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WTF Rockefeller funded Mises?

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Clayton replied on Wed, Apr 18 2012 2:04 AM

@Jargon: I have a slightly different view of the matter - I think that the ruling elite actually have certain virtues that most people lack and that these virtues are partly responsible (in combination with dumb luck) for their present status. In particular, the virtues I have in mind are a zeal for life, a strong sense of family/kin loyalty, low time preference, high discipline, consistency and so on - perhaps these could be called the martial virtues. The flip side is that they are homicidal maniacs.

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Merlin replied on Wed, Apr 18 2012 3:19 AM

Clayton:

@Jargon: I have a slightly different view of the matter - I think that the ruling elite actually have certain virtues that most people lack and that these virtues are partly responsible (in combination with dumb luck) for their present status. In particular, the virtues I have in mind are a zeal for life, a strong sense of family/kin loyalty, low time preference, high discipline, consistency and so on - perhaps these could be called the martial virtues. The flip side is that they are homicidal maniacs.

Clayton -

 

The Regression theorem is a memetic equivalent of the Theory of Evolution. To say that the former precludes the free emergence of fiat currencies makes no more sense that to hold that the latter precludes the natural emergence of multicellular organisms.
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zeal for life, a strong sense of family/kin loyalty, low time preference, high discipline, consistency

You might even say that they follow the classical traditions...

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Autolykos replied on Wed, Apr 18 2012 10:54 AM

Clayton:
This came up once before, can't find the thread. However, this should really knock your socks off.

About 1.5 years later, it really did. It gives credence to my suspicion that TPTB essentially follow the Austrian school of economics without being public about it. Why would they do this? If you've seen the movie Apocalypto, do you remember the solar-eclipse scene? The king, queen, and high priests at the top of the sacrificial pyramid knew what was really going on, but the masses at the bottom had no idea. The high priest proceeded to lie to the masses about what was going on, and the masses ate it up. Exploiting such an extreme asymmetry of information can apparently be very profitable. Most people, however, won't try to persist such exploitation by deceit or worse unless 1) they believe they have strong incentives to do so, and/or 2) they're psychopaths.

One of the key insights of the Austrian school of economics - the entirely subjective nature of economic value - means that there's never any guarantee that people will pay you what you want for your assets. The question then arises of how to persuade or convince people that they should value your assets to the extent that you want them to. There are many ways to do this, not all of which are regarded as ethically or morally acceptable by most people. What does this have to do with TPTB? Basically I think it's a lot of the "game" they play, and they seem to be less scrupulous about the means they employ.

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Clayton replied on Wed, Apr 18 2012 11:26 AM

1) they believe they have strong incentives to do so, and/or 2) they're psychopaths.

QFT - I like the Apocalypto reference, too... that was a very powerful scene, deeply illustrative of the true nature of power.

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Autolykos replied on Wed, Apr 18 2012 11:33 AM

Thanks. I modified the sentence you quoted slightly to hopefully be more accurate.

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Autolykos:
[...] Exploiting such an extreme asymmetry of information can apparently be very profitable. Most people, however, won't try to persist such exploitation by deceit or worse unless 1) they believe they have strong incentives to do so, and/or 2) they're psychopaths.
It's extremely profitable and they're using deceit and worse as well as the market to widen the information asymmetry.

While the state uses its power to hide is secrets and inside information, it is forcing us to give up our privacy by requiring medical and historical information from school children. Am I the only one that thinks that it's a conspiracy that every school child is given the assignment of writing and talking about his family to his teacher, counselors and schoolmates, under the guise of "getting to know each other" and for their own protection from "abusive" family members. There have plenty of cases where teachers and counselors have used the information they gather to report parent child services and the police. The state basically has a profile on every family that it can use against those families.

Also, they're fueling the boom in tech (partially) to gather more information to further widen the asymmetry. I find it hard to believe that the state doesn't have backdoors to Facebook and Google. They could easily do it under the guise of preventing child trafficking and terrorism. And who are Facebook and Google to complain when they've been funded by the CIA? This is why there is such a huge push for an open Web. TPTB want you to be open, whether by force or not, to use that information to their advantage. (As an aside, this is why I was surprised that whomever at the LvMI decided to use Facebook Connect for authentication in the new Mises.org community, and pushing for it the be sole form of authentication.)

