Currency Manipulation


The FED, IMF, China and the Wold Bank 

Going along with the Comparative Disadvantage theory that I have previously posted here we also have currency manipulation going on to help support that deceit.  The main player, and the one with the most to gain, in this game, is China; however they would not be able to play this game if it weren’t for the social welfare policies that America and Europe have been following since the end of WW II.  As the war was coming to an end the Allies held a conference in Benton Woods New Hampshire to establish the monetary system that would be used in the world after the war had ended.  By this time, July 1944, the Allies knew the end was near for the Axis powers and that there would need to be a way to manage the rebuilding.

The United States as the driving economic and military force for the allies and as the one country that was still intact was the only one capable of supplying the currency for rebuilding. The currency would be the U.S. dollar backed by gold. The chief features of the Bretton Woods system were an obligation for each country to adopt a monetary policy that maintained the exchange rate by tying its currency to the U.S. dollar and the ability of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to bridge temporary imbalances of payments between the members.

From then on the dollar was therefore the Reserve Currency of world commerce and virtually all goods traded internationally were priced in dollars.  Then on August 15, 1971 President Nixon took the United States off the gold standard because of complications between the gold standard and the United States being the reserve currency and at that point the Dollar’s value was solely a determinant of the United States government.

Although that system worked reasonably well for a while there was a hole in the system that was used first by the Japanese and then more currently the Chinese.  For various technical reasons there was a way to manipulate the exchange rate between currencies to give a country a trade advantage with the United States.  Japan being a small country was only able to use this method for a short time and it was mostly played out by the late ‘80s.  However that manipulation was what allowed several Japanese companies to become the dominant players’ in a number of the world’s consumer markets.

The Chinese after Mao was gone and the U.S.S.R. (Russia) fell realized that since central planning didn’t work they were going to have to do something or the U.S.S.R.’s fait would soon be theirs.  I think they saw how the Japanese conducted their trade with the United States and they set up a similar system to be used by them.  This system, in time, allowed them to run up a huge trade deficient with the United States as described in the previous section.  Also in that section we saw how our politicians allowed that to get out of hand creating the situation we are now in.

The United States was not alone in the imbalances of government spending Europe was also a player only in a different manner.  Europe banded together forming the European Union (EU) in November 1993 probably has a result of the breakup of the USSR in December 1991 thereby eliminating them as a security military threat.  The Europeans thought that by forming this Union they could become an economic power house.  However that was not to be as they twenty years later.

Between 1995 and January 1999 the majority of the countries in the EU adopted the Euro as their official currency.  Why this was done I don’t know since every economist knows that you can’t have one currency and multiple fiscal policies being conducted by the member states.  Could the 50 American states each have their own state national bank that could set internal, to the United States, policies — well the answer is no the Dollar could not stand that for long and the Euro didn’t either.

Some countries like Greece went on a spending binge but they were not alone Spain, Portugal, Ireland to name just a few all conducted themselves recklessly and ended up forcing their internal banks to buy sovereign debt from them as well as other member states.  The monies generated were given to the various citizens groups such as the Unions and various social welfare benefits programs.  By the mid 00’s many of these former impendent countries had run up sovereign debt well in excess of their Gross National Product (GDP).

After the financial collapse in the fall of 2008 and the weak recovery in the next few years the problem with the EU debt became worse mainly, but not limited to, Greece as they got closer and closer to default.  Various austerity programs were tried but as of this writing no real solution has yet been found. Worse the Greek citizens’ not liking the austerity have begun to strike and riot in protest.  The EU is trying desperately to solve the Greek problem but since the Greeks are only the worst of the lot the EU governors may not be able to succeed.  The past reckless spending on social programs is exacting to great a cost.

Foolishly we elected many naive politicians in United States over the past 20 years and they embarked on a program to transform the American system into the European system, because we were told that our system was broken.  However the fact is that the European system is not working as advertised; or they would not be having all the problems that they have. This is of no consequence to these intellectuals’ politicians and they are going full steam ahead with their program for internal changes here.  The result of these new programs has been massive deficit spending averaging about $1.6 trillion per year for the last 40 months and by the end of the government FY, September 20, 2012, total federal deficit for the full 4 years will probably top $6.4 trillion.  We are averaging about $133.3 billion per month of deficit.

So we have both the Europeans and the Americans spending on give away programs like there is no tomorrow, and there probably isn’t, and the Chinese not liking this situation have embarked on a plan to take over the world financial system as a result.  This brings us to the description of what is going on now — under the table so to speak and this is the reason that the financial markets have been so erratic of late. Even though many in the financial markets do not see the big picture they do sense the undercurrent of instability and that causes the markets to move first one way and then another as rumors and facts point first one way and then another.

The result of what was just described is that there are three currency wars being waged as you read this. The European Union (EU) is fighting to prevent Greece from bringing down the EU (the latest deal is not enough). The second battle is being waged by the Federal Reserve (FED) in America to prevent a second recession.  The third is the war the Chinese are waging against both the EU and America over western devalued currencies. The signs can be seen in the movements in the commodities, stock, and the gold markets e.g. gold moving in the same direction as the Dow Jones Industrials (DJI) when they normally move opposite of each other.

The players in the game are the FED, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the Bank of England (BOE), the European Central Bank (ECB), the Peoples Bank of China (PBC) and The Chinese State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE).  Of course the political leaders in these countries are the puppet masters for these agencies. This list can be put into two groups the Western Countries, the WC, (America, England and the EU) and China.  The WC with their excessive entitlements spending and resulting debt needs to inflate their currencies to prevent collapse. China holds much of the WC debt and doesn’t want that. They seem to be in the driver’s seat but the vehicle is speeding down the road and the bridge just around the bend is out.

The Chinese think that they have found a way out of their dilemma; by manipulating their currency using the PBC and SAFE as their tools to achieve their goals. It works like this, when a Chinese company receives payment from the U.S. for goods supplied to a company there the dollar denominated payment goes first to the PBC and then from their it’s turned over to SAFE so SAFE ends up with the dollars. But the PBC gives the company that sold the material payment in Yuan in lieu of the dollars that were sent to them. However the Chinese not wanting to lose control make this a conversion at a fixed exchange rate set by the PBC.  The Chinese company gets paid and yet the Chinese government still has the dollars so in effect every dollar payment coming into China is doubled there; the company gets paid and the government holds the real money which it invests in the world outside China.

The wild card in this plan is that China does not allow many foreign made goods into their country because they need to create lots of jobs.  At least they have the creating jobs part right. So they buy things like gold mines, and other minerals and energy related mines and resources and — sovereign debt.  This is an economic system from the past but well discuss that later.

It’s now estimated that SAFE holds $3.2 trillion in foreign currency (almost half of that in U.S. Treasuries) and as previously stated China is worried about the WC countries resorting to inflation; as in the FED QE programs and the ECU write down of Greek debt. So they have gone, under the table, on a gold buying spree.  China probably has 2,000 tons of Gold now and is expected to take that to 5,000 tons in the next few years. Their plan is to make the Yuan a gold backed reserve currency. Unfortunately for both them and us the Chinese leadership being Marxist don’t understand the free markets and their real knowledge of world finance is limited and so this plan of theirs will backfire on them.

This currency battle can’t be hidden much longer. The trigger that brings this problem into the light could be a Greek full or partial default, a 2nd U.S. slowdown or recession, or the recent FED announcement that they plan to inflate the dollar by 33% over the next 20 years (2% a year).  Or it could be something else; the reason doesn’t really matter what matters are what actions, on the world stage, will be taken. If we aren’t prepared and make the right choices the results will likely be counter productive and those results will be very, very bad.

The problem we now have is that if the U.S. dollar fails the Chinese Yuan can’t replace it for two fundamental reasons. The first reason is that in any monetary system based on gold, A Gold Standard, the gold “must” be free to move between countries. The second reason is that in economics there is something called the Triffin dilemma which states that the country with the reserve currency, the U.S. right now, has to be a net importer of goods and services. By importing goods we supply dollars into the world market and this is how the world economy works. In essence we are exporting dollars and importing goods.

China will not let gold out of the country
China is a major exporter of goods

Therefore the Yuan can’t replace the dollar and the system that China is putting in is the very system that was in place in the eighteenth century prior to Adam Smiths Wealth of Nations being written — it was called the mercantile system.  This system tries to make all transaction favorable to one country and to horde gold at all costs.  Spain in its quest for gold created sever internal inflation that eventually destroyed their empire.  Smith proved conclusively with inductive logic that the mercantile system hurt trade and everyone was worse off and that it was one of the reasons that there were so many wars.

The pedal is to the medal, the bridge is out and it’s almost in sight.

Why do People Do What They Do?


The Hierarchy of Needs

Abraham Maslow, a very famous mid twentieth century psychologist, developed a concept referred to now as Maslow’s “Hierarchy of Needs” in 1943 in a paper he wrote A Theory of Human Motivation. Maslow’s concept was that humans would react to their environment in a particular and structured order to satisfy their internal drives or needs which he called the self-actualization theory.  He further showed this as a pyramid with things like air and water at the bottom and things like personal gratification at the top on the pyramid.

His logic is that air is required for life above all else and therefore that need must be satisfied first.  Next, we must have water and food and then an environment that’s not hostile to us.  Once these basic or core needs are met we get into more personal needs such as love and respect.  These personal or social needs always come after the physical but can become very important if we feel secure that the others have been met and are not in danger of being taken away.  There are the five levels to Maslow’s self-actualization theory.

Level 1 Physiological needs, such as hunger, thirst, and sex

Level 2 Safety needs such as security, stability, and order

Level 2 Belongingness & love needs e.g. affection, affiliation, identification

Level 4 Esteem needs, such as needs for prestige, success, self-respect

Level 5 Self-actualization needs, such as realizing potential

The first two levels of Maslow’s Hierarch of Needs go a long way to explain basic human nature.  For example the movement of Mexicans into the American southern boarder states with Mexico.  The reason being, that differences in the first two basic levels are the reasons for the occurrence of immigration.

From the forward of this book is the fact that the individual will always do what his or her best interest. The logic and theory for this was adequately proven in the book Wealth of Nations first published in 1776 by Adam Smith. And further this is supported by Level 1 & s from Maslow’s work. All attempts to disprove the theory of free markets a central feature of the theories proved by Smith have failed.  They all fail, including the works of Marx and Keynes, because all the examples that are used are not ones where there is a real “free” market.

The second fact, also discussed in the forward to this book is that after many centuries of trying just about every conceivable kind of political or governmental system imaginable we find that there are really only two basic kinds.  The book The Five Thousand Year Leap written by Cleon Skousen gives an excellent explanation on the reasons for this.

The first based on the rule of a single party usually through the leadership of a strongman.  This person could be a King or a President for life and has immense personal power but still must have the support of a group of close confidants that carry out this dictates.  Historically this form of government appears to be the most “common” form of government that has every existed. In this form of government the people exist, only, to support the government, they are subjects.  This form develops from either an attempt at Democracy or form anarchy after the collapse of a government which was until the formation of the United States with its Constitution the only other possibilities there were.

Today the only other form of government that is possible is something new and it is a system based on a set of laws and principles that form the basis for the legitimacy of the government, a fixed constitution.  The U.S. Constitution is the best example of this form being the one that has lasted the longest, so far, since it was designed to be very hard to change. In this system the federal government is there solely at the will of the people and is there solely to protect the people not to rule them. However, there is a great risk here for if this system does not have very strong, not just adequate, checks and balances the politicians will over time turn this system into the government of a strongman, backed by a ruling party.

