Friday, August 31, 2012

"Voting won't get you what you want, but you may as well do it."

Editorial by J. Frederick

What you’re about to read is little more than a rant, and stream of conscience diatribe on the 2012 election for POTUS.  Ever since G.W. Bush ran against Al Gore and John Kerry, and Obama vs McCain, I have become increasingly disenfranchised with the American political process.  The republicans, in election after election, have been giving us different version of the same old backwards Christian fundamentalist white guy.  Even now with Mitt Romney, it’s more of the same.  Anyone who argues that Mormonism isn’t a Christian sect doesn’t understand religion.  The democrats have given us the same soft “revolutionary”, guys who talk big, but don’t have the cojones to do anything significant.  Democrats would of course argue that Obama is a revolutionary, with his Affordable Health Care Act (a.k.a. “Obamacare”) supposedly guaranteeing health care for all Americans.  The republicans also think it’s revolutionary, but the kind of revolution that Lenin and Mao had (bad), not the kind that Jefferson, Franklin, and Washington led (good).  Look at it closely, and it’s neither.  It’s a pat on the back to the health care and insurance industries, and more bureaucratic hoops to jump through.  Obama’s only accomplishment is being a minority and getting elected president in a country that is only slightly less racist than South Africa (who elected their first black president in the 1990’s, even though apartheid ended only four short years before Mandela’s election).  I don’t need to get into Kerry or Gore, who together are more boring than a “manila envelope pinned to a beige wall”, to paraphrase Stephen Colbert.

Continued here.

Monday, August 27, 2012

Childhood Never Ends, Episode 1



Childhood Never Ends is a dystopian sci-fi series written by J. Frederick, who is also known as Saparmurat Niyazov on Tumblr.

