arguments:
@MINE = As an expert in gambling matters,
I have mathematically
described the deadly effects of the mortgage
(death-gamble).
@MINE = Section 7 of the new Charter of
Rights states "everyone has
the right to life and the right not to
be deprived thereof." I submit
it is the duty of the Crown to protect
its citizenry from any system,
even Government-created, which inflicts
mort (death) in violation of
religious and scientific laws.
@MINE = Blackstone on Jurisprudence says
"this law of nature, dictated
by God himself, is of course superior
in obligation to any other; it
is binding all over the globe, in all
countries and at all times. No
human laws are of any validity if contrary
to this ... Upon the law of
nature and the law of revelation depend
all human laws; that is, no
human laws should be suffered as to contradict
these. Human laws act
in subordination to the former. In the
case of murder, if any human
law should allow or enjoin us to commit
it, we are bound to transgress
that human law or else we must offend
both the natural and the
divine."
@MINE = This is not a question of if we
will be delivered from the
evil of interest but when. Its genocidal
impact is nullified by the
implementation of 100% electronic money,
the hardware solution. Yet we
need not wait, with the availability of
the software solution, the
abolition of interest from the system's
programming. The atrocity of
usury must cease.
@MINE = Order Sought:
@MINE = The relief sought is an order
of mandamus or leave to appeal
late for that order and that the banking
system's computers be
restricted to a pure service charge until
the legality of the interest
charge can be determined in a court of
law.
jct: On the eve
of the hearing, I worked all night on getting a
second anti-usury case ready for hearing
in two weeks for a quick one-
two. The first pushing Government to charge
the banks and switch
software and the second stiffing the banks
for the interest they never
created with the principal and it had
just made it out of the Ontario
Court of Appeal. Right after the hearing
of the first motion, I filed
the second one for their next available
day in two weeks. Took them by
surprise. Bora Laskin, the Chief Justice
himself came out hear the
argument for himself. But that second
shot is another story.
19820607Mo
Hamilton Spectator "Supreme Court says
phooey to charges against
Bouey"
Toronto Star "No trial for Bouey
on "Killer interest rates"
Edmonton Journal "Phooey on Bouey,
court told"
Owen Sound Sun Times "No genocide
charges against Bouey, court"
Kitchener Waterloo "Court
KOs Bouey critic"
London Free Press "Court won't
hear attack on Bouey"
Winnipeg Free Press "Gambler
loses Bouey gambit"
Gazette "Bouey genocide charge
thrown out"
Citizen "Turmel craps out
on bid to have Bouey charged"
Final "Court buries gambler's
case against Bouey"
Le Droit "Bouey, no accusation"
Calgary Herald "Bouey beats
genocide charge"
19820608Tu
@PAPER = Globe & Mail, Leslie Sheppard,
CP
@HEADLINE = Bouey won't face his charges,
top court tells political
gadfly
@NEWS = 1. Bank of Canada Governor Gerald
Bouey will not be charged
with genocide and keeping a common gaming
house, the Supreme Court of
Canada ruled today.
@NEWS = 2. A panel of three judges, alternating
between amusement and
annoyance, refused to hear arguments supporting
the charges from
professional gambler and sometimes politician
John Turmel of Ottawa.
@NEWS = 3. Mr. Turmel, 31, was seeking
a judicial order to have
Ontario's Attorney General lay the genocide
charge against Mr. Bouey
on the grounds the Bank of Canada's interest
rates policies are
killing people.
@NEWS = 4. He wanted the Supreme court
to order the Ontario Court of
Appeal to give him more time to appeal
lower court decisions refusing
to order the charge be laid.
@NEWS = 5. Mr. Turmel told the court that
every time a farmer is
forced into bankruptcy because of high
interest rates, food production
is slashed and starvation increases.
@NEWS = 6. He maintained that about 46,000
babies die of starvation
throughout the world daily because farmers
can't afford to grow food,
he maintained.
@NEWS = 7. Mr. Bouey should also be charged
with keeping a common
gaming house, Mr. Turmel argued because
the bank is gambling that
customers will be able to repay both the
principal and the interest on
their loans.
@NEWS = 8. Mr. Turmel had pointed to the
French origins of the word
mortgage to support his case -- mort is
the French word for death and
gage is a form of the French verb to wager.
@NEWS = 9. "The usury rake-off set by
Gerald Bouey, Governor (Keeper)
of the Bank (Gaming house) of Canada creates
a genocidal gamble aptly
named mortgage (death gamble) for its
requirement that the
participants in the death gamble repay
both the principal and the
interest when the banks only created and
loaned out the principal, Mr.
Turmel said.
@NEWS = 10. "Natural law, biblical law
and criminal law indict the
mortgage as the greatest atrocity ever
inflicted on mankind. It is the
proverbial root of all evil."
@NEWS = 11. He urged that the banks' computers
be reprogrammed to
eliminate interest charges until the legality
of interest rates can be
determined by the courts.
@NEWS = 12. Mr. Justice Roland Ritchie
said Mr. Turmel's view were all
very interesting but beyond the jurisdiction
of the busy court.
@NEWS = 13 "We're really not concerned
with matters so esoteric as
your arguments."
@NEWS = 14. Questions about the federal
Bank Act would be more
properly addressed to the House of Commons,
of which "happily or
unhappily you are not a member," he said.
@NEWS = 15. Mr. Turmel, who can often
be seen on Parliament Hill
waving a placard urging the abolition
of interest rates and labeling
Mr. Bouey a crook, is a candidate for
the fledgling Christian Credit
Party in the Jan. (June) 17 election in
Hamilton West.
@NEWS = 16. The main platforms of the
Christian Credit Party are the
abolition of interest rates and establishment
of no-fault fire and car
insurance, he said.
@NEWS = 17. He has run in 10 elections
in Ontario in the past year,
including last August's federal by-election
in Spadina.
