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Ever hear the one about the little old lady living in an old but paid-off
house, with a shoe box full of gold coins in the basement? Across the street
lived a big guy, in a big McMansion. It had a special garage for the RV, and
another four-car garage for the other four cars. He had a boat at the side
and a trailer with two jet skis in front of the boat. Then one day little old
lady noticed big guy was gone. The bank had taken back his house.
Most people thought big guy was rich and little old lady was poor. How wrong
most people were.
Tiger's Tail
I watched a pretty forgettable movie the other night on TV. It was just so-so
from a film-maker's perspective, but it had at least one redeeming quality
from my blog-maker's perspective. It highlighted a point I had been thinking
about.
The film is called "The Tiger's Tail", and the basic back story is
identical twin brothers that were separated at birth when one was given up
for adoption. The adopted brother is destitute when he discovers he has a
twin who is a very public multi-millionaire businessman. So, filled with envy
and anger over being given up as an infant, he hatches a plan to
"steal" his brother's identity and life for just long enough to
liquidate his assets and make off with the cash.
He is successful supplanting himself into his brother's life only to find
that the vast wealth is built completely on debt. What filled him with envy
on the surface is nothing but a giant, net-negative hole once he looks behind
the curtain.
Here is an eight minute version of the movie that contains all the relevant
scenes. We pick it up right at the point where the adopted twin first arrives
at his brother's office, pretending to be him, ready to liquidate a few
assets...
My apologies to John Boorman. I'm really looking forward to your remakes of
The Wizard of Oz and Excalibur, and I loved Deliverance and Exorcist II: The
Heretic. ;)
Marx Had It Backwards
Karl Marx predicted the breakdown of capitalism as a result of class
struggle, followed by the establishment of a grand commune in which all the
means of production would become publicly owned and used only for the public
good. Sounds pretty nice, huh? "Imagine no possessions, I wonder if
you can. No need for greed or hunger, A brotherhood of man. Imagine all the
people, Sharing all the world..." ... and all that peace and harmony
stuff.
Today we have many fine, intelligent and exacting analysts all looking at the
same economic data and coming up with vastly different analyses of the
present global financial crisis. What sets them all apart from each other is
not intelligence, or math skills, or even popularity. What sets them apart is
the foundational premises on which they operate.
And a false premise can skew a brilliant analysis 180 degrees in the wrong
direction. Few analysts fully disclose their premises. But Karl Marx did, and
in this we can find the one, key flaw that sent his analysis off in a
disastrous direction.
Marx writes, "The history of all hitherto existing society is the
history of class struggle." He got this part right! What he got wrong
was his delineation of the classes.
Marx's classes were:
1. Labour (the proletariat or workers) - anyone who earns their livelihood by
selling their labor and being paid a wage for their labor time. They have
little choice but to work for capital, since they typically have no
independent way to survive.
2. Capital (the bourgeoisie or capitalists) - anyone who gets their income
not from labor as much as from the surplus value they appropriate from the
workers who create wealth. The income of the capitalists, therefore, is based
on their exploitation of the workers.
Simply put, Marx says it's the rich versus the poor. According to Marx the
rich exploit the poor to get themselves a "labor-free income",
which spawns a class struggle.
This is an attractive perspective because it requires only a cursory, superficial
judgement to place someone into one of the two camps, the rich or the poor. If
someone is driving a Bentley we immediately know which group they are in,
right?
But within this simple, foundational premise lies an error so serious that
within 130 years of Marx's death it caused somewhere between 85 million and 150 million deaths, depending on how
you count them. That's an oddly large number of dead people for a commun-ity
in which class struggle had been eliminated, isn't it? Peace and harmony my
ar$e.
Inscription reads:
"Workers Of All Lands Unite"
As I said, Marx got one thing right. History does bear out the dramatic story
of centuries of class struggle. But if we eliminate his one small flawed
premise, we can see it all much more clearly.
The two classes are not the Labour and the Capital, the rich and the poor,
the proletariat and the bourgeoisie, or the workers and the elite. The two
classes are the Debtors and the Savers. "The soft money camp" and
"the hard money camp". History reveals the story of these two
groups, over and over and over again. Always one is in power, and always the
other one desires the power.
1. Debtors - "The soft money camp" likes to spend (and
redistribute) money it did not earn, either by borrowing it, taxing the
savers for it, or printing it. They like soft money because it is always and
everywhere constantly inflating, easing the repayment of their debts.
2. Savers - "The hard money camp" likes to live within their means
and save any excess for the future. They prefer hard money (or in some cases
"harder" money) because it protects their savings and forces the
debtors to work off their debts.
1789, the French Revolution, "the hard money camp" had been in
power since 1720 when John Law's soft money collapsed, and starting in 1789
"the soft money camp" killed "the hard money camp" and
took back the power. This is the way "the soft money camp", the
Debtors, usually take power... by revolting against the hard repayment of
their spending habits.
