Archive for March, 2008

Trans-Texas Corridor funding.

In the latest installment concerning the Trans-Texas Corridor, the Spanish firm Cintra has obtained a loan from the Empire and is using that money to build the road. So we have a Spanish firm using US taxpayer dollars to construct roads in Texas to extract more money from Texas Taxpayers and make a profit for the Spanish firm. This is a weird mixture of public funding for public roads, with the public being taken advantage of so that the private firms can make a profit. This is an example the government not having our best interests at heart in its policies.

In other news, many politicians are now avoiding the term “Trans-Texas Corridor” due to its connotations. Even the planned I-69 is now being questioned.  This tells me that the people are on to what is happening.

Along the same lines of selling out, the Presidential candidate John McCain is in favor of increasing the number of H-1b visas, which allow more immigrants in to do American jobs. So if you did not like the Trans-Texas Corridor, you will get more of it with McCain and his crew.

Free Texas!

J Murrah

Technorati , , , , ,

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

The scroll, the plaques and the record

Key rabbis are planning to present the head of the regime with a scroll. The scroll notes that he has a choice between being a figure like Cyrus or Nebuchadnezzar. He can bring peace or destruction. The nation of Israel wants to be able to settle in their own nation. We in the South want our own nation as well. We want to settle our traditional lands and leave in peace. If past behavior is any indication of what will happen, let us examine what has occurred:

1. The regime has not respected the landmarks which previous generations had set. The regime removed them illegally from the courthouse in Austin. Despite reminders of scripture and his violation of it, the regime persisted.

2. The regime did not stand up to protect the ten commandments from being removed in Alabama.

3. The regime often sides with Mexico and against Texas concerning criminal cases, which it has no authority to speak out on.

4. The regime has consistently shown that border security and protection of its own people is not a priority.

5. The regime has made the prosecution of downloads and copyright a higher priority than the persecution of robbing banks and violent crimes.

6. The regime has openly supported the independence of Kosovo, even though it was illegally cut out of another sovereign nation. (Note: On 1 April 2008, the regime officially documented that it intends to arm Kosovo. The regime is going to support the military of this so-called nation in suppressing the Christian minority. If this does not wake you up to the reality that the regime does not support Christianity I do not know what will).

7. The regime has persistently pushed for the disregard of national sovereignty and the wishes of its citizens concerning Mexican trucks operating on its highways.

8. The regime is currently recommending violating the Constitution by surrendering some of its power to the FED.

With such a disregard for his own nation, the heritage of Texas and the safety of its people, what is the likelihood that he will care about Israel and the Israeli people? If he treats them like he has treated his own, they are in trouble.

Free Texas!

J Murrah

Technorati , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

The Foxes will soon be running the chicken coop!

In a surprise move, the Treasury Department has recommended that the FED (Federal Reserve-Note this is a Private company. The Federal Reserve is not federal, despite the name) be given more power over the financial landscape. This amounts to the foxes running the chicken ranch. Such moves are not a good sign. The government is literally giving away its power and responsibilities. When the power hungry government gives up its power willingly, something is up. Moves like this usually only occur when there is a change in regime or ownership. When Texas was about to be occupied by US troops the first time for annexation, many agencies were bribed into stopping their regulatory responsibilities. The shift in such agencies was a predecessor for the switchover to occupational forces (they were even called the army of occupation). This does not bode well for financial freedoms, when the power is turned over to a private company especially in these times of financial turmoil. The Fed in combination with Congress got us into this mess, and now the Fed is claiming to want to get us out of it? Come on folks, another bite of the dog that bit us is not going to fix this one. This kind of logic is going to keep the nation in financial bondage.

This is a far cry from when President Andrew Jackson told the banks what to do. What we have now is just the opposite. A private bank (the FED) it telling the government what to do. Even though the Constitution gave Congress the right to make money, that power has been abdicated to a private bank (the FED).