Why these previous paragraphs are so important is that the principles identified can totally explain the reason for the movement of people from one place to another, be it from one side of town to the other or from one country to another. The movement occurs because of either economic or political restrictions or both on the individual where he or she is and that the individual see’s that he or she can live better someplace else.

If there are no restrictions on movement then the movement will be quick and if there are restrictions the movement will be slowed.  But in either case unless there are significant and insurmountable physical barriers be they natural or man made the movement will not be stopped.

Being a person with a strong technical background it would be logical to be able to put this into a set of principles much like those that are used in science and engineering.  In this case we will use the form used for the explanation of the laws of thermodynamics (which is about the movement of energy – heat).  There are three laws of thermodynamics which we will not go into this is not about engineering. The engineering form (Three principles or laws) used to explain thermodynamics by scientists and Engineers does seem to fit well when also trying to explain the motivation behind the movement of people so that is why it was used here.

The First Law of Motivation can then be stated that the principle factors determining the core of human behavior are predominantly genetically fixed. This is adequately explained in Maslow’s theory of the hierarchy of needs so further discussion here is not needed.  Therefore it can be stated that we are dealing with basic principles of motivation that apply to all humans.

The Second Law of Motivation can then be stated as individuals will move to the place that satisfies the greatest number of their needs in the order explained by Maslow.  Or stated a different way we can say that individuals will always move to a place that allows them to move up Maslow’s pyramid. That flow will be from the least to the most and will be inversely proportional to the strength of the resistance to that flow be that resistance natural or man made.

The Third Law of Motivation is that if there is no individual freedom and there is no opportunity where the person is and there is therefore no way to move then there is no motivation to work or be productive as there is no personal advantage.  This will create a stagnant society where people will only do the bare bones necessities to survive and no more.  Further it will take prodding by the government to get even that done.

The Second Law of Motivation explains why there is and has always been a movement of people into the United States.

The Third Law of Motivation explains why the old U.S.S.R. collapsed when its work force could no longer be coerced into being productive citizens.

The Second Law of Motivation explains why U.S. Citizens almost never move out of the country even when that are extolling the virtues of other political systems.

The Third Law of Motivation explains why in a welfare state there is no incentive for those at the bottom to move out.  All their first level needs are taken care of by the state.

The issue that we face now with immigration legal or illegal is one where the standard of living in the United Sates combined with the higher level of personal freedom that we have makes for a powerful magnet to those not so fortunate.  This is especially true at the border between Mexico and the United States where the disparity is large.  The only thing that has prevented a title wave of Mexicans to enter the country is the desolate land that must be crossed over much of the southern border.  Even still and despite the dangers a high percentage of the hundreds of thousands that start the journey eventually make it across.

The U.S. Mexico border could have been sealed long ago if the government had wanted to.  Would it have been expensive, of course it would have.  That isn’t the question the question is why it wasn’t done.  Three reasons prevent a barrier from ever being built.

One the Democrat Party sees the Mexicans as a source of future votes since they will vote at some time in the future in a higher percentage to them then to republicans’ because of entitlements. 

Two the Republican Party sees the Mexicans as a source of cheep labor and that they could be used as leverage to hold down labor costs for companies. 

Three both saw them (the documented and undocumented) as a cheep source of personal servants to do their menial work and take care of their children. How many politicians have been caught not paying taxes for having au pairs, nannies and other domestic help?

Under President Ronald Reagan an attempt at solving the problem was tried with amnesty and a promise of better broader security. The border security never happened and without securing the border the flow is never going to stop as the Second Law of Motivation explains.  The lure of moving up Maslow’s hierarchy of needs was too strong since they, the Mexicans, were on the bottom in Mexico and there was no way they could move down any further, they were already on the bottom, and they also didn’t believe they had any chance to move up where they were.

To stop the flow is not possible but there are two ways to significantly slow it down. One is with a very solid and formidable barrier that makes it very difficult to make it across.  In addition we would need cleared zones, on the U.S. side, that are off limits to everyone so that anyone in them can be detained.  This would require relocating Americans and a significant military presence.  Something like the barrier between the east and west in Europe after WW II is what would be need, only keeping people out not in.  We also know that, that was not 100% effective.

The other method would be to change the differential in the standard of living between Mexico and the U.S. Raising that of Mexico reduces the incentive just as lowering that of the U.S. does. Lowering the U.S. standard is the more practical since raising the standard in Mexico is not what the politicians there want. Either or both minimizes the flow in accordance with the Second Law of Motivation.

If we don’t build a barrier or if we don’t lower our standard of living to be more in line with the rest of the world then we are faced with the problem of having created a very unfair system of immigration.  The reason for this is not enough Mexicans (we’ll use that term for all of Central America) are allowed in nor could there be as we would need to allow many millions in to stop the illegal flow.  And Mexico is not interested in helping with the problem as the flow of people north is a pressure relief on them politically. And besides with the growing Mexican influence Mexico City has a growing influence on policies being established in Washington.

Universal Suffrage


Good or Bad?

Suffrage is the term given for the right to cast a vote.  In a pure Democracy everyone of the established voting age or any other qualifier can cast a ballot.  Then all it takes is for one side to have one vote more then the other side in order to win, which is majority rule.  In addition in a pure democracy all the citizens with the right to vote would vote on all issues directly.  Rousseau wrote about that kind of Democracy in his The Social Contract since he was very familiar with this kind of government from Geneva where he grew up.  Obviously this system only applies to a small area or town.

That direct voting by the citizens on everything has always been considered to be both bad and impossible especially at the Federal level and so when the Constitution was written only men (predominately white) with property were allowed to vote. But that restrictive view was not universal and so a few years later under President Jackson, who believed that voting rights should be extended, they were. Therefore by 1840 universal white male suffrage (and some blacks) was the norm, and nearly all requirements to own property had been dropped.

This expansion of the voting franchise continued unabated until 1971 when by that time all Citizens over 18 male or female and of any race could vote.  Whether that was good or not it was the law of the land through the amendment process to the Constitution (14th, 15th, 19th, 23rd, 24th and 26th Amendments plus various legislative acts).  The United States was the first major country to have full suffrage for women starting with a few states as early as 1869 and completed when the 19th amendment was ratified in 1920.

The problem with this expansion of the franchise was not with any of the various groups that were added but with an ever increasing lack of understanding by the voters on whom or what they were voting for. There were two parts to this:

The first problem was the education system which stopped teaching the principles of government.  This was by far the worst problem for if the Citizens no longer understood their system of government then they could be manipulated by those seeking power.

The second problem was the formation of political parties that took advantage of this and created block voting where it didn’t matter who was running or what the issue was — it was a vote cast only for the party.

With the very lose voter registration process and vote manipulation (this maters a lot when the vote is close) going on today we have created a system where the winner is chosen more by popularity and money then anything that really counts. Who has the best “spin” and/or the most money gets to win today with the TV, radio and the web (social media) as powerful means of communication. An interesting tidbit about the entertainment industry, Plato in his Republic understood that the Arts could influence elections and that therefore they must be strictly controlled so as not to corrupt the Citizens, he would be appalled at what comes out of Hollywood today..

But there is more as we have a representative system of government as the Citizens with the right to vote do not vote directly they vote for Representatives. In the Federal system as originally setup the Citizens voted for someone to represent them in the House of Representatives known as the Peoples house, for obvious reasons.   The House with the Constitutional mandate to prepare an operating budget for the Federal government was given this task so that the Citizens could control the spending since it was their representatives that were responsible for the budget.

This was a much debated system with concerns that the Citizens would find ways to have the federal government find ways to spend money on them, the citizens.  So to counter this tendency the Senate was established (for other reasons as well) and they had to concur with the House on spending bills.

Now the Senate was originally set up to be filled with appointed Senators two from each state.  The logic being that the several states would appoint seasoned and experienced Citizens to these positions.  It was probably assumed back then that these would be wealthy land owners and they would represent the upper class of the country while the House was for the common man.  A check and balance system again.

So with this system both ends of the Citizens were represented the common man and the wealthy man. And they had to work together to get anything done.

But over the last couple of elections cycles this system has been subverted by the Democratic Progressives and the current occupant of the White House Barak Husain Obama the first president that actually instructs the Senate to refuse to bring up House passed Budgets. So instead of doing their job they demand that their spending ideas be taken and no debate is allowed.  The president approves of this process since he does nothing to stop it and instead demands that the House Republicans give him what he wants. This is probably unconstitutional but since the Public education system has produced several generations of students with no real understanding of the process and so the media can blame the House for not giving Obama what he wants. Which is absurd since the House is the peoples House and it is their main responsibility not the Senate nor the Presidents to produce a Federal Budget.

James Madison, “We have staked the whole future of American civilization, not upon the power of government, far from it. We’ve staked the future of all our political institutions upon our capacity…to sustain ourselves according to the Ten Commandments of God.”

Self Rule Verse a Ruling Class


Why America is Different

America and its unique Constitution was an experiment in self rule.  The way the country was put together was something never tried before on this scale and with the freedoms established.  Yes we did have some of the Greek city states and the original Roman republic but they did not give anywhere near the freedom that was established here under our Constitution.  The rest of the world watched in awe as the Republic was formed and then actually worked.

Alexis de Tocqueville a young Frenchman visited the United States in 1831 with his friend Gustave de Beaumont for a nine month visit which would have been longer had he not been called back to France. After going back to France he wrote and published a treaties called Democracy in America the first Volume I Part 1 and Part 2 in 1835 and the second Volume II Part 1 through Part 4 published in 1840.

An English translation of the First part was published in America in 1838 by Henry Reeve but Tocqueville did not think it was completely accurate.  A much later version by Francis Bowen In 1945 corrected some of this. The writing here used for reference the Penguin Classics version published by Penguin Books London in 2003 translated from French by Gerald E. Bevan with an introduction and notes by Isaac Kramnick.

Tocqueville’s writing skills and his passion for the subject make his writing a must read for any serious student in the theory of self rule.  Democracy in America was an instant hit in France and set de Tocqueville up for election to the French Chamber of Deputies and a distinguish career thereafter.

What Tocqueville found in America, was that the freedoms that existing in America after the first settlers arrived had created an awakening of a spirit in the Citizens and that it was his opinion that this was because the colonists were initially left to fend for themselves.  They were no longer restrained by artificial rules and regulations imposed on them by the Aristocracy which then ruled all of Europe in one form or another.

So they set up their own system of government based on Townships which Tocqueville credited for the eventual establishment of our present form of government. Once they had become free of those ‘old’ shackles they went on to better their lives by working hard and improving their conditions.  They did this because they could keep the fruits of their labor — they had the right of property and “local” control of the property.

These liberated American Citizens were also very aware of their government, much more so then we are today.  They understood the principles and what it meant to be free to succeed and also free to fail, but the opportunity to succeed outweighed the risks of failure. It could be said that the Citizens of America back then and without any expensive public education understood their form of government better then do even those with advanced college educations today.  I know that I did not really understand out form of government until the ‘90s. That basic understanding was one of the surprises that Tocqueville experienced while here in America. It was a surprise because in his France the subjects and even some of the Aristocrats knew very little about their form of government.