Only nine years later, 1797, soft money collapsed once again (as it had just
done in 1720) and a new French monetary system based upon gold was again
reinstated. This is the way "the hard money camp", the Savers, almost
always regain control: when the soft money collapses. On very rare occasions
and only under highly favorable circumstances (like moving to a new
continent!), "the hard money crowd" takes control by physically
separating from "soft money" and declaring independence from the
Debtors.
The American Revolution. Yes, the Constitution mandates hard money.
So just to repeat for clarity: Hard money regimes almost always end in
bloodshed, when the soft money camp slaughters the hard money camp to avoid
hard repayment terms. And soft money regimes almost always end in financial
suffering when the soft money collapses. Here are a few more examples of
"soft money collapses"...
Angola (1991-1999)
Argentina (1975-1991, 2001)
Austria (1921-1922)
Belarus (1994-2002)
Bolivia (1984-1986)
Brazil (1986-1994)
Bosnia-Herzegovina (1993)
Bulgaria (1991-1997)
Chile (1971-1973)
China (1939-1950)
Free City of Danzig (1923)
Ecuador (2000)
England (1560)
Greece (1944-1953)
Georgia (1995)
Germany (1923-1924, 1945-1948)
Greece (1944-1953)
Hungary (1922-1927, 1944-1946)
Israel (1979-1985)
Japan (1944-1948)
Krajina (1993)
Madagascar (2004)
Mexico (1993)
Mongolian Empire (13th and 14th Century AD)
Nicaragua (1987-1990)
Persian Empire (1294)
Peru (1984-1990)
Poland (1922-1924, 1990-1993)
Romania (2000-2005)
Ancient Rome (~270AD)
Russia (1921-1922, 1992-1994)
Taiwan (late-1940's)
Turkey (1990's)
Ukraine (1993-1995)
United States (1812-1814, 1861-1865)
Vietnam (1981-1988)
Yap (late 1800's)
Yugoslavia (1989-1994)
Zaire (1989-1996)
Zimbabwe (1999 - present)
Source
You see, Marx had it almost completely backwards when he said the rich
exploit the poor for free income. Once we shuffle and re deal the two camps
correctly we see that it is actually "the soft money camp" (the
Debtors) that always exploit "the hard money camp" (the Savers),
taxing them, destroying their savings, destroying capital, borrowing money
only to repay it on easier terms, and sometimes even killing
them. So are "the Debtors" the rich and
"the Savers" the poor? Of course not! Is this clear enough?
What does all this have to do with Freegold today? Well, with history,
ANOTHER and FOA as our guides, we can see clearly what is coming. And with a
correct view and a wide enough perspective, we can also see how some fine
analysts operating under false premises are inducing the wrong conclusions.
Today we are living the end of the longest stretch of time in which "the
soft money camp" has been in power both politically and monetarily. For
a century now they have been softening our money more and more. And for those
of you obsessed with the "emerging" NWO and One-World Currency...
surprise! You've been living with it for 66 years now.
This latest push for central control and massive deficit spending by the
"soft money camp" is simply the blow-off phase right before the
long awaited collapse. And when soft money collapses, the transition is
always financially painful but not necessarily bloody like the French
Revolution, which was the end of the "hard money camp".
Now, what happens during ALL periods in history, whether "the hard money
camp" is in charge or "the soft money camp" are running
things... is a transfer of wealth. This is important! Because when the soft
money guys are in power the transfer of wealth happens slowly and gradually,
and wealth flows from the Savers to
the Debtors. But when "soft money" collapses - and
it ALWAYS collapses - there is a very RAPID transfer of wealth in the other
direction, from the Debtors back to
the Savers.
And this is where you need to take some action today. Because we have been
living in a "soft money regime" for so long now, the delineation of
the two camps is somewhat obscured. There are many many people who consider
themselves Savers who are still sitting in the wrong camp, and will be on the
WRONG side of the coming
- extremely rapid - transfer of wealth.
Today you need to be proactive if you want to get on the receiving end of
this "blow back" transfer of wealth. You need to actively choose
which camp you are in. And to do that, you need to recognize the two camps,
or classes. Remember, this is a "class struggle".
So let's put a few modern groups and people into these two camps. I think it
is fairly obvious that almost all modern "socialistic" governments
and their politicians addicted to sovereign debt and deficit spending are in
the debtor class. These are the soft money guys. And the bankers as a class
are generally there too. As I said in a recent
post:
The banker makes his largest profits during times in history
when the liberal soft money crowd is in power both politically and
monetarily. And he makes his most absurd profits when the debtor class allows
its debt to go too far... to the very mathematical limit. But don't worry.
This unstoppable avalanche will reduce banking and central banking to what it
should be; a utility for the public good.
