Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
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Is American government confused or what?PAYING FOR THE PURPLE
by Bill BonnerAmerica took its first awkward steps towards empire at the end of
the 19th century, with Theodore Roosevelt intervening in various
countries for forgettable reasons and with regrettable results.
Later, in April of 1917, Woodrow Wilson took off at a trot with the
fat Rough Rider still breathing down his neck. He urged Congress
to declare war on distant country with
which it had no real beef and in which it had no genuine interest.America had mixed and confusing sentiments about empire from
the get-go. Its founders were schooled in the history of Rome and
determined to avoid what they saw as her mistakes. But at the
same time, they couldn't help but lust for the grandeur of it
themselves. The longed for the imperial purple, perhaps, from the
very beginning.William Drayton, chief justice of the highest court in South
Carolina, wrote in 1776: "Empires have their zenith - and their
declension and dissolution... The British period is from the year
1758, when they victoriously pursued their Enemies into every
Quarter of the Globe... The
Almighty...has made the choice of the present generation to erect
the American Empire...and thus has suddenly arisen in the World, a
new Empire, styled the United States of America. An Empire that as
soon as started into
Existence, attracts the attention of the Rest of the Universe; and
bids fair by the blessing of God, to be the most glorious of any
upon Record."John Quincy Adams, however, cautioned that while "she might
become the dictatress of the world: she would be no longer ruler of
her own spirit."
More than two centuries later, her spirit has run wild. She has
soldiers garrisoned all over the world. She has "interests" in places
few Americans have ever heard of, and even fewer still care about.
There is no corner or
dead-end street in the world that is not somehow patrolled by U.S.
forces.
The Pentagon has divided the entire globe into four regional
military commands - each with its own commander-in-chief. The
role of these, said
General Anthony Zini is "like that of a proconsul of the Roman
Empire." At the end of this year, America is scheduled to spend
more in a single year on
"defense" than all the rest of the world combined.Already, Daily Reckoning readers must be asking themselves
questions: America is the world's only super power; since the
capitulation of the Soviet Union, she has no enemies capable of
inflicting serious damage; what
is she defending herself against? But that is just the point. The
imperial spirit has gotten the best of her. She no longer plays a role
that she can understand and control. Now, she is an imperial
power; she must play the role that has been thrust in her hands.
She must provide "security" for the
entire world. She must provide the "public good" of law and order.
Someone has to do it. Who else could, but America? She is
dictatress of the world,
but no longer master of herself...or her own finances.We stop a moment to reflect. The urge to empire is as irresistible
as a free lunch. The male of the species can't pass up a chance to
strut around feeling superior, like the cock of the walk in the
henyard. Scarlet tunics and ostrich feathers have gone out of style,
but the men who wore them are
the same as those who sacked Rome with Alaric, laid waste to Albi
with the Duke de Montfort, and entered Baghdad with the U.S.
Army 3rd Infantry Airborne. The uniforms change, but men are the
same grasping, vaunting, humbugging schmucks they always have
been.That is what makes history so entertaining. And what makes the
history of empires particularly entertaining is watching the great
emperors...the Napoleons, Alexanders, Caesars, Attilas, and Adolfs
of the world - with all their glorious pretensions and sordid
butchery - put on the red tunics and burnished helmets...mount
their white chargers...and ride right into a stone wall.There is nothing quite so amusing as watching another man make
a fool of himself. It makes you feel superior; that is why you grow
taller and more good looking when you read the history of
empires.Evolutionary biologists reduce the whole impulse to empire to
nothing more than genes and math. After a man has enough to eat,
his genes - and by
command, his thoughts and emotions - want nothing more than
for him to spread his seed as widely as possible. Genes are only
interested in replication, according to the hypothesis. All the
trappings of wealth and power - including the urge to lord it over
others - are merely proxies and
substitutes for sexual attractiveness. A great ruler conquers a city
much for the same reason a middle-aged lawyer buys an expensive
sports car or a peacock spreads his tail feathers. It indicates to
females that he has good
genes. The entertainment comes in when the great ruler himself is
defeated and hung from a meat hook...when the peacock is taken
by a fox...and the red sports car gets the boot!Genghis Khan's empire was simple to understand, and hugely
successful. His Mongols conquered cities from the Nile to the China
Sea. He demanded that
they pay a tribute of 10% of their revenues. If they resisted - and
often even if they didn't - he killed the men...and took the women
for his own pleasure. A recent DNA study across Asia shows how
successful he was. He has about 16 million descendants,
researchers estimated.Most imperial pretenders are neither so honest, nor so successful.