Gavin woke from his unintended slumber with a start. He had been asleep for only a couple minutes, and he wasn't exactly tired, but train rides were so damn boring. Everywhere one looked, it was the same thing: an endless expanse of dusty scrub-land littered with the dilapidated remains of forgotten towns and farms. Crossing the Midwest was to tempt insanity. What a desolate place it was! Gavin, like every other citizen, was dumbfounded at the stupidity of their ancestors. Who in their right mind would try to farm a barren dessert? When the ancient Europeans arrived in North America 600 years ago, they began staking claim to huge swaths of land, as the history goes, hoping to grow grain and raise cattle in what was, and still is to this day, effectively a desert. Of course they dug canals for irrigation, and when the industrial era began in the 19th century, they built machines that carried water to the fields and developed industrial fertilizers in laboratories that eked out a bit more of a yield from their meager crops, but it was such a useless endeavor. It was hard to believe that it wasn't until the 2050's that hydroponic farming had been adopted wide scale, and ended the problems of world hunger, non-renewable fuel sources, and unsustainable resources for industry: textile, building materials, et cetera. Such was the world of the capital socialists. Their idea of utopia was that of a welfare state that was held up on the backs of the bourgeois. Thankfully for Gavin, and everyone else in the world, the class struggles which created a seemingly endless stream of ideological excrement (capitalism, socialism, communism, fascism, theocracy, democracy, monarchy, and on and on) was finally solved in the 2040's when the greatest man who ever lived, David Golan, created a revolutionary societal system: predictive redistributionism.
Life in what used to be the United States and Europe was perfect, as far as Gavin and practically everyone else was concerned.  David Golan, the first Chancellor, united the old world with the new, and created the Trans-Atlantic Federation, rescuing the United States of America and the European Union from economic and societal collapse, famine, and civil war.  Western civilization, at its zenith, was the greatest society in human history, but then began to spiral downward and collapse in the early 21st century.  With the creation of the T.A.F. and the implementation of predictive redistributionism (often just called Golanism, after its creator), Golan somehow rescued the western world from collapse and made the absolute perfect society.  No one in the T.A.F. ever wanted or needed for anything.  While that was the objective of socialism, which made its best efforts to create a just society worldwide in the 19th and 20th centuries, it failed to address one basic human need:  the desire to achieve, succeed, and the value of merit.  Golanism united the two seemingly opposing problems of creating equal opportunity for every man woman and child while rewarding the achievements of productive individuals by the key component of the term "predictive redistributionism":  prediction.
Through a scientific process of biological and psychological analysis of every man, woman, and child, the Golanist procedure of "predictive analysis" can determine what the best choices for any person are to achieve their personal level of maximum satisfaction in all aspects of their life:  education, occupation, even family and leisure.  Giving everyone a clear path in life to follow has made the most productive society in all of history.
Gavin rather liked his "life path" (the best course of action for one to take as recommended by predictive analysis).  He was steered into a career as an information architect, creating content for the social media outlets used by the Golanist party, which has ran the government of the T.A.F. since its inception.  Politics in the T.A.F. were inclusive, embracing the freedom of speech and expression.  Just because the Golanist party had dominated the T.A.F. about 50 years, it did not mean that other political parties and ideologies were oppressed.  There were still all the archaic political parties:  republicans, democrats, socialists, conservatives, communists, nationalists.  There were new ones, too:  Neo-theocrats, singularitians, anarcho-capitalists, anarchic collectivists, and neo-fascists.  Everyone was given equal say in debates, which were staged constantly on a wide array of media, but the infallible nature of Golanism always won due to it's purity and perfection of reason.  Those who were members of those other political parties were just in a difficult stage in their "life path" and simply needed a little guidance to their final destination:  Golanism.  Everyone went  through this, even Gavin himself.
He mused quite often about those days, as he was doing right now on his transcontinental train ride.  When he graduated preparatory school and began going to university, he was as rebellious as an 18 year old boy could be.  He read about the communist revolutionaries of the 19th and 20th centuries (Marx, Lenin, Mao, Guevarra) and decided that he wanted to be a communist himself.  He didn't like the competitive nature of Golanist education, and just wanted everything to be easy and equal, which was the promise of a communist society.  It wasn't until his professor of Golanist studies had shown him the values of merit and hard work had he finally understood:  Golan's way was the best way.
An inoffensive, yet obstreperous tone notified Gavin that the train was reaching its next stop.  Although the train had been zipping across the Midwest as 600 kilometers per hour, thanks to magnetic levitation propulsion, the ride from Chicago to Denver had seemed to take two and a half weeks rather than two and a half hours.  Gavin wished that he could have taken a sub-orbital plane, which could have covered the same distance in less than half the time, but was a type of transport that was only used for extremely long distances because it was simply inefficient for shorter jaunts.  There were only a few routes, such as Los Angeles to New York, Washington to London, or San Francisco to Tokyo, and sub-orbital flights were also prohibitively expensive.
"Denver, E.T.A. 15 minutes.  Please prepare for departure, and thank you for riding Intertrack." said the synthesized voice of a computer generated hologram of an attractive, yet completely average looking woman.  Her projected form looked gently from passenger to passenger, nodding slightly, and meeting everyone's gaze with a pleasing smile.  Her form evaporated into a series of commercials, acted out by three dimensional holograms of people, mostly computer generated, for products ranging from toothpaste to underwear to automobiles.  All the passengers began the routine of gathering their carry on luggage and then having a seat and fasting their seat belts.
Everything seemed perfectly normal, except Gavin had noticed a woman across the aisle from him behaving strangely.  Her stringy black hair hung over her pale face, but could not conceal the bags under her eyes and the quivering of her bottom lip.  Her piercing green eyes darted about the passenger cabin, and she wrung her hands about nervously in her lap.  He thought she seemed to be an odd contrast:  she had looked disheveled and perhaps a bit crazy, but she was dressed in highly fashionable clothing and wore tasteful jewelry denoting a successful person of high status.  Gavin looked away and decided to think nothing of it, until everyone in the cabin was shocked when she bolted upright from her seat a couple minutes later and began screaming.

To be continued in Episode 2...

