Foreword
to Bagels, Barry Bonds, and Rotten Politicians
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Since
the hyper-statist Progressive Era especially, American intellectuals
have tended to disrespect and even hate business people. Instead
of troubling themselves to learn about the real world of commerce,
and the entrepreneurs who are responsible for the material well-being
of the world, intellectuals have tended to promote everything evil,
from Communism to perpetual neocon wars. Business people in turn
have rightly suspected that anything smacking of scholarship might
pose a mortal threat. But this split is not inevitable. As Murray
N. Rothbard noted, it was Ludwig von Mises who saw that the free
society had no future without an alliance between capitalist intellectuals
and the far-seeing business leaders who could make their work possible.
Burton
S. Blumert is an example of what Mises and Rothbard hoped for, an
entrepreneur dedicated to the intellectual cause of freedom and
free enterprise. That cause started to become clear for Burt when
he enlisted in the Air Force to avoid being drafted into Truman’s
slave army during his war on North Korea. As a member of a socialist
organization, Burt saw that a society organized in that fashion
would be catastrophic for humanity.
After
the war and NYU, Burt began his private-sector experience, and learned
that this sector is the one and only key to social progress. It
was also in this period that Burt was exposed to the writings of
Ayn Rand, Mises, and Rothbard. In fact, he knew Mises, and was later
Murray’s closest friend.
After
managing a chain of millinery shops in the South – he has loved
the region ever since for its manners and traditions – Burt was
transferred to California, and then entered the coin and precious
metals business, eventually establishing the Camino Coin Company
and running it for almost fifty years. Burt always felt blessed
to be dealing in collector coins, a hobby he had enjoyed his whole
life. Camino, while always important, was central to monetary affairs
in the 1960s and 1970s, decades of dramatic changes in the precious
metals market.
The
US had abandoned the domestic gold standard and then the coinage
of silver. Ever since FDR, it had been illegal for Americans to
own gold. That finally changed, and people needed a reliable business
to make that ownership real. Camino became the most respected name
in the industry. Burt’s buy-sell spreads consistently beat the competition,
his attention to the consumer was famous – his long-term customers
became his friends – and he fought against unethical practices,
as recognized by various industry groups. Burt was also a Silicon
Valley pioneer: in 1970, he founded the first computerized price
and news network that knit together dealers all over country, and
made the coin market more efficient. Xerox recognized Burt’s entrepreneurial
achievement when it bought the network.
As
a collector, Burt would use real examples of hard money and depreciated
paper money for the most engaging lessons in monetary history and
theory I’ve ever heard. He especially enjoyed teaching young people
about inflation, and the direct connection between monetary deprecation
and tyranny. Among his tools were zero-filled Yugoslavian notes,
and paper currency printed and used in Nazi concentration camps.
Burt
helped Murray Rothbard found the Center for Libertarian Studies
in 1976, later becoming its president. In this role, he was publisher
of the Journal of Libertarian Studies and the Austrian
Economics Newsletter, and the benefactor – materially and in
friendship – to many libertarian intellectuals. His offices were
a kind of home base for thinkers in the movement. He also became
the chairman of the Mises Institute, succeeding Margit von Mises,
and then the publisher of the Rothbard-Rockwell Report
and its successor, LewRockwell.com, where these funny and profound
essays first appeared.
Burt
Blumert has been charitable, far-seeing, and steadfast in his role
as Misesian-Rothbardian entrepreneur. As a man, he is funny, charming,
decent, and generous. As a writer, as you will see from this book,
he is a talented satirist who can teach the truths of liberty and
life while making you laugh out loud. Most of all, he has shown
how the Mises-Rothbard dream of drawing together commerce and ideas
can be achieved.
September
16, 2008
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is founder and president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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