That Big Lie just keeps on rollin’ along

Like that ol’ man river of song, some things just keep rollin’ along.

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is image-2.png
“Federal taxes fund federal spending.”

Some lies do, too, especially The Big Lie in economics.

The Big Lie ranks as the most significant lie because it affects virtually everything Congress does — every bill, every speech, every vote, every proposal, every crooked backroom deal.

The Big Lie is the biggest because it adversely affects every man, woman, and child in America, plus many men, women, and children in the rest of the world.

The Big Lie rains on us all.

The Big Lie is the biggest because it is so clearly and obviously wrong, on the same level of truth as claiming that the stars are pinholes in a black, velvet sky.

The Big Lie in economics is: Federal taxes fund federal spending.

There are only two types who promulgate the Big Lie:

  1. Those who do not understand economics. That includes you unfortunate souls who wasted years of your lives obtaining economics degrees at prestigious schools like the U. of Chicago. You could have learned the facts at less prestigious, but far better economics schools, like UMKC. 
  2. Those liars who do not give a gnat’s behind about the people of America and the world., and are interested only in power.

The next time you hear or read of someone expressing The Big Lie, you can decide which of the two he/she is.

Here’s today’s expression of The Big Lie as seen in the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.

Dems work to revive economic bill
Boosted taxes on some would extend Medicare’s solvency
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., is working on a revised economic legislative package. J. Scott Applewhite/AP
By Alan Fram Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats want to boost taxes on some high earners and use the money to extend the solvency of Medicare, the latest step in the party’s election-year attempt to craft a scaled-back version of the economic package that collapsed last year, Democratic aides said.

The sentence above expresses The Big Lie in all its glory. 

Medicare is a federal agency. It is part of the federal government.

The federal government and its agencies cannot run short of dollars unless that is what Congress and the President want. That is why federal taxes do not fund federal spending. 

The federal government is an infinite cornucopia.

The federal government is an infinite cornucopia that never runs dry.

“Boosted taxes” would not extend Medicare’s solvency.

Today, the U.S. Treasury does not have the money to extend the solvency of any federal agency.

Instead, the government creates the necessary dollars, by the act of paying bills.

Even if all federal tax collections were $0, the federal government could continue spending, forever.

The U.S. federal government is unlike state and local governments, businesses, euro nations, you, and me. The U.S. federal government uniquely is Monetarily Sovereign.

I’m sorry to tell you that you are not Monetarily Sovereign. You can run short of dollars. You can be unable to pay for some things. You can be insolvent. 

The federal government and its agencies cannot. 

The government passed the laws that created the very first dollars. The government passed as many laws as it needed.

Those laws created as many dollars as the government wanted and gave those dollars the value the government wished.

At its whim, the federal government repeatedly revalued the dollar according to various gold standards and silver standards.

Finally, in 1971, President Richard Nixon unilaterally ordered the cancellation of the direct convertibility of the United States dollar to gold.

This allowed the federal government to create infinite dollars at any time and for any purpose, merely by passing laws.

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan: “A government cannot become insolvent with respect to obligations in its own currency.”

Because the U.S. government cannot become insolvent, no agency of the U.S. government can become insolvent unless Congress and the President want it to become insolvent.

This applies to all federal agencies, from the AbilityOne Commission to the Women’s Bureau. There are hundreds of federal agencies, none of which can become insolvent unless that is what Congress and the President want.

Each of those hundreds of federal agencies is funded by federal money creation. Yet, for political reasons that have nothing to do with reality, just a few agencies are limited by fake “trust funds.”

According to the Peter G. Peterson Foundation

“The largest and best-known trust funds finance Social Security, portions of Medicare, highways, mass transit, and pensions for government employees.

“Federal trust funds bear little resemblance to their private-sector counterparts, and therefore the name can be misleading.

“A ‘trust fund’ implies a secure source of funding. However, a federal trust fund is simply an accounting mechanism used to track inflows and outflows for specific programs.

“In private-sector trust funds, receipts are deposited and assets are held and invested by trustees on behalf of the stated beneficiaries. In federal trust funds, the federal government does not set aside the receipts or invest them in private assets.

“Rather, the receipts are recorded as accounting credits in the trust funds and then combined with other receipts that the Treasury collects and spends.

“Further, the federal government owns the accounts and can, by changing the law, unilaterally alter the purposes of the accounts and raise or lower collections and expenditures.”

In short, Congress and the President can do anything they damn well please with the “trust funds.” They can add dollars, subtract dollars, or eliminate the “trust funds” altogether.

The government doesn’t need to search for U.S. dollars. It creates U.S. dollars.

As for Medicare, only Part A is related to a trust fund. Part B is funded the same way virtually all other agencies are funded — the same way the military, Congress, SCOTUS, the White House, et al. are funded — via payment from the federal government’s General Fund.

And in no case do federal taxes pay for anything.

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke: “The U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost.”

There are various measures of the money supply:

In the United States, the money supply is categorized by various monetary aggregates, including M0, M1, and M2.

The monetary base, or M0, equals coin currency, physical paper, and central bank reserves.