They are reluctant to admit their own ambitions. Instead, they
deceive others...and
often themselves. These vanities and deceptions make the story of
empires doubly entertaining. Not only is there sex and violence,
but chicanery and tomfoolery, too. We see the mighty fall...and we
also see that they are pathetic fools and liars. It makes the whole
thing even more comically satisfying.President Wilson got America's self-deception off to a running start
early in the 20th century:"I believe that God planted in us visions of liberty," he said, seeking
the Democratic nomination in 1912, "that we are chosen and
prominently chosen to show the way to the nations of the world
how they shall walk in the path of liberty."There was the problem right there. So worthy was the mission
there seemed no need to figure out how to pay for it. If God had
set us on the trail of Empire, He could jolly well figure out to make
it a paying proposition.
Neither then, nor now, have Americans bothered to understand
how the business of empire really works. They think they are doing
the world a favor. That deception alone would not be so grave, but
they totally miss the point: nearly every imperial power has claimed
to act for the good of others, but every one of them found a way to
make it pay. When it stops paying, they're out of business.The imperial power provides a useful service, according to the
theory of it. Like the Mafia, it maintains order. Under the
protection of the imperial pax
dollarum, trade and commerce can flourish. People get rich. They
should be grateful and happy to pay for the service. The imperial
power, though, must charge for the service; otherwise, what would
be the point?But America has so cleverly deceived itself, that it believes it gets
its "tribute" from globalized commerce itself, and from the loans
given it by its tributary states and trading partners. The whole idea
is mad and preposterous. The idea of empire is that the imperial
power controls the lesser states. In America's absurd version, it is
the subordinate powers that control her. Not only can they stop
paying 'tribute' whenever they want, they now have the power to
destroy her economy completely."Will China be setting U.S. rates?" asks an article in today's
International Herald Tribune. Floyd Norris explains:"The way things work now, China sells to the world most
everything the world wants. China then uses the dollars it receives
to buy Treasury securities.
That helps to hold down U.S. interest rates and stimulates
consumer spending, enabling Americans to buy more from China."
It is the "largest vendor-financing program ever."What it has done is put China in a commanding position. As
Americans spend, China builds its productive capacity. China gets
rich, selling geegaws and
electronic paraphernalia...and assorted consumer goods...to
Americans. The imperial consumers, on the other hand, grow
poorer. Each day, about $2
billion net passes from American hands to stronger hands in Asia.The idea of imperial finance is that the central, imperial power gets
richer than its vassals. America has found a way to do it in reverse;
its grows poorer, relatively.And now the periphery powers, which are supposed to be
subordinate, are actually capable of ruining the central imperium.If the Chinese and other major holders of US Treasury bonds were
to sell...there would be hell to pay in America. Interest rates would
rise. The housing boom would turn into a housing bust. The
imperium would have to beg is subordinate states for more credit.What kind of odd empire is this? We have a long line of U.S. leaders
strutting across the world stage like peafowl - the buffoonish
Theodore Roosevelt, the weasely Wilson, the other
Roosevelt...Truman...Kennedy...Johnson...Reagan...Bush - but none
of them seems to have understood how to make an empire pay."The United States, even more than any other economically and
militarily dominant powers in the recent past, has acquired an
empire," writes Deepak Lal, "but is reluctant to face up to the
resulting imperial responsibilities."Au contraire, Americans have hoisted the imperial purple onto their
backs. The spectacle is more exhilarating than any we've seen.Regards,Bill Bonner
The Daily Reckoning Montag questioned the family, will you?
