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	<title>Whiskey and Gunpowder &#187; bank</title>
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		<title>401(k) as Dangerous as the Dollar</title>
		<link>http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/401k-as-dangerous-as-the-dollar/</link>
		<comments>http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/401k-as-dangerous-as-the-dollar/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 26 Jun 2009 12:55:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Linda Brady Traynham</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Morning Whiskey]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[401(k)]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bank]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bank holiday]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/?p=4628</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Prophets are famous for being without honor in their own country, and it isn&#8217;t any fun being Cassandra.  We&#8217;re considered alarmist nuts until what we have foreseen comes to pass&#8211;and repulsive thereafter if we say &#8220;I told you so!&#8221; Well, we told you so about a lot of things, including the plans that the Obama [...]<p><a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/401k-as-dangerous-as-the-dollar/">401(k) as Dangerous as the Dollar</a> was originally featured on <a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com">Whiskey and Gunpowder</a>. Visit <a href="http://lfb.org/">Laissez Faire Books</a> for the best selection of libertarian book titles.</p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Prophets are famous for being without honor in their own country, and it isn&#8217;t any fun being Cassandra.  We&#8217;re considered alarmist nuts until what we have foreseen comes to pass&#8211;and repulsive thereafter if we say &#8220;I told you so!&#8221;</p>
<p>Well, we told you so about a lot of things, including the plans that the Obama Nation has for your 401K.</p>
<p>To be brutal, the rape artists are moving on their plans to hijack your 401K and replace it with a handsome certificate suitable for framing which says you got a Guaranteed Retirement Account in return for one of your old, unsafe means of preparing for the grim future.  Actually, I made that part up.  You probably won&#8217;t get a certificate large enough to frame and hang over your computer as a constant reminder never to trust government with your money, or not to change the rules on you.  What you&#8217;ll get is a dud IOU.</p>
<p>Given the speed with which the Left Wing Congress and the &#8220;I just sign what they send me&#8221; President move, you have at most days to contemplate what is left of years of thrift and deferred gratification.  Those people don&#8217;t mess around when they have prey in their sights.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m no expert on how a 401K can be restructured, but if I were you I&#8217;d be on the &#8216;phone to my CPA or financial advisor immediately to see if there is any exemption anticipated, any way to get your meager security th&#8217; hell outta Dodge.  What I would really do&#8211;and did two years ago&#8211;is pay the penalty and close the position out.  You&#8217;re going to have to pay taxes on those funds eventually anyway, and far better to snatch two-thirds or so of the prize away before it gets dumped into the general fund and is spent on housing for Hamas, the snail darter, uniforms for the Obama Youth, excruciatingly bad modern &#8220;art,&#8221; or more perquisites for Congress.  Even half a loaf will be better than none&#8230;if you turn it quickly into objects of intrinsic value, such as gold, silver, diesel oil, and emergency rations.</p>
<p>This freight train is building up speed, folks, and actions which were objects of scorn two years ago can be discerned now quite clearly.  Here are some serious warnings:</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px">1.  Empty out your safety deposit box.  Your bank manager will confirm that if there is a Friday surprise he can not guarantee that you will ever have access to it again.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px">2.  Start pulling your cash out of banks.  Again, turn as much of it as possible into real property&#8211;which does not mean &#8220;real estate&#8221;but tangible assets.  It doesn&#8217;t matter if the banks crash before the bond market does or whether the dollar crashes or is devalued first.  The interests rates are so low it is very inexpensive insurance to remove your personal wealth from sinking Bernankes and store it in metal, C-rations (sorry, MRE, &#8220;meals, ready to eat&#8221;), or cowrie shells.  I&#8217;m famous for saying, &#8220;The worst that can happen is&#8230;&#8221; and the worst that can happen is you will lose the premium you paid for gold coins (there are better ways to buy metal), forfeit the 1.13% your funds are accruing in the bank, and have to pay the premium to sell silver ingots back much later.  