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Clayton replied on Wed, Apr 18 2012 1:31 PM

Good guys:

  • Like encryption, wouldn't mind if everything was encrypted
  • Like passwords and recognize that biometrics can only supplement passwords
  • Don't ask you to store your data in the clear out on remote servers
  • Don't care about "linking your data" or "linking your access" or "one-password connects you to everything"
  • Don't force you to enable cookies as a condition for accessing their site
  • Don't suggest that you give your mobile phone number so it can be "linked" with your email/etc.
  • Don't generate personal data logs except on user's request (such as GPS location)
  • Don't have privacy policies more than a paragraph in size
  • In general, never say things like "trust us"

Bad guys are just the opposite on every point. Whenever you hear somebody saying something that's not consistent with common sense digital privacy, you know immediately they're one of the bad guys. Google, Facebook, YouTube, etc. all spectacularly fail these tests.

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Autolykos replied on Wed, Apr 18 2012 1:36 PM

I agree with you, Daniel. You're not the only one to think that about school children being assigned to write/talk about his family. IIRC, teachers and other school officials are effectively required by law (e.g. CAPTA, also known as the "Mondale Act") to report any possible instance of "child abuse"* to the legally appropriate government agencies (typically child services, under their many different names, and the police) - because the law stipulates that, should they fail to report something that turns out to be "child abuse", they will be punished.

On the subject of the internet, I wonder how many people understand just how impossible it will be to put that genie back in the bottle. While the heart of "the" internet - its DNS root-zone file - is owned by the US federal government (Department of Commerce), there's no reason that one must use exactly that DNS root-zone file. As IP, TCP, DNS, etc. are protocols, they can be used to construct as many internets as people wish. The physical infrastructure might be more difficult to come by, but that's a different story. Even without setting up entirely separate physical internets, a potentially infinite number of logical (i.e. virtual) internets can be constructed within the existing infrastructure. This has already been done who-knows-how-many times already.

If TPTB really push against freedom on "the" internet, or the spying there becomes too obvious and too pervasive, then I think what we'll see is most of the existing internet "going underground", as it were - into a proliferation of virtual internets that are more difficult to obtain meaningful intelligence from. At that point, TPTB will have to resort to things like rubber-hose decryption and, in the limit, shutting down all internet technology, period.


Note: I put "child abuse" in quotation marks, not because I don't think it ever happens, but because I don't necessarily agree with what current US law considers it to mean.

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Jargon replied on Wed, Apr 18 2012 1:40 PM

@Muffin - What do you think of Ferguson's position? I think he's a talented historian but he also must know who he is and who the families he documents are. I think that he knows how things work, but doesn't want to sacrifice his prestige in asserting so. He still provides a virtuous role in documenting these histories. If he were to go "A. Jones" he would lose all credibility and likely his access to research. Honestly he's written biographies of the Rothschilds and now he's doing Kissinger. He can't be so thick as to think that they're merely high-society 'power players'.

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Clayton replied on Wed, Apr 18 2012 1:45 PM

This has already been done who-knows-how-many times already.

 

Three letters, baby: V P N

shutting down all internet technology, period.

Actually, they've really let the genie out of the bottle this time - they can't even throw the Internet kill-switch except in the event of WW3, literally. Why? Well, very simply, the public is hooked on the porn that TPTB peddle and distribute. The US/UK/EU public would pull a Samson and bring the entire socio-political structure crashing to the ground if any of these governments ever tried to throw a kill-switch over some riots or whatever. The government can spy and terrorize all it likes but it damn well better think twice before shutting off the porn.

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PhilipK replied on Wed, Apr 18 2012 1:48 PM

I've been looking at some of Ferguson's work since seeing it posted earlier today. It has left me thinking... do I need to start converting my money to Yaun?

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Autolykos replied on Wed, Apr 18 2012 1:58 PM

Clayton:
Three letters, baby: V P N

Indeed. I'll throw out three more letters: P G P

Clayton:
Actually, they've really let the genie out of the bottle this time - they can't even throw the Internet kill-switch except in the event of WW3, literally. Why? Well, very simply, the public is hooked on the porn that TPTB peddle and distribute. The US/UK/EU public would pull a Samson and bring the entire socio-political structure crashing to the ground if any of these governments ever tried to throw a kill-switch over some riots or whatever. The government can spy and terrorize all it likes but it damn well better think twice before shutting off the porn.

