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PERRIN LOVETT

~ Deo Vindice

PERRIN LOVETT

Tag Archives: economics

Theft, Murder, and Slavery

07 Wednesday Sep 2022

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ Comments Off on Theft, Murder, and Slavery

Tags

economics, evil, financial capitalism, Michael Hudson, usury

Michael Hudson explains exactly how the mass financialization of the economy has destroyed the economy and American society. Watch this and LISTEN.

If you don’t or can’t understand what the man just said, then you are too terminally stupid or wicked to salvage.

Your beloved Ds and Rs will not help you. The only way to turn this around is to ban all fake money and all of the loans that created the fake money, make dealing in fake money and charging any amount of usury capital felonies, and retroactively execute the murderers who created this evil system. Deus vult.

COLUMN: How About Murder?

31 Wednesday Aug 2022

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Christianity, debt, economics, evil, forgive debts!, murder, usury

How About Murder?

Opposing Student Debt Forgiveness Subborns Evil:

A Christian Perspective

 

*Perhaps unwisely, I am publishing this as-is and unedited. It’s a little rough and not as artfully brushed together as I’d like. Still, it’s rather irrefutable – from any good and honest perspective. I may touch it up some, or not; I have one of the darndest head colds ever and don’t feel at all like going any further. Enjoy. 

 

As far as I can tell, there are two primary reasons why one would oppose eliminating American student loan debts, in particular, and (perhaps) all fake, credit-based, usurious loans, in general: 1) one is either ignorant (and/or stupid), or 2) one is possessed of wickedness, of a spirit of evil. I understand there may be categorical overlap. There are multiple reasons to favor loan forgiveness. Chief among them are the facts that these loans: 1) are greatly assisting the general destruction of society; 2) consist of legal, economic, and monetary fraud stacked upon fraud, and; 3) contravene the tenets of Christianity, directly opposing the will of Jesus Christ and His Father.

Herein, I will concentrate on the Christian perspective. Lately, Christians are making their voices heard on this matter. Dark state puppet and fake president Biden, allegedly a Catholic, has stirred interest and controversy by touting a plan to shift some debtors’ burdens ($10,000 – 20,000 per debtor) via another spending spree bill. The plan, as presented, is fraught with problems, though it is a stumbling, half-step in the right direction. Many reactions to the plan, even from other alleged Christians, are at best selfish, short-sighted, and solipsistic. 

Even Ron Paul has objected. I suppose that he understands the true underlying evil and would – I know he would – right all the wrongs. Others don’t get such benefit of the doubt. Thanks to a friend’s email about something else, I inadvertently came across a Tweet(!) by a Matt Walsh: 

Yes, you were scammed when you took out your student loans. You got suckered. You bought a worthless thing for way too much money. That’s true. But making someone else pay for your mistakes is a greater injustice. It sucks that you have the debt but it is your debt. Not mine.

-Tweet(!) of Matt Walsh, August 23, 2022.

Not knowing who Matt Walsh is, I did some quick research. The man purports to be Catholic, like former vice president Biden and myself, and also describes himself as a “theocratic fascist.” He also appears to be in league with Benjamin Aaron Shapiro, so I suppose there might be a question as to the theos in the theocracy. But his statement sums up much of the current hyperbole: he acknowledges that a scam suckered the victims, whom he then blames, shuns, and disowns. 

Other comments I have seen, from the left, the right, and the inebriated libertarian center, go further and to worse effect. Most of them fall along the lines of argumentum ad personalem (I paid my loans! I’m better than you!) or argumentum ad hominem (You ain’t paid yer loan! You ain’t good as me! And your major sucked, you commie…); both miss the reality that there is a world outside of the self. It is not all “me, me, meeee!”

Before moving to Biblical precepts, I thought it advantageous to briefly examine the thoughts of two men well-grounded in reality and logical reasoning. Neither of them were Christians, both living and dying before the Holy Birth of Christ. Yet their thoughts which I give in example are in-line with the teachings of the Catholic Church – consider it further proof of Truth by universal acceptance and understanding. 

In or around 44 BC, Old Tully related an alleged conversation between the mighty Cato and a presumably ambitious young Patrician. I’ve elsewhere read that the younger man was attempting to goad Cato into ratifying the man’s pre-selected occupation. The conversation is presented as an example of competing expediencies or comparative outward advantages. It did not go exactly as the young man had hoped:

To this class of comparisons belongs that famous saying of old Cato’s: when he was asked what was the most profitable feature of an estate, he replied: “Raising cattle successfully.” What next to that? “Raising cattle with fair success.” And next? “Raising cattle with but slight success.” And fourth? “Raising crops.” And when his questioner said, “How about money-lending?” Cato replied: “How about murder?”

