It also includes many other
beneficial features for everybody.
But for one to understand this
advanced system it is necessary
to study the entire plan from the
book, Direct Credits for Everybody, which outlines the whole
system in its complete form.
Direct Credits is so perfectly ecenomic that it takes nothing from anybody but gives everything to everybody. Has the man who invented the Direct Credits System, which is attracting attention everywhere, had sufficient practical experience to enable him to understand economics from all of its different viewpoints?
V.L.F., New York City.
ANSWER:Several books have been published about the practical work Alfred Lawson has accomplished ard these should be read to obtain a knowledge of the character of the man. However, in this brief space we will say this: First; Alfred Lawson has devoted 50 years to the study of Economics, both ancient and modern. Second; he has organized more than fifty corporations, clubs, leagues and associations of one kind or another. Third; at one time in his career he managed eight corporations at one time. Fourth; he has been a Laborer and he has been a Capitalist so he can see both points of view. Fifth; he was the leader in the early development of air transportation, he helped to build the foundation of the aircraft industy. He published an aircraft magazine in 1908 to educate the people along those lines before those words were even used, In fact, he coined the word aircraft. He designed airplanes for the Government during the first world war and refused to take any salary for his work. Living expenses was all he would accept. He invented the first airliner in the world, built the first 18 seater and flew it from Milwaukee to Washington and return in 1919. His flying license for that trip was the first large air transport pilot’s license ever issued. He invented the two tier cabin for airplanes, busses and railroad cars, which cuts the cost of passenger traffic almost in half. He edited several magazines and wrote several books, some of them on economics. A brief story of his life can be found in the International Cyclopedia of Aviation Biography, or a more extended account of his labors can be found in a 200 page book entitled, “The Airliner and Its Inventor,” or in the larger 304 page book, “Lawson - Aircraft Industry Builder.” From the time Alfred Lawson sold newspapers on the streets as a boy and organized baseball clubs and leagues as a young man to the time he became the Commander-in-Chief of the Direct Credits Society he has always been the leader. What will the Bankers do if the Government lends money without charging interest on it? Won't they have to go out of business?
F.S., Detroit, Mich.
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