Richard Maybury on the Collapse of the Anglo-American Empire and
What It Means for You
by Anthony Wile
The Daily Bell
Recently
by Anthony Wile: Richard
Daughty on the Fiscal and Monetary Insanity of the Whole Freakin' World
The Daily
Bell is pleased to present another exclusive interview with Richard
Maybury.
Introduction:
The former Global Affairs editor of MONEYWORLD, Richard Maybury
is one of the most respected business and economics analysts in
America. His articles have appeared in major publications. Books
include Whatever
Happened to Penny Candy?, Whatever
Happened to Justice?, Evaluating
Books: What Would Thomas Jefferson Think of This? His current
interest is "The Fall of the U.S. Empire." His writings
have been endorsed by top business leaders, and is a consultant
to numerous investment firms in the U.S. and Europe. He is Editor
of the newsletter, Richard Maybury's U.S. & World Early
Warning Report For Investors.
Daily Bell:
We last interviewed you in 2009. Has the world's economic picture
gotten worse?
Richard
Maybury: As far as production is concerned, I think that things
have improved but the essential problem is the malinvestment that
was created by the Federal Reserve counterfeiting dollars since
1913, and almost all that malinvestment is still out there and needs
to be shaken out. The pain we have been going through since August
of 2007 has essentially been for nothing because the federal government
stopped the malinvestment, or most of it, from being shaken out,
and that traumatic experience is yet to come. So, anybody who thinks
we are getting to the end of this thing is dreaming.
Daily Bell:
What's the worst problem America is suffering from?
Richard
Maybury: I think ethics. Nearly the entire population has been
raised in schools that are under the control of government agencies
and they have been taught that the government doesn't need to obey
ethical principals such as, "Thou shall not steal." So,
this has become part of the American culture. I don't see any long-term
solution for America or any of the rest of the world until they
start accepting the fact that government has to be ethical, just
like individuals.
Daily Bell:
Is America essentially bankrupt?
Richard
Maybury: America isn't but the federal government sure is. I
don't think I need to get into statistics, but the federal government
is about as hopeless as we have ever seen in history. I can't think
of any other government that ever got into this much trouble, but
the country and the government are not the same things. Some individuals
are bankrupt, some are prosperous, it varies from one person to
the next, but most assuredly the federal government is a real financial
basket case.
Daily Bell:
How can America recover?
Richard
Maybury: Well again we go back to ethics. We have to go back
to obeying the rule of "Thou shall not steal." The American
founders went through all this two centuries ago. I am doing an
article on this in the Early Warning Report. Thomas Jefferson
for instance, in his first inaugural address laid out 16 principles
for how the government should be run ethically. I think the time
has come where we have to start re-learning what those principals
are and the country is supposed to be about. I have become very
optimistic when I look at the protests that are going on in the
United States now, and there is a lot of focus on the constitution
and the writings on the American founders. I think the American
people are beginning to realize that there's a lot they were not
taught in school and they need to now learn what the country is
supposed to be like. That's a wonderful development and I hope it
continues. We have to rediscover our origins, and a lot of people
are beginning to do that.
Daily Bell:
What will happen to the dollar?
Richard
Maybury: I think the dollar, as we know it is dead or pretty
close to it. Obviously it's not dead yet but it's another great
big version of Tulipmania. This demand for not only the dollar but
for all paper currency, fiat currency, it's just Tulipmania. It's
been going on since 1971 when all currencies were converted to fiat
currencies. So now we are seeing the process of the world bringing
this calamity to an end. So the dollar and all other fiat currencies
will no longer be fiat. They will be tied to something real, perhaps
gold, perhaps a basket of commodities that includes gold, I don't
know, but the whole world is clearly a lot more interested now in
holding real assets than fiat currencies. I think we are in the
beginning of a great revolution of currencies where we are going
to go back to the type of money that can't be created without limits
out of thin air.
Daily Bell:
Will the EU be able to salvage the PIGS?
Richard
Maybury: I would politely disagree with the phrasing of the
question. It should be, Will Germany be able to salvage the PIGS?
The answer is probably not in the long run because you can bleed
the Germans for a while, but they will probably end up going broke
if they try to keep bailing out the PIGS. And there are going to
be more PIGS. There are many countries out there operating as welfare
states and they are inherently unsound. So if the question were,
will the German's bail them out, I would say for a while, but then
the Germans will be dragged down too.
Daily Bell:
Let's continue with some geopolitical questions. Is the euro going
under?