During the period he was here he did note that women did not have the right to vote but then in Europe almost no one had the right to vote so what was here was a lot better then in his native France or anywhere else for that matter.  Also free black men in the North had the right to vote but were subtly discouraged from doing so. Interestingly Tocqueville wondered if this freedom was good and whether self rule would work in the long run.  He believed that an Aristocracy might be required to get the benefits of Art Literature and Science since there was a difference that came with being high born.  More on this thought later.

Obviously that was not true as later works in America both in the arts and science would prove.  So If nothing else we now know that freedom and self rule produce more benefits to the Citizens then does any other kind of system that attempts to manipulate the results no mater the reasons good or bad, meddling is meddling.  Every obstacle that Tocqueville thought of as to why America would not work was overcome.  The problems we have today started when the things that make us great were gradually taken away.

The importance of knowing what is going on today in Washington is the result of a push by the progressives (some in each political party but mostly they are Democrats) to establish a new ruling class in America.  A ‘ruling’ class is made up of select group of people that have (mostly) inherited wealth and thereby have attended the best schools and know all the right people.  Foremost they believe, because of their station, that they know what is good for society.

Most countries even today have either a ruling class or an aristocracy (class) which is not much different except for the titles that the nobility give to their supporters with an aristocracy.  These people believe that by the very nature of their birth and privileged education they know better then anyone else what is good for the “common” man.  This is what Tocqueville down deep believed — probably because he was one of the privileged few, and he was having a hard time accepting that this views were wrong even when he saw what was going on here.

When there is a ruling class, whatever they are called, you will find that most of the important politicians are of that class. Certainly not all politicians but the ones that are in the real positions of power in the government most definitely are. They also fill the management ranks of the government bureaucracy and make sure their supporters fill the lower ranks.  These people are all well paid for the positions they hold and most retire with large pensions and connections that allow them to live well for the remainder of their lives.  In the United States today they mostly come from the north east States.

Once a ruling class is established it is almost impossible to remove especially with the number of bureaucrats in Washington and the movement of politicians in and out of the public and private sectors for lobbying.  With over $3.5 trillion dollars flowing through Washington on a yearly basis today that amounts to $10.0 Billion per day or almost $7.0 million per second of potential money up for grabs. That is a lot of temptation and incentive to grab as much as one can as Milton Friedman wrote about in his book Free To Chose.  And then more recently we have the book Extortion written by Peter Schweizer where he shows us how in great detail the politicians are able to skim off large amounts of money and retiree very wealth.

Once a ruling class is established the country becomes theirs and legislation is always designed to benefit them first and the Citizens or subjects second.  Not all those in the upper class are a part of this ruling class but as time goes on the ruling class will get larger and larger by nature and require greater and greater amounts of skim off the top of the federal budget.  At some point these kinds of system either collapse or turn into a monarchy/dictator style system. There is a good book written by Angelio M. Codeville on this subject The Ruling Class: How They Corrupted America And What We Can Do About It. A portion of this book also appeared as an article in the American Spectator in the July 2010 – August 2010 issue.

There is little doubt that what is going on today in Washington is the push to establish a ruling class in this country.  All the legislation and regulation that has been pushed through starting with the New Deal, then later whenever they could, was designed to slowly take away the rights of the Citizens as listed in the Declaration of independence the U.S. Constitution and all its amendments. We are now at the final stage of that process — we will either overcome the progressives and reestablish the republic or we will become subjects to them and the republic will be no more.

Benjamin Franklin, “Freedom is not a gift bestowed upon us by other men, but a right that belongs to us by the laws of God and nature.

Thomas Pain, “What we obtain too cheaply, we esteem too lightly; ‘tis dearness only that gives everything its value. Heaven knows how to put a price upon its goods; and it would be strange indeed if so celestial an article as freedom should not be highly rated.”

Why Big Government Can’t Work


Friedman’s Spending Matrix

The very famous Nobel Laurite economist Milton Friedman explains a key aspect of social behavior in his 1980 book Free to Choose (Friedman’s wife, Rose, is a coauthor).  Friedman’s book should be mandatory reading in all our high schools and is a very highly recommend read for anyone with an interest in politics and economics.  Friedman’s writing style make this book an easy read. In Chapter 4 on page 116 of Free to Choose, Friedman presents a matrix which sums up the economic decision-making process, and this is critical to the understanding of the behavior of people with regards to how they spend and who they spend on.  The following is my interpretation of Milton’s economic matrix:

Friedman’s Spending Matrix

A

B

1

You use your money to buy something for yourself

You use your money to buy something for someone else

2

Someone else uses their money to buy something for you

Someone else uses your money to buy something for someone else

This simple matrix is really quite easy to understand.  The two columns labeled “A” and “B” and the two rows labeled “1” and “2” result in four possible situations:  A1, A2, B1, and B2.  These four possibilities are described in the next few paragraphs.

A1 In this situation, someone earns money, assigns a value to that effort, and then spends the money on something for him/herself.   The personally “assigned value” is used to make decisions about how the money earned will be spent.  The amount earned will determine one’s priorities and motivation for distribution of it e.g. the spending.  Maslow’s “hierarchy of needs” directly applies to these decisions — If one earns only a small amount, the money will be spent on the necessities of life; if one earns more, one can indulge in some “frivolous” spending. The bottom line is, however, that the person who earned the money will spend it to maximize his/her personal satisfaction (consciously or unconsciously in the best way he/she knows.  Only the person who actually performed the work to earn the money can place a “true” value on it that is proportional to the effort that went into earning it.  Further the “value” will be different for every person. This situation is the only one that optimizes the individual’s spending. The optimization of the individual’s transactions when summarized in the market place maximizes the economic transactions of the society. The maximization of monetary transaction in an economy must be steered into this category if the economy is expected to be viable.

B1 In this situation, someone uses the money that they have earned to buy something for someone else.  A good example of this kind of spending is the simple birthday present.  What you buy for the other person, however, may not be what he/she would have bought had they spent that amount of money on himself/herself.  In many, if not most all, situations, an individual simply cannot spend money for another individual to the highest satisfaction of that recipient.   Even husbands and wives or parents and children do not achieve total success in this arena (imagine how much worse people of less familiarity must fare!).  This situation does not optimize the individual’s spending. However, the spender does allocate their money used in accordance with the value they placed on it. We all known how many times a person return gifts to a store after getting them, so time and money was spent by the giver to get the gift and time and money was spend by the receiver retuning it. So by definition this process can not be as efficient as that of A1. The best method for giving gifts would be to give cash or a gift card.

A2   In this situation, someone else uses the money he/she has earned to buy something for you.   This, of course, is simply the reverse of B1.  We have probably all experienced receiving a gift that we did not use or like, no matter how much we may have appreciated the effort made by the giver. The old expression “it’s the thought that counts” probably comes from this very situation.  This situation, like B1, tends to be economically inefficient, and does not optimize the individual’s spending.  (By all this Friedman does not mean to imply, however, that one should stop giving gifts there are other factors besides economics to consider!) Since B1 and A2 are just the flip side of each other they could be combined.

B2   In this situation, someone else uses the money you have earned to buy something for someone else.  This is the problem situation, because there is absolutely no motivation to optimize spending.   This scenario is epitomized by government actions and spending no matter what the form of the government:  The government taxes you (you have no choice but to pay), and subsequently uses that money to buy something, or provide a service for, somebody else.  This process can never be accomplished efficiently, since neither the spender (the government bureaucrat) nor the recipient care about the “value” of the money spent.  It should be understood that it is the very process itself, and not the individual government employees, that causes the problem. There is no way to make government (of any kind) an efficient method of providing goods and services since the “value” link is completely broken. This is why Social Welfare, Communism and Redistribution of Wealth do not and cannot work in practice, no matter how hard one tries to make any of these policies work. But there is more as a layer of bureaucrats are required to handle the taxes and the distribution of the money; this process provides no economic benefit and so as these programs go the economy become less and less efficient. .

One of the objects of Friedman’s work was to show why the welfare start could not work for long in any society.   Both Marx and Keynes tried to justify large transfers to those at the bottom from those at the top.  Forgetting the wanting to do good issue by now after trying to do this so many times and always having it work out badly one would think that we would realize that Friedman was right.  His B2 situation shows the fundamental issue with the process that makes it impossible to work.  And Adam Smith in his book the Wealth of Nations comes to the same conclusions from a different perspective. Government by its very nature and purpose is not suited for legislating social believer and for sure never every actually running anything.

By contrast, private industry must provide services or goods on which individuals are willing to place personal value and spend money on.  Private industry must entice the buyer with “Value” to make the sale (positive feedback).  Firms or organizations that don’t provide real “Value” do not last long, for when their sales slow down they must immediately find and correct the problems (negative feedback) or they will either lose market share or go out of business.  This is true for both large and small companies there are no exceptions.

For example, Sears which was the premier consumer retailer for decades stopped providing “Value” to its customers and was dethroned by Wal-Mart who found a more efficient way to supply goods to the consumer.   The too big to fail belief of this current administration is not valid.  Bailing out companies of any kind or size only make the situation worse for it mitigates the consequences of making bad decisions.

The Friedman matrix thus proves that it is virtually impossible for any government no matter how formed to efficiently manage an economy.  Moreover, this logic is borne out by history, which has witnessed the absolute failure of all attempts at central planning or collectivism.   The collapse of the U.S.S.R. (Russia) in the late 80’s and early 90’s was a result of the inability of the Russian “Central Planners” to make good economic decisions and their economy collapsed as a black market developed that was by some accounts becoming the real economy of Russia. We should keep this in mind as the progressive politicians are right now duplicating the very system that brought the Russians down.  What these Politian’s’ don’t understand is that there is no way to make Central Planning work unless you have an absolute static economy with no innovation and growth, a hydraulic society as existed thousands of years ago especially in China and India. These were systems with strong Central Planning and static or unchanging social systems i.e. things were the same today as they were 10 years ago or 100 years ago or a 1000 years ago.

Only market-based systems can efficiently allocate resources.

Although it may be argued that social goals must sometimes take precedence over economic efficiency, Friedman disagrees with this statement explaining in his book that there are other ways to achieve social goals. Friedman did suggest that if the government had to do something that the best system would be a negative income tax that only gradually disappeared as income rose so there would be no disincentive to work and earn more, which is the core problem with most all social welfare programs as exist today.

Book Review, Rules for Radicals


A Must read for anyone interested in Politics

This book was first published in 1971 and was written by Saul D. Alinsky a Chicago resident and a “professional” Community Organizer on what he had learned about promoting his views.  Alinsky like many back then was, at heart, if not in practice a Marxist. Meaning that he did not believe in the principles of Adam Smith and instead supported a government much like what the Russians thought they had with their “Central Committee” that would, in theory, take care of all the people of the state; with Karl Marx’s “… from each according to his ability to each according to his need.” This was, after all, a revolution of the Have Not’s against the Haves. Although Alinsky did not actually support the Russian form of Communism as practiced by Joseph Stalin he probably would have been a huge supporter of a pure Marxist system using Max’s views of the Labor Theory of Value and that the masses were held down by the rich and powerful.

Alinsky’s beliefs were very influential on both Hillary Rodham and soon to be Mrs. Clinton and Barack Husein Obama. Hillary who grew up in Chicago would have been 24 when Rules for Radicals was published and though she was in Yale Law school she could very well have meet Alinsky.  Barack Husain Obama would have only been 10 when Rules for Radicals was published and it’s unlikely that he could ever have met Alinsky, however he was a Community Organizer in Chicago before earning his law degree at Harvard. Based on the known views of both Hillary and Barack it’s clear that that they were both influenced very heavily by Alinsky; which makes this book review very important as it gets to the motives of two of our most prominent politicians.