@PAPER = Hamilton Spectator, Dana Robbins
@HEADLINE = Turmel feels "shafted" in
fight against Bouey
@NEWS = "They blew it, I've been shafted."
That was John Turmel's
reaction to a Supreme Court of Canada
decision yesterday that ruled
Gerald Bouey, governor of the Bank of
Canada, wouldn't be charged with
either genocide or keeping a common gaming
house. Mr. Turmel, a
professional gambler and politician, is
a candidate in the Hamilton
West provincial by-election and had requested
that the charges be
laid. He maintains that bank interest
rates are responsible for
thousands of children starving to death
around the world because
interest rates force many farmers out
of business. Mr. Turmel who grew
up in Hamilton but now lives in Ottawa,
represents the fledgling
Christian Credit Party, which opposes
all bank interest and supports
establishing no-fault fire and auto insurance.
He accuses the
Conservatives, Liberals and New Democrats
of being controlled by the
banks. "The other three parties are brought
lock, stock and barrel, he
said. Mr. Turmel told an all-candidates
meeting last night that the
court's decision doesn't mean an end to
his fight against interest
rates. "It's either people in the poor-house
or bankers in the jail-
house," he said. "If everyone refused
to pay the interest on their
mortgages, the courts would become so
backlogged on their cases that
the government would be forced to intervene.
"We're going to clog the
courts," he said. He said that if he was
elected, he would personally
take every mortgage foreclosure in his
riding to the Supreme Court.
"If I get in, I'm going to get the banks
off your back," he said. "I
represent revolution." Mr. Turmel said
government should be providing
interest-free credit. "Interest kills
jobs," he said. "We should cut
the banks right off. There's no reason
the government can't provide
banking services.
CANADA SUPREME COURT INTEREST REPUDIATION
19820621Mo
@TITLE = Supreme Court of Canada #2
@COURT = SUPREME COURT OF CANADA
@STYLE = Bank of Nova Scotia VS Ray Turmel
@JUDGES = Justices Laskin, Estey, Lamer
APPELLANT'S MEMORANDUM
----------------------
Facts:
Definitions:
MORT GAGE : Death gamble
INTEREST RATE: Death rate on death gamble
INTEREST: Genocide of the poor: USURY
This is an appeal from the March 16, 1982
decision of Justices Brooke,
Thorson and Robins of the Ontario Court
of Appeal dismissing the
appeal against the Aug. 27, 1981 decision
of Judge C. Doyle of the
Ontario County Court at Ottawa.
In his Affidavit of Merits, the Defendant
accepted the responsibility
for the principal, the social credit portion
of the debt, but
repudiated the interest, the anti-social
credit portion of the debt on
the grounds that it is a violation of
Natural Law to attempt to repay
both the principal and the interest when
the banking system only
created and issued the principal and that
such a demand is in
violation of the Canadian Criminal Code
thus making the contract null
and void.
Judge Doyle ruled that a contract is a
contract and enforced the
Interest Act inflicting on the Defendant
an unusually high 20% more
usury on the judgment.
At the March 16, 1982 hearing of the appeal,
the court would not allow
that this very technical presentation
be made by the Appellant's
engineer and big brother and insisted
that the Appellant present it
with only 15 minutes to prepare.
Though the court stated that the case
book had been read, when the
Appellant claimed the right to repudiate
the interest on the basis of
the Criminal Code, the court asked "What
has the Criminal Code got to
do with this?" As had been explained ten
times in the case book, once
even in the Bank's Statement, the Appellant
claimed the Criminal Code
Aces in the the gage (gamble) portion
of the mortgage (death-gamble)
is in violation of section 179.1.b.iii
of the gaming house laws in
that it is a "fee for the privilege of
participation in the gamble"
and that the mort (death) portion of the
mortgage (death-gamble) is in
violation of Section 281.1.2.b of
the genocide laws in that it
"inflicts on the group conditions of life
calculated to bring about
its physical destruction." The court immediately
ruled that the
Criminal Code did not apply.
When it was explained how Justice Zuber
had overruled the Bank's
objection purely on the merit of the Criminal
Code question and had
allowed the question to be put to the
whole court, the court asked
"What has Justice Zuber got to do with
this?" Evidently the court had
failed to note the three times Justice
Zuber had been mentioned in the
case book, nor had they noted the irregularity
of the Appellant's
Affidavit of Merit having been accepted
as his Appellant's Statement.
The court again ruled that the question
of Criminal Code violations
had "absolutely no merit."
When the Appellant claimed the supremacy
of the Bible Wildcard
Nehemiah 5:10 which states "Let the exacting
of interest stop" over
the Interest Act which states "anyone
may exact interest," the court
ruled that the Bible did not apply.
When the Appellant claimed the supremacy
of Science in that it is a
violation of Natural Law to attempt to
do something that is physically
impossible to do, the court asked "What
do you mean by physically
impossible?" Evidently the court had again
failed to notice the seven
times it had been mentioned in the case
hook that it is physically
impossible to repay both the principal
and the interest when borrowers
were only given the principal, resulting
in the death of life support
systems. Denying the life and death import
inherent and implicit in
the mortgage death-gamble, the appeal
was dismissed
POINTS OF OBJECTION:
1) The Court erred in denying the supremacy
of God's Natural and
Divine Laws as guaranteed in the preamble
to the Charter of Rights;
2) The Court erred in denying the supremacy
of the Criminal Code and
in inflicting on the Appellant even more
usury, the Court has violated
his right to life as right not to be deprived
thereof as guaranteed in
section 7 of the Charter and has also
violated his right not to be
subjected to cruel and unusual punishment
as guaranteed by section 12
of the Charter:
3) In denying the Appellant's wish to
have his very technical vase
expressed in the most technically competent
way, the Court has
violated his freedom of expression as
guaranteed by section 2 of the
Charter and in denying the life and death
import of the matter after
having retained so few salient facts after
their first reading and in
the face of incontrovertible scientific
proof, it is submitted that
their decision was "per incuriam" in that
things that ought to have
been considered were not.