Oh, I agree - if all internet technology were shut down, I think we'd already have much bigger issues to worry about.

If you ask me, though, I don't think people are hooked on porn due to TPTB. I think humans as a species are just obsessed with sex to begin with. Some of our closest animal relatives are like this, too. (Chimpanzees are also promiscuous, but not quite to the extent that bonobos are.)

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Clayton replied on Wed, Apr 18 2012 2:17 PM

Porn is neither here nor there in my view. Of course it's natural. Nevertheless, there's a lot more to it than just people looking at naked pictures of other people - in particular, money, manipulation (guilt, dirt) and cultural degradation due to the widespread lowering of standards of decency. I'm more offended by the cover of Cosmopolitan or an explicit Superbowl ad than I am by a hardcore porn website... you have to make an effort to view the latter, the former is thrust in your face and the faces of your children and everybody in the world whether you like it or not.

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I like the Apocalypto reference, too... that was a very powerful scene, deeply illustrative of the true nature of power.

Indeed, I'm always referencing that. Funny considering Gibson is such a hardcore Catholic - guess it's only those other religions that are used for control.

apiarius delendus est, ursus esuriens continendus est
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dalai replied on Thu, Jun 14 2012 5:50 PM

If you are informed about the Hegelian dialectics and how two poles of an opposition are controlled for "total control" (a remedy, aka the synthesis, ordo ab chao), this wouldn't shock you. You also have to realize that without an active opposition to fractional reserve banking and interest, free markets are never free.

I really can't understand why brilliant people (like Peter Schiff) claim that fractional reserve is up to the market to decide and do not acknowledge the externalities this creates. Applies to almost all so called free market economists. This is the only mises.org piece I can find on this issue and nothing else. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KmlSxvwqbo

I think the reason is obvious, AE is another controlled opposition. I'll try to elaborate.

 

Why are people like Peter Schiff talking always about all the moral hazards of social security (which is true to the core) but seldom mention the 100+ US military bases all around the world and how this is not only financed by American tax payers, but everyone who are forced into buying dollars; and these two parts of the budget are not even comparable in size and morality?

Blaming people for borrowing money, spending beyond their means and abusing social security is very easy. How about all the inflation that is created via fractional reserve -which is an externality that falls into the category of theft more than fraud- and people being forced into borrowing? How can fractional reserve be an issue of debate among "libertarians" including Mises and Hayek, but not something that is established as "wrong" just like price fixing is "wrong"?

How can these apparently brilliant economists dismiss people like Alan Greenspan as incompetent and plain stupid, but don't mention how it is impossible for all this not to be a "setup?"

Austrian economics is not the answer to the problems we have, it is (one of) the diametrical opposite(s).

Lending money on interest ,selling risk and time are immoral. I am not saying that there is no price to capital, I consider myself a Muslim, therefore I am pro-free market; and as a business owner, I am aware of all the pains that come with creating capital (underconsumption, borrowing etc). Of course capital has a price.

 

Of course capital deserves a return which should be determined via market forces, but this is true up to the point that you bear risk in that operation. Risk free gains (lending on interest is exactly that, I don't buy that lenders have risk with a fixed interest) are immoral and haraam. This causes people to be immune from becoming poor, and hinder the access of poor people getting rich. Besides, with this (Islamic) approach, making money by lending for consumption is impermissible, thus most of the problems we live today are impossible to occur.

How is raising interest rates going to help people after a point of no return which USA has already passed? Yes, fixed interest rate kind of lending has a point of no return, that the only way out is slavery. I think this is self evident, but if you disagree or don't get my point, I can explain.

Insurance is haraam, because one's gain is another's loss without exception. Gain with a definite loss is the whole point of insurance, not a probability. A legitimate business transaction at least aims, or let's say, starts with an intention of mutual benefit (you get the good you want, I make money). The problem with the insurance system is not that it is public, and that it should be left to the private market, but the concept itself is immoral. So selling risk is haraam.

Fractional reserve is obviously as haraam as paper money itself is haraam.

