Attack of the '70s
You know who to blame, right...?
WRITING for the Brownstone Institute at the end of December 2023, Jeffrey
Tucker offers a synopsis of
the US' recent past, says Tim Price of Price
Value Partners.
It is not an auspicious review:
"As we approach the end
of the year, we are surrounded by a cultural and economic darkness this generation has never seen
before. Most incredibly, public
health itself is wrecked.
"Let's just count the ways. Each consequence dates
from the beginnings of the
lockdowns. That was the turning point, the end of innocence, the great reset, the moment when the choice
between freedom and despotism
weighed heavily in the most inhumane direction.
"Consider:
"Homeless people are
everywhere at record highs (650K), stemming from rampant mental disorder, substance abuse, and
incredibly tight leasing standards
stemming from the eviction moratorium.
"The middle class can no longer afford
to buy a home thanks to high
rates from the Fed, deployed in an attempt to mitigate against inflation which is still running
hot.
"Every
merchant has hidden fees in everything, struggling to find some way to hide the hot potato of inflation
that has eaten 20-plus percent
of the Dollar's purchasing power since 2019.
"Shoplifting is a major national
problem to the point that
thousands of stores have closed.
"Shrinkflation affects everything. The
groceries have shrunk and the bills
have soared – a direct consequence of some $8 trillion in stimulus and money printing.
"Office real estate in
large cities is approaching an accounting crisis because people are not returning to work, their
routines totally shattered by
lockdowns.
"Travel is uncertain with endless delays and cancellations due to
pilot shortages stemming from
stay-at-home orders, vaccine mandates, and rampant illness.
"The 'great reset'
is all around us, as we are
constantly nudged to drive EVs, live without comforts, buy less meat, and even eat bugs.
"A wide-open
Southern border has created an immigration crisis as government neglected its core duties in favor of
insane methods of virus
control.
"Restaurants are unaffordable for most people.
"Dependency on government
handouts is 28 percent higher than in 2019.
"All stores close an hour or two
earlier because they cannot get
workers to stay later.
"The learning losses among the kids are unfathomable,
two years and rising, and
perhaps an entire generation is lost.
"There is a population-wide mental-health
crisis in addition to rampant
substance abuse.
"The federal budget has been blown to smithereens.
"Political
divisions are festering as never before, with neither party willing to discuss the Covid elephant in the
room.
"Our conception of what it means to live in freedom with a government that knows limits to
its power has slipped
away.
"Arts venues are struggling for dear life to survive.
"World trade is
shattered, with new trading blocs replacing the old ones.
"The rise of maniacal
gender dysphoria of the young
is probably connected with this: endless hours online, loss of confidence in the world as it is, plus
loneliness.
"One could argue that even the war in Israel and Gaza is a result: security concerns were
neglected in favor of microbial
activism and shot mandates, and the loss of a moral center to policy then unleashed successive rounds of
violence.
"Finally, there is the loss of trust in everything: government, public health,
pharmaceuticals, academia, science, media,
and each other. Society cannot function without trust. Not even churches are immune from broad
incredulity since most went along with
the Covid response in every detail.
"This only begins to scratch the surface of
what we've lost and what has
replaced it. Ultimately all such tragedies come down to individual lives. These days you hear them only
among friends and families.
And they are terrible stories of sadness and personal despair. The pain is only intensified by the
silence on the part of all
corporate media, government, and other commanding heights. Because of the news block on the whole topic,
there is mass and festering
anger beneath the surface."
We know where to point fingers. US and global
alphabet agencies, unaccountable
lobby groups with the pompous adjective 'World' affixed to their names, the UN, its laughable 2030
Agenda for Sustainable [sic]
Development...
All of these agents of malevolent cretinocracy can be summarised
simply as the grim return of
the Big State.
"The state is a human institution, not a superhuman being. He
who says 'state' means coercion
and compulsion. He who says: There should be a law concerning this matter, means: The armed men of the
government should force people
to do what they do not want to do, or not to do what they like. He who says: This law should be better
enforced, means: The police
should force people to obey this law. He who says: The state is God, deifies arms and prisons. The
worship of the state is the worship
of force. There is no more dangerous menace to civilization than a government of incompetent, corrupt,
or vile men. The worst evils
which mankind ever had to endure were inflicted by bad governments. The state can be and has often been
in the course of history the
main source of mischief and disaster." (Ludwig von Mises, 'Omnipotent Government', 1944, Chapter
3).
Our
formal brief, though, is not to advocate for political causes, but rather to act as responsible stewards
of our clients' valuable
capital. This is not as easy as it sounds in an environment of deeply unsound money and in the run-up to
monetary system regime
change.
Monetary systems change all the time. They changed in 1914, for
example, when the combatant powers
all abandoned the gold standard, because staying on it whilst continuing to prosecute the war would have
bankrupted them almost
immediately. (Sound money saves lives.) They changed for the UK in September 1992 when the pound
sterling was ethnically cleansed from
Europe's exchange rate mechanism because the UK could no longer bear to maintain the peg with the
Deutsche Mark. And they will change
in the months and years to come as the world increasingly comes to realise that the Petro-dollar is no
longer the indisputed
unchallengeable force in global finance given the offensive scale of the US' unpayable debt
burden.
So we
seek safer harbours in assets (not the Big State's liabilities) that are independent, scarce and
permanent – gold and silver amongst
them.
Arguably the most important short assembly of words in the English
language is the phrase 'This Too
Shall Pass'. Consider, for example, the cultural and economic situation of Britain in the 1970s.
Stéphane Porion ('Reassessing a
turbulent decade'):
"Britain was hit throughout the 1970s by skyrocketing
inflation and unemployment
(stagflation, in other words), a wide range of strikes, power cuts, and states of emergency. Trade
unions could be called 'robber
barons', as they opposed the Conservatives' statutory incomes policy and brought down the Conservative
government, thereby answering
the question asked by Edward Heath, when he called a general election in February 1974: 'Who Governs
Britain?'
"After 1975 they were also deemed responsible for tearing to pieces Labour's Social
Contract, paving the way for the
1978-1979 Winter of Discontent which in turn sealed the Labour Party's defeat. British people suffered
from a sense of despair and
pessimism, while Britain struggled in the 1973 oil crisis and, on the brink of bankruptcy in 1976, was
forced to ask for a loan from
the IMF. At the same time, academics started to argue that the country was 'ungovernable' or 'dying',
while the power of the trade
unions seemed impossible to curb."
Or, as Dominic Sandbrook puts it ('State of
Emergency: The Way We
Were'):
"The defining characteristics of the Seventies were economic disaster,
terrorist threats, corruption
in high places, prophecies of ecological doom and fear of the surveillance state's suffocating embrace.
The 1970s have merely been
lurking, like a mad woman in the attic, waiting for a suitable moment when they can re-emerge and scare
us out of our wits all over
again."
And then, at the 1979 General Election, Margaret Thatcher was elected,
and she would go on to become
the longest-serving British prime minister of the 20th century.
That we do not
yet see the Margaret Thatcher
of 2024 does not mean that she, or he, is not out there, quietly mustering resistance to the corrupt
predations of the overlarge
State. The unique energy of the genuine free market – as opposed to the crony corporatism that has
largely held sway these last four
years – is an endless capacity for reinvention.
"This, too, shall pass."











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