ARGUMENTS:
1) Supremacy of God's Natural and Divine
Laws:
Blackstone on Jurisprudence says "Upon
the law of nature and the law
of revelation depend all human laws; that
is, no human laws should be
suffered as to contradict these... This
law of nature, dictated by God
himself, is of course superior in obligation
to any other. It is
binding over all the globe, in all countries
and at all times; no
human laws are of any validity if contrary
to this; and such of them
as are valid derive all their force and
all their authority from this
original."
Mr. Justice Coleridge remarks that he
understand the author to mean by
this that a human law against the law
of nature has no binding force
on the conscience and that if a man submits
to the penalty of
disobedience, he stands acquitted; the
burden of proof and the moral
responsibility in case of error lies on
him who disobeys; that is, on
him who sets up his own understanding
of the divine law as a ground in
conscience for refusing to submit to the
lawfully constituted
legislature of the country."
The Appellant submits that the lawfully
constituted legislature of
Canada should be disobeyed on the grounds
that the Interest Act kills.
In a world still afflicted by starvation,
putting even one farmer out
of production results in even more starving
children in the global
village.
The economic death over one cycle has
been measured with algebra in
the theory of games to be U=i/1+i where
"i" is the interest rate.
Producers must gamble by borrowing newly
created credit into
circulation to pay for the costs of production
and trying to repay
both the principal and the interest by
inflation their prices to
recuperate both. Since only thee principal
was created and put into
circulation, there are always more prices
on the store shelves than
there is money in our wallets so a minimum
number of producers will
not sell their goods and will fail and
be put out of production.
Keynes likened the mortgage death-gamble
of trying to survive with
insufficient money to the musical chairs
death-gamble of trying to
survive with insufficient chairs. Just
as all know that when the music
ends, some do not come up with a chair,
so too, all know that some do
not come up with both the principal and
the interest and are knocked
out of the game by foreclosure. Just as
musical chairs is a death-
gamble, so too, the mortgage is a death-gamble
which results in the
genocide of the poor by the destruction
of life support systems.
The amount of death can now be determined:
Interest rate:
i .1
.2 .3
.4
Production Costs:
1 1
1 1
1
Production Prices:
1+i 1.1
1.2 1.3
1.4
Purchasable COSTS
P = 1 .909
.833 .769 .714
portion (P): PRICES
1+i
Unpurchasable INTEREST U= i
.091 .166 .231
.286
Portion: (U) PRICES
1+i
For U = 0, Let i = 0.
U, the ratio of producers who fail
(HAVE TO CHECK
have their collateral confiscated by
THE BANKMATH.ASC
the banking system resulting in the
FOR EXPLANATION)
inflation Shift B, the same money chasing
less goods, not more money chasing the
same goods as is not expounded by the
orthodox economic establishment.
They state that inflation is the inverse
function of the interest rate
and that raising the interest rate will
will decrease the inflation
rate. Our physical senses tell us that
in order to survive, when the
rate rises, producers must pass that increase
along to the consumer.
Now the equation proves that our physical
senses are correct and that
inflation is actually the direct function
of the interest rate and
that increasing the interest rate will
actually increase the inflation
rate. Battling inflation with interest
is like battling a fire with
gasoline. The statement that interest
fights inflation is a Big Lie.
Everyone sees that when the interest rate
is increased, a boss has
less money with which to pay employees
and most fire. When the
interest rate is decreased, a boss has
more money with which to pay
employees and can hire.
Wa can now look at the equation for the
amount of death generated by
the death-gamble, not over one cycle with
algebra but over time with
exponential functions.
We know that the rate of increase
of the bank balance is directly
equal to the present state of the
balance times the interest rate.
This differential equation tells us
how the banking system affects our bank
balance is dB/dt = iB.
The Laplace transform of the balance B
is L{B} = 1/(s-i).
Taking the inverse Laplace transform in
order
to obtain the solution to the differential
equation, we find that InverseL{1/(s--i)}
= exp(it) where t = time.
With the Laplace transform, it is now
possible to electrically model
the banking system. In electrical engineering
analysis of feedback
systems, the Laplace transformation is
used to perfectly describe the
complex functions that alter inputs into
outputs. Functions of actual
output can be fed back to control future
responses of the system.
Using simple algebraic manipulation, more
complex feedback systems can
be reduced to a simpler form by the following
formula:
CONTROL SYSTEM DERIVATION
We can now draw the electrical blueprint
of the usury banking system.
CONTROL SYSTEM
It is easy to see from the blueprint that
added to the input is the
interest which can be positive or negative
depending on whether the
previous balance was positive or negative.
This net amount is added to
the previous balance to produce the new
balance.
Any electrical engineering student could
show that such a positive
feedback system is unstable and the root
of all our economic bad
vibrations. He could also attest that
the solution to eliminate the
bad vibrations is as simple to implement
as pulling the interest plug
in the bank's computers and using only
the interior circuit.
The circuit can demonstrate that the compounding
of interest means
simply dividing the rate by the number
of cycles(n) and going through
(n) cycles. As the number of compounds
per year approaches infinity,
the size of the balance hits a finite
limit.
Consider that as the interest gets compounded
faster and faster, the
size of the balance nears more and more
the value of exp(it) for t=1.
Consider that with interest compounded
even daily, the actual value
of the balance comes to within one one-thousandth
of a percent of the
value of exp(it) for i=.1 (10%)
ERROR = exp(it) - (1+(.1/365))**365
= 1.1051709-1.1051558 = .0000137
------------------------------
------------------
exp(it)
1.1051709
We can now state that our debts grow as
an exponential function of
time. exp(it) is a non-linear function,
crooked.
