Decivilization
and What To Do About It
by
Doug French
by Doug French
Howard
Ruff is one of the icons of the investment newsletter business.
The Ruff Times is one of the most successful newsletters
of all time and his book How
to Prosper during the Coming Bad Years sold almost three
million copies. He is most famous for recommending the purchase
of gold at $120/oz in 1975 and more importantly recommending that
people sell the yellow metal near its peak of $850/oz in 1980.
Mr.
Ruff has returned with a new book, Safely
Prosperous or Really Rich: Choosing Your Personal Financial Heaven,
and another recommendation to buy gold. Hey, it was lucky for
him in 1975, maybe it will work for him again to sell three million
books.
Despite
being "nearly canonized as a high priest of the Gold Bug Church,"
Ruff writes that he is no gold bug and devotes little space in his
new book for gold and gold investment opportunities. In fact, Ruff
seems to deride gold investors in his chapter "Worshipping
the Golden Calf." When he made his recommendation to sell gold
he says that he "was castigated as an apostate by the believers."
"But I have had the last laugh," Ruff assures the reader.
Ruff reminds the reader throughout the book of how smart he is,
as opposed to those dumb gold worshipers.
So
what does Mr. Ruff prescribe for a safely prosperous life? First
of all, lower your time-preference. Of course he doesn’t use that
term. He does mention a couple of times that he is a devotee of
the Austrian school of economics, but uses none of the school’s
insights to amplify his common sense solutions to the financial
woes of many middle-class Americans.
Anyone
who grew up during the Depression or was raised by parents who grew
up during that period has had most of what Ruff has to say drilled
into them since they were knee high to a grasshopper. Ruff tells
the reader to save money rather than borrow it, clip coupons, drive
an old car, eat at inexpensive Chinese or Thai restaurants, etc.
"This is pretty old-fashioned, fuddy-duddy stuff," Ruff
writes, "and it’s really out of style in today’s live-it-up
environment, but it has worked throughout history and it will work
now and in the future."
But,
one has to go Hans-Hermann Hoppe’s Democracy
the God that Failed, to understand why these rudimentary
basics of finance and prudent behavior are being ignored by so many
people. Because of the growth of government and its property rights
intrusions, the supply of present and future goods is being reduced,
serving to "not only raise time-preference rates (with given
schedules) but also time-preference schedules," writes Hoppe.
This
increase in the population’s time-preference serves to stop the
process of civilization. As Hoppe explains, "if government
property-rights violations take their course and grow extensive
enough, the natural tendency of humanity to build an expanding stock
of capital and durable consumer goods and to become increasingly
more farsighted and provide for ever-more distant goals may not
only come to a standstill, but may be reversed by a tendency toward
decivilization: formerly provident providers will be turned into
drunks or daydreamers, adults into children, civilized men into
barbarians, and producers into criminals."
It
is this increasingly decivilized group of people that Ruff is trying
to reach with the first part of his book.
Ruff’s
secret to being really rich takes only half the number pages of
the safely prosperous section. Ruff writes about financial leverage
and management leverage as a way to be really rich. He surprising
touts George Bush as someone we should emulate for his success as
a CEO. Ruff described Bush 43’s effectiveness as a manager as "so
far, so good." Oh, my.
The
rest of Ruff’s really rich instructions amount to the same old infomercialesque
stuff like: accept risk, dream big, believe in your product, don’t
be afraid to fail, oh, and be sure to write a business plan.
Then,
after you’ve started your business and marketed it well, go to Wall
Street, sell part of your company to the public for an inflated
price, and guess what: you’ll be really rich.
Marketing
is clearly near and dear to Ruff’s heart. He devotes a chapter to
it. But, actually the entire book is just a marketing piece for
his newsletter The Ruff Times, which is referenced on 37
different pages in the book (out of a total of 255).
Ruff’s
best advice is early in the book when he cautions against "worshiping
mammon."
He
urges the reader to be generous and that giving away a portion of
one’s income will be deeply satisfying, keep a person out of mischief
and serve as an "inoculation against the love-of-money disease."
Ruff
tithes to his church, but he points out that "you can do it
to any worthy cause." In Safely
Prosperous or Really Rich he preaches old-time financial
religion, attempting to change the behavior of people who have been
decivilized by the actions of an ever more intrusive government.
There are two organizations that work daily to stop this decivilization
by advancing the Austrian School of economics, and, defending the
market economy, private property, sound money, and peaceful international
relations, while opposing government intervention as economically
and socially destructive: LewRockwell.com
(Center for Libertarian Studies) and the Ludwig
von Mises Institute.
Take
Howard Ruff’s advice, but tithe to Lew and Burt: there is no cause
greater than saving civilization.
July
29, 2004
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and a policy fellow
of the Nevada Policy Research Institute.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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