M1, typically the most commonly used aggregate, covers M0 in addition to demand deposits and travelers’ cheques.

M2 covers M1 in addition to savings deposits and money market shares.

When you pay your federal taxes, you take M1 dollars from your checking account and send them to the U.S. Treasury. Dollars held by the Treasury are not counted in any money-supply measure because the Treasury has access to infinite dollars.

Adding dollars to infinite dollars is still infinite dollars. Thus, the Treasury effectively destroys your federal tax dollars upon receipt. They are not used for anything.

To pay its bills, the Monetarily Sovereign federal government creates new dollars ad hoc. When it approves an invoice for payment, the government (or the appropriate agency) sends instructions (not dollars) to the creditor’s bank, instructing the bank to increase the balance in the creditor’s checking account.

The instant the bank obeys those instructions, new dollars are added to the M1 money supply. Tax dollars are destroyed, and new dollars are created. That is the federal government’s method for creating dollars, which is why federal taxes do not fund federal spending.

(State and local governments, being monetarily non-sovereign, operate differently. Their tax dollars remain in the economy by being deposited into private banks. Those same tax dollars are used for invoice payment.)

Continuing with the Sun-Sentinel article:

Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., could be edging toward a compromise the party hopes to push through Congress this summer over solid Republican opposition. Manchin scuttled last year’s bill.

Under the latest proposal, people earning more than $400,000 a year and couples making more than $500,000 would have to pay a 3.8% tax on their earnings from tax-advantaged businesses called pass throughs. Until now, many of them have been using a loophole to avoid paying that levy.

That would raise an estimated $203 billion over a decade, which Democrats say would go to delay until 2031 a shortfall in the Medicare trust fund that pays for hospital care.

That fund is currently projected to start running out of money in 2028.

And it’s all a lie, The Big Lie.

Manchin “scuttled” last year’s bill because, through ignorance or maliciousness, he claimed it would cost too much and/or increase the deficit too much.

But “cost” is meaningless for an entity with the infinite ability to create dollars, and the “deficit” adds growth dollars to the economy. 

Deficits are so crucial to economic growth that we have recessions when deficits don’t grow enough.

 

When federal deficit growth declines, we have recessions cured by increased deficit growth. Rising federal deficits are necessary to stimulate economic growth.

Continuing the article:

Most U.S. businesses are pass-throughs, which include partnerships and sole proprietorships and range from one-person law practices to some large companies.

Owners count the profits as income when they pay individual income taxes, but such companies do not pay corporate taxes — meaning they avoid paying two levels of taxation.

Translation: Because of The Big Lie, Schumer and Manchin have devised a plan whereby $203 Billion growth dollars would be removed from the private sector. 

Contrary to what The Big Lie tells you, those dollars will not pay for anything. They simply will be destroyed.

Presumably, new dollars will be created to delay a fictional shortfall in a non-existent “trust fund.”

Democrats this week also sent the parliamentarian a separate 190-page piece of the emerging Schumer-Manchin compromise aimed at lowering prescription drug costs for patients and the government.

Provisions include requiring Medicare to negotiate drug prices, limiting beneficiaries’ out-of-pocket costs to $2,000 annually and increasing federal subsidies for copays and premiums for some low-income people.

There are both bad and good in the above. The bad part is “negotiate drug prices,” which means the government would pay the private sector (“the economy) less for drugs. Reducing federal payments is recessionary.

The good part is “increasing federal subsidies,” which is stimulative.

Democrats say both plans will show voters they are battling to curb health care costs and protect Medicare, positions they say will be dangerous for Republicans to oppose.

The government should “battle health care costs” by creating a generous, comprehensive, no-deductible Medicare for All program, not by taking money from the economy.) 

Former Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke when he was on 60 Minutes:
Scott Pelley: Is that tax money that the Fed is spending?
Ben Bernanke: It’s not tax money… We simply use the computer to mark up the size of the account.

Schumer and Manchin have been bargaining privately for weeks on a package aides say could include around $500 billion in spending and tax credits, more than paid for with about $1 trillion in revenue and other savings. 

Translation: “More than paid for” means the federal government, which has infinite money, unnecessarily will take 1 trillion growth dollars out of the economy, which has limited money.

The suggestions of progress were emerging seven months after Manchin derailed a roughly $2 trillion, 10-year social and environment bill, dealing a stunning blow to a cornerstone of Biden’s domestic agenda.

That’s 2 trillion potential stimulus dollars that are denied the economy.

And now we come to the other phase of The Big Lie. Call it “The Big Lie II,” the claim that federal deficit spending causes inflation.

This one has been an article of faith in most economics classes — the notion that inflation is “too many dollars chasing too few goods.” It’s memorable, even poetic in its rhythm, but it isn’t factual.

There is no predictive relationship between the money supply (blue line) and inflation (red line).

Inflation is caused by shortages. Today, the primary cause of inflation is the oil shortage, while other critical goods and services shortages contribute.

Those essential goods and services include lumber, computer chips, shipping, foods, housing, labor, and other commodities too numerous to list.

