Tag Archive | "depression"
Posted on 18 June 2010. Tags: agencies, american peasants, austrian economic theory, austrian economics, Big Brother, blog economics, blog political, blog politics, blog real estate, blogging political, blogging real estate, bubble real estate, buyer real estate, buying real estate, capital, capital structure, capitalism, conspiracy theory, crash, debt, debt capital, deflation, department housing urban, Department of Housing and Urban Development, depression, diluting currency, dollar, Economics, economics blog, economics blogging, economics real estate, equity, equity capital, Fannie Mae, federal agencies, federal housing administration, federal national mortgage association, federal reserve, federal reserve flow of funds, feudalism, fha, financing real estate, fiscal policy, FNM, Freddie Mac, government, government policy, great recession, holc, homeowner society, homeowners, homeowners loan corporation, homes, housing, housing bubble, housing bubble crash, housing policy, housing politics, housing recession, HUD, hyperinflation, inflation, institutions, interest rates mortgage, liquidity, monetary policy, mortgage, mortgage interest rates, mortgage rates, mortgages, ownership society, peasants, policy, policy housing, political, political blog, political blogging, political policy, Politics, politics blog, property, public institutions, quantitative easing, rates mortgage, Real Estate, real estate blog, real estate blogging, real estate bubble, real estate bubble crash, real estate buyers, real estate buying, real estate economics, real estate financing, real estate policies, real estate policy, real property, Road to Serfdom, serfdom, serfdom road, theory conspiracy, transfer ownership, U.S. dollar, urban housing, USD
The capital structure of US real estate assets has been in a long process of change. By subsidizing real estate and making mortgage debt artificially cheaper than equity capital, the US government has been effectively transferring real estate ownership from individuals to lending institutions and the Federal Reserve. Here’s how this game has been unfolding, and a warning to Americans that they will one day wake up in a country where most people live as feudalistic peasants, beholden to their banking and political overlords. Continue Reading
Posted in Economics, Politics, Real Estate
Posted on 22 June 2009. Tags: airlines, backpacking, biking, books, Brooke Musterman, budget, budgeting, buy in bulk, buy used, cable, camping, coupons, cut expenses, cutting expenses, decorate for less, decorating, depression, Economics, economies of scale, entertainment, exercise equipment, expensive to be sick, Frugality, Goodwill, gym, health, health care costs, Hulu.com, inexpensive entertainment, libary, living within a budget, make deodorant, Personal Finance, picture frame, reading, recession, running, saving money, thrifty, tickets, TIPS, vacations, valuable investment, Walking, working vacation, yoga
Since I, along with most people, am feeling thrifty, I searched high and low for thrifty tips. Here are some of my favorite websites dedicated to saving a few more pennies. Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Frugality, Personal Finance
Posted on 10 June 2009. Tags: American Revolution, Battle of Trenton, bureaucracy, country, debt, Declaration of Independence, deficits, depression, Economics, financial crisis, Foundation for Economic Education, freedom, George Washington, government spending, Lawrence Reed, liberty, patriot, Politics, recession, regulation, service, socialism, The American Crisis, The Freeman, Thomas Paine, tradition of courage, tyrrany, we are all socialists now
B Y LAWRENCE W. R E E D
These are the times that try mens souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands by it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph. What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly: it is dearness only that gives everything its value. Heaven knows how to put a proper price upon its goods; and it would be strange indeed if so celestial an article as freedom should not be highly rated.
So began the first of 16 pamphlets under the title The American Crisis, by patriot Thomas Paine. These very words were read aloud to General George Washingtons forlorn and
bedraggled men on Christmas 1776, the night before the Battle of Trenton.
Consider the backdrop: For the six months since the Declaration of Independence, Americans had been in almost constant retreat. To a disinterested observer, the American cause must have seemed hopelessly quixotic. To many patriots as well, it appeared all but lost. But Paines stirring words helped give the troops the morale boost they needed. The next day they accomplished the impossible, capturing nearly the entire force arrayed against them. Desertions plummeted and reenlistments soared.