-M.T. Cicero, De Officiis, II, § 89 (W. Miller) (Loeb, 1913).

Keep that response in mind: why did Cato equate money-lending with murder? 

We’re going to get to the answers. But first, a brief look at the magnitude of the problem currently faced by American college students and graduates who indebted themselves in pursuit of academic credentials.

Ye Old National Debt Clock, as of Wednesday, August 31, 2022, says the total US student loan debt is somewhere around $1.768 trillion (it’s higher, now that you’re reading this). That’s a lot of debt, and a considerable portion of the total outstanding personal debt in the US. It averages to about $40,000 per debtor, which mathematically produces a total college debtor class of about 44 million people. (As an aside, the Debt Clock explains in stark terms, and immediately below the student loan numbers, how and why all the credit money is utterly fake – statistically, there is zero real money in the economy. Again, that is an aside.).

The Census Bureau recently told me, as far as I one can trust them, that about 85 million US residents and citizens hold some level of college education (roughly 25% of the total US population). Either 44 million or 85 million is a little high, in my estimation; I would presume that fewer than 10% of the population has any real need of or derives any real benefit from higher education. This assumes that any of them are receiving an education – which most of them are not. Mr. Walsh is correct as to the scam and the suckering. Of course, that falls under the decline of society and outside the parameters of this essay.

Also outside the Christian scope of discussion – but still worth noting – are the inflationary effects of too many people attending college. That inflation, along with many other factors (women in the workforce, immigrants in the workforce, massive credit financialization in the general economy, etc.), has completely erased the definition and the concept of money, regarding education or anything else. If the wages of 1950 had kept pace with the cost of a new house, then today the average single-job annual salary would be around $300,000 nationwide. Minimum wage would pay something like $75,000 per year. As-is, NBC “News,” in another of those cherished “you gotta go to college!” hit pieces, says “good jobs,” only obtainable with a sacred degree, have starting salaries of … $35,000. It’s not that something doesn’t add up; nothing adds up. 

Like houses and other large-ticket items, education has soared far above and beyond the corresponding costs of labor. (In other words, kids, you are losing). And, sadly, there’s something uniquely or exceptionally American about the disparity. The late, great Tom Moore wrote School For Genius (2006) about Switzerland’s Federal Institute of Technology, or ETH. Lately, ETH charges around 730 CHF per semester in tuition, which roughly equals $1,500 per year. MIT offers a similar education (or, it once did), for an annual tuition of $57,000. Back in 1950, when the average American man earned $6,000 per year, MIT, like Harvard and other “elite” schools, charged something like $500 per year. 

It’s like this for each and every other US school. For many or most students, the only way to cope is through loans, which repeat and exacerbate the problem. Scam. Suckers.

What would Jesus say about all of this? He said forgive it.

“And forgive us our debts, as we have forgiven those who are in debt to us.” Matthew 6:12.

For the quantum edits folks, the Codex Sinaiticus quoted, in Greek, “debts” not trespasses. That, for what it’s worth, was in or about 350 AD.

Some Christians and churches have transmuted that part of the Lord’s Prayer into “sins” rather than “debts.” That is somewhat understandable, though incomplete. Elsewhere in the Gospels, it’s: “…and forgive us our sins, for we ourselves forgive each one who is in debt to us. …” Luke 11:3-4. Sin and debt go together, and both are forgiven upon righteous and humble request.

Jesus drove home the importance of forgiveness of debt, along with the punishment for refusing to forgive debt, in the Parable of the Wicked Servant: 

Then the master sent for the man and said to him, “You wicked servant, I cancelled all that debt of yours when you appealed to me. Were you not bound, then, to have pity on your fellow-servant just as I had pity on you?” And in his anger the master handed him over to the torturers till he should pay all his debt.

-Matthew 18:32-34.

One is reminded that, as Jesus came to fulfil rather than replace The Law, so His New Testament generally mirrors the Old. Forgiveness of debts stems from the Levitical Law and the Code of Legal Holiness. 

Leviticus, Chapter 25, concerns the Sabbatical Year and the Jubilee Year. Sabbatical years, which concern far more than debts, come every seventh year. Seven cycles of seven years, or forty-nine years, leads to the fifttieth year of Jubilee. The Sabbatical and the Jubilee may be thought of as minor and major resets. In years seven, fourteen, twenty-one, twenty-eight, thirty-five, forty-two, and forty-eight, as to debts, there is a “relaxation” or “remission.” 

At the end of every seven years, you must grant remission. The nature of the remission is as follows: any creditor holding a personal pledge obtained from his fellow must release him from it; he must not exploit his fellow or his brother once the latter has appealed to Yahweh for remission. A foreigner you may exploit, but you must remit whatever claim you have on your brother. There must, then, be no poor among you. For Yahweh will grant you his blessing in the country which Yahweh your God is giving you to possess as your heritage, only if you pay careful attention to the voice of Yahweh your God, by keeping and practising all these commandments which I am enjoining on you today.

