How Fascism Comes to America

Guest Post by Doug Casey via International Man

fascism

I think there are really only two good reasons for having a significant amount of money: To maintain a high standard of living and to ensure your personal freedom.

There are other, lesser reasons, of course, including: to prove you can do it, to compensate for failings in other things, to impress others, to leave a legacy, to help perpetuate your genes, or maybe because you just can’t think of something better to do with your time.

But I’ll put aside those lesser motives, which I tend to view as psychological foibles.

Basically, money gives you the freedom to do what you’d like – and when, how, and with whom you prefer to do it. Money allows you to have things and do things and can even assist you to be something you want to be. Unfortunately, money is a chimera in today’s world and will wind up savaging billions in the years to come.

As you know, I believe we’re well into what I call The Greater Depression. A lot of people believe we’re in a recovery now; I think, from a long-term point of view, that is total nonsense. It will be far more severe than what we saw in 2008 and 2009 and will last quite a while – perhaps for many years, depending on how stupidly the government acts.

Real Reasons for Optimism

There are reasons for optimism, of course, and at least two of them make sense.

The first is that every individual wants to improve his economic status. Many (but by no means all) of them will intuit that the surest way to do so is to produce more than they consume and save the difference. That creates capital, which can be invested in or loaned to productive enterprises. But what if outside forces make that impossible, or at least much harder than it should be?

The second reason for optimism is the development of technology – which is the ability to manipulate the material world to suit our desires. Scientists and engineers develop technology, and that also adds to the supply of capital. The more complex technology becomes, the more outside capital is required. But what if sufficient capital isn’t generated by individuals and businesses to fund further technological advances?

There are no guarantees in life.

Throughout the first several hundred thousand years of human existence, very little capital was accumulated – perhaps a few skins or arrowheads passed on to the next generation. And there was very little improvement in technology – it was many millennia between the taming of fire and, say, the invention of the bow.

Things very gradually accelerated and improved, in a start-stop-start kind of way – the classical world, followed by the Dark Ages, followed by the medieval world. Finally, as we entered the industrial world 200 years ago, it looked like we were on an accelerating path to the stars. All of a sudden, life was no longer necessarily so solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, or short. I’m reasonably confident things will continue improving, possibly at an accelerating rate. But only if individuals create more capital than they consume and if enough of that capital is directed towards productive technology.

Real Reasons for Pessimism

Those are the two mainsprings of human progress: capital accumulation and technology.

Unfortunately, however, that reality has become obscured by a morass of false and destructive theories, abetted by a world that’s become so complex that it’s too difficult for most people to sort out cause and effect. Furthermore, most people in the OECD world have become so accustomed to good times, since the end of WW2, that they think prosperity is automatic and a permanent feature of the cosmic firmament. So although I’m very optimistic, progress – certainly over the near term – isn’t guaranteed.

These are the main reasons why the standard of living has been artificially high in the advanced world, but don’t confuse them with the two reasons for long-term prosperity.

The first is debt. There’s nothing wrong with debt in itself; lending is one way for the owner of capital to deploy it. But if a society is going to advance, debt should be largely for productive purposes, so that it’s self-liquidating; and most of it would necessarily be short term.

But most of the scores of trillions of debt in the world today are for consumption, not production. And the debt is not only not self-liquidating, it’s compounding. And most of it is long term, with no relation to any specific asset. A lender can reasonably predict the value of a short-term loan, but debt payable in 30 years is impossible to value realistically.

All government debt, mortgage debt, consumer debt, and almost all student loan debt does nothing but allow borrowers to live off the capital others have accumulated. It turns the debtors into indentured servants for the indefinite future. The entire world has basically overlooked this, along with most other tenets of sound economics.

The second is inflation. Like debt, inflation induces people to live above their means, but its consequences are even worse, because they’re indirect and delayed.

If the central bank deposited $10,000 in everyone’s bank account next Monday, everyone would think they were wealthier and start consuming more. This would start a business cycle. The business cycle is always the result of currency inflation, no matter how subtle or mild. And it always results in a depression. The longer an inflation goes on, the more ingrained the distortions and misallocations of capital become, and the worse the resulting depression.

We’ve had a number of inflationary cycles since the end of the last depression in 1948. I believe we’re now at the end of what might be called a super-cycle, resulting in a super-depression.

The third is the export of dollars. This is unique to the U.S. and is the reason the depression in the U.S. will in some ways be worse than most other places. Since the early ’70s, the dollar has been used the way gold once was – it’s the world’s currency. The problem is that the U.S. has exported perhaps $10 trillion – but nobody knows – in exchange for good things from around the world. It was a great trade for a while. The foreigners get paper created at essentially zero cost, while Americans live high on the hog with the goodies those dollars buy.