Lovers of liberty need a little Paine today in the face of all the pain around us. It seems at times that the world has gone mad. Companies that lose billions are being bailed out by a government that loses trillions. The same federal Leviathan that outlaws competition in first-class mail delivery but still cant deliver letters at a profit now supposedly knows how to run auto companies, banks, and insurance firms. Debt, deficits, bureaucracy, regulation, government spendingthe depressing stuff already in frightful superabundance pre-financial crisisnow threaten our diminishing liberties more than ever before. The cover of the March 15 issue of Newsweek proclaimed,We Are All Socialists Now.
No Sunshine Soldiers
Maybe we have good reason to feel like those dispirited troops on Christmas Day in 1776, but
we should learn from what they did just a day later. We can either be summer soldiers and sunshine patriots, or we can let the very principles we profess be our rallying cry for the battles ahead.
Eternal optimist though I am, I admit that pessimism really tugs at me when I read the morning papers. At every speech I give these days, theres a sizable portion of the crowd that seems ready to crawl under a rock and let the world go to a statist hell in a hand basket.
But then I ask myself, what good purpose could a defeatist attitude possibly promote? Will it make me work harder for the causes I know are right? Is there anything about liberty that an election or events in Congress disproves? If I exude a pessimistic demeanor, will it help attract newcomers to the ideas I believe in? Is this the first time in history that believers in liberty have lost some battles? If we simply throw in the towel, will that enhance the prospects for future victories? Is our cause so menial as to justify deserting it because of some bad news or some new challenges? Do we turn back just because the hill we have to climb got a little steeper?
Readers of this magazine [The Freeman] should know the answers to those questions.
This is not the time to abandon time-honored principles. I cant speak for you but someday I want to go to my reward and be able to look back and say, I never gave up. I never became part of the problem I tried to solve. I never gave the other side the luxury of winning anything without a rigorous, intellectual contest. I never missed an opportunity to do my best for what I believed in, and it never mattered what the odds or the obstacles were.
A Tradition of Courage
Remember that we stand on the shoulders of many people who came before us and who persevered through far darker times. The American patriots who shed their blood and suffered through unspeakable hardships as they took on the worlds most powerful nation in 1776 are
certainly among them. But I am also thinking of the brave men and women behind the Iron Curtain who resisted the greatest tyranny of the modern age, and won. I think of those like Hayek and Mises who kept the flame of liberty flickering in the 1930s and 40s. I think of the heroes like Wilberforce and Clarkson who fought to end slavery and literally changed the
conscience and character of a nation in the face of the most daunting of disadvantages. And I think of the Scots who, 456 years before the Declaration of Independence, put their lives on the line to repel English invaders with these thrilling words: It is not for honor or glory or wealth that we fight, but for freedom alone, which no good man gives up except with his life.
As I think about what some of those great men and women faced, the obstacles before us today seem rather puny. We just need to gird our loins. We have to get a lot smarter and better at reaching more fellow citizens with a compelling alternative to the dead hand of the corrupt and incompetent State. We need to put confident smiles on our faces and sally forth.
Time to Rally
We should not squander a second feeling bad for ourselves. This is a moment when our true character, the stuff were really made of, will show itself. If we retreat, that would tell me we were never really worthy of the battle in the first place. But if we resolve to let these tough times build character and rally our dispirited friends to new levels of dedication, we will look back on this occasion someday with pride at how we handled it. Have you called a friend yet today to explain to him or her why liberty should be a top priority?
Nobody ever promised that liberty would be easy to attain or easy to keep. The world has always been full of greedy thieves and thugs, narcissistic power seekers, snake-oil charlatans,
unprincipled neer-do-wells, and arrogant busybodies. Sometimes theyre nattily dressed in custom-tailored, pin-stripe suits and give good speeches; sometimes theyre bedecked in jewel-studded robes and give lousy speeches; on yet other occasions they wear well-worn street clothes and dont bother with a speech at all as they hold you up. It doesnt matter how theyre dressed or what they say. No true friend of liberty should just roll over and play dead for any of them.