The first paragraph in the first Chapter titled “The Purpose” Begins with “WHAT FOLLOWS IS for those who want to change the world from what it is to what they believe it should be. The Prince was written by Machiavelli for the Haves on how to hold power. Rules for Radicals is written for the Have-Not’s on how to take it away.” Alinsky then tells us that the book is not about “ideology” but about how to take power from the existing system, the Haves, by those that have none the Have-Not’s. This is pure Class Warfare and is based on the premise that the Haves did not acquire their Wealth or Status legitimately but that they acquired it by taking it from those that are now the Have-Not’s leaving some for the middle the Have-Little Want-Mores’. The result of Alinsky’s Change is never discussed in the book it is only about how to make the change.

This logic assumes a Zero Sum game where the “pot’ is fixed and we all fight over who has what percent of it. And further, a just as, legitimate argument can be made that the Have-Not’s are Have-Not’s not because the Haves took what they had but because they are not capable of being anything else but Have-Not’s. Like what happened in the 1917 Russian revolution most revolutions do not turn out well for the Have-Not’s. The American Experience being the one exception, up until now! Since Alinsky read Democracy in America written in 1835 by Alexis de Tocqueville it’s surprising that he had such a jaundiced view of America. But then Karl Marx’s works were very seductive to many intellectuals who did not understand the social dynamics of the period between the American Civil War and WW II. The rebellion of the Boomer generation for which Alinsky supported had little to do with the Have-Not’s and a lot to do with the Bombers’ quest for power and they are also known now as the “me generation.”

In the first few chapters Alinsky goes to great effort to justify what he does and to be honest no one can fault someone for trying to improve the conditions that many live in. Alinsky’s greatest fault was in not recognizing that the differences in American were much less than the rest of the world; so rather than trying to make a reasonable system better he and others like him want to tear it all down and rebuild from scratch.  This process is very risky for just like those that wanted an end to the Russian involvement in WW I and to have a better life, in essence a workers protest that brought down the Czar in 1917 the end was quite different. Instead of freedom they got the Bolsheviks and then Joseph Stalin. Two Chapters stand out in this book “Of Means and Ends” and “Tactics” which need to be understood to appreciate Alinsky.

In the Chapter “Of Means and Ends”, Alinsky justifies the morals of his policies, which is very important to him as he was not an evil man. This is a key Chapter which contains the following eleven justifications which he calls rules pertaining to the ethics of means and ends these are his moral justifications:

One, that one’s concern with the ethics of means and ends varies inversely with one’s personal interest in the issue.

Two, is that the judgment of ethics of means and ends is dependent upon the political position of those sitting in judgment.

Three, is that in war the end justifies almost any means.

Four, is that judgment must be made in the context of the times in which the action occurred and not from any other chronological vantage point.

Five, is that concern with ethics increases with the number of means available and vice versa.

Six, is that the less important the end to be desired, the more one can engage in ethical evaluations of means.

Seven, is that generally success or failure is a mighty determinant of ethics.

Eight, is that the morality of a means depends upon whether the means is being employed at a time of immediate defeat or imminent victory.

Nine, is that any effective means is automatically judged by the opposition as being unethical.

Ten, is that you do what you can with what you have and clothe it with your moral garments.

Eleven, is that goals must be phrased in general terms like “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity,” or “Of the Common Welfare,” “Pursuit of Happiness,” or “Bread and Peace.”

Alinsky ends this chapter with the following observation which has never really been answered, “Means and ends are so qualitatively interrelated that true question has never been the proverbial one, “Does the Ends Justify the Means?” but always has been “Does this particular end justify this particular Means?”

Alinsky had more rules and in his Chapter “Tactics” he goes into great detail in explaining the how to achieve the “Ends” which are actually never properly identified other than as a “change,” much like our current president who also promised “Change.” This is a must read chapter if you want to understand Alinsky.

One, power in not only what you have but what the enemy thinks you have.

Two, never go outside the experience of your people.

Three, whenever possible go outside of the experience of the enemy.

Four, make the enemy live up to their own book of rules.

Five, ridicule is man’s most potent weapon.

Six, a good tactic in one your people enjoy.

Seven, a tactic that drags on too long become a drag.

Eight, keep the pressure on.

Nine, the threat us usually more terrifying than the thing itself.

Ten, the major premise for tactics is the development of operations that will maintain a constant pressure on the opposition.

Eleven, if you push a negative hard and deep it will break through into its counter side.

Twelve, the price of a successful attack is a constructive alternative.

Thirteen, pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it.

Rule “Thirteen” is very important and should probably be number one as it has been used very successfully by the Progressive movement. In Rules for Radicals he also wrote, [t]he job of the organizer is to maneuver and bait the establishment so that it will publicly attack him as a ‘dangerous enemy.'” According to Alinsky, “the hysterical instant reaction of the establishment [will] not only validate [the organizer’s] credentials of competency but also ensure automatic popular invitation.”

There is little doubt that Alinsky’s methods have been hugely influential, since they can be used for any cause; but therein lies the Rub as these methods can be used for Good ends and well as Bad ends. In fact one of the main criticisms for him is that he has no clear Philosophy other than “change” though “conflict” used supposedly to better the lot of Have-Not’s.  In practice this has led to the Have-Not’s being used as pawns in a power struggle between different factions of a society neither of which care a hoot about the Have-Not’s.

Social change can be achieved but only by discussion and debate to achieve a consensus that the change is good and needed. No society in all recorded history has yet found a way to achieve this.

Is a Change in our form of Government Coming?


The Real Reasons for Health Care & Immigration Reform

There are many serious debates going on in the country today, especially as we have an election coming up in November 2014 that could have major implications for the future of the country.  In this off year election, as it’s called, every member of the House of Representatives is up for reelection and 1/3 of the Senate.  The outcome has the potential to change the course of the country for the good or the bad.  There are three possible outcomes: the first is that the House remains under Republican control and the Republicans pick up enough seats that they gain control of the Senate; the second is that there is no major change in the makeup and the House remains under Republican control and the Senate remains under Democratic control; the third is that the Democrats gain control of the House and that they maintain their control of the Senate.

The core issue to be decided is the Obama administration going to be allowed to complete the “Transformation” of the country that he stated after he won the 2008 election and took office. Obama will probably be known, in history, as the least “qualified” person elected to this office out of the 43 that proceeded him, having only the barest minimum specified by the constitution. His reelection in 2012 was more by the incompetent management of the Republican Party than the support for his policies although it must be said that his message of more “free” stuff (Redistribution of Wealth) was very powerful to the underclass which he significantly added to, by the way, during his first four years. The question that begs an answer now is, have the American citizens woken up and are no longer mesmerized by the sweet talking progressive salesperson?

The debate over the unequal end result of life which occurs for many reasons such as heredity, station, motivation and luck has been going on for all of recorded history, some 5,000 years.  The American experience of less than 250 years represents only 5% of that body of political experience.  Many empires and kingdoms have lasted for thousands of years however none of them had a free citizenry.  Only in America had the common man been allowed to do his own bidding not that of some master.  The result was amassing as in less than 200 years we became the preeminent power on the Globe which simultaneously creating a way of life that was the envy of all.  Keep in mind that even considering the programs started in the mid to late ‘30s the Federal government was still restrained by the Constitution and the Bill-of-Rights; so the Federal government cannot claim that all the growth that occurred before that had anything to do with Federal policies.

Not until the late 60’s did foreigners’ began coming here “primarily” for the “benefits” not the “opportunity” that existed here. The massive influx of people from Europe that occurred from after the civil war until the beginning of the Vietnam war came here for the opportunity not the benefits (free stuff) as the benefits did not exist until after President Johnson (LBJ) created them in the form they now are. Unlike previous waves of immigrants today’s immigrants are given special treatment and benefits such as “welfare,” “The anchor baby” and “The dream act” policies that actually give illegal’s more benefits than citizens. Since nothing can ever be totally “free” the existing citizens are paying for this out of their earning (taxes); such that if you can sneak across the border and get here the rest of us will pay you to live here, get health care and get education at no cost to the illegal.  It’s a very good deal for them but not for us.

An argument has been made that we need the workers: but at the same time we are told that the workers we need are technicians, engineers and other professionals that can do the hi-tech jobs of the future. On face there is a very large disconnect here for the majority of those we allow to come here by our policies are uneducated for sure no technical skills and speak no English. In other words there are millions of illegal’s that have no chance of being productive members of our hi-tech society.  Whether their children will be so qualified or not is not the point they are not and for the most part will never be. So on face the propositions before us in Immigration reform are preposterous.

Since we have the Federal Government, which is now controlled by the progressive wing of the Old Democratic Party, telling us that two mutually exclusive ideas must be followed something is amiss.  The need for hi-tech workers does just not jive with bringing in illiterate non-English speaking immigrants. Therefore we can only assume that there are other reasons than those being started. The most likely being that if the existing crop of illegal’s were given any form of amnesty (meaning they could stay here) then it would be a very easy step for a future congress to grant them citizenship.  Since these are predominately uneducated people (no fault of theirs) they will be dependent on the federal Government and vote Democratic in overwhelming numbers.  Even if it would be 60/40 to the Democrats favor it would mean the end of the Republican Party. It would more likely be 75/25 or worse and than the Republican Party would be extinct.

Free health care from the Affordable Health Care act known as Obama Care is now going to add to the draw of third world people to come here one way or another.  No political or economic system can sustain these kinds of policies for long without bringing economic destruction.  By the end of this year the Federal Government will have added $10.0 trillion to the national financial obligations (T-bills are only one form) in only 6 years. Since foreign investors presently pick up 50% of the U.S. debt in the form of T-bills the continuation of this uncontrolled spending trend along with anemic jobs growth will soon make any U.S. investment problematical and some change in our form of government will be required.

When one studies Political Philosophy, especially the classic Greeks i.e. Socrates, Aristotle and Plato one finds that there are only a very few forms of government that are possible. Further there are patterns to transitions between them since no single from lasts for very long.  These “basic” forms are:

A. The people are ruled by one person which can take two forms …

A-1 MONARCHY
One ruler, restrained by law  who tries to serve all the citizens of a state.
Example: Queen Elizabeth the First.

A-2 TYRANNY
One ruler who uses his power for himself or for some special group.
Example: Adolph Hitler or Joseph Stalin.

B. The people are ruled by a few people which can also take two forms …

B-1 ARISTOCRACY 
The rule by a small elite of the state’s best people chosen by ability or achievement.
Example: America after the revolution for about 30 years. 

B-2 OLIGARCHY
Self-interested rule by a group chosen for their wealth or social caste.
Example: Post revolutionary France.

C. The people are ruled by themselves which can also take two forms …

C-1 POLITY
The rule by the majority of the citizens but controlled by constitutional law to protect the rights of the minority.
Example: Great Britain or The United States 

C-2 DEMOCRACY
Rule by majority. It uses its power to oppress the minority. Small groups manipulate the masses to get what they want.
Example: Ancient Athens

You can see that the only difference between C-1 and C-2 is a “strong” Constitution” which the founding fathers knew and that was their stated purpose when they created it. Over the past several decades those that desire power but were frustrated by the Constitutional limits decided to get rid of those limits by first instituted a re-education system in the American schools. The tools they used were multiculturalism, political correctness and sustainable energy.  That is now completed and the final transformation is now being instituted with all the talk of the old and obsolete Constitution and according to our current president the need for a “Bill of Positive Rights” meaning what the government can do for you.  The current talk of by-passing Congress with a pen and a phone are also part of this change. The completion of this change in beliefs will move us from C-1 to C-2 which is the opposite of what most would think.

