Doug
Casey on the US's Most Consistently Wrong-Headed Journalist
Interviewed
by Louis James, Editor, International
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[Skype rings.
It's Doug calling. Sounds like he's got a fistful of papers he's
waving around in agitation.]
L:
Hola, Doug what's on your mind?
Doug:
Well, you know I try not to read much in the popular press. It's
mentally unsanitary. But occasionally, a few things catch my notice.
For example, I've got an article I tore out of the September 3 Wall
Street Journal it's been in a stack of papers for a couple
of months, and I just uncovered it. I couldn't decide, when I first
tore it out, whether it was simply beneath contempt or worth commenting
on. It's an absolutely shocking indictment of the depth to which
the moral and intellectual character of what was once America has
descended. The title is How
to Turn in Your Neighbor to the IRS. The author's
theme is that the IRS is offering big rewards to people who turn
in tax cheats but there are catches. As though the depravity
of denouncing your neighbors to a ruthless, brutal, and predatory
government bureaucracy were a good thing, as long as one is careful
in going about it.
The person
who wrote the article, one Laura Saunders probably the kind of
creature who's angling for a cabinet post in the Department of the
Treasury at some point starts off by writing: "Maybe it's your
brother-in-law, who has a new Mercedes and likes to quip that only
fools pay all their taxes." The article then goes on to list other
sorts of people who the envious losers and assorted sociopaths of
the world may want to use the IRS to punish for being what they
are.
[Sounds of
paper being crumpled violently]
L:
That article reminds me of Ray Bradbury's Farenheit
451, about a future in which houses were almost fireproof
and books were banned because they made people think, which made
them unhappy with the way things were. So there were special Fire
Department drop boxes you could use to denounce your neighbors who
might be hiding books in the rafters, and the Fire Department would
show up and burn the house down, with prejudice.
Doug:
[Laughs] Yes, that's right. Even in prisons, among the dregs of
society, the snitch the squealer is viewed as the lowest form
of life, next to a child molester. But here we have someone alerting
the public how to rat out their neighbors and relatives in a feature
article in the Wall Street Journal. To me, this
is an indication that the Wall Street Journal, supposedly
a bastion of capitalism, is no bastion of anything. There are clearly
no standards, either in its editorial department or among its reporters.
It's appalling and disgusting but, that said, still far superior
to the New York Times, The Washington Post, and
USA Today.
[More crumpling
of papers, possibly followed by the sound of a toppling wastebasket,
knocked over by said crumpled papers]
L:
Better take it easy crumpling papers by the microphone, or people
might think you're trying to sound like Rush Limbaugh.
Doug:
Anything but that. There's another sign of the decay of the US.
Limbaugh has done great harm to the cause of free-market thinking.
He was actually quite funny back when he was making fun of Clinton.
One might have thought, hating the Clintons as he did, that he was
a friend of liberty. But the enemy of your enemy isn't necessarily
your friend. As it turned out, he was just a Republican lickspittle.
It's especially rich that he advocated the execution of drug users
and then went and got himself busted for being an Oxycontin junkie.
I despise hypocrites. I have many vices of my own, most of which
I rather enjoy, but I'd hate to be called a hypocrite.
L:
I could never stand listening to the man. Much as I value self-esteem,
his ego pushed me right out of the room whenever he was on the radio.
Doug:
But the brain-dead "dittoheads" who idolize him couldn't care less.
Anyway, another journal out of New York that I read is the New
York Review of Books. It's a sort of in-house publication for
left-wing intellectuals and the literati. It's a house organ for
concerned, socially active, overeducated liberals in New York. I've
nonetheless subscribed to it for over 20 years.
L:
[Chuckles]
Doug:
The reason I do is that I like to know what's going on in these
people's bent minds. It's a kind of early warning system to see
what they talk about among themselves. But that's hardly enough
to justify $60 per annum, or whatever I pay. Forgetting their politics
and economics, they frequently have excellent articles and obviously,
reviews of books on the sciences, ancient literature, and various
odd areas of intellectual arcana I'm interested in.
L:
And it'll confuse the Thought Police when they go through your garbage.