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
Is American government confused or what?PAYING FOR THE PURPLE
by Bill BonnerAmerica took its first awkward steps towards empire at the end of
the 19th century, with Theodore Roosevelt intervening in various
countries for forgettable reasons and with regrettable results.
Later, in April of 1917, Woodrow Wilson took off at a trot with the
fat Rough Rider still breathing down his neck. He urged Congress
to declare war on distant country with
which it had no real beef and in which it had no genuine interest.America had mixed and confusing sentiments about empire from
the get-go. Its founders were schooled in the history of Rome and
determined to avoid what they saw as her mistakes. But at the
same time, they couldn't help but lust for the grandeur of it
themselves. The longed for the imperial purple, perhaps, from the
very beginning.William Drayton, chief justice of the highest court in South
Carolina, wrote in 1776: "Empires have their zenith - and their
declension and dissolution... The British period is from the year
1758, when they victoriously pursued their Enemies into every
Quarter of the Globe... The
Almighty...has made the choice of the present generation to erect
the American Empire...and thus has suddenly arisen in the World, a
new Empire, styled the United States of America. An Empire that as
soon as started into
Existence, attracts the attention of the Rest of the Universe; and
bids fair by the blessing of God, to be the most glorious of any
upon Record."John Quincy Adams, however, cautioned that while "she might
become the dictatress of the world: she would be no longer ruler of
her own spirit."
More than two centuries later, her spirit has run wild. She has
soldiers garrisoned all over the world. She has "interests" in places
few Americans have ever heard of, and even fewer still care about.
There is no corner or
dead-end street in the world that is not somehow patrolled by U.S.
forces.
The Pentagon has divided the entire globe into four regional
military commands - each with its own commander-in-chief. The
role of these, said
General Anthony Zini is "like that of a proconsul of the Roman
Empire." At the end of this year, America is scheduled to spend
more in a single year on
"defense" than all the rest of the world combined.Already, Daily Reckoning readers must be asking themselves
questions: America is the world's only super power; since the
capitulation of the Soviet Union, she has no enemies capable of
inflicting serious damage; what
is she defending herself against? But that is just the point. The
imperial spirit has gotten the best of her. She no longer plays a role
that she can understand and control. Now, she is an imperial
power; she must play the role that has been thrust in her hands.
She must provide "security" for the
entire world. She must provide the "public good" of law and order.
Someone has to do it. Who else could, but America? She is
dictatress of the world,
but no longer master of herself...or her own finances.We stop a moment to reflect. The urge to empire is as irresistible
as a free lunch. The male of the species can't pass up a chance to
strut around feeling superior, like the cock of the walk in the
henyard. Scarlet tunics and ostrich feathers have gone out of style,
but the men who wore them are
the same as those who sacked Rome with Alaric, laid waste to Albi
with the Duke de Montfort, and entered Baghdad with the U.S.
Army 3rd Infantry Airborne. The uniforms change, but men are the
same grasping, vaunting, humbugging schmucks they always have
been.That is what makes history so entertaining. And what makes the
history of empires particularly entertaining is watching the great
emperors...the Napoleons, Alexanders, Caesars, Attilas, and Adolfs
of the world - with all their glorious pretensions and sordid
butchery - put on the red tunics and burnished helmets...mount
their white chargers...and ride right into a stone wall.There is nothing quite so amusing as watching another man make
a fool of himself. It makes you feel superior; that is why you grow
taller and more good looking when you read the history of
empires.Evolutionary biologists reduce the whole impulse to empire to
nothing more than genes and math. After a man has enough to eat,
his genes - and by
command, his thoughts and emotions - want nothing more than
for him to spread his seed as widely as possible. Genes are only
interested in replication, according to the hypothesis. All the
trappings of wealth and power - including the urge to lord it over
others - are merely proxies and
substitutes for sexual attractiveness. A great ruler conquers a city
much for the same reason a middle-aged lawyer buys an expensive
sports car or a peacock spreads his tail feathers. It indicates to
females that he has good
genes. The entertainment comes in when the great ruler himself is
defeated and hung from a meat hook...when the peacock is taken
by a fox...and the red sports car gets the boot!Genghis Khan's empire was simple to understand, and hugely
successful. His Mongols conquered cities from the Nile to the China
Sea. He demanded that
they pay a tribute of 10% of their revenues. If they resisted - and
often even if they didn't - he killed the men...and took the women
for his own pleasure. A recent DNA study across Asia shows how
successful he was. He has about 16 million descendants,
researchers estimated.Most imperial pretenders are neither so honest, nor so successful.