Richard
Maybury: Yes, I think the euro is going under but I don't know
when. It's a fiat currency like the rest of them. It's going to
be wiped out too, or replaced by some form of currency that cannot
be created in unlimited quantities.
Daily Bell:
Ireland just started printing its own euro notes. Is this a significant
crack in the dike?
Richard
Maybury: Yes, sure. Any time you give any human being the privilege
of counterfeiting money, he's probably going to do it, and do a
lot. The Irish are just as human as the rest of us and they will
succumb to the temptation to inflate the euro.
Daily Bell:
Will the EU itself survive?
Richard
Maybury: I hope not and I don't think so. If you look back,
say, 45 years, when the various countries in Europe were much more
independent and they had their own currencies tied to gold, the
choice that they had among currencies was a wonderful thing. Let's
say if you lived in France, and you saw your government counterfeiting
francs in an irresponsible fashion, you could move your wealth into
Swiss Francs or into German Marks, and I think before this Great
Monetary Calamity is over, the Europeans are going to realize that
those were nice choices to have and they are going to go back to
that. I think they will break up into much more independent countries
than they are now and the less power a central government can have...
well that's always a good thing because it means more liberty for
the individual. I think they will move in that direction because
they have tried the opposite and it's not working so well.
Daily Bell:
China is considered an economic powerhouse. For some two years we've
been writing that China is the in the grip of an inflationary bubble.
Is China headed for a hard landing?
Richard
Maybury: Yes I think absolutely. Whenever you have someone counterfeiting
money, whether it's a government or a private individual, that money
does not descend on the economy in a uniform blanket. It goes into
specific areas. Those areas become hot spots and they attract businesses
and investors and these businesses and investors create malinvestment.
The Chinese government has been creating yuan in large quantities
and creating these spots of malinvestment all over China and that
has to be shaken out. Then you take a look at Chinese history. The
Chinese have a history of violence and political upheaval that is
just astounding. It's probably the bloodiest history in the world
when it comes to political upheaval. They may escape that but I
don't think that's the way to bet. I think they will follow their
heritage and there will be some terrible amount of bloodshed in
China from the shake out of the malinvestment.
Daily Bell:
What will this mean for the rest of the world?
Richard
Maybury: There's no way to know because you are asking what
these individual Chinese politicians will decide to do and we don't
know what that is. They are like all politicians everywhere
they change their mind pretty much every day and when the bloodshed
starts they're surely going to change their minds every day, maybe
every hour. There's no way to know what they will do but it's a
good guess they will try to direct their population's attention
toward outside enemies. Then they may start picking fights with
people and getting in wars. It's just impossible to say. We also
don't know how many of them will survive but historically in these
situations a lot of Chinese politicians end up hanging from lamp
posts and so the smart ones will get out of China when the trouble
starts. The dumb ones will stay and be killed and we don't know
who will survive or how they will behave.
Daily Bell:
Will the powers-that-be use a worldwide depression to set up a new
currency? Will it be the bancor?
Richard
Maybury: As I remember the bancor was not based on anything
real. It was just another fiat currency. It was Keynes' attempt
to create a fiat currency. When all this turmoil is over with the
world is not going to want a fiat currency of any kind and the people
will demand that whatever currency they accept is backed by something
real like gold or something else. So, as to your question,
will the powers that be set up a new currency, I think they will
try. They may try many times. And we may go through various successive
issues of new currencies. A currency may rise and then be rejected
and then a new fiat currency may emerge and then that will be rejected
and so on. In the end, people will no longer accept fiat currency
of any kind regardless of what you call it.
Daily Bell:
Will the economy simply default to gold, silver and free banking?
Richard
Maybury: I think some individuals will certainly try to move
in that direction. How many there will be like that I don't know.
It's likely that some sort of privately issued money will be tried.
I would like to point out that I follow Austrian economics and my
belief is that governments should have nothing to do with currencies
at all. Private companies should issue currencies and the individual
consumer can select which currency he likes. In all probability
this would happen over a period of 5 or 10 years. The world would
probably settle on a half dozen or so currencies that are the most
trusted and they would become the currencies of the world. Now the
free markets, to the extent that markets are free, will try to move
in that direction and people will move in the direction of currencies
they can trust, but whether governments will allow this to happen
I don't know. Again, politicians change their mind every day.
Daily Bell:
What do you think of the Brownian green backer movement? Is US Intel
actively promoting it?
