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"Here
we are yet again in the midst of another 'global economic crisis',"
says financial analyst, Nicholas Vardy, editor of The
Global Guru. Vardy is not reporting, but mocking. For he is one of
the establishment cheerleaders respected by Wall Street, and he does not
look kindly upon those considered to be bears in today's world. There
was a lot of castigation in his latest missive to us in the hinterland
(2/5/08). So what I wish to do in this essay is investigate some of
Vardy's derisive barbs and see how substantive they really are. His
comments are in italics; my answers follow in regular font.
Before you liquidate
your financial assets, buy gold bullion, and move to a cave in Montana,
you may wish to consider that current predictions of global economic
collapse may be simply hyperbole. It has happened before.
Yes, hyperbole accompanies all economic crises in history,
most of which do not result in collapse. But the presence of hyperbole
does not negate the disastrous policies that create the potential for a
collapse. It is the policy sources of the potential collapse that we
must investigate here, not the tenor of the voices exclaiming its
coming.
Comparing economic
statistics is inevitably a "glass is half empty" versus
"glass is half full" kind of game. Both Pollyannas and
Cassandras can marshal endless statistics to support their version of
events.
True both of us can marshal support statistics. But we both
cannot marshal credible historical, philosophical, economic and moral
arguments to support our case. When we incorporate history, philosophy,
economics and morality together, the Cassandras have the far better
case. In the following, I will present these kinds of arguments.
Good news came from
the consumer sector (spending increased by 2%), business investment
(jumping 7.5%), and exports (up 3.9%). It was declines in residential
investment (down 23.9%) and in inventory investment that almost wiped
out those gains. All of this indicates that the economy stands less at
the precipice of the next Great Depression than at a cyclical purging of
excesses.
Many of us in Bear Country don't insist that a Great
Depression is coming. In fact we insist that what is coming is NOT going
to be a depression as we have known such a phenomenon in the past. This
time, it will be different because our political and monetary
authorities have learned some things from their last escapade in
economic humbuggery during the 1930s. In fact Bernanke is a devout
student of that period and his Fed has acquired several new ways to
shore up the Keynesian system. So things will be extended this time. Not
healed, or solved, just extended. And in the process, exacerbated. We
bears see Bernanke and the Fed as nothing but gussied up monetary witch
doctors with an array of fiscal gimmickry (such as derivatives) and
crypto agencies (such as the WGFM), which they can draw upon to defend
their paper paradigm. But it is not a defense that can last. It is a
defense that, every time it is trotted out, loses a little of its
impact. Thus a day of reckoning is coming.
Actually we are experiencing the "day of reckoning"
right now; have been for the past seven years. The Great Depression this
time is going to be a long period of stagflation comprised of numerous
severe Dow plunges followed by WGFM-engineered dead cat bounces. The
plunges, however, will be deeper than the bounces can recoup, and thus
the Dow and the Dollar will greatly deteriorate over the next 10-15
years. Our standard of living will erode as the authorities try to cover
it all up via Washington's rendition of Enron, the BLS.
Thus instead of a dramatic mega-crash like in 1929, economic
conditions will just relentlessly worsen for all Americans as Wall
Street and Washington convince a credulous citizenry that during the
"dead cat bounce" periods nominal growth is real growth, and
that during the "severe plunge" periods our misery is the
necessary price we must pay to bring about the ideal of One World
Government. This will take place because our political and monetary
authorities do not possess the courage to face the real problem that
afflicts us -- massive debt -- and then provide the appropriate remedy,
liquidation. What's more, due to many decades of collectivist
brainwashing in the West, they do not possess the desire either. They
seek to further centralize government control over our lives. And if
systemic debt is overwhelming us, then such turmoil can be exploited to
panic the people into relinquishing more and more of their freedom every
year. Turmoil, misery, and debt thus become tools for our government's
Mad Hatters to smuggle us into their Brave New World.
The
current din of criticism against Bernanke is a lot like baseball fans,
screaming "throw the bum out" at the game or venting their
frustrations on post-game AM radio talk shows. But it’s a lot easier
to criticize than to step up to home plate and swing the bat.
This is what investors will NOT be doing for a while -- stepping up to
the plate and taking lusty swings. In a recession, everyone pulls in
their horns and goes to the sidelines. This is the natural, prudent,
intelligent thing to do. Yet Vardy is trying to turn virtue into vice
and make it look like all "bears" are a bunch of armchair
quarterbacks with no stomach for playing on the field in the snow and
cold. Don't buy it. The place to be in a raging blizzard is safely
hunkered down inside a warm and well-stocked cave. Do we have a blizzard
coming? Can't say for sure, of course. But when the temperatures are
dropping to zero, and the winds are howling like the ghosts that haunted
Ebenezer Scrooge, it is best to head for the cave rather than charge out
to frolic in the night.
To assume that Fed
policy is based on responses to such criticism would be as absurd as for
baseball star Alex Rodriguez to walk over and hand his bat to an
obnoxious, beer-swilling critic in the bleachers of Yankee Stadium to
take his place at home plate.
