Libertarian Thread #2: We Shall Never Die! |
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Gamemako
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 31 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 1184 |
Posted: January 24 2012 at 10:59 | |
That is, by definition, what a bank does. People like to say that banks "create money", but in reality, they leverage trust to assume risks which allow them to hold an overall-negative balance sheet and operate profitably. This is why I hate the "create money" phrase in the first place: it's not accurate because they trade risk (which has finite, calculable value) for cash. Having a hard standard does not affect their business at all; they'd just be making loans and borrowing money from customers in a hard currency. It's regulations that say they have to have a certain reserve portion to service those customers, which allows the government to guarantee that money to customers in the case that the bank's investments go sour. While it sounds like something that would harm business (wah wah, make the regulation stop mommy), it's ultimately a handy little subsidy. While I'd like to insert accusations of crony capitalism here, I'm not sure what a better system would be, because if putting money in the bank is a high-risk proposition, you're going to have a really stormy economy. Edited by Gamemako - January 24 2012 at 11:02 |
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Hail Eris!
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Equality 7-2521
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 11 2005 Location: Philly Status: Offline Points: 15784 |
Posted: January 24 2012 at 11:13 | |
It's not exactly the definition of banks though. They did not originate that way and there's no logical reason they must operate that way. You're describing the process that supposedly allows them to operate in this way. That does not change the fact that the practice is necessarily inflationary. A hard currency greatly limits the degree to which this expansion process may take place. Absence of FDIC insurance, if you're going to point out a misnomer it's right there in that label, the people assume a regulatory position in actually assessing this risk leverage. Since wealthy financial interests vigorously campaign and received their kickback, we're left with some nebulous body supposedly ensuring the safety of the bank's operations.
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"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
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Negoba
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 24 2008 Location: Big Muddy Status: Offline Points: 5208 |
Posted: January 24 2012 at 11:25 | |
Now to something very basic...
I thought the reserve was the percent of money deposited in demand type accounts that must be kept on hand to give to account holders if they want it. I'm reading your description as the reserve being the percent of loans given out that has to have ever been deposited in the institution. Meaning that the bank just loans people money that never even existed??? What keeps this from falling apart? This seems very emperor's new clothes. |
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You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
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Equality 7-2521
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 11 2005 Location: Philly Status: Offline Points: 15784 |
Posted: January 24 2012 at 12:10 | |
Yes that's what it is. In effect, what that does is limit the amount of money creation (or leveraging trust to assume risk which keeps them negative in the balance sheet whichever you prefer).
Yes essentially the money never existed. With a fiat currency, the idea of money existence is nebulous to begin with though. Yes they are loaning money they do not have. Several things keep it afloat: ignorance, trust in the stability of the system, FDIC, the Fed as lender of last resort. |
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"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
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Gamemako
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 31 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 1184 |
Posted: January 24 2012 at 12:15 | |
Trust is at the core of all contracts. Without trust, capitalism doesn't work at all because no transactions can be made. |
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Hail Eris!
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Equality 7-2521
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 11 2005 Location: Philly Status: Offline Points: 15784 |
Posted: January 24 2012 at 12:44 | |
One's a very broad notion of trust and one is relatively narrow. I would not consider trust in contracts being enforced the same kind of animal.
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"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
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Negoba
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 24 2008 Location: Big Muddy Status: Offline Points: 5208 |
Posted: January 24 2012 at 14:42 | |
The thing that is rocking my world today is that most of our society (or at least ignorant naive me) assume(d) that money had some solidity. In fact to say "I owe you $20" demands that it's 20 of something. Even an agreed upon amount of air. To call some 20 its ratio compared to 1 must have meaning.
It is clear that $20 is NOT evenly 20 of anything. Except a highly variable result that's spit out of a nasty and untransparent game that rich arseholes play. My view of world took another hit today. I read the justification for how this works and I get it. The justification of "Bank Money" being an assumption of debt risk, the justification for having multiple IOUs for the same amount of initial capital...it's all a bunch of complete BS. And people starve because they don't have a piece of paper that says $5 on it. Mass delusion. And I'm still part of it.
Edited by Negoba - January 24 2012 at 15:08 |
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You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
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Gamemako
Forum Senior Member Joined: March 31 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 1184 |
Posted: January 24 2012 at 17:36 | |
People are wiling to place a lot more trust in large banks than on individuals. This is why I always laugh when I see the WSJ talking about how the Bond Vigilantes are going to come in and crush the ability of the US to borrow money. Pure fantasy: people have enormous faith in the ability of the government to pay, so it will never happen. It's a game of cat-and-mouse, where risk is assessed at a value and traded depending on what that risk is worth at any given time. It's hard as individuals to understand the business because we lack sufficient capital for investors to be willing to trust us. |
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Hail Eris!