Fig. 2
BALANCE
8|
+1*exp(it) $
|
$
6|
$
|
$
4|
$
|
$
2|
$
$------------------------------
0-------1-------2-------3-> Time
-$------------------------------
-2| -$
|
-$
-4|
-$
|
-$
-6|
-$
|
-$
-8|
-1*exp(it) -$
Consider that if two men are in a car accident
and one owes the other
money, only when there is no interest
in the relationship does the
debt stay friendly, social and Christian.
(Fig.2) The moment the debt
is filtered through the usury banking
system's filter (1/(s-i)), the
balances start to grow with time and double
in time T, then again in
time and again and again.
Now that we know how prices grow as a
function of both interest and
time, the equation for the death generated
by the mortgage death-
gamble can be determined with similar
analysis to that used to derive
the algebraic equation:
Interest rate:
i .1
.2 .3
.4
Production Costs:
1 1
1 1
1
Production Prices:
exp(it) 1.10517 1.22140
1.34986 1.4918
Purchasable COSTS
P =_1_ .90483 .81873
.74082 .67032
portion (P): PRICES
exp(it)
Unpurchasable INTEREST U= i
.09517 .18127 .25918
.32968
Portion: (U) PRICES
exp(it)
For U = 0, Let i = 0 or Let t = 0.
The equation for the death of life support
systems, U=1-exp(-it),
shows that the software solution "Let
i=0 or Let the time of
transaction be instantaneous by the use
of 100% electronic money
transfers" is computerized, electronic,
speedy credit.
Starving children: 46,000/day
Deaths due to Usury
|
|
46000x---------x-------------------------------x
40000| x
x
x
|
x x
x
30000|
x x
x
|
x x
x
20000| X
x K x
A
x
|
slab x slab x
slab
x
10000|
x x
x
|
x x
x
-----^---------^------x---------x--------------^----------------x--->
t=now
t=soon
t=finally TIME(t)
Unfortunately, only the software solution
can be implemented now.
Being generous in assuming that
the rate of children perishing due to
starvation on the planet will remain constant
given the recent flurry
of foreclosures on farm production, Fig.
3 shows the death curve.
Since this software change in the computer's
programming is quite
instantaneous, if it were to be ordered
at time t(now) and the bank`s
computers immediately restricted to a
pure service charge, all those
industries that have recently died will
be resurrected by an infusion
of interest-free credit that will allow
them to start rehiring as fast
as they start writing new paychecks that
need only be exchanged for
work as collateral. This will generate
the greatest industrial boom
imaginable. The increase in production
would cause the slope of the
death curve to change downwards until
the eventual eradication of
starvation due to the maximization of
our industrial capacity. Area X
under the death curve represents the number
who will perish even if we
flip the economic engine to full power
at time t(now) because we won't
be able to get to them in time.
Delaying the switch to full power till
time t(soon) delays the fall of
the curve causing the area under it to
increase by a statistically
measurable amount K. Fortunately, the
curve must come down at time
t(finally) when the hardware solution
is finally implemented by
cashless money transfers.
The hardware solution nullifies the gage
(gamble) portion of the
mortgage death-gamble in making the communications
so good as to
guarantee sure gambles! Today entrepreneurs
gamble on their wares
being sold and the weakest are put out
of production. Inflation
through confiscation now occurs. This
cannot occur in the electronic
medium available in our near future. For
instance:
Today, a man with very bad taste may gamble
on producing two-tone lime
and pink wing-tip shoes. He borrows and
pays to produce them but finds
that his shoes don't sell and that his
principal gets used to pay the
interest of the survivors. In the electronic
medium of the future,
that same man with the very bad taste
would put his suggested product
out over the wire: "does anyone want me
to make them two-tone lime and
pink wing-tip shoes?" and when no one
answers, he need not take the
losing mortgage death-gamble. If, of course,
after some counselling,
he offers: "Does anyone want me to make
them some black and white
wing-tip shoes?" it is possible that there
could be a great demand
from the nostalgic older generation and
on discussion of a price, the
credit would be immediately available
on a sure gamble.
When communications become that fast,
the slope of the death curve
will change downward until the certain
elimination of starvation,
since food production will become a sure
thing. The total area under
the curve represents the maximum number
of souls who will perish even
if the software solution is never implemented.
Though the curve must
eventually come down by the electronic
revolution, hastening the
change of slope to time t(now) causes
the area under the curve to
decrease saving a statistically measurable
slab of humanity A. For
anyone with the power to hasten or delay
the software solution,
realize upon reading this that this is
your Judgment Day in that there
is now a slab out there with your name
on it that is growing and
whether it is a death(K) or a life(A)
slab depends purely on your
decision right now.
It is undeniable that the function that
decreases food production is
the function that kills. St. Thomas Aquinas
stated in Summa Theologica
that "any unjust and unreasonable law
and one which is repugnant to
the law of nature, is not the law but
a perversion of the law."
Justice Coleridge added "It appears to
me however, that, in such a
case, the subject or citizen has only
one of two alternatives:
revolution -- an appeal to the ultimate
power which exists in every
society, after he has tried all the ordinary
forms of the constitution
to obtain a repeal of the obnoxious law,
-- or removal to another
country."
The Appellant, knowing that there is nowhere
to go that is not
afflicted by usury on the planet, has
therefore decided to use the
multi-varied forms of constitutional revolution
available.
The Appellant has followed the precedent
of the servant in the parable
of the talents in Matthew 25:15. Just
the the Bank of Nova Scotia
loaned money to the Appellant, so too,
the master entrusted 5 talents
of gold to the first servant, 2 talents
to the second servant and 1
talent to the third servant, each according
to their ability. The
first two servants did trade with their
money but the third buried his
money.
On the master's return, the first servant
approached and stated
"Master, you gave me five talents of money
and here is give more;" one
hundred percent. The master said "Well
done, come in and I'll put you
in charge of many things."
The second servant approached and stated
"Master, you gave me two
talents of money and her are two more;"
one hundred percent. The
master said "Well done, come in and I'll
put you in charge of many
things."