Wipe that frown off your face and get to work. Libertys future depends on you.
Lawrence W.Reed is the president of the Foundation for Economic Education
Posted in Politics
Posted on 14 April 2009. Tags: ACORN, anti-tax protests, backing bank loans, bailout, balance sheets, banking, banks, Big Brother, big government, bonds, budget, capital, career, CFA, CFA study program, charter, Chartered Financial Analyst, competitive, congress, contraction, Crash Proof, Credit, debt markets, deflation, depression, earning potential, eco-nomics, economic growth, Education, exam, FDIC, federal, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, financial crisis, fiscal policy, free choice, green jobs, inflation, labor market, leftists, Level 1, liberty, mandates, monetary policy, money supply, nationwide, No Child Left Behind, Obamanomics, offshore, outsource, peter schiff, Peter Schiff predicts crisis, President Obama, presidential budget, progressive taxes, propaganda, protectionism, public education, recession, Rob Viglione, school vouchers, skepitcal about green jobs, socialism, Spanish study, stipulations, stock market, stress tests, strings attached, TARP, tax policy, taxation, Tea Party, Tim Geithner, toughen standards, Treasury, unemployment, velocity of money
Nationwide anti-tax protests staged for April 15th tax day-rumors abound that leftist group ACORN intends to crash events, Obama administration readying to disclose results of bank stress tests, revisions to No Child Left Behind on the Obama agenda-prepare to see pervasive federal mandates in education, FDIC helps banks raise $300 billion through unregulated channels, Congress looks set to let D.C. school voucher program expire next year-Big Brother not prepared to let parents choose how to educate their own children, Spanish study casts skepticism on economic value of government creating green jobs… Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 13 April 2009. Tags: AAA, accountability, acquisition, Alan Meltzer, apartment building, bailout programs, banking, banks, barack obama, Ben Bernanke, Benjamin Graham, Big Brother, big government, bond auction, bond market, borrow, buy your first apartment building, california, Carnegie mellon, CFA, CFA study program, Chairman, charter, Chartered Financial Analyst, CNN, commercial real estate, competitive, conservative insurgency, credit markets, crowd out, debt, Delta Global Advisors, depression, eavesdropping, economy, fair tax, Fed historian, federal, federal reserve, financial system, fiscal policies, Georgia, government debt, hedge inflation, hedge risk, history, hyperinflation, independent media, inflation, Keynes, learn about CFA, Michael Pento, Milton Friedman, monetary policy, money, money printing, money supply, municipal bonds, munis, nest egg, Obama administration, Obamanomics, older workers, online, political economist, Politics, President Obama, private placement, private sector, progressive taxation, public auction, public oversight, Real Estate, recession, releveraging, Retirement, risk, risk management, risk mitigation, Rob Viglione, Santa Monica Tea Party, secrecy, socal real estate advisors, spend, state, state secrets, struggling to pay taxes, surveillance, tax protests, tax reform, taxation, tea parties, tears, The Freedom Factory, transparency, Treasury securities, unemployment, Utah, valuation, value investing, what is a CFA, wiretapping
Obama continues Bush policy of surveillance secrecy despite campaign promises, tax protests spark conservative insurgency online, submit video footage of your tax woes to CNN and you might be aired nationally, Fed historian and political economist predicts worse inflation than 1970s, consider real estate as an inflation hedge, municipal bond market shows signs of life, older workers 45 years and older face brunt of recession, and flood of government debt crowds out private economy… Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 04 April 2009. Tags: barack obama, Big Brother, bonds, borrow, budget, capitalism, central bank, class warfare, competition, competitive, currency, cut taxes, debt, depression, economic prosperity, Economics, expenditures, fiscal policy, free enterprise, free markets, free trade, globalization, government, government spending, growth, improving productivity, interest rates, John Key, laissez-fair, leftism, limit to what government can do, make country more productive, monetary policy, National, New Zealand, New Zealand dollar, Politics, populism, President Obama, prime minister, print money, productive, prop up growth, recession, redistribution, regulations, resources, Rob Viglione, socialism, spend, stimulus, taxation, taxes, trade, trader, transform the economy, Wall Street Journal, world leader, WSJ
New Zealand Prime Minister John Key speaks a strange language. It’s English, all right, even with an accent, but he is one of the only world leaders who is speaking of relaxing regulations, cutting taxes, spending within budget, and focusing on making his country more productive.
