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Liberty Asylum
Barbarous Relic
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By George
Articles
Demagogue's Survival
Guide
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Barbarous Relic
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"This new world hath been the asylum for the persecuted lovers of civil and religious liberty from every Part of Europe. Hither have they fled, not from the tender embraces of the mother, but from the cruelty of the monster; and it is so far true of England, that the same tyranny which drove the first emigrants from home pursues their descendants still." -- Thomas Paine, Common Sense, January 10, 1776
By
the Way, Free Markets Are Free
January 29, 2010
Having failed to learn what causes depressions and how to treat them when they arrive, our nation's leaders are steering us straight into a monetary catastrophe. Predictably, the major media voices are clinging to the assurances of Keynesians, who see new wads of debt and paper money and conclude that the good times are ready to roll again; don't pay any heed to the millions still looking for work.
No one traveling in hostile country should ever be without reliable protection. When the territory in question is intellectual, it always helps to have the aid of fighters who've been there before. In fact, two of the most seasoned pros are yours for only the cost of the effort required to understand their arguments. Fortunately, these straight-shooting writers have made that cost minimal.
I'm speaking of Thomas Paine (1737–1809) and Frederic Bastiat (1801–1850).
The Long Shadow of Frédéric Bastiat
December 25, 2009
Frédéric Bastiat's legacy has two key components: his artful polemics for free markets and his uncompromising conviction that men's interests are "naturally harmonious" to the extent that their property rights are respected. He was an artist with an unfailing loyalty to logic, and a revolutionary who fought the interventionist schemes of both the Right and Left despite suffering from a debilitating terminal illness.
October 9, 2009
Even before the Fed, hoarding was not the way to get rich, but because gold retained its value "through time and space," holding it was a way of avoiding penury and saving for old age. The present fiat money system pressures people to drop a portion of their income into the great slot machine of the investment world, most often by means of financial intermediaries.
People's portfolios fatten during the boom years, but working below the radar is the central bank's monetary policy, silently siphoning off the value of their money while orchestrating a disaster. Whether the boom ends in depression or a spurt of aggressive inflation, Fed policy will ruin investors who don't time their bets properly.
One way to hoard money today is in precious metals, particularly gold and silver. Thanks to Congressman Ron Paul's work, it has been legal for Americans to own and trade gold coins since January 1, 1975. Buying gold and silver coins and holding them is not only a way of protecting oneself against inflation, but it is also, in a sense, a way of boycotting the federal reserve. That in itself would be reason enough to own them.
The American dollar is no longer tethered to gold. Whereas money was once difficult to create, thus keeping its supply limited and protecting its value, the Fed can create fiat paper money in any amounts at the push of a button. Because of the benefits that accrue to the early users of the new money, there is pressure throughout the political system to keep the money machine printing.
Ben Bernanke is committed to monetary inflation. He claims it is healthy in boom times and will pull us out of any recession. He blames the Fed for not inflating enough once the Great Depression began. He’s determined not to make the same mistake today.
Fiat paper money regimes are not designed to promote a healthy economy. They are designed as a means of wealth distribution for the benefit of a few.
That probably doesn’t include you, and it definitely doesn’t include me
September 5, 2009
In 1919 a book was written that contained a brief passage about how to bring any modern society to its knees without firing a shot.
There is no subtler, no surer means of overturning the existing basis of society than to debauch the currency. The process engages all the hidden forces of economic law on the side of destruction, and does it in a manner which not one man in a million is able to diagnose.
Ninety years after publication of that passage, another book has arrived calling for the abolition of the world’s most respected currency debaucher, the U.S. Federal Reserve. It’s author, Ron Paul, has spent the better part of his career trying to wipe the Fed and its toxic effects off the face of the earth. His new book, End the Fed, is, as the title indicates, a death threat to the central bank. Given Paul’s popularity among libertarian activists and his congressional support for blowing the lid off Fed secrecy, the book cannot be dismissed as fanciful.
