Yes but usary and money are connected. Extremely soft money like the USD requires usary both practically and from a moral standpoint as well. It's not the usary that's immoral. It's the money. This is a situational ethics argument, like killing in war I suppose. Notice we don't actually see usary in collateral, which are the hard assets backing the loan. The bank doesn't come along mid agreement and say "now you owe me two new cars". When money is a hard asset, especially a deflating one, usary would resemble such a contract.
Yes but usary and money are connected. Extremely soft money like the USD requires usary both practically and from a moral standpoint as well. It's not the usary that's immoral. It's the money. This is a situational ethics argument, like killing in war I suppose. Notice we don't actually see usary in collateral, which are the hard assets backing the loan. The bank doesn't come along mid agreement and say "now you owe me two new cars". When money is a hard asset, especially a deflating one, usary would resemble such a contract.
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