Chapter Source from the free audio series at http://www.wizardsofmoney.org/ (website no longer valid last I checked) | barrysclipart.com – artwork (website no longer valid last I checked)
Wizards of Money by Smithy (smithy at mindspring dot com)

Other Brilliant Stuff with money references:
Listen Now to Wizards of Money
A brilliant Audio series …
1 How Money is Created
2 Financial Risk Transfer
3 Banking on Poverty
4 Wizards and Warlords
5 Monetary Terrorism
6 Democratising the Monetary System
7 The Money Cycle versus The Water Cycle
8 Trading Nature and “Cooking the Books”
9 Jack and the Sweatshop
10 Back to the Twenties Through the Looking Glass – Steagall
11 House Lever-Edge at the Derivatives Casino
12 The Imperial Budget and the Mythical Lock Box
13 Bankruptcy Bill’s Shoot-Out at the Social Safety Net
14 The Trade Federation and the InterGalactic Banking Clan
15 Homeland Securitizations and Overseas Vacations
16 There’s a Generic in my Shark Fin Soup!
17 Caught Between and Dock and a Sweatshop
18 Where Wall Street Crosses Auburn Avenue
19 The Education Sweepstakes
20 The Battle of the Dragons – Oil vs Insurance
21 Playing Russian Roulette in the Carbon Markets
22 Ecotainment Gossip Status of Public Lands
Introductionshow
This is your Money and Financial Management Series…but with a twist. My name is Smithy, I’m from the land of Oz.
In response to the growth in business and personal finance shows at most media outlets, including so-called public media, such as NPR and PBS, we bring you this new series on money but “with a twist”. In this series we will look beyond the latest DOW and NASDAQ ups and downs, and past the hot stock tips, and see just how peculiar and undemocratic our monetary system really is. The Wizards of Money will take a critical look at the mechanics of the capital and debt markets, who makes the critical decisions that drive them, and how these markets then effect everybody’s lives.
Humans have inherited a monetary system that fueled the industrial revolution, lost its commodity backing during the Vietnam War and now travels by the trillions, over millions of miles in a matter of nano-seconds. Physical currency notes are almost irrelevant having been replaced by a system of bits and bytes accounting in complex networks. While money is just a highly abstract measure and a medium of exchange our lives revolve around it and its disappearance can bring trade to a grinding halt, collapsing whole communities. This ridiculous situation is akin to a carpenter stopping work because he has run out of inches! Or a musician calling it quits because she’s run out of decibels!
Today, in part one, we’ll examine that most peculiar activity known as “making money”; how money is made and who makes it. We’ll explore the mysterious money making process by first exploring the origin, and role of, one of the most secretive bodies in the world, the Federal Reserve System. We will also look at the role of the commercial banking system, and why it is that the money origination process is quite unfair and undemocratic.
In future editions of Wizards we will look further into the workings of the Federal Reserve, and its sole shareholders, the private banking industry. We will also investigate similarly secretive bodies such as the Bank for International Settlements in Switzerland, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, Central Banks in other countries, and most importantly how these institutions interact with the stock markets.
Recent decades have brought with them a growing public awareness of the long-term costs of the short-term profiteering legacy of the industrial revolution. Global Warming, Ozone Depletion, and Acid Rain are now all household names. The current monetary system – the one inherited from this same industrial revolution and the one in which we always “discount the future” – has played a large role in such destruction of the environment. Many are asking the question – Can we design monetary and economic systems that encourage preservation of the environment and sustainable economies?
Along these lines, in later editions of Wizards we’ll examine some of the fundamental flaws of contemporary mainstream economic theory, that led to such environmental destruction. Then we’ll explore how emerging fields of economics, such as Ecological Economics, are addressing some of these flaws and challenging the underpinnings of traditional theory.