The third servant approached and stated
"Master, I knew you are a hard
man, reaping where you do not sow and
gathering where you do not
scatter seed, and so I was afraid to lose
what was yours and so I
buried it. Here is what is yours." The
master rebuked him "You knew I
was a hard man, reaping where I do not
sow and gathering where I have
not scattered seed and so you should have
put my money with the
bankers so that I would get back what
was mine with interest. Take
what is his and give it to those who have
and throw him into the alley
where men weep and gnash their teeth because
TO EVERYONE WHO HAS
ABUNDANCE WILL MORE BE GIVEN BUT FROM
HIM WHO HAS NO ABUNDANCE, EVEN
WHAT HE HAS WILL BE TAKEN AWAY." The rich
will get richer and the poor
will get poorer when the Interest Act
is enforced!
Similarly, the Appellant accepted the
responsibility for the principal
but repudiated the interest and similarly,
the Interest Act has been
enforced. To understand the parable of
the Servant's and the
Appellant's repudiation, three questions
must be answered:
1) Where did the other two servants get
the extra gold?
2) Who are the men in the alley weeping
and gnashing their teeth?
3) Why did the servant prefer being thrown
into the alley when he
could have put the money with the bankers
and collected his interest?
Surely the Servant had noticed, as has
the Appellant, that everybody,
sandal-makers, food-growers, house-builders,
chariot-makers, all had
to borrow the master's money at interest
to pay the workers for their
work done until the work done could be
sold and the money returned to
the banker. The demand for interest had
a noticeable effect on the
industrial activity.
Consider the chariot industry. In the
last production period, Ford
Chariots, Chrysler Chariots and Generals
Mules each borrowed 10
million dinars from the master to pay
for the production of their
chariots. 30 million dinars were spent
into the economy in the
production of chariots but in order to
repay to the master both the
principal and the interest, they each
inflated their prices to 12
million dinars at 20%. Of course, with
only 30 million dinars chasing
36 million dinars in prices, all the chariots
could never be sold
making for hard times at settle-up time.
On the master's return, the president
of General Mules approached and
stated "Master, you gave me 10 million
dinars and here are 2 million
more." The master said "Well done, come
in and I'll put you in charge
of many things."
The president of Ford Chariots approached
and stated "Master, you gave
me 10 million dinars and here's 2 million
more." The master said "Well
done, come in and I'll put you in charge
of many things."
The president of Chrysler Chariots timidly
approached and stated
"Master, we did our best but the economy
chose their models over ours
and all we have is inventory. We can't
pay." The master stated "I am a
ma "I am a master who reaps where he does
not sow. You're going to
believe that I don't like men who don't
pay me back what is mine with
interest. Take what is theirs and give
it to those who have. Throw
them into the alley where men weep and
gnash their teeth because TO
EVERYONE WHO HAS ABUNDANCE WILL MORE BE
GIVEN BUT FROM HIM WHO HAS NO
ABUNDANCE, EVEN WHAT HE HAS WILL BE TAKEN
AWAY." The Interest Act is
enforced.
Understanding that the men in the alley
weeping and gnashing their
teeth are the unfortunates who are eternally
knocked out of the
mortgage death-gamble and realizing that
one's survival by paying the
interest is contingent on the economic
death of another, the Servant's
and the Appellant's reasoning behind the
repudiation of the interest
is to demonstrate the injustice and inhumanity
of the Interest Act by
taking the consequences of having done
the banker no harm.
We read in Nehemiah 5 how he delivered
the people from the bondage of
their mortgage death-gambles. They were
complaining that they had lost
their means of support, their vineyards,
their houses and their
children to slavery. In those days, the
bankers confiscated the
children with the houses. It was unfair.
Nehemiah knew that the "love
of money is the root of all evil" and
that the reason men love money
is that there is never enough for everyone
to survive. The Bible
identified the wicked as "he who has seized
houses he did not build"
and in Nehemiah's day as in our day, those
who profit from the seizure
of houses they did not build are the bankers
who inflict usury, the
elected officials who pass the laws allowing
usury, and the Courts
that enforce the usury.
After careful study, he rebuked the nobles(bankers)
and the
rulers(politicians and judges) stating
"You are exacting interest! Let
the exacting of interest stop." They were
a wise society and let the
exacting of interest stop. Their industrial
capacity was maximized as
predicted by the mathematics and they
stunned the world at how quickly
they rebuilt the walls of Jerusalem.
In seeking similar wisdom through our
society's courts, the Appellant
has but echoed the sentiments of the Servant:
"Banker, I know you are
a hard man who reaps where he does not
sow and I won't lose what is
yours like the men at Chrysler. Here is
what is yours."
The Appellant submits that just as the
Servant stands acquitted of
having done his master no harm, so too,
the Appellant stands acquitted
of having done his banker no harm. Given
the virtual plethora of
challenges now available through the rights
that are guaranteed in the
Canadian Charter against the Interest
Act, there should be no reason
for the Appellant to reach that final
stage of physical revolution in
his effort to repeal the obnoxious law.
The Appellant further submits
that the Biblical precedent for such rebellion
against the Interest
Act was made by Jesus Christ himself in
his assault on the money-
lenders in the temple. Careful scrutiny
of his criminal record
indicates that he was not crucified for
practicing medicine without a
licence but for common assault.
As a carpenter, his generation's version
of an applied scientist, he
must have reasoned that since it is not
possible to repay more gold
that there is, interest is a violation
of Natural Law. Yet, Natural
Law and Divine Law stem from the same
perfect source: GOD. Accepting
that transgression of Divine Law is Sin,
he had to accept that
transgression of Natural Law is Sin and
that just as the Sin of trying
to fly off a cliff with no wings was punished
by broken bones, so too,
the Sin of trying to repay the usury was
punished by death and/or
confiscation. He therefore gave us, through
Paul, Cor II 8:14, the
golden economic rule: YOUR ABUNDANCE SHOULD
AT THE PRESENT TIME BE A
SUPPLY FOR THEIR WANT SO THAT THEIR ABUNDANCE
MAY LATER BE A SUPPLY
FOR YOUR WANT.
