Doug
Casey: If I Were President
Doug
Casey Interviewed by Louis James, Editor, International
Speculator
Recently:
Doug Casey
on G20 Economic Suicide
L:
Hola Doug; what's on your mind this week?
Doug:
Well, it occurs to me that for all the times we've criticized the
counterproductive, foolish, or just plain wrong ideas of others
and have sometimes offered sounder alternatives, I've never fleshed
out a picture of what I would do if I could call the shots.
L:
"If I were president"
But you're an anarchist!
Doug:
Yes, but that doesn't mean that I don't have any ideas on what should
be done, if there were anyone with the strength and courage to do
it.
L:
And a very good bulletproof vest.
Doug:
Just so. I'm certainly not interested in taking up residence in
the White House wouldn't want the job if offered. But say some
other occupant of that government housing project got hit on the
head and woke up honest, industrious, and willing to do what was
right come hell or high water.
L:
Okay, I'm game. What would she do?
Doug:
Are you referencing that Heinlein
story in which the crooked president dies and his honest VP
takes over and she's a lady?
L:
Good catch. Heinlein wrote that since men had held the office for
200 years, a law was passed limiting it to women for the next 200
years. He thought they would be less likely send young men off to
die in wars for stupid reasons, and would generally be more sensible
than men on many subjects. But anyway, as you were saying
Doug:
First, I would declare to the public that the problems we face today
as a society have been generated by our own governments, particularly
in the US, where it's pretty much 100% government induced.
L:
"Government is a disease masquerading as its own cure." Bob LeFevre.
Doug:
Exactly. And it should be admitted, stopped, and apologized for
just as should have been, but was not done when the writing on
the wall regarding the Vietnam War was clear to all.
L:
Okay, I'll buy that; calling a spade a spade is very important in
this day of spin and misdirection. But how would you go about the
"stopping it" part?
Doug:
The first thing to do is to cut the budget. Almost all of the harm
the government does would be reduced or eliminated if it weren't
able to steal so much money to pay for its harmful activities.
L:
Taxation is theft just try not paying the "voluntary" income tax
to the IRS okay, but they also borrow and print money.
Doug:
That's just indirect theft. Borrowing money forces future tax slaves
to hand over money against their wishes, and printing it steals
wealth from everyone by making the money in their pockets worth
less and less with every new dollar, euro, yen, or whatever printed.
But it's not
just the act of stealing that is so harmful, but the things the
government spends it on. They are almost always directly against
the best interests of those from whom the money was taken.
We need to
starve the beast; so all these marginal,
so-called budget cuts the politicians are wailing about are just
smoke and mirrors not a real, meaningful scaling back of the
government. It's too late for half measures. I'd cut the budgets
of the federal, state, and local governments by 98%. For starters.
L:
You're joking 98% that'll never happen!
Doug:
Yes, it will. It's just a question of whether it happens in a somewhat
controlled, voluntary way, or whether it comes about as a result
of a totally out-of-control collapse. What's going on today is completely
unsustainable, so I'm convinced this sort of change is coming
it'll just be that much more destructive if we let it come as an
involuntary crash. It's like when you have an old, unstable building
that will collapse sooner or later; it's wiser and safer to bring
it down at a time and in a way you control than to let it collapse
on its own, with no warning to those around.
L:
A controlled demolition of the US and global economies. US voters
would probably love that just as much as Greek voters love austerity
programs.
Doug:
Probably so, but it's still the right thing to do. The whole current
structure is rotten through and through, corrupt and counterproductive.
It needs to be replaced, not fixed.
L:
Replaced with what?
Doug:
Economic freedom, of course. Let the future build itself, based
on the voluntary actions of all market participants, acting in free
exchange.
L:
You know I'm on the same page, but many of our readers may be skeptical.
Doug:
It's good to question everything. But this is not just a theory
look at Iceland, which didn't bail all the idiotic bankers out,
but let them crash. It
has recovered much faster than most people expected. And that's
without embracing real, thorough economic freedom; its simply as
a result of letting stupidity reap its natural reward.
It remains
to be seen how well things work out for Iceland it still has way
too much government in my view but there's an earlier, well-documented
example in the history of Chile. When Pinochet overthrew Allende,
he enacted deep and far-reaching reforms of the Chilean economy.
He didn't go as far as I would have, but he did enough, and in such
a way that it stuck and has had greatly beneficial economic consequences
long after his departure. Chile is now the most prosperous country
in Latin America, and may well be the most prosperous country in
the western hemisphere.
L:
I've been there many times and have noted the modern buildings and
clean streets of downtown Santiago. The middle class in that city
exercises on mountain bikes on weekends and enjoys excellent restaurants
evenings. They dress fashionably and stroll along sipping Starbucks
lattes
downtown could be a city in California. But there are hovels
in the poor districts and dirt streets in the countryside. Are you
saying Chile is more prosperous than the US or Canada?