-Deuteronomy 15:1-5.

Note that the Lord, here, prescribed the debt-creditor remissions of His People of the day, the Israelites. The point of inclusivity is that among the Hebrews there was to be economic equality of a degree, and that the blessings of God only extended to the degree His Laws were honored.

The Jubilee Year dealt with, in addition to elimination of domestic debts, a complete ancestral and cultural reversion. See, Leviticus 25:8—. Much of this law was exclusive to the Israelites and held, even as to them, some exceptions which might not be applicable to modern peoples, Christian, Karaite, or others (land within or without certain walled cities, for example). 

Leviticus also contains a strict prohibition against usury (one of several in the Pentateuch and the Old Testament) as to fellow Israelites. “Do not charge [your brother or countryman] interest on a loan, but fear your God, and let your brother live with you.” Leviticus 25:36. For those who fail to fear and honor their God, Chapter 26 explains the rather exacting Punishments of Disobedience. These are the same punishments the Hebrews (and “Jews”) eventually succumbed to upon their rejection of Christ.

Christ came to fulfill, and in a way, simplify the laws which very few had been able to faithfully follow through the many long years. It is interesting that the forgiveness of debts survived to become a central tenet of the Lord’s Prayer. It is also interesting, though not exactly necessary to point out, that at all times, Jesus, His Father, Moses, Aaron, and everyone else, were concerned with debts based on real money, whether silver shekels, Roman silver, gold, etc. Usury was prohibited, even in terms of actual money with legitimate value in and of itself, as a sin. 

St. Thomas Aquinas examines the nature of the sin of usury, in Question 78 of the Summa Theologiae. After listing, and before defeating, seven objections to the concept of usury as a sin, Aquinas explains:

On the contrary, It is written (Exodus 22:25): “If thou lend money to any of thy people that is poor, that dwelleth with thee, thou shalt not be hard upon them as an extortioner, nor oppress them with usuries.”

I answer that, To take usury for money lent is unjust in itself, because this is to sell what does not exist, and this evidently leads to inequality which is contrary to justice. In order to make this evident, we must observe that there are certain things the use of which consists in their consumption: thus we consume wine when we use it for drink and we consume wheat when we use it for food. Wherefore in such like things the use of the thing must not be reckoned apart from the thing itself, and whoever is granted the use of the thing, is granted the thing itself and for this reason, to lend things of this kin is to transfer the ownership. Accordingly if a man wanted to sell wine separately from the use of the wine, he would be selling the same thing twice, or he would be selling what does not exist, wherefore he would evidently commit a sin of injustice. On like manner he commits an injustice who lends wine or wheat, and asks for double payment, viz. one, the return of the thing in equal measure, the other, the price of the use, which is called usury.

On the other hand, there are things the use of which does not consist in their consumption: thus to use a house is to dwell in it, not to destroy it. Wherefore in such things both may be granted: for instance, one man may hand over to another the ownership of his house while reserving to himself the use of it for a time, or vice versa, he may grant the use of the house, while retaining the ownership. For this reason a man may lawfully make a charge for the use of his house, and, besides this, revendicate the house from the person to whom he has granted its use, as happens in renting and letting a house.

Now money, according to the Philosopher (Ethic. v, 5; Polit. i, 3) was invented chiefly for the purpose of exchange: and consequently the proper and principal use of money is its consumption or alienation whereby it is sunk in exchange. Hence it is by its very nature unlawful to take payment for the use of money lent, which payment is known as usury: and just as a man is bound to restore other ill-gotten goods, so is he bound to restore the money which he has taken in usury.

– Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, § 78, Sin of Usury (“THE Philosopher” is Aristotle).

Again, in Aquinas’s thirteenth century, money, debt, and usury, was calculated as to legitimate money, rather than ones and zeros summoned effortlessly from a computer. How much worse is our present situation, when all the money, not just the elusive interest, does not exist? Also, usury means interest, period, and not “excessive” interest as modern usurers tell.

The fake “money” for a modern loan, like a student loan, is created by the loan itself. It does not exist in reality. Under no circumstances does the interest for a loan otherwise exist. Repayment, with interest, works like this: a loan (real or fake) is made; the debtor must work to obtain money (real or fake) to repay it, and; the debtor must work extra hard to conjure the interest money (real or fake), in essence robbing Peter to pay Paul. This process of robbery and overwork, for something that does not exist and which cost the lender nothing to loan, requires the debtor to literally give up a portion of his life in repayment. 

Without the benefit of Hebrew law, Jesus Christ, the Catholic Church, or any other part of Christianity, Old Cato was onto something. It’s something that nominal Catholics like Mr. Walsh and poor Biden (and others) would do well to consider.