Doug:
That's always a good thing. At any rate, a case in point is a review
of a new book by Thomas L. Friedman, who is the intellectual Wrong-Way
Corrigan
L:
[Laughs long and loud]
Doug:
of our day. He's a professional busybody who's ethically and economically
on the wrong side of everything. Now, I have to say that I haven't
read the book, called That
Used to Be Us: How America Fell Behind in the World It Invented
and How We Can Come Back, partly because I don't want a
single penny of my money going into his pocket, and partly because
this is one of the reasons I subscribe to NYRB. However,
I've read enough by him in the past to understand his thinking;
and the book review itself, which is written by a highly sympathetic
foreign policy wonk these people all review each others' books,
it's quite incestuous is worth commenting on.
My friend Bill
Bonner of The Daily Reckoning and I tend to agree on most
everything. We have a laugh riot whenever we talk about a Friedman
editorial, although it's a black kind of comedy.
As a professional
busybody, Friedman has the answer for how to improve
everything how we can all make our lives better, if we'd only
do as he says
which almost always involves giving the government
more power to enforce his prescriptions.
L:
So, what are these prescriptions that will save us all?
Doug:
The reviewer summarizes the book, saying Friedman describes four
challenges America faces. First is the expansion of globalism.
L:
Ah yes, that evil force that is raising the standard of living of
some of the poorest people across the planet, because now they can
compete for jobs with laborers in richer countries.
Doug:
[Chuckles]. Yes, that's the one. Because everyone knows that Americans
deserve to get paid more for the exact same work that others will
do for less. It says so in the Constitution. Or the Bible. Somewhere.
That's the natural order of things, so naturally, we can't even
consider eliminating minimum wage laws, mandatory insurance and
retirement plans, and fat benefits packages extracted and accreted
by labor
unions over the years. That'd make it possible for Americans
to compete for jobs on a level playing field. That obviously just
wouldn't do, having some overfed gender-studies graduate competing
with an Indian engineering major. We must have government tame the
evil force of globalization with more regulations, fees and fines,
or what-have-you.
L:
It'd be funny if it weren't tragic, how quickly people come to regard
historically recent social arrangements, like so-called Social Security,
as though they were carved in stone at the time of Moses.
Doug:
Indeed. The next challenge is education, which in the Information
Age must be upgraded to enable Americans to compete with all the
smart, hardworking people globalization is empowering. This, of
course, according to Friedman, will require much more government
spending and involvement in education the very thing that has
led to such dismal educational levels in the US now. State-provided
"free" education (ignore the man behind the curtain and the taxes
you must pay, whether you have children in school or not) is the
primary reason for the appalling level of ignorance in the US today.
Although schools
in the US have become little more than babysitting centers, indoctrination
institutes, or juvenile prisons, it's obvious to any right-thinking
person they can be made better simply by throwing more money at
them.
L:
Of course! By the way, when we're out and about and my children
who are homeschooled see a school bus, they like to shout out:
"Prisoner Transport!"
Doug:
[Laughs]
L:
I was just talking to a sports coach, and he was telling me that
schoolteachers are increasingly not allowed to fail anyone. Might
hurt their feelings. He's got the problem of not being able to allow
students to advance without actually achieving the results necessary
to advance, or they can get hurt. But the children are increasingly
unprepared to work hard or endure any discomfort, because in school
everyone passes regardless of effort. Everyone is wonderful regardless
of results. All the system needs is more money and maybe sedatives,
which will surely teach the kids not to do drugs and all will
be well.
Doug:
This is typical of the statist mind-set: People like Friedman never
saw a bureaucracy they didn't like, and if the bureaucracy fails
in any way, it's not the fault of the bureaucrats or stupid regulations
and laws. It's because they need more money and power to do the
job right.
L:
A pity Reagan didn't have the spine to kill the Department of Education
as he said he would
Doug:
That and about 100 other counterproductive, expensive, wasteful,
and unethical agencies that ought to be completely abolished and
salt sown in the ground where their buildings once stood.
L:
Just to show that it doesn't take a village, did
you see that MIT a private school is now giving
education away?
Doug:
I did see that. And of course, you know I'm a big fan of The
Teaching Company's products a much better way to learn than
paying tens of thousands of dollars to have administrators babysit
you while you read textbooks. Education isn't something that you
receive by paying money; it's something you do.
