The Brain Drain

Guest Post by Jeff Thomas

In 1933, Albert Einstein renounced his German citizenship soon after Adolf Hitler became Chancellor. Although that left him without a legal home, he was welcomed in England and later, the US, and eventually became a US citizen in 1935.

This was quite a risky move at the time, as he had no certainty of a better life outside of Germany, or even a prospective job. But he saw the writing on the wall. As a man of reason, he focused not on the present condition in Germany, but where events would ultimately lead. His focus was on the Germany of the future and he made a difficult call that those with less vision might not have made.

In 1940, Ludwig von Mises was perhaps the most gifted economist in Austria, as well as being a visionary of libertarian thinking. But he left Austria in that year. The Nazi expansion was already under way and he understood that, if anything, he was leaving late in the game, but before it became impossible to leave. On that day, Austria lost one of its best minds.

When Fidel Castro came suddenly to power on 1st January 1959, many business leaders understood immediately what effect that would have on them in the future and made a hasty exit from Cuba. Then, in the following years, as the socialist confiscations of businesses and property began to take place, larger numbers of businessmen made their exit. In the end, hundreds of thousands left.

Many similar examples can be studied, evidencing that, when a systemic collapse is imminent and, even more so, after it has begun, it’s invariably the best and brightest that choose to head for the exit doors first.

In most cases, it begins with a few forward-thinking people making their exit, followed by a small wave of others who see what’s coming. That wave is followed by a larger wave, made up of those who need a bit more evidence of decline before they see the writing on the wall. After that, the waves become ever-larger, as the most inventive and productive people realise that they may become collateral damage of the decline.

But why should this be? Is it coincidence that the greatest contributors to a society leave prior to a major decline, or does it simply seem that way after the fact – after they’ve been proven to be correct?

Well, if we observe any society, we learn that the bottom 10% tend to contribute very little. Indeed, they tend to be a drag on the economy and to remain so throughout their lives.

Then there’s the main bulk of society – say, 60% – who merely accept whatever the leaders dictate. They may complain that they want more, but for the most part, as long as they don’t experience extreme hardships, they accept their lot in life and tend not to be especially analytical. Therefore, when a systemic decline is in the works, they tend not to notice, as they’re not in the habit of analysing change.

Then there are the people at the management level – say, 20% – who are more expansive in their thinking. They tend to be the class of people who, whatever their field of expertise, make day-to-day analysis and day-to-day decisions.

At the top, there are those who consistently think outside the box – the Einsteins, the Mises, etc., who are gifted and are capable of perceiving the larger picture. They’re also the visionaries, who are capable of imagining and planning a greater future.

Not surprisingly, it’s this group that recognise the coming danger first, since they habitually analyse events. The decline is simply the next series of events.

It’s important to note that those who recognised the coming problem first had the greatest amount of time to prepare. Thus, they were not only more able to take their wealth, however large or small, with them, they also arrived at their destination of choice at a time when few others were doing so. This made it more likely that the “welcome mat” was out and they were well-received.

For each successive wave of exiters, the ability to leave freely became less likely, as did the possibility of being welcomed in the destination of choice.

Today, we’re witnessing the unravelling of the “First World” – the group of nations that were launched into prosperity following World War II. All of them – Canada, the UK, Australia, Japan and much of Europe – hopped on the US train to prosperity after the war and benefitted from the post-war prosperity that the US created. But unfortunately, they were still on the train when the US changed from being the world’s greatest creditor nation into the world’s greatest debtor nation. And now, still on the train, they will follow the US over the economic cliff that it’s headed for.

And so, as always transpires, a brain drain will occur. I first began warning of this, some twenty years ago, well in advance. The actual exodus did not begin until 2008, and even then, it was just a trickle. Now, it’s speeding up.

Of course, for anyone who lives in an exit jurisdiction, such as the EU or US, this is hardly noticeable. Indeed, most people in these jurisdictions are preoccupied with the flood of immigrants – the largely unproductive refugees in their tens of thousands, who are flooding in, based upon promised largesse from the government.

Not surprising then, that few people notice those who are leaving.

This group is, however, quite visible to those of us who live in a destination country.

In my own country, larger numbers are applying for residency every year. And true to form, they tend to be those who are capable people, having been successful in their home countries and seeking a continuation of opportunity in their choice of destination.

For the most part, they invest whatever wealth they’ve earned in their lives in the target country, thus ensuring continuing prosperity for that country.

We’re now past the initial stage of the exodus – the trickle of the most-informed individuals – and are witnessing the first real wave of people making an exit.

