Typically, determinist schema leave convenient
implicit escape hatches for their creators and advocates, who are somehow able
to rise above the iron determinism that afflicts the rest of us. Hegel was no
different, except that his escape hatches were all too explicit. While God and
the absolute refer to man as collective organism rather than to its puny and
negligible individual members, every once in a while great individuals arise,
"world-historical" men, who are able to embody attributes of the
absolute more than others, and act as significant agents in the next big
historical Aufhebung — the next great
thrust into the man-God or world-soul's advance
in its "self-knowledge." Thus, during a time when most patriotic
Prussians were reacting violently against Napoleon's imperial conquests, and
mobilizing their forces against him, Hegel reacted very differently. Hegel wrote
to a friend in ecstasy about having personally seen Napoleon riding down the
city street: "The Emperor — this world-soul — riding on horseback through
the city to the review of his troops — it is indeed a wonderful feeling to see
such a man."[1]
Friday, October 5, 2012
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Why good men do not become president
Successful candidates must hide their true beliefs, assuming they have any
By Ryan Young
To hear President Barack
Obama’s supporters tell it, his challenger in this year’s presidential contest,
former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, is an out-of-touch plutocrat mainly
concerned with becoming president. According to Governor Romney’s supporters,
the president is an out-of-touch elitist whose main concern is staying in the
White House. They’re both right.
After all, what sane person
would want a job that destroys your privacy, makes it impossible for you to go
out on the street, subjects your family to intrusive media scrutiny, forces you
to watch everything you say, and drives some people to want to take a shot at
you? Apparently someone who feels that the power that comes with the office is
worth the attendant indignities.
“Great men are almost always
bad men,” Lord Acton famously said. “There is no worse heresy than that the
office sanctifies the holder of it.” Indeed, good men rarely run for president.
And when they do, they rarely win. An honest man stands no chance against a
Lyndon Johnson or a Richard Nixon. Yes, one slips through the cracks now and
then. We could use Grover Cleveland’s restraint in handling the economic crisis
today. I have a particular fondness for Calvin Coolidge, who conspicuously
lacked the pathological need for attention that characterizes most
officeholders.
Drugs: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
The FDA is a government a rule-driven bureaucracy, rather than α market-driven institution
by Mark Thornton
The senseless Batman killings in Aurora, Colorado, as
well as those that occurred years earlier in Columbine a few miles away, have
something in common with the number one cause of overdose deaths in the United
States and an important potential cause of teen suicide: prescription drugs
approved as safe and effective by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
As an Austrian economist, I am not saying that
FDA-approved drugs "caused" these problems. The people who took those
drugs and did those things are the people who "caused" those bad
outcomes. What I am saying is that the FDA is guilty of manipulating
information and people's choices and thereby contributes to all these negative
outcomes.[1] I am also not saying that all FDA-approved drugs
are inherently harmful, ineffective, or should never be used.
Most importantly, FDA-approved drugs and products help
to make Americans fatter, weaker, dumber, sicker, poorer, and in general less
healthy. We have been lulled into substituting prescription drugs for healthy
lifestyles. "You don't need to correct unhealthy conditions in your life,
just take this pill everyday for the rest of your life. The experts at the FDA
have approved it and your doctor has advised you to take them."
Collectively, this process is unconscionable, even though it is now considered
normal.
As the pharmaceutical and medical industries pile up
cash, the health crisis grows and spreads across the country. This is the
irrational world created by the FDA. This powerful government bureaucracy,
coupled with massive government monopolies (e.g., the American Medical
Association, drug patents, certificates of need for hospitals), direct
government subsidies such as Medicare and Medicaid, and indirect subsidies for
comprehensive health insurance, etc., have combined to give America the most
expensive medical industry and the least healthy population in the advanced
world.
Spending Isn’t Production
Economic growth depends on more than just increasing
demand
By ROBERT P. MURPHY
A recent NYT column by Paul Krugman showcases exactly what
is wrong with mainstream Keynesian economics. Krugman takes a JP Morgan note
claiming that the iPhone 5 would boost economic growth, then concludes that the
analysis proves that bigger government deficits are a good thing. As we’ll see,
the only thing Krugman has proved is that he’s committed a basic error, in
confusing actual economic growth with a mere statistical
artifact.