The wicked in his generation are still
with us today. He knew his
enemy was the financial power structure
and spoke in parables to
conceal the main thrust of his argument.
"TO EVERYONE WHO HAS
ABUNDANCE WILL MORE BE GIVEN BUT FROM
HIM WHO HAS NO ABUNDANCE, EVEN
WHAT HE HAS WILL BE TAKEN AWAY. That is
why I speak to them in
parables; though seeing, they do not see;
though hearing, they do not
hear or understand... For I tell you the
truth, many prophets and
righteous men have longed to see what
you see but did not see it, and
to hear what you hear but did not hear
it.
Before his outright rebellion against
the banks, he may have logically
tried all the available constitutional
motions and run up against some
who "see but do not see and hear but do
not hear or understand." The
Appellant certainly did. The Appellant
would therefore submit that
just as Christ stands acquitted of his
rebellion, so too, the
Appellant would stand acquitted if forced
into outright rebellion
after failure of constitutional means.
Or course, within days, the premier warrior
for abolition of the
mortgage death-gamble was sold out, tried
and crucified. He was not a
revolutionary in an ordinary war. He died
in the war to end all wars,
ARMAGEDDON, the primordial conflict between
the Keepers and the
Abolitionists of the mortgage death-gamble.
Finally, the Appellant submits that the
Court erred in denying the
supremacy of God's Natural and Divine
Laws in enforcing the Interest
Act, such supremacy as guaranteed in the
Canadian Charter of Rights'
preamble.
2) Supremacy of Canada's Criminal Code:
Since the Interest Act states "Anyone
may exact interest except as
otherwise provided by any other Act of
Parliament," the Court erred in
denying the supremacy of the Criminal
Code as an other Act of
Parliament.
Since one of the statutes is the genocide
law, the Court has violated
the Appellant's right to life as guaranteed
by Section 7 of the
Charter in enforcing the Interest Act
and has further violated the
Appellant's right not to be subjected
to cruel and unusual punishment
as guaranteed by Section 12 of the Charter.
Consider that it is the only punishment
inflicted on men that can be
directly influenced by the bankers. The
interest rate attached to the
Appellant's judgment happened to be at
the whim and discretion of the
banking system. Whatever rate the banking
system orders, the judicial
system will pass it along. This allows
the bankers to decide how much
of a losing death-gambler's collateral
the banking will let him keep.
Since the bankers pick the rate at which
the debt for the judgment
grows, they can effectively make the debt
grow to whatever value they
choose enabling them to always get whatever
share of the spoils that
they decide.
Consider that the interest inflicted on
the Appellant is cruel because
the debt grew and the amount of money
in the system to pay it back did
not. The Court only ordered that more
money be returned and made no
provisions for a source of new money with
which to pay the debt growth
it had mandated. Such a judgment is not
only cruel but the 20% rate
inflicted was one of the highest rates
in Canadian history and was
certainly unusual.
Given that the Interest Act violates both
Natural Law and Divine Law
and that the Canadian Criminal Code is
in accord with those Laws, the
Appellant submits that the Court erred
in denying the supremacy of the
Criminal Code over the Interest Act.
3) Decision did not consider things that
ought to have been: Given the
highly technical nature of the matter
in the case book, the Appellant
submits that in denying his freedom to
have his argument expressed by
his engineer, the Court has violated his
right to express his defence
optimally. Given their lack of retention
of the basic facts being
disputed after their first perusal, the
Appellant submits that their
denial of the life and death import in
the face of incontrovertible
proof of the death generated by usury
is but proof that their decision
could not have been given the consideration
that a life and death
issue is due. Scientific truth was fed
into the legal system and came
back rejected. The legal system is flawed
if one accepts that all
systems abide by the same Divine Laws.
The magnitude of the disastrous
consequences of their error can be statistically
measured.
DEATH RATE VS TIME PARALLELOGRAM
It can easily be shown that the area in
the K slab of the Keepers of
the Interest Act is equal to the area
covered during the delay.
Assuming a linear decay in the death rate,
it can be shown with the
parallelogram theorem using the slice
of both areas, that if the small
parallelogram to the right is squared
off and added to the other end,
the areas can be shown to be equal.
DEATH RATE VS TIME CURVED
A
B
\--------------------------------------------------\
| \
| \
| \
| \
| \
| \
|
\
| \
|
\
| \
|
\
| \
|
\
|
\
|---------------|--------------------------------------------------\
D
F
C
E
The same reasoning can be used to state
that the area representing the
number of souls to be lost due to the
extra delay is equal to the
number of souls who perish during the
delay. In other words, just as
the area ABEF of the parallelogram is
equal to the area ABCD of the
rectangle, so too, the area of the K slab
ABKL is equal to the area
ABCD of the rectangle.
Using the UNICEF estimate of the number
of children who perished in
the global village in 1981, 17,000,000,
we can now accurately scale
the death curve to get a good idea of
the stakes we are gambling. The
daily death rate of children in 1981 was
therefore 46,000 per day.
Deaths due to
|
|
46000|--------------x---x------------------x---x
40000|
| x x
x x
|
17 |
x x
x x
30000| million |
x x
x x
| needless |
x x
x x
20000| dead |
x A x
x A x
| children |
x x
x x
10000| in 1981 |
x x
x x
|
|
x x
x x
-----|--------------^---^------------x---x-^---^------------x---x-->
1982 Mar 15 16
Jun 7 21
TIME(t)
DEATH RATE WITH DIFFERENT SLABS
The area between the date of the Court
of Appeal hearing on March 16,
1982, and the date of this hearing on
June 21, 1982, represents the
number of children who will perish as
a direct result of the Court's
failure to comprehend the seriousness
of the matter. The number who
will perish as a result of their 97 day
delay is equal to the number
who perished during the delay. 46,000
dead children per day times 97
days equals 4,462,000 children who will
not live who should have.
