Lost Republic
"the 'substitution of political for economic power' now so often demanded means necessarily the substitution of power from which there is no escape for a power which is always limited."
~ F.A. Hayek, The Road to Serfdom

Archive for August, 2009

U.S. Banking crisis just BEGINNING

Posted in Corruption, Money/Economy/Taxes on August 21st, 2009

“The dichotomy between the fantasy-world of U.S. business reporting and the real world continues to widen. While media propagandists have unequivocally claimed that ‘the worst is over’ for the U.S. banking sector, the employees and shareholders of the 77 U.S. banks which have already gone belly-up this year might choose to dispute this claim.

Five more insolvent U.S. banks were seized by the FDIC in its weekly salvage operations Friday night. As is becoming increasingly common, even with the large bribes which it offers potential buyers, it couldn’t find takers for all of these bankrupt companies.

Bank bankruptcies have already more than tripled the total for all of last year, and are steadily accelerating. Meanwhile, for a nearly endless list of reasons, the crisis in this sector can only get much worse.

Thanks to the U.S. accounting ‘watch-dog’ – the FASB – legalizing fraudulent accounting (see ‘FASB strong-armed into mark-to-fantasy accounting’), the ‘solution’ which the bankster oligarchs have come up with to the mass-insolvency of U.S. banks is to simply hide a lot more bad loans. Indeed, fraudulent accounting has become a way of life for the U.S.” (Read more from seekingalpha.com)

Federal Reserve Board coming to Des Moines IA

Posted in Money/Economy/Taxes on August 20th, 2009

Dear Iowa friends, It seems the Fed board is doing some desperate PR in Des Moines on Saturday. I hope you all go ask them what the hell they are doing with OUR money.

“Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement (Iowa CCI) will continue its campaign for economic justice at a public hearing with the Federal Reserve on Saturday, August 22, at the Highland Park Presbyterian Church in Des Moines, Iowa. This unprecedented hearing — one of nine being held across the U.S. – was won after grassroots members of Iowa CCI and other community organizations across the country pressured Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke to begin putting people before profits.

Who: Iowa CCI members and allies

What: A community meeting and public hearing with Federal Reserve Board officials

Where: Highland Park Presbyterian Church, 321 Euclid Avenue, Des Moines, Iowa

When: Saturday, August 22, 1:30-4:30pm”

(Read more from journalexpress.net)

Rand Paul Money Bomb Today!

Posted in Election / Politicians, Ron Paul on August 20th, 2009

Rand Paul, son of Ron Paul, is running for Senate in his home state of Kentucky. Rand is a medical doctor, and a strong supporter of the constitution and individual liberty. DONATE NOW

Max Keiser on Goldman’s near perfect trading record (they’re cheating)

Posted in Corruption, Money/Economy/Taxes on August 20th, 2009

Goldman Sachs & Climate Change

Posted in Corruption, Science / Environment on August 20th, 2009

As Matt Taibbi detailed in last month’s rollingstone, Goldman Sachs is poised to make huge profits from Cap & Trade legislation if it goes through.

“Last year when the firm spent $3.5 million to lobby climate issues. (One of their lobbyists at the time was none other than Patterson, now Treasury chief of staff.)” (More at failedexperiment.com)

And as of not-too-long-ago, the front page of Goldman’s website depicts a melting glacier:

Makes me say HMMMMMMmmmmm….

Obama Promises Senators He Will Help Pass Bill Banning Torture Photos

Posted in Censorship, Torture on August 19th, 2009

“President Barack Obama sent a letter July 29 to Senators Joe Lieberman and Lindsey Graham informing them that he would work with Congress to ensure legislation is passed that would block the release of any photographs and videos depicting U.S. Soldiers abusing detainees in Iraq and Afghanistan captured after 9/11.” (Read more from pubrecord.org)

New boss seems a lot like the old boss.

Washington Post: Time to End the War on Drugs

Posted in Big Media, Gulag U.S.A., War on Drugs on August 18th, 2009

“The prohibition on drugs leads to unregulated, and often violent, public drug dealing. Perhaps counterintuitively, better police training and bigger guns are not the answer.

When it makes sense to deal drugs in public, a neighborhood becomes home to drug violence. For a low-level drug dealer, working the street means more money and fewer economic risks. If police come, and they will, some young kid will be left holding the bag while the dealer walks around the block. But if the dealer sells inside, one raid, by either police or robbers, can put him out of business for good. Only those virtually immune from arrests (much less imprisonment) — college students, the wealthy and those who never buy or sell from strangers — can deal indoors….