Once this happens, and it is very close right now, according to the Classical Philosophers we move from the “C” class to the “A” class of government. The normal transition would be from C-1 to C-2 to A-2, the transition will be quick and unless the Republican Party will wake up and embrace the “Tea” party the transition to A-2 will be completed by 2020. The reason it will be quick is that it is generally believed that the from C-2 is the most unstable.

There is only one way to stop this transformation and that is for “all” conservatives to band together and keep the House and take the Senate. The goal should be to create a coalition of conservatives in the Senate comprising 60 members. If that could be accomplished than the President could be removed from office by the Impeachment process. Although that would put Joe Biden in office it would be for a very short time and in 2016 a new president could be elected that was not interested in changing our form of government.

However, even if the 60 number could not be reached in the Senate, if the Republicans got the majority, anything over 50, than Obama would have his hands tied to the point that we could at least put changes on hold till 2016 and prevent more damage from being done.

Private verse Public Development


The Free Market Works best, when it is “Free”

There has been much debate some very heated over many complex issues today energy policy and climate change being only two of them and so the methodology we use to resolve issues like these becomes a very important subject.  The core of the issue is; should the government set development policy or the private sector? But before we can even discuses methodology and who sets policy we need to review some history, in particular the period from 1929 through 1949. More or less before 1929 most development in this country was in the private sector.  After 1949 more and more development ended up being directed and financed from the public sector e.g. the federal government.  I do not mean to imply that these are hard dates but that there was a gradual soft turning from one way of doing things to another way of doing things.

Much of what happened in this period centers on economics which in non-economic terms was a battle between the Free Market (laissez faire) as developed by Adam Smith and Central Planning as developed by John Maynard Keynes views of governance. During the ‘30s Europe was experimenting with Central Planning and America, the home of the Free Market, could not get out of a very serious recession. So naturally central planning was being seriously considered as the solution to the deepening problem. Again keeping this technical subject short and simple it was the actions of the federal government playing with Central Planning through the newly created Federal Reserve (Fed) that turned the 1929 market crash, a normal market correction, into what became known as the Great Depression.

However, the true reason for this economic depression here wasn’t actually known until 1964 that Milton Friedman a noble laurite economist showed what really happened.  The bottom line was that the Fed’s inept policies collapsed the banking system. This is fact not speculation. Unfortunately forty years had passed and by then the fixes that were tried were ingrained in the people and the politicians.  The fix being that a strong federal government could spend borrowed or printed money to stimulate economic growth.  In reality it was WW II that ended the Great Depression as spending changed from social policy spending to making armaments.  But I digress so continuing the politicians loved this concept of “spending” as it gave them a way to buy the votes of the citizens — and the modern welfare state was created.  Obviously this was not all at once, it took decades, but once in place it became impossible to get out.

We know today that the economic logic used to justify large governments and deficit spending is false but that economic proof is beyond the scope of this paper.  For those that are interested read The Big Three in Economics by Mark Skousen. However, we don’t really need academic proof we can see that the 2009 stimulus legislation that authorized almost a Trillion dollars of spending to prevent a bad recession, all borrowed by the way, did not do what it was indented to do.  If the theory had been valid at any level there would have been a large jump in the countries Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and many hundreds of thousands of jobs created.  Instead we got almost no jobs and very little growth.  We were told that things would have been even worse if that money hadn’t done what it was supposed to do.  Try claiming anything like that in the private sector and see what happens. This along with the exact same inability to spend our way out of the great depression was definitive proof that the basic theory was flawed.

Now back to development and the source of funding. Partly because of the success of developing the atomic bomb in WW II in so short a period of time and partly as the growing but mistaken belief that large government was good, development money started to flow from the government to the private sector.  Nuclear power then space then computers (initially) were successful but when the spending began shifting from technology based to social policy spending like the “great society” and “war on poverty” we had a problem.  But we need some more history to understand what happened.

In any serious study of government one quickly finds that there was great fear of large powerful governments.  And for good reasons, the first reason is that over the last several hundred years all the major wars were started by countries with a strong central government. Then next look at history and all the economic chaos caused by government interference in the economy. Of course what government would ever admit they were wrong so that is mostly blamed on the private sector. History is full of debate and discussion on this issue and over time it became accepted thought that as Thomas Jefferson said “A government big enough to give you every thing that you need, is big enough to take away everything that you have …” and that is truer today then ever.  Think of all the recent scandals: Fast and Furious, Benghazi (Four dead in Libya), the IRS, the NSA, and now Health Care Insurance.   Besides the politicians lust for power a good part of the reason for this is that there is an inherent flaw in government spending.  The flaw is systemic one that can not be eliminated as many of the political theorists understood when our country was founded.

The flaw is that all government decisions are based on politics.  That means that almost all legislation is designed to either to buy votes e.g. Social Security, or to reward someone for political favors e.g. Solynda. There are almost no exceptions to this.  The main purpose of the U.S. Constitution was to make it “hard” for the federal government to actually do something or anything. The principle of separation of power was how that was done. Further there was a limit on their spending as there was no income tax. That was changed by the 16th amendment in 1913 that established the income tax system we now have. And that same year the Federal Reserve Bank was created and that eventually gave the government the ability to create serious amounts of fiat money. Again don’t believe me read Free To Chose written by Milton and Rose Friedman.

So combining the two big government and unlimited spending we have money taken, borrowed or taxed, from the private sector that is spent on government programs that are based on legislation made for political reasons. This is contrast to the private sector which only spends money that is justified by a documented future return on that investment.  Granted that the private sector is not perfect but we do find that it is self correcting in that bad decisions do put businesses out of business. Profit is the reward for doing good and the lack of profit means that no one wants your product or service and you go away.

The government on the other hand when it wants to spend on something can: borrow more, taxes more or worse just print more which is basically just putting a tax on everything.  Then if it doesn’t work, and it almost never does, they just ask for more money.   The Department of Energy (DOE) was created to make us energy independent and we are much worse off today then when it was founded.  The Department of Education, now Health Education and Welfare, was created to improve education and even after changing the scoring system education is worse now then it ever was.  Only two examples there are many more. And yet after decades of no good results and billions spent they both claim they need more money to their job.

The most egregious current policy related to development is that based on the elimination of CO2 emissions.  The reason is that a critical requirement for plants to grow, CO2 has now been determined to be pollutant. This policy is of course the government program to buy the votes of the farmers be they private or corporate by subsidizing corn production to make into ethanol to make E85 gasoline. This program makes no sense at any technical or economic level and was never anything more then a way to buy votes from environmentalist and farmers.  It is not energy efficient since it takes more energy to make then it produces.  And by diverting good crop land to growing corn for E85 instead of food it raises the price of food not just in this country but world wide as less corn is available for export and what is grown is more expensive. No one today with knowledge on the subject will agree that this is a good idea.  But once started it, like any government program, cannot be stopped.

Another current government induced policy with very questionable benefits is the forced switch from cheap incandescent lamps to expensive compact florescent lamps (CFL’s). The logic is that the 10% efficient incandescent lamps will be replaced by 50% efficient CFL lamps and that will save a lot of electricity.  Less electricity means less pollution, CO2 and mercury. Although technically true there are major offsets that have been minimized by studies that are not completely valid.  The first reason is that all the energy from the lamps ends up in the building where it is installed mostly at night for obvious reasons.  It’s also colder at night and so the heat of the lamp is an offset against the heating load of the building.  The less lamp heat there is the more gas or electricity that must be used to maintain the set temperature.  This effect can completely offset the gain in cold climates.  There probably is some reduction over all but not what is claimed.

The other more serious issue is with the mercury in the CFL’s.  The EPA claims that the landfill emissions from CFL lamps is lees then that emitted from power plants making the electricity and therefore it’s a gain for the environment.  Whether that claim is true or not the real issue is broken lamps in the home where most of these CFL’s are going.  This more serious issue is not even considered in the EPA figures.  Whether this is a real problem or not I don’t know but considering this omission why would you believe a study that was not done by an independent lab.  If the government is promoting something they would be the last people that I would believe, just as I would be skeptical of the claim of a company promoting a product, at least until verified buy independent review e.g. Consumer reports.

One thing that is not understood with all government studies is the logic that they “have” to use to do these studies.  All government work is funded by legislation, law so to speak, and that legislation dictates that money be spent in certain ways, line item by line item. This method of funding and running departments includes the way that studies are done, which in some if not all cases dictates the methods to be used since the methods determine the costs. The bottom line to any government study is that although the report maybe 100% true in may also be meaningless if it did not consider all relevant items.  Before any government report can be used one must look at the law it refers to and what were the dictates governing the conduct of that study.  If you had only worked in the private sector you would not understand this process and how it can distort outcomes.

For example if you are in the U.S. military you do not exist for purposes of having a job even with the now professional military.  It was determined that the military did not keep track of their jobs the same way that civilians do and that since there was so few of them that they would just be ignored.  They were not worth tracking.  Is this a big deal maybe, maybe not, the point is that if you really wanted to know how many people were drawing a paycheck in the United States the government reports would not give you that number.  So we have a report that is correct to the accuracy available but yet doesn’t give us what we want to know.  All government work falls into this kind of quandary.

Some would say that our representatives are the only ones looking out for us, protecting us from greedy businessmen and Wall Street capitalists.  To those people I would say they are very, very wrong.  The politicians claim the private sector is the problem and therefore they need to be regulated; for example as in the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) that makes it a federal crime to trade on insider information. However when that legislation was written they, congress, exempted themselves from being covered. So they can and do make trades after being briefed by say the Fed in closed door meeting.  They make money on insider information that anyone else would go to jail for.  And in fact there are people and firms that watch what stocks or land or other things that our representatives buy or short and do the same since these watchers know that those representatives have inside information.  Another maneuver to make money that our representatives’ use is to buy land directly or indirectly near an interstate highway and then appropriate federal money for an interchange to be placed there thereby raising the value of the property they bought.

Not understanding the systemic flaws of governmental actions we have created a host of government departments and agencies that do nothing much but distort the free market.  There is no business in this country big or small that does not have to deal with local state and federal laws and regulations.  Whether these laws and regulations were done for good reasons or not the bottom line is that they put government in the companies as a partner that must be consulted at every step of running a business. These reports, costs, fees and taxes raise the price of the product and or services that companies provide and that is the primary reason that so many jobs have left this country.  CFL’s for example are all made outside the country as are all the “I” phones and “I” pads.

As government got bigger and bigger after WW II and the funded research in computers space and other technologies, money started to flow into the universities for research.  Initially maybe that was OK but soon direct government funding for research reached 30% of all research and of the remaining 70% of private money a good portion was directed at supplying product to the government. Today all the major private research labs are now gone with the exception of pharmaceuticals. With government now in practical control of the research funding they could funnel the money into areas that they wanted benefit or to reward supporters.  Pick winners and losers based on political decisions. Since the primary goal of politicians is, number one get reelected and two make money one can see that money was taken from the private sector passed through the government and then dispensed to companies and universities with political connections.  The recent book “Extortion” written by Peter Schweizer explains the process the politicians use in details that you really don’t want to know.

