The news from the financial front is that the stock market
is still soaring, but people still seem to be poor. At the same time, the “gold bugs” are
claiming that a return to “the gold standard” is the silver bullet (sorry)
needed to cure our economic ills and balance the budget.
Friday, May 30, 2014
Thursday, May 29, 2014
Do We Own Our Social Security Accounts?, III: The Solution
The whole issue of Social Security that we’ve been looking
at and the “unbooked” liability that, combined with projected Medicare and the
prescription drug liabilities, is upwards of $129 trillion (yes, trillion,
or nearly ten times total U.S. annual GDP) per the “National Debt Clock” would be a non-issue if
the U.S. would adopt a Capital Homestead Act along the lines recommended in Capital
Homesteading for Every Citizen: A Just Free Market Approach for Saving Social
Security (2004).
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
Do We Own Our Social Security Accounts?, II: The Situation
While we appreciate the sentiments expressed by the Lady in
Montana given in the previous posting, and agree that, under the influence of
Keynesian economics, politicians have been bleeding the productive private
sector dry in favor of unproductive government spending and private sector
speculation and gambling, the simple fact is that we do not own the money that
we have paid into “our” Social Security accounts. Social Security was
designed as a redistribution program in which those paying the tax (and note
that it is a tax, not a contribution) support those receiving benefits.
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
Do We Own Our Social Security Accounts?, I: The Complaint
A little while back we got a forwarded e-mail from a
correspondent who occasionally sends us . . . provocative materials. This
piece, with the subject line, “Do You Think She’s Pissed?” contains language
that really doesn’t have a place in a learned forum such as this, but it would
detract from the overall impression to delete it. We don’t even know if this thing is real, but
that’s not the point: it expresses what many people believe Social Security to
be, i.e., a bank account with our
money in it, earning interest for our retirement.
Monday, May 26, 2014
Guest Posting: A Critical Response
Every so often (like every couple of hours or so) we get a
response or a comment from someone who seems to have seen a word or two he or
she disagrees with in something we said or wrote, and shoots off a comment
before checking to see if his or her brain is loaded. Usually the comment has nothing to do with
what we actually said, but everything to do with what the commentator thinks we said, based on unquestioned
assumptions of the commentator.
Friday, May 23, 2014
News from the Network, Vol. 7, No. 21
Stock market soar like eagle . . . by suckering in
turkeys. Frankly, the wild swings in the
stock market really ought to make people a lot more nervous than it does. The same sort of thing was happening about
this time in 1929.
Thursday, May 22, 2014
“Inspired Amateurs Should Avoid Politics”
On May 12, 2014, the Wall
Street Journal carried an op-ed piece that was truly opposed to what the newspaper
claims to stand for. (Contrary to
popular opinion, “op-ed” doesn’t mean “opinion-editorial,” but “opposite the
editorial page.” An op-ed piece
presumably reflects the personal opinion of the writer, not necessarily the
official stance of the newspaper. Look
it up.)