I saw another example of this in another article in a paper that bemoaned the sub-prime crisis and how it hit poor neighborhood worse than other ones. The article made the bankers sound like villains. The banks were only doing what Congress told them to do. Banks only make money when they loan money out. The sheer number of banks now days is not a good thing. A bank on every corner means that the people are in hock up to their eyeballs and then some. Banks on every corner are worse than liquor stores on every corner. So now the banks are demonised rather than those who told the banks to make those kind of loans in the first place. It is another case of twisted logic, much like allowing the Fed to fix a problem of their own creation.

Free Texas!

J Murrah

The empire’s recommendations are laid out in this article.  From the indications, the empire is losing control if it has not been lost already. This is a prime example of how government is not the answer to the question. The government can not fix this problem.

The Brits see through the delusion and are calling the economic situation as they see it. The Independent is calling it a depression.  They based this assessment on their observations of the food stamp program.

Technorati , , , , , , , , , ,

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

Know Your History! Part II

The past two days have been filled with erroneous history. Yesterday it was Barack Obama on Alexander Hamilton, now it is Condeelzza Rice. She claims that “the United States still has trouble dealing with race because of a national “birth defect” that denied black Americans the opportunities given to whites at the country’s very founding”. She needs to study her history. She forgets that at its founding that women did not have the right to vote and neither did non-property owners. She also forgets that many Whites were brought to America in chains as well. Many Scots and Irish were not brought to this land willingly. The lands of those nations were purged (the term they used was ‘a clearance’)of their inhabitants by the British. Those ‘cleared’ were shipped off to America. In some cases, they had their tongues or ears nailed to the market cross in the center of town. Much like the black slave traders, sold their own into slavery, the British sold the Scots and Irish into slavery as well.

The indentured servant program was not bringing happy whites to these shores. Those Scots and Irish who were forced out of their homes and ripped away from family did not come here willingly. (I guess her government schools did not teach her about that group, since they do not have a Scots history month). Her proposition is based on wrong assumptions. If what she says is true, then gender issues could also be explained by the decisions of the founding fathers in laying the foundation of the United States. (Could she be hinting that dear Alexander Hamilton was at fault?).

Her claims indicate that she is ill informed concerning the foundation of America, which makes me wonder “What else she is ill informed about? ” Why is there no animosity between property owners and non-property owners? Why isn’t there a problem between those of Scots/Irish ancestry and those of French or German origin. If what she says is true in part, it should be true concerning the whole of the people that were part of the founding population.

Clearly she needs to stick with what she knows, being that she is Secretary of State. Her statements reveal that she is biased and ill-informed regarding the founding of the nation. If this is any indication of how much she knows of social issues underlying international relations, WE ARE ALL IN TROUBLE. If the regime does or says nothing, it is condoning the ignorance of its members. We already know that the regime wants to remove portions of history (as it did with the plaques on the courthouse in Austin) and heritage (as it did with the ten commandments in Alabama). Now after removing history, they promote ill informed comments by their cabinet.

Condi’s ignorance of history is more disturbing that Obama’s since she is in a greater position of power. She is in line for the head of the regime, whereas he is not. If she is ignorant on these matters, the policies she is likely to put in place will be based on a pack of lies and deception.

Be Informed!

Free Texas!

J Murrah

Technorati , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

Know Your History!

In a recent speech, Obama laid out his financial policy. In it he made glowing references to Alexander Hamilton and his policies. The speech advocated Hamiltonian policies and expressed opposition to Jeffersonian policies. Recall that Hamilton wanted a Strong central government and rule of the nation by a small elite group (sounds like socialism/communism to me). Hamilton hailed from the British planter aristocracy. Some of his peers referred to Hamilton’s imperial tendencies. Hamiltonian policies were dangerous then and they are dangerous now. Thomas Jefferson advocated that power be invested in the people, rather than the elite few. He was opposed to the strong central government. (I find it ironic that Obama embraces Hamilton, who came from Nevis, which continues uses hanging as capital punishment, whereas his pastor speaks negatively about lynching. I guess they want to have their cake and eat it too).