July 15, 2009
As the dollar continues its descent, the prospects for
sound money are alive, but much more so are the prospects for a new fiat
currency. The top decision makers in the federal government regard the money
machine as their right arm.
read more…
July 1, 2009
The Fed is a racket at heart, a con game writ large —
what else can you call an organization with the exclusive privilege of printing
money in the trillions and handing it over to friends? But if this is true, what
does that say about the state, the organization that created and sanctions it?
Is the Fed an honest mistake in the state's otherwise undying efforts to
preserve our liberty, or might it be a key component of a bigger racket?
read more…
June 16, 2009
Will Barack Obama's New Deal finally sink the American economy into the sands? This is the question author Robert P. Murphy poses at the end of his latest myth buster, The Politically Incorrect Guide to the Great Depression and the New Deal. Readers who follow Murphy's narrative from page one will understand that unless the current administration suddenly turns pro free market and gets out of the way, our future looks grim at best.
May 19, 2009
“The government gives
[blacks] the drugs, builds bigger prisons, passes a three-strike law and then
wants us to sing ‘God Bless
Such were the words of
the Reverend Jeremiah Wright as he addressed the congregation of the mostly
black Trinity United Church of Christ in southside
Many people were
shocked at Wright’s rhetoric, believing racial diatribes were mostly behind us.
But as Judge Andrew P. Napolitano explains in his latest book,
Dred Scott’s Revenge: A Legal History of Race and Freedom in America,
Wright’s comments are one of the predictable outcomes of government’s sordid
history of race relations.
May 7, 2009
The Titanic tragedy is about the unexpected sinking of an unsinkable ship. In that respect, it is much like the American economy that many believed would stay fat and happy forever.
In
today’s crisis, our “ship” is not being allowed to right itself; in fact, Team
Obama is accelerating its sinking. As Guido Hülsmann
observes, “The crisis did not hit us
despite the presence of our monetary and financial authorities. It hit us
because of them.” And the nightmare continues. They’re still on the
job.
Whatever you do, make sure it doesn’t amount to re-arranging deck chairs. Don’t be one of the steerage passengers who can’t find the lifeboat
February 24, 2009
Studying Jörg Guido Hülsmann's latest book, The Ethics of Money Production, is a vastly enriching experience. After building his case for natural money on the inviolability of an individual's right to his own property, he then shows us how the state has spent the last 400 years usurping this right for the benefit of a privileged few through its protection of fractional-reserve banking.
The production of natural money is ethical because it involves no violations of property rights and is the corollary of a completely free society in which private property is inviolable. The economy of such a society, Hülsmann tells us, may then be called a "free market," which would likely harbor a variety of natural monies. With this understanding, the claim that the culprit of the current crisis is the free market puts its proponents in the awkward position of having to show causality from something that doesn't exist. Full Article
With the world’s economies run by monopoly printing presses, there is a serious disconnect with reality. Someone very important needs $30 billion to stay afloat? Will it to happen, and it is done. A bunch of very important entities need 20 times that figure, or even more? All it takes is more will. No one has to dig it out of the ground.
Money, which once had real value whose supply could not be changed on command, can be created in any amount by state appointees. This is inflation. It has ruined other countries. It is a juggernaut of destruction. It is what the administration is counting on to save us. Full Article
When history confirms that hands-off is the only
effective and humane approach to a bust, and to prosperity generally, while
hands-on brings ruination, why do governments today consider every option but
free markets? Look back to the founding and the baneful influence of Alexander
Hamilton. His influence has been highly detrimental to the majority who live
outside the rarefied reality of national politics.
Full Article
Bailout!
December 15, 2008
In my proposed game, a player could have
the option of paying rent to the bank in return for future undisclosed favors.
If a player subsequently finds himself threatened with bankruptcy by landing on
a property with hotels, he could draw a card to see if his past rent payments
have earned him the status of “too big to fail.” Also, if a player wanted to
put 7,000,000 hotels on a piece of property in a fit of
irrational
exuberance, the bank should have the option of providing cheap credit to
cover the investment. And if another player should be so unfortunate as to land
on a property with 7,000,000 hotels, the bank should once again be available to
intervene in the public interest by bailing out the player.