The concept of pure human greed restraining each other to create a fair and free society is just far fetched. I am not saying that aiming a better life and providing services while pursuing this aim is immoral. This is one of the fundamental mechanics of a society and wealth creation and anyone who disagrees with this mechanics and whines about the "greed of capitalists" is an idiot and can wage his next war against gravity and arithmetic. But saying that law and defense can and should be privatized is plain fantasy, which in my humble opinion, inconsistent with formal logic and utterly inapplicable.

These are the issues which Islam and AE have different views on. Otherwise we are very similar with regards to economics and politics. But I think these are also the very issues which explain why Rockefeller would want to fund AE as a diametrical opposite that only propagates  as a controlled opposition, which has never been or can ever be a true alternative.

Even Wicksell-Hayek structure of production model is mentioned in the Quran cheeky

 

“Those who devour usury will not stand except as stand one whom the Evil one by his touch hath driven to madness. That is because they say: “Trade is like usury,” but God hath permitted trade and forbidden usury. Those who after receiving direction from their Lord, desist, shall be pardoned for the past; their case is for God (to judge); but those who repeat (the offence) are companions of the Fire: They will abide therein (for ever).”
- Quran Verse 2:275 (Chapter Al-Baqara)

 

Thanks for reading, I've been waiting for this for a long time. 

 

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dalai replied on Thu, Jun 14 2012 6:57 PM

On time preference...

Underconsumption and postponing consumption are the means to gain capital, not to benefit from capital. The benefit should only come from the utilization of that capital and bearing risk in the operation.  The only way to get a return from a capital investment (in Islam) is becoming a partner/stockholder.

a. This eliminates the possibility of making money by lending capital for consumption, therefore eliminating the market for consumption based loans, which would have been very beneficial for the current situation if it had been utilized before. "Inflate and force them to borrow" scheme becomes impossible. A moral hazard gone. 

b. You can no longer bet against/short the very investments that you lent to, in order to bankrupt those investments to get access to the collateral at a very low liquidation price, first hand. Another moral hazard gone.

c. Just because you made money at some point in time can't supply you with a definite income when the only way to gain from capital is being a partner/stockholder in a company or a distinct business operation. Another moral hazard gone.

d. The point of no return that I mentioned in the above post becomes an impossiblity with Islamic economics. Raising interest rates, they say, is the only way to restructure; but after the point of return (which most countries have passed) "the only way to structure" (raising interest) also makes sure that the restructuring is impossible. This is more visible with the concept of "compounded interest". (USA is already bankrupt and is attached to an intensive care unit, waiting for its death. When the only way to get cured is to make sure that you are dead, means that you are already dead. There wont be a revival of USA after they do the "right thing". USA is done for.

Islamic economics is superior to AE.

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I really can't understand why brilliant people (like Peter Schiff) claim that fractional reserve is up to the market...I think the reason is obvious, AE is another controlled opposition.

What?  Murray Rothbard, one of the most important members of the Austrian School, was hugely opposed to fractional reserve banking and wanted it outlawed in a free society.  What happened to the 'controlled opposition' of the Austrian School during the decades in which Rothbard was the leader of the Austrian School?  Or are you saying that AE is only controlled opposition in more recent times?  Well, Ron Paul - the most prominent Austrian public figure - believes that fractional reserve banking is fraudulent and follows Rothbard in calling for its illegality!!  Jörg Guido Hülsmann and Jesus Huerta de Soto also oppose fractional reserve banking, among many others.

As I recall Mises and Hayek believed that, on the free market, fractional reserve banking would be greatly limited by the supply and demand for banknotes (which would most likely have commodity backing).

Why are people like Peter Schiff talking always about all the moral hazards of social security (which is true to the core) but seldom mention the 100+ US military bases all around the world and how this is not only financed by American tax payers, but everyone who are forced into buying dollars; and these two parts of the budget are not even comparable in size and morality?

Firstly, Peter Schiff does talk about the cost of the military bases and doesn't always talk about social security.  He likely emphasises the costs of 'Social Security' because it is such a sacred cow of politics and few realise that it's a ponzi scheme.  As for the budget comparison, the unfunded liabilities of SS amount to around $9 trillion.  The yearly budget of the entire US military - not only the foreign bases you are talking about - is $550 billion.  It seems then that the enormous costs of SS greatly dwarf those of the foreign bases, and few realise how costly it is compared to those who oppose the existence of costly foreign military bases.  For that reason it is even more pressing for people like Schiff to emphasise the problems of SS.