Richard
Maybury: As I remember, the Brownian movement might be a move
in the right direction but I don't think it goes far enough because
it calls on government to do the right thing (laughing aloud) and
when has that ever happened? Inherently if you are going to let
your currency be managed by a government, you are assuming that
the government is going to be wise and honest. Well, where is the
evidence for that? To the degree that the Brownian movement relies
on the government to do the right thing, it's going to fail.
Daily Bell:
Would America really be better off if it printed its own currency?
Richard
Maybury: Well again America is a country and the government
is a different thing than the country. So are you asking would America
the country be better off if the federal government was printing
it's own currency? Well it already is printing its own currency
and it's doing a rotten job of it. So I don't expect that these
people are suddenly going to become wise and honest. If you think
the government is going to solve your problems you are going to
be sorely disappointed.
Daily Bell:
Do you expect further deflation?
Richard
Maybury: Deflation originally meant a decline in the amount
of currency that is in circulation. We are certainly not in deflation
under that definition. The federal government has been deluging
the world with money. Then we get into what is called velocity or
money demand. Velocity refers to the speed at which money changes
hands and money demand is the force that governs how fast money
changes hands. If there's a high demand for the money then it won't
change hands very quickly and if there's a low demand for the money
it will change hands very quickly. This has the same effect as changes
in the money supply. If money is circulating very fast it has the
same effect on the economy as an inflation of the money supply.
I explain this concept in my book called The
Money Mystery. So, do I expect further deflation? I don't
know what to say. Velocity has been the dominant force not
the money supply throughout this correction and velocity
has been bouncing up and down. I think it will continue to do that.
Daily Bell:
How about hyperinflation?
Richard
Maybury: I think it's coming in a lot of countries and that
it is even probable in the United States. I would say over the next
10 years there is a 70% probability that we will see hyperinflation
in the US. A lot of other countries, like the PIGS for instance
which may end up breaking away from the Euro and the EU, could end
up printing their own currencies and head right into hyperinflation.
I think hyperinflation is something the whole world is going to
learn a lot about.
Daily Bell:
Is the dollar dead?
Richard
Maybury: For all intents and purposes yes, but I could have
said that 30 years ago too. It's a fiat currency and it lives only
as long as people believe in the tulipmania. The instant they stop
believing in this tulipmania, the tulip the dollar
becomes worthless. The whole world is beginning to get really nervous
about the dollar so I think we are on the edge of it. Whether we
are going to go over the proverbial cliff or not is impossible to
say for sure, but I think we will. Now I am not saying you should
get rid of all your dollars because this begs the question of what
do you transfer into? Here I refer people to one of Harry Browne's
books, Fail
Safe Investing, which I think is a very realistic investment
plan because you simply don't know what is coming and you've got
to be ready for everything and that's the plan that Harry
presents.
Daily Bell:
What should people be investing in today?
Richard
Maybury: Again I refer you to Harry Browne's book. His plan,
called The Permanent Portfolio, is the best one I have ever heard
of. Grant it, it is not perfect. I would like to be able to hand
you something that is going to work perfectly but I don't know of
anything that does and I have been actively looking for more than
25 years. I just can't find anything better than Harry's plan. It
has been performing spectacularly. Its main purpose is to achieve
as much safety as possible for your wealth. I just did some calculations
on a permanent portfolio fund and it's up 55% since 2006. This is
a strategy whose primary purpose is safety not profit and yet it's
up 55%! In addition to this approach, some people may want to acquire
further holdings of gold, silver, platinum and other sorts of non-dollar
assets. I certainly wouldn't argue against it.
Daily Bell:
Is a recovery coming? Is the US still in bad shape economically?
Richard
Maybury: We talked about malinvestment already and yes I think
the US economy is still in very bad shape. For a real recovery to
exist there first has to be real political reform because it's unethical
politics that have screwed up the country. No country is going to
get out of a mess like this unless they abandon the idea that stealing
is acceptable. It is not. Once again, it all comes down to ethics.
People have been mislead and taught that stealing is OK. Simply
put, as long as people are willing to accept the notion of legalized
theft in the form of visible and hidden taxes, there can be no lasting
solution to the mess we are in.
Daily Bell:
Will the housing market recover any time soon?