Doug:
Yes. Parts of the place may still look third world, but Chileans
are not loaded with debt the way North Americans are. My understanding
is that the average Chilean has greater net worth than the average
US tax slave.
One important
contributing factor to this is that Pinochet privatized the social
security program, and Chileans pay into individual retirement accounts
that they own and control. There are restrictions, but they can
fire their managers and move them to those who deliver results
this is good use of a vital market mechanism. These are real assets
that can be liquidated and reinvested not like US Social Security,
which is nothing but a vague promise backed by nothing but an impossibly
debt-ridden government with financial problems that are about to
get much worse.
Taking this
single step in the US would enable a huge reduction in budget and
unfunded future spending. There is absolutely no need for government
involvement; people's retirement should be their own individual
responsibility, and their employers' contributions to their retirement
accounts should be negotiated between the people and their employers.
L:
Just to be clear, you're not condoning Pinochet's death squads and
such just commenting on the results of his economic reforms.
Doug:
The facts are the facts. Pinochet was a rare bird. And yes, it seems
certain that he had several thousand people killed but how many
people did Baby Bush kill in Iraq over so-called weapons of mass
destruction that weren't even there? Many of the world's big governments
are guilty of far greater atrocities and numbers of deaths that
are orders of magnitude larger.
The US has
supported and continues supporting far more barbaric and destructive
dictators around the world. It seems to me that Pinochet is demonized
because he instituted many free-market reforms that was his truly
unforgivable sin, particularly among leftist intellectuals.
L:
The sort of people he had killed
Doug:
Yes. Two wrongs don't make a right, but the fact is that Chile has
many advantages today because of Pinochet. It's not as cheap as
Argentina, but it's cheaper than Uruguay. It's the least corrupt
of Latin American countries, and one of the least corrupt in the
world. You picked a good analogy; it has a fantastic California
climate. It has a low population density. It has one of the freer
economies in the world And its growing rapidly. Plus, they grow
some world-class wines in Chile. It has many advantages.
What I don't
like about Chile is that it's the most conservative country in Latin
America probably in the western hemisphere. It's the most religious,
and that's saying a lot in Latin America. They love their police.
They love their army. And it's isolated. It's like an island, with
the Andes to the east, the South Pacific and Antarctic oceans to
the west and south, and a desert to the north. That makes the culture
more provincial than I prefer but that is a personal preference.
I find Argentina more welcoming to bon vivants, even with
all the problems it has those problems really don't affect foreigners
living there who have income from abroad.
L:
So noted. I can't say I wish we had a Pinochet takeover in America
the US version would almost certainly be hawkish and have the
world's biggest military budget to play with. Scary. But suppose
a Ron Paul type made it and was following your plan, cutting the
budget 98%, privatizing Social Security. What would be next?
Doug:
Default on the national debt. That would punish the people foolish
enough or unethical enough to lend the US government money. It would
reduce the budget and greatly reduce the ability of the government
to spend beyond its means. But most important of all, it wouldn't
make indentured servants out of future generations of US taxpayers.
Look, I know
this seems unthinkable to most people, but it's going to be defaulted
on anyway. There is simply no way it can be repaid, and an uncontrolled
default would be catastrophic probably in the form of total destruction
of the US dollar as we know it today.
It has to be
emphasized that default on the national debt is default on the government's
debt, not the people's. Most of the real wealth in the world will
still be there after the dust settles it'll just be in different
hands. The feds might even be forced to sell off their assets
a sort of gigantic "going out of business" sale that would put those
assets into more capable and productive private hands. NASA, for
example, as
we've discussed already.
L:
I understand, but that would still hurt a lot of people who have
their savings in Treasury Bills.
Doug:
Those savings will be lost anyway, if they leave them in Treasuries.
The people it would hurt the worst are the fat cats in bed with
the government the kind who got their pals in Washington DC to
bail them out. It'd be poetic justice.
L:
Okay. What's next?
Doug:
Eliminate the Federal Reserve. Get the government out of the money
business entirely, so it can't inflate it to pay for things people
would not willingly, knowingly pay for.
L:
Why stop there why not go for complete separation of economy and
state? The same logic applies as with the separation of church and
state, which once seemed unthinkable and now is the norm in much
of the world in the West, at least.
Doug:
All in good time, Lobo. Next, I would take whatever gold is left
in Fort Knox and use it to back the US dollar. After defaulting
on the debt and the ensuing collapse, trillions and trillions of
dollars would cease to exist. Assuming the gold is still there
the government doesn't allow any independent audits of Fort Knox
I would use it to put what dollars were left on a solid, inflation-proof
footing, at whatever price of gold that could be accomplished at
the time.
L:
Right. What next?
