You Never Give Me Your Money
by Bill Huff
by Bill Huff
DIGG THIS
You only
give me your funny paper
Did the Beatles
know something about Government Bailouts? Liberty? The Fed?
Is Helicopter
Ben Bernanke "Fixing
a Hole Where the Rain gets in…" or maybe feverishly drilling
holes in the bottom of the boat to let the water out – more like
the Three Stooges? Perhaps he should be "…taking [his]
time for a number of things that weren't important yesterday…"
e.g. the Constitution.
We really don’t
know what will happen when the American People comprehend the differences
between "funny paper" and lawful money; between fiat currency
with fractional reserve banking through the non-governmental [now
almost supra-governmental] private banking cartel called the Federal
Reserve and the Gold and Silver required by the Constitution. We
don’t know how it will affect them to know they were drawn into
a huge scam to swindle their own children and grandchildren. They
still seem to respond to the "it’s for the children" mantra
– but only in a visceral and sort of anti-cerebral way. This can
be quite easily verified in any man-on-the-street interview scenario.
The American People have been a benighted people. But there are
signs; encouraging signs, that they are beginning to awaken. The
Ron Paul Revolution is one tremendous and surprising example.
We don’t have any idea how far it will go. But we must keep making
every effort to rebuild the Republic and the restore the Rule of
Law – wherever and whenever we can. Many of us have been looking
for an opening for decades.
The evils
of this deluge of paper money are not to be removed until our
citizens are generally and radically instructed in their cause
and consequences, and silence by their authority the interested
clamors and sophistry of speculating, shaving,
and banking institutions. Till then, we must be content to return
quoad hoc
to the savage state, to recur to barter in the exchange of our
property for want of a stable common measure of value, that now
in use being less fixed than the beads and wampum of the Indian,
and to deliver up our citizens, their property and their labor,
passive victims to the swindling tricks of bankers and mountebankers
[apparently a Jefferson-coined composite of "mountebank"
and "bankers" – it works for me].
~
Thomas Jefferson to John Adams, 1819. ME 15:185
What did the
Beatles know about Liberty?
Many of my
readers will remember and appreciate their hit Taxman.
It seemed they were being plagued by a ridiculous level of taxation
in Great Britain at the time: "Should 5% appear too small…
be thankful I don’t take it all." That lyric portrays an aristocratic
attitude not unlike what is being shoved down our throats here in
the States under the current reign of a duopoly posing as a two-party
system. Later they penned "Her
Majesty’s a pretty nice girl – but she doesn’t have a lot to say."
The current Bailout Reaction
is a good sign. As I have been asking folks what they think of the
Bailout, I have been getting some encouraging feedback. They don’t
seem to appreciate wealth redistribution on this scale – especially
since most of them know the Congress has disregarded the voice of
the People and the Rule of Law. They also seem to know this is a
gross Constitutional violation – and part of "a long train
of abuses and usurpations."
The Beatles’
words and music have changed the world. I hope that most of us who
were influenced by it; who are still singing and humming it, will
take the most positive elements from it and mix them with our highest
aspirations. Of course they haven’t led perfect lives – and I am
not here to Canonize them. I just want point out how some
of their instincts about liberty might be valuable to any generation.
I’d like to think all of my readers would be grinding their own
prism for seeing the potential to interpret any situation in terms
of how it relates to human liberty. After all, the Beatles came
up at a time when authoritarian government was seeking to impose
its arbitrary will on an unwitting people. Has that changed? When
Jefferson spoke of a revolution every twenty years he wasn’t talking
about exchanging pleasantries with receptive representatives who
cherish the Rule of Law and the Constitution. Fighting for liberty
is an all the time everywhere vocation.
As far as I
can tell Arizona
Libertarian Ernest Hancock was the person responsible for donating
the popular Ron Paul Revolution Logo which has a backward "L"
in superimposed word "Love." I discovered the backward
"L" is also used the Cirque
du Soleil Beatles Revolution Lounge housed in the Mirage Casino
in Las Vegas. A lasting Revolution must have a heart, a soul
and a mind, and, of course, we also need some slogans
or maxims, jingles, songs and lasting symbolism. But all must
have the goal of pointing the Revolution toward a solid foundation.
The RP Revolution has been remarkable in this respect. Like Ron
Paul, we strive to point fellow citizens back to Rule
of Law and the Constitution.