Richard
Maybury: I think the housing market may be bottoming out now
simply from the standpoint that real estate is a non-dollar asset
and as people flee from dollars they are heading into any non-dollar
asset they can find. Real estate will be one of those categories
that people will start buying up. I wouldn't be surprised to see
real estate start to turn, or let's say start to boom this year
at some point. All it's going to take is a bunch of people to decide
that the bottom has happened and then they will go in. It's not
because real estate is necessarily a good investment but more because
it's a superior alternative to holding depreciating US dollars.
Daily Bell:
How about employment?
Richard
Maybury: I think we are going to be stuck with high unemployment
for many years. Even Ben Bernanke has conceded to at least five
years of high unemployment and I think this is evidence that the
man does know how to tell the truth occasionally. The economic disruption
is so great from all this fiat counterfeiting that has been going
on for so many decades that I can't see an improvement in the unemployment
rate of any significance for years to come.
Daily Bell:
Is Ben Bernanke doing a good job? Will he be the LAST Fed chairman?
Richard
Maybury: Well it would be great if he was the last Fed Chairman
but I don't know if he will be or not. Is he doing a good job? I
think that his job is to expand the money supply and to lie about
it. So, according to that job description, he is doing rather well.
But if you think his job description is to preserve the value of
the currency and not to lie, then he's doing very badly.
Daily Bell:
Will gold hit US$5,000? Will oil go to US$300 as you've predicted?
Richard
Maybury: Yes, I think those prices are practically inevitable
not because those items will rise but because the fiat dollar will
fall. These are non-dollar assets and if the dollar gets weaker,
as it's rejected more and more around the world, then one of the
things people will run to will be gold and another will be oil.
Just about anything that tends to hold its value better than paper
money does will attract fleeing capital. To me these are slam-dunk
predictions, not because I believe in gold or oil but because I
have no faith at all in the future of the dollar.
Daily Bell:
Is the price of oil manipulated?
Richard
Maybury: Well certainly it's being manipulated to the extent
that it can be by various governments. Number one being the Saudis.
The Saudi Royal Family clearly manipulates the price of oil and
nobody even lies about that. It's just accepted in the markets.
The Saudis are even called the benchmark producers because they
have enough oil that they can manipulate the price. So the Saudi's
certainly are manipulating it and there are undoubtedly others who
try. But to what extent? I am a bit skeptical about this because
oil is a commodity that is traded worldwide and is available in
such huge quantities.
Well maybe
I should back up on that. I tend to think that one-way to look at
it is that the oil price is manipulated by the US Navy.
If the US navy
stays in the Persian Gulf and continues to back the regimes that
control Kuwait and Saudi Arabia and other oil countries on the west
side of the gulf, then the price of oil can go rather high. However,
if there's a revolution and the navy leaves and these governments
are overthrown and new governments come in and just start pumping
all the oil they can, then the price falls dramatically. There were
some calculations done, that I wrote about maybe ten years ago,
that show the price of oil really ought to be somewhere around $5.00
per barrel because there's so much of it in the Persian Gulf and
that's the only place it would be pumped from if politics didn't
enter into the situation. All these other places like the North
Sea, Texas and Indonesia have higher costs of production than the
Persian Gulf does. So if we could remove all the politics then all
oil would be pumped from the Persian Gulf at a cost of approximately
$5.00 per barrel. In that sense, if the US navy would leave the
Persian Gulf, we might see $5.00 a barrel.
Daily Bell:
Is oil abiotic?
Richard
Maybury: I know that theory and it's a tempting one. For instance,
there's one of the moon's of Saturn, Titan, where it's atmosphere
is methane, meaning natural gas. Well where did the methane come
from? There's nothing alive out there that we know of and yet this
rock has the ability to produce methane. The theory about oil being
abiotic seems to make sense but I'm still waiting to see some conclusive
evidence.
Daily Bell:
We think the powers-that-be conspire to keep oil in short supply
via environmentalism and regulatory measures. Agree?
Richard
Maybury: It's possible but I don't have anything further to
add to that.
Daily Bell:
Let's circle back. We believe that there is a small Anglo-elite
built mostly of banking families that are behind much of the world's
problems, including an endless quest for further centralization
of money and power, called globalization. Agree?
Richard
Maybury: Yes but I might not agree as strongly as others. The
way I see it is birds of a feather flock together and rich people
are always going to hang around with rich people and they are going
to do deals with each other. They are going to try to manipulate
events to their own advantage. As far as I know, it's always been
so. To what extent are they successful at manipulating events to
their advantage? I think in some cases very successful and other
cases they fall flat on their faces. The way I see these groups
operating is that there's not any central conspiracy, but there
are task forces. Rich and powerful people will get together and
form a task force to get something done. Maybe it will work and
maybe it won't. After that enterprise is over with, it breaks up.
