Posts

Showing posts from 2025

Federal Reserve Interest Rates Calculator

Whole Life Banking — Rate Linkage & Loan Strategy (Simplified) Whole Life Banking — Rate Linkage & Loan Strategy Calculator Simplified: you edit only the core drivers. Policy-loan and bank-loan rates are auto-derived from Fed rates + spreads. PUA is calculated (not editable). Educational model only. 1) Fed Rate Linkage Inputs Editable: Discount + spreads (or Funds/Prime override) Discount ↔ Funds ↔ Prime Preset Typical modern regime Tight credit / crisis Loose credit Custom (manual) Federal Discount Rate (%) ...

Whole Life Banking vs Conventional Banking Calculator

Whole Life Banking™ vs Conventional Banking Same income. Same purchase. Different banker. This calculator shows how bank interest you normally export can be recaptured, used to buy Paid-Up Additions, and compound inside a Whole Life Banking policy. Basic Inputs Monthly Deposit / Premium Loan Amount (purchase financed) Loan Term (months) Rates Bank Savings Rate (annual %) Policy Cash Value Rate (annual %) Bank Loan Rate (annual %) Tax, Inflation & PUA Income Tax on Bank Interest (%) Inflation Rate (% per year) PUA Cash Value Factor (% of PUA to cash value) PUA Death Benefit Facto...

Policy Comparison Calculator

Whole Life Banking – Comparative Illustration Calculator Whole Life Banking – Comparative Illustration Calculator Educational illustration engine: baseline policy values vs. the same policy with policy loans + higher-rate repayment treated as PUAs (split between Cash Value and Death Benefit). Not a quote, not actuarial, not a guarantee. Inputs Readable • Stacked Policy Assumptions Core Start age Projection years Annual premium / outlay ($) Pay years (7-Pay default) Base CV growth rate (guaranteed-style, %) Dividend add-on (illustrative, %, can b...

Whole Life Banking Policy Calculator

Whole Life Banking – 7-Pay Example Calculator Whole Life Banking – 7-Pay Example Calculator Enter an annual premium to see an illustrative 7-pay Whole Life Banking policy. Premiums are paid for the first 7 years only. Cash value and death benefit are scaled from a sample policy and extended to 30 years with simplified growth. This is educational only , not an actual quote or guarantee. Annual premium (money deposited) Calculate Optional: Policy Loan & Over-Repayment Extra interest you choose to pay above the company’s loan rate is treated as Paid-Up Additions (PUA) in the year the loan is fully repaid. PUAs boost both cash value and death benefit. Loan year Loan amount Policy loan rate (%) Your repay rate (%) Loan term (years) ...

Free Energy Technology vs Whole Life Banking

Image
Free energy technology imagines a system where energy never escapes the loop. There’s no heat loss, no friction, no dissipation. All the power generated stays inside the system, allowing it to run continuously without waste. Whole Life Banking is the financial version of that idea. In normal finance, wealth leaks out the same way energy leaks out of an open system: through inflation, taxes, interest to banks, market losses, withdrawals that stop compounding, and inefficient spending where incentives misalign. Every leak reduces the amount of financial energy available to grow, just as physical leaks reduce the energy that can be used to power a machine. Just like energy efficiency depends on how well inputs and outputs align, spending efficiency depends on how well the person who earns, the person who spends, and the person who benefits align. There are four ways to spend money, and each differs in efficiency based on how well personal incentives align between the payer, the chooser...

Wealth Creation and Growth

Image
​ Wealth is any economic value people create through work or acquire through exchange. Money is merely a general medium of exchange used to buy assets like houses, businesses, or land , whose values may rise or fall over time. As such, money itself is an asset as a claim on real wealth. When wealthy people need spending money, they usually do not sell appreciating assets or make bank account withdrawals to acquire the money because selling or withdrawing would end their asset’s or bank account’s future growth and income potential.  Instead, they borrow money using their assets as collateral to secure the loan, which gives them spending money (functionally untaxed income) while they keep ownership and potential growth of the asset against which they borrowed. Most people cannot do this because they do not yet own large assets. Whole life banking solves that by immediately creating a non-tangible financial asset called “cash value” whose primary purpose is to serve as collateral fo...

Should You Really “Buy Term and Invest the Difference”?

Most financial experts recommend “buy term and invest the difference,” but this advice fails most families. Term premiums start low, about $30/month at age 40 for $500,000 coverage, but rise sharply to $150 - $400/month at age 60, and up to $800/month after 65. Most people drop coverage as it gets expensive, losing all benefits. Over a lifetime, the average person pays $10,000–$20,000 or more in term premiums and receives nothing if they outlive the policy. As part of this mainstream strategy, people are told to put the “difference” (what you’d pay for whole life insurance premiums, for example) into 401(k)s, IRAs, CDs, bonds, and other investments, often spreading savings across multiple accounts and vehicles. But these assets are subject to market fluctuations, taxes, penalties, and are typically spent down in retirement. Average lifetime savings of $150,000 may experience exceptional growth throughout your life or they may experience periodic losses due to market downturns. To finan...

Debt-Based Central Banking and Why You Should Control the Banking Function

THE ROLE OF CENTRAL BANKS IN PERPETUATING GLOBAL MISALLOCATION OF RESOURCES: Central banks, particularly the Federal Reserve, are integral to the modern economic framework, yet they prioritize financial control and profit over societal well-being. Established in 1913, the Federal Reserve uses a fractional reserve banking system that allows banks to hold only a fraction of their deposits in reserve while lending out the remainder. This system expands the money supply through loans and inherently ties money creation to debt, ensuring the total debt in the economy always exceeds the money in circulation. The Federal Reserve’s creation also coincided with the federal income tax, directly linking citizens’ labor to the government’s debt repayment obligations. This intertwining of earnings and debt perpetuates a cycle of dependency on central banking systems, misallocating resources to serve financial elites rather than society at large. DEBT-BASED MONETARY SYSTEMS: The cornerstone of the Fe...