Rather than jumping on the tax, borrow, spend, print, populist bandwagon with nearly every other world leader, John Key’s solution to the tough times is to “use this time to transform the economy to make us stronger so that when the world starts growing again we can be running faster than other countries we compete with.”
Key’s idea is to grow the country out of recession by improving productivity, not simply catering to populist calls for wealth redistribution, stifling regulation, and growth-inhibiting class warfare taxes. He calls attempts to use debt and money printing to “prop up growth” risky, saying that saddling future generations with debt could be counterproductive. He is one of the only politicians who states “There is actually a limit to what governments can do.”
At a time when governments are growing by leaps and bounds, and everyone seems convinced that Big Brother holds the keys to economic prosperity, it is refreshing to see a world leader (actually an ex-currency trader) embrace sound economic principals.
Key admits that New Zealand will not pull the world out of recession; it’s too bad other leaders lack such humility!
Here’s a link to the Wall Street Journal interview with Key.
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Posted in Economics, Politics
Posted on 03 April 2009. Tags: accountability, Ahmad Tanveer, AIG, alternative economic data, america, American International Group, bail out the people, barack obama, Ben Bernanke, Big Brother, big businesses, bipartisanship, BLS, bonds, bonuses, bottomless pit, budge deficit, budget plan, Bureau of Labor Statistis, bureaucratic, capitalism must end, cato institute, chanting and drumming, collectivism, concentration camps, congress, debt, democrats, Department of Homeland Security, depression, detain immigrants, detention centers, developing world, development, development economics, DHS, economic systems, Economics, Economists' Adventures and misadventures in the tropics, employment obligations, end of American Empire, fair trade, Fannie Mae, fascism, federal reserve, financial regulations, fiscal year, FNM, FRE, Fredd Mac, free enterprise, free trade, G20, Georgia, global New Deal, Global Socialism, globalization, Goldman Sachs, Gordon Brown, Group of 20, harassed by government, Harry Reid, House of Representatives, Hugo Chavez, IMF, immigrant deaths, immigration, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, ineffective, inherited mistakes, insurance, international aid organizations, International Monetary Fund, London, mortgage giants, mortgage market, Nancy Pelosi, new york protest, New York University, New Yorker, NYU, Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, Pakistani, Pax Americana, Politics, poor countries, President Obama, prisons, protectionism, quadrillion, real unemployment, recession, republicans, retention bonuses, Rob Viglione, Russia, secondary market, Senate, ShadowStats, socialism, spending bill, statistics, stimulus spending, summit, The Elusive Quest for Growth, The White Man's Burden, third world, Tim Geithner, trade credits, treasuries, trillion, troop withdrawals, unemployment, united states, unprecedented spending, utopia, Utopian aid plans, Venezuela, wasteful, why doesn't aid work, Why the West's Efforts to aid the rest have done so much ill and so little good, William Easterly, World Bank, world leaders
Government detention camps cover up deaths-does America have a human rights problem? Congress passes unprecedented $3.6 trillion budget with $1.2 trillion deficit, official unemployment rates his 8.5%-some economists claiming they are really upwards of 20%, government mortgage giants Fannie and Freddie to pay $159 billion in new bonuses, Obama calls end to ‘Pax Americana’, world leaders pledge $1.1 trillion to IMF, Russia refuses to remove troops from Georgia, NY protesters call for government to ‘Bail out the People’, Hugo Chavez declares that ‘Capitalism must end,’ and Treasuries drop with announcement of next week’s $59 billion note issue and Goldman Sachs estimate that government will need to borrow another $3.25 trillion this year… Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire, Uncategorized