Friday, August 3, 2012

Social Credit Theory: Money Grows in Trees! by Overwatch




Social Credit Theory: Money grows in trees!
By Overwatch

There are several topics that I contemplated writing about this time, but the sudden pervasiveness of this repackaged “Free Lunch” economics insists that I do whatever I can to save the minds of those searching for answers as the current economic system implodes around them.
The most important point has already been made twice, first in the “Money grows in trees” reference and secondly in referencing the theory as a “Free Lunch” theory. The Theory of Social Credit posits that the immutable economic law of scarcity is somehow suspended if people just “believe”. If something seems too good to be true, it probably is; and it definitely is in this case.
For those who may be unfamiliar with what the Social Credit Theory/ Argument is, I will go over the basics very quickly. Social Credit advocates rightly attack the destructive nature of debt based fiat currencies, noting that paying an entity for fiat money creation (in the case of the US, bond holders and/through the Federal Reserve System) , seems like paying for nothing. Why not just print the money, instead of making interest payments on it as well (from taxes or through printing with no debt backing the new money)? Social Credit arguments centered on the US quote excerpts from the US Constitution (Article I, Section 8 “The Congress shall have Power….. to coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures”) to point out how the US Government has needlessly abrogated this right to a public-private partnership to the detriment of the taxpayer and national fiscal health. Again, why not just print the money? We could have all the money we want for free! Sounds pretty sweet right? On the contrary, this theory is possibly the only thing worse than the current system.
The first problem with this theory is it focuses on only one aspect of the entire economy (money, or the exchange medium), and then focuses only on one aspect of the exchange medium (debt base). It does not take into account the problems of fiat (“by decree”, or “legal tender laws”, a government supported monopoly of money), central banking (the cartelization and monopoly of the banking sector), fractional reserve banking (the freedom of the banks to keep less reserves than the amount needed to cash out deposits, etc.), or the inflationary aspect of cheaply produced currency (particularly fiat). Social Credit advocates go so far as to say that inflation is good for the economy, while it is deflation that is bad, speaking only in terms of how deflation makes things bad for borrowers. I thought the point was to avoid debt? That is only one example of the cognitive dissonance required to make this Theory fly.
So in this potential land of unicorns and marshmallows, Social Credit Theorists claim that a country may just print all the money it wants, and thereby fund all the social programs, infrastructure projects, etc. that the people of the nation need, while also providing enough money for everyone to live comfortably, while legal tender laws ensure cooperation from everyone. They usually reference prior usage of “free money” in the US in glowing terms, such as “Colonial Scrip” and Lincoln’s “Greenbacks” as examples of success. They even go so far as to suggest that Lincoln was assassinated by the banking establishment for bringing this wonderful economic freedom to the citizens of the country. However, they never spend any time on expounding the full history of those currencies, and for good reason. They must leave out important facts about these currencies, that they were used to fund wars (how noble and helpful), the notes were supposed to be backed by specie (precious metals) but either never were or only partially (lies) , and that after some time they often could only be spent at gunpoint (particularly in the case of the Colonial Scrip, the Continental Army was not above stealing supplies when wagonloads of paper scrip was refused). Why give up real goods and services for paper and ink? This leads into the next argument.
Austrian economists have always held that precious metals will win the currency competition in a free market economy (I will not explain this whole argument here, as there are plenty of free resources online about this position). Social Credit Theorists disagree, positing that in a free market economy, “Social Credit banks” will offer interest free loans of the money-printed-on-demand, and that since any loans in commodities will require interest with repayment, the cheaper loans from the Social Credit institutions will quickly run commodity currencies out of the market. They overlook a key problem with this assertion: Just because you can get a loan, doesn’t mean the seller has to accept the payment. Without legal tender laws, Gresham’s law (bad money will drive out good money) does not work. I have yet to see a social credit theorist explain why someone would sell hard earned real goods or sell their labor for something they could easily print up themselves at home, or notice that when they appeal to Gresham’s law in defense, they are admitting to supporting bad money. This leads us back into the initial contention with “Free money”: If printing as much money as desired is the path to prosperity, why don’t we all just start printing our own money? Why not just start paying for things in literal monopoly money? What makes this different from counterfeiting?
The Social Credit Theory is merely another attempt at a free lunch. Stealing. Getting something for nothing. If one entity can make money as it pleases, why bother with loans from them? Why can’t you do it? Why can’t we all do it? Of course if we all do it, it would be worthless, which is why Social Credit Theorists don’t like this question, or really any questions that don’t involve their anti-bond arguments. When someone counterfeits (creates) money, they get the goods the purchase for free. This is no different than anyone else printing money, whether it’s the US Treasury and Federal Reserve, or a Social Credit institution. There (Still) Ain’t No Such Thing As A Free Lunch (TANSTAAFL).