Let’s first establish Krugman’s case. After telling his readers that
analysts have suggested that the iPhone 5 might provide a “significant boost to
the U.S. economy,” Krugman went on to argue:
Do you find this plausible? If so, I have news for you: you are, whether you know it or not, a Keynesian—and you have implicitly accepted the case that the government should spend more, not less, in a depressed economy.
…
A recent research note from JPMorgan argued that the new iPhone might add between a quarter- and a half-percentage point to G.D.P. growth in the last quarter of 2012.…
Last of the Sentimental Stalinists
On the passing of
Eric Hobsbawm
Eric Hobsbawm, who
died Monday at 95, was the last of the sentimental Stalinists. He was one of
the most famous British historians of the twentieth century, and his books sold
worldwide by the hundreds of thousands. In Brazil, for example, he achieved an
astonishing celebrity.
He was a gifted
prose stylist and very learned. His principal and most significant
characteristic, however, was intellectual dishonesty characteristic of the age
in which he grew to maturity. He made the choice for Soviet Communism, for
perhaps understandable personal reasons, at 14, and remained true to his choice
for 81 years, long after there ceased being any possible excuse for doing so.
At least no one could accuse him of being a turncoat: he supported a radical
form of evil from his early adolescence to his late senescence.
French Economy Implodes
You reap what you sow
Final Markit France Services Activity Index at 45.0 (49.2 in August), 11-month low.
Final Markit France Composite Output Index at 43.2 (48.0 in August), 42-month low.by Mike "Mish" Shedlock
As expected, at
least in this corner, the French economy has started to implode. Service sector
business activity is dropping at fastest rate since October 2011.
More importantly,
the Markit Composite PMI sports the steepest rate
of contraction since March 2009 with job losses accelerating at the fastest
pace in 33 months and output plunging at the fastest rate in 42 months.
Summary:
French service providers reported a steeper decrease in business activity
during September. The latest fall in activity reflected a considerable drop in
incoming new work. Companies adjusted staffing levels down accordingly, leading
to an accelerated drop in employment. Input prices rose at a sharper rate but
output charge discounting gathered pace, highlighting a deepening squeeze on
companies’ margins. Future expectations meanwhile dipped into negative territory
for the first time since February 2009.Growth By Tax Hikes – Only in France
Curdled Sauce Hollandaise
by Pater
Tenebrarum
![]() |
Mountebank meets steel workers and promises to upend economic laws in their favor. |
French president
François Hollande continues to fulfill his election promises – promises that in
essence amounted to the modern-day equivalent of a rain dance: the expectation
to get desirable results from implementing policies that fly into the face of rational
thinking.
In Hollande's
case, it is all about fixing France's deteriorating deficit and nose-diving
economy by blithely ignoring economic laws. In many respects his plans are not
much different from those many other European governments have pursued,
although his program has proved a good sight more radical.
According
to Bloomberg:
“President Francois Hollande’s
first annual budget raised taxes on the rich and big companies and included a
minimum of spending cuts to reduce the deficit.
The 2013 blueprint relies on
20 billion euros ($26 billion) in tax increases, including a levy of 75 percent
on incomes over 1 million euros, and eliminating limits on the wealth tax.
Hollande aims to reduce spending by 10 billion euros, bringing the deficit to 3 percent of output from
4.5 percent in 2012. The budget predicts growth of 0.8 percent.
Untold Misery on the Iranian People
Hyperinflation
Has Arrived In Iran
by
Steve H. Hanke
Since the U.S. and E.U. first enacted sanctions
against Iran, in 2010, the value of the Iranian rial (IRR) has plummeted, imposing untold misery on the
Iranian people. When a currency collapses, you can be certain that
other economic metrics are moving in a negative direction, too. Indeed, using
new data from Iran’s foreign-exchange black market, I estimate that Iran’s monthly inflation rate has reached 69.6%.