Full Article
When Is a Voter Truly Sovereign?
November 4, 2008
There may be as many different preferences
for president as there are voters, but only one person will win. Voters who
prefer someone else or non-voters who prefer no one at all must endure the
election results -- for years. If the political methodology were imported to
the market, everyone in the country would end up wearing one size, style, and
brand of shoes, even if their choice was to go without them.
The 'Something'
Government Should Do
October 30, 2008
Government has tried countless ways to sustain its Fed-induced booms and avoid the painful but necessary corrections. Its track record has been an unmitigated disaster, unless inflating the economy out of a crisis for a bigger one later is regarded as success. Yet the idea persists that intervention works, that if a mountain of facts show otherwise it’s always possible the intervention was too little, too late.
From the Establishment’s perspective, the
fatal flaw of Austrian economics is the job it accords government,
which is none at all. But free
markets are markets free from intervention, which means today’s government not
only has a job, but a crucial one: It should bow out of our economic lives
altogether. That’s the “something” government should do.
Crop Seeding in America
September 25, 2008
Everything possible is done to prevent the fraud of the
monetary system from being exposed to the masses who suffer from it.
~ Rep. Ron Paul, TX,
before the
The gold standard did not collapse. Governments abolished
it in order to pave the way for inflation.
The quotes from Paul and Mises are political heresy, yet
they hint at why government crises have long dominated the headlines. Why
doesn’t the public understand this? Libertarians often observe that
government doesn’t work, but clearly, it does some things right or those
statements would be conventional knowledge. Put another way, why is the idea of
sound money so foreign to most people? Why do they trust the state’s inflatable
notes and the
inflationist in charge of them, then wonder why the economy blows up? Given
its record, why do they trust the state
at all?
Year in and year out, government schools produce students
who either (a) could care less about monetary issues, or (b) have state-approved
ideas of them. Government crop management weeds out potential trouble-makers.
Why Shed Blood for Democracy?
September 2, 2008
Winston Churchill once
said that
the best argument against democracy is a five-minute conversation with the
average voter. A conversation with just about any voter would work as well.
Hans-Hermann Hoppe points
out that democracy promotes “the ‘infantilization’ of society,” resulting in
“continually increased taxes, paper money and paper money inflation, an unending
flood of legislation, and a steadily growing ‘public’ debt.”
Full Article
Not to Worry, They're on Our Side
August 25, 2008
Less than three months from now
either Obama or McCain will be the president-elect. Should we be concerned?
Not whatsoever. Here’s why:
Are You a Deathbed Libertarian?
August 20, 2008
From what I can gather, Hackworth
and Paine had this much in common: They saw the world with their own eyes. They
were surely wrong about some things, perhaps many things, but their loyalty to
reality was seldom breached. Their gods were facts and logical argument, not
authority.
Jim Rogers' Ultimate Road Trip
August 6, 2008
Anyone who publicly calls for the
abolition of the Fed gets my attention. Add to his resume the fact that he rode
a motorcycle across China once, circled the planet on the ground twice (the
second time with his beautiful bride), ran the New York City marathon three
times, and is one of the world’s most successful investors as well as a
best-selling author, and I’ll sit and take notes.
I did my note-taking while reading
Jim Rogers’s book, Adventure Capitalist: The Ultimate Road Trip...full
article
The Revolution's Paper Money Legacy
July 17, 2008
After Lexington and Concord,
Congress had a war on their hands and needed a way to finance it. The Americans
were in large measure tax rebels, so taxation of their own would have to wait.
After giving some thought to borrowing, Congress decided instead to call upon
their old friend, the printing press.
The colonists had a long history
with paper money. They had been inflating since the 1690s and had all but
driven silver specie out of circulation.