Members go their separate ways and then down the road more of these
people form another task force and they find some other scheme.
As long as
we have large powerful governments this is a wonderful convenience
for these people because all they have to do is get control of a
large powerful government and they use this as a tool to get what
they want. The solution to the whole thing is to eliminate as much
political power as you can so they aren't presented with these tools
to use on us. I do not regard the groups of the elite as the problem;
I regard the political power as the problem. If you eliminate most
of the power then you are de-fanging these groups and they are left
to flounder and probably can't do anywhere near as much damage to
us as they can with all this power available to them.
Daily Bell:
We think the Internet has compromised this elite's secrecy. Agree?
Richard
Maybury: Everybody's secrecy has been compromised by the Internet!
(Laughing). The age of privacy is over with and that's privacy for
the elites, government and everyone else. That's the significance
of Wikilieaks. In fact, in my February issue of Early Warning Report
there's an article about that. I think Wikileaks is the beginning
of what will turn out to be the biggest political development in
a thousand years. Or say for the next thousand years. Pretty soon
it will be impossible for governments to operate in secrecy and
once everybody knows what every government is doing it's going to
be a different world.
Daily Bell:
We think the Internet has turned into a real force for freedom and
political fragmentation which we consider good. Comments?
Richard
Maybury: I absolutely agree. Anything that puts light on what
the political elite is doing is a good thing. That's why the American
founders were so much in favor of a free press and why America is
famous for having the most free press in the whole world The founders
understood that government can't really hurt us too badly if we
know what they are doing. There is no tool more important to a power
junkie than secrecy. So yes, absolutely, the Internet is one of
the greatest things ever to come along for that reason.
Daily Bell:
We think the elite is fighting back with false flag operatives.
We think Julian Assange might be one.
Richard
Maybury: I don't know anything about Mr. Assange personally
so I can't really comment on that, but as far as false flag operatives,
that has to be a near certainty. Once everybody knows what you are
doing your only defense for what you are doing is to spread a bunch
of lies so that nobody believes anything. I think that's what governments
are probably doing now. They are trying to spread so many lies that
no one will believe anything, including the truth.
Daily Bell:
We think the war in Tunisia might not have been entirely spontaneous.
What's your take?
Richard
Maybury: There are always underground movements, especially
in the Islamic world because all Islamic governments are dictatorships
and they naturally spawn underground movements. So there's always
an underground ready to spring up when a window of opportunity opens.
In that sense it was not entirely spontaneous. You could even argue
if a government is dictatorial or tyrannical then nothing is spontaneous
because the people will eventually do something about the tyranny.
It's always this coiled spring situation. All dictatorships are
these coiled springs, which is why they don't want a free press,
why they don't want you to have the right to bear arms and why they
want to have all sorts of other controls on you. They are scared
to death of the population and they know the day will come when
the population will rise up. You might say there's nothing spontaneous
in a dictatorship.
Daily Bell:
We think the powers that be could be encouraging a sphere of Muslim
radicalism stretching from Saudi Arabia to Somalia and beyond. What
do you think?
Richard
Maybury: Yes, but guess I'm uncomfortable with the term, "powers
that be." There are certainly groups that have an agenda that
requires overthrowing some or all of these governments. Now, whether
that's the "powers that be" or not, I don't know. I don't
think there's a unified power elite either. I think these people
are opportunists, just like other humans, and being the elite they
assume that they don't really have to follow any rules like the
rest of us do. So, what history shows is they stab each other in
the back. A good example is Hitler and Stalin. When it was to their
advantage, they had an agreement. However, when Hitler decided it
was no longer to his advantage he attacked Stalin. I think this
goes on all the time. I think this is what governments do. This
is basically what foreign policy is all about. Who are we going
to stab in the back this week?
Daily Bell:
So would you have a term for them or what would YOU call them?
Richard
Maybury: Well maybe to make a term is misleading. Perhaps that's
a good point because they are all individuals. They have their own
individual needs, wants and desires. Some of them have really evil
intentions, while others have really good intentions but are stupid.
It's hard to say there's any unified agenda. I have never seen evidence
that there is a unified agenda among the rich and powerful. Sometimes
I am sure they act in concert, but I think a lot of time they don't.