With a monthly inflation rate this high (over 50%), Iran is undoubtedly experiencing hyperinflation.
Eric Hobsbawm and the tragedy of the left
Hobsbawm’s 19th century
histories were enlivened by his Marxism, his 20th century were corrupted by his
Stalinism
by James Heartfield
Eric Hobsbawm’s great gift was to the written history of the nineteenth century.
by James Heartfield
Eric Hobsbawm’s great gift was to the written history of the nineteenth century.
Having come to Britain from
Vienna, the young communist from a well-to-do Jewish family signed up for
service in the British Army, echoing Stalin’s claim that Churchill was fighting
for democracy. When the British Empire was restored, communists like Hobsbawm
were stung to find that they were targeted as the red menace. While some worked
at getting a foothold in the trade unions, a small band of university-educated
communists got jobs as teachers, and lecturers if they could.
Among them, an historians’
group started to work, led by AL Morton and Dona Torr, champions of what they
called ‘people’s history’, later called ‘history from below’. Morton and Torr
were solid Communist Party propagandists who burrowed into the papers and
journals of working-class activists to tell a story of the steady progress of
the labour movement - from the Corresponding Societies to the Chartists, craft
unions and then the new model unions of the industrial working class, with the
Communist Party treated as the proper inheritor of that tradition.
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
The Audacity of Hopelessness
"Government is the only thing we all belong to."
According to the New
York Times, "the magic is gone." According to the New York Post, "the thrill
is gone." And yet, according to the polls, he isn't a goner. Even if you
shave off two-three-four points for Democrat over-sampling and other pollster
malarkey, the unmagical non-thrilling President Obama remains remarkably
competitive.
Which
means that if he wins we won't have the same excuse as we did last time. In
2008, Senator Obama was lucky, as he has been all his political life: a global
downturn, war-weariness, a Republican opponent who even in his better moments
gave the strong impression that honor required him to lose . . . These and
various other stars all aligned for him. But he himself was the biggest star of
all: a history-making candidate, a messianic figure and not merely a national
but a planetary healer. Not all of us bought into it even then: I saw him on
the stump just the once and thought the silver-tongued orator was a crashing
bore. Couldn't see what the fuss was about. But fuss there was. It's one thing
if the Republican loses to a thrilling, magical superstar; it's quite another
if the Republican loses to a mean, petty, leaden, boring, earthbound hack who
hasn't lit up a room in years. In 2008, the American people said: We like this
guy. In 2012, they'd be saying: We like these policies. That's far more
disturbing.
The Real Reason Behind War
War is the Health of the State
To
mark the 11 year anniversary of the Afghanistan occupation, the death toll for
the U.S. military reached two thousand. The soldier who had
the misfortune of both dying and becoming a stark symbol of America’s longest
running war died under unusual circumstances. Instead of being killed
while on patrol, the unnamed
soldier was the victim of an “apparent insider attack” that was conducted by
American-backed Afghan forces. This latest incident comes
one week after an announcement by NATO that it would scale back its
operations with Afghan security forces after a spike in insider attacks.
At the time of the announcement, a total of fifty one NATO troops had been
killed by soldiers wearing Afghan uniforms.
This upsurge in violence committed by supposed allies remains a
challenge to the U.S. military which is attempting to arm and train a
suitable domestic security force to leave behind as the troop drawdown deadline
of late 2014 approaches. As the Associated Press reports, the internal
attacks are “undermining the mantra that both sides are fighting the Taliban
“shoulder to shoulder.””
Eight Signs The System Is Broken
Interesting little facts
Here
are a few interesting tidbits to chew on:
1)
In the land of the free, there are now more than 760
incarcerated inmates for every 100,000 citizens. This is more than 5x the 1980
average, and it far surpasses the number (560 per 100,000) that
Stalin threw in the Gulag at the peak of Soviet terror.
2)
Apparently, Americans are
getting more interested in snitching on each other. According
to Google Trends, internet searches for terms such as “IRS reward” (and related
keywords) have exploded since 2008, and especially this year.
