The
Problem With Seeing Government as God
by
David Galland
Casey
Research
Recently
by David Galland: Is
the US Monetary System on the Verge of Collapse?
While I haven't
made a scientific study of the topic, I suspect the leading genre
for popular entertainment – and for popular delusions of crowds,
for that matter – revolves around magical worlds. As illustration,
the Harry Potter series will serve.
The problem
is that there is no such thing as magic, at least not in the mystical
sense (versus sleight-of-hand variety). Rather, the physical world,
and even the metaphysical world constructed by humans in their ancient
and long-running quest for protection from the physical world, operates
within the boundaries of certain irrefutable truths.
In the first
instance, the laws of physics are only rarely found wanting; in
the second, basic principles of economies are inviolate, or should
be if you actually want an economy to succeed for any length of
time.
This unblinking
faith in an all-caring, omnipotent "Godvernment" is terrifyingly
misplaced: it not only runs contrary to many of those truths but
runs contrary to nearly every important lesson history has to teach.
Look no further than the debts and deficits of Godvernments around
the world to see the consequences of trying to keep this myth alive.
That this faith
is on the increase, versus the opposite, should be very concerning…
both to those who believe in the rights of individuals and to those
trying to build and maintain a reasonable standard of living in
this age of deep uncertainty.
Especially
in that most, if not all, of that uncertainty, as well as active
threats to the general well-being, emanates from the very Godvernments
people look to for salvation and sustenance. The graphic shown here
demonstrates this point vis à vis US security policies
soberingly well.
Now, I am sure
that some of you view these remarks as just another libertarian
tirade, and I guess to some degree, they are.
Yet, I think
there is an important underlying point that requires serious reflection.
Namely, with people the world over trapped in a delusional and self-destructive
cycle of believing that the Godvernments can solve all that ails
– even though almost all that ails is caused or made worse by those
very same institutions – then things can only get worse from here.
It's like all
but the tiniest minority of the world's population have been brainwashed
into joining a dangerous cult. A cult whose leaders are unscrupulous
about stripping their followers of their wealth, their dignity (see
cartoon above) and their sense of individuality, while rewarding
their most ardent supporters with pensions, tax breaks, a leg up
over competitors and, if push comes to shove, hard cash in the form
of bailouts.
Viewed through
this lens, the thinking individual – you, for instance – should
see the need to take certain self-protective measures. And since
few things are as useful as a high net worth when it comes to protecting
your independence, there are opportunities to chase down as well.
Some suggestions,
a number of which you may have heard before.
- Expect
the latest eurozone patch-up job to come unglued. When
you have the heads of the eurozone's largest countries talking
about levering up bailout funds or ringing up the Chinese to ask
for money, you know the latest "solution" to the eurozone's intractable
problems is little more than a hastily concocted plan to kick
the wine bottle just a bit further down the road. The problem
is that nothing suggested begins to resolve the structural problems
of the eurozone – because nothing can be done to resolve
those problems. Thus, a heads-up speculator will look for ways
of betting on failure and place those bets during brief flare-ups
of euro-optimism.
- Likewise,
expect the US government's new Super Committee to fail.
Sure, they may come up with some optics in an attempt to mask
the dire nature of the situation (for instance, by pushing the
impact of any proposed measures out for five or more years – time
enough to ignore them), but the fundamental truth in this case
is that the Godvernment is hopelessly broke, at the same time
the population expects it to do ever more.
On the prospects for the Super Committee, and how the bond markets
are likely to react if it fails, Casey Research Chief Economist
Bud Conrad sent me an email:
David,
What
do you think will happen when the Super Committee fails with deficit
reduction and S&P follows through with its promise for another
debt downgrade? Probably not that much, as the last time it didn't
wreck the markets, but if rates rise, it would not be a good call
to be long stocks.
We
have had good auctions from the Treasury until a very bad acceptance
today that drove the 10-year Treasury to 2.4%. When I wrote my recommendation
at the end of September confirming that rates were too low (for
the October edition of The
Casey Report), the rate was only 1.8%. This kind of
move up would normally take months, not days. Here is the pretty
dramatic chart:

Rising US interest
rates will be a stake through the heart of the US economy. Even
just a return to more normal historical averages will skyrocket
the costs of servicing the US Godvernment's mountain of debt, wreak
havoc in the bond markets, and simultaneously smash any prospect
of recovery in the hugely important housing sector. The key point
is that this is big, important stuff you have to be preparing
for.
- Reassess
the risks to you or your business. Given the sense of
extreme empowerment felt by the high priests of the Godvernment,
you need to keep a very close eye on your personal vulnerabilities.
A cautionary example are the Alabama farmers who failed to anticipate
the tough new anti-immigrant legislation their meddling state
government passed, and who now face sure ruin due to the lack
of trained workers willing to do the back-breaking work of bringing
in the crops or planting new crops for next spring.