I am hesitating to say there is some sort of a unified plan with
these people. We did discuss the case-by-case basis earlier. For
example, if something in Libya interests the Bush family but not
the Kennedy's then the Bush's might act and the Kennedy's sit it
out. I think that goes for all these rich and powerful people all
over the world. They operate just like you and I do sometimes
we get together and sometimes we don't. And it depends on the specific
situation as to whether we get together or not. I think there is
absolute certainty that these people occasionally form groups for
the purpose of overthrowing a government so they can take control.
Historically in Latin America, for maybe a century or more, the
rich groups in the United States have manipulated the Latin American
governments. So government control and population manipulation does
occur, but as far as a unified plan to take over the world is concerned,
I would be surprised if they were able to get a big enough consensus
among themselves because they are all going to have disagreements
with who ought to be shot and who ought to be subsidized. They're
just not going to come together in total agreement of any given
quest.
Daily Bell:
Isn't it true that the West lavishly funds Saudi Arabia who in turn
funds Muslim fundamentalism? Is this just a coincidence?
Richard
Maybury: I think it's true. Again the US Navy is the most important
subsidy the Saudi Royal Family has. Try to imagine yourself a rebel,
living on the coast in Saudi Arabia, and every morning making coffee
you look out the window and there's an American guided missile cruiser
sitting there. How inclined are you going to be to try to overthrow
the government while staring down the barrel of a gun, so to speak.
The simple fact that the US navy is there, even if it never fires
a shot, is a tremendous interference in the politics of Saudi Arabia.
Daily Bell:
How else do we explain the world's drift toward centralization and
authoritarianism? We believe when the power elite is challenged,
it generates wars. What do you think?
Richard
Maybury: In some cases I am sure that's true, but again I think
the elite operates on a case-by-case basis. Sometimes they are successful
and sometimes they are not.
Daily Bell:
Isn't it a fact that the Anglo sphere tends to support its financial
adversaries in advance of a confrontation? Didn't Wall Street fund
the Soviet Union and by extension Red China?
Richard
Maybury: There's a very good book written by Antony Sutton called,
"The Best Enemy Money Can Buy." It's about Americans financing
the Bolshevik revolution and subsidizing the Soviet Union ever since.
I think it's an absolute fact that the US helped prop up the Soviet
Union so that Washington would have an enemy that would justify
its rationale to go out and meddle in the rest of the world. Sutton
presented evidence on this theory and I for one think it's irrefutable.
Other than that, I would have to think long and hard about your
question.
Daily Bell:
How about a war with Iran?
Richard
Maybury: I am assuming you mean a US war with Iran. In the next
5 years, I give it a 60% probability that the US will go to war
with Iran. I think it is likely to happen because the Israeli government
wants something done with Iran and I think Washington will support
the effort. Should I say more?
Daily Bell:
Are more wars likely because the Western economy is bad?
Richard
Maybury: The whole world economy is bad. If it's not suffering
from deflationary forces, it's suffering from inflationary forces.
So the whole world is in bad economic shape and that tends to lead
to wars. I am working on an article for the March issue on my newsletter
now that's going to be about this issue.
Essentially,
I believe that the fall of the US Empire has begun and that's what
you are seeing in Tunisia, Egypt and Yemen. It's going to be like
watching dominos fall, in my opinion. So just from that standpoint
alone, just from the perspective of a potential collapse of the
US Empire, we are going to see the whole world's political matrix
upset and there's possibly going to be a lot of wars from that.
Remember that there are all sorts of groups of people around the
world who have their own private grudges with each other and I think
a lot of those are going to erupt for instance, the historic
rivalry between Pakistani's and the Indians. That's why I keep suggesting
defense stocks. I think they are going to look good simply because
the defense industry is going to be in big demand for its products.
To say that a lot more wars aren't going to happen is to believe
that humans have somehow learned their lesson and they are going
to behave rationally. I haven't seen any evidence of that.
Daily Bell:
Is China likely to be a military adversary of the US?