My opinion is that over 50% of that “grant” or “study” money is a pay back for political support (direct or indirect) and therefore the result of the work product was of little practical use to anyone.  All federal departments and agencies partake in this process since they are all run by political appointees. You would be shocked to see how much funding goes to grants from say the DOE to study non energy issues or to groups that have political agendas that match those in power.  Tens of thousands of non profits have been created to suck up of this free money.  This distortion also makes it hard to determine how much is being spent on the real reason for that agency or department to exist.  And by doing this the politicians create massive duplication whose only purpose is to create federal jobs.

Many would argue over these statements claiming that these issues are not all that bad and there is more good accomplished than bad.  This view is not supported by any facts.  We know from history that any government that tried to work from a central planning basis was soon gone.  The distortions that government policies create in the market place by improper allocation of costs soon cause these governments to collapse.  The old U.S.S.R. is a prime example; it lasted less then 70 years.  The leaders in China not being stupid saw what happened to Russia and rather then lose their power they opened up a limited free market and that saved their positions, at least for now.  This change is only a couple of dozen years in the making and economic policies can take generations to work out so the jury is still out on this one.

But we can look closer to home and see what it going on in Europe and the European Union (EU) today with their sovereign debt problem.  Their problem is very simple the politicians promised their citizens that they could work less and get more (from the government), someone else would pay the bill.  They got away with this for many years only because the United States covered their costs of protection by stationing our military there.  But even without significant military costs they still couldn’t spend enough so they borrowed money, by in essence forcing their banks to buy their bonds, their sovereign debt. Now they are paying the price the debt service is getting out of control and it’s very likely that the EU will break up in 2012.  The point to this discussion is that big government is bad and that any big government will collapse the country that it is in within 40 to 60 years of becoming the dominant player in that economy.

The federal government of the United States now represents over 25% of the economy and once the take over of the health care sector is completed with “single Payer” it will be approaching 50% but worse if we also look at state and local spending we will be way over 50% and probably closer to 60% within five or six years, assuming the health care legislation is not reversed. Since right now the federal government is borrowing almost 25% of what it spends and that there is no way to close that gap with taxes there is a very, very big problem about to hit us.

Sometime in early 2012, the ratio of U.S. sovereign debt to gross domestic product (GDP) exceeded 100% and now in early 2014 it’s grown to over 110% of GDP.  Worse yet is that the ratio is increasing at an alarming rate such that possibly within five years the United States will be where Greece was when their debt exceeded their ability finance.  That is what triggered the European problem that they have not yet been able to solve; and it now seems likely that Greece will pull out of the EU rather then fix their problem. What happens after that is not good and that is why there is so much current effort (including the Fed loaning the EU dollars) to not let that happen.  Unfortunately, there is no way to fix the problem unless the Greek people would give up much of what they were promised by their government.  So far they seem unwilling to discuss that.

The Greeks are maybe the worse offenders but they are not alone.  Spain, Italy and France to name a few are not immune.  The recent S&P downgrading of many EU banks as well as the downgrading of the U.S. treasuries last year were predictors of what is coming down the pike. This sovereign debt bubble is a lot worse then the housing bubble was and it is all caused by the various government of each of these countries doing something that doesn’t and didn’t make financial sense.

Once the government gets to between 25% and 50% of the economy what’s left of the private sector focuses almost completely on getting government work not what the private individuals want — the government becomes their biggest and in some cases their only customer. It is obvious what that means as the politicians control policy and by doing so they pick winners and losers based on politics.  This is called crony capitalism verse free market capitalism and is what most of the rest of the world has.  There is a semi-independent private sector that exists mostly at the whim of the central government. Costs and prices are distorted by policy and things grind to a halt.

We are not there yet but we are not far from getting there.  However don’t get me wrong I am not for pure laissez faire as that could be just as bad as crony capitalism.  There must be a balance and its up to the citizens to determine that. If nothing else the one thing that should be kept in mind when making that choice is; that it is always bad to concentrate power.  And that those with power will always try to do just that. There is no justification for that and it has always and will always turn out very bad.

In summary although some of what the various government agencies publish is valid it should not be taken that everything they publish is gospel.  There are many factors that go into anything the government does; crony politics, blaming the private sector for everything that is wrong and never taking any responsibility for anything they have done are three to keep in mind. If you treat the government just like any other source of information and know there will be a bias then you will be much better off.

Dustoff in Vietnam


The story of what it is like to be WIA

The night of 7 December 1967 was an eventful one for me because of what would happen over the next six hours.  It all began at about 2100 hours when the VC/NVA launched another rocket and mortar attack against Bu Dop and the 1-28th infantry that was deployed adjacent to us on our north.  While my normal alert position, when the CO was in camp, was in the commo bunker (a strongly protected bunker with all the radio equipment in it) we had received so many replacements over the past several weeks, due to casualties, that we had lost continuity.  Therefore, I went with the new Heavy Weapons Sergeant, SFC Ernest O. Broom and another SF trooper, SP4 Gerry D. Schroeder (I can’t remember his specialty now) to their assigned post at the 4.2″ mortar position.  Both had just arrived in camp and were unfamiliar with anything relating to Bu Dop operations and so it made no sense to send them out into a potential combat situation without help.  Especially, as the 4.2″ mortar position was a key spot, since we used it to illuminate the area around Bu Dop so that we could see any enemy troop movement near the camp.  I went there to show them where we fired the illumination rounds and also where the HE was to be fired, if required.  The 4.2″ mortar couldn’t fire in close on attacking troops (for technical reasons beyond the scope of this story) but it could fire on suspected staging areas and routes of withdrawal and we used it extensively for this purpose.

Over the next several hours we continued to receive sporadic incoming mortar rounds from the Northeast; probably from somewhere near Ap Phuc Tien as in most of all the past mortar attacks, I don’t remember any rockets being fired at or hitting the camp.  There was also some small arms fire but no signs of any kind of ground assault.  It appeared that this time we were just being harassed or probed and not attacked as they had just recently done and been repulsed.  As I remember it about 20 or 30 mortar rounds were fired at Bu Dop and the 1-28th infantry positions during the night, more to keep us from sleeping than to inflict major damage, I would guess. The 1-28th infantry was taking some casualties from shrapnel but I don’t think they had any KIA’s during this mortar bombardment.  We fired counter mortar fire from our attached 105 mm Howitzer pieces (artillery) as did the 1-28th infantry but I don’t think any of us hit the VC/NVA mortar positions.  They were probably just moving around firing a few rounds from one position and than a few rounds from another nearby position.

However, at about 0300 hours early in the morning of 8 December 1967 one of these incoming rounds landed either: near the 4.2″ pit sending hot shrapnel into the ammo bunker; or it landed directly on the ammo bunker itself penetrating it with flash or hot shrapnel (There was no way for me to know then or now).  In either case it didn’t matter for it ignited the charges on the staged illumination rounds (on the back of mortar rounds are placed propellant charges “explosives” that fire when the round is dropped in the tube.  That’s what propels the round to the target).  Maybe even some of the illumination rounds themselves that we were getting ready to fire were set off.  I do remember that there was a dull explosion and then several very intense waves of heat that went through the position igniting everything that could burn.  Fortunately we had used up all the HE rounds that night and only a few illumination rounds were left unfired.  If there had been any HE rounds in the pit and they had gone off when the incoming round hit they wouldn’t have found much if any of us.  Just a few pieces and parts here and there scattered around the camp.  For sure I wouldn’t be here writing this book now.

I had on a standard issue steel pot, a nylon flack vest, jungle fatigue pants and jungle boots, your basic standard uniform for combat in Vietnam.  Because we were in camp I did not have on any web gear and I wasn’t carrying a side arm (45 caliber pistol).  My CAR-15 was in the pit with me but I did not have it in my actual possession.  Most of us didn’t wear socks or underwear to try and prevent getting fungus infections from the heat and moisture that was always present.  The heat from the blast hit me from the right rear while I was talking on the PRC-25 radio.  I remember being engulfed by the flames as the fire ball rolled past me in several intense waves (I could feel the pressure as they hit me) of heat hitting me on the back and right side.  These blasts or waves of heat were extremely hot such that the intensity of them melted the nylon flak vest completely off me as well as instantly setting fire to my pants and jungle boots.  I must have instinctively closed my eyes as the fireball engulfed me and then there were a few seconds where I don’t remember what happened.  The blast either blew me out of the pit or I crawled out (I’m not sure which), the next thing I do remember a few seconds later was that I was laying on the ground just outside the pit and seeing that I was on fire.

My first action was to put out the flames that were still consuming what was left of my clothes and flack vest.  That probably took 20 or 30 seconds and while I was doing that I also saw there was an intense fire still burning in the 4.2″ mortar pit.  After I put out the flames with dirt I got up and saw that SFC Broom and SP4 Schroeder were down on the ground in the pit and still burning, I think they were both unconscious.  They were behind me when the blast hit and so this was the first I saw of them after the fireballs rolled over us.  I was in the process of climbing into the pit to help them when some of the other team members showed up.  They stopped me and took care of the other two guys in the pit.  I don’t remember which team members helped me (If ever any of them read this thanks for what you did) besides that being a long time ago I probably wasn’t in the best state of mind.

I knew I was injured and burned but I had no sense that I might be seriously or even mortally wounded.  I was placed on a stretcher and I do remember getting a shot of morphine.  A Dustoff was called (call name given for a MEDEVAC helicopter mission normally a Huey UH-1D) and by 0400 hours we were loaded in it and we left Bu Dop for the last time.  It was still dark and as we left I could see the camp and 1-28th positions dropping away as the chopper rose into the dark night sky.  Still, not realizing the extent of my injuries I was concerned over my team and that I needed to get back right away, they needed my experience.  I was thinking that I’d be gone for a few days, get some rest and then join my team in a week or so.  I was very wrong in this assessment of the situation.

When doing the research for this book one of the documents I was able to get from the National Archives was the 1st Division radio logbook for the period November 25, 1967 through December 8, 1967.  When going through it to check the accuracy (dates and times) of what I was writing I found on two of the pages the references to my MEDEVAC.  It wasn’t my name  (names were not used in most cases) but it was the right date, time and place and I know it was me.  It was a very eerie feeling reading about your own MEDEVAC and also knowing that later you would almost die from those wounds.  It was almost like reading your own obituary, a very strange feeling indeed.

1st Division LogSf-1log

We were all MEDEVACed to the 24th Evacuation Hospital in Long Binh for emergency treatment (see copy of emissions report on next page). I can remember going into the triage room (place were the doctors made decisions as to what to do and how serious the injuries where) and answering a few questions but then my memory starts to get fuzzy.  Probably by that time shock was setting in as the next several days were very disjointed and what I can remember is only a few images and feelings.  At some point I remember being loaded on a medical transport and then being moved to the 106th army hospital in Japan on 9 December 1967.                                                                 

Copy Emissions Report, 24th Evacuation Hospital, Long Bin Vietnam.Sf-emit

I spent several days in Japan, of which I remember almost nothing but a few images of being in a hospital ward that I remember as being dark (however, I was experiencing shock by this time and so I can’t really rely on anything I remember as being absolutely true).  Then all three of us were placed on a military hospital plane (we were all on stretchers, stacked maybe three high and on both sides of the plane, in any case there were a lot of us, but I don’t think we were all burn patients) and flown back to the states.  The ride back was one of constantly dropping in and out of consciousness and blurred images of patients, nurses IV’s and being very cold.  I think there was a plane transfer somewhere in this process (in Hawaii or maybe California) and then we (the three of us from Bu Dop) were taken to the Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas.  I remember very little of that plane ride from Japan but I do remember the airfield in the states and the ambulance ride to the hospital when we arrived there on 11 December 1967.  This was the last planeload out before Christmas that year (I was told that later by my wife).  If I had missed that plane I would not have gotten to Brooke until sometime in January and by then I may not have been alive.