The fifth commandment [6th to some (8th(!) to a very few)] forbids doing anything with the intention of indirectly bringing about a person’s death. The moral law prohibits exposing someone to mortal danger without grave reason, as well as refusing assistance to a person in danger.

The acceptance by human society of murderous famines, without efforts to remedy them, is a scandalous injustice and a grave offense. Those whose usurious and avaricious dealings lead to the hunger and death of their brethren in the human family indirectly commit homicide, which is imputable to them. …

–Catechism of the Catholic Church, Para. 2269 (2nd Ed., 1994).

Usury is not theft. It is not robbery. It is a form of full or partial murder. 

PS: for a great summary, for those who don’t read, of the economic and societal evils of the debts, listen to Vox’s Darkstream No. 919.

Confidence or Struggle

26 Tuesday Jul 2022

Posted by perrinlovett in News and Notes

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Tags

dbet, economics, Murica, terminal decline

Or, a struggle against a confidence game. The debtpocalypse of mass financialization is working well! Perfectly, even.

In order to make ends meet, 43% of Americans expect to add to their debt in the next six months, especially young adults and parents with young children, according to a separate study by LendingTree.

Most will rely on credit card debt to bridge the gap between what they need and what they can afford, the report found.

Already, the rise in borrowing, together with auto loans, student debt and mortgages, propelled total household debt to a record $15.84 trillion at the beginning of the year.

“The truth is that debt can be either a sign of confidence or struggle,” said Matt Schulz, LendingTree’s chief credit analyst.

Catch that part about young adults and parents? It’s almost like there’s a war on the future of America or something. I’m sure it’s nothing another 80 million enemygrant invaders won’t fix.

“Trespasses” is an enlightenment misinterpretation. Matthew 6:12 literally reads: “And forgive us our debts, as we have forgiven those who are in debt to us.”

“Creditor-friendly” = satanic = destruction of families and society.

Jubilee now.

Deflationary Inflation

27 Monday Jun 2022

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

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deflation, economics

Karl Denninger nails it. Here’s how the increasing financialization of everything kills buying power and crushes values.

Well, interest rates have doubled on mortgages in the last six months or so, and have not gone back down — nor will they to any appreciable degree. At 3% a $300,000 house has a P&I payment of $1,264.81.

That same house, at the same payment with rates at 6% is worth $210,960, a reduction of about 30%.

Oh, you think not? Well then that same person has to be able to come up with $1,798.65 a month for P&I and the $551.84 additional each and every month, over $6,600 a year, is not spent somewhere else because you can’t spend the same dollar twice.

Has gas come down appreciably? No. Nor has diesel. Diesel is in literally everything since the farm tractor and combine run on it, the trucks move everything at least the last mile with it, and thus the price level will not relent in its pressure until and unless that cost recedes.

If I spent $20 a week to get to work a year or so ago and now spend $40 that’s $1,000 a year that I don’t have to spend on other things.

But hey, as gas and mortgage rates have doubled in a year, so has your income, right? Right? The good news is, this in only the beginning. The bad news is, this is only the beginning.

COLUMN: Nibble, Nibble, Like A Mouse

01 Wednesday Jun 2022

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

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economics, Janet Yellen, money, witches

Nibble, Nibble, Like A Mouse

 

The headline of a recent article at Bloomberg, by Alex Tanzi, caught my eye: “One-Third of Americans Making $250,000 Live Paycheck-to-Paycheck, Survey Finds.” The author likely intended a little shock value. However, my reaction was, “yes, of course!” Allow me to explain (again).

“Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live.” (Exodus 22:18). Thou damned sure shouldn’t suffer one in charge of thy economy. Alas, thou hath done that, and worse.

Janet Yellen is the current, putative Secretary of the Treasury. She was formerly the head of the Federal Reserve. She has a Ph.D. in economics from Yale. She is possessed of that most-mythical “high” 115 average IQ. Ever channeling the wisdom of Keynes and the spirit of Baal, she has haunted the monetary world for over forty years. Accordingly, she is as fucking wicked and stupid as they come. 

Who knew that pumping, what, twenty trillion dollars into an already flooded money supply could possibly lead to more inflation? Certainly not a putative Treasury Secretary. It’s like adding wood to the fire and not expecting to roast small children. “Opps, y’all. Wrong path. My bad!”

Yes, I know. She’s but the latest in a never-ending line of alleged experts who somehow manage to get everything wrong, shrug, screw things up even more, and then ride off leaving the rest of us to dodge the debris. She’s just the only one that my sources tell me lives in a gingerbread house in the dark woods – a matter I cannot independently verify.