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acft replied on Thu, Jun 14 2012 11:55 PM

Clayton said :
"The government can spy and terrorize all it likes but it damn well better think twice before shutting off the porn."

I think this got Santorum into trouble. Very stupid move to try to censor porn.


"I think that the ruling elite actually have certain virtues that most people lack and that these virtues are partly responsible (in combination with dumb luck) for their present status. In particular, the virtues I have in mind are a zeal for life, a strong sense of family/kin loyalty, low time preference, high discipline, consistency and so on -"

I am curious, What does everyone think the most important virtue or psychological trait is with regard to gaining, keeping, and accumulating power?

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Merlin replied on Fri, Jun 15 2012 1:57 AM

If refusing to force free parties into fashioning a banking deal according to your, as opposed to their, wishes - i.e. refusing to ‘outlaw’ fractional reserve banking - is conducting controlled opposition, than I myself am a proud controlled opposition guy.

The Regression theorem is a memetic equivalent of the Theory of Evolution. To say that the former precludes the free emergence of fiat currencies makes no more sense that to hold that the latter precludes the natural emergence of multicellular organisms.
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dalai replied on Sat, Jun 16 2012 4:06 AM

Fractional reserve creates negative externalities. The third parties are not free in this case.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KmlSxvwqbo

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Merlin replied on Sat, Jun 16 2012 11:40 AM

 

Do such alleged externalities include a direct destruction of the physical property of third parties? I don’t think so. Nobody owes me a ‘solid’ monetary system. 

The Regression theorem is a memetic equivalent of the Theory of Evolution. To say that the former precludes the free emergence of fiat currencies makes no more sense that to hold that the latter precludes the natural emergence of multicellular organisms.
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Autolykos:

It gives credence to my suspicion that TPTB essentially follow the Austrian school of economics without being public about it. Why would they do this? If you've seen the movie Apocalypto, do you remember the solar-eclipse scene? The king, queen, and high priests at the top of the sacrificial pyramid knew what was really going on, but the masses at the bottom had no idea. The high priest proceeded to lie to the masses about what was going on, and the masses ate it up. Exploiting such an extreme asymmetry of information can apparently be very profitable. Most people, however, won't try to persist such exploitation by deceit or worse unless 1) they believe they have strong incentives to do so, and/or 2) they're psychopaths.

 

Professor Jason Jewell at the LibertyClassroom.com forums was asked why people worshipped the pharaohs and whether it was because they had special knowledge with which they were able to fool the people. He responded:

 

"The pharaoh, backed by the priests, did have some tricks up his sleeve. Some Egyptian temples had sophisticated ways of measuring the water levels in the Nile and could 'predict' the annual floods before anyone else noticed the changes in the levels. Priests typically were the only people who were literate."

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Clayton replied on Mon, Jul 16 2012 1:30 PM

I am curious, What does everyone think the most important virtue or psychological trait is with regard to gaining, keeping, and accumulating power?

Please note I provided no ranking of the virtues. Personally, I think we need the lot of them and a big part of the problem with the encroaching, global cultural monolith is precisely that it elevates a very small number of virtues to the be-all-end-all of human virtue. In the process, only people exhibiting these virtues can achieve material success in life and so all the other (absolutely essential) virtues end up being marginalized and neglected and society devolves into this hyper-sterilized, hyper-jackbooted, hyper-anal-retentive culture created in the image and likeness of the Pentagon.

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Wait, so what are the virtues and which ones are elevated?

 

To paraphrase Marc Faber: We're all doomed, but that doesn't mean that we can't make money in the process.
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Clayton replied on Mon, Jul 16 2012 3:25 PM

There are a large number of virtues that can be named - kindness, friendliness, diligence, nurturing, forethought, frugality, etc. etc. My contention is that the martial virtues (discipline, physical fitness, punctuality, persistence, energy, ambition, etc. etc.) are assigned the highest seat in modern American culture to the marginalization of other virtues. In fact, if someone is more sensitive than punctual, we consider such a person to be "irresponsible" on net. This bias towards the martial virtues leads to a general beating down of virtuous people who simply exhibit virtues other than the martial virtues. What we really need, instead, are the positive contributions of all virtuous people to our culture and life.

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