The
human ape has any number of qualities not often found in other species of mammalia, including opposable thumbs and the ability to
fashion and use tools.
Continuing
the list, I would add a tendency to form all manner of mental constructs and
to then act in accordance with those constructs, even when those constructs
have little or no connection to reality.
Thus,
for instance, I stride confidently onto the golf course with the firmly held
conviction that I am a solid striker when, in fact, on most days I am a
wild-hitting duffer of the lowest order.
But
an over-elevated opinion of one’s golf game is harmless compared to
some of the delusions humans are capable of. For instance, the teenager who
becomes convinced that by blowing himself up in a crowd of innocents, he is
serving some sort of higher purpose… or that his reward will be an
eternity highlighted by bedding virgins.
A
more widespread delusion is a tendency to believe in the status quo. Simply,
that tomorrow will be roughly on par with today, a construct that extends out
as far as the mind’s eye can see.
This
particular construct is entirely understandable – it’s this
expectation that things will be more or less constant that allows us to make
plans and take the steps necessary to execute those plans. In other words, it
is a lynchpin to human progress.
Conversely,
when the controlling force of the economy that sustains us in our businesses
and lifestyles is ever changeable – and these days that controlling
force is the government – sensible humans become wary and start
squirreling away nuts in preparation for an uncertain future. This is, of
course, not conducive to a vibrant economy.
What
will Team Obama dream up next in their flailing attempts at reinvigorating an
economy that more than anything needs certainty? It is literally
anyone’s guess. Are we going all in on the whole carbon credit thing,
or is that now a passing fad? Will the Dodd-Frank Act, with its 400+ new
rules for financial institutions and everyday businesses, such as automobile
dealers who offer financing, help or hurt? Will the government, having bailed
out the big banks, now turn around and sue them out of existence… or
just until they squeal?
Is
it any wonder that the banks now have upwards of $1.6 trillion in reserves
sitting on the Fed’s balance sheet? Sure, they are earning a whopping
0.25% interest rate while taking no risk, as they would do if they put the
money out as loans to the public. But the real implication – at least
to me – is that they are keeping their capital on hand against the
uncertainty of future government action and to deal with the hundreds of
billions in toxic loans still on their balance sheets.
Another
large subset of the human herd has become brainwashed to the point of
delusion by a combination of state education, misinformed college professors,
mainstream media, religious leaders and high-talking politicos into believing
that they as individuals are little more than pawns, knee-benders, set on
this planet to follow a path proscribed by the power elite.
As
a consequence, when social trials arise on that path, they look first to the
government for solutions. And they cling stubbornly to false beliefs, such as
the myth of anthropogenic global warming, even though the truth of the
situation would be readily apparent if they trusted in their instincts and
did some actual research.
And
so it is that while the world is dominated by the human ape, the species is
greatly hindered in its progress by stupid monkeys. Let anywhere near the
levers of power, it is a certainty these stupid monkeys will start pulling
madly, and keep pulling even as the machine begins to shudder and smoke.
Making
the point, I would like to share with you – a more sensible species of
simian, I am sure – a few examples of stupid monkeys at their dumb
deeds; deeds that can only make one shake one’s head in dismay.
For
example….
The stupid monkeys at the Justice Department decided to block a merger
between AT&T and T-Mobile because it would “harm
competition.”
“Gawd’s blood!” I cry out loud to no one. The
whole idea of such a business combination is, of course, to “harm the
competition” by enhancing profitability with a combination of larger
market share and reduced redundancies. Maybe the Justice Department should
require AT&T to shut down, because the very act of staying in business is
clearly damaging to the competition. And while they are at it, the feds
should also clamp down on the burgeoning Internet telephony companies that
are now slashing into the market share of all the big telecoms.
A sub-species of particularly stupid and destructive capuchins in the
California legislature appear poised to pass a bill that will effectively put
an end to hiring an adult babysitter or anyone seeking casual employment
doing odd jobs.
Here’s
the state’s own legislative summary of the bill’s intent:
Existing law requires employers to secure the payment
of workers compensation for injuries incurred by their employees that arise
out of and in the course of employment. The failure to secure workers
compensation as required by the workers’ compensation law is a
misdemeanor. Under existing law, employers of persons who engage in specified
types of household domestic service and who work less than a specified number
of hours are excluded from that definition of employer and are therefore
excluded from the requirement to secure the payment of workers’
compensation, as specified.
This bill would remove that exclusion and require all
domestic work employers, as defined, to secure the payment of workers
compensation and would make conforming changes. By expanding the definition
of a crime, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
In
lay terms, the bill – which already overwhelmingly passed in the
Democrat-controlled assembly and just passed unanimously through the
California State Assembly Committee on Appropriations, precedent to passage
by the Senate and therefore into law – will require you as a parent (or
otherwise casual employer) to follow formal employee reporting protocols and,
among other disincentives to employ, provide your babysitter with
worker’s compensation benefits, regularly scheduled rest and meal
breaks and even paid vacation time.