Don&#8217;t stand there like a deer caught in a jack light, and don&#8217;t expect any sympathy if you go to the bank one day and see signs that say &#8220;Bank holiday.  Closed until further notice.&#8221; or &#8220;Daily withdrawal limit $300.&#8221; There are proposals for those very restrictions floating around, and that limit is going to include transferring funds between banks.  Mr. Paulson asked for permission a while back to post SWAT teams to prevent bank runs.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px">3.  You&#8217;ve been warned repeatedly to accumulate a bare minimum of three months&#8217; supplies of food, water, and Sudoku puzzles, those representing whatever you, personally, would not wish to be without in times of stress and crisis.  Don&#8217;t forget the Tullamore Dew.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px">4.  If the dollar is devalued again history shows that the usual amount is on the order of two-thirds.  If you want to risk getting roughly thirty-three Amero coins for a Bernanke, you keep your innocent faith that this is &#8220;just another bump in the road&#8221; and that Mr. Obama couldn&#8217;t possibly do what Roosevelt and Nixon did.  When the dust settles from what at best will be a controlled demolition you have watched go whoomp-whoomp-whoomp-whoomp-whoomp in a series of rapid shocks you will take what you are given on any assets you haven&#8217;t squirreled away in hard money of various kinds including tobacco, soap, fifty pound bags of rice and pinto beans, and canned corned beef.</p>
<p>Our world is a-swirl with forces building hurricane speed, each having an impact on the others.  The concatenation of instability in the bond and stock markets, housing and commercial real estate, the mushroom cloud of increased &#8220;money&#8221; supply, job losses developing in the auto and tobacco industries due to recent legislation, the Chinese and Japanese at least eying manipulating our currency or replacing the dollar as the standard against which other currencies float, and the possibility that the government is going to appropriate the health industry are just some of the warning signs that indicate it is time to head for the storm cellars with the kiddies, the livestock, a kerosene lantern, a good book, and an enormous picnic lunch.</p>
<p>Those are only the more obvious evils building to gale force.  Ignore the urgency of the klaxons if you will, but this occasionally fey half-Irish lady thinks she knows &#8220;Dive! Dive! Dive!&#8221; and &#8220;Tora, tora, tora&#8221; when she hears them.</p>
<p>Call me Chicken Little if you must, but I&#8217;m off to stuff some more silver coins under the mattress.  Literally they make lumps which prevent fairy tale princesses from sleeping well, but figuratively you&#8217;ll sleep far better if you have prepared for the hurricane before it makes landfall.  It may yet turn and blow away at sea, but a big one is right off your coast, and others are lined up clearly visible on radar.</p>
<p>Take care,<br />
Linda Brady Traynham</p>
<p>June 26, 2009</p>
<p><a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/401k-as-dangerous-as-the-dollar/">401(k) as Dangerous as the Dollar</a> was originally featured on <a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com">Whiskey and Gunpowder</a>. Visit <a href="http://lfb.org/">Laissez Faire Books</a> for the best selection of libertarian book titles.</p>
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		<title>Government Meddling Hasn&#8217;t Eradicated the Mortgage Market</title>
		<link>http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/government-meddling-hasnt-eradicated-the-mortgage-market/</link>
		<comments>http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/government-meddling-hasnt-eradicated-the-mortgage-market/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2009 14:42:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Linda Brady Traynham</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Featured]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Morning Whiskey]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bank]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mortgage]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/?p=4398</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The most captious critic could not claim that this article does not bear directly on matters very dear to all of our hearts, such as finding good investments, calling bottoms, being cantankerous, ah, Contrarians, and having what is tantamount to insider information without the risk of having to discuss our knowledge and behavior with a [...]<p><a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/government-meddling-hasnt-eradicated-the-mortgage-market/">Government Meddling Hasn&#8217;t Eradicated the Mortgage Market</a> was originally featured on <a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com">Whiskey and Gunpowder</a>. Visit <a href="http://lfb.org/">Laissez Faire Books</a> for the best selection of libertarian book titles.</p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The most captious critic could not claim that this article does not bear directly on matters very dear to all of our hearts, such as finding good investments, calling bottoms, being cantankerous, ah, Contrarians, and having what is tantamount to insider information without the risk of having to discuss our knowledge and behavior with a vindictive prosecutor in front of a disapproving jury practicing tying hangman&#8217;s nooses and muttering about tar and feathers and Martha Stewart while wondering when they can have a cigarette break.</p>