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
Grosscup on Anti-Trust Laws, VII: Workers Should Be Owners
Today we close our short series consisting of the full text
of Judge Peter S. Grosscup’s “long lost” talk on anti-trust legislation from
October of 1907 — right after financier J. Pierpont Morgan caused the “Panic of
1907” by taking advantage of the financial mismanagement and shenanigans by the
management of an important bank. As
Grosscup concluded,
Tuesday, May 20, 2014
Grosscup on Anti-Trust Laws, VI: National Commission on Corporation Reform
Cohan as Wallingford |
Monday, May 19, 2014
Grosscup on Anti-Trust Laws, V: Securing an Interest in Combinations
This portion of Judge Grosscup’s talk brings in an
assumption with which we disagree: that the process of capital formation in an
advanced economy necessarily means that enterprises must be big, bigger, and
biggest just to survive. On the
contrary, given the use of future savings to finance new capital formation and
the operation of a truly free market, enterprises should be the optimal size
for efficiency, not big or small to fit preconceived ideas. This does not, however, invalidate the point
Grosscup was making. As he continued,
Friday, May 16, 2014
News from the Network, Vol. 7, No. 20
Most of this week was spent “cleaning up” from prior
meetings, or arranging or preparing for future meetings. Nevertheless, we did commit a few newsworthy
acts:
Thursday, May 15, 2014
Grosscup on Anti-Trust Laws, IV: Diffusion of Wealth in the United States
With all the discussion, acrimonious and otherwise, stirred
up by Pope Francis’s tweet about inequality being the root of all social evil,
it’s interesting to see that Judge Grosscup was saying pretty much the same
thing more than a century ago. As His
Honor continued,
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
Grosscup on Anti-Trust Laws, III: Our Legislation Wrong in Principle
Here is the second part of Judge Grosscup’s talk on
Anti-Trust Laws given in Chicago in October 1907, and lost until rediscovered
recently by CESJ researchers. Judge
Grosscup continued,
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
Grosscup on Anti-Trust Laws, II: Opening Remarks
The following talk is taken from Proceedings on the National Conference on Trusts and Combinations Under
the Auspices of the National Civic Federation, October 22-25, 1907, New
York: The McConnell Printing Company, 1908, pp. 11, 221-231. . . . which title probably
explains why this insightful talk was “long lost.” It wouldn’t be at the top of too many reading
lists being included in a book with a title like that.
Monday, May 12, 2014
Grosscup on Anti-Trust Laws, I: Introduction
It seems singularly appropriate to begin this series at this
time, as the annual ESOP Association Conference was held in Washington, DC. The awards ceremony was last Wednesday night,
as a matter of fact, and EEI’s biggest for-profit client, Mid South Building Supply, won some prestigious awards.
Friday, May 9, 2014
News from the Network, Vol. 7, No. 19
Most of the CESJ core group was busy this week with
“outside” activities. Nevertheless, a
number of projects saw significant advances, although not in ways that make for
good news items. Events that do make
good stories are:
Thursday, May 8, 2014
Some Thoughts on Atheism, V: Will and Intellect
Replacing reason with faith, as the solidarist political
scientist and jurist Heinrich Rommen pointed out in his book on the natural
law, is the inevitable consequence of putting your private interpretation of
the Will (opinion/faith) over Intellect (knowledge/reason), and leads (as Adler
concurred) to pure moral relativism, even nihilism, and is the basis of
totalitarian government. Everything ends
up being opinion. Knowledge itself
becomes fit only for ridicule. Might makes
right.
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
Some Thoughts on Atheism, IV: Faith v. Reason
Many atheists mistake materialism for science. It is true that you cannot prove the
existence of God by deduction. You
cannot put God in a test tube or under a microscope and subject Him to various experiments. You cannot prove the existence of an
immaterial being by material means.
Tuesday, May 6, 2014
Ukraine: The Free Trade Solution
Someone made an interesting suggestion about the crisis in
Ukraine. The current push for sanctions
that doesn’t seem to be having any effect may not be the best way to go. The country is in a state of disunity. Making things worse doesn’t make things any
better.
Monday, May 5, 2014
Some Thoughts on Atheism, III: Wiederspruch (Contradiction)
The habit of some religious believers of espousing a type of
“muscular Christianity” (or Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, or anything
else) and attempting to bully people into believing their way has probably
spawned more atheism than anything else.
Nobody likes a bully, and religious people can come across as (and
sometimes are) bullies attempting to force others to do their will — or God’s
Will, as they imagine it to be. An
atheist (or anyone else) is fully justified in thinking that any god that needs
that kind of help can’t be much of a supreme being.
Friday, May 2, 2014
News from the Network, Vol. 7, No. 18
Some very interesting things have been happening this week .
. . some of the best of which we can’t tell you anything about because they’re
still in the formative stages. We do
have enough, however, to show that we’re starting to make some significant
progress:
Thursday, May 1, 2014
“Inequality is the Root of All Social Evil”
We interrupt our regularly scheduled blog posting to bring
you an important news bulletin. On
Monday, April 28, 2014, Pope Francis did it again. He completely baffled both “liberals” and
“conservatives.” He “tweeted” a short
message (as if there can be extended discussion in a tweet): “Inequality is the
root of all social evil.”