It amazes me how some of the same bad ideas continue being recycled. When one knows how the arguments were countered when they first arose, they have the ammunition to know how to counter them when they are resurrected.

Hamilton’s ideas were popular, yet people saw through them even back when they were put forth. He advocated that the Federal system of government needs to trump all state power. His model gave the states no recourse in dealing with bad central government policies. He also advocated the central control of the military, with the states having no state guard or militia troops. It is no surprise that Obama is a fan of Hamilton.

Ironically, Hamilton’s death at the hands of Aaron Burr occurred in the aftermath of some harsh words they exchanged. The argument concerned Hamilton’s claim that Burr was advocating the secession of New York from the Union. Burr was putting together a plan of taking armed farmers to Texas in order to work 40,000 acres he had leased from Baron de Bastrop, but hat leads to another story.

The bottom line is that Hamilton’s original policies were bad for freedom then and they are bad for freedom now.

Free Texas!

J Murrah

Technorati , , , , , , , , , , ,

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

Texas Independence and Sharia Law

In the latest Baptist Standard, print edition, there is a story concerning Islam and how efforts are being made to improve relations and misunderstandings about the religion. The article bemoans how good relations between the Baptists and Muslims have been made difficult by the blogosphere and other media outlets. When I saw the article I was reminded that appeasement by Neville Chamberlain ended up leading to World War I.

In the struggle for Texas Independence, it is important to avoid appeasement. In a free Texas, there would be freedom of religion. Texas fought its secession war (War for Texas Independence) partly over religious freedoms. One religion dominated Texas at the time. Under the tyranny on having only one religion under law, all the religions suffered. A free Texas will only be accomplished under English common law, it can not be accomplished under sharia law, which is advocated by many Muslims. Despite the fact that Texas courts (second court of appeals) has accepted Sharia courts, this is not a wise move. (Here is the ruling). The model of sharia law would put the land under Islamic domination with Saudi Arabian soil being seen as more sacred and important than Texas soil. Such a mindset is not conducive to Texas Independence. The limited toleration given to Christian beliefs under such a system makes it untenable. We and the rest of Texas needs to recognize that. We need to recognize the danger of Sharia law to Texas and Texas culture. Here is a copy of the film Fitna, to help educate concerning the true nature of what Texas is facing. The film makes it clear that the radical elements of Islam have no intention of living peacefully or allowing for a free South.

Free Texas!

J Murrah

Technorati , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

Remembering Goliad

Goliad ChurchOn 27 March, 1836, many Texians learned the lessons of trusting the government. On that day 342 men were executed by Mexican soldiers at Goliad. The executions occurred after they had received reassurances from the Mexican commanders that they would be deported. Imagine the outrage that Mexico would raise if hundreds of illegal immigrants were gunned down while awaiting deportation. The amount of outrage would be staggering. This incident outraged Texians across the Republic. It struck fear into the hearts of the colonists, revealing the true intents of Santa Anna and the government of Mexico. This was not his first atrocity. He killed the survivors of Tampico and allowed his soldiers to rape, plunder and kill many of the inhabitants of the Zacatecas region prior to Goliad. The Zacatecans received nicer treatment than the Texians received.

To put it in perspective, there were 183 men at the Alamo, there were 76 people killed at Waco. There were 909 killed at Jonestown Guiana. These reference points help readers understand what occurred. The men were marched out from the compound in three groups, with promises that ships were waiting for them at Copano. The three groups were taken to different locations. Once at the locations, the Mexican troops had them line up with their backs to the Mexicans. The men were commanded to “Kneel”. At that point the Mexican troops, located 3-4 yards away began opening fire with  .75 caliber musket balls. The large caliber balls shattered the bones of the men when they hit. Some of the Texians feigned death and then scrambled away in the smoke from the gunfire.