<p>I got someone in &#8220;the business&#8221; talking, and scribbled cryptic notes frantically for over an hour.  The bottom line, as we all say tritely, is that in the opinion of a real expert&#8230;</p>
<p>The sky is not falling, Chicken Little.</p>
<p>Yes, some chunks did, and there are still a few faint cracks, but don&#8217;t worry about it because hard times can provide great opportunities for growth and profit, and they&#8217;re hard at work proving it.  My congratulations to those of you who deduce on no clues whatsoever which sector of the economy is feeling very good about business these days, even though the answer is not obvious.  Here&#8217;s a clue if you didn&#8217;t:  which portion could say, &#8220;The competition is gone!  There&#8217;s a bigger share for those who are left?!&#8221;</p>
<p>My source, who spoke on conditions of absolute anonymity, said enthusiastically, &#8220;Now is a great time to be hunting a job!&#8221;  He&#8230;she&#8230;let&#8217;s say &#8220;she&#8221;&#8230;added that it is important to think for yourself, and although &#8220;she&#8221; doesn&#8217;t consider &#8220;herself&#8221; a stock market expert, despite having studied it, put the Contrarian position perfectly:  &#8220;If  people are complaining about it, I&#8217;m going to invest in it.&#8221;  The source continued, &#8220;What&#8217;s going on in the MSM exacerbates the situation and confounds those of us who know what is really going on.  We all knew that our competitors were in trouble and that their business practices would catch up with some of them eventually.&#8221;  Part of being a Contrarian is times when it appears we&#8217;re going with the herd, but we&#8217;re doing it for different reasons.  One of my rules is to investigate what I know before I get excited about fields where I am ignorant.</p>
<p>My attention was riveted from the moment my source said that the government&#8211;and we!&#8211;are being stampeded into looking at the sky and acting like Chicken Little.  I was spellbound a minute later when I heard a complacent, &#8220;We all knew that Indy Mac&#8217;s behavior would catch up with them.&#8221;  (We should have known that professional, dignified mortgage bankers don&#8217;t approve of churning, an amplification that emerged later on, as we should have known that serious bankers don&#8217;t lend to those with poor credit scores, no collateral, and food stamps as &#8220;income&#8221; given any choice.)</p>
<p>&#8220;We knew they were going out of business eventually.&#8221;  Argh.  Things we wish we&#8217;d known earlier, and all of those who predicted it take your bow.   &#8220;Indy Mac is just an example, of course.  We knew the risks Fannie and Freddie were being made to take and had a good idea of risks others were taking.  Any time there is a lot of money to be made&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>I wish that I were at liberty, sometimes, to tell you more about my sources, but you don&#8217;t have the famous &#8220;need to know,&#8221; and discretion is the better part of valor if I want more comments later.  I have friends who are Engineers (four different fields of Engineering), and friends who are truck drivers&#8211;who know a lot of interesting things&#8230;and people.  I know oil men, cattle men, well diggers, and grandmothers.  I hang out with landsmen, retired football coaches, goat herders, hog hunters, and college professors.  Anything I quote directly is precisely what I was told.  I never accept as truth anything more than once removed, and then only when someone I trust says, &#8220;I know because X told me so personally,&#8221;  and X is in a position to know.  Everything is a direct quote that has been checked via e-mail for accuracy by my source who has been employed in the field for nearing fifteen years and worked only for very well known banks, always in the mortgage field.</p>
<p>&#8220;There are three ways to make money in the mortgage loan business:  the interest on the loan, servicing the loan, and selling loans.  LIBOR, the London Inter Bank Offering Rate, which is both a leading index and very volatile, was and is often the index of choice.  This dynamic makes it easy to persuade borrows with a low rate and sell investors on the exponential potential.</p>