Nothing can be done to undo that fact
though the magnitude of their
error can be held to a minimum by the
immediate solution.
It was to stress the importance of hastening
the software solution by
even one day that I sought an Order of
Mandamus that the Crown enforce
the Criminal Code Sections against Gerald
Bouey one day before this
appeal was to be heard on the morrow in
full court. At that hearing, I
explained that given the money system
is now 90% electronic and
vulnerable at its central computer to
instantaneous correction, I
likened our problem to that of the astronaut
attempting to pull the
plug on the killer computer in the movie
"2001 A SPACE ODYSSEY." I
stated "Here we sit in front of the killer
computer's plug. I'm a
scientist and I say pull the plug and
our mortgage death-gamble will
be over."
It is simple to prove that since the Canadian
banking system is
international, if and when it changes
to a pure service charge, the
usury banking system will collapse globally.
It was to try and save
one day's worth of children, 46,000 souls,
that I asked for the
electronic solution one day earlier.
Justice Blair had wanted to put off his
decision until the ruling on
the morrow but the Crown objected. Justice
Blair decided that he would
not extend time on the matter and dismissed
the motion without costs.
Leave to appeal was sought at the Supreme
Court of Canada on June 7,
1982.
In denying the life and death import,
the Appellant submits that the
Court of Appeal could not possibly have
given the matter the serious
consideration it was due and that their
decision was per incuriam.
The Appellant submits that on all those
grounds, the Court of Appeal
has erred and prays for three wise men
to deliver him from the evil of
interest, Amen.
ORDER SOUGHT
The Appellant seeks an Order allowing
the repudiation of the interest
portion of the bank debt on the grounds
that the interest charge
violates Natural, Biblical and Criminal
Laws.
Date at Ottawa on June 7, 1982.
Engineer for the Appellant,
John C. Turmel, B. Eng.
19820622
@PAPER = CP, Gerard MacNeil
Gazette: Man vows to clog courts with
foreclosure cases
Journal de Montreal: $45 to go to the
Supreme Court
@NEWS = Ottawa -- Raymond Turmel of the
fledgling Christian Credit
party of Canada said today he will clog
the courts with foreclosure
cases unless something is done about interest
rates. Turmel, 29, an
unemployed, had just argued unsuccessfully
in the Supreme Court of
Canada that it is a violation of natural
law for the Bank of Nova
Scotia to charge him interest on a $900
promissory note. The Ottawa
resident said the Criminal Code's provisions
against gambling are
paramount to the Interest Act's provisions
allowing lenders to charge
borrowers interest rates. "You're way
off base," Chief Justice Bora
Laskin told Turmel. "You may contract
any rate of interest you agree
on." Turmel also argued that interest
rates are causing the deaths of
thousands of infants because farmers are
forced into bankruptcy by the
banks. "That's not relevant to this case,"
Laskin said. "46,000 deaths
isn't relevant?" Turmel asked.
@NEWS = Laskin and two other justices,
Willard Estey and Antonnio
Lamer, who heard the Turmel motion urged
him to raise his point of law
if he had one. Turmel said the new charter
of rights and freedoms
gives supremacy to "the law of God" then
began quoting Biblical
passages relevant to interest rates. "Well,
I figured that one of
these days, it (the charter) would come
up this way" Laskin said
wearily. A smile crossed the faces of
the black-robed lawyers waiting
their turn with other motions. The hearing
lasted about 15 minutes
before Laskin dismissed the motion. But
outside the court, Turmel said
the Supreme Court would soon be inundated
with such cases. "There are
200,000 foreclosures a year in Canada
and County Court judges rubber-
stamp them," he said. "We have prepared
a "how-to-stiff-the-banks kit"
that will allow anyone to bring their
case to the Supreme Court of
Canada. It only costs $45 to go from County
Court
to the provincial
appeal court to the Supreme Court of Canada.
When the Supreme Court
has to foreclose on every case in the
country, maybe things will
change.
@NEWS = Turmel's brother, John, who was
in the Supreme Court a few
weeks ago with a similar case against
interest rates, said the
Christian Credit Party kit was used last
week by Owen Sound beef
farmer to stave off foreclosure. Other
farmers in Owen Sound also
intended to use it, John said. "No more
farmers are going broke,"
Turmel added. "They're all coming here.
We'll represent them. My
life's ambition is to shut down the courts.
They are the enforcers of
the Interest Act."
@NEWS = Turmel will run in Leeds-Grenville
under the Christian Credit
banner in a federal by-election that has
yet to be called.
CANADA SUPREME COURT INJUNCTION AGAINST BANK OF CANADA
19821101Mo
@TITLE = SCC3 BOUEY BEETZ, CHOUINARD,
LAMER MARCEAU
@COURT = SUPREME COURT OF CANADA
@STYLE = John Turmel VS Gerald Bouey
@JUDGES = Justices Beetz, Chouinard, Lamer
@MINE = APPELLANT'S MEMORANDUM
@MINE = FACTS:
@MINE = This is an appeal from the Sept.
10, 1982 decision of Justices
Pratte, Ryan and Kerr of the Federal Court
of Appeal dismissing the
appeal against the Feb. 26, 1981 decision
of Justice Marceau
dismissing my motion for an Order that
"the Bank of Canada cease and
desist the genocidal banking practice
of interest and switch to a pure
service charge" on the grounds that it
was for an Order "that is
clearly beyond the powers of the Court;
it is frivolous, vexatious and
constitutes an abuse of the process of
the court."
@MINE = In the appeal, using high-powered
technical analyses, it was
explained in several different mathematical
languages that when the
Courts enforce the Interest Act and foreclose
on farmers, they reduce
the global level of food supplies. In
a world still afflicted with
starvation, such foreclosures generate
genocide by starvation. Though
confronted with detailed scientific proof
that interest kills, in
violation of Natural, Biblical and Criminal
laws, after several
seconds of deliberation, the Court of
Appeal dismissed the appeal
without reasons, costs payable to Gerald
Bouey.
