Time
To Bury the Guns … or To Load Them?
by
Vin Suprynowicz
by Vin Suprynowicz
DIGG THIS
Its hard
to write about politics of any kind in a straddler column
one keyboarded in early October to appear on most newsstands
the week AFTER a national election.
As I write
this, the autumn 2008 global stock and financial swoop is well underway.
The problem was caused, first, by reckless expansion of credit and
the currency supply, encouraging the final bubble which
caps every boom-bust business cycle under an inflationary, fiat-currency
system tied to the accompanying legalized fraud known as fractional
reserve banking. (Read Ludwig Von Mises or far easier
to digest Murray Rothbard.)
Guilty party?
Everyone in power in Washington since 1912, but especially presidents
Roosevelt, Johnson, and Nixon, for taking us completely off hard
gold and silver money, which used to limit such balloons by allowing
our great-grandparents to expose fraudulent expansion by demanding
payment in specie, which is to say bullion: real money.
The secondary
cause was bank regulators no, U.S. banking was not de-regulated
in the past eight years pressuring banks to make bad loans
to non-creditworthy borrowers (mostly racial minority
borrowers that was the whole point) under the Democrat-birthed
Community Redevelopment Act of 1977, as beefed up by the Clinton
Democrats in 1995.
Guilty parties?
Bill Clinton, Chris Dodd, Barney Frank, Hillary Clinton, Barack
Obama everyone who favors making all our banks essentially
part of one big bank via one-size-fits-all federal regulation
and the Federal Reserve Board. So of course, Octobers financial
crisis led more folks to say theyd vote Democratic, in search
of change. (Feel free to insert your own sourpuss
version of one of those smileys, here.)
The final cause?
The best solution would have been precisely to do nothing,
allowing mis-invested banks to fail and better managers to buy up
their remaining good assets at auction during which time
we all might indeed have had to live for a few months essentially
without credit (Oh, the horror; what do you suppose
grandpas credit line was in 1938?) In fact, in
his recently re-issued book The Mystery of Banking,
my late friend Murray Rothbard insists allowing mis-invested banks
to fail isnt a sign that the free market is failing
its a VITAL AND NECESSARY PART of any free market.
But, terrified
that the Democrats would point fingers and call them do-nothings
and make them cry, the Federal Reserves Bailout Ben Bernanke
and Treasury Secretary Shifty Paulson ran around doing their best
Halloween imitation of the relentless interventionist Herbert Hoover,
assuring everyone Things will be fine! Were continuing
to plow more fake Monopoly Money into the system! The first trillion
dollars didnt work, so were going to do it some more!
Guilty Party?
George W. Bush, whos supposed to be providing adult, conservative
supervision to this gang of highly credentialed idiots, not merely
reading their scripts on TV.
So the winner
of the Nov. 4 election as you doubtless know by now, but
as I could hardly know when this was written was the only
presidential candidate to join Texas Republican Ron Paul in roundly
condemning the whole bailout follies . . . Libertarian
nominee and former Georgia Congressman Bob Barr. Right?
I didnt
think so.
Lets
wrap up a few other matters:
I have my ongoing
differences with the National Rifle Association, whose executives
have met far too many unconstitutional gun regulations they think
are just right.
But I appreciated
their press release of Sept. 10, responding to a rally in rural
Lebanon, Virginia, where Barack Obama made another one of
his empty election-year promises not to take away shotguns, rifles
or handguns if elected president.
Chief NRA lobbyist
Chris Cox responded: He has supported bans on handguns and
semi-automatic firearms, and he has voted to ban possession of many
shotguns and rifles commonly used by hunters and sportsmen across
America. And we will remind voters every single time he lies.
In 2003 while
serving in the Illinois State Legislature, Obama voted in favor
of a bill in the Judiciary Committee that would have made it illegal
to knowingly manufacture, deliver or possess a so-called
semi-automatic assault weapons, the NRA researchers
learned. Under this bill, a firearm did not actually have
to be semi-automatic to be banned. According to definitions in the
bill, all single-shot and double-barreled shotguns 28-gauge or larger,
and many semi-automatic shotguns of the same size, would be banned
as assault weapons.
