The American Tradesmen: Weary Cogs in the Engine of the American Empire
by Mark R. Crovelli
by Mark R. Crovelli
I
have noticed over the past six months, as a construction worker
in Denver, a strange and steady change in the demeanor of tradesman
on jobsites all over Colorado. Once strong, proud and enterprising
small businessmen, the tradesmen are now sullen, worried and taciturn.
Virtually the only banter passed between the thinning crews of workers
on jobsites revolves around the prospect for new work. The phrase
"You keeping busy these days?" echoes from jobsite to
jobsite.
When
the tradesmen do speak to one another for any extended period of
time, the topic usually involves domestic politics or the economy.
"If they can force the banks to start lending,"
I often hear in this regard, "maybe we can get rolling again
this year." The claim is usually made somberly, however, as
if the speaker doesn’t really believe it himself. It is truly heart
wrenching to watch men gloomily and broodingly trudge through their
work, when they were previously so sturdy and enterprising.
These
tradesmen once formed a critical section of the backbone of the
American economy. They knew what it meant to go out and forge a
life for themselves and their families with the sweat of their brows
and the strength of their hands and minds. They are now finally
learning what it means to be citizens of a global empire – an empire
run by the most powerful and wealthy government machine ever assembled
by man. Perhaps most importantly, they are learning that there are
massive costs to be paid for the maintenance of the American Empire
– and that they are going to have to pay a hefty portion of those
costs themselves. In other words, the tradesmen have found themselves
at the complete mercy of the political classes of this country –
mere cogs in the engine of the American Empire.
It
was extremely easy in previous years to forget that the empire required
constant maintenance and massive amounts of fuel. Tradesmen, businessmen,
and private employees of all other stripes in the United States
were able to go about their daily business without bothering their
busy little minds about the latest foreign and domestic schemes
and boondoggles of the political classes in Washington and New York.
"What goes on in the gilded halls of our government has nothing
to do with my own life," many no doubt thought to themselves
in the smug years of the past two decades. This sentiment led many
to the false idea that every individual American was the sole master
of his own destiny – that each man could "do anything"
with his life if he simply worked hard enough, got a college degree,
or started a small business. It also led to the equally false idea
that government spending for war and welfare is irrelevant to the
enterprising individual American, and that he need never worry that
his life’s work could be wrecked in an instant by inflation by the
Federal Reserve.
These
ideas have now been exposed as mere fantasies engendered by years
and years of artificial prosperity financed through government debt
and money creation. The veil of artificial prosperity has finally
been lifted, allowing many to see for the first time the awful costs
of our imperial government. What is also being discovered, moreover,
is that our American Empire has conferred no real benefits
to the ordinary Americans who continue to be forced to finance it.
On the contrary, it has only produced a great deal of death and
destruction around the world (which has unsurprisingly generated
abject hatred and resentment for this country abroad), and it has
produced a suffocating regulatory and welfare-based economy at home.
It has also had the inevitable consequence of devastating the American
economy by inducing millions upon millions of Americans to start
businesses and take up lines of work that were (and remain) unsustainable
without more and more Federal Reserve money creation.
To
be a citizen in the American Empire, these men are finding out to
their horror, means to be forced to pay for interventionist adventures
to bring "democracy" and "freedom" to the poor
and hapless people of the world. The leaders of our imperial government
are not content to leave the poor masses of the world to their own
devices (or, to put it differently, to treat foreigners like human
beings capable of taking care of themselves); rather, they are
convinced that they have a divinely-ordained mission to take money
from their own population of increasingly impoverished and unemployed
workers and either use that ill-gotten money to invade foreign lands
or give it to other governments. The American tradesman who has
lost his job and has no prospect for future employment must content
himself with the knowledge that his own misery has made it possible
for our government to kill countless foreigners and prop-up foreign
governments despised by their own people. This knowledge offers
precious little in the way of consolation for the tradesman who
has no idea how he will keep a roof over the heads of his family
members and food in their bellies. It is a cost he must bear, however,
because our imperial government lives and flourishes on money that
is taken from its own people through brute force – that is, through
the awful and infamous institution of taxation.
On the
domestic scene, the tradesman is forced to bear equally onerous
burdens in order to support the empire. The empire’s domestic tentacles
have wriggled and forced their way into every nook and cranny of
the American economy. In order for the tradesman to make a living
for himself he must bow down, ask permission, or hide from the legions
of bureaucrat-regulators and policemen that claim the right to tell
him what is permissible and impermissible in this so-called "free
market" economy. He cannot even hang sheetrock without first
gaining permission to operate as a contractor from fat bureaucrats
he has never met, filling out reams of paperwork to take care of
the taxes and permits required by the empire’s local henchmen, and
then having his work "inspected" by someone who claims
to know his trade better than he does. If he is fortunate enough
to jump every hurdle correctly, he will be rewarded with what the
federal government calls the "self-employment tax," robbing
him of a massive portion of the fruits of his labor.
And
where does his confiscated money go? It is used as fuel to keep
the empire marching along: paying salaries for fat politicians and
bureaucrats, paying for welfare to people who are unwilling to work
for a living like our beleaguered tradesman, and paying for more
foreign adventures in the name of "freedom" and "democracy."
In fact, the only person who can be assured he will not benefit
from the existence of the domestic and interventionist empire-machine,
(beside the innocent people murdered abroad by the empire’s legions,
that is), is the tradesman-taxpayer himself.
There
is thus no reason to be surprised that tradesmen have become gloomy,
brooding and increasingly dejected. They have finally discovered
that they are not the rugged and indomitable entrepreneurs they,
until very recently, imagined they were. They have found out that
their lives and labor are, and will continue to be, the property
of the imperial American government.
It
is still too early to tell, however, whether the bureaucrats and
politicians at the helm of the American Empire have scored a decisive
victory over the enterprising American tradesmen. For, while the
fools and knaves in Washington and New York have indeed managed
to destroy virtually everything the tradesmen labored to build up
for themselves over the past few decades, they have not yet managed
to erase the memory of the old, non-imperial America: the America
that existed before the creation of the fraudulent Federal Reserve
system; the America before the emergence of predatory social engineers,
welfare bureaucrats and regulators; the America that existed before
Washington and New York managed to wrest all control away from the
rest of the empire’s fifty colonies; and the America that chose
peaceful trade over military intervention and war.
Unless
or until the architects and managers of the American Empire can
conspire successfully to completely destroy the memory of the old,
non-imperial America, there will always remain the possibility that
the American tradesmen will stand up and fight the Washington and
New York-based empire of today in the same way that their
ancestors fought the London-based empire of their day.
February
23, 2009
Mark R.
Crovelli [send him mail]
writes from Denver, Colorado.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
Mark
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