As the waves increase in volume, we can expect the governments of the exit countries to react. First, they’ll create capital controls, making it difficult to expatriate your wealth.

Indeed, this has already begun for Americans – an “exit tax” that is to be paid on any wealth you presently have, even though you’ve already paid a stiff income tax on it.

Next come the migration controls – the laws and regulations that seek to criminalise any sort of expatriation. We can expect that these will be explained by governments, not as a loss of freedom, but as a protection against those who expatriate, with the accusation that they’re involved in money laundering and/or terrorism.

But there’s a final point to be made here that’s rarely considered. Whenever a country experiences a systemic collapse, it rarely, if ever, recovers quickly. Generally, it takes a generation or more.

Why should this be?

Well, once all the best and brightest – the movers and shakers – have exited, they rarely return. They tend to get on with life in their new homes, where they then invest, and cause those nations to advance economically.

Once that’s happened, the exit country can’t quickly replace them. The large percentage who did not see the collapse coming are not equipped to take over in an inspired way.

And certainly, the refugees who entered that country as parasites, following promises of governmental largesse, will not pick up the slack.

Therefore, once a brain drain has occurred, that country is likely to slide into the doldrums – perhaps for a generation, and, as history has shown, often for much longer.

Editor’s Note: Economically, politically, and socially, the United States seems to be headed down a path that’s not only inconsistent with the founding principles of the country but accelerating quickly toward boundless decay.

That is precisely why NY Times best selling author, Doug Casey just released this urgent new video which outlines what comes next and what you need to do to be ready. Click here to watch it now.

As an Amazon Associate I Earn from Qualifying Purchases
-----------------------------------------------------
It is my sincere desire to provide readers of this site with the best unbiased information available, and a forum where it can be discussed openly, as our Founders intended. But it is not easy nor inexpensive to do so, especially when those who wish to prevent us from making the truth known, attack us without mercy on all fronts on a daily basis. So each time you visit the site, I would ask that you consider the value that you receive and have received from The Burning Platform and the community of which you are a vital part. I can't do it all alone, and I need your help and support to keep it alive. Please consider contributing an amount commensurate to the value that you receive from this site and community, or even by becoming a sustaining supporter through periodic contributions. [Burning Platform LLC - PO Box 1520 Kulpsville, PA 19443] or Paypal

-----------------------------------------------------
To donate via Stripe, click here.
-----------------------------------------------------
Use promo code ILMF2, and save up to 66% on all MyPillow purchases. (The Burning Platform benefits when you use this promo code.)
Click to visit the TBP Store for Great TBP Merchandise
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
21 Comments
kfg
kfg
February 19, 2024 7:03 pm

“Whenever a country experiences a systemic collapse, it rarely, if ever, recovers quickly. Generally, it takes a generation or more. Why should this be?”

Because it’s a lot easier to destroy than it is to create.
It’s also easier to unpark a car than it is to park it.

Simply leave things alone and disorder will create itself. Order takes work.

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 19, 2024 8:45 pm

Go where?

august
august
  Anonymous
February 19, 2024 11:21 pm

Speaking as an oldster, this “internationalize, get a second passport” stuff seems like beating a dead horse. If you’re only now catching on to this option, you’re either quite young, or perhaps brain-damaged.

FWIW if you actually are young, I highly recommend living and working, or studying, abroad, if only for a limited time. If you’re over fifty, you’re better off sticking with the people and places with which you are familiar… unless of course that happens to be a large US city, in which case you are likely already screwed.

BuyGoldnonamous
BuyGoldnonamous
February 19, 2024 9:16 pm

I bet the video recomends countries that are the ones
Where lots of people are leaving for the U.S
Lol
ps buy more gold

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 19, 2024 9:32 pm

If the brain drain was real then Germany would have stagnated without all the brilliant jews that left or were cruelly Holocoastered.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
February 19, 2024 10:19 pm

were, not was, real . . .

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
February 19, 2024 11:14 pm

Americans, I mean real Americans, only use the subjunctive when their papers are being graded.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
February 20, 2024 2:01 am

I ‘were’ trying to emphasise that specific ecksample and not brain drano as a whole :p

luke2236
luke2236
February 19, 2024 9:46 pm

einstein was a fraud; he flunked high school algebra and plagiarised his most famous ‘work’. i.e the whole e=mc2 squared thing – from an Italian scientific journal some 5 years earlier. he was jewish posterboy who never really did much except bang his large breasted cousin.