Eric Hobsbawm and the Totalitarian Double Standard
A remarkable historian has died -- but does it matter that he was a
Stalinist?
By PAUL GOTTFRIED
The death of Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm at the age of 95 two days
ago set me down memory lane. The one time I met this illustrious historian was
when Gene Genovese (who predeceased Hobsbawm
by just a few days) introduced him to me at a meeting of the American
Historical Association in Boston in 1969. I had just given a critical rejoinder
to a plea for a “humanistic Marx,” who had suffered from 19th-century German
anti-Semitism. In my response, I suggested that Marx himself had been
virulently anti-Semitic but that if one accepted his historical analysis his
personal prejudices should not seem important. After all, Marx was trying to
explain the course of human history and planning for a revolutionary future. He
was “not competing for the ADL liberal of the year award.” It seems Hobsbawm,
who was a dedicated member of the English Communist Party, agreed with my
sentiments and expressed concern about “the exotica being produced by
idiosyncratic, would-be Marxists.” Thereupon I took a liking to this dignified
gentleman in a three-piece suit, who had learned splendid English after growing
up in Vienna. He may have been a commie but he was clearly no bleeding-heart
leftist.
Whatever Happened to Civil Liberties?
Under Obama, Democrats have embraced the national
security state
By JACK HUNTER
During a scene in the 2006 Oscar-winning movie “The
Departed,” Martin Sheen’s cop character points at government agents who are working
with police during a sting operation and remarks: “All cell phone signals are
under surveillance, due to the courtesy of our federal friends over there.”
Alec Baldwin’s cop character then slaps the back of a fellow officer in glee,
exclaiming: “Patriot Act, Patriot Act! I love it, I love it, I love it!”
I considered this scene to be a Hollywood liberal dig at then-President
Bush, whose Patriot Act legislation was considered an assault on civil
liberties by the left. At the time, liberals’ greatest beef with Bush was
unquestionably on the issues of foreign policy and civil liberties — with the
warrantless wiretapping and government eavesdropping permitted by the Patriot
Act at the top of the list.
But that was then.
Spain ready for bailout, Germany signals "wait"
The German U-turn has convinced the Spanish they could end up in the same position as Greece
By Julien
Toyer
Spain is
ready to request a euro zone bailout for its public finances as early as next
weekend but Germany has
signalled that it should hold off, European officials said on Monday.
The latest twist
in the euro zone's three-year-old sovereign
debt crisis comes as financial markets and some other European partners are
pressuring Madrid to seek a rescue programme that would trigger European
Central Bank buying of its bonds.
"The Spanish
were a bit hesitant but now they are ready to request aid," a senior
European source said. Three other euro zone senior euro zone sources confirmed
the shift in the Spanish position, all speaking on condition of anonymity
because they were not authorised to discuss the matter.
German Finance
Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble has said Spain is taking all the right steps to
overcome its fiscal problems and does not need a bailout, arguing that
investors will recognise and reward Spanish reforms in due course.
If You Prop Up An Artificial Economy Long Enough, Does It Become Real?
Does
carefully nurturing a facade of health actually lead to health?
The policy of the Status Quo
since 2008 boils down to this assumption: if we prop up an artificial economy
long enough, it will magically become real. This is an extraordinary
assumption: that the process of artifice will result in artifice becoming real.
This
is the equivalent of a dysfunctional family presenting an artificial facade of
happiness to the external world and expecting that fraud to conjure up real
happiness. We all know it doesn't work that way; rather, the dysfunctional
family that expends its resources supporting a phony facade is living a lie
that only increases its instability.
The
U.S. economy is artificial in three important ways:
1.
The Federal Reserve has distorted the market for borrowing capital by reducing
interest rates to zero. Those holding capital (savings) receive essentially
zero interest income while favored borrowers (banks and large corporations) can
pursue marginal-return speculations for free (when measured in real terms),
creating systemic moral hazard of the most pernicious sort.