Full Article
Government's Perennial Enemy
June 30, 2008
The gold standard, Ludwig von Mises
wrote, “requires nothing else than that the government abstain from deliberately
sabotaging it.” [p. 421] Much to
the detriment of civilization, governments have undermined and debased the gold
standard throughout much of history. With the aid of a state-sympathetic class
of intellectuals, most educated people now regard monetary gold as a quaint
contrivance of a bygone age--to the extent they give the issue any thought at
all. Any suggestion that we adopt an authentic gold standard as a permanent
solution to financial crises, dollar depreciation, and senseless wars is
dismissed by the
intelligentsia as hopelessly naive.
A Colonial Radical in King Bernanke's Court
May 5, 2008
Thomas Paine made the case for
freedom in 1776, and ten years
later made the case for
freedom’s money, gold and silver.
[1] If we had followed his advice on the latter,
we would still possess a good measure of the former.
Ron Paul's Revolution
April 28, 2008
Ron Paul not only believes in the power of freedom, he is the only candidate I’ve heard explicitly oppose the philosophy of statism. And if we can go by a man’s record, we have to believe he means it. To get us moving in the right direction, he offers a few recommendations...Full Review
The Sacred Cow of Inflation
April 16, 2008
No one has ever died from inflation directly, yet
it constitutes a serious threat to our existence. By “inflation” I mean a
policy of increasing the money supply, the root cause of the booms that
inevitably go bust. Using this traditional idea of inflation--which, it should
be mentioned, is regarded as
contrived by most economists today--in what sense can it be considered so
dangerous?
Especially when a simple perusal of the facts
suggests otherwise.
Who Does the Fed Serve?
April 8, 2008
In testimony last week, Ben Bernanke told Ron
Paul that the government created the Federal Reserve in 1913 to stop the
“periodic financial crises” that erupted in the 19th Century and again in 1907.
Bernanke, evidently, was counting on Paul holding the accepted view of the Fed’s
origins, the one untainted by Wall Street-government conspiracy -- not the view
meticulously presented in the works of Kolko, Rothbard, and Griffin, among
others.
Full Article.
Bernanke and the Holy Grail
March 20, 2008
In times of financial crisis, people want
nuts and bolts advice on
how to survive, or even better,
how to profit from the calamity.
“Tell us how to get out of this, not how we got in it,” is the prevailing
attitude -- which is ironic, since most
investors are calling for more cheap credit,
the policy that brought us to disaster’s door in the first place.
What's Wrong With the Markets?
March 5, 2008
“The Federal Reserve, the central bank of the
“WAR IS PEACE FREEDOM IS SLAVERY IGNORANCE IS
STRENGTH”
Like an interminable soap opera, pundits continue
to bring forth scenarios of impending economic disaster. Financial Times
columnist
Martin Wolf, for instance, discusses in detail Professor Nouriel Roubini’s
Twelve Steps to
Financial Disaster, of how we have reached unsustainable levels of debt, and
that bankruptcies, defaults, a collapse of stock prices, and “a drying-up of
liquidity” are heading straight at us.
Gold, Ron Paul and Prosperity
November 15, 2007
Candidate Ron Paul understands inflation as the
creation of money out of thin air. While this view depicts a disturbing state
of affairs and has a distinguished history, it is not in the least popular. For
one thing, it tends to incriminate the money creators.
If inflation is defined as price increases, by
coincidence the guilt falls on those who raise prices.
The Root of
Financial Panics
September 10, 2007
Imagine for a moment the dark days of banking
when banks had to redeem gold coin for the money substitutes they issued, which
were either bank notes or deposit accounts. Folks were generally happy to keep
their gold locked up in a safe place and found it more convenient to use the
substitutes. Very importantly, most of them were also either
stockholders of the
bank or in debt to it {pdf, p. 82), so they had little incentive to confront
the bank for redemption. But this very fact enticed banks to create substitutes
well beyond the amount of gold they held in their vaults, a practice considered
normal and not the least fraudulent.
This site is in no way connected to George H. Smith
Other Interesting Sites
Ron Paul's
Campaign for Liberty
Classics of Libertarian Thought
Greenspan's 1966 "Gold and Economic Freedom"
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