The Republic's Conscience — Edition 12. Part VIII.: The Constitutional Doctrine of Monetary Closure

The Whitepaper by Nicolin Decker

Episode notes

In Day Eight of The Constitutional Doctrine of Monetary Closure, Nicolin Decker turns to a foundational but often underexamined constitutional requirement: democratic legibility—the public’s ability, through Congress, to see, understand, contest, and authorize the exercise of monetary authority over time.

This episode follows Day Seven’s examination of fiscal–monetary coordination and national solvency, and addresses a distinct but inseparable question: how monetary power remains visible, accountable, and corrigible, especially under conditions of crisis.

Day Eight explains why monetary authority has never been treated as a neutral technical function within the American constitutional order. Decisions affecting settlement, liability termination, and enforcement are governing acts tha ... 

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Keywords
White House — National Security Council (NSC), Federal Reserve System — Board of Governors, United States Department of the Treasury, United States Congress, Supreme Court of the United States, United States Department of State, Harvard Law School, M