Herein, I’m about to repeat some economic comparatives, mostly from memory and based on mental estimates, that I’ve been reciting for years now. Sources? If you can’t trust me or do your own research, then consult the archives at this blog, my TPC columns, FP columns, and PPN episodes. If that’s not good enough, then just follow a white bird deeper into the forest. 

I will give you this:

(US Debt Clock, 6/1/22. It’s worse now).

The first number, from left to right, is speculative. The second is highly speculative. The third is essentially science fiction fantasy. The Treasury Dollars figure is the only “lawful” money in the economy. Theoretically, it might be kind of backed by gold or something more than mere lies and threats; almost all of it is off-limits to the sheep. M2 is a play-pretend accounting of the Fed’s fiat to include that colorful paper in the wallet. The Derivatives+ sum is a wild guess at the total (fake) value of all the loans, bets, hedges, and voodoo swirling around the whole economy. This is the fulfillment of Gresham’s Law. The slightest adjustment, possible under multiple scenarios, places the ratio of real money to nonexistent fantasy money at around 1:1,000,000. Statistically, there is zero money. Thus, as I keep writing, there is no money in the economy. This is the end result of over a century of mass financialization, of rebuilding the economy and money supply completely on fake debt. It has driven all real value into the hands of a tiny, elite group of evil criminals. And it has left even those of the ordinary masses earning a quarter-million (fake) dollars per year living “paycheck-to-paycheck.” As with the schools, the shootings, the demographics, and the false flags, this is what you get.

Seventy years ago, which something tells me was 1952, the average wage in the old US was approximately 75% of the cost of the average house in the old US. Both numbers were, then, well under $10,000. The average wage was calculated from all occupations – executives, firemen, teachers, carpenters, farmers, lawyers, etc. It typically represented the work of the sole breadwinner in a household, generally the husband. Since 1952, all prices have increased. However, wages have lagged waaaaaaaaay the hell behind the rest. 

Today, household income accounts for all parties within the household who are working. That may mean a total of two jobs. Or four. Or more. Boomer, this is why your dad’s factory job more than provided for you and your three siblings and why your only son and his partner can’t afford to live or give you grandchildren even as they work two “good” jobs each. 

Assuming inflation as it actually happened, but also assuming that average wages had kept pace with the cost of the average house, then the current average wage would be around $300,000 per year. On average. For all occupations. With one income earner. Interestingly enough, the wage increase would be roughly the same, allowing for actual, as-it-happened inflation, had the dollar remained tethered to a gold-silver standard. Funny, no? No. But dead serious. So it is that those making $250,000 a year are on the low side of average. Their barely getting by isn’t hard to fathom with the correct math. 

In sad, modern reality, most Americans are lucky to bring home one-tenth of what they should earn. I read somewhere recently that Massachusetts has the highest average income, on the order of $75,000 per year. That, honestly adjusted out, is about what minimum wage should average across the country. Of course, in a more expensive place like Mass, the national average would be comparatively low. 

The terrible thing is that my afore-referenced accounting is based on pre-2020 information. Thanks to Yellen, Brandon, Orange Man, and the rest of the gang, elected and selected, things are getting even worse. How much worse? We’re finding out, now, and we will keep finding out. Hang on to something.

As bad as things are, and have been, most people still either don’t get it, don’t care to understand it, or simply refuse to acknowledge reality. I figure that once the booze, the dope, and the TeeVee are interrupted for more than a day or three, things will heat up. Dramatically. Time will tell.

What’s the solution? “FIRE!” immediately jumped into my mind. But there’s another single word that would, if applied, start to do wonders. One will find that word (starts with a “J”) repeated several times in a row in the book after Exodus in that old Bible no one likes to read or believe in anymore. Or, of course, we could just lay down a trail of breadcrumbs, hope for the best, and keep trusting the cackling, cannibalistic experts who forged this predicament. For the short time being, I think I know the people’s choice of inaction.

Either way, any way, I trust the good reader is prepared.

COLUMN: The “Arsenal of Democracy”

20 Wednesday Apr 2022

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

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economics, Gal Gadot, Goodles, lies, Russia, US, War

COLUMN: The “Arsenal of Democracy” – with Noodles!

 

For the first time in about fifty years, a little truth crept into some MSM headlines and stories. Carlos Slim’s little blog casually admitted that the Ukies, not the Russians, cluster bomb their own civilians. There’s something, something about blaming Russia, but still, this was as close to an honest admission as we’re going to get these days. Except for what Bloomberg and a few slightly more reputable outlets were spinning…

Today’s American “democracy” means the promotion of our more cherished and time-honored values: usury, narcotics, hoaxes, perpetual war, lies, idiocy, Antibody-dependent Enhancement, etc. All of it is in jeopardy because of something, something Russia. Or something.