The bodies were unceremoniously dumped into  nearby drainage ditch. Their bodies provided food for the coyotes and vultures.
The sick and wounded did not escape either. They were taken into the streets outside the Church and bayoneted.

Our fore fathers told us to “Remember Goliad!”. What is it that we need to remember?

1. Do not trust government promises, whether from the Mexican or other government.

2. In war, men cannot be counted on to act honorably or do the right thing.

3. Tyrants do not stop in their desire for power until they have the power over life and death.

4. Centralized power is dangerous to liberty, whether it be in Mexico City or Washington City.

5. People want to forget the atrocities of government all too quickly.

6. Mexico is not a friend of Texas.

7. The cavalry does not always come charging to the rescue just because you are on the right side.

8. Being right does not always mean that you will win. One cannot assume that victory means that God is on your side.

9. Recall that all the Churches had been confiscated from their denominations and turned over to government control. Hence, government control of the churches is one hallmark of tyranny. If you do not think this could happen in America, look in your churches, and whose flag do you see displayed? What regulations must the church abide by regarding what it can and can not preach? Why do many churches fear the IRS more than they fear God? The signs of tyranny and central control are all around us if you open your eyes. The government of Santa Anna had no respect for churches or God’s word.

10. It is always dangerous when the government rounds up large groups of people. When the government does so, they are up to no good.

These are some of the many lessons of Goliad. This Texian remembers Goliad, do you?

Free Texas!

J Murrah

Technorati , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

Texas strikes back!

The Supreme Court sided with the State of Texas and against the regime and the international courts in its recent ruling concerning a man on death row. The fact that the regime would put relations with Mexico ahead of the safety of its citizens is stunning in itself. The ruling is a victory for States Rights and Texas in protecting its people. The ruling also allows the States to have say so regarding their own laws. In many recent situations, the Feds often step in and try to take over enforcement of laws that are the responsibility of the State. The State of Texas did the right thing in not Kowtowing to the regime and its blustering rhetoric.

Free Texas!

J Murrah

Technorati , , , ,

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

Lessons for today from the New Deal

Although many modern Texas history books portray Texans as all following the FDR and his new deal the reality is very different. There was strong opposition to the New Deal in Texas. Many prominent Texans fought the programs whenever they could. In order to counter the resistance, FDR used LBJ (Lyndon Baines Johnson) and the democratic political machine with people like Maury Maverick to gain support for his programs. Maverick often saw through the programs and realized that it was more about social re-engineering than good politics.

When FDR was about to stack the Supreme Court with his ‘picks’, the Vice-President, John Nance Garner, resisted. He had been refusing to attend the staff meetings (which he often termed FDR’s prayer meetings). He presented the legislation and held his nose to signify his disapproval. Garner’s resistance was more visible, when he resisted FDR concerning the third term in office. Garner filed for his own candidacy.

Besides Garner, another Texan who spoke out was Martin Dies. Dies discovered many communists and spies within the Washington circles. He confronted FDR with his discoveries, which FDR dismissed. Dies also uncovered military intelligence that suggested the Japanese were up to something and once again FDR dismissed him. There were many Texans who resisted the New Deal and sought to preserve Texas liberties. Many of the lessons concerning how a few Texans can stand up to the leviathan of national politics and a regime with imperial fantasies are applicable today. Just in the news this morning, Hillary wants a more protectionist tax policy, whereas the regime considers protectionism or nativism as dangerous for the nation. FDR and his opponents dealt with protectionist and isolationist policies.

When the New Deal is taught in your school, provide your children with the facts rather than the indoctrination often occurring in the government schools.

Consider purchasing your copy of Texans Always Move Them: A True History of Texas.

Free Texas,

J Murrah

Technorati , , , , , , , , , , , ,

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

Quo Vadis?

It is the 19th of March 2008 as I begin to write this piece. The last seven days have been some of the most portentous (save that of Easter Week so long ago which we now celebrate), perhaps in the history of the world.

