The Wonder Springs Chronicle
No Skin In The Game VI
18 May 2011
Volume 13, Issue 20
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Ready
for the storm? ItŐs coming!
Thursday
afternoon my email inbox chimed with a weather alert. A large storm was headed
this way and warm heavy rains, causing a rapid melting of the snow pack, was
expected to cause area flooding and rapidly rising small streams. The Saturday
storm however, punched its power on the eastern slopes of the Cascades, here it
was probably the nicest day we have had all year.
My
Sunday morning forecasts said, never fear the storm is coming today, arriving
about 11 AM. While there was a brief shower about that time, it soon passed,
but slowly the sky darkened, the wind picked up and we knew the storm was on
its way. At about 4 PM the rains began, and continued all night, nonstop until
midmorning. The storm dropped more than an inch of those wet drops, causing
Boulder Creek to rise to its highest level I have seen, since I have moved over
to GodŐs country.
Decreasing
showers and colder weather is bringing the creek back to a normal seasonal yearly
peak flow, the Kettle River still has a way to go, and its normal peak comes
about the traditional Memorial Day, and Tuesday afternoon it was 22,000 CFS, still
well below what I have seen and is now about the peak annual high flow.
Because
of the unusually cold spring there is still a lot of snow up high, and the
taller mountains up in Canada are still fully white. Should we get some hot
weather, things could get really interesting river-wise. If the seasons
continue cool and wet, it might be a very delightful summer.
This
natural weather is a segue into the storms that seem to be a pattern that is
developing again in the worldŐs economics, which leads us to ask the question:
Are you ready for these storms?
As
the rains pelted down on the metal roof, I couldnŐt help thinking about the
song that doesnŐt really ask the question, but states the reality that a storm
is coming and you need to get ready. The link to the song at the beginning of
this article says that the composer, was of Celtic roots but the person is
unknown. However most of the artists that have recorded the song, interpret it
within genre that through the storm, the lonely sailor is never alone, if he
has God as his companion.
One
of the artistsŐ lyric links even goes so far as to reference Isaiah
50:5 - 11 as an appropriate Biblical reference. I like that linkage because it points to the reality that I
discussed last week, within the storm metaphor, it is God that is allowing
the weather tempest, and those who attempt to be ready for the storm within only
their own preparedness are not going to find peace—but torment. In common
usage this could be considered Divine Providence.
Monday
the United States reached it authorized debt ceiling. Yawn? What happened to
the end of the world, as we know it? According to a Wall Street Journal article
the real perfect storm default date is now August 2.
So
in the meantime, President Obama will continue his electioneering for his
second term. His Democrat Party, will continue to say we have a debt problem,
but offer nothing constructive to prevent the storm. The Republicans will
continue in the Reaganesque mantra that cutting spending and not raising taxes
will solve all the nationŐs woes. For his part of protecting the folks, Bill O
ReillyŐs 500 word, ninth grade level column, last week dealt with some rapper
named Common, who did a gig at the White House. Debt ceiling? What debt
ceiling?
The
economic storm that is coming to the United States and the rest of the world is
not the result of some act of God, but rather the unintended consequences of
the human desire to be God in our own eyes and really not possessing the
skills, knowledge and wisdom to manage the world we are trying to create;
without any thoughts toward an overriding natural reality.
Those
storms have destroyed civilizations and empires, from ancient Babylon up to
this day; the European Union, China and most of the countries of the world have
more destructive storms on their horizon than the United States.
We
have attempted to focus upon the time from the 1960s, as the period where we
began to assume that a rosy storm-free future would continue forever, provided
we played our cards right. The problem was, by the time we reached the 1970s,
with the need to fund the Great Society and the Vietnam War, we assumed that
financial liquidity was all the same, whether it came from debt sources or from
true wealth. That is the true weakness of fractional-reserve banking.
Still
today, the leadership of the United States truly believes that we can fix the
problems by just properly managing the world the way we did as we reached the
climax (used as an ecological term) of the Industrial Age.
So
today we have a polarized country in which the Collective Elitists believe with
just a little more government help, social justice and a whole feast of
egalitarian progressive solutions, will make as a better nation. In contrast
the Laissez Faire Scoundrels believe that if we just get the government off the
backs of the people, the free market will make a better and more prosperous
nation.
Both
of these worldviews are just extremes of atheistic materialism and because both
are founded and operate totally within human limits, the concept of grace,
towards others, who might not agree with you, has no basis in reality.
Therefore we are limited to one of two choices; you can either attempt to
create a world in which mankind can design our own collective salvation; or man
can create his own individual salvation out of his evolving rational goodness.
By
the 1980s however the Industrial Age mechanism of more stuff forever was
beginning to reach the limits of prudent natural law. With the Reagan
Revolution and the appointment of the Ayn Rand disciple, Alan Greenspan as head
of the Federal Reserve, RandŐs Objectivism of rational self-interest, in the
true atheistic sense, was used to continue the illusion of prosperity, by
rationally securitizing ever increasing housing values, as the highest and best
example of the American Dream.