Drug users generally aren’t violent. Most simply want to be left alone to enjoy their high. It’s the corner slinger who terrifies neighbors and invites rivals to attack. Public drug dealing creates an environment where disputes about money or respect are settled with guns.” (Read more from dailypaul.com)

Holy smokes!

Austrian Economist speaks to EU Parliament

Posted in Austrian School / Libertarian Theory, European Union on August 18th, 2009

My Austrian Economic professor recently spoke before the EU Parliament.

Here is his account:

I recently made my second trip to speak at the European Parliament. Last year I spoke in Brussels to a committee on international development about the benefits of sound money for developing countries. This year I spoke in Strasbourg, France as part of a panel of three Austrian School economists, representing the Right Approach Group, which seeks market solutions to current economic problems. Now, just consider these first two lines. Yes, the European Parliament, which is just one branch of the many-tentacled European Government, has two offices—one in Brussels and one in Strasbourg. This fact alone illustrates why the organization is unpopular with the European taxpayer—it spends too much money on itself.

Last year I was wowed by the size and beauty of the Parliament’s offices in Brussels. It is a modern masterpiece of architecture—lots of glass, huge open areas, vast meeting halls, multiple cafeterias and coffee shops, not to mention the hundreds, perhaps thousands, of offices for the members, their staffs, and the unionized civil service. The office complex in Strasbourg is the same—vast, beautiful, and busy. But busy doing what? Well, for one thing, moving. Each month the entire European government moves from its main offices in Brussels to Strasbourg for one week. The cost of this move is enormous. Twice each month the members and their staffs must pack and ship files and other official documents, then travel and reside at significant expense in another city. Strasbourg is much smaller than Brussels, so the prices of hotels rise to reflect the increased demand. And we have not even touched the cost of lost productivity—which assumes, of course, that one believes that something beneficial to Europe really comes out of its alleged continental government. This is the elephant in the living room–does Europe really need a continental government?

. . . .

But another, more grandiose agenda arose—political integration that would weaken each nation’s sovereignty. To some extent this has been achieved. The Euro—the European Union’s standard money—is administered and controlled by the European Central Bank (ECB), a supposedly independent entity. Although it is just as susceptible to political pressure as is our Federal Reserve Bank, no nation in the Euro Zone (not all EU members are in the Euro Zone) has total control of the ECB. Furthermore, the EU has managed to impose many standard economic regulations on its members and it has been partially successful in standardizing taxation throughout the EU. The purpose of tax standardization is to prevent shifts of business headquarters from high tax countries to low tax countries within the EU. Moving headquarters is very easy to do now that there is relatively free movement of people and goods throughout the EU. But the “tax equalization” movement became a cover for closing the door to the few tax havens that remained in Europe. At one of the large worldwide economic summits recently, French President Nicholas Sarkozy called for the world to close down tax havens in places like the Cayman Islands. So the real purpose of tax equalization is to fleece business everywhere on the planet in order to prevent European headquartered companies from escaping Europe’s onerous taxation.

The downside of all this, as the so-called “Euro Skeptics” claim, is that the EU has become a giant protectionist zone which greatly restricts trade outside its borders and engages in massive transfer payments within it borders. Half of the EU budget goes to farm subsidies, and they are a constant source of controversy. My wife and I had a front row seat to one incident. Our hotel in Strasbourg was only a few minutes’ walk from the EU complex, on a broad avenue that led to the beautiful heart of the city, about two miles away. The farm lobby held a demonstration by marching from the downtown area to the Parliament. The demonstrators chanted slogans, carried signs, drove tractors, and even herded a few reluctant cows. That evening the “France 24 English” television station explained that the farmers want their milk subsidies increased, because the price of milk is so low. One member of the Parliament voiced his support. Apparently he had no conception of basic economics; to wit, subsidies encourage production, and more production lowers the market price. Increasing subsidies would encourage even more production and cause the price to go even lower. Ah, well, we Americans cannot take the moral high ground here, with our own outrageous farm subsidies. Furthermore, like America, the EU blocks imports of cheap food from its poorer neighbors. We Americans block cheap sugar cane imports form dirt poor Caribbean nations, while Europe blocks farm products from Africa. Taxpayers on both continents not only get the honor of paying higher prices for food staples, but we also get the honor of propping up tyrannical and corrupt regimes through our foreign aid.