We move through
symbolism toward substance while the two major parties and the MSM
move in the opposite direction. While there is some truth in the
Braveheart line, "History is written by those who have
hanged heroes," it is also true that tyrants don’t always carry
the day – and conscientious historical inquiry often unravels their
grandest conspiratorial artifices. The works of Professor
Thomas DiLorenzo, exposing the truth about Lincoln, and now Hamilton,
are most important recent examples.
The Beatles’
music is full of references and innuendos that could be considered
libertarian or liberty-minded. Some of the messages are clearly
related to personal and human liberty, and some of course, are related
to all sorts of other concepts and often quite in the abstract.
I am not merely trying to make sense from nonsense. I never could
really figure out "Lucy
in the Sky with Diamonds." But, as Lawrence Welk would
say, "it
was real-a toe tapper-a!" So many of the melodies are almost
addictive – and harmonic structure often surprisingly advanced –
especially for the pop genre. The number of recordings of Beatles’
tunes by other artists the world over is proof enough that imitation
is the sincerest form of flattery.
They were "pro-love,"
"pro-peace" and "anti-war" before it was popular.
One central theme of the generation they helped shape is the notion
that the element of "coercion"
needs to be avoided at all cost. At the extreme swing of the pendulum
there may sometimes be a lack of self-discipline – call it anarchy
if you like – but without a socialist safety net it will
quickly correct to free market solutions. In any case anarchy is
preferable to totalitarianism. A Classical Libertarian view must
always rule out the use of force in the coercion of citizens under
any form of collectivism or totalitarianism. Liberty is freedom
from all unjust uses of force or coercion – and that
necessarily means almost all uses of force and coercion. The
only righteous use of force is for self-defense or exclusively defensive
war. Know
your Spooner. Know
your Bastiat. All associations must be natural and voluntary.
Primum non
nocere [first do no harm].
This reminds
me of another lyric [out of context] that could be adapted as a
maxim of lawful government: "Oh
Darling, Believe Me! I’ll never do you no harm!" Historically
speaking, only a truly free government could make such a claim.
And this claim would be made a mockery in any government that would
steal from one citizen to benefit another citizen or entity who
has not earned it. The Latin above is a maxim of the medical profession
[or used to be]. But it would serve Any profession well. Remember,
governments often kill even more people than doctors do.
We have just
received a Trillion Dollar Wake-up Call: the "Government"
is quite willing to harm or destroy all of us for its own agenda
– and Notwithstanding the Constitution.
Further along
in the "You
Never Give Me Your Money" lyrics we read, "Out of
college, money spent, See no future, pay no rent, All the money's
gone, nowhere to go," which makes me think of the millions
of young people in America who are now strapped with paying back
oversold college loans. Now we find that many of the trades are
going to be where it’s at for the foreseeable future. Perhaps they
could have been trained in less than half the time to provide something
the market was ready to buy. Funny paper yields fake results. Ethnomusicology
is really quite interesting – but a Ph.D. in that field may more
likely find himself saying "Do you want fries with that?"
than working in his esoteric specialty.
I recently
met a New Yawk attorney who tows cars and does plumbing instead
of practicing law. Those who want to succeed in hard times must
have something, or be able to do something, for someone who has
items of true value to trade – and who elects to do so in a free
market. Even the Soviet
Union was not able to eliminate the black market – which is
sometimes the only real market. I am told you will be laughed out
of the room in Israel if you are naïve enough to believe you
can survive without using the "gray" market. If you want
to have some fun right now, try to buy some American Silver Eagle
Troy Ounces at the artificially suppressed "fixed" price.
The shelves are bare – unless you want to pay a significant premium.
Check the silver prices on eBay
for deals that are actually closing – not in places that have zero
inventory. The gold situation is the same. I called about American
Gold Eagle Troy ounces and I got a quote for $1550.00 each – with
the so-called spot price ranging around $725.00 per troy ounce.
Private dealers are saying "this is the price if you want them
now." Larger public dealers are saying, "If you want to
give us your ‘money’ we will hold it until sometime in November
against a spot price plus commission deal. Then if we can’t fill
the order we will return your funds."
Let’s look
at the gorgeous "Golden
Slumbers" medley and see what we can glean:
"Once
there was a way to get back homeward…" There still is!