Why would I make such a bold statement?  I am mortal as any other human.  I can only tell of what I perceive.  But before I express my thoughts about what I see as possibilities about “Where from Here” (Verse 36 John 13 (NIV)), I must consider how we’ve come to this point of embarkation.

The modern financial system would not exist today were it not for the preservation of some things from our deep past.  The preservation of those things eventually resurfaced after the Crusades brought the West into contact with Islam many centuries ago.  Eventually, those things Islam had preserved from our deep past, would, after that exposure, bloom into the Renaissance in Italy.

Here is what Os Guinness, philosopher and religionist, says about that period;

From The Striptease of Humanism

“The Enlightenment has its own unmistakable identity, but at the same time it also has an affinity with the Renaissance. Both directly appealed to classical antiquity, deliberately opposed Christianity and consequently accelerated the forces of modernity. . . . If the legacy of the Renaissance is humanism, then the contribution of the Enlightenment is paganism.

The eighteenth century came in on a wave of irony and satire, exalting the trivial, ridiculing the noble and attacking anything which previous centuries had been taught to believe, revere or love. . . . As this occurred, the break between reason and revelation was finalized, and the battle was joined in terms of reason versus superstition, philosopher versus priest and men of realism versus purveyors of myth. . . . They asserted their right to use reason to question anything.

As time went on the questions became more far-reaching and the criticisms more uncompromising. . . .  Little wonder that it could be said that for men like David Hume “religion has lost all specificity and authority. . . .”  The eighteenth century went out amid wars of revolution and the nineteenth century was ushered in by the campaigns of Napoleon. . . . Man was not only the measure of the world he knew but the measure of the world of which he dreamed. . . .”

That project of becoming the “measure of the world” involved the attempt to emancipate men from . . . well, everything.  But there are some things from which one cannot “free” oneself.  There are certain inescapable “forces” to which we are subject, however we might struggle against them.  One is the force of gravity; another is the iron laws of finance.  Of course finance is about the “magic” of money, the “store of value” of the past production of surplus.  And producing a surplus is the attempt to free ourselves from the tyranny of scarcity that has always plagued human kind.  In other words, there is (or we think there is) never enough of anything we might think we need or want and money becomes our means to free ourselves from scarcity – or so we think.

The foundation for modern finance–double entry accounting–originated during the Renaissance in Italy.  By the time Enlightenment philosophy began to grip the world, the first “Central Banks” had been invented.  One still exists, the Bank of England.  The others ended in miserable failure.

During the early 18th century, when England and France fought the world’s first world war over possession of North America, France became infatuated with a Scottish banker named John Law who argued that money could create wealth (the production and store of a surplus) instead of money being the measure of such, to wit: the price, the measure of money, at which some scarce good can be obtained.

Simply “printing money” however distorts the price mechanism.  It makes some goods appear cheaper than they really are and therefore creates surpluses in some goods that otherwise would not have been produced.   At some price though, folks will not buy the excess being produced -  and the “bubble” bursts.

When the bubble that was the French economy under John Law (The Federal Reserve Chairman of his day) burst, France became ill prepared for the fight with England over who would become the chief colonizer of the New WorldEngland had long before defeated Spain, the first colonizing rival for North America, and England’s banks had gotten rich off taking over the financing of the trade in tobacco, rum, molasses and the slaves that produced them from Spain and Portugal.  And make no mistake, the capital base of the entire modern world rested upon that trade in slaves to produce those commodities.  We hear an echo today of that fact when those who wish to buttress their call for “slave reparations” find financing statements in the records of the antecedents of today’s modern bank’s of the financing of that worldwide trade in human flesh.

In a sense, that struggle between England and France over control of North America in the world’s first world war, (the French and Indian War, as we call it), ended badly for both.  The winner, England, would ultimately lose North America to its colonial children, and the financial collapse of simply printing money to magically end scarcity would for the French Monarchy not just help it lose North America, but their collective heads as well during the French Revolution.