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manofmystery
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 26 2008 Location: PA, USA Status: Offline Points: 4335 |
Posted: January 26 2012 at 14:49 | |
Wish I'd have found Bastiat sooner because I've been stumbling over my words trying to say exactly this for the last several years here:
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Time always wins. |
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The T
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 16 2006 Location: FL, USA Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
Posted: January 26 2012 at 16:45 | |
Possible answers from the opposite direction:
1. That's why we elect these people so they are accountable. 2. We always elect people of high moral fiber. 3. You can say the same the other way around. Of course all reasons make little sense. |
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Negoba
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 24 2008 Location: Big Muddy Status: Offline Points: 5208 |
Posted: January 26 2012 at 18:33 | |
I assume the question is "Why must there be laws?" or "Why must there be leaders?"
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You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Online Points: 32525 |
Posted: January 26 2012 at 18:54 | |
I quite like this one. I am not an anarchist (I do envision a minimal role of government), but I appreciate his observation. |
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The T
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 16 2006 Location: FL, USA Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
Posted: January 26 2012 at 19:18 | |
Watching the debate. All the questions and all the answers give me a gigantic sense of deja vu...
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Online Points: 32525 |
Posted: January 26 2012 at 19:20 | |
We have it up but not running yet (kids, etc.). I was hoping for something better...CNN did a good job last time, and it's the last debate for a month. NBC was awful. |
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The T
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 16 2006 Location: FL, USA Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
Posted: January 26 2012 at 19:35 | |
Romney vs Gingrich... This is so entertaining... They're killling each other . Oh the fools don't know how fantastic is the ammo they are giving to Obama
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Equality 7-2521
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 11 2005 Location: Philly Status: Offline Points: 15784 |
Posted: January 28 2012 at 17:33 | |
In some sense, no monetary system ever represents any intrinsic value aside from its ability to serve as a trade mechanism. Even on a hard standard, gold has a real value as a commodity, but this is quite different from its monetary value which can be seen as kind of meaningless. I agree with the anger though. |
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"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
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Equality 7-2521
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 11 2005 Location: Philly Status: Offline Points: 15784 |
Posted: January 28 2012 at 17:39 | |
You should read Etienne de la Boetie too. I love Frederic Bastiat's negative railroad conceptualization and most of Economic Sophisms actually. |
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"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
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manofmystery
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 26 2008 Location: PA, USA Status: Offline Points: 4335 |
Posted: January 29 2012 at 23:33 | |
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Time always wins. |
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Slartibartfast
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / In Memoriam Joined: April 29 2006 Location: Atlantais Status: Offline Points: 29630 |
Posted: January 30 2012 at 10:05 | |
The Founders’ True ForesightJanuary 28, 2012 Exclusive: The Tea Party’s revisionist history of the nation’s founding document may play well with the ill-informed, but the truth is the framers of the Constitution were fed up with state “sovereignty” and decided on a strong central government, a judgment that has served the United States well, writes Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry After the Constitutional Convention in 1787, Benjamin Franklin, its oldest and possibly most renowned delegate, recommended that the new American political framework could be a model for Europe, suggesting “a Federal Union and one grand republic of all its different states and kingdoms, by means of a like Convention.” Of course, Franklin’s suggestion fell on deaf ears in Europe where nation states already had long histories of deep-seated grievances against one another. Forming an enduring union proved hard enough for the 13 American states with their much shallower differences. Ignoring Franklin’s advice, Europe remained sharply divided and those rivalries threw the world into periodic fits of bloody chaos. Two powerful dictators – Napoleon and Hitler – would try and fail to unify the Continent by force. It would not be until the last half of the 20th Century when a loose federation of democratic European states would take shape as the European Union. However, the current European financial crisis highlights the shortcomings of the EU, particularly how the European nations retain much of their old sovereignty and keep control over key policies, particularly their budgets making it difficult to coordinate fiscal strategies behind a common currency, the euro. Indeed, today’s European Union resembles more the ineffectual Articles of Confederation, which governed the United States from 1777 to 1787, than the U.S. Constitution with its strong central government. The Confederation’s Article II declared that “each state retains its sovereignty, freedom, and independence, and every power, jurisdiction, and right, which is not by this Confederation expressly delegated.” The United States wasn’t really even a government or a nation then. It was called “a firm league of friendship” among the states. General George Washington was particularly contemptuous of this concept of “state sovereignty” because he had watched his soldiers freeze and starve when the states reneged on promised contributions to the Continental Army. So, with George Washington in the lead and fellow Virginian James Madison serving as architect, some of America’s most distinguished citizens, including Franklin, met in secret in Philadelphia to devise a governing framework that eliminated the independence of the states and subsumed their sovereignty into a binding Union. The new American system concentrated the key national powers, from currency to defense to commerce, in the central government (though leaving more local matters to the states and municipalities). The framers wanted a vibrant central government that could tackle the present