I have been calling for the replacement of the Legislative Branch of government since September 11th, 2001, when two F-15s received scramble orders out of Otis, to fly a heading to an altitude where no commercial Boeing 767 had existed for more than nine (9) minutes - taking both F-15s up to an altitude that would guarantee absolutely no contact with a commercial aircraft, whatsoever.
Government is not the problem. We The People, are the biggest problem our nation faces. We don't have our act together and therefore, government is having its way with us. We are uneducated in the things that matter most. We are so blinded by the here and now that we fail to study the mistakes of yesterday and by definition plan to fail in the future. We think we live in a Democracy when the founders gave us a Republic.
Jefferson, told us explicitly what to do when things get this bad - and they have been bad since 1913 - not with the election of Obama, Clinton or Bush 41\43. But, who the heck knows what Jefferson, said anyway or why it matters.
I worry for my country. I worry a great deal. I don't know that we have another 200 years left as a free standing Republic. I just don't know.
$17 trillion in debt. Nearly 3 times that much in outstanding netted credit. Sigh. We've got ourselves into some serious trouble. China, is getting stronger - not weaker. The tide is changing directly under our feet and our generation is just sitting by and letting it happen. We could have had Thorium Reactors up and running, providing the energy needs for ALL American Households from coast to coast and lowering our energy dependence on foreign entities, but no. We ran for the profits in oil instead of fueling the future with cleaner and virtually unlimited (for all practical purposes) supplies of energy. Meanwhile, China, develops it own clean reactors with the nice little added benefit of never undergoing a meltdown by design.
We've got it all sdrawkcab.
Firstly, like I said, there is no dilution and no reduction of purchasing power. Secondly, are the bank shareholders not "people"? I mean it's the beauty of capitalism that you can become one of the recipients of banking profits, simply by buying a share of, I dunno, JPM or Citi or whatevers... Thirdly, banks risk virtually none of their own "private" capital? As a UK taxpayer I am a proud owner of RBS and lemme tell you, they sure did risk a lot of their capital on all sorts of random sh1t. They weren't alone, either.
I don't see how I am debating straw men. You specifically talk about the evils of fractional reserve and the nationalization of the banking system. I am trying to suggest to you that, while certainly far from perfect, our current system is, most crucially, capitalist. You want to replace it with a basically socialist setup to fix what you perceive as an "unfair" distribution of wealth and income. As I have a bit of personal experience with socialist experiments, I disagree and am arguing against your suggestions.
I never said anything of the sort.
It seems a key word in your statement I quoted above is the word "bad" to characterize U.S. debt . Is the debt really "bad"? The way that is typically decided is through the market, is it not? I would have to say that so far, according to the market, the U.S. and Japan have not been pushing "bad debt". I am one of the few, however, that believes that the market is often wrong.
1. Like I have said already, you're neglecting a basic rule of double-entry bookkeeping. Specifically, the value of the newly created money is derived from the value-added produced by the project which is being financed with the loan. This is what makes it different to counterfeiting. Since you keep insisting on your interpretation, we're going to have to agree to disagree.1. Every new dollar printed or digital, reduces purchasing power by an incremental amount. What do you suppose counterfeiting is? Because it's a loan that must be paid back, is immaterial. The value of that loan is derived from the debauchment of purchasing power from existing dollar holders. Banks simply have the authority to loan out The Peoples money without compensating the people!! This is theft, and backwards.
Now you're engaging in semantics and tap dancing to avoid the issue. Please explain to me where the value of newly created money is derived from?
2. Modern banking is NOT capitalism. Capitalism implies consensual exchange between two or more parties. Modern banking is rooted in fraud and theft. Banks loan out the peoples money by debauchement, without their consent, and reap the profits. Banks and borrowers consent to this. But not the owner of actual capital being loaned out.
3. See above.
See above. I believe in just compensation, period.Our banking system is far from capitalist. It's more fascist, then capitalist because it coerces a major party to every transaction.
A socialized banking system rewards the people who actually own the capital being loaned out. Which is exactly what you argued to begin with.
You believe in just compensation only when it suits you. Interesting, eh?
Well actually there is a critical difference between what Zimbabwe did and what the other countries you mentioned do. Though the lay person refers to either what Zimbabwe did or what the Fed does as "money printing," and even economists may sometimes refer to what the Fed does as "printing," economists know the difference between what Zimbabwe did and what the others countries do. They correctly refer to what Zimbabwe did as "money printing". What the U.S. and other countries generally do, however, is to issue bonds that the central banks buy. When those bonds are purchased by the central bank with newly created money, the new money becomes linked to debt. (This is probably the origin of the idea of money as debt.) In Zimbabwe's case they simply printed money without linking it to debt, and used that newly printed money to pay on debt!
I believe this critical difference between money printing the Zimbabwe way and creating money the Fed way, by linking the new money to debt, is the Reason Bernanke, when questioned about "money printing" in a Senate committee hearing, responded, "We're not printing". And technically he was correct. Technically, printing is what Zimbabwe did.
When new money tied to debt is created, the new money will have value so long as the credit of the issuer is good and the issuer may continue to borrow, from other than their own central bank, at reasonable rates. If a countries credit is so bad that no one other than their own central bank will buy newly issued sovereign bonds, or only at usurous rates, money in circulation will rapidly decline in value and hyperinflation occurs. (At one point Argentina printed new money so rapidly that she actually ran out of paper on which to print currency. It became a moot point whether the newly issued currency was linked to new debt because no one, other than the central bank, wanted their bonds. Hyperinflation set in.) Zimbabwe, of course, also suffered hyperinflation. In their case, no one wanted their currency. Since their newly created money was not linked to debt with a reasonable credit risk, there was no limitation on how much could be printed.
It seems a key word in your statement I quoted above is the word "bad" to characterize U.S. debt . Is the debt really "bad"? The way that is typically decided is through the market, is it not? I would have to say that so far, according to the market, the U.S. and Japan have not been pushing "bad debt". I am one of the few, however, that believes that the market is often wrong.
This is precisely right and common sense should dictate this reality to all of us - including those in Congress who keep spending us down the toilet decade after painful decade. Just look at what happened in 2006. The Current Account was cut by more than half before 2010.
Oh, sure. They will say that it was because our economy was slowing down. But, will they actually take a look at the data:
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The contraction in the economy did stall growth in the Current Account, no doubt. However, we could have had the same result with a growing Middle Class, the return of Middle Income Jobs, less borrowing from China/Germany/Japan and more inherent (homegrown) buying here in the U.S. instead of the overflow of buying we do from foreign sources.
We've got the script entirely backwards and at some point we need to start asking whether or not someone is doing this on purpose and to what end.