But at some point quite soon, dollars won’t be readily accepted, and smart foreigners will start dumping their dollars, passing the Old Maid card. Ultimately, most of the dollars will come back to the U.S., to be traded for titles to land and businesses. Americans will find that they traded their birthright for a storage unit full of TVs and assorted tchotchkes. But many foreigners will also be stuck with dollars and suffer a huge loss. It’s actually a game with no winner.

What’s Next

These last three factors have enabled essentially the whole world to live above its means for decades. The process has been actively facilitated by governments everywhere. People like living above their means, and governments prefer to see the masses sated.

The debt and inflation have also financed the growth of the welfare state, making a large percentage of the masses dependent, even while they’ve also resulted in an immense expansion in the size and power of the state over the last 60-odd years. The masses have come to think government is a magical entity that can do almost anything, including kiss the economy and make it better when the going gets tough. The type of people who are drawn to the government are eager to make the state a panacea. So they’ll redouble their efforts in the fiscal and monetary areas I’ve described above, albeit with increasingly disastrous results.

They’ll also become quite aggressive with regulations (on what you can do and say, and where your money can go) and taxes (much higher existing taxes and lots of new ones, like a national VAT and a wealth tax). And since nobody wants to take the blame for problems, they’ll blame things on foreigners. Fortunately (the U.S. will think) they have a huge military and will employ it promiscuously. So the already bankrupt nations of NATO will dig the hole deeper with some serious – but distracting – new wars.

It’s most unfortunate, but the U.S. and its allies will turn into authoritarian police states. Even more than they are today. Much more, actually. They’ll all be perfectly fascist – private ownership of both consumer goods and the means of production topped by state control of both. Fascism operates free of underlying principles or philosophy; it’s totally the whim of the people in control, and they’ll prove ever more ruthless.

So where does that leave us, as far as accumulating more wealth than the average guy is concerned?

I’d say it puts us in a rather troubling position. The general standard of living is going to collapse, as will your personal freedom. And if you’re an upper-middle-class person (I suspect that includes most who are now reading this), you will be considered among the rich who are somehow (this is actually a complex subject worthy of discussion) responsible for the bad times and therefore liable to be eaten. The bottom line is that if you value your money and your freedom, you’ll take action.

There’s much, much more to be said on all this. I’ve said a lot on the topic over the past few years, at some length. But I thought it best to be brief here, for the purpose of emphasis. Essentially, act now, because the world’s combined economic, financial, political, social, and military situation is as good as it will be for many years… and a lot better than it has any right to be.

One more thing: Don’t worry too much.

All countries seem to go through nasty phases. Within the lifetime of most people today, we’ve seen it in big countries such as Russia, Germany, and China. And in scores of smaller ones – the list is too long to recount here. The good news is that things almost always get better, eventually.

Editor’s Note: As these trends continue to accelerate, what you do right now can mean the difference between coming out ahead or suffering crippling losses.

That’s exactly why bestselling author Doug Casey and his team just released a free report with all the details on how to survive an economic collapse.

It will help you understand what is unfolding right before our eyes and what you should do so you don’t get caught in the crosshairs.

Click here to download the PDF now.

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27 Comments
olde reb
olde reb
August 19, 2020 4:54 pm

Debt that can be paid off is one thing. The National Debt, which can never be paid off, is a Ponzi scheme for a transfer of wealth from the citizens to covert owners of the FRBOG, Inc. The FRBNY has exclusive handling of the accounts of Treasury security auctions. Ref. 31 CFR 375.3. More than $12 trillion passes the accounts annually and they have never been audited. TreasuryDirect will not identify the destination of some funds. Ref. ..

THE GREAT SCAMDEMIC: Biggest and Deadliest Medical Fraud Ever Perpetrated on the Human Race

Anonymous
Anonymous
  olde reb
August 19, 2020 11:53 pm

Where’s young Timothy Geithner when we need him?

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
August 19, 2020 6:22 pm

Here we go with the Fascist BS again.
He said, “It’s most unfortunate, but the U.S. and its allies will turn into authoritarian police states. Even more than they are today. Much more, actually. They’ll all be perfectly fascist – private ownership of both consumer goods and the means of production topped by state control of both. Fascism operates free of underlying principles or philosophy; it’s totally the whim of the people in control, and they’ll prove ever more ruthless.”
Perfectly Fascist? “private ownership of both consumer goods and the means of production topped by state control of both.” We don’t have that. We have total control of government by “Private” ownership.
“Fascism operates free of underlying principles or philosophy; ” It does no such thing. In fact I doubt any form of government does that. “it’s totally the whim of the people in control, and they’ll prove ever more ruthless.” More like Communism or an Oligarchy.
“”It’s most unfortunate, but the U.S. and its allies will turn into authoritarian police states. Even more than they are today. Like Neo Feudalism or communism.