. . . .

My talk went well. The audience was attentive, as confirmed by the excellent participation in the Q&A session at the end. I was on three-person panel of Austrian School economists. Our twin goals were to educate and form alliances—educate potential allies in Austrian School principles so as to encourage them to use their influence to adopt sound economic policies. . . . As enjoyable as are my talks to those already friendly to Austrian School principles, we must face facts that we are outnumbered by the Keynesians in the halls of power. These are the people who must be presented with the likely consequences of their well-intended but disastrous actions. My points were simple—the actions of the past year to debase money, stimulate the economy, re-regulate the economy, and bail out failed industries must be repealed. The window of opportunity to do so is rapidly closing. The excess reserves injected into the banking system have not been leveraged, via the fractional reserve banking system, into massive amounts of new money media…yet. Only a small percentage of the stimulus package has been spent…yet. There is still time to prevent onerous and foolish new regulations on the financial system. And the bailouts must stop. The other two speakers—Professor Jorg Guido Hulsmann of the University of Angers and Dr. Thorsten Polleit of the Frankfurt School of Management—made similar points.

(Read more from patrickbarron.blogspot.com)

J Street, ADL launch war of words over Obama Israel policy

Posted in Israel Lobby on August 17th, 2009

“Nearly seven months after the inauguration of Barack Obama, feuding among major U.S. Jews organizations is taking place behind closed doors and could be reaching its worst point in recent memory.

Left-wing U.S. Jewish organizations have been buoyed by the election of Obama, and according to some Jewish Democrats in Washington, tensions have been worsened by the lessening of right-wing Jews’ access to senior White House officials, in contrast to the near-monopoly they had on access to Bush administration officials for the past eight years.

The feuding may have become more personal this week, after left-wing Israel advocacy group ‘J Street’ published an open letter Anti-Defamation League Head Abraham Foxman.

The J Street letter came in a response to a full-page ad taken out by the ADL in the New York Times this week, which said, ‘The problem isn’t settlements, it’s Arab rejection.’” (Read more from haaretz.com)

US Tells Israel: Iran Has Eight Weeks

Posted in Iran, Israel Lobby on August 17th, 2009

“Robert Gates, Jim Jones, and other US officials traipsing in and out of Israel this week have told Israeli officials to stop “ranting and raving” about Iran for, oh, about eight more weeks.

Eight weeks! According to Haaretz, the liberal Israeli daily, that’s how much time they’re willing to give Iran to start talking. Let’s hope that Iran does start talking by then, but if they don’t, well, then it’ll take longer. But the Obama administration seems set on tougher sanctions after that.

Perhaps the most unintentionally hilarious part of the Haaretz report is that Jones and Co. told the Israelis about the progress of Joe Liberman-sponsored sanctions legislation in the US Senate. Said the paper:

‘Jones and his team reported that a bill by Senator Joe Lieberman to curb sales of refined oil products to Iran is almost complete, and 67 senators have already signed it.’

Just a guess, but I think top Israeli officials are well aware of what the vaunted minions of the Israel lobby are doing in Washington. In fact, yesterday the Senate passed a bill that gets that sanctions ball rolling, according to Reuters:

‘To pressure Tehran to give up its nuclear program, the U.S. Senate has voted to ban companies that sell gasoline and other refined oil products to Iran from also receiving Energy Department contracts to deliver crude to the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve.’

According to Haaretz, the new sanctions under consideration by the administration include a ban gasoline and refined petroleum imports by Iran:

‘New sanctions would mainly aim to significantly curb Tehran’s ability to import refined petroleum products. Despite its huge crude oil reserves, Iran has only limited refining capacity, so it imports large quantities of refined products such as gasoline.’” (Read more from news.yahoo.com)

Not left vs right, but government vs liberty

Posted in Big Media, Dictatorship on August 16th, 2009

Just as opponents of Bush’s war were portrayed as fringe loonies, opponents of Obama’s healthcare are portrayed the same way. It’s not left vs right. It’s government vs liberty, and a complicit media to spin every debate in favor of government.

So long as we the people are fighting one another, the government can run rampant.

Three In Four Americans Support Federal Reserve Audit

Posted in End the Fed, Money/Economy/Taxes on August 16th, 2009

“ALEXANDRIA, Va.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–A recent poll conducted by highly respected Rasmussen Reports found that 75 percent of Americans support an audit of the Federal Reserve, our Nation’s secretive, quasi-governmental central bank. Only 9 percent of respondents opposed an audit, a further indication of overwhelming support for Fed transparency. . . .