Telegram telling My Family I was Severely WoundedSf-tel4

Brooke Medical Center was then (I think it still is) the premier center, in the world, for treatment of burns, so if you were going to be burned this was where to be.  I had 3rd degree burns (all skin burned away) on my legs (23% of body area) and 2nd degree burns on my arms, back, neck and face (44% of body area).  I had also inhaled hot burning gases in the pit when the fire balls rolled over me which had burned the inside of my mouth, tongue and my lungs.  Besides that I had some shrapnel wounds and was experiencing a sever loss of body fluids.  Generally I was in very, very bad shape

Much later, when I was discharged from Brooke Medical Center, the Doctors told me that when I reached the hospital in December they had given me only a 10% chance of living through this severe trauma.  There had been so much physical damage to my body that they just didn’t think I would be strong enough to make it.  However, I’m certainly glad they didn’t give up and that they did still tried to save me despite their doubts.  As I contemplated this brush with death a few years later I came to the conclusion that my life after 1968 was a gift and that since I should have died then, but instead I had lived, that I would do something before I died to justify my existence.  As a result I have been driven to accomplish something ever since and what I’ll do if I’m ever successful I don’t know.

Being burned extensively is not pleasant and the burned person’s body reacts to this, in part, by allowing the mind to hallucinate.  I guess the hallucinations allow time to pass without direct knowledge of the pain the body is going through.  I was no exception to this developing situation even when I knew what was happening to me.  However, to me going into the hallucinatory state was a very frightening situation, much more so than the burns and associated pain (most people would not understand this nor agree with me).  The pain, I could control mentally to the point of being the only patient (during that period) in the ward that didn’t scream or in any way get violent during the treatments.  That’s not to say that I in any way enjoyed it but only that between the two at least the pain was real.  The real I could deal with but the lose of reality was frightening to me.  I’ll write more on this later in this chapter, but now I’m talking more about the treatment.

For example, there was a daily treatment where the burned patient taken to a special room and was placed in a tank (called a Hubbard Tank) full of water with cleansing and disinfectant soaps.  This treatment was given each and every morning whether you wanted it or not. A doctor would then proceed to scrape away all the dead skin with a scalpel.  In effect a person was being skinned alive and I can tell you with a great deal of certainty that it did hurt.  I was always able to bear this without any screaming or hollering.  Also, since everyone could not be treated at once, you could hear the ones that went before you hollering and screening as they got their daily skinning treatment. That preconditioning was almost as bad as the treatment itself for you knew your turn was coming.  After you turn in the “TANK” all the raw areas were coated with a white cream (silver sulfadiazine?).  In 1967/68 this was a new treatment and it prevented infections from getting into the large open areas of the body.  Unfortunately, it had a side effect in that it burned worse than the original burns when placed on the raw flesh of the burned areas.  Since this one two punch was given to us each morning we didn’t have a lot to look forward to when waking up each day.

I had always prided myself in being in control of my internal self (I recognized that I could not control the external world in any way) to the point that I really never allowed myself to even get drunk (I could act totally rational even after quite a bit to drink).  This pain and shock induced hallucinatory state beat me, however, and as I would go in and out of this dream world I found that I could not stop it from happening nor recognize that I was in this state after it happened (Very different from being drunk and at least knowing you were high).  While in these dream states I actually believed that what I was hallucinating was real no matter how bizarre the situation I was experiencing.  After this hallucinatory state had happened to me a few times I could sense it was coming on but it was too powerful a force to fight, as much as I tried to stop it from happening, it would take control of me at will.  Note hospital policy (at Brooke in 1968) in regards to burn patients is that no painkillers are given.  The logic was that since the time of treatment was so long, no matter what painkiller was given or what the dose was the person would become addicted.

I can remember lying in the circle bed and feeling reality shifting and changing on me.  As I was watching the room or something in it, my perception would blur and I would lose focus then I would be somewhere else.  I guess it’s kind of like a dream or maybe what it is to experience drugs like LSD (I have never taken any drugs nor smoked any marijuana so I have no direct knowledge) as we have all seen in movies or as we have read about in books.  It’s very strange to be one place and then all of a sudden somewhere else.  These spells lasted from a few minutes to several hours (I’m really not sure and I was in no state to time them) and they would center on some situation.  Sometimes they seemed to relate to experiences that I had in Vietnam and other times they related to what I was currently experiencing in the hospital.  The specifics are now vague and so I can’t relate any of the situations except that as I remember it they were quasi real like animation characters (The Disney film of a few years ago “Roger Rabbit” might be a good example).  I do remember that as I came back into this reality I knew what had happened.  I could remember being in the state when I was out but I could not tell when I was in one of these states that it was not real.

Later after leaving the hospital and thinking about what had happened I realized how dependent our beliefs and actions are on what our sensory input tells our brain.  If the input says one thing no amount of logic and intelligence can overcome that for long.  We are therefore captives of what we perceive, whether it is right or wrong or whether it is true or not.  This taught me the importance of analyzing a situation for the root causes and even to question supposed facts.  However, I will never forget how when I was in this state I was fooled into believing something that was not true.

During the initial period of my treatment at Brooke I dropped from over 180 pounds to under 100 pounds (98 pounds if I remember correctly).  As I started my recover (probably in mid January) I started to gain weight back and also to have fewer and fewer hallucinatory states.  After getting skin grafts from by chest to my legs where the skin had been completely burned off and healing some from those operations I had to learn to walk again.  That was a task, as the grafted areas would quickly swell up when standing as well as be very uncomfortable.  It was probably five or six years later before I really felt comfortable walking and I was never able to run again for any length of time.  Now, thirty three years later I probably could start running again if I tried as I can still feel my body recovering from that period, and I no-longer need support socks to keep my legs from swelling up with fluids.

While I was recovering from one of my many operations I was interviewed by a military person (I don’t remember his name or rank) on the subject of flame warfare and the effects on the individual soldier.  The military was interviewing troopers that had been burned to see if flames/fire was an effective means of stopping a military unit.  Flame warfare unlike explosive warfare does not necessarily render you immediately incapable of fighting even though you may be fatally wounded.  It was my personal opinion that I could have fought on for a short while (1/2 to 1 hour) after I was burned, which would mean that flame warfare might not be effective in a personal combat situation.  I relayed this personal opinion to the person taking the survey, but what the results of the survey were I never found out.

My wife, Darlene, flew to San Antonio to be with me and I attribute my recovery solely to her presence there.  She was there the entire time I was, and I believe that this gave me enough of an anchor to reality to hold on to life.  My brother, Jonathon, also visited me while I was in the hospital during December 1967, around Christmas, if I remember correctly. There was one good experience later on, which was I think in February, when I received a phone call from Martha Ray (the famous entertainer) she wished me a speedy recovery from my wounds. This call was a real surprise and resulted from a request from my parent’s neighbor’s daughter, Susan McCollum.  She was a dancer and with Martha Rays’ troop in Vietnam in 1967/1968 when she heard about my being wounded, and she had Martha Ray call me. That was really something I can tell you and shows what was in her heart; unlike many in the entertainment industry today. Note: Martha Ray did a lot for Special Forces troopers such that she was later made an honorary Colonel in the Green Berets.

San-Antonio

One other thing happened to me while at Brooke and that was that my left elbow froze to the point that I could not move it at all, from calcification.  When I was discharged from the hospital the doctors told me that after a year or so they could operate to free the joint (they also stated that I would not get back 100%).  Prior to that length of time they said it would not have stabilized and could have reoccurred again.  That meant that I would have no motion in my left arm until that operation could be performed.  Along with that I had a lot of Keloid tissue (scar tissue) form that gave me additional motion problems on my arms.  That too would have to wait but could also be fixed.  Since I knew that it would be 12 to 18 months before I would be done with all these corrective surgeries I elected to stay in the army and take a light duty assignment instead of getting a medical discharge, which was an option.  I couldn’t picture myself waiting around for a year or more waiting for these operations.  It would be impossible to get a job and I would just be another unemployable vet until these operations were finished.

While I was in the hospital (over three months the first time) I received several operations and skin grafts to repair the massive burn and shrapnel damage I had received in Vietnam.  SFC Broom and SP4 Schroeder who were there with me in Vietnam both died at Brook Army Medical Center while I was there.  I was therefore the only one of the three wounded in the mortar pit at Bu Dop that made it.  SFC Broom was very severally burned and there was probably never any chance that he could be saved.  I was bad but he was even worse as he was the closest to the explosion when it when off.  He may even have shielded Schroeder and I from some of the blast.  SP4 Schroeder was only slightly burned and was actually on his way to being released.  He had been transferred to a different, non critical, ward and then he developed a strange infection which ravaged his body with extremely high temperatures eventually killing him. Years later long after writing this book I visited the Vietnam Wall Memorial in Washington DC and found the names of all those that died at Bu Dop in 1967 while I was there.

Fortunately for me I was not that aware of what was happening and so I didn’t really comprehend that they were both gone until later when I was out of immediate danger.  If I had realized what was happening to them it probably would have affected me to an extent and that may have been just enough to trip me over to the not make it category.  In any case I didn’t really know and I just made it through this experience.  The following paragraph was something I wrote to summarize what happened to me that night in Vietnam.

On the night of 7/8 December 1967 I was mortally wounded (all mortal wounds don’t kill you immediately). I was MEDEVACed and sent to a hospital in Texas where I meet the grim reaper soon after arriving.  He told me he was coming for me but I told him I wasn’t ready; he laughed at me and said he was going to come anyway.  I told him it didn’t matter whether he came or not I just wasn’t going with him.  But he wasn’t to be denied and so he visited me every night in the form of a large Bengal tiger and we battled all night for the rights to my soul.  He was a very vicious and determined tiger and he tried his best to rip my soul from my body with his sharp teeth and claws but I was strong and stubborn and I would not let go.  This battle lasted for two months and he chewed me down to 95 pounds but in the end I prevailed and he disappeared and I was not dead and he had to settle for taking the souls of the two men who were standing next to me in Vietnam.

Is Global Scale Sustainable Energy Possible?


Green Energy not suitable for Grid Power

This post was written using the best available information found using Google and Wikipedia.  The purpose for writing this post was for putting things in the proper perspective in regards to sustainable energy at the global scale.  The words Sustainable Energy as used today refer to Energy that does not pollute and is not finite.

All carbon-based sources of energy are finite and pollute and nuclear process pollute and are also finite.  Hydroelectric is very limited and cannot be considered as a serious source for global energy. Other similar sources such as wave power and geothermal have the same limits and so this class although very suitable in some locations does not solve global needs.

Therefore the only real source of truly sustainable energy is the sun, and the only question then is how can we acquire it and how much is available? This potential energy availability takes two basic forms; the first directly converting sunlight to electricity with energy collection panels and the other indirectly capturing the movement of the solar heated atmosphere with wind turbines to create electricity.