Haw2
Haw2
  luke2236
February 19, 2024 9:55 pm

Einstein dug a well on someone else’s property .

kfg
kfg
  luke2236
February 19, 2024 10:11 pm

Einstein didn’t go to high school, because he was a mathematics prodigy and went straight on to technical school.

What he flunked was humanity and was told to come back after he had learned something more than maths.

It’s also worth noting that the Nobel committee didn’t consider his most famous work his most important work.

Llpoh
Llpoh
  luke2236
February 20, 2024 2:32 am

What a moron. No one in the scientific community agrees with that stupidity. The people who it is said, by morons , that he plagiarized from, admired him greatly. He indeed built upon earlier ideas, which were incomplete. And the e=mc2 is the least of his work on relativity. But hey, Jew haters gotta hate.

kfg
kfg
  Llpoh
February 20, 2024 7:03 am

“No one in the scientific community agrees with that stupidity.”

I referred only to his permanent record, written by his actual teachers and judges before 1922, not contemporary opinion and myth.

The idea that he flunked basic maths is a recent and particularly pernicious myth.

“He indeed built upon earlier ideas, which were incomplete. ”

And Newton stood on the shoulders of Kepler (a law of planetary motion) and Galileo (a law of gravity), with a boost from Descarte (analytic geometry). That’s the way science works. Go figure.

The hate doesn’t all come from the fact that he was a Jew. A good deal of it comes simply from the fact that he was accomplished. The nail that sticks up higher than me must be knocked down.

FloridaPatriot
FloridaPatriot
February 20, 2024 1:43 am

All those elite minds, you mean the ones who were most likely to take a vaccine with unknown long term affects, for a disease that was at worst 99.8 percent survivable?

Is that the great look-ahead thinkers you’re referring to?

I have three of these people in my family, and from where I stand they don’t only not see the runaway train coming, they don’t even know that train exist.

Llpoh
Llpoh
  FloridaPatriot
February 20, 2024 2:35 am

I guess they survived.

Llpoh
Llpoh
February 20, 2024 2:29 am

From the article: “ Indeed, this has already begun for Americans – an “exit tax” that is to be paid on any wealth you presently have, even though you’ve already paid a stiff income tax on it.”

That is flat wrong. The exit tax is on unrealized capital gains. Not on wealth. If a person has unrealized capital gains, they are taxed on that. It is painful, for sure, given the tax is applied as though the asset has been sold, even though it has not. But it is a tax on capital gains, not on wealth. Further the exit tax applies to very few individuals – you need to be a multimillionaire to have it apply, or have been a very high earner.

I really hate it when these people spin a narrative.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Llpoh
February 20, 2024 5:27 am

yeah. Doug Casey is a hyped old doddery git

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 20, 2024 5:44 am

This Jeff Thomas is a complete tosser.

In his article

Sorry, You Can’t Have Your Gold 

he rants on about capital controls with an example about a person in Austria :

“Austria: A client tries to transfer his allocated 138 gold Philharmonics from his bank to a facility in another jurisdiction. The bank repeatedly produced roadblocks, as follows:

Refused to ship the products themselves and refused to arrange shipment.
Refused to release the goods to FedEx when they arrived, even though proof of insurance was provided. The bank then insisted on the hiring of a Brinks truck.
They then refused to release the coins at all, except to another bank.
They then claimed that they were “not ready” to release the coins. The client was invited to “try again” if he wished. (Eight attempts were required.)

Finally, they agreed to release the coins, but only if a 1% withdrawal fee were applied (not part of the original agreement – essentially a ransom).”

Then later he states:
“Choose the jurisdiction that’s easiest for you to access – In Europe, this might be Switzerland or Austria. In Asia, this might be Singapore or Hong Kong. In the Western Hemisphere, this might be the Cayman Islands.”

What a stupid dipstick – together with old geezer Casey they make a right pair.

Admin really publishes some bullshit articles

Blackdogs
Blackdogs
February 20, 2024 7:46 am

Von Mises brilliant? I never met an economics student who transferred to the physics department.

Mr. Hyde
Mr. Hyde
February 20, 2024 9:38 am

Those leaving all had a better place to go…here in the US. We all see what is happening, but there is no where to go that is better. I choose to stay and bail rather than leaving a ship that is leaking and listing heavily to the left.

Bullwinkle
Bullwinkle
February 20, 2024 2:07 pm

Citizenship is a “5” year process.
First, Einstein gets Citizenship in less than 2 years, and Now all it takes is a President to “Declare” one is a Citizen.
Today, “Citizenship is meaningless.