Failing
to do so will open you up to lawsuits from disgruntled help and being dragged
into court by the nanny’s nanny (state).
Now,
a monkey with even average intelligence might conclude that passing this law
in the grips of an unemployment crisis – and California’s
unemployment rate is over 12%, versus the nationwide average of 9.1% –
would curb enthusiasm for hiring and so should be avoided. But not the stupid
California capuchins.
Vermonters want to block the shipment of oil from the tar sands through
the state.
This
next example is particularly ripe, providing evidence of just how badly the
US educational system has failed its pupils.
Quoting
a supportive article in Vermont’s Burlington
Free Press…
A tar sands oil developer might be planning to pipe its
product to Montreal – and then across Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom
in an existing pipeline to Portland, Maine, according to Canadian and
American environmental groups.
That threatens the region’s air, water and
wildlife habitat, the environmentalists say.
Egad,
a reader might decide, the region’s environment is at risk. Break out
the placards, fuel up the lawyers!
We
are all aware, of course, of the principle of NIMBY – as in Not in My
Back Yard. But even the most simple of simians might want to rethink the
notion that Ft. McMurray, Alberta – the hub of the Canadian tar sands
and source of the hateful oil – is in Vermont’s backyard. Unless
one also considers, say, Phoenix, Arizona to be similarly a part of the
neighborhood: Ft. McMurray is about 2,750 miles from Vermont, and Phoenix
just 2,600.
And
how is it that feeding processed oil into an existing pipeline constitutes
such a dire threat?
Oh,
what folly these enviro-monkeys are capable of. It
it’s positively laughable, but only if you like laughing in the dark.
Then there’s this, from the Stupid-Monkey-In-Chief (SMIC)
This
week, our own President Obama, the SMIC, has confirmed his intention to tune
up his vocal chords in order to create the jobs that have so far gone missing
in this crisis, and which, according to today’s again dismal
unemployment data, remain nowhere in sight.
Said
the SMIC:
“It is my intention to lay out a series of
bipartisan proposals that the Congress can take immediately to continue to
rebuild the American economy by strengthening small businesses, helping
Americans get back to work, and putting more money in the paychecks of the
middle class and working Americans, while still reducing our deficit and
getting our fiscal house in order,” Obama said.
“We’re
saved!” shout the staunch few that still believe the SMIC is cut from
superior cloth. But even the stupidest of the stupid monkeys might be
tempted, after so many disappointments, to raise their hands and ask,
“What’s the plan, chief?”
In
answer to which I provide the following preview of “the plan,”
courtesy of Bloomberg…
Obama’s plans include more infrastructure
spending, tax incentives to spur hiring, a reduction in the employer portion
of the payroll tax credit and changes to unemployment insurance to subsidize
worker retraining.
Did
you just get an overwhelming sense of déjà vu? If so,
it’s probably because the SMIC’s latest plan is pretty much the
same as the previous plan, and the one before that. Sure, there are a few tax
breaks here and there – but companies don’t hire people based on
tax breaks. They do so because there is work to be done and people are needed
to do it. And in the real world, a $5,000 tax credit for hiring someone
– the amount being bandied about in the new plan – will be burned
through in a couple of months of (now mandatory) health insurance payments.
Still
in the real world, if the country is to pull itself out of the muck, the
government needs to stop spending itself into a deeper and deeper fiscal
hole. And it needs to undergo radical reforms in regulatory and tax regimes
(to attract businesses and capital here, versus over there). And it needs to
remake the monetary system on a foundation of something more tangible than
political promises.
But
first of all, the government has got to acknowledge the simple reality that
it cannot meet its obligations and begin, in earnest, the restructuring of
those obligations.
Of
course, only a stupid monkey would look at the state of our degraded
democracy – where half of the monkeys pay no taxes while complaining
about the half who do – and believe that the government will willingly
make any significant reforms, versus just handing out more bananas.
Therefore,
smarter-than-average monkeys are actively taking steps to protect themselves
from the coming currency debasement – the only way the government knows
to reduce its debt in a politically acceptable way.
Back
in 2001, Doug Casey and very few others were waving their arms and hooting
about the need to buy gold – had you acted then, you would have
outperformed even the legendary Warren Buffett. And as the chart here shows,
you would have outperformed them, decisively so.
[Don’t let your future be at the mercy of the D.C. stupid
monkeys. Register today for the upcoming Casey online, free video
event – The
American Debt Crisis: How Big? How Bad? How to Protect Yourself. Listen to Doug Casey, David Galland,
others from the Casey Research team, and some special guests explain how bad
things are likely to get for the US economy and dollar… and learn how
you can start to prepare and even thrive during it. The event will be held
Wednesday September 14 at 2 p.m. EDT. Don’t miss it!]
David Galland
Managing
Editor, Casey Research
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