The
Core of American Liberty
by
Bill Bonner
Bill
Bonner's Diary
Recently
by Bill Bonner: The
Serf Society
I've been
at the beck and call of rich men all my life. But I'll be damned
if I'll be at the beck and call of every son-of-a-bitch with a 3¢
stamp.
~ William Faulkner
on losing his job at the Oxford, Miss., post office
One of the
rarely cited advantages of having money is that you're less beholden
to others who have it too. The more you have, at least in theory,
the more you can ignore the other fellow with it, and go about your
business. Nor need you drink the same cocktail or rush to the same
mall so you can outfit yourself in the same duds.
In short, with
a little capital of your own you can do what you want.
And the fellow
who said "money can't buy happiness" has apparently not
read last Thursday's New York Times:
Broadly speaking,
the data now indicate that as people get richer, they report getting
happier too. Though it's not quite that simple.
Justin Wolfers,
an economist at the University of Michigan who helps advise the
U.S. government on happiness statistics, told me that poor people
in poor countries are not unhappy simply because they don't have
wads of cash. They are more likely to have fewer choices, more
children who die in childbirth and other grave problems. And while
wealthier nations are generally happier, there is no evidence,
Wolfers says, that an artist would be happier if she became a
hedge-fund trader.
The Importance
of Capital
But we're talking
capital, not cash flow. The trouble with cash flow is that it doesn't
spring ab ovo from nowhere. It comes to your hands from the greasy
mitts of someone else.
If they don't
keep the cash flowing, you may not have any. Unless you're a government
employee or a tenured professor, a job is just a job. You serve
at the pleasure of others. If you give them displeasure, they can
cut off your income.
Capital
is different. If you have enough of it, you don't have to work for
anyone. You can go fishing, pick your teeth and maintain unpatriotic
opinions.
Capital frees
you from politics too. According to the most recent numbers, nearly
half of U.S. households now rely on other people's money for some
or all of their income. They are beneficiaries of one or more of
the feds' transfer programs. Money is taken from others; it is transferred
to them, as if to a getaway car.
The feds even
have the chutzpah to give the recipients of this stolen loot an
electronic card called the "Independence Card." Independent
is exactly what these people aren't. Instead, says Charles Hugh
Smith over at OfTwoMinds.com,
they are like feudal serfs.
"The core
of American liberty is widespread private ownership of property,"
he writes. If you want to be free you have to have your hands on
the "means of production." Otherwise, you've got to learn
to bend.
Imagine that
you have zero equity in the house you own, Hugh Smith suggests.
How free are you then?
Or imagine
that you need to buy a house and need a mortgage.
The mortgage market is almost 100% controlled by the feds. How free
are you?
The Rise
of "Neo-Feudalism"
Hugh Smith
does not mention it. But imagine that you rely on the feds for unemployment
benefits, food stamps, healthcare or Social Security. Are you a
free man? Or a serf?
Smith says
we live in a condition of creeping "neo-feudalism." A
few people own a lot of property. Most own very little. His attention
is focused on housing, where he believes the feds are quietly taking
more and more property out of private hands and putting it in the
hands of rich, concentrated elites.
He's probably
right about that. But it seems to us that even more neo-feudalism
is taking place right out in the open where large groups
now depend on the feds... and on Fed's EZ money... to maintain their
current standards of living.
Balance the
federal budget? Stop the Fed's printing presses? Let interest rates
rise to a normal level?
Forget it.
The serfs can't afford it.
February
13,
2013
Bill
Bonner is
a New
York Times
bestselling author and founder of Agora, one of the largest independent
financial publishers in the world. If you would like to read more
of Bill’s essays, sign-up for his free daily e-letter at Bill
Bonner’s Diary of a Rogue Economist.
Copyright
© 2013 Bill Bonner
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