Resolutions
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
"My
Administration is making America safer, more prosperous, and better.
We are meeting the challenges of our time," says George W. Bush
in his end-of-the-year message.
"Our
armed forces, joined by our allies, are on the offensive against
terrorist enemies around the world. Saddam Hussein is no longer
in power and we are hunting down al Qaeda leaders and al Qaeda terrorist
cells and bringing them to justice. Fifty million people in Afghanistan
and Iraq have been liberated from tyranny and our homeland has been
made more secure.
"So
people could find work, I proposed an economic stimulus package.
Our tax cuts returned money to the people who earned it. They have
put it to work in our economy, which is growing again and beginning
to generate new jobs, but we won't rest until everybody who wants
to work can find a stable, productive job.
"The
country is better off because we passed historic education reforms
that will provide all our children a quality education, beginning
with teaching every child to read. We took on a tough issue and
fulfilled a promise to seniors by providing prescription drug coverage
and more choices in a stronger Medicare system."
Americans,
at the beginning of Anno Domini 2004, are a happy and contented
race but in revolt against Fate. The president's description may
not be accurate or prescient, but it is probably not far from what
most Americans believe. They have little doubt that they have liberated
the desert tribes from tyranny, rather than imposed a tyranny of
their own. They do not worry about the softening dollar; they hardly
notice it. Nor do the biggest deficits in history, the weightiest
debts, or the highest bankruptcy levels seem to bother them; they
borrow more and think they are getting rich. They even support the
biggest government and fastest growth in bureaucracy since Franklin
Roosevelt...and do it in the name of liberty!
Our
readers sometimes think they detect an anti-American attitude in
these reflections. We deny the charge, but face the facts. At the
beginning of the year, we look in the mirror and see sags and wrinkles
we would ignore in an Albanian or a Fiji islander. Our amour-propre
forces us to look more closely at ourselves than at others. We expect
more. At least, we hope for more...and are more bitterly disappointed
when we turn out no better than other men.
"I
think you Americans are making a mistake," began a conversation
with a gray-haired Frenchman yesterday. "As I understand it, you're
using a variety of the 'flypaper' strategy in Iraq. The idea is
to pin down the enemy by attracting him to you where you can control
the terms of the fight. There are two great examples of that in
French military history. Neither of them turned out very well.
"At
the battle of Alésia, for example, Vercingetorix fortified
himself in on a hilltop. His idea was to force Caesar to come to
him...and while the Romans were facing his troops on the hilltop,
they would be encircled and attacked from the rear by other Gallic
tribes.
"It
almost worked. But Caesar figured it out and brought in the Germans.
While the Gauls were surrounding Caesar's troops, the Germans surrounded
them. Caesar won.
"Much
more recently, we tried it at Dien Bien Phu. There, as in Iraq,
the problem was that the enemy could roam around freely and attack
wherever he wanted. We needed to pin him down and force him to fight
a conventional battle which we were sure we could win. So we put
our troops down in the valley of Dien Bien Phu, and like George
Bush, we invited the communists to 'bring 'em on.' Well, they did.
We never thought they were capable of rolling up artillery. But
they did. And we were sitting ducks.
"Maybe
Americans are better than we were. Maybe the mistakes others make
don't bother them. I don't know..."
We
will find out. If any trick can be found to cheat Nature or defy
the gods...Americans will find it. Otherwise, we will suffer the
consequences of their own errors, just as all mortals do.
After
the long party of 2003...and the festive years that preceded it...we
checked the looking glass on New Year's day and thought we saw deeper
creases...darker eyes...and a palsied shake. Had we been partying
too hard? Too long? Looking closer, we think we see 2 strains of
delirium tremens in the contemporary American. One is likely to
be fatal to his finances. The other may be fatal to his soul.
We
chronicled the Great Delirium of the late '90s in these pages. The
end of it came not in a bang of revelation, but in a whimper of
self-delusion. All of a sudden, as the 21st century began, the future
seemed less sure. Stocks proved they could go down as well as up.
The economy itself shrank in the recession of 2001. And then a tiny
group of fanatics delivered a stunning and spectacular blow driving
commercial airliners into New York's Twin Towers.
But
these setbacks did nothing to change the current of American sentiment.
Instead, they merely increased the jolt. Never before were Americans
so sure they were right about everything. Their army was unbeatable.
Their system of government represented not merely a spark of temporary
success...but permanent democratic perfection. Nor could they imagine
any improvement in their economic model. America has been the 'engine
of growth' for the entire world. They could not imagine that the
little engine would fail.
Americans
look in the mirror this New Year's and like what they see. They
think they see superior men, with a superior system...men with such
big feet they will not fall into life's pits and traps...men who
know how to get rich and how to run the world. America's economists
and intellectualosos used to admire the Germans in the '30s...then,
the Japanese in the '80s...Now, since they have no one to look up
to but themselves, they do with double the adoration and three times
the fidelity.
"What
he knows that isn't so." That's the steel-toed boot that really
hurts a man, not the soft shoe of what he doesn't know at all. Americans
think they know almost everything they need to know. Hence our advice
and New Year's resolution: Cover your derrières.
At
the end of the '90s, the similarities between Japan and America
stood out like two Republicans in a police lineup. The two economies
seemed so close to one another, an ambitious prosecutor could have
gotten a wrongful conviction. And what difference would it have
made; both were frauds.
But
in years 1 to 5 following the peak of the Japanese stock market,
investors and economists still couldn't believe it. Japan would
soon bounce back, they said. By year 13, they had given up. Japan
would never bounce at all, they maintained.
We
are now nearing the 4th year of America's great correction. So gentle
has it been that it seems like no correction at all. Indeed, little
has been corrected. The errors not only persist, they get worse.
The Fed's flypaper strategy has brought the borrowers out in force
and stuck them so deep in debt they may never get out. Consumer
spending continues even through a recession. Deficits get bigger.
Speculation replaces investment. Lines of credit replace savings.
Jobs get shipped overseas. The dollar falls.
Americans
don't seem to be able to imagine that things could go wrong. They
still buy stocks at 30 times earnings, confident to a fault that no Dien Bien Phu nor Alésia is in their future.
January
3, 2004
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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