The
American Officer Corps
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
Frederick the
Great was once asked why it was that he chose his officer corps
only from the Junkers of Prussia, rather than other groups. Why
not a clever baker's son from Dresden? What's wrong with a solid
farmer from Pomerania?
"Nein," he
replied, explaining his preference for the Junkers, "Because they
will not lie and cannot be bought."
Great empires
depend on a reliable professional class of military officers, administrators
and businessmen. Britain had them when it ruled the waves. They
came out of the public (we would call them private) school of "Tom
Brown's School-days," and were packed off into the Her Majesty's
civil service. Many were incompetent. But few were dishonest.
America never
really had a specific class of civil servants; the place was always
too big and too mobile. As good a military man might spring from
the coalmines of West Virginia as from the citadels of the East
Coast elites. So might a good businessman arise from the cattle
ranches of Texas as from the counting houses of San Francisco. The
history of World War II, for example, is the tale of how they came
together and got the job done. They too were often hopelessly naïve
and incompetent compared, say, to the more experienced Germans.
But very few stole. Very few lied. Very few shirked, ducked, or
jived.
But now, more
than half a century later, they have all got the scent of the dollar
floating in their nostrils. The fumes of it seem to intoxicate them;
they'll say anything to catch the smell of the green. A heavy whiff...and
they're ready for an offer. There are so many dollars around; the
odor of money is overpowering.
Thus, we hear
the stories of outrageous executive compensation in America. They
are no Junkers. Instead, they pack "compensation committees"
with cronies and crooks who throw them juicy contracts. They juggle
quarterly earnings and pull out bigger bonuses from the hat. They
twist the numbers so much you'd think they worked for the U.S. Labor
Department where, in the throes of what once was quaintly
called "public service," we find other figure-benders at work, bamboozling
the public.
And
even out on the periphery of empire, where U.S. soldiers risk their
lives, the incorruptible Junkers have died out. According to the
press reports, the lure of money is irresistible. Billions of dollars
are being squandered. Sweetheart contracts with Bush supporters,
bids that are rigged or jigged, products never delivered, jobs never
completed...or even begun. It is as if the money-grubbers realize
that the war were not real, and use it only another chance to get
something for nothing.
Back
in the homeland, the common man has picked up the scent, too. He
has sniffed his way to Wealth Without Work in the form of housing
price increases. He does not have to build a better mousetrap. He
no longer needs to work harder or save more. Honesty doesn't seem
to help him. Can he be bought? Are you kidding? It is just a question
of price. As long as house prices keep rising 10% per year, anyone
can have his vote. And so, house prices rise, and he takes the money
and binds himself like slave to master, like knave to lord to
mortgage payments, Social Security and federal handouts. He is no
sturdy, independent Junker. He cannot afford to be. Instead, he
too has become a Fed-watcher, for he knows that another couple of
rate-rises will wipe him out.
But every bad
thing finally comes to an end. That this too will pass we don't
doubt. How it will pass and what will pass with it, we wait to find
out.
June
29, 2006
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis.
Copyright
© 2006 Bill Bonner
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