In the meantime, the effect of the Enlightenment on England through another Scottish philosopher named Adam Smith (author of The Wealth of Nations) was about to re-found the world.  Smith set out the first useful exposition of the relationship between money, trade, and production, and in expounding on an idea called free trade, helped create the industrial revolution.  That revolution, for the first time in history, actually began to address the scarcity issue in a meaningful way by creating a conceptual base for the idea of free markets, so much so that today the old saw that one should “waste not, want not” has become nearly meaningless to the modern ear.  And the first phase of that revolution was about the production of textiles, which eventually made Cotton King in America and made slavery indispensable to the success of the early American Republic.

In those former English colonies that had become the united States of America, that industrial revolution produced a contention between rival sections, the north and the South.  That contention, of course, had many facets. One was slavery, which enriched both sections; another was the issue of finance.

New England, whose early chief proponent became Alexander Hamilton simply wanted to reproduce the English Mercantilist system (“managed” rather than “free” trade), based on the Executive Power’s control of a central banking system to dispense favors to the Crown’s friends. Virginians such as Thomas Jefferson were aware of what had happened in France, and they also knew that the Roman Republic and the subsequent Empire had failed in a similar financial debacle through the debasement of its currency (that distortion of money as a measure of value, aka price).  Indeed, the modern world would not exist had the western half of that empire not fallen around 500 AD.

It took nearly 500 years thereafter for Europe to dig out of the Dark Ages that financial debacle and fall produced.  Those Virginians were determined that the practice of simply printing money “out of thin air”, creating the catalyst for such bubbles, would not plague the American Republic.  In this, they were unsuccessful.

The Hamiltonians won at the point of the bayonet, using slavery as a red herring, and in 1863 the National Currency Act was passed and the national banking system we have today was founded.  Eventually, after fifty years of subjugating the chief opponent, the South, the Federal Reserve system, would be put into place in 1913.

The Federal Reserve’s (the FED) chief function is to “create money out of thin air” for the benefit of the “Executive’s friends” (aka big business) , which, unless it has official sanction as France gave to John Law, is called counterfeiting and inevitably leads to a debasement of the currency (which produces those distortions which create bubbles – that price at which no one will purchase the resulting surplus).  The resulting inevitable “price corrections” are the popping of the bubble – that mal-investment (those “excess surpluses”) that the executive and its friends always produce in a fiat money system. 

Simply put, the world is awash in US dollars that the FED has produced.  Those excess  dollars have produced bubbles that have already popped or soon will. But the dollar itself is a bubble.  There are simply too many of them floating around the world without a home at the right price – hence the explosion in the price of gold, oil and commodities valued in dollars. 

 

So where from here?  And just where is here?  I would encourage you to peruse Finance’s “New Day”,  Highest Volatility in 70 Years and Prometheus.  Those inevitable price corrections, as I’ve written, create inevitable solvency problems.  Today, that is reflected in the ongoing real estate bubble.  We currently have double the amount of homes available for purchase than the market will absorb (that central bank-encouraged mal-investment).  The problem is that all of  the real estate those mortgages financed is now far below the price at which it was financed, and those upside down mortgages have become part of the financing structure of the world’s financial system.

Because our fiat system has “monetized” debt, such a solvency problem becomes acute because no one will trade that upside down debt and liquidity disappears (no one has the cash they need to finance daily activities).  This has happened before in1929, an event also fomented by the then newly-created FED, and indeed in the last week the FED has engineered unprecedented actions (and others not seen since the 1930s) to stave off the latest potential debacle created by the system itself.

Will it work?  We shall see.  But I would encourage you to do the math.  The FED’s balance sheet is roughly $900 billion.   They have recently “injected” $200 billion into the “system” by trading nearly worthless mortgage securities for US debt securities and have promised more.  That amount is roughly the measure of the excess in mortgage valuation that has already been written off by today’s banking system.  There is at least (because no one knows the real final number) $400 billion more to be written off.  That’s two thirds of the balance sheet of the FED. If those mortgage valuations end up being significantly less, there is only one way to restore the FED’s balance sheet – PRINT MORE MONEY. This will create more of the same problem.

