|
2010 Ready or Not Here
It Comes
|
|
|
Much has been written about the Great Depression and the
present crisis. There is much that is similar and some that is not. The
differences explain why events have unfolded differently. The similarities
explain why the end will be the same.
WAITING FOR THE OTHER SHOE TO DROP A
DAISY CHAIN OF DISASTER
The present economic crisis is similar to that of a patient
who has suffered a massive near-fatal heart attack. Presently surviving
only because of constant care and unprecedented levels of medication, it is
the unprecedented levels of medication that will ultimately cause the
patient’s death.
The amount of monetary stimulus keeping the global economy
afloat has never been greater. Two of the largest economies in the world,
the US and Japan, now have interest rates close to zero and, along with the
UK, are engaged in “quantitative easing”, a monetary phenomena
akin to self abuse, i.e. self-stimulation.
Extreme measures of monetary stimulation via money printing
are necessary to counteract the deflationary pressures set in motion by
declining asset values against which massive amounts have been borrowed.
But, in the end, creating money out of nothing will reduce the value of
money to exactly that—nothing.
This is the path upon which governments and central bankers
have embarked. Fraught with danger and pitfalls, it was not their first
choice—it was their only choice—and the rising price of gold is
a measure of how far on the path they have traveled. Just prior to the
collapse of the dot.com bubble, gold was $300 per ounce. Today, it has
exceeded $1200.
It is not a coincidence that as monetary debasement
has reached unprecedented levels the price of gold has also reached
unprecedented heights. As money printing has increased, so, too, has the
transparency of its fraud. Money printed in increasing quantities becomes
increasingly worthless; and, gold, as an intrinsic store of value, reflects
the accelerating debasement of money in its price.
Not all believe, however, that gold is a function of
monetary debasement.

In How To Survive The Crisis and Prosper In The
Process I discuss common reactions in these uncommon times. Because
periods of systemic monetary distress are rare, most will misinterpret
economic signs during what I call The Time of the Vulture.
In times of expansion, it is to the hare the prizes go.
Quick, risk taking, and bold, his qualities are exactly suited to the
times. In periods of contraction, the tortoise is favored. Slow and
conservative, quick only to retract his vulnerable head and neck, his is
the wisest bet when the slow and sure is preferable to the quick and
easy.
Every so often, however, there comes a time
when neither the hare nor the tortoise is the victor. This is when both the
bear and the bull have been vanquished, when the pastures upon which the
bull once grazed are long gone and the bear's lair itself lies buried deep
beneath the rubble of economic collapse.
This is the time of the vulture, for the
vulture feeds neither upon the pastures of the bull nor the stored up
wealth of the bear. The vulture feeds instead upon the blind ignorance and
denial of the ostrich. The time of the vulture is at hand.
Chapter One, How To Survive The Crisis and Prosper In
The Process, 1997, www.survivethecrisis.com
Most investors are unprepared for times of deep systemic
change; times when both bulls and bears are unprepared for what will be.
Ignorance will provide no protection, however, and those who do not
understand will pay a high price for their prolonged denial.
… Being risk taking or risk adverse is
often due to personality. But people do choose to be ostriches, especially
in times of change. This is because denial of change—the refuge of
the ostrich—gives all of us a sense of security. Though the security
is as false as the comfort it offers, unfortunately many, if not most of
us, will choose to be ostriches in the days ahead. Chapter One,
How To Survive The Crisis and Prosper In The Process, 1997, www.survivethecrisis.com

In times of deep change, few will understand what is
happening and instead of changing, most will persist in clinging to the old
even as it is being swept away. Events change but human nature rarely
does—at least not yet.
This is a process that has happened countless times throughout history.
That it is happening today is either fortune or misfortune. Whether it is
one or the other will be determined by each of us.
CAPITALISM’S FINAL PAROXYSM
The deep systemic change now in motion will result in the
collapse of capitalism. Capitalism, a system that replaced money and
savings with credit and debt, is in disarray as never before.