Congressman Ron Paul’s bill H.R. 1207, the Federal Reserve Transparency Bill of 2009, and S. 604, its Senate companion bill, are experiencing tremendous momentum on Capitol Hill.

H.R. 1207 currently has 279 bi-partisan cosponsors, including every Republican and 101 Democrats. S. 604 enjoys 20 cosponsors including Independent Bernie Sanders (I-VT), progressive Russ Feingold (D-WI), and conservative stalwart Jim DeMint (R-SC).

Campaign for Liberty has been the leader in a push for a Federal Reserve audit, using its nationwide grassroots network to educate millions of Americans about sound monetary policy and the need for transparency in our banking system. The groups has generated hundreds of thousands of petitions and phone calls to lawmakers, distributed massive amounts of educational material and canvassed countless neighborhoods across the country.” (Read more from businesswire.com)

Rasmussen? Hmpf.

See Also:

I think she uses disinformation techniques 9 & 13, play dumb & Alice in Wonderland.

Twenty Five Disinformation Techniques

Posted in Misc on August 16th, 2009

(from goldismoney.info)
by H. Michael Sweeney copyright (c) 1997, 2000, 2001 All rights reserved (Edited June 2001)

Twenty-Five Rules of Disinformation

1. Hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil
2. Become incredulous and indignant
3. Create rumor mongers
4. Use a straw man
5. Sidetrack opponents w name calling, ridicule
6. Hit and Run
7. Question motives
8. Invoke authority
9. Play Dumb
10. Associate opponent charges with old news
11. Establish and rely upon fall-back positions
12. Enigmas have no solution
13. Alice in Wonderland Logic
14. Demand complete solutions
15. Fit the facts to alternate conclusions
16. Vanish evidence and witnesses
17. Change the subject
18. Emotionalize, Antagonize, and Goad
19. Ignore facts, demand impossible proofs
20. False evidence
21. Call a Grand Jury, Special Prosecutor
22. Manufacture a new truth
23. Create bigger distractions
24. Silence critics
25. Vanish

Eight Traits of The Disinformationalist

1. Avoidance
2. Selectivity
3. Coincidental
4. Teamwork
5. Anti-conspiratorial
6. Artificial Emotions
7. Inconsistent
8. Newly Discovered: Time Constant

(Read more at goldismoney.info)

More on Demonizing National Healthcare Opposition

Posted in Big Media, Healthcare, Protests & Civil Unrest on August 15th, 2009

I’ve been disgusted by what little I’ve seen of big media’s healthcare opposition coverage. As usual, the media is trying to squeeze a people vs. government issue into a left vs. right paradigm. So long as we are fighting each other, government is free to run rampant.

God bless the internet, lest I might think myself un-American for opposing Obamacare. I’m please to see strong criticism of the coverage from my usual sources.

Great commentary by Southern Avenger:

Some guy reacts to MSNBC host equating cries of “socialism” to using the N-word:

Fox “news” has been a checkered ally of the liberty movement. They seem like party hacks. When Republicans propose war, tyrannical government powers, and endless spending, Fox “news” becomes their #1 cheerleader, but when Democrats propose war, tyrannical government powers, and endless spending, Fox works to expose the threat to our liberty. Here, Fox interviews a Michigan man who confronted his congressman:

In the above interview, the man who confronted his congressman referenced this NY Post article, in which two of Obama’s advisers, including Ezekiel Emanuel, brother of chief of staff Rahm Emanuel, discuss healthcare rationing. I actually think they offer very level-headed thoughts on how socialized healthcare would work. You can’t provide unlimited use of finite (and expensive) goods and services. Of course, most of the socialists behind Obamacare like to pretend you can.

As Tyler Durden wrote in this essay: “There is no system that provides for unlimited wants with limited resources. Our choice is whether it should be rationed by free people making their own economic calculations or by a bureaucracy run by Congressional committee (whose members, like the Russian commissars, will, I guarantee you, still get the best health care the gulag hospitaligo can provide).”

Lastly, hear Peter Schiff discuss bringing free market forces back to healthcare. I think the example of cosmetic surgeries provided at the end is spectacular:

Two Depressing Economic Charts

Posted in Money/Economy/Taxes on August 14th, 2009

I think this chart captures the “growth” that everybody’s talking about. Hint: Government Growth.

(Original Source)


(Original Source)

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