Anyway, the
third challenge is debt. Now, I'd have to agree that debt levels
are in urgent need of addressing. But true to form, Friedman
looks at it completely backwards. He says: "Our habit of not raising
enough money through taxation to pay for what the federal government
spends, and then borrowing to bridge the gap
" This is typical of
Friedman. He never even considers the possibility of not spending
so much money to start with. It's not even a logical possibility
in his mind.
L:
Isn't it peculiar that in the US which is thought of around the
world as a capitalist society the idea of actually cutting government
spending in any significant and meaningful way is a total non-starter?
It's not even an option on the table in Washington, D.C. But in
Europe long a bastion of more openly socialist public policy
the EU is actually demanding austerity measures of its more profligate
members, including actual cuts in government spending.
Doug:
Yes. But that is the bright side of all these governments going
bankrupt; they will be forced to dump many of their cherished projects
and programs. That won't be because they believe in free markets,
but simply because it simply won't be possible to keep the Ponzi
schemes going.
L:
And the fourth challenge?
Doug:
You're going to love this: It's the threat of fossil fuels to the
planet's biosphere. Somehow, the US will save itself and make itself
more competitive in the global economy by embracing more economically
suicidal policies based on misinformed if not actually malign
pressure from environmental extremists.
Now, I have
to be careful here, because I'm not a climatologist nor an expert
in any of the many technical fields one would really have to master
in order to come to a truly, fully well-informed opinion about anthropogenic
global warming.
L:
Sure, but I'd guess Friedman isn't either, and that doesn't stop
him from pronouncing his sage advice on the topic.
Doug:
Of course not. On the other hand, I am somebody who makes it his
business to read a lot of scientific publications and I try to understand
the basic theory, as well as keep abreast of current scientific
developments. As we've
discussed, I've actually done a lot of digging into the subject,
trying to sort through the hysteria and highly politicized coverage.
I've got to
say that it makes me very uncomfortable that US Republicans generally
come down against the notion of anthropogenic global warming, because
they tend to be scientifically ignorant and wrong-headed. I almost
wish they were on the other side on this one, because I feel very
uncomfortable being on the same side with them it's rather like
making an argument for states' rights and then finding yourself
in the company of KKK members making the same argument.
L:
Ouch.
Doug:
But it is what it is, and at least we can say that the Democrats
are almost equally scientifically ignorant, with their fetish for
being anti-technology. It's rather odd, really. The Republicans
are reflexively anti-science especially evolution theory. And
the Democrats tend to be reflexively anti-technology things like
fracking and nuclear power.
At any rate,
global warming is Friedman's fourth big challenge, and the reviewer
says that Friedman asserts that all four "require a collective response."
L:
Can't rely on the private sector when you believe it takes a village.
Doug:
Or a mob. Never mind that a collective has never discovered or invented
anything. It was individual geniuses who brought cheap light and
heat to give us comfort and productivity in what was once the cold,
dark night. Friedman seems to sincerely think that Congress is wise.
He really believes that if our wise leaders would only say, "Make
it so," then the peons could go out and collectively create the
millennium.
I hate to be
in effect reviewing a book without reading it, but I have a lot
of confidence in the NYRB to present something they agree
with accurately. That said, I see this more as an opportunity to
review Friedman who, although an excellent writer, is even more
shallow than he is earnest and he's very earnest. He'll probably
sell some books, since shallow isn't a problem when marketing to
Boobus americanus, and the public is anxious for easy solutions.
They also love certainty, which is something he radiates. Unfortunately,
Friedman not only comes up with bogus challenges, but foolish solutions
to the problems he fabricates.
L:
I'm looking on Amazon.com, and the book is currently ranked 415th
on its best-sellers list. Nowhere near the top, but still getting
some sales.
Doug:
Friedman desperately wants the ruling classes to take him seriously.
And they do because they're cut from the same cloth. Politicians
love ideas that can serve to increase their relevance and power.
Friedman is a point man for those who believe that there actually
should be a public-private partnership between the state and businesses.
For example, he goes on about the need for government support for
basic research.
L:
Well, Al Gore invented
the Internet. Don't you remember?
Doug:
[Chuckles] Ah, yes. I forgot about that. And I'm sure at this point
that Al would like to forget about it as well
although he'll likely
be best known as an inventor of global warming. But back to Friedman.
He's one of the most popular journalists in the US, and the vision
he's promulgating is for more taxes, more regulation, and more government
generally, to "help" the US recover.