<p>The lender profits on the initial loan and again by selling over the rate.  Money exists in servicing the loan; however, you have to be willing to do what is in the best interest of a customer if you are to originate and service a loan.&#8221;</p>
<p>Fascinated, frantic scribbling, wondering how London got into all this&#8230;and all of you are probably laughing, &#8220;There is no way LBT wrote &#8216;This dynamic makes it easy to persuade borrows with a low rate and sell investors on the exponential potential.&#8217;&#8221;  No,  I really didn&#8217;t.  What&#8217;s the line?  &#8220;You are only thinking I am speaking your language!&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;A big part of the problem was banks that were making bad loans, packaging them, and swapping them to those who did not do due diligence and find out exactly what they were buying.&#8221;  Momentary sigh of relief, glad to be back to something I understood.  Derivatives, right?!</p>
<p>&#8220;What government and the average intelligent business analyst don&#8217;t seem to grasp is that there is a bigger share of business for those of us who are left!  The competition is gone. It is gone for the lender, for the brokers, and for the investors.&#8221;  If the marble doesn&#8217;t drop with a big thud for you, it did for me.  Of course that is how it has to be, because even when heavy-handed Statists muck things up they can&#8217;t prevent at least some part of free market principles from working in their sweet, inexorable way.  Yes, the government threw trillions of dollars at failing financial institutions, but those still gasping for air are never really going to recover.  Yes, Goldman Sachs has so many alumni in high places that it will hang around, but the vigor and the power are probably gone.  The successful banks will absorb what is valuable that the government hasn&#8217;t confiscated first, and the husks will wither away.</p>
<p>&#8220;We smile when we hear there is no money available for loans.  We have more business than we can handle with the staff we have!  It is a great time to be in mortgage banking and to hunt jobs in investment banking.  We aren&#8217;t short of money or clients, we&#8217;re short of people who know the business.&#8221;  Another good area to consider is &#8220;It&#8217;s a great time to be a broker, too, since too many gave up and closed up shop because they were listening to the news instead of paying attention to what is actually going on&#8230;or were unqualified to be in the business at all merely looking to make some fast cash.  New housing starts are up again this month.  In my (territory, area, circle of influence) I had to figure out how to get time off for eight staff members with personal closings this month!  We&#8217;re 2,000 loans behind right now and every day we worry about how to get an extra 86 over our usual average completions moved forward lest we be fined for not finishing within a specific time.&#8221;  THAT, friends, strikes me as a very interesting bit of information, particularly since the person quoted will be moving into the new house currently under construction less than a month from now.   I can tell a hawk from a handsaw occasionally, and when senior mortgage bankers conclude that &#8220;We looked at all the aspects and concluded we are nearly as recession proof as it is possible to be.  We pounced on Mr. Obama&#8217;s offer of $8,000 for first-time buyers.  By building we get exactly what we want and more for the money than we would buying a &#8216;depressed value&#8217; MacMansion.&#8221;  I, for one, conclude that those who are driving (as opposed to those who are getting paid $40 Mil a year) have confidence in the future as well as knowing what they are talking about.</p>
<p>There are always pockets that do well no matter how bad the economy gets, and it could make a lot of difference if we consider trusting at least some bankers not to be cowed, unscrupulous, or over-paid idiots.  The house in question is custom designed, with all the extras, a modest little 3400 square feet for two professionals in their early thirties.  Their thought is to spend four or five years in it&#8211;and build again.   This certainly indicates confidence in the ability of the housing market to recover in the future, at least sufficiently to store current outlay safely at present value.</p>
<p>&#8220;For most of us it is business as usual.  Sure, we got memos from high up saying that we can no longer have box seats for sporting events&#8230;and we asked &#8216;What box seats?!  We don&#8217;t get box seats!&#8217;  We were told we couldn&#8217;t have parking for our limousines any more.  What limousines?&#8221;</p>
<p>My source is in the strata of business where there are a few levels higher but most are subordinates.  Not high enough up nationally to be in an interesting position where they could have made um, unusual lucrative deals, shall we say, and not being paid millions in salaries and bonuses, but definitely informed enough to know what is going on industry-wide and plan their futures accordingly.</p>
