The Cause That Won't Go Away
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
The first conference
hosted by the Mises Institute was on the gold standard. How well
I can recall the names we were called in Washington, DC. Reactionaries,
Neanderthals, irrelevant to the modern debate, worshippers of a
barbarous relic, throwbacks, pipe dreamers, and the rest: all designed
to make us all shut up about the most important issue in modern
political life.
But we cannot
afford to shut up, and the desire of so many agents of the regime
to change the subject only proves its importance. So long as government
can fund itself by printing paper, it will continue to wreck the
economy and our freedom. It is the most critical tool leviathan
has, so it is the most important one to take away.
We held our
conference, and a book came out of it that is still in print: The
Gold Standard: Perspectives in the Austrian School.
Here we are
twenty-five years later, and the issue is back, even as the topic
of public conversation.
I thought of
this when I watched a C-Span interview
with Professor Joseph Salerno, who has taught and written so much
on monetary policy for the Mises Institute.
Many thousands watched this live and then again on the internet.
This type of public education is enormously valuable. The most important
single step we can take is to say what's true. Through this one
step the topic remains a living presence in the intellectual culture
of the country.
Of course,
Ron Paul did heroic work this year and last – as he has throughout
his career – in constantly reminding people of the need to discuss
foundational issues of monetary policy. His work led many people
to look up further resources. And what do they find? They find essays
and books by Rothbard, Mises, de Soto, and so many others on Mises.org.
Here is the world center of good intellectual work on the gold standard.
It took all
these years to put together this treasury of writings. We did it,
under the inspiration of Murray Rothbard, while hardly anyone else
cared about it, or bitterly opposed it. Generous donors supported
us in this cause when it was unpopular to do so. But because of
the resources devoted to it, these works are all available when
they are needed most. This is what it means to do entrepreneurial
intellectual work. You write and talk about principles during times
when people say what you are doing is ridiculous. Only later is
your work seen as visionary.
Why is the
gold standard back again as a topic of debate? Well, we might start
by looking at what is happening to prices. The increases are intolerable
for the American consumer. They are hitting in the worst way, and
countering the good trends toward falling prices in sectors such
as electronics and imported goods. For years, price increases have
crept along in ways that did not alarm people, but sticker shock
recently has led many to ask serious questions. The problem of the
falling dollar has impeded imports and travel, and disrupted investment
plans internationally.
Popular fears
of a long and deep recession are growing. Everyone knows that this
has something to do with the oil-price shock as well as the housing
bust, but how precisely is not well known. But monetary policy figures
into the mix in an important way.
Meanwhile,
even the mainstream press is shocked at the machinations of Ben
Bernanke's Federal Reserve, as it resorts to every means not only
to print new money, but to force it into the banking system through
bribes and trickery.
There is finally
the problem of an out-of-control government. No one is in a position
to restrain the president, the congress, or the courts so long as
the dollar is as printable as paper. Matters of fiscal policy become
purely illusory. This is the most dishonest form of finance there
is. It makes a mockery of elections, debates, budgets, and just
about every other aspect of government.
In the end,
the strongest case for the gold standard isn't limited to economic
matters. It is a guardian of freedom itself – a point that Alan
Greenspan once made in his writing, under the influence of Ludwig
von Mises, the 20th century's great gold advocate along
with his leading student, Rothbard.
People have
lots of questions about how to restore gold as money. These are
all fascinating, but my whole experience here tells me that the
resistance to radical reform has nothing to do with such technical
details. People suspect that the gold standard would disempower
the nation state as we know it, including its ability to wage endless
wars. To me, this is the strongest case for reform. If we want freedom
and peace, the gold standard is the topic that cannot and will not
die.
To
learn more, see the Mises Institute's Gold
Standard Collection. See also these popular
and scholarly
articles.
June
3, 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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