Zombies
Born of Government Spending
by
Bill Bonner
Daily Reckoning
Recently
by Bill Bonner: The
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Zombie,
zombie in the night
Making cities burn so bright
What immortal hand could frame
Thy fearful symmetry?
Yes, dear reader,
the mobs are getting angry. Heres the story from Germany:
Far-left
extremists are specifically targeting German luxury cars, symbols
of the countrys wealth and power, bringing the total number
of vehicles torched in the German capital this year to at least
138, more than double the figure for all of 2010.
The rise
in Berlin car burnings coincides with widespread lawlessness that
erupted last week across England. More than 1,500 people were
arrested as rioters looted shops, attacked bystanders and burnt
autos. In Berlin, far-left extremists are specifically targeting
German luxury cars, symbols of the countrys wealth and export
prowess, police said.
The
arsonists want to hit what they say are Fat Cats,
Berlin police spokesman Michael Gassen said. A special unit is
investigating the fires as political crimes after the police received
letters claiming responsibility that derided globalization, gentrification
and rising rents, he said.
In England
they steal clothes. On the continent, they burn cars. Thousands
of Renaults and Citroens have been torched in France in recent years.
Now, theyre burning BMWs and Mercedes.
But what do
zombies do in America? Do they steal clothes? Burn cars? Or join
the Tea Party?
First, we need
to define our terms. This is a serious matter. And people are beginning
to use the word zombie too loosely, causing it to lose
its meaning. Poor Thomas L. Friedman, for example, managed to mix
everything up
confusing the zombies on the streets of Croydon
with Michelle Bachmann and the Tea Party crowd. He sees only that
they are all angry.
So, whats
the difference between an angry zombie and a person who is angry
because hes tired of supporting zombies?
In economic
terms, a zombie is a parasite. He contributes less to the economy
than he takes from it. He lives at the expense of others.
Almost any
profession or career can be a nest for a zombie; an auto mechanic
who rips off his customers, for example, is a zombie
at least
in a sense. But most often, zombies are created, enabled, and supported
by government. Government transfer payments create whole armies
of zombies. Government bailouts turn whole industries into zombies.
Government programs and government employment turn millions of otherwise
reasonably honest and reasonably productive people into leeches.
A guy who might have been a decent gardener, for example, becomes
an SEC lawyer or a Homeland Security guard.
Politicians
like zombies. Zombies are cheap. If you buy a vote from a man who
is independently wealthy, its gonna cost you. And the bourgeoisie
which earns its money from honest toil and enterprise
is hard to buy. But zombie votes? Theyre a dime a dozen. Just
increase Social Security or Medicare; the zombies will line up to
vote for you.
Its relatively
easy to turn people into zombies. And its fairly easy to support
them when an economy is healthy and expanding. But when an economy
goes into a contraction, you can no longer afford to give the zombies
their meat. Then what?
Then, watch
out. The zombies rise up.
Germany was
the success story of Europe. Until this week. The latest numbers
show the German economy has stopped growing. In fact, it is now
trailing the rest of Europe
which is said to be growing at
a very slow rate.
Friends in
Berlin tell us that young people have gotten used to living off
the government. Youth unemployment is high. Everybody wants to earn
money and status in the easiest way possible. Even well-educated
young people find they can live better by taking government support
payments than by working a regular job.
What will they
do when the checks no longer come? Look out.
Reprinted
with permission from the Daily
Reckoning.
August
20,
2011
Bill
Bonner is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
The New Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis
and the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007). His
latest book is Dice
Have No Memory.
Since 1999, Bill has been a daily contributor and the driving force
behind The Daily Reckoning.
Copyright
© 2011 Daily Reckoning
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