L:
From its addiction to too much government?
Doug:
Right. And then the reviewer goes on to say that, "as Paul Krugman
reminds us"
L:
[Laughs] The guy who thinks fear
of space aliens would be good for the economy.
Doug:
Yes, him. You can tell where the author and reviewer are coming
from. Krugman is almost certainly the most embarrassing choice they've
ever made for the Nobel Economics prize; he's not even an economist.
He's only a political apologist and an intellectual clone of Friedman.
But, to give credit where it's due, I will say that Friedman says
in the book that he regrets his support for the war in Iraq.
L:
Well, at least he didn't wait 30 years like McNamara did.
Doug:
Yes. I think I've mentioned that one of the things I
most regret not having done in my life is related to Robert
"the Strange" McNamara.
On the other
hand, I don't want to give Friedman too much credit, because after
what seems like a duplicitous neglect to mention the role of public
education in producing ignorant and ill-trained workers, he just
calls for more government spending to provide training. And at the
same time, he advocates more corporate welfare, to help with "research"
and "job creation."
Without the
wise direction of the state, individuals wouldn't have the sense
to educate themselves. Without state money which was originally
taken from them corporations couldn't afford to do R&D.
L:
Clear as day. He doesn't see that when government pays companies
to create jobs, they get jobs that don't need doing otherwise
the market would have met the demand. And the money they extract
from the economy to do these things is taken from more productive
uses, weakening the economy.
Doug:
Friedman is clearly a fascist, believing that the government should
splurge even more on welfare not only to those at the bottom but
to the big companies at the top.
L:
Note to readers who don't know Doug well: He's not just calling
names a cornerstone of Mussolini's fascist vision for Italy was
a public-private partnership.
Doug:
Hitler's too, for that matter. So, it's no surprise that two of
the worst
presidents from a libertarian view are Friedman's favorites:
FDR and LBJ. Why? Because they "exploited crises," in the forms
of the Great Depression and the assassination of JFK, to ram through
"bold and daring" government programs. Anyway, fascism isn't essentially
about jackboots, mass rallies, and starting wars although it always
winds up with those things. It's about meshing the state with large
corporations. Unlike socialism, it's about allowing corporations
to be privately owned, so thoughtless people easily conflate it
with capitalism. Then favored classes can become wealthy, through
fat salaries, bonuses, and share options. But corporations are state
controlled through regulation, taxation, and directed spending.
L:
Friedman is like an anti-Doug. So Doug, if you were to shake hands
with him, would you both cease to exist, like matter and antimatter
colliding?
Doug:
It'd be an interesting experiment
but I've shaken hands with Castro
and Clinton and I'm still here. But perhaps it was partly fear of
a matter-antimatter flash that kept me from shaking Cheney's hand.
L:
[Laughs]
Doug:
That's probably just about enough on this subject, but there is
one more thing I'd like to comment on. The reviewer goes on to say:
"At a time when Tea Party enthusiasts, determined to oppose, discredit,
and ultimately defeat the first black president of our country
"
as though Obama's race was even an issue for most Tea Party members,
and more so than his blatant socialist philosophy.
L:
If the reviewer is making it about race, then he's actually the
one acting as a racist, because such decisions should be made on
merit, not skin color.
Doug:
Exactly. And people like this are archetypes among the chattering
class who control the mainstream media in the US. They never hesitate
to support and praise people like Thomas Friedman, no matter how
ill-informed and destructive his ideas are, because like them, Friedman
wants to see more government control of our lives. These people
all slop at the trough of the state. At the same time, they do their
best not to even acknowledge the existence of people like Ron Paul,
who's trying to do the opposite.
More nails
the in the coffin of the place that was once America.
L:
Investment implications?
Doug:
More of the same: rig for stormy weather. Buy gold, build cash,
diversify yourself internationally, look for opportunity in crisis.
L:
Which people can read all about in The Casey Report. Okay
then, thanks for another interesting if not exactly cheerful
conversation.
Doug:
My pleasure, as always.
With America
becoming more socialist by the day, it's critical to internationalize
your assets as soon as possible. Discover
the five best ways to do it.
January
13, 2012
Doug
Casey (send him mail)
is
a best-selling author and chairman of Casey
Research, LLC., publishers of Caseys
International Speculator.
Copyright
© 2012 Casey
and Associates
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