Richard
Maybury: Well, they already are adversaries. If you look at
things from the standpoint of the Chinese, I think it is inevitable
that there's going to be this adversarial relationship because historically
China was invaded repeatedly by western powers. There's no reason
for Chinese to feel friendly towards, or to trust, the western powers
because they've been kicked around a lot by them for more than a
century. You have these US Nimitz-class aircraft carriers sailing
around in the far Pacific in the Yellow Sea and the South China
Sea along the Chinese coast. There's basically a US naval presence
there all the time. Most Americans don't understand what a Nimitz-class
carrier is. If it is sufficiently re-supplied, one of these carriers
can, all by itself, conquer nearly every country in the world. There's
only a half a dozen or so exceptions to that. This carrier can basically
sail around the world conquering countries all by itself. And the
US has at least one of those things in the waters off of China all
the time. Now if you are Chinese and your country has already has
been invaded numerous times by westerners, how would you feel about
one of those carriers sitting off your coast? So the adversary relationship
definitely exists. As long as Washington continues this kind of
behavior there's just no other way it can be. Imagine how Americans
would feel if the Chinese had by far the most powerful weapon in
the world and they had it parked right off the coast of California.
How would Americans feel about that? Well that's the situation in
China.
Daily Bell:
Is the Anglo-American culture warlike?
Richard
Maybury: Well, certainly, but I guess it's a question of degree.
More warlike or less warlike than who else? I think the Anglo part
of that, meaning the English part is indisputably war-like. They
conquered a fourth of the world. In the United States the assumption
of being patriotic means willing to go to war. If the government
says we have to attack somebody, by gosh you better be willing to
support the battle or you are not patriotic. As long as we've got
patriotism hooked to war we are going to be warlike.
Daily Bell:
Are all empires warlike? Is the US an empire? You've written about
that in the past haven't you?
Richard
Maybury: Yes, I have numerous times. Actually in order to do
the article for March I had to count them and there is no less than
16 times in the last ten years when I have pointed out that the
US is an Empire and the Empire is coming to an end. My article in
March is an announcement that I believe the end of the Empire is
upon us. The US certainly has an Empire and I should point out that
the White House has a policy of stating that the US is not an Empire,
therefore nobody talks about it. But you have seen the evidence
in the last couple of days alone when the President of the United
States called up the President of Egypt and ordered him to quit.
(Laughing) If that is not evidence of an Empire, what is it?
Daily Bell:
Why is the US still in Afghanistan? We have explained that it is
a war to westernize the Pashtuns, not a war for oil or to strategically
surround the Chinese. These are secondary goals at best. Agree?
Richard
Maybury: Yes, I agree with that. As far as westernizing the
Pashtuns, well of course, Americans are more good and wise and noble
than anybody else in the world and they know how other people should
behave. As a result, they naturally believe they have every right
and duty to go over to Afghanistan and make sure the Pashtuns behave
according to the American model. Isn't that logical?
Daily Bell:
We do not believe the Afghan war can be won. Do you?
Richard
Maybury: It can be won in the sense that the US has the firepower
to turn Afghanistan into a radioactive parking lot, but they aren't
going to use those nuclear weapons so it can't be won. It's a guerilla
war and guerilla wars are practically impossible for a conventional
power to win. When I was in the Air Force, I was in special ops
and our main job was to train the troops of dictators in Latin America
to fight guerillas. In those days, the absolute minimum numerical
superiority you needed was 6 to 1 against the guerillas and a whole
lot of generals would have told you 10 to 1. The Turks for example,
when they were fighting the Kurds, found out that 100 to 1 wasn't
even enough. And that's the way it is because you can't shoot what
you can't find. That's the essence of guerilla war troops
can't shoot what they can't find. So the guerillas have this enormous
advantage making the odds of winning the Afghan war less than 5%.
Daily Bell:
The war is destabilizing Pakistan. Will Pakistan survive?
Richard
Maybury: I doubt it very much. I would not be surprised if the
next country to go down, which is the next puppet in the US Empire,
will be the government of Pakistan. I was talking about this yesterday
with some friends and we were saying, OK, Tunisia has gone down
and Yemen is near it and Egypt is now going down what's going
to be the next one to fall? If I had to bet money, I would probably
bet on Pakistan. It could be somebody else but I have often written
that Pakistan is the most dangerous country in the world. It's one
of the most unstable and it has dozens of nuclear weapons. I really
can't say enough bad things about Pakistan.
Daily Bell:
How will Afghanistan end up? Will the Pashtuns retain their independence
from the West?
Richard
Maybury: Yes. Probably all those tribes will regain their independence
from the West. The West is just not going to make the sacrifices
necessary to go in there and defeat them. In fact, nobody even knows
what victory looks like over there. Nobody has been able to sit
down and write what victory looks like over there. Nobody has yet
to come up with that description.
Daily Bell:
We are obviously in a very unusual period in history now. What do
you think is an aspect of this period that few investors have recognized?
