A Study of the Federal Reserve and Its Secrets: A Controversial Critique of Central Banking and Monetary Power - Paperback
by Eustace Clarence Mullins (Author)
Eustace Clarence Mullins's A Study of the Federal Reserve and Its Secrets is a controversial critique of central banking, monetary power, and the institutions surrounding the Federal Reserve System. Written in the tradition of anti-establishment political and economic polemic, the book argues that the creation and operation of the Federal Reserve should be understood through private banking interests, financial influence, and the relationship between money, government, and public authority. Its subject is not only banking policy, but distrust of concentrated power and suspicion toward the institutions that shape national currency and credit.
Mullins's work has circulated for decades among readers interested in Federal Reserve criticism, monetary reform arguments, banking history, conspiracy literature, and dissenting accounts of American financial power. It should be read as a polemical and highly disputed work rather than as a neutral institutional history. Its importance lies partly in the history of alternative political literature itself: the way arguments about money, credit, elite power, and central banking have been framed outside mainstream academic and policy discussion.
This Wilder Publications edition presents the work as a document of controversial economic and political criticism. For readers studying monetary policy debates, Federal Reserve criticism, conspiracy theories, political polemics, banking distrust, and the history of American anti-establishment writing, A Study of the Federal Reserve and Its Secrets offers a stark example of a strain of argument that has remained influential in certain corners of public debate.