On the contrary, we don't think noisy responses from bear critics are
what drive the Fed at all. What drives the Fed is false Keynesian
economics, authoritarianism, hubris, and the desire to drive around in
black limousines. It's pretty much the same thing that has driven all
humans that have climbed the political and banking ladders for the past
3,000 years. Anyone who has read a modicum of history knows that the
political elites and monetary elites have been conspiring with each
other for centuries. It goes back to the ancient money changers playing
up to the Kings of Judea, to the smelters of gold and the Caesars of
Rome meeting behind closed doors. Conniving power lusters are common to
the human race, and that is what we have in abundance in Washington
these days -- contemptible power lusters who have thrown out all sanity
and common sense to govern our Economy as if it is the board game of
Monopoly. Only in this case, the role of the bank has been rigged to
favor its Wall Street cronies with lavish injections of
"liquidity" every time they throw a bad number on the
dice.
The reality is that
few of Bernanke's most vitriolic critics were even smart enough to make
it into an introductory economics class taught by Bernanke at Princeton
-- let alone to run the world's most influential Central Bank.
How naïve! This is not a matter of "smartness." Bernanke's
intellect will not be able to protect against the coming downturn if it
is a full blown recession / stagflation period. This is a matter of
Natural Law manifesting. It is like a Great Northern blizzard, and all
the IQ in the world will be no better shield than a fish net against the
freezing snow. Smartness won't get Bernanke very far at all. Nature does
not take kindly to humans driven by hubris instead of humility; and it
is hubris that has driven Keynesians for the past 70 years in America.
This is retribution time for Nature, while it is mea culpa time for
Keynesians and their fellow travelers among the neo-con establishment (Kudlow,
Cramer, et al come to mind regarding the latter).
Thankfully, airline
pilots guiding a plane through rough turbulence play to a less
vociferous crowd.
This conveys the notion that Bernanke is a wise and benevolent operator
that has been honorably given the job of directing his fellow citizens
through economic blizzards and avalanches that are just "out
there" and not of his and his ideological comrades' doing. These
heroic chaps at the Fed are thus riding to the rescue of us
know-nothings in the hinterland, and flying us off to the safe havens of
Big Brother's wonderfully planned Great Society.
Not so. The economic hazards that Bernanke is now facing are not just
"out there." They are of his and his ideological mentors' own
doing. It is the Bernanke-Greenspan-Burns-Keynes mindset that has
created the Great Northern blizzard that Washington and its apologists
are now saying they are going to fly us through in their ideological
biplane. I say, "No thank you." I prefer Montana where they
have steel structured storm cellars dug deep into the ground so as to
ride out Great Northerns. They have loads of provisions and gold. Guns
too. They're no nonsense people out there. They have watched the greed
and stupidity of Washington / Wall Street types like Kudlow and Cramer
for over 35 years now. They see their hubris, their blindness to the big
picture, their lust for celebrity, their disingenuous twisting of
critics' complaints, their shallow understanding of ideology's power,
their ignorance of Natural Law, their imprudence regarding the next
generation, their gullibility regarding "liquidity" (e.g., if
we call the counterfeiting of money by a fancy term, it will somehow not
be criminality), etc., etc.
Here's
the reality….The Fed can't stop a downturn, but it can help it be
short and shallow. This is a complex, fast-changing situation. Let's
give the Fed and the U.S. government some credit for acting swiftly and
decisively.
The Fed is not a "swift and decisive captain at the helm of the good
ship Gibraltar." It is a mafia gang of ideological thugs who have
been handed a printing press that pours out green pieces of paper
because 70 years of sham economics in the school system have bamboozled
Americans into believing paper money is wealth if we call it wealth. But
as any economist knows, money itself is not wealth. If money was actually wealth, then the government could just print
up a million dollars for everyone and wipe poverty off the face of the
earth. Money is just a substitute for wealth, a store of value for it.
True wealth is the goods and services that we have produced. It can
never be created with a printing press.
So are things really
that bad?...The Fed has shown that it is willing to act quickly to
reverse course and hike interest rates once it is clear that the economy
is through this bout of weakness.
Yes, the Fed may be able to whipsaw us again into another bout of
"boom times," and then whipsaw us back to higher rates. That's
the plan, I'm sure. But I doubt it will work this time around. The
mortgage mess, the derivatives overload, the insidious termites of debt,
the plague of protracted foreign wars, the cerebral decadence and fraud
of our intellectual class all add up to the Lilliputians not just tying
Gulliver down, but poisoning him in the process to keep him down for a
long time. I would say the Fed is going to be whipsawing us into a long
bout of "stagflation" rather than "boom times." And
since the Fed will not want to assume responsibility for bringing on
such fiscal insanity, it will cover its connection to the bad times with
a lot of doubletalk and sophistry. The boys at the Fed are good at
sophistry to cover up the ideological criminality that launched their
cartel back in 1913 and which is the cause of this long train of
monetary debasement promoted as "new economics." Unfortunately
our establishment media are very bad at deciphering sophistry.