Posted on 30 March 2009. Tags: Britain, British, british pound, capitalism, conservative, currency, Daniel Hannan, debt, deflation, depression, devaluation, economy, European Parliament, fiscal policy, free enterprise, free markets, freedom, furious, Gordon Brown, inflation, liberty, markets, MEP, monetary policy, money supply, national debt, Politics, private sector, protectionism, public debt, public sector, recession, Rob Viglione, socialism
In a speech to the European Parliament, British Conservative MEP Daniel Hannan confronts Prime Minister Gordon Brown:
In the last 12 months a 100,000 private sector jobs have been lost and yet you’ve created 30000 public sector jobs. pm, you cannot carry on forever squeezing the productive bit of the economy in order to fund an unprecedented engorgement of the unproductive bit. You cannot spend your way out of recession or borrow your way out of debt.
Hannan is furious with Britain’s response to the financial downturn, decrying the borrowing, spending, currency devaluation, and increased Socialization of the economy as destructive. It turns out that everything Britain is doing wrong is being done in the U.S.
Check out Daniel Hannan’s book, The Plan: Twelve Months To Renew Britain.
Posted in Economics, Politics
Posted on 29 March 2009. Tags: agenda, bailouts, banking, banks, barack obama, bureaucrats, capitalism, carbon credit market, carbon dioxide, CEO, checks and balances, Chief Executive Officer, climate change, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, communism, Constitution, credit contraction, credit crisis, deflation, depression, derivatives market, economy, emissions, executive power, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, federal reserve, financial crisis, financial system, fiscal policy, forgotten age, free enterprise, free trade, General Motors, Global Socialism, GM, green agenda, IMF, inflation, International Monetary Fund, Investing, legal authority, liquidity, monetary policy, money supply, Obama administration, Obamanomics, policy drives markets, political economy, pollution, portfolio, President Obama, protectionism, quantitative easing, recession, Republic, resignation, resigned, restrictions on power, Rick Wagoner, Rob Viglione, secondary market, socialism, spending orgy, Tim Geithner, Treasury, turf battle, White House
President Obama forces General Motors CEO to resign, tallying up the spending binge-Federal Reserve and Treasury dump $13 trillion into financial system over last 16 months, bureaucrats begin turf battle over $1 trillion carbon credit market, and Global Socialism is on the way with tripling of IMF budget… Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire
Posted on 28 March 2009. Tags: Afghan strategy, Afghanistan, Al Qaeda, Amnesty International, barack obama, climate, climate policy, consumers, Cuba, David Peterson, deflation, depression, detention camps, due process, Economics, embargo, energy, energy costs, federal reserve, freedom in Cuba, Freedom Towers, governor, habeas corpus, immigrant rights, inflation, international meetings, Investing, joe biden, legislature, millionaire tax, moderate elements, New York, Obamanomics, One World Trade Center, open talks, policy, political theft, Politics, President Obama, price sensitivity, printing money, recession, Rob Viglione, Taliban, tax bracket, tax hike, terrorism, unemployment, Vice president Biden, war in Afghanistan, White House
New York to pass ‘Millionaire Tax’ in biggest tax hike in recent history, White House organizing international climate and energy meetings, consumers not ready for energy cost increases brought about my environmental policies, Obama unveils new Afghan strategy, Amnesty International criticizes U.S. on immigration rights and detention camps, ‘Freedom Towers’ renamed ‘One World’ Trade Center, and Biden says U.S. has no plans to end Cuban embargo…just the latest in your Freedom Under Fire Report! Continue Reading
Posted in Featured, Freedom Under Fire