And this is because soft money debt must flow THROUGH the banking class as it
is passed between the savers and the debtors.
But as individuals, not "banks", but individual bankers, we could
say that some of them are Debtors while others are Savers. For example, would
you agree that the Rothschild family, as a family unit, is in the "saver
class" while their industry or profession (banking) as a whole falls in
the "debtor class"? Or perhaps we could say that the banking
institutions, as the hollow corporate shells that they are, are closely aligned with the debtor
class.
But on the other side of the coin, we can broadly say that most of the young
"hot shot bankers" and investment bankers probably fall firmly in
the "debtor class". When you look at the lavish lifestyle of a lot
of these young guys, you don't see the debt it is built upon. Just like our
character, Liam O'Leary, in The Tiger's Tail. You could watch a Rothschild
and a Goldman VP pull up to an event in identical Bentleys, not seeing that
one is leased while the other is owned outright. Are you catching my drift?
You can tell who the "soft money guys" are because they will always
argue that a currency devaluation is preferable to forced austerity. They
will say, "the euro got it wrong because it doesn't allow for Greece to devalue." And in saying this, they put themselves firmly in the Debtor camp.
They are saying that the "Argentine/Brazilian
/Soviet/Zimbabwe workout" is preferable to what is happening in Greece today.
How about that Soviet
"soft money collapse" in 1992? Who came out ahead? Most average
people that thought they were savers lost everything. So did the Russian
banks take over Russia? Or did a handful of "Oligarchs" emerge as
multi-billionaires through the process and buy up anything in sight for
pennies on the dollar? And which camp do you think these Oligarchs were in? The
Debtors or the Savers? Curiously, one of them just bought the New Jersey
Nets.
Russian Oligarch Mikhail Prokhorov
(Age: 45 - Born: Poor - Starting Industry: Precious Metals)
As I said earlier,
almost all modern governments are in camp with the Debtors. And this includes
the Russian government. So are the Oligarchs in the opposing camp as their
beloved comrades in the corrupt government? Here is an interesting article:
Here's The Real Reason The Russian Oligarchs Are Buying Up
Professional Sports Teams
By Henry Blodget
Business Insider
SNIP:
...we hear that some Russian oligarchs feel that, if they become highly
visible owners of beloved sports franchises, the Kremlin will be less likely
to take them out.
Yes, as in that kind of out.
Remember Alexander Litvinenko, the ex-Russian spy who got poisoned in London...
Russian Oligarch Roman Abramovich
(Age: 43 - Born: Poor - Starting Industry: Entrepreneur)
So here's the important thing in today's dangerous world. We must each
understand the difference between choices and inevitabilities. What is coming
at us is inevitable. It is unavoidable. How we personally prepare for it is a
choice we each must actively make.
The coming "blow back" hyper-rapid transfer of wealth is not
something that necessarily requires moral judgements of good and evil. It is
simply a fact of life today. Pick which side you want to be on in THIS
particular transfer of wealth. By selling your debt-financed paper savings
and buying physical gold today you are making the conscious CHOICE to join
the camp of the true Savers.
Many people that consider themselves "savers" are precariously
positioned right now. These people need to take active measures to get on the
receiving end of this transfer of wealth to survive. Many, many, many average
citizens amazingly still have this option, yet they don't even realize it. They
need to get up and move over into the same camp as the Rothschilds and the
Russian Oligarchs, and prepare to own the future. It's not a matter of good
versus evil at this point, it is a matter of survival!
The soft money crowd has had a really, really long run in the sun this time. There's
no need to feel bad for them. And all the last-ditch central control efforts
we see today are simply the culmination of that run. But their influential
position is completely dependent on the power afforded by the soft money debt
machine that is now crumbling. Their "power generator" is out of
gas. And it's not the kind of gas you can legislate or print.
But don't take my word for it. And certainly don't take financial advice from
me! For that matter, don't take financial advice from ANYONE. Think it
through yourself, quietly. Use your own head. This is the only path to peace
of mind. You and only you will lose your wealth if you take the wrong advice.
And this time, it doesn't take an MBA and a JD to understand the choices.
It is easy to watch the dollar losing its reserve privilege today. And it is
also easy to see who will come out ahead when it happens. All else is noise.
Choose your camp wisely.
Sincerely,
FOFOA
Imagine there's no Heaven
It's easy if you try
No hell below us
Above us only sky
Imagine all the people
Living for today
Imagine there's no countries
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion too
Imagine all the people
Living life in peace
You may say that I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will be as one
(Imagine no possessions
I wonder if you can
No need for greed or hunger
A brotherhood of man) [1]
Imagine all the people
Sharing all the world
You may say that I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will live as one
[1] Why didn't Elton sing these lyrics?
FOFOA
FOFOA
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