Doug:
Eliminate unnecessary, counterproductive, and unconstitutional government
programs. Cutting spending is only a beginning; you have to abolish
the programs if you dont want the spending to come back. We've
already talked about getting the government out of Social Security.
This and other social spending is the biggest chunk of government
spending and liabilities something on the order of $220 trillion,
last I heard. So, Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid have to
go.
Unfortunately,
people over 50 have come to rely on it too heavily to take it away
from them, so their payments and benefits would have to continue.
But people under 50 don't get anything, and the payroll taxes that
support the programs would be ended immediately.
L:
Who pays for the older ones who keep getting the benefits? They
were deceived into thinking they were making savings deposits of
a sort, but it's not true; the government has already spent every
dime they put away for the future.
Doug:
I know. A large portion of whatever income the government could
honestly generate from core services like running the courts and
military would have to be directed to this expense until it went
away naturally.
L:
That won't win any popularity contests, but I suppose it would be
an extension of the default youve already recommended. Bankruptcy
is never pretty. It's also unavoidable, when the money just isn't
there. What next?
Doug:
De-fund, eliminate, and abolish every single alphabet agency the
government currently lavishes money on. If any provide services
people value, the market will step in to provide those services
at a fraction of the cost and without the ability to ride roughshod
over citizens who dissent. For starters, every agency and government
action not expressly listed in the Constitution should be uprooted
entirely and the ground where it stood sown with salt. Enforce the
10th Amendment. Then we can see if there's anything left
that we really don't need anymore.
It's important
to understand that the budgetary savings are really the lesser issue
here. What's really important is getting the government off the
peoples' collective back. The state is sand and glue in the gears
of the economy, and it needs to be completely cleaned away to allow
it to function freely to create greater prosperity for all.
L:
That wouldn't leave much
the military.
Doug:
Yes. Unfortunately, most people in the US are under the delusion
that the military is the one part of the government that is honest
and works that it protects them from dangers foreign and domestic.
The truth is that even if many soldiers are honorable, the politicians
who control them are not, and their missions around the world are
creating more enemies and stirring up more hatred almost everywhere
they go. This is making the world a more dangerous place, not a
safer one.
Further, the
"military-industrial complex" Eisenhower warned us of is still in
place, more entrenched, and greedier than ever. Remember the $600
toilet seats?
But more important
than this financial debacle is that the military now exists to protect
the government, not the people. Veterans are being increasingly
indoctrinated to view civilians as potentially hostile enemies,
rather than the very thing that justifies the military's existence.
And when they muster out and go to work for law enforcement agencies
(not people protection agencies), their training and attitudes become
extremely dangerous to average citizens.
L:
That'll be a hard pill for most people to swallow. They still want
to think of most cops as being like Andy
Griffith, even though the evidence is strong that many, if not
most cops see civilians as potential threats and object to control.
Your whole list is going to be hard for most people to believe,
let alone accept.
Doug:
No doubt. But once the avalanche has started, it's too late for
the pebbles to vote. This is all going to happen. The only questions
are how, and whether the damage and chaos can be limited along the
way.
Unfortunately,
I have to say that I see absolutely no way that these steps will
be taken voluntarily. As we discussed when we
talked about Ron Paul, the kind of person who could do these
things would never get elected and if by some cosmic accident
such a person were elected, he or she would almost certainly be
assassinated in short order. Remember Kennedy and don't say it
can't happen in the place that was once America. It's going to be
like France after 1789.
Chaos is coming.
L:
Our regular readers should know what you recommend doing about it
Doug:
Yes. I am doing exactly what I've been saying for some time now:
I'm building cash to deploy buying great assets during the crash,
I'm putting my savings in gold and silver, and the businesses I'm
building are in productive agriculture. As a speculator, I remain
convinced that these junior mining stocks that you follow have explosive
upside as much now as at any point I've ever seen.
L:
Okay then. Enough said. Not a happy vision of the future, but our
aim is to offer the best guidance we can, not to sweet-talk people
into smiling. And speaking of offering guidance our own chief
economist, Bud Conrad, will be speaking at the upcoming Global
Currency Expo, held April 5-7 in San Diego. He'll share his
big-picture views of the American economy over the near future,
as well as making some specific investment recommendations.
Doug:
Yes, I enjoyed your conversation with Bud last week, and encourage
those able to attend to do so it should be a great event.
L:
Very well. Thanks for your thoughts, Doug.
Doug:
You're very welcome.
Doug Casey
writes every month for The Casey Report, which focuses
on leveraging emerging trends to outstanding gains. These are the
same tactics that have made Doug and other legendary investors like
Rick Rule and Peter Schiff fortunes. Learn
more about The Casey Report.
March
14, 2013
Doug
Casey (send him mail)
is
a best-selling author and chairman of Casey
Research, LLC., publishers of Caseys
International Speculator.
Copyright
© 2013 Casey
Research
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