Is there personal or business risk that you can take steps to
mitigate now, while you still can? Especially if you are on the
wrong side of the populist mantras now being heard in the temples
of Washington, you can't afford to be complacent.
For example, if you or your business are involved in or reliant
upon the financial services, you might want to consider developing
some new lines of business. On that front, we haven't even begun
to understand the implications and effects of the Dodd-Frank Act,
other than that it was written by career politicians with zero
business experience in a period of hysteria following the 2008
crash, and that it is very ambitious.
Think Patriot Act for financial services – there will be consequences,
and I doubt many of them will be good. Investors should consider
doing some short-selling or using options strategies in betting
on another big leg down for the banks and the financial-services
sector. (In The
Casey Report, we're using a simple options strategy
to bet on the failure of a massively overindebted regional bank.)
- Don't
expect anyone to help you. Actually, with the growing
meme to soak the "rich," namely anyone who pays more than a modest
amount of taxes, you need to wake up to the reality that you are
on your own.
Put another way, if you have assets, you have a target on your
back. Laugh at the OWS folks if you want (and it's hard not to),
but it is their world we'll be living in going forward, not the
ones our parents or we made (and, truth be told, screwed up pretty
badly). If you think you're going to be able to afford to retire
on your Social Security, think again. If you're lucky, it will
buy you a hot cup of coffee to enjoy while you and your buddies
stand around the burning oil drum on a cold winter's night.
If you don't have a respectable net worth at this point, then
learn useful skills – such as how to speculate in investment markets.
Or how to program computers. Apparently, the youth of today like
to use the stuff but aren't so hot on actually learning how to
program – they prefer liberal arts educations. Given that many
of the iconic successes in the computing industries (Gates, Jobs,
Ellison) never graduated college, it would be a mistake to consider
that a prerequisite. There are many more directions you might
go in, including internationally, the important point being that
it's time to get going.
- Internationalize.
With the biggest threat to your wealth and maybe even well-being
coming from your own government, it's essential that you spread
your wealth into other political jurisdictions. Don't do it hastily,
but do it nonetheless. InternationalMan.com,
a new site that picks up where Doug Casey's best-selling book
International
Man left off, may be of some help. Remember, once
exchange controls are implemented (almost a certainty), your wealth
is trapped and the government will be able to have its way with
your assets.
- Front-run
the mob. For example, with the mob against all currently
viable forms of baseload energy production – and they are – careful
bets on rising energy prices are, over a period of time, a sure
thing.
Let me say that again because it seems self-destructive madness
to me, but a large chunk of the mob as well as the priesthood
of Godvernment are actually dead set against all currently viable
forms of baseload energy. You know, the stuff that keeps the lights
on at night. Coal, oil, nuclear and now, thanks to the trumped-up
fracking controversy, even natural gas! While the mob hasn't yet
overrun the barriers of sanity and pulled the energy plug – though
many would do so in a heartbeat – they have been very effective
at slowing exploration and development of energy resources to
a crawl. Actions have consequences, in this case, higher energy
prices. That's what I call an opportunity… don't miss it.
Likewise, the mob is not going to stop demanding that the Godvernment
provide succor and sustenance, and so deficit spending and debt
has to continue to rise, leading to currency debasement. Buy tangibles,
but especially gold and silver, on any setbacks.
Those are just a couple of ideas for front-running the mob, but
if you put on your thinking cap, I'm sure you'll come up with
many more.
Wrapping up,
I'll repeat my basic position on all of this… in the form of an
excerpt from a lightly edited response to a reader who took offense
at a recent article of mine.
The
left and the right both have it wrong, as far as I am concerned.
Both share equal responsibility for the big dislocations that have
proven so damaging to the economy and society.
Thus, I can only conclude that who is in charge is far less important
than what those who are charge are actually allowed to do. The size
and scope of government, in my view, has to be very specifically
spelled out and very limited so that the next gang to take control
can't just willy-nilly play to the prevailing mob sentiments.
That's
how we got here in the first place. Put another way, are many of
Obama's policies counterproductive and damaging to the economy?
Of course. But so were those of Baby Bush. And, before him, Clinton
(who allowed the government to grab Social Security funds so that
he could claim a balanced budget). And before him, Bush senior...
and before him... and so forth and so on.
Unless and
until we stop the madness – stop the meddling – the path the world
takes will remain perilous and, fortunately for us speculators,
somewhat predictable.
Will you be
well positioned to survive when your Godvernment's time runs out?
The Casey Report tells you what to expect
and how to protect yourself. In the current issue, read investment
legend Doug Casey's outlook for 2012 – on the stock market, the
US economy, the euro, gold and silver, the Middle East, China, and
much more. Also in this edition: An in-depth analysis of the Fed's
battle for low interest rates, and how to add gold to your IRA and
save taxes. For just a few days, you can get The Casey
Report for only $98 per year… a staggering 72% off
the regular price. Start
your subscription today.
November
7, 2011
David Galland
is the managing editor of Casey
Research.
Copyright
© 2011 Casey
Research
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