One might recall that just last month, on March 15, 2022, retired Lt. Col. Ben Hodges, former commander of the US Army Europe, confidently told the gullible public that, “Russians are about 10 days away from what is called the culminating point, when they just no longer have the ammunition nor the manpower to keep up their assault.” One might then consult a calendar and realize that this statement might have been just a teeny weeny little itty bitty bit of total projection and bullshit. 

Some in the media kind of noticed something off with this situation, which is really odd. It’s even stranger that they were allowed to mention it. The Times’s wailing about the “arsenal of democracy” was an admission that it’s not the Rooskies who are running out of ammo. As I noted a few weeks ago, the empire is so weak that it has to lose this one on the back of neo-Nazi proxies. The strategy thus far has been to provide the Azov-SS with intel and small and medium arms. Great heaping shipments of missiles, rifle rounds, mines, and artillery shells flow into Ukraine. Russia makes a sport of turning these shipments into burning rubbish. The Banderaites continue to surrender or die. Moscow rolls. DC panics. The MSM lies. The cycle repeats. But the cycle is beginning to take a hard toll.

It’s been nearly a month since the MSM’s military “expert,” Hodges, got it dead wrong about Russia’s culmination. Phase Two is now in progress and the SMO proceeds unimpeded. Mad Vlad has somehow managed to find enough men and munitions somewhere – probably in Russia’s huge manpower reserves and her massive armaments industry.  The truth is that the US’s and NATO’s supplies of weapons are running low. The point of some of this new, honest reporting is that the choice manifesting is whether to keep funneling targets for the VVS and AVMF to destroy on arrival or to keep some of the stuff in case, you know, ‘Murica and NATO need them. 

The US has lost both the manufacturing capacity and the necessary skilled labor to readily replenish the stocks that Brandon keeps giving away. The Boomers inherited a gold mine because the US of their childhoods was the only nation with a major manufacturing sector that survived World War II intact. They also stumbled into the budding Bretton Woods reserve dollar and the relatively high-IQ American workforce. Easy times made for soft men, and the soft men squandered it all and then some. 

There’s also the uncomfortable fact that the US’s astronomical military budgets don’t fund much in the way of working weapons systems. All those albatross-around-the-neck foreign bases aren’t cheap. Neither is the make-work, the HR costs, the retirements, or the MIC graft. It’s not the arsenal of democracy, it’s the arsenal of globalization, with the attendant financialization and creeping incrementalism. 

[I had A LOT more, here, but cut it so I could wrap with the stellar, improvised conclusion, below.]*

The US doesn’t make much anymore. The heyday was some time ago. About the only things we still make in large numbers are fairytale stories of grandeur, excuses, and fake loans of money that never existed. It’s all beyond stupid; there’s an element of evil in it.

In not-unrelated news, I was originally going to relate some interesting news about a certain railroad and a certain fertilizer company, both owned, in part, by the same certain investment institutions. The US does still have the ability to make fertilizer. They’re just going to cut way back on it … because banks?  In short, the mass financialization of the US economy might end up meaning something worse than recessions and inflation. How about a little famine? You’ll eat nothing, and you’ll be happy!

Time will tell. I’m sure the powers that be have our best interests in mind. Now might be a good time to mention nationalism and national capitalism, but that’s a subject for another day, maybe for another country. At any rate, I have the honor of ending this one on a high note!

War and contrived fertilizer shortages aside, it just got a little easier to come by Goodles! We owe this development to GG. Here she is with the final word:

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Gal Gadot (@gal_gadot)

 

*I also cut much of the fire and wrath from this one. Call it the “GG effect.”

The Piper Demands Rubles

31 Thursday Mar 2022

Posted by perrinlovett in News and Notes

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economics, EU, gas, Karl Denninger, paying the piper, Russia, USSA

He’ll get them too, either grudgingly from the fools in the EU or else, happily, from China and India. Karl Denninger writes about the wider implications of the new financial-monetary order for the free nations and the WereWest.

Medvedev, Russia’s deputy chairman of their Security Council, has specifically pointed out that our inflationary credit policies — in the US and Europe — will no longer be tolerated by either Russia or China.

‘No matter if they want it or not, they’ll have to negotiate a new financial order,’ Medvedev said. ‘And the decisive voice will then be with those countries that have a strong and advanced economy, healthy public finances and a reliable monetary system. And not with those who endlessly inflate their public debt, issuing more and more pieces of paper into circulation which aren’t backed by national wealth.‘

The United States and, to a large degree Europe as well, have run monstrous deficits for the last two decades.  Europe did it to “rescue” the PIIGS, if you recall during the time of the “great financial crisis”, and that “stimulus” has never been withdrawn.  The United States did the same sort of thing during the time of the housing blowup, which followed the tech wreck and again, that was never withdrawn.

