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I.O.U.S.A.
Misses Point
Moviegoers should save $12.50, buy gold and avoid taxes
by
Doug French
by Doug French
DIGG THIS
The American
empire, like the Roman one, is heading for a fall, and an out-of-control
government deficit is one of the reasons. However, destruction by
deficit is not fait accompli, if Peter Peterson, David Walker and
the Concord Coalition have anything to do about it. Peterson and
Walker like their government after all. Peterson was United States
Secretary of Commerce and Chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations,
and is the Senior Chairman of the politically connected private
equity firm, Blackstone Group. Walker was Comptroller General of
the United States and head of the General Accounting Office. The
Concord Coalition is an organization founded by the late former
Sens. Paul Tsongas (D-Mass.) and Warren Rudman (R-N.H.), along with
Peterson. Concord added former Sen. Bob Kerrey (D-Neb.) in 2002.
Not exactly
a confederation of anarcho-capitalists.
I had high
hopes for the documentary film I.O.U.S.A., because it was conceived
of, co-written and executive produced by Agora Financials
Addison Wiggin, co-author with Bill Bonner of the excellent book
Empire
of Debt. When the movie finally started, the opening credits
even indicated that the documentary was based on the book. I wish.
Bonner and
Wiggin wrote that the purpose of empire was to show that the
United States is headed for trouble. And, their burden
is only to show that the people making important policy decisions
are morons and frauds. I.O.U.S.A. shows that the United States
is in trouble all right, but instead of politicians and central
bankers being outed as crooks and mountebanks, the likes of Bill
Clinton and Paul Volker are treated as heroes. Ex-Fed Chair Alan
Greenspan is made to look like an idiot by Ron Paul in one clip
and by comedian Jon Stewart in another, yet the filmmakers continually
go back for sound bites from him and ex-Fed governor Alice Rivlin
as authority figures. The film even claimed that one Federal Reserve
mandate is to keep inflation low. Good grief, the Fed creates inflation.
Empire of Debt
cited gold 23 times, government debt 19 times and David Walker only
once, Stephen Fairfax noted on the LewRockwell.com blog. But the
movie made no mention of gold and makes David Walker out to be the
nations savior. I.O.U.S.A. is essentially a buddy-movie with
Walker and Concords Executive Director Robert Bixby hitting
the road to alarm Americans into holding their elected officials
accountable. So there are plenty of scenes in the car, in the banquet
rooms and being interviewed by local TV stations that dont
air their story. Interspersed amongst these action sequences are
person-on-the-street interviews that make the point that the average
Joe and Jane dont know or care about the goings on with the
government budget.
If billionaire
Warren Buffett has his way, the great unwashed and uninformed will
pay the $12.50 they saved by not seeing the movie to the government
in taxes. After I.O.U.S.A. concluded, CNBCs Squawk Box honey
Becky Quick moderated a panel of wise ones live from Omaha, led
by Tout TVs favorite guru, Buffett. The panel assured everyone
that government Ponzi-scheme Social Security would be there when
they retire. The Cato Institutes freedom-loving chairman William
Niskanen even thinks people should be forced to save for retirement.
Bill Novelli, CEO of AARP, believes the five guys on the panel could
solve all of the countrys problems. And more than one panelist
blamed everything on partisanship in Washington. If our representatives
in this great republic could just learn to get along, everything
will work out fine, was the claim. After all, America has faced
greater challenges and triumphed.
But
by far the most annoying was the Omaha Oracle, who continually piped
in that the budget deficits arent that big a deal, but that
trade deficits are, and that future generations of Americans will
live better than the present generation, as long as Americans will
pay enough in taxes to keep this good American thing going. We are
lucky to be born here, according to Buffett, but he is unhappy that
he pays a lower tax rate than his cleaning lady. No doubt she is,
too.
The main message
of the film that, by the way, was purchased by The Peter
G. Peterson Foundation last month is that all of this debt
will swamp our ship of state, and that the trade deficit
will lead to less leverage in matters overseas. So, pay more taxes,
and urge your congressman to decrease government spending.
Instead, moviegoers
should spend their time reading Wiggins and Bonners book,
buying gold and avoiding taxes.
November
14, 2008
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute and associate editor for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies. See his tribute to
Murray Rothbard.
Copyright
© 2008 Doug French
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