Absent
the common sense gift of God, it seems this dream would work forever. When this
was coupled with the belief that lower marginal tax rates would increase government
revenues; that if the wealthy had more money to spend; that wealth would
trickle down to others; economic growth would grow forever. We now have thirty
years of empirical data that shows that trickle down doesnŐt. That growth
illusion however keeps libertarian-conservatives looking back to the golden age
where we could have economic growth outside the restrictions of anything
natural.
When
all this began to unravel during the first decade of this century, at least
Alan Greenspan was honest enough to admit that his religious beliefs of forty
years, about half of it as FED chairman, were wrong. This reality check however
allowed all the closeted progressive Collective Elitists to get a final chance
to make it right with the election of the hope in change savior, Barack Obama
to the highest office in the land.
That
hope and change isnŐt working out all that well either; even a cancerous
Keynesian economic stimulus plan—has failed to create cancer; but it does
seem that GreenspanŐs replacement Ben Bernanke, no Great Depression on my
watch, is succeeding in creating inflation and weakening the dollar.
About
15 years ago I wrote my only book, ŇThe Garden of God.Ó I never succeeded in
getting it published, I didnŐt have enough money to have it self-published, and
a few years ago I realized that the electronic copy had somehow been erased in
computer changes, but there still are a few hardcopy manuscripts somewhere in
storage.
The
Garden, seems to have been ahead of its time. Laid out in trade paperback
format it ran about 160 pages, and basically took the Phylogenesis
attributes of my Business Ecology Principles and provided the common
natural reasons behind each point.
Updating
it today, could double its size, as it could provide some applications of those
natural principles, as we transition out of the Industrial Age into the
Individual Age, where human diversity will provide not just the freedom and
liberty to follow the republicŐs founders desire for the pursuit of happiness,
but also provide for a new model of wealth production through entrepreneurship.
This updated book would be best achieved through real publisher resources and
even a flesh eating book tour. You know of any volunteers?
In the 1960s America was at its true natural zenith as the
best that humanity had to offer. That was epitomized, at least in the American
male, in their car, it was not one of todayŐs econo-box gutless wonders, it was
not a vehicle, it was your wheels, your manhood, that possession you would love
to have again in 2011.
The city that gave us our cars: Detroit Michigan. Today Detroit has become a
ruins, as portrayed in the photo essay of Yves Marchand Romain Meffre. Real
Detroit city data you might find enlightening is found here. If we
continue to pursue the current course of unintended consequences of Industrial
Age global materialism, Detroit will be just the first dreadful example of
multiple coming storms.
How can we change that future?
I believe that the United States of America was founded as a
secular nation, based upon GodŐs Divine Providence. Over those two hundred plus
years, until recently, we have done a pretty decent job. There are those who
claim we are still and exceptional nation, but recently that ideal has at least
some relative qualifiers, our wishful thinking no longer makes it so, for we
have foregone our historical roots.
We previously briefly discussed the Reagan Revolution and how
lowering marginal tax rates, eventually increased government revenue. That
result, like some of our Business Ecology Natural Life Curves, is visually
illustrated by what is called the Laffer
Curve. The Laffer Curve helps us determine where increasing taxes become a
drag on society rather than a source of government revenue.
What the Laffer Curve does not do however is show us how
lower marginal tax rates decrease the amount of equity funds available to
entrepreneurial and small business growth. In other words, one of the
unintended consequences of decreasing marginal tax rates is that it eliminates
essentially flight money from the economic picture, hence the only trickle down
comes from the spending of the more wealthy, and they invest only in more
secure investments that truly have a detrimental effect on job creation.
This reality was pointed out in a report issued by the Kaufman
Foundation that U. S. job growth is entirely driven by startups and that small
business and major corporations provide net job losses. This does not fit
within the talking points of the news media, so it has been ignored. Is this
just a failure of the anchors/analysts/commentators/pundits/ to do their job,
or is it just a big business bias of major news outlets, or is it a vast
conspiracy to only collect the no trickle down fat paychecks? The actual
Kaufman report is just twelve pages that includes; two covers, a title page and
a number of graphs and other illustrations.
After the storm future of the United States, depends upon us
developing a Business Ecology that has a economic equivalent of the natural
hydrologic cycle. That development work can be done before the storm hits and
maybe if those adaptations are done now, the effects of the storm will not be
all that catastrophic.
The natural hydrologic cycle is the prime natural law that
allows life to exist on this earth. The fundamental requirement of economics in
the Individual Age is to create a mechanism by which economic seed liquidity
can be provided to startups. That means we need to create a way that makes
these investments worth the risk.
Next week we will begin to put forth our attempt to start
that dialogue.
Your homework will be to read the material under both the Laffer
Curve and the Kauffman
Foundation links.
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