Without an
understanding of our Foundation, the Constitution and the written
laws made in pursuance thereof, we are like a ship adrift, and without
a rudder, "tossed about by every wind of doctrine…" We
lack direction and could easily end in tyranny or chaos. There was
tremendous organization and peripatetic pedagogy of the philosophy
of liberty in the period leading up to our Revolution. Liberty was
well understood and well taught. It was Constantly and Comprehensively
taught. Literacy was extremely high. Consider that the "Federalist
Papers" were written to be understood by the majority of
newspaper readers of the day. There is no way back without improved
education in the principles
of Liberty. There is a way back to liberty. It is a simple matter
of reverse engineering – and it is well under way!
"Boy,
you’re gonna carry that weight a long time…"
"If it’s
to be it’s up to me," is more than just a positive affirmation
by Robert Schuller. If you are not willing to carry you own weight
You will be the big ultimate loser. Throwing your needs and desires
off on someone else – especially on a big Nanny-State Government
will have its consequences. Every child wants to run back to their
parents and say, "Look, Mom and Dad, I did it all by myself."
But the government is not qualified to be a surrogate parent any
more than the Army is a humanitarian organization. Just look at
the child support services nightmare – or any State MVA if you like.
The cause of liberty needs the best efforts and perseverance of
every last precious one of you!
Love, Liberty,
and True Charity are all analogous. When they are practiced with
perfection the resulting outcomes are righteous. They are always
opposed to Hate, Tyranny and Greed. So, each of us is free to build
a very lovely place in our own minds, something like a garden [not,
perhaps, an "Octopus’s
Garden"]. But even in the Octopus’s Garden the Beatles
sound libertarian: "We will be so happy you and me… no one
there to tell us what to do..."
Let’s talk
about the Ron Paul Revolution and the Campaign for Liberty and how
the Beatles "Revolution" lyrics resonate together.
"You say
you want a revolution…Well, you know…We all want to change the world."
In a natural
law universe everyone wants freedom and liberty for themselves.
This is axiomatic. But if you don’t understand the Golden Rule or
Cause and Effect, you may have been brainwashed into an unnatural
paradigm. It may take a while in some instances, but what goes around
will come around. The quicker you grasp the Golden Rule’s universality
the better use you will be able to make of it. Applied to foreign
relations it is the doctrine of Washington and Jefferson. Too bad
the Bushies have never been disposed to "Give
Peace a Chance." In Revolution
we learn that the Beatles are anti-violence and also anti-communist:
"If you’re talkin’ about destruction don’t you know that you
can count me out….If you are carrying pictures of Chairman Mao,
you ain’t gonna make it with anyone anyhow!" Later, there may
be an anti-socialism allusion in the words, "You ask me for
a contribution, well, you know, we’re all doin’ what we can."
This is followed by "But when you want money for people with
minds that hate, All
I can tell is brother you have to wait…" – an anti-hate message?
John loses
many of us later on in "Imagine" where he says, "Imagine…
nothing to kill or die for…" But perhaps he is trying to say
the State is a shabby cause – and that we should have higher causes
and principals. Obviously the central theme of "Imagine"
is universal peace, love and non-coercion. Where many of us go astray
is to be lured into the illusion that the State can be trusted to
fix all [or any] of our problems. When it tries, it always exacts
a price too heavy for anyone to pay. The song has been offensive
to many because it says, "Imagine there’s no heaven… no religion…
no Hell," etc. – which I take as John’s way of saying, "while
we’re all here together,
we need to do whatever it takes to get along." While many have
taken umbrage at some of their statements that could be best considered
to be excoriating organized religion, I think perhaps some of the
reactions over the years have been out of proportion. According
to market information some of the same people that burned their
albums must have purchased replacements or upgraded to CDs and mp3s
by now. Which is too bad, since it’s harder to play them backwards.
Remember… this is not a treatise on Beatle Metaphysics or recreational
drug use.
"And
in the end the [Liberty] you take will be equal to the [Liberty]
you make."
Don’t
let me down
With many thanks
and apologies to John, Paul, George and Ringo,
Sincerely,
Bill
Huff
October
28, 2008
Bill
Huff [send him mail] is a
Classical Libertarian and proprietor of LEXREX.com
and JamTheCulture.com;
a former public school music teacher turned home schooling advocate;
a US Navy veteran, and host of WarIsARacket.com.
He
is available as a guest
lecturer or for interviews on talk radio.
Copyright
© 2008 Bill Huff
Bill
Huff Archives
|