<p>&#8220;No money to loan?  We have lots of money to loan, and those who have good credit still have no problems getting loans.  It takes a little longer, for several reasons, but lack of funds isn&#8217;t one of them.  We are back to smart lending instead of fog a mirror lending.&#8221;</p>
<p>Huh?  That certainly isn&#8217;t what we&#8217;re hearing from politicians and the MSM!</p>
<p>We&#8217;ll go into some specific reasons, other than extra caution, that it takes longer to get a loan approved in the next segment.  &#8220;We&#8217;re lending far more of our own money than TARP money because that carries a lot more demands and restrictions.&#8221;  It didn&#8217;t seem polite to ask, but if it were my bank I would certainly be skimming the very best loans and funding them with my own money.  Mind, there was no hint of that in the conversation, and perhaps professional bankers have standards that forbid &#8220;cherry picking&#8221; or &#8220;high grading.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;If rates weren&#8217;t so low I would recommend an ARM, an Adjustable Rate Mortgage.  You&#8217;re borrowing cheap money from yourself with one of those, so to speak, since you can choose what to pay.  Use what you don&#8217;t have to pay on the mortgage at 3% to pay off those 17% credit card bills or to put the full amount your employer will match into your 401K.  If the air conditioner goes out, have it replaced; banks will work with you since we have an incentive to keep your house in good sale condition.  The key is to find a stable lagging index that is tied to something like the cost of funds.&#8221;</p>
<p>That&#8217;s what you have to look at, not the ARM, but what it is tied to; index + margin = rate.  Take COFI, the Cost of Funds Index for I think the 11th District which is used in California, Nevada, and so forth.  They tend to lag badly, so if a bank can pick up a lower rate at LIBOR and sell the loan to someone using COFI there is money on both ends.&#8221;   Gosh, and lots of us were thinking an ARM was the devil&#8217;s invention.</p>
<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t have to refinance if the interest rate goes down; your ARM will do that automatically.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;We&#8217;d really rather write a standard mortgage at a set rate because that way we can manage our funds better and know which will be more lucrative to sell or to keep.&#8221;</p>
<p>Fascinated, I asked if there were some formula for what I had been told long ago, on how big a difference it would make if the buyer made even double principle payments each time.  &#8220;Most people get paid bi-weekly&#8221; They DO?  I thought most got paid weekly or monthly&#8230;shows how many regular jobs I&#8217;ve had in my life, I guess.  &#8220;so the best plan is to use a biweekly option if available and pay extra each time you can afford it, but make payments every two weeks.  Ask ahead of time.  Some banks will hold your first payment until the second one comes in and makes a &#8216;full&#8217; payment.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Aha!  Keeping both the interest that is accruing and the float!&#8221;</p>
<p>Gentle smile at the toddler&#8217;s knowledge.  &#8220;A good bank will go ahead and pay towards the loan and re-amortize.  In addition, you will be making thirteen payments a year, and on average a thirty-year loan will be paid off in twenty-three-and-a-half years.&#8221;  Wow.</p>
<p>&#8220;Most people spend four to seven years in a house, so they never actually see the benefit of the 5% interest rate they think they have.  Do the math; the true interest rate is shocking.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;People really need to find out what mortgages do and what terms they are really getting.  Go on line and look up &#8216;the Banker&#8217;s Secret.&#8217;  That is what needs to be changed.&#8221;</p>
<p>In the early stages most of PITI is going towards interest, and it should actually be considered &#8220;ITIP,&#8221; because the principle gets what&#8217;s left over after interest, taxes, and insurance.  We all &#8220;know&#8221; that, but we haven&#8217;t tried to work out an advantage to off-set it.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s a comment made in another context that certainly has application to what is going on politically and in many sectors of the financial world:  &#8220;If you solve the problem, you don&#8217;t have a business any more!&#8221;  That is practically up there with the Ten Commandments in terms of rules for big government.</p>
<p>That should give you enough to think about, and perhaps even incentive to talk to a banker you know well.</p>
<p>In the next segment we will go into mistakes banks make that you can work out pretty easily for yourself in terms of how they treat you, which will help you choose one.  Profitable good management makes a difference, and one place it shows up is in customer service.</p>