They are reluctant to admit their own ambitions. Instead, they
deceive others...and
often themselves. These vanities and deceptions make the story of
empires doubly entertaining. Not only is there sex and violence,
but chicanery and tomfoolery, too. We see the mighty fall...and we
also see that they are pathetic fools and liars. It makes the whole
thing even more comically satisfying.President Wilson got America's self-deception off to a running start
early in the 20th century:"I believe that God planted in us visions of liberty," he said, seeking
the Democratic nomination in 1912, "that we are chosen and
prominently chosen to show the way to the nations of the world
how they shall walk in the path of liberty."There was the problem right there. So worthy was the mission
there seemed no need to figure out how to pay for it. If God had
set us on the trail of Empire, He could jolly well figure out to make
it a paying proposition.
Neither then, nor now, have Americans bothered to understand
how the business of empire really works. They think they are doing
the world a favor. That deception alone would not be so grave, but
they totally miss the point: nearly every imperial power has claimed
to act for the good of others, but every one of them found a way to
make it pay. When it stops paying, they're out of business.The imperial power provides a useful service, according to the
theory of it. Like the Mafia, it maintains order. Under the
protection of the imperial pax
dollarum, trade and commerce can flourish. People get rich. They
should be grateful and happy to pay for the service. The imperial
power, though, must charge for the service; otherwise, what would
be the point?But America has so cleverly deceived itself, that it believes it gets
its "tribute" from globalized commerce itself, and from the loans
given it by its tributary states and trading partners. The whole idea
is mad and preposterous. The idea of empire is that the imperial
power controls the lesser states. In America's absurd version, it is
the subordinate powers that control her. Not only can they stop
paying 'tribute' whenever they want, they now have the power to
destroy her economy completely."Will China be setting U.S. rates?" asks an article in today's
International Herald Tribune. Floyd Norris explains:"The way things work now, China sells to the world most
everything the world wants. China then uses the dollars it receives
to buy Treasury securities.
That helps to hold down U.S. interest rates and stimulates
consumer spending, enabling Americans to buy more from China."
It is the "largest vendor-financing program ever."What it has done is put China in a commanding position. As
Americans spend, China builds its productive capacity. China gets
rich, selling geegaws and
electronic paraphernalia...and assorted consumer goods...to
Americans. The imperial consumers, on the other hand, grow
poorer. Each day, about $2
billion net passes from American hands to stronger hands in Asia.The idea of imperial finance is that the central, imperial power gets
richer than its vassals. America has found a way to do it in reverse;
its grows poorer, relatively.And now the periphery powers, which are supposed to be
subordinate, are actually capable of ruining the central imperium.If the Chinese and other major holders of US Treasury bonds were
to sell...there would be hell to pay in America. Interest rates would
rise. The housing boom would turn into a housing bust. The
imperium would have to beg is subordinate states for more credit.What kind of odd empire is this? We have a long line of U.S. leaders
strutting across the world stage like peafowl - the buffoonish
Theodore Roosevelt, the weasely Wilson, the other
Roosevelt...Truman...Kennedy...Johnson...Reagan...Bush - but none
of them seems to have understood how to make an empire pay."The United States, even more than any other economically and
militarily dominant powers in the recent past, has acquired an
empire," writes Deepak Lal, "but is reluctant to face up to the
resulting imperial responsibilities."Au contraire, Americans have hoisted the imperial purple onto their
backs. The spectacle is more exhilarating than any we've seen.Regards,Bill Bonner
The Daily Reckoning Montag questioned the family, will you?
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
