The document discusses the realities of increasing the money supply. It argues that increasing money supply through bank lending leads to remote investment projects that are encouraged before final consumption, causing prices to rise when preferences remain unchanged and projects are liquidated at a loss of capital. As a result, production decreases and unemployment increases. It also argues that no country can force another to subsidize its economy by currency manipulation, and that increasing the money supply inevitably leads to a loss of the currency's value and higher prices over time.