<p>I hope you found this as interesting, unexpected, and even soothing, as I did.  I&#8217;m not one to doubt the courage of my convictions, and I remain convinced that we are in for a doozy of a Depression.  At the same time, I can be persuaded by facts from an expert.  When someone who has been everything from an underwriter up and down tells me that a bank I had qualms about is doing very well no matter what MSN tells me, I&#8217;m willing to adjust as necessary.  I couldn&#8217;t elicit an opinion on what banks might still fail (&#8220;There are always banks that can fail, and there are still those who may, but I wouldn&#8217;t sell the majors still standing.&#8221;) but even though I might not buy Wells or BOA and such, I wouldn&#8217;t sell any stock I had in them either.</p>
<p>Regards,<br />
Linda Brady Traynham</p>
<p>June 2, 2009</p>
<p><strong>Update:</strong> I just learned that a young former Marine friend who was accepted at a good medical school and planned to start this fall does not intend to spend the next decade of his life and at least a quarter of a million dollars becoming an M.D. for the best of good reasons:  Hillary Care Plus.</p>
<p>Clay plans to enroll in Veterinary school here at A&amp;M, instead, because he will be out in under four years, he will still be a &#8220;doctor,&#8221; and any vet who tries at all is remunerated very handsomely.  Nearly twenty years ago the average vet cleared $100 K.  I don&#8217;t know what they do now, but I know what vet bills can run.</p>
<p>True, Clay will get bitten and kicked occasionally, but toddlers bite and kick, too.  There is no point in going through arduous training for a third of your professional life only to be told that the government only wants family practitioners who will be overworked, underpaid, and overruled by bureaucrats.  As a vet he will be able to order and perform an MRI any time he thinks his patient needs one, and no one will complain about the medications he prescribes.  Since pet insurance is a fairly new and small field he won&#8217;t have a lot of office expenses affiliated with that, either.  I may well let him build a clinic here on the ranch in return for his services!</p>
<p><a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/government-meddling-hasnt-eradicated-the-mortgage-market/">Government Meddling Hasn&#8217;t Eradicated the Mortgage Market</a> was originally featured on <a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com">Whiskey and Gunpowder</a>. Visit <a href="http://lfb.org/">Laissez Faire Books</a> for the best selection of libertarian book titles.</p>
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		<title>Government, Banks, Currency: Legitimacy Dwindles</title>
		<link>http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/government-banks-currency-legitimacy-dwindles/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 26 Dec 2008 19:04:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>James Howard Kunstler</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Zounds! Public sentiment toward the accelerating economic fiasco has shifted, seemingly overnight, from a mood of nauseated amazement to one of panicked grievance as the United States moves closer to an apparent comprehensive collapse &#8212; and so ill-timed, wouldn&#8217;t you know it, to coincide with the annual rigors of Santa Claus. The tipping point seems [...]<p><a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/government-banks-currency-legitimacy-dwindles/">Government, Banks, Currency: Legitimacy Dwindles</a> was originally featured on <a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com">Whiskey and Gunpowder</a>. Visit <a href="http://lfb.org/">Laissez Faire Books</a> for the best selection of libertarian book titles.</p>
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Zounds! Public sentiment toward the accelerating economic fiasco has shifted, seemingly overnight, from a mood of nauseated amazement to one of panicked grievance as the United States moves closer to an apparent comprehensive collapse &#8212; and so ill-timed, wouldn&#8217;t you know it, to coincide with the annual rigors of Santa Claus. The tipping point seems to be the Bernie Madoff $50 billion Ponzi scandal, which represents the grossest failure of authority and hence legitimacy in finance to date in as much as Mr. Madoff was a former chairman of the NASDAQ, for godsake. It&#8217;s like discovering that Ben Bernanke is running a meth lab inside the Federal Reserve. And out in the heartland, of course, there is the spectacle of Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich trying to desperately dodge a racketeering rap behind an implausible hairdo.</p>