Europe, as with the United States, thought they could add to their fiscal insanity without consequence by importing a whole bunch of lower-skilled people who couldn’t pull their own weight at or above median per-capita GDP in the name of “diversity”, never mind the cultural divide brought by such immigration that further exacerbated the fiscal cost of doing so beyond bare economics.

Read the whole thing. Tomorrow, Russia may well and truly start this thing rolling by turning off the gas to Europe. Either way, it’s a new world. And no, the idiots in Mordor will not do what needs to be done. You see, the conventional (wrong) wisdom in Gorgoroth holds that restoring the real dollar and nixing all the fake debts would destroy the economy, so it’s much better to simply destroy the economy. Please do your part by watching TV, jabbing^10, and voting this fall.

Demographic Communism

07 Sunday Nov 2021

Posted by perrinlovett in Legal/Political Columns

≈ Comments Off on Demographic Communism

Tags

Denmark, economics, invasion, migration, NET DRAIN, Vox Day, War

While they should be concerned with their God, their families, and their nation, too many fading ‘Muricans still appear only concerned with money. So, there’s this economic rebuttal to mass migration. Denmark, like other European nations and the USSA, discovers – definitively – that immigration is a huge fiscal drain.

The net cost of non-western immigration to Denmark, after tax contributions have been deducted, has been revealed to be nearly $5 billion a year.

…

The lie that “immigration is good for the economy”, and its big brother “immigration is necessary for the economy” was always a complete deception. The truth is that some immigration is beneficial to a society, but most of it is detrimental, even when it is beneficial to the economy. This is because it usually represents a permanent transfer of wealth from the native population to the parasitical newcomers.

All those Boomers who hate communism and wax eloquent and teary-eyed over immigrants should reflect upon the fact that immigration is, quite literally, demographic communism.

And quality matters far more than quantity. Mexicans create Mexico wherever they go in sufficient numbers, just as Scandinavians bring along their competence and naive cucketry wherever they settle. This is no secret to anyone, but it is a truth that has been ruthlessly obscured by relentless lies.

The good news is that, unlike the former America, the Danes still has time to kick out the invaders and save their nation and money. Do they have the will?

High Cost, Low Return

03 Wednesday Nov 2021

Posted by perrinlovett in News and Notes

≈ Comments Off on High Cost, Low Return

Tags

college, economics, lies

Back in 1980, the lies about the financial benefits of college education were becoming obvious as just that – lies. Now, 1980 seems like a high-paying dream. The numbers speak for themselves.

According to the researchers’ analysis of U.S. Census, Bureau of Labor Statistics and National Center for Education Statistics data for the years 1980 to 2019, college costs have increased by 169% over the past four decades — while earnings for workers between the ages of 22 and 27 have increased by just 19%.

Just the included chart is enough to convince all but the dumbest boomer. There is a difference, however. In 1980, for the most part, the colleges delivered educations. Now, even that is lost.

COLUMN: The Trillion Dollar Coin

06 Wednesday Oct 2021

Posted by perrinlovett in Other Columns

≈ Comments Off on COLUMN: The Trillion Dollar Coin

Tags

Amerika, column, economics, terminal decline, trillion dollar coin

The Trillion Dollar Coin

 

*A “real” column returns today!

The past many years, I have written again and again and again about the debt and the destruction it has wrought. Here we go yet again. A broken record on perpetual autoplay.

Not too long ago, on the PPN (I think), I told of the financial horrors plaguing the lowly-paid workers at Disneyland. I mentioned something about the absolute lack of enough money anywhere to properly compensate them. They’ve been joined this week by the members of the IATSE. This is the entertainment world edition of the national quest for $15(!). As I have explained previously, that is approximately half of what the bare minimum hourly wage should be (and won’t/can’t be). 

Here’s wishing all those good people well. But what they are up against is the hard wall of total financialization of the US economy. Debt, coupled with demographics, destroyed the American Nation and now dissolves the US as a polity. 

Once again, the base criminal morons in DC are playing the old fiscal cliff-debt ceiling game. Is there any doubt in anyone’s mind that the pointless limit will be raised? No. Our beloved Fed Chair Secretary of Treasury, Janet Yellen, who according to the Wiki “Early Life” was, in fact, born to “a family,” has publicly lobbied for Congress to give up control of the debt limit and get back to full-time Brahma worship. I mean, why not?

Her illegal private bank federal department even has an emergency plan to ensure full faith and credit and rainbow unicorns in the utterly impossible event that Kongress fails to act in time to further bury future Amerikans under a mountain of unpayable fake debts. They plan to mint – and this IS NOT A JOKE – a US Treasury $1 TRILLION platinum coin. One ounce of metal worth the entirety of LBJ’s 1969 economy. I could stop here. Even the assertion that this plan exists is definitive proof that this thing is wrecked beyond repair. However, in the interest of a full column, I’d like to poke around the old US Debt Clock for a little fun.