and future needs of a vast nation – and that is what they achieved. Despite some moral compromises like tolerating slavery – and despite decades of struggle against forces that objected to the dominant power of the federal government – the Constitution has worked pretty much as the Founders intended. It has proved, by and large, to be a flexible governing arrangement that enabled the United States to adapt to changes and to emerge as the world’s leading nation. Tea Party ‘History’ However, even today, influential political movements, such as the Tea Party and much of the Republican Party, continue to attack what has been the most effective feature of the Constitution, its potential for providing national solutions to national problems. Earlier political attacks on the Constitution were more frontal – such as the Nullificationists in the 1830s and the secessionists of the Confederacy in the early 1860s – essentially reasserting the states’ independence that had been lost in the drafting and ratification of the Constitution. Today’s assault is more modern, based on a combination of widespread ignorance about American history and disinformation spread through a pervasive propaganda network. Rather than defying the Constitution, today’s nullificationists simply revise the history to their liking under the guise of divining the Founders’ “originalist” intent. It has become a touchstone of the American Right that the Founders wanted a weak central government and were big-time advocates of states’ rights. Tea Partiers also dress up in Revolutionary War costumes and pretend that the enemy of that time must have been Philadelphia, not London. They seem to think that their coiled-snake “Don’t Tread on Me” flag was aimed at fellow Americans, not the British. In the real history, the banner that addressed the American colonists was one devised by Franklin showing a snake cut into pieces, representing the colonies/states with the warning, “Join, or Die.” If Tea Partiers directed their snake venom at the creators of a strong American nation-state back then – the targets would be the likes of Washington, Madison and Franklin. But today’s right-wingers simply ignore the historical fact that Madison inserted the crucial Commerce Clause quite deliberately into the Constitution because he felt a national strategy on commerce was vital if the United States was to fend off predatory European competition. And, the whole point of giving the U.S. central government control over interstate commerce was so the country could implement national solutions to national problems. That was why even a conservative U.S. Appeals Court judge, Laurence Silberman, ruled recently that the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) was constitutional, because he recognized that Congress has broad powers to devise responses to challenges that impact the nation’s commerce. Citing the intent of the Founders and longstanding legal precedents, Silberman concluded that the law – even its requirement for individuals to obtain health insurance – fits within the Constitution (though it’s still very possible that the Republican partisans on the U.S. Supreme Court will reverse Silberman’s ruling to deal President Barack Obama a political body blow right before the election.) False Narrative After all, the Right has spent years now building up its false founding narrative with the same kind of determination and resources that it has invested in many other false narratives. For that reason, many more people know the Right’s argument that the Tenth Amendment is determinative on state’s rights than understand that it was more a case of closing the barn door after the horse was gone. The Tenth Amendment to the Constitution states, “the powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.” But the Right’s historical revisionists miss the key point here. The Constitution already had granted broad powers to the federal government – including regulation of national commerce – so there were far fewer powers left for the states. The Tenth Amendment amounted to a minor concession to mollify the anti-federalist bloc that unsuccessfully sought to block ratification of the Constitution by the 13 states. To further appreciate how modest the Tenth Amendment concession was, you also must compare its wording with Article II of the Confederation, which is what it essentially replaced. Remember, Article II says “each state retains its sovereignty, freedom, and independence, and every power, jurisdiction, and right, which is not by this Confederation expressly delegated.” All that language is either eliminated in the Constitution or substantially watered down. In effect, the power relationship between the federal government and the states was reversed by the Founders who convened in Philadelphia in 1787. The Tea Party’s misguided “history” of the Founding is also reflected in how little some of the Right’s champions know about real Revolutionary War history. For instance, Texas Gov. Rick Perry told some voters that the Revolution was fought in the 1500s, a couple of centuries off, while Rep. Michele Bachmann claimed the opening shots of the Revolution were fired in New Hampshire, rather than Massachusetts. But the current irony of the Right’s revisionist history on the Constitution is that it comes at a time when the financial crisis in Europe – and its inability to adopt a comprehensive regional solution – underscores the wisdom of America’s Founders to create a strong national government. The Right’s neo-Confederate assault on the Constitution also comes at a time when innovative national solutions are desperately needed for the American people, both to respond to the economic recession caused by the Wall Street crash of 2008 and to address long-term problems that threaten the welfare of the nation, from the health-care crisis to a decaying infrastructure to cataclysmic climate change. To take on these pressing national challenges through unified national action would be precisely what George Washington, Benjamin Franklin and James Madison had in mind. |
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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Equality 7-2521
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 11 2005 Location: Philly Status: Offline Points: 15784 |
Posted: January 30 2012 at 13:28 | |
I'll probably read that eventually, but anything stating that the Founders were fed up with State sovereignty is just ahistorical and most likely an outright lie since you would essentially have to maneuver around this information when examining an original sources of the time. Yes some founders did want a strong central government. Nobody in their right mind will deny this. Some founders also wanted a king. Can I go around saying that the Founders were fed up with the republican form of government? It's just absurd even for a lot of the biased stuff you usually post.
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"One had to be a Newton to notice that the moon is falling, when everyone sees that it doesn't fall. "
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