The
Wonder Springs Chronicle
Let
the spooky times begin!
3
November 2010
Volume
12, Issue 43
Access
now the fresh insights of ÒThe Wonder
Springs ChronicleÓ Front Page. Be sure to check out the grizzly times wisdom
and fresh insights of BruteÕ Griz every Friday and our Monday Cult Football
series article was ÒR U Normal.Ó This column also now appears each
Wednesday on Deep Woods Moola, Redux Rendezvous and ÒThe Creation
Leadership CenterÓ.
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AmericaÕs
second most favorite holiday, Halloween, has come and gone again. The midterm
elections are now over and even though the hassle over winners and losers in
some races will continue for some time, it is time to move forward. Today the
Federal Reserve is meeting and the preliminary results show some quantitative
easing, more than some had hoped for, but not enough for the money hounds.
So
where do we go from here? Take a deep breath and let the spooky times begin.
The
first major question seems to revolve around the premise, that Barak Obama has
no real understanding of the reasons of what just happened, and probably has
surrounded himself with advisors, who really donÕt have the intestinal
fortitude to tell him, or donÕt think he will understand — so why bother.
Needless
to say, for the next couple of years, until after the 2012 election, will
include some serious hubris about economics, finance, money, and taxes. The
question will be who or what will become the nemesis of these spooky times?
While
the Biblical metaphor of Abraham leaving Ur to go to a land that God will show
him, is probably too religious for most people, in reality, probably your
danger principle should flag first and foremost those who state that they
really have the answer. The common reality seems to suggest that we are closer
to the beginning of this societal odyssey than near the destination. The travel
adventures of Odysseus seem to be a good time frame for these spooky times, so
it is probably wise for you to develop some sources of fundamental re supply
along the way.
Last
week in ÒYou CanÕt Buy Creativity?Ó we proposed the
creation of an individual entrepreneurial frontier of the Wild West, free from
all the regulations that so easily entangle todayÕs startup enterprises. Then
we need to let that liberty and freedom create new wealth, something that
has been missing from the American
economic equation for at least a generation.
Put
into some sort of academic jargon, so that even the president and vice
president might understand, the goal of what we called Moola Land was to
restructure the historical commons so that those who currently have no access
to capital, other than through leveraged debt, might be able to create wealth
from equity money. This Òright?Ó now is only commonly available to those who
have access to Wall Street investment bankers.
I
really like our vice president in a humors sense, sometimes mixed within all
his spin he says some things that are utterly profound, but I doubt he really
understands the depth of what he said, and those who report his remarks really
have no understanding of the broader context either.
Joe
reminds me of one of my unclesÕ father in law; I called him BS Henry. Henry
could talk faster and say things that made no sense to anyone for long periods
of time, however sometimes amidst all the blather, he would say something truly
profound. If you interrupted him and took him back to the statement, his
response was he was totally unaware of what he had just so profoundly
stated.
This
week we will see that spooky times are really a failure of the commons that
provided for the misapplication of capital. Through government programs in
harmony or in collusion with the Òcapitalist money structureÓ we have either
through systematic planning or stupidity continued to concentrate wealth (as
money) in the hands of a few rather than providing for the Òcommon good.Ó
The
henryism that Òsay it ainÕt so JoeÓ uttered was basically Òthat the federal
government has been responsible for much of the development of the United
States for the last 200 years.Ó We shall assume what Joe was talking about in
the nineteenth century context, were the intercontinental railroads and the
homestead programs.
So
were these truly great achievements of federalism, or were they just
bureaucratic misapplication of market principles? Did they succeed because the
government got it right, or because the government play was the only game in
town, or more properly, the nation?
The
correct answer was these federal programs did allow for the closing of the
western frontier, but we are still forced to live and restructure the American
landscape because the governmentÕs once size fits all (egalitarian) solution.
Could some sort of free market approach have done it better or faster, but as
in FDRÕs New Deal, it is just water behind the dam reservoir?
Virtually
all the railroad development in the west was done on the basis of state and
federal land grants. This was true for regional lines as well as the
transcontinental. The significant question that relates to us today were these
railroad builders really railroad developers, or did they develop the railroads
because that was a requirement to be major western land speculators?
It
seems the latter is truer than the former. The only transcontinental railroad
built in the United States without land grant help was the Great Northern. St.
Paul entrepreneurial capitalist James J. Hill, with the eventual terminus in
Seattle, built the Great Northern through primarily the use of his railway
bonds as a funding mechanism. If it were not for the progressive distain of
president Theodore Roosevelt, in his lifetime Hill would have probably owned a
western railroad monopoly. Today
the Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNSF) recently purchased by Warren Buffet, is
HillÕs legacy brought in harmony with the delayed fruits of government
activism.
With
their land grants, railroad speculators sold much of their free land to farmers
and others. Those land sales however, because of the freedom in the real estate
market, are the basis for the continuing success of American agriculture. Could
that land have been directly sold by the government to the frontier people and
then used that wealth in productive common ways? Again this land grant program
provides for stories to be mulled over with a good brandy in the appropriate
gentlemanÕs club.