Capitalism: It’s a bit like borrowing from Peter
to pay Paul. Except in the case of capitalism, it’s your money
you’re borrowing, Peter and Paul are the same person and he’s a
banker.
Capitalism has long been identified with free markets. In
actuality, capitalism is any system where the banker’s capital, i.e.
credit, has become the engine of economic growth and debt has replaced
savings as an asset. Free markets existed long before being exploited by
bankers and will exist long after.
Capitalism, however, does thrive in free markets because
capitalism, like the parasite it is, thrives best when attached to a
vibrant and expanding host. Unfortunately, its host is far less vibrant now
that the global economy is contracting and succumbing to the
parasite’s destructive appetite.
Not since the deflationary collapse of the Great Depression
has the banker’s system of credit and debt been under so much stress.
Today, that stress has been temporarily contained. Tomorrow will be another
story.
GOLD—THE BAROMETER OF SYSTEMIC
DISTRESS
From its central bank induced lows in the 1990s, the
price of gold has almost quintupled. Today, gold seems expensive. In the
future, today’s price will seem like a bargain.
We are now approaching the final stage of the collapse of
the bankers’ house of cards; when debt levels are so high they can no
longer be serviced, crushing those still trapped by credit’s
promissory lure.
Hyman Minsky, the late American economist, made a seminal
contribution to the study of debt in his financial instability hypothesis.
In the early stages of capitalist systems, interest and principal can be
serviced out of the debtor’s cash flow. In the final stage of
“mature capitalist systems”, they cannot.
Capitalism’s final stage is what Minsky calls
“ponzi-financing”, when debt payments can only be made by
additional borrowing. This is what the US, the UK and Japan are doing
today, having to borrow against tomorrow in order to pay yesterday’s
bills.
For 50 years, not one Dollar of new debt created by the
US government to fund the activities it does not wish to tax for has been
repaid. The debt has simply been “re-financed” with new debt
being sold to retire the existing debt.
The Privateer, Late November 09, issue 6430100,
www.the-privateer.com
At some point, the end finally arrives.
Ponzi-financing cannot service debt forever. Investing in unhedged paper
assets is the bet that it can. Gold is the bet that it cannot.
TYRANNY FREEDOM & THE FUTURE
The ideal tyranny is that which is ignorantly
self-administered by its victims. The most perfect slaves are, therefore,
those which blissfully and unawaredly enslave themselves.
When a well-packaged web of lies has been sold
gradually to the masses over generations, the truth will seem utterly
preposterous and its speaker a raving lunatic.
Donald James (1931-2008)
The movie, The Matrix, has been described as a
metaphor for life. The economic matrix in which we are enmeshed is no less
real or unreal. Escape and/or freedom within it exists but it is not easily
achieved.
Those who wield power within the current economic system
are engaged in a life and death struggle to maintain it. Supporting their
efforts are the oppressed who rightfully believe the end of economic
tyranny will only come at a price they are unwilling to pay.
Those fearful of systemic change include both who benefit
from the system and those oppressed by it. Neither possesses the requisite
power to prevent it.
Power is no more control than
credit is money
We are already seeing evidence of deep systemic
change. The falling away of the old will make way for what is to be; and,
despite our efforts, none of us can stop it. If we could, we would all
still be living in trees.
Buy gold, buy silver, have faith.
Darryl Robert Schoon
www.survivethecrisis.com
blog www.posdev.net/pdn/index.php?option=com_myblog&blogger=
drs&Itemid=81
****
November 2-5, Professor Fekete
will be speaking in Australia on “The World Financial Crisis and the
Vanishing Gold Basis”. For those wishing to know more about the
professor, the wikipedia reference, http://en.wikipedia.org
/wiki/Antal_E._Fekete, is invaluable. I also discuss Professor Fekete
on my YouTube channel, http://www.youtube.com/user/SchoonWorks. For
information about the up-coming event in Australia, see http://www.professorfekete.c
om/gsul.asp . I, and others, will be speaking as well.