To treat your facts with imagination is one thing, but to imagine your facts is another
The ECB: The Missing
Assets/Liabilities
Yesterday I published the assets/liabilities of the
European Central Bank as provided by them. I provided some analysis that I
thought was relevant as I also asked all of you to look at the numbers
yourself. To be quite open; I was stunned by the data they provided and shocked
by the implications. I had not seen the data in any other source or commented
about by anyone and the subject, while admittedly complex, and perhaps made
more complex by design, is a huge wake-up call for anyone investing in Europe.
The
ECB lists, as of the end of the 1st quarter of 2012, 16.304 trillion Euros ($
21.032 trillion) in assets and 17.334 trillion Euros ($22.631 trillion) in
liabilities. It is right there in black and
white as I showed in the ECB provided data that I presented yesterday. However
when you get to their consolidated balance sheet you find the numbers they
bandy about in public to be a ledger of 3.240 trillion Euros ($4.00 trillion)
and you catch your breath and pause. Utilizing normal American accounting
practices this variance would be impossible and yet here it is; staring us all
right in the face.
“Europe has put a ‘stop payment’ on our reality check!”-The Wizard
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
The US Is A Debt Meth Addict
Unless The Fiscal
Gap Is Closed Soon "The Damage Will Be Beyond Repair"
The highlights from Bill Gross' latest monthly piece:
The highlights from Bill Gross' latest monthly piece:
- Armageddon is not around
the corner. I don’t believe in the imminent demise of the U.S. economy and
its financial markets. But I’m afraid
for them.
- The U.S. is no “clean
dirty shirt.” The U.S., in fact, is a serial offender, an addict whose
habit extends beyond weed or cocaine and who frequently pleasures itself
with budgetary crystal meth. Uncle Sam’s habit, say these respected
agencies, will be a hard (and dangerous) one to break.
- What the updated IMF, CBO
and BIS “Ring” concludes is that the U.S. balance sheet, its deficit
(y-axis) and its “fiscal gap” (x-axis), is in flames and that its fire
department is apparently asleep at the station house.
- To keep our debt/GDP
ratio below the metaphorical combustion point of 212 degrees Fahrenheit,
these studies (when averaged) suggest that we need to cut spending or
raise taxes by 11% of GDP and rather quickly over the next five to 10
years. An 11% “fiscal gap” in terms of today’s economy speaks to a
combination of spending cuts and taxes of $1.6 trillion per year!
- To put that into perspective, CBO has calculated that the expiration of the Bush tax cuts and other provisions would only reduce the deficit by a little more than $200 million.
The “antiseptic” war
When Drones Decide to Kill on
Their Own
By J. Michael Cole
It’s almost impossible
nowadays to attend a law-enforcement or defense show that does not feature
unmanned vehicles, from aerial surveillance drones to bomb disposal robots, as
the main attraction. This is part of a trend that has developed over the years
where tasks that were traditionally handled in situ are now operated remotely, thus
minimizing the risks of casualties while extending the length of operations.
Eliot, Pound, and Lewis
A Creative Friendship
By HENRY REGNERY
It may be a
source of some pride to those of us fated to live out our lives as Americans
that the three men who probably had the greatest influence on English
literature in our century were all born on this side of the Atlantic. One of
them, Wyndham Lewis, to be sure, was born on a yacht anchored in a harbor in
Nova Scotia, but his father was an American, served as an officer in the Union
Army in the Civil War, and came from a family that has been established here
for many generations. The other two were as American in background and
education as it is possible to be. Our pride at having produced men of such
high achievement should be considered against the fact that all three spent
their creative lives in Europe. For Wyndham Lewis the decision was made for him
by his mother, who hustled him off to Europe at the age of ten, but he chose to
remain in Europe, and to study in Paris rather than to accept the invitation of
his father to go to Cornell, and except for an enforced stay in Canada during
World War II, spent his life in Europe. The other two, Ezra Pound and T.S.
Eliot, went to Europe as young men out of college, and it was a part of
European, not American, cultural life that they made their contribution to
literature. Lewis was a European in training, attitude and point of view, but
Pound and Eliot were Americans, and Pound, particularly, remained aggressively
American; whether living in London or Italy his interest in American affairs never
waned.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)