<p>What seems to spook people now is the possibility that everybody in charge of everything is a fraud or a crook. Legitimacy has left the system. Not even the the legions of Obama are immune as his reliance on Wall Street capos Robert Rubin, Tim Geithner, and Larry Summers seem tainted by the same reckless thinking that brought on the fiasco. His pick last week for chief of the SEC, Mary Shapiro, is already being dissed as a shill for the Big Bank status quo. In a few days we&#8217;ll discover what kind of bonuses are being ladled out by the remaining Wall Street banks with TARP money and a new chorus of howls will ring out.</p>
<p>This is very dangerous territory. In dollar terms, the numbers being applied to the various problems are so colossal &#8212; trillions! &#8212; that the death of our currency seems assured. And in defiance of congress&#8217;s express intentions, none of the TARP &#8220;money&#8221; has been applied to its targeted purpose of buying up &#8220;toxic&#8221; (i.e. fraudulent) securities hidden in the vaults of banks, pension funds, and municipal portfolios.</p>
<p>George W, Bush&#8217;s personal bailout of General Motors and Chrysler is designed solely to postpone their bankruptcy and mass job layoffs until after the holidays. Otherwise, the $17.4 billion will probably be used by the companies to underwrite the extensive legal work required for the moment they must declare bankruptcy &#8212; when Mr. Obama is in the White House. Meanwhile, the President-elect has ramped up his job-creation target overnight from two to three million, and some observers are catching a whiff of Soviet-style economic engineering (&#8220;&#8230;we pretend to work and they pretend to pay us&#8230;.&#8221;).</p>
<p>The years since Jimmy Carter have produced an astoundingly flaccid public, sunk in various addictions and distractions, but this is about to change. The darkling mood of political protest and violent activism that saturated my own young adult years is scudding up again on the horizon. Mr. Obama&#8217;s pick for attorney general, the mild-looking Eric Holder, may be the key figure in the early months of the new government. If he doesn&#8217;t commence some aggressive investigations and prosecutions &#8212; beginning with Henry Paulson for insider trading when he was in charge of Goldman Sachs and shorting his own company&#8217;s mortgage-backed securities &#8212; then the whole Obama enterprise could fall under suspicion of illegitimacy. The bums who ran the US banking sector into a ditch have to account for their turpitudes. They can&#8217;t be allowed to hide under a TARP.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, the legal system, and probably the legislative system, will be so buried in procedural B.S. from the unwind of countless enterprises and institutions, and the sorting out of the remnants, that it remains to be seen whether this generation of people-in-charge can even embark on a fresh start of anything connected to real everyday life in America. All this is starting to alarm the tattered residue of the middle classes, and from here it&#8217;s a very short path to them being really pissed off.</p>
<p>When legitimacy erodes, anything goes. Nothing is respected including rules and personalities. The center doesn&#8217;t hold and the new vacuum there is a tumultuous place. The same crisis of authority and legitimacy is spreading from nation to nation now. Soon, China will contend with a discontented army of the unemployed. Greece has been in an uproar for two weeks. Belgium&#8217;s government just collapsed. Trade barriers are going up. Exports are falling away. The world&#8217;s energy markets are not immune to these disorders. I would expect problems with the currently seamless supply lines that bring America two-thirds of the oil we use. Even a mild disruption of oil supplies could attach an anvil to the ankle of an economy already falling off a cliff.</p>
<p>Right now, the overwhelming sentiment is to get this country back to where we were, say, ten years ago, when everything was humming nicely: Clinton nostalgia. We&#8217;re definitely not gong back there, though. It&#8217;s an idle wish. And any set of policies designed to lead in that direction will prove very disappointing. Our destination is a land of much smaller-scaled local economies. We could retain our federal ties if the federal government can scale back appropriately from the bloated, feckless enterprise it has become. Otherwise, it might only get in the way and make matters worse, and the public in one region or another of North America might reach a decision that they are better off without it. That would be what&#8217;s called a revolution.</p>
<p>Regards,<br />
Jim Kunstler</p>
<p>December 26, 2008</p>
<p><a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/government-banks-currency-legitimacy-dwindles/">Government, Banks, Currency: Legitimacy Dwindles</a> was originally featured on <a href="http://whiskeyandgunpowder.com">Whiskey and Gunpowder</a>. Visit <a href="http://lfb.org/">Laissez Faire Books</a> for the best selection of libertarian book titles.</p>
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