This cycle of leveraging and de-leveraging (boom and bust) has simply returned us to the problems of the ancient pagan order; only now it is magnified by the enormous distortions provided by magic money.  This produces excess surpluses of some goods as well as excesses in certain behaviors.  The ancient world fought constantly for land because food surpluses were the first and most fundamental scarcity problem.  Today, we have seen an enormous increase in wars, and the degree of destruction they can now produce is beyond human reckoning.  I would suggest there is a connection between that fact and the higher demand for the raw materials the leveraged machine age requires to continue its operation.  War, after all, is a racket.

The war over possession of North America between England and France, financed by their respective inflationary central banks, that produced the industrial revolution also produced the world’s first deflationary (price correcting bust) in the 1820s.  That first bust also propelled the French Jacobin revolution onto the rest of the planet through the development of socialism.  The socialist ideology reflected the “war” between money interests and the labor it commands created by this system, a warning that South Carolinian John C. Calhoun remarked about in the years shortly after 1820.  (Indeed, Karl Marx would turn that tension between capital and labor into a pseudo-scientific explanation of the whole of human history).

Oil, although produced in quantity in the mid 1800s, did not become the life blood of that machine age until coupled with the internal combustion engine at the beginning of the 20th century.  That mating helped cause World War I.  It did so due to the exponentially rising demand for black gold to run those new engines of economic expansion, and although certainly involving other matters, the war also was about gaining access to the oil fields of the Middle East that Germany’s ally, the Ottoman Empire, then controlled. 

Central bankers are not blind to the dynamics of this new order, but they have the proverbial wolf by the ears.  Indeed, Dr. Hjalmar Schacht is a perfect example.   Schacht was the Nazi regime’s central bank head in the 1930s.  His warning to Hitler that the leveraging that created the “miracle” that Hitler seemed to have produced in the war ravaged economy of post WWI Germany and which built his Wehrmacht was about to lead to an inevitable price correction.  Hitler’s solution was to invade the Soviet Union to obtain their oil fields.

The resulting WWII of course put the United States at the top of the international heap and its currency became the measure of the cost of obtaining that oil.  And now,  to prevent our own price corrections, we also have invaded and practiced war in order to avoid the inevitable consequences of the boom and bust cycles produced by our magic money systems.

The amplitude of those booms and busts keeps getting steeper and steeper.  The booms are ever more expansive and the busts are potentially ever more catastrophic.  In the 1970s, the inflationary consequences almost brought us to disaster by the end of that decade, until Paul (the Vulture) Volcker,  then the Federal Reserve chairman, deflated and produced the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.  Then came Alan Greenspan, who re-inflated, thus creating three of the biggest bubbles the world has ever seen (the equities bubble that popped in March of 2000, the real estate bubble that Greenspan’s successor Ben Bernanke popped in 2007, and now the commodities bubble of the last five years, caused by deflating once again).

One day we will run out of margin for error.  We may be there now, but eventually we are headed for a collapse of historic proportions – the kind of change that brings down governments and creates Dark Ages.  I would encourage everyone to ponder these matters. In preparation, store up some necessities such as food, water, ammo, tools, etc.  Things could get truly nasty.  If you’d like to ponder just how nasty things might get, think about his. In the investment world there is a mathematical principle called “reversion to the mean.”  This fiat “magic” money system is 500 years old.  If we retrace half the “advance” it has produced, that ought to put us at about the year 1750.  What was the world like then?  I would also recommend remembering the Scriptures’ admonition to “Be not Afraid.”  We’re going to need all the courage and help we can get.

 

Basil Childress

Chairman, Kentucky League of the South

 

 

 

 

 

Technorati , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!