Unfortunately there is no way to discuss this subject without using lots of numbers.  Their use has been minimized to the extent possible.  But to do so requires that some liberties were taken in the descriptions.  None of these liberties changes the basic facts presented here in any way.

Basic facts one, the earth is a sphere albeit not a perfect one but very, very close with a mean radius of 6,371 km and that is revolving around the sun at distance of between 147.1 (perihelion) and 152.1 (aphelion) million km with an orbital period of 365.2564 days.  The solar radiation (flux) at the surface of the sun is 6.4 X 107 +/- .25% wm-2 considering variations due to the fusion process going on in the sun.  By the time this solar energy reaches the earth it has been reduced to between 1,435 wm-2 at perihelion and 1,345 wm-2 at aphelion with a small variance of 90 wm-2 between the two. The accepted “average” all this considered is 1,367 wm-2 at the interface of outer space and the earth’s atmosphere

Basic facts two, the earth, to the sun, is only a flat disk, which has an effective area of 1.28 X 1014 m-2 so that the 1,367 wm-2 of the incoming radiation must be reduced by a factor of 2 to compensate for the 3D effect (sphere verse disk) on the surface. Considering only that adjustment we would have 683 wm-2 on the surface but that level is further reduced by the earth’s albedo (the amount being reflected back into space) of about 30% so the net at the surface facing the sun is about 478 wm-2 when these things are considered. We’ll ignore the various variations because they are relatively small.

Basic facts three, Continuing with our simple disk model the backside of the earth, that facing away from the sun, is radiating energy off the planet back into space. So therefore since the planet is in thermal equilibrium the backside is radiating 478 wm-2 of energy back into space at a frequency shift down into the infrared range.  And the net mean temperature of the surface of the earth is 287.2 degrees K (Kelvin) as a result.

Note, this is a very simplistic thermal model of the Earth and the actual energy flows of a very large rotating sphere within a gaseous envelope being heated on one side is going to be very complex.  The above descriptions are meant only to give the feel for the energy flows even though the actual energy flows are not exactly as described.

Basic facts four, Of significant note is that the water vapor and water droplets in the atmosphere absorb the outgoing inferred as described in basic facts three delaying the back radiation going out and thereby raising the temperature of the planet (the so called greenhouse effect). That water acts as a thermal dampener and thereby raises the temperature of the plant by about 33 degrees Celsius.  In other words the temperature of the planet without atmospheric water and also the CO2 would be 254.2 degrees Kelvin instead of the actual 287.2 degrees Kelvin and the Earth would be an ice ball with no life on it

Much to do has been made about using sustainable energy i.e. solar and wind in lieu of carbon based sources for two reasons.  The number one reason is that carbon based fuels produce CO2 and that since CO2 is a green house gas that it will raise the temperature of the planet by some unacceptable amount.  The second reason is that we will soon run out of carbon based fuels and we need to find a substitute.

The first reason is without any merit since historically the level of CO2 in the atmosphere has ranged from historic lows of around 180 ppm (parts per million) in the recent past to well over 7,000 ppm in the distant past.  If an average were developed it would be in the range of about 1,200 ppm, which is 3 times what it is now.  When considering geological time frames there does not appear to be a causal relationship between CO2 and temperature so it’s unlikely that even reaching 800 ppm today will have much effect on the planets temperature.  The temperature of the planet has, in geological time frames, only moved +/- 1.8% from the mean while CO2 has moved +/- 274.1%.  That alone is enough of an issue to give pause to the current climate theories.

However realizing that this is a unconventional belief its not worth arguing about since well over 80% of the worlds energy is carbon based and that is not going to change in the next 40/50 years even with all the attempts being made at limiting the use of carbon based fuels.

So the real question is how do we transition from where we are which is using up finite resources to being able to have abundant energy that has no or minimal adverse effects on the planet and on humanity. One point of clarification is needed here and that is that although the carbon fuels i.e. coal, oil and natural gas are finite, they will last well into the next century.  We are not going to run out in the next 50 years. In fact, there appears to be in North America enough carbon based recoverable energy to last us between 100 and 200 years depending on usage rates. The point being that there is plenty of time to work out an alternative.

But back to our study, the first thing we need to know is not how much energy we use now that’s a given but how much will we need in the coming decades. The estimated level of energy produced and used world wide in 2008 was 474 exajoules or about 449 Quads and it was growing at about 5% per year as third world counties industrialize.  That would put total world energy usage at about 3,679.8 exajoules or 3,485.0 Quads at mid century if that growth rate were sustained.  That is the equivalent of 1,024,529.6 TWh (terawatt hour) used from a generating capacity of 117.0 TW (1,024,529.6 dived by 8760 hours) which is almost 8 times what we have now.  So the issue then is how much of that could be converted to wind or solar?

To determine the amount of energy we can get we first need to know how much of the available land area can be used to convert the incoming energy to a usable form with either solar or wind systems.  We’ll ignore the costs for now and only focus on the energy generation.  The Earth is 29.2% land or 148,940,000 km-2 but not all of that is available for several reasons.  Those reasons being: the requirement of living which are having cities, crop land and other uses of the land for human work and pleasure; then that which makes the land unsuitable i.e. the polar areas, mountains, swamp land and other areas where putting wind turbines and PV panels would just not be practical.  For sake of discussion let’s assume that 10% of the land area of the planet is available for either wind or solar power and that calculates out to about 14,893,882 km-2 of available land.  And that gets reduced by another 25% to 11,170,412 km-2 for other reasons explained later.

Solar PV (Photovoltaic) is probably the most efficient method for collecting energy since we are not using the sun to heat air and then the air to move turbine blades.  Turbines are complex devices with a high mechanical content subject to breakdown and high maintenance, They are also not visually pleasing and they generate audio harmonics that cause humans and animals that are near them discomfort. Solar PV panels are the more practical means of collecting solar energy since they lend themselves to mass production and cost reductions better than wind systems.  There is a downside however as only half the planet is facing the sun at any one time and there is a certain amount of infrastructure required that also reduces the area actually available. That means when we factor all this in that we only have 5,585,206 km-2 available at any one time for generating solar PV power out of a total installed base of 11,170,412 km-2 worth of panels.

So how much power can we get? Well we know that on average the solar radiation is 474 wm-2 and there are only 5,585,206 km-2 available for generating power at any one point in time. There are many figures out there all using many different ways of determining solar PV capability and cost. We also need to consider incentives and grants as they do not change the cost of production only who pays for it. So rather then guess at the numbers we’ll use the actual published data of one of the world’s largest solar PV installations, the recently constructed solar PV panel generating plant in Sarnia Ontario, Canada that was finished in 2010.  On their website the stated generating capacity is 80 mW and it is expected to generate 120,000 mWh per year (we do not know if this is actuate yet).  This plant was said to cost about $400 million to build and consists of 966,000 m-2 of high efficiency First Solar PV panels.

Using these numbers and considering these previously discussed facts: First that on average we only get sunlight for 12 hours on any one panel, the side facing the sun. There will also be a additional reductions for clouds and other atmosphere effects and dirt on the panels. And we also know that we will need access roads and other support structures as well as maintenance.  So we have 5,585,206 km-2 of PV panels generating power and we end up getting 1,392,491 TWh of power as the theoretical maximum if all these assumptions hold true and although it’s true that that is a lot of power it is only about 35.9% more then required by mid century. Not much room for additional growth and not even enough if the growth in population is more to the high side then the low side of the UN projections. The population growth is discussed later.

Clearly a massive switch to Solar PV cannot solve the issue of world energy needs, as the land area available is just not there.  By 2060 to 2070 that 35.9% reserve will be gone. Putting it into perspective if the entire land area of the United States were covered in solar PV panels, which is not possible, it would only generate about two thirds of the required power of the planet by mid century. Is using up this much land for this purpose something that we really want to do?  Keep in mind that these installations are going to be placed on good land not mountain tops.

Then there is one other factor that has not been considered about installing global scale solar PV power systems.  Solar PV panels are back and are designed to absorb energy.  At a global scale this will change the albedo of the planet to something less then it is now.  That will change the thermodynamic balance of the planet and possibly raise the temperature more then that feared for by the increasing CO2 levels — unintended consequences lurk behind every decision that we make.

Baring a major break through in developing fusion power there is only one real alternative for sustainable energy that can match the population growth without a corresponding reduction in the standard of living.  So let’s assume that the goal is to bring everyone in the world up to at minimum the “present” standard of living of America.  In round numbers we Americans used about 100 Quad of energy before the 2008 financial collapse and there were about 300,000,000 people.  So we can say that we will need .333 Quad per 1,000,000 people.

By mid century it’s estimated that there will be between 7.5 and 10.5 Billion people on the planet according to UN projections.  However that low end appears to be unrealistic since we are or almost at 7.0 Billon right now.  So lets use 9.5 Billion people and that would translate into 3,166 Quad worth of energy verses the 3,485 previously calculated. So the previous 5% assumed growth rate in energy is not far off if we want to raise the standard of living of everyone.  However that does also imply that our American standard of living cannot increase or we would need more energy.

Baring some major breakthrough the method being described here reaches a maximum amount of energy possible, from solar PV, by mid century plus or minus a few years so from that point on we must either get rid of people or lower the standard of living.  Either way that creates haves and have nots and that is not a good idea.  There would also be a very large cost as 11.2 million square km-2 of solar PV panels would cost $462.5 Trillion to produce and install at $41.41 per mWh, which is only 10% per mWh of the actual cost of the Sarnia project.  That is a huge reduction which is probably not achievable when the raw resources to make this happen are considered.

Is there another way?  Yes there is we could put the PV panels in orbit around the Earth where the sun shines 24/7 and there is no loss of energy in the atmosphere. The same amount of power could be generated with an array only 250 by 250 miles and at $122.41 per mWh (three times that on the surface), it would probably cost under $52 Trillion to install. NASA studied this concept back in the ‘70’s when oil was still cheap and solar PV panels were a lot more expensive then they are today. Orbital PV power was assumed to not be feasible as it was assumed that we would be using nuclear (fission) power by now.  The point to this is that a lot of the conceptual groundwork has already been done.  All it needs is to be dusted off and updated.  Although there would be some land use required on the surface of the planet for receiving the power it would only be a fraction of that required with the panels on the surface. Back then in was microwaves now lasers could be used. So less money and a lot less land — and more importantly this is very scalable.

The last thing we need to consider is that solar panels lose capacity at a rate of about 1% per year.  At that rate panels need to be replaced at about 25 years of life or when they reach 75% of their original capacity.  Using that number and the goal of having an objective of generating the maximum amount that we can from solar by mid century plus or minus a few years we find that if they are on the ground we need to get to a sustained production rate of 340,000 km-2 per year and then stay at that rate forever.  This will cost about $14.1 Trillion per year and will maintain above 1,024,529.6 TWh of power. Using the same assumptions but using power satellites we can get the same amount of power from 13,000 km-2 of panels costing $1.7 Trillion per year to maintain.  Either of these options will take care of about 85% of the world’s power, some things like planes, boats and other heavy equipment will still have the need for carbon based fuels.

Whether these capabilities or time frames are actually achievable or not this project would certainly put a lot of people to work and focus our attentions on something other then trying to redistribute the existing resources of the planet to no real long range benefit to all the citizens of the planet.  With our current policies we end up fighting over a smaller and smaller pot of energy and available land.  America is the technological leader in the world — we are the ones that need to think this way or the Facebook and Tweeter users will not have the electricity to run their phones and laptops.