@MINE = POINT OF OBJECTION:
@MINE = To disagree with scientific truth,
as the Court of Appeal has
done, is to err.
@MINE = ARGUMENTS:
@MINE = The fundamental issue at question
is whether God's Laws of
Science and Revelation, which apply everywhere
else in the universe,
may be ignored by a Court of law. I submit
that these laws do apply at
all times, in all places, including our
courts.
@MINE = I also submit that in dismissing
such serious technical
allegations so quickly, the Appeal Court
has not accorded Science the
respect it deserves. Although highly advanced
mathematical languages
were used and I do not expect the legal
profession to possess such
scientific lucidity since most lawyers
never get past high-school
mathematics. I do expect the Courts to
demonstrate aptitude in
rudimentary grade-9 algebra. The higher
analyses could have easily
been verified by any competent engineer
or mathematician. Given the
life and death import of the usury question,
I must further submit
that their decision was per incuriam in
that things that ought to have
been considered could not have been considered.
@MINE = I finally submit that in dismissing
the motion with no reasons
shows the impossibility of presenting
logical arguments in impeachment
of scientific truth.
@MINE = ORDER SOUGHT:
@MINE = The Appellant seeks an order that
the decision of the Court of
Appeal be overturned and that the Bank
of Canada "cease and desist the
genocidal banking practice of interest
and switch to a pure service
charge.
@MINE = John C. Turmel
19821102Tu
@PAPER = Ottawa Citizen
@REPORTER = CP
@HEADLINE = Supreme Court reserves decision
in Turmel case
John Turmel's campaign against interest
rates got a boost Monday as
the Supreme Court of Canada reserved decision
on his motion for a full
hearing of his case against Bank of Canada
governor Gerald Bouey.
Turmel has made numerous efforts in the
last two years to challenge
the central bank's interest-rate policy,
and in virtually every case,
judges have dismissed his arguments as
frivolous. But the 31 year-old
self-styled "engineer" of the Christian
Credit Party, arguing his own
case before a panel of three justices,
may have scored points Monday
with a constitutional argument. He claimed
that interest rates violate
the right to life guaranteed him by the
Charter of Rights and
Freedoms. Turmel maintains that every
time someone forecloses on a
farmer, infants die as a result. Most
motions to go before the Supreme
Court are rejected after a brief hearing.
The justices grant leave on
a handful of the 30 or so applications
as an indication of the court's
interest in an argument. "We've finally
got to first base," chortled a
Christian Credit supporter after Justices
Jean Beetz, Julien Chouinard
and Antonio Lamer reserved decision after
a 20 minute hearing. Their
decision on whether to hear the case will
be announced later this
month. Turmel, aside from his interpretation
of the Charter of Rights,
argued that laws allowing banks and other
lenders to charge interest
violate Criminal Code provisions against
genocide and gambling. He has
been assaulting interest rates on a number
of legal fronts. For those
facing foreclosure, he has a court action
kit he says can stave off
eviction for a year at a cost of about
$45 to the user. "Get an extra
year rent free," he said of the scheme.
Successful users so far
include Bela Devecseri, a Montreal homeowner
who faced eviction in
September, and George Bothwell of Owen
Sound, Ont., whose beef farm
was about to be taken over by the bank
that held the mortgage, he
said.
Globe & Mail: COURT BOOSTS INTEREST
CASE
Journal de Montreal: TURMEL IN A GOOD
MOOD
Vancouver Province: BOUEY FOE REACHES
FIRST BASE IN COURT
Charlottetown Guardian: GETS BOOST (small)
Edmonton Journal: INTEREST ARGUMENT INTERESTS
JUDGES
Le Devoir: UN VIOL DE BANQUE (small)
Le Droit: THE TURMEL REQUEST RESERVED
IN THE SUPREME COURT
Vancouver Sun: BOUEY FOE REACHES FIRST
BASE IN COURT'
I did an interview with a radio station
in Halifax.
19821124We
@PAPER = Ottawa Citizen
@REPORTER = Dennis Foley
@HEADLINE = Turmel loses another interest
rate round
John Turmel's latest attempt to have Bank
of Canada Governor replace
interest rates with a service charge was
thrown out Tuesday by the
Supreme Court of Canada. Undaunted by
his third straight loss in the
highest court in the land, Turmel said
afterwards he was not giving up
the fight and was already planning a return
engagement. The Court
refused Turmel leave to appeal lower court
rulings dismissing his case
against interest rates, which he maintains
are contrary to the
"natural, biblical and criminal laws."
Turmel is a founder of the
Christian Credit party of Canada, an offshoot
of the Social Credit
movement. The Christian Credit party opposes
interest rates.
The Supreme Court heard his arguments
Nov. 1 but reserved decision
until Tuesday, apparently caught by his
argument that interest rates
violate fundamental freedoms guaranteed
by the Charter. Turmel said
Mr. Justice Antonio Lamer alerted him
to the fact he was chasing after
the wrong person in basing his case on
Bouey. Lamer was intrigued by
his arguments, Turmel claims, but pointed
out he was not properly
directing his challenge. "I'm going to
... go after the justice
minister and the finance minister. I'm
going to force them to protect
us under the charter. I've learned a lot
since I started this two
years ago and this time, I'm going to
rigorously ensure that all steps
are properly followed. He is currently
stickhandling four other
motions challenging the validity of interest
rates before the Ontario
Supreme Court and three appeals before
the Ontario Court of Appeal.
Turmel, a professional electrical engineer,
is trying to become the
first accredited banking systems engineer,
contends the economic
system does not have built-in allowances
for interest charges. When
one person pays interest, someone else
is the loser. The higher the
interest rate, the more bankruptcies,
he said.