Richard
Maybury: Getting back to my March issue, "The Fall of the
US Empire," the White House has this policy that says the US
government has no empire. Nobody in the financial industry ever
looks at the fact that it does have an empire and yet the empire
has such a huge impact on the flow of money. So I think that's the
single biggest thing that is being overlooked by the financial industry
and now the empire has begun to collapse.
Daily Bell:
Good points. Any books or articles you would especially recommend?
Richard
Maybury: Well the March issue is going to have a lot in it about
the fall of the empire and how it's going to affect the financial
industry. This is where my attention has really been focused lately.
I want to point out that I count the beginning of the Great Monetary
Calamity as August of 2007 and this means we are almost 4 years
into this economic crisis. I have given this an enormous amount
of coverage over the last 4 years but now I think it's going to
be eclipsed by the fall of the empire. That is where our newsletter
is headed now. We're going back to covering more geo-politics
to covering more of the collapse of the empire.
Daily Bell:
Closing thoughts?
Richard
Maybury: America was a really special place between the end
of WWII in 1945 and 9/11. Most Americans don't realize how special
it was. It was very close to a golden age and probably should be
called a golden age. However, now that golden age is over. The financial,
career and business strategies that worked very well during that
golden age won't work any more. You have to recognize that we are
now back into what is normal for mankind, which is a whole lot of
war and economic turmoil and general upheaval. That's what's normal
on this planet and we are back to normal now. So you need to adopt
a new paradigm a new model of the world you are living in,
which is that we are back to normal now. The golden age is over
for a while, at least for the next 510 years, and then it
will come back as the necessary political reforms are made. Here's
my point again as we get more ethical the golden age
will come back again. We have this period that we are going to go
through that's going to be really nasty and people need to concentrate
on adapting to this nasty period in order to get through it with
as little discomfort and as much profit as possible.
Daily Bell:
It's been an honor and you have been so generous with your time
today. We encourage readers to consider subscribing to Richard's
newsletter. Click here for more
information.
Daily Bell
After Thoughts
This is a truly
great and comprehensive interview with a fine thinker and observer
of the modern scene. There are so many delights in this interview
for Daily Bell readers that we won't try to catalogue them. The
viewer can make up his or her own mind. What stands out most for
us is Richard Maybury's strong philosophical bent, his ability to
place modern events into a specific context that is historically
persuasive. It is a great talent acquired from disciplined study
of history and economics.
We hardly want
to write anything more; but for the sake of providing some intellectual
content in this "after thought," we will revisit the one
real area of difference that we have Richard Maybury's world view.
That has to do with a power elite that is cognizant of the world
scene and making active attempts to influence it. The Daily Bell's
brief, generally, has to do with analyzing the dominant social themes
of this power elite, which has world government as its goal. It
uses fear-based promotions to push Western middle classes to give
up wealth and control to international, authoritarian institutions
in furtherance of these goals.
If one reads
the above interview with the idea of an active and aggressive power
elite in mind, the points that Maybury makes fall into an undeniable
pattern (from our view). Almost everything going on can be seen
within the context of a larger, attempted centralization
one that has run into the decentralizing force of the Internet itself.
This is the struggle of the New Age the 21st century
and no one is much better at deciphering the ramifications than
Maybury, even though he doesn't fully accept the premise (as propounded
by this website).
No matter,
his observations are so acute and his grasp of history so vast that
his conclusions are valuable with or without the Bell's putative
context-overlay. He is truly one-of-a-kind and has been educating
people for decades. Those who believe that people are better off
if they understand their culture and their place within it owe Richard
Maybury a debt of gratitude. Additionally, we are grateful for the
amount of time he spent with us on this interview. Thank you, Mr.
Maybury for all you've done and have yet to do.
Reprinted
with permission from The
Daily Bell.
February
7, 2011
Anthony
Wile is an author, columnist and entrepreneur focused on developing
projects that promote the general advancement of free-market thinking
concepts. He is the Chairman and CEO of the Swiss-based publishing
firm Appenzeller Business Press AG (ARBP). He is a senior editor
of ARBP's flagship news site, TheDailyBell.com.
In 2010, ARBP founded and appointed Mr. Wile as the Executive Director
of The Foundation for the Advancement of Free-Market Thinking –
a non-profit Liechtenstein-based foundation. His most popular book,
High
Alert, is now in its third edition and available in several
languages. Other notable books written by Mr. Wile include The
Liberation of Flockhead (2002) and The Value of Gold (2002).
Copyright
© 2011 The
Daily Bell
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