The misinformed tell the uninformed who become the illinformed.

Anonymous
Anonymous
August 19, 2020 6:36 pm

So, why are these (((shitbags))) screaming about the supposed horrors of fascism again?

The importance of the financial problem in itself requires today no special explanation. The power of the large financial powers ruling everything lies manifest to anyone that wishes to see it. The perspicacious person has already for long recognised that precisely the incompetent, false manner in which the state has positioned itself with regard to the financial system is the basic reason for the present-day catastrophic conditions in the state finances. The fact that most of the so-called state central banks are not at all purely state institutes but stock companies in which the governments have retained for themselves only certain supervisory rights already gives an idea of the muddled conditions in the field of the public financial system. In reality the nationalisation of the central banks, especially the Reichsbank Public Ltd. Co. (!), has virtually meant the transfer of the most important state sovereign rights to private capital. In addition, the large banks and the other financial institutions have become the unrestrained rulers of the entire national economy.

— The German State on a National and Socialist Foundation, Feder, 1923

Because fascism recognizes the cause behind the symptoms of societal malaise – and provides the only real solution to it.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  Anonymous
August 19, 2020 7:08 pm

Anon
Exactly. I just quoted Feder the other day.

Ken31
Ken31
  Anonymous
August 19, 2020 8:49 pm

Communism is the cancer and Fascism is the cure.

Panzerlied
Panzerlied
August 19, 2020 8:45 pm

The future was already planned for us nearly 100 years ago. In their own words they tell us how world domination will occur and our freedom and possessions will disappear. Read it and weep, folks. Yeh, especially you down voting Jew lovers that can’t seem to realize it’s the truth if it came up and bit you in the ass.

https://rense.com/general96/domination-plan-1928.php

Ken31
Ken31
August 19, 2020 8:48 pm

If the Nazis were the bad guys then tell me what the fuck went wrong after WW2?

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
August 19, 2020 8:57 pm

How fascism STAYS in America:
comment image

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
August 19, 2020 9:24 pm

90% of Americans would rather get caught with Kiddie Porn than a copy of Mein Kampf. Ask an american about Falange and they’ll tell you it’s a Roman Army formation.

e.d. ott
e.d. ott
  Fleabaggs
August 20, 2020 9:42 am

That’s because your average American has no real interest in either politics or history.
“Mein Kampf” was a mediocre school library book that bored the shit out of me as an 8th grader. On the other hand I’ve managed to keep a nice copy of the Federalist Papers that influenced me for a long time. In theory and practice a simple, small government republic would kick the hell out of a police state if the populace had an active civic interest in the health of their own communities. Unfortunately, that isn’t our modern reality so we have to fall back on the bully tactics of 20th Century political juveniles to solve social problems.

Panzerlied
Panzerlied
  e.d. ott
August 20, 2020 10:19 am

That’s because your average American has no real interest in either politics or history.- Have you viewed the latest edition of the people of Walmart lately? That’s ‘Merica, folks. Fat, dumpy, docile, subservient and stupid. See if that can be molded into an effective fighting force for the resistance.

Home

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  e.d. ott
August 20, 2020 11:27 am

Otto
“That’s because your average American has no real interest in either politics or history.” Wrong!
That’s because the Fish have used their total control of schools and media to stigmatize all things Hitler or Fascist for 90 years while just ignoring the federalist papers. If the Federalist papers were the threat to the Kabbalists that Fascism is you would have the same intense hatred of them in the mainstream. Remember that the “World Fishery” declared war on Germany in 1933.
“if the populace had an active civic interest in the health of their own communities. If they had that we would not be the Socialist mess we are today and Fascism would never have been born. Neither would Capitalism or Communism. They don’t.

Ken31
Ken31
  e.d. ott
August 20, 2020 7:37 pm

History has left no doubt that between the two, The Federalist Papers were the mediocre pile bullshit. None of the reassurances in them have held up to the objective scrutiny of history.

The Constitution was a huge mistake and the Anti-Federalists are vindicated.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
August 20, 2020 9:24 pm

Anyone interested in the complete works of David Irving that me and Yoji were discussing can fined it here. Both audio and written. The written has an audio version as well.

https://archive.org/details/DavidIrvingHistorianAndPoliticalPrisonerBorn19381