Without
land grants, it still could be said that much of HillÕs market success was the
result of being able to provide a route to eastern markets for Midwestern
homesteads. Especially in the areas of the tall grass prairie these 160-acre
homesteads were of sufficient size for
JeffersonÕs dream of the yeoman farmer to become reality. Sadly when you
moved beyond the one hundredth meridian, (near Minot, North Dakota today and
south) that 160 acres, this time short grass prairie flowing into desert, a
government edict of one size fits all homesteads, becomes a slow progressing
economic disaster to those who really had nothing to begin with.
Wallace
Stegner covers this demise of arid and semiarid homesteading extensively in his
classic work: ÒBeyond the Hundredth Meridian, John Wesley Powell and the
Second Opening of the West.Ó On the basis of the book there are
those who criticize Powell for being an early progressive, promoting giving out
land to the poor folks who had a true American Dream.
However
homesteading was the governmental program designed in Washington DC to settle
the west. The real problem, really didnÕt come from a mechanism of people
achieving the American Dream through land acquisition, the failure stemmed from
the egalitarianÕs stupid concept that 160 acres and hope was enough land,
anywhere, for anyone. Powell believed that homesteads could be successful in a
few as 40 acres with access to significant water, to beyond no less than 2560 acres where livestock grazing was the
only means of achieving farm profitability.
So
what we really see is not as Joe Biden said, the success of government in
meddling with markets, but really just a mechanism to dash the hopes of those,
who really had nothing but hope and gumption to begin with. It seems as the
more things change, many realities remain the same.
For
example on my motherÕs side of the family my great grandfather Jump, homesteaded
and built a successful homestead in Jump Canyon on the shores of the Columbia
River, near Whitestone Rock. With the profits from that 160 acres, basically
which today would be called a truck farm, he was able to buy more land, and the
residual of that homestead still above the waters of Lake Roosevelt, the
reservoir behind Grand Coulee Dam, is now the vineyard of the Whitestone
Winery.
On
the other hand my grandfather and great grandfather on my fatherÕs side of the
family made an attempt to homestead 320 acres at an elevation of 2800 feet in
the Okanogan Highland, less than 70 miles to the northwest. Even a century ago
PowellÕs 2560-acre rule should have applied. Part of this homestead dream was
also hampered in that it was situated on what had been the north half of the
Colville Indian Reservation which was opened to homesteaders in 1900.
The
bottomland, where the small Bannon Creek now flows, maintained ownership as
Indian allotments, where the homesteads were located on even more questionable
uplands, than the marginal land of the creek bottom. For his part great
grandpa, was smart enough to realize his blunder and moved to California
leaving his wife alone to manage the homestead. This wife leaving is the way
the story was told on this end of the family, but then again maybe he realized
his stupid mistake and his wife didnÕt, or wouldnÕt.
In
the big picture of property rights, at least in the American west and the
closing of the frontier, the ownership of physical property was always a means
to create wealth, but money was always the wagging-tail tale.
When
we look at the real estate meltdown as the true cause of the current mess and
the election results from yesterday, what you really see is a couple of
centuries of wagging-tail tales. No one in leadership either seems to care, or
has the broad management skills to foresee the changes needed and attempt to
implement them. In other words we need a John Wesley Powell today, and people willing
not to dismiss Powell type solutions because they are too complicated for
government politicians, totally too complex for the government bureaucrats.
This solution is something that limits those who only leverage money, and moves
financial liquidity to the wealth creators.
I
see the results of yesterdayÕs election and the promise of todayÕs quantitative
easing to be just a continuing of the same ditch we have been traveling for a
generation. The real problem is the so-called solutions can no longer do
anything other than create more really spooky times of real stupendous change.
As
of this early left coast writing, the House swing is reported to be 64 seats to
the Republicans, with 11 still up in the air. The Senate is plus 6 for the
Republicans with Washington and Colorado leaning Democrat, and Alaskan
write-ins leading, which should be interesting to watch as time marches on.
The
consensus is of course that divided government really doesnÕt do all that much,
which is superior to doing something wrong. But in spooky times, doing nothing
has a magnifying effect much different than when continuing down the same path
during prosperity with common support.
After
election reporting states that the Federal Reserve will face much more
scrutiny. Like most Americans, for a long time I thought that inflation was
something that sort of happened because nobody really knew what was going on.
Now it seems that might have never been the case. The current goal of the
quantitative easing is to boost inflation to just two percent, to help ease the
bad times and to get the economy moving again.
So
you work hard, try to raise your family, put away a little money and
investments for your older years, and now you learn that the grand plan of the
unregulated forth arm of the government is out to make your due diligence
worthless, as they reward with cheap money their crony friends from whence they
themselves came forth.
It
seems that all the Tea Party outrage at government spending is grossly
misplaced, as we have been living for a long time in a Halloween house of
mirrors. In this light of day, outside the last spooky door, it seems like
something as mundane as Òauditing the FEDÓ truly is quite similar to arranging
the deck chairs on the Titanic. This might be the economic time to eliminate
the FED social Darwinists from the governance gene pool.
The
wealth creation solutions like we stated last week, must come from outside our
common understanding of our Federal structure. Those powers are not going to
release their power easily, especially when many people still think getting
something from the government is their only hope.
Welcome
to the spooky times, in which a lot a people will again understand the power of
prayer and the reality of GodÕs Providence.
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