This
definition would have banned a large percentage of the shotguns
used for hunting, target shooting and self-defense in the United
States. The bill also would have banned hundreds of models of rifles
and handguns.
Any Illinois
resident who possessed one of these commonly used guns 90 days after
the effective date would have had to destroy the weapon or
device, render it permanently inoperable, relinquish it to a law
enforcement agency, or remove it from the state. Anyone who
still possessed a banned gun would have been subject to a felony
sentence.
Obama
may argue the bill was poorly drafted, said Cox. But
Barack Obama who brags about being a constitutional law professor
and the former president of the Harvard Law Review voted
for it. Thats pathetic.
B.R. writes
in from Pahrump, Nevada:
I moved
from California eight years ago.
I havent researched
its current gun laws, but I doubt that they have become more lax
since I left. In your column, you refer to prohibited loaded
guns in parks unless locked in a trunk, etc. I believe thats
an error.
When
I lived there, you couldnt carry a loaded weapon locked in
a car trunk anywhere in the state. Loosely interpreted, the law
stated that ammunition had to be stored completely separate from
the weapon, with three distinct acts required to combine the two.
That basically meant that one component had to be in the glove compartment
or other locked container, and the other had to be in the trunk,
or locked box if in the back of a truck, etc. The three acts would
then be comprised of unlocking the glove box to access the gun or
ammo, exiting the vehicle, and unlocking the trunk to get at the
other component.
I know
that some cops were relaxed about enforcing such strict laws. I
personally had a cop find a loaded 9 mm pistol under my seat during
a routine traffic stop. (No, I didnt prevent him from searching
my vehicle. I usually try not to piss cops off.) He asked why I
had a loaded weapon hidden from view. I explained that I worked
graveyard shift in downtown L.A. and didnt want to be defenseless.
He said he understood, but that he could arrest me. He didnt,
but he advised me that other cops might not be so understanding,
so please follow the law.
Anyway,
I love your column. Keep up the great work.
Finally, returning
to an earlier topic, I recently stumbled on an economist whose advice
might prove useful in Washington, these days, even though hes
not a pure laissez-faire capitalist, mores the pity.
Instead
of furthering the inevitable liquidation of the maladjustments brought
about by the boom during the last three years, all conceivable means
have been used to prevent that readjustment from taking place; and
one of these means, which has been repeatedly tried though without
success, from the earliest to the most recent stages of depression,
has been this deliberate policy of credit expansion, this
fellow explains.
To combat
the depression by a forced credit expansion is to attempt to cure
the evil by the very means which brought it about; because we are
suffering from a misdirection of production, we want to create further
misdirection a procedure that can only lead to a much more
severe crisis as soon as the credit expansion comes to an end,
he continues.
It is
probably to this experiment, together with the attempts to prevent
liquidation once the crisis had come, that we owe the exceptional
severity and duration of the depression. We must not forget that,
for the last six or eight years, monetary policy all over the world
has followed the advice of the stabilizers. It is high time that
their influence, which has already done harm enough, should be overthrown.
The
fellows name is Friedrich August von Hayek, author of the
1944 classic The Road to Serfdom, a title meant to refer
to the kind of economic policies being promoted these days by Ben
Bernanke, Henry Paulson, Chris Dodd, Barney Frank, George Bush,
Barack Obama, Harry Reid, and it gives me no joy to report
John McCain.
He spoke these
words during an earlier presidential campaign, in which Americans
faced an equally unappetizing choice between a small field of misguided
socialist meddlers, in June of 1932.
F.A. Hayek
shared the Nobel Prize for economics in 1974. He died in 1992. Not
that it matters. If he were still alive, hed still be waiting
for anyone in Washington with the possible exceptions of
Ron Paul and Bob Barr to listen to him.
See Congressman
Ron Pauls warning on where the bailout will
lead.
November
14, 2008
Vin
Suprynowicz [send
him mail] is assistant editorial page editor of the daily Las
Vegas Review-Journal and author of The
Black Arrow.
Copyright
© 2008 Vin Suprynowicz
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