Here lies the real nature of the Keynesian economic paradigm. It is a
grandiose endeavor in SOPHISTRY and IDEOLOGICAL CRIMINALITY. This, in a
nutshell, is the economic history of the 20th century. A band of
collectivist ideologues (with the philosophical prescience of John Law
and the moral compass of a pack of wolves) hijacked Western
civilization. They have not guided our airplane bravely through the
treacherous storms of reality. They have created the treacherous storms
themselves. This is what human beings get when they attempt to extract
more from life than they are willing to put in.
The philosopher, Richard Weaver, wrote in 1948 in his great classic, Ideas
Have Consequences: "Are you ready, we must ask them, to grant
that the law of reward is inflexible and that one cannot, by cunning or
through complaints, obtain more than he puts in? Are you prepared to see
that comfort may be a seduction and that the fetish of material
prosperity will have to be pushed aside in favor of some sterner ideal?
….These things will be very hard; they will call for deep
reformation."
That life is largely inscrutable is the conclusion wise readers of
history come to once they get past fifty and have rid themselves of the
callow ignorance of their youth. But thankfully despite this mysterious
aspect to life, there still are numerous and profound realms of truth
that are perceivable. One of these truths, which so many of us have such
difficulty remembering, is that all men and women come into this world
with a tendency to wickedness. It's what the ancients in biblical days
referred to as "original sin." Modern intellectuals don't buy
into biblical wisdom anymore, and as a consequence are having a tough
time explaining why their social institutions are such grotesque and
fraudulent affairs. Perhaps if they were presented with the above
biblical wisdom in the words of a modern philosopher, it would sit
better with them.
Richard Weaver referred to original sin in this way: "There is no
concept that I regard as expressing a deeper insight into the enigma
that is man. Original sin is a parabolical expression of the immemorial
tendency of man to do the wrong thing when he knows the right thing. The
fact of this tendency everyone should be able to testify to, not only
from his observation but also from his personal history."
This is what our politicians and media of the present day need so
desperately to rediscover about the human condition. Men and women are
born with a tendency to do wrong even though they know the right. No one
escapes this tendency. This is why Jefferson and Madison tried to tie
down our government with the chains of the Constitution. They knew that
men and women could never be angels. They would always be naturally and
relentlessly "self-serving," and if they were not given a
moral compass in their youth along with a Constitution in their adult
years, they would regress to their barbaric beginnings. Is this not what
we have wrought today? Is this not what our bevy of Keynesians and
fellow travelers are all about? Are they not merely serving themselves
with a lot of sophistry, a lot of "doing wrong when they know what
is right?"
After all, Kudlow, Cramer and friends certainly know that paper money is
not wealth. They know that cranking up the printing press and
"injecting liquidity" is not a genuine cure for what ails the
nation. But perhaps they have been able to con themselves into believing
that somehow Bernanke's dross can be gold if we call it gold. If that's
the case, then they and their comrades are indeed guilty of "doing
wrong when they know the right," for self-con is the first and
greatest sin. So it's either that Kudlow, Cramer and the establishment
media are embarrassingly stupid, or they are crudely sinful. My guess is
that it's the latter.
Not that this writer is any great shakes in the virtue department. He is,
like all humans, afflicted with many failings. But one of his failings
is not blindness when it comes to observing our financial media prancing
around Wall Street these days and our Washington mountebanks wallowing
in capitol graft.
The grafters and sophists have won over the modern world; that is for
sure. In the universities, in the corporations, in the legislative
halls, and in the courts, these despicable humans prevail. The clear
thinkers and freedom advocates are definitely outnumbered. We don't have
bevies of pulchritudinous babes to act as shills for us on the big
television networks. We don't have billion dollar advertising budgets.
We don't have connectivity to the Washington corridor. We have only one
thing going for us. We have the truth on our side. But that, in the end,
will be the determinant, for truth is the real power infused so
mysteriously and majestically into the universe.
Tyrants have never understood this throughout history, which is why their
lives are such ugly and ruinous affairs. The real glory of life is to
find the truth, muster the integrity to accept it, and then summon the
courage to fight for it. This is something about which our establishment
media haven't a clue. They are, no doubt, sitting in their watering
holes tonight fashionably sipping their cocktails and wondering if the
bears could possibly be right. But they will quickly dismiss such
apprehensions as childish boogeyman-under-the-bed fears. They're not
interested in truth as the glory and the meaning of life. They're
interested in celebrity as a means to strut in front of the chattering
classes.
© 2008 Nelson Hultberg
Americans for a Free Republic
Email
Author l Editorial
Archive & Bio l Website
Nelson
Hultberg is a freelance writer in Dallas, Texas and the Executive
Director of Americans for a FreeRepublic www.afr.org.
His articles have appeared in such publications as The
Dallas Morning News, Insight,
The Freeman, Liberty, and The
Social Critic, as well as numerous Internet sites. He is the author
of Why We Must Abolish The Income Tax And The IRS (1997) and Breaking
the Demopublican Monopoly (2004). He is presently finishing a
book on political-economic philosophy entitled The
Golden Mean: The Case for Libertarian Politics and Conservative Values.
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