Note: I looked at the following figures on Tuesday afternoon; they’re worse now (whenever “now” is). In an attempt to stay slightly ahead of the extreme pace of our decline, I’ve rounded all the numbers upwards.

The total federal government debt (on books) that the popular press is having a meltdown over is $29 Trillion. Years ago, I predicted we’d be at $40 Trillion by 2024. I think we’ll make it. As-is, it’s roughly $87,000 per citizen and $229,000 per taxpayer. It’s also $54 Billion per Congress Critter, but they don’t count it that way.

This year, 2021, the dead empire has already expended about $7 Trillion, about half of it via new debts. The debt to GDP ratio is about 125%. All of this is “bad,” though we’re just getting started.

Total USSA unfunded liabilities total approximately $158 Trillion. We need that amount of cash on hand now to meet future requirements. We have approximately 0.0%.

The state and local governments are indebted to the tune of $3-4 Trillion. Ho-hum. Ma and Pa Amerika also carry serious obligations. Total personal debt is around $22 Trillion. That works out to something like $65,000 in debt per citizen. On average, Amerikan families have around $22,000 in assets. In other words, on average, Amerikan citizens and families, just like their governments, are bankrupt. This is why the loans – home, credit card, education, automobile, etc. – cannot and will not be repaid. 

Another way to look at the gross imbalance is through the lens of interest paid by and to the banks. The people have lately received about $66 Billion from the banks. However, they’ve paid the somewhat ominous number of $666 Billion to the banks. See how that works, mathematically and maybe Biblically?

Here’s the big intersection of the foregoing, my previous statements, and Janet’s new coin: There is NO MONEY in the US economy. I say that with confidence and based on the date. The Treasury currently has around $785,000,000 in hard dollars available. Some are transfer notes, some are old bills in circulation, some are accounting errors. They don’t matter and they statistically amount to zero. The Yellen Coin (which I hear might feature a portrait of Moloch) would technically increase the actual legal money supply. It would also debase the supply by the same amount of “emergency value” it adds. That doesn’t matter either. Why?

Because the total of the fake, nonexistent “money” floating around is so ridiculously high that it completely eclipses the rest. The bad money has totally driven out and murdered the good. The Clock goes with the most conservative estimate available: a total fake money supply of $600 Trillion! (The more liberal estimates range into the multiple Quadrillion$).

The ratio of fake, nonexistent money (it’s not even fiat currency) to real (eclipsed) legal money is roughly 765,000:1. Add in the Great Platinum Coin of 2021, and the ratio pitifully improves to 600:1. Lord Gibbons wrote something about a similar program a long, long time ago. There are examples from Weimar Germany and Zimbabwe. Ho. Hum.

The solution is to nullify ALL OF the debt and abolish the system that created it. A gold or other hard standard could be reimposed. All dealings in fake or fiat currency along with all forms of usury (in any amount) could be made illegal – capital felonies if we’re serious. And, all of this could be done legally and quickly. It is or could be, a great reset, though, of course, not The Great Reset. This plan, being beneficial to the 99.99%, won’t happen in the dying US. However, once the empire is gone and new nations form from the ashes, it will happen. It has to. And it is the right, good, true, beautiful, and Holy thing to do.

Maybe the grandkids…

Back to the Clock, there’s more!

They note that this Century, even as the total population increased, the workforce shrank. We have as many eligible adults, not in the workforce, and people working part-time as we do taxpayers. We have more people dependent on one or more types of welfare than we have total workers or taxpayers. We have almost as many government employees as we do union members and factory workers. We have far fewer manufacturing jobs than we did in 2000. Despite all the fake money sloshing everywhere, we have more people in poverty than ever. And, despite (or thanks to?) Obamacare, we have about as many “uninsured” people as we’ve ever had.

Forget my old 1952 comparison and the loss of purchasing power. We can just run with numbers from the distant year of 2000. Remember waaay back then? Neither can I. Then, the average salary was $31K and the average home price was $167K. Now, the numbers are $35K and $370K. Congratulations on that $4,000 raise!

They also post some commodities to paper dollar comparisons from 1913 to 2021. Those are so fantastically laughable that I’ll just let you wander into them. Also, note the rise in the value of the scam known as “cryptos.” 

The servants of satan tell us, with a smirk, that we’ll own nothing and we’ll be happy. We already own nothing. Happiness is what one makes of it. In closing, consider that, as for the masses, if or when the electricity, booze, and dope finally run out, being happy may well become synonymous with burning, lethal rage.

Just like at Disney, this ride is going to be wild!

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Perrin Lovett

From Green Altar Books, an imprint of Shotwell Publishing

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