And no, those shortages were not caused by “too much money.” Too much money did not cause you to eat, build, ship, or live in more houses.

All of those shortages resulted from less production and/or supply. In fact, most shortages can be cured by more federal spending to increase supply and availability.

COVID, not deficit spending, caused oil production to drop precipitously, and even today, the oil shortage has not been cured. That is the primary reason for today’s inflation.

Additional deficit spending, not less, and certainly not the Fed’s interest rate increases, will cure the oil shortage and inflation. All inflations are supply-shortage problems, not excessive-demand problems.

The Fed cannot cure the shortage problems by manipulating interest rates.

The Democratic-run House approved the measure in November, but Manchin abruptly withdrew his support because of its cost and worries that it would fuel inflation.

That is what Manchin said. If he really believed it, he is a victim of The Big Lie. If he didn’t believe it, he is a liar.

Polls show widespread public alarm over recent months’ historically high inflation rates, supply chain problems, and other economic issues that, along with President Joe Biden’s dismal popularity ratings, are pushing voters toward Republicans, the GOP says.

And then, for one last statement of The Big Lie II:

Asked for comment, a spokesperson for Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said the Kentucky Republican told constituents this week that Democrats would make inflation “considerably worse” by reviving their economic bill.

McConnell is terrified that the Democrats would be able to revive their economic bill because that would stimulate the economy just before the elections, the last thing the GOP wants.

[Taxation: No rational person would take dollars from the economy and give them to a federal government that has the infinite ability to create dollars.]

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Monetary Sovereignty

Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty
Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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THE SOLE PURPOSE OF GOVERNMENT IS TO IMPROVE AND PROTECT THE LIVES OF THE PEOPLE.

The most important problems in economics involve:

  1. Monetary Sovereignty describes money creation and destruction.
  2. Gap Psychology describes the common desire to distance oneself from those “below” in any socio-economic ranking, and to come nearer those “above.” The socio-economic distance is referred to as “The Gap.”

Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics. Implementation of Monetary Sovereignty and The Ten Steps To Prosperity can grow the economy and narrow the Gaps: Ten Steps To Prosperity:

  1. Eliminate FICA
  2. Federally funded Medicare — parts A, B & D, plus long-term care — for everyone
  3. Social Security for all
  4. Free education (including post-grad) for everyone
  5. Salary for attending school
  6. Eliminate federal taxes on business
  7. Increase the standard income tax deduction, annually. 
  8. Tax the very rich (the “.1%”) more, with higher progressive tax rates on all forms of income.
  9. Federal ownership of all banks
  10. Increase federal spending on the myriad initiatives that benefit America’s 99.9% 

The Ten Steps will grow the economy and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

Why we have not been contacted by aliens

What does an octopus eat? For a creature with a brain in each arm,  whatever's within reach
Maybe aliens aren’t physically equipped for interstellar contact.

Astronomers estimate there are more than 2 trillion (2,000,000,000,000) galaxies in the observable universe, and these galaxies encompass more than 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 planets.

That makes for vast real estate on which some forms of life could exist — and that’s not even counting the various moons upon which life also could exist.

(Scientists even believe life may exist on certain moons in our own solar system.)

Admittedly, most of those planets and moons are not welcoming for what we consider to be life, and on most of the remaining, life either may not yet have developed sufficient intelligence to contact us, or for us to understand their contact.

Yet, 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 is a truly gigantic number, and we might think that by now we would have been contacted by at least one alien. So, in the words of Enrico Fermi, “Where are they?”

Among the many problems of intergalactic communication is that of timing.

While there has been life on earth for about 4.5 billion years, only in the past century or so have we been technologically sophisticated enough to initiate or receive contact with an alien life civilization. If someone had tried to send us a message just five hundred years ago — a mere speck in cosmic time — we wouldn’t have received it.

That may be the case with any alien forms. They may not yet be technologically advanced, at least not advanced enough to send radio messages, much less to actually travel among the stars.

I suspect there is an additional hindrance to inter-alien communication: Any life form that is clever enough to initiate such communication also is clever enough to destroy itself.

Think of what our cleverness has brought us: ever more deadly guns, nuclear weapons, poison gasses and liquids, and sophisticated weapon delivery systems.

Only in the past few decades have we had the war capability to destroy virtually all life, certainly all life advanced enough to receive and understand alien communications.

And it’s not just intentional war: We inadvertently or just carelessly have poisoned our air, our water, and our land. We have heated our climate to the point where some lands are, or soon will be, too hot for human life.

And though most of us say we would like peace and the preservation of our environment, that has proven to be mere lip service.

We have elected, allowed, and/or supported such anti-life leaders as Ivan IV, Stalin, Hitler, Kim, Mao, Duvalier, Amin, Pol Pot, Mussolini, Mugabe, etc., none of whom could have survived without the active participation of their thousands of followers and lackeys.

If humanity is a typical example of what an intelligent life form eventually becomes, whoever or whatever created the universe exhibited wisdom in keeping us lifeforms lightyears apart, for our first instinct is to conquer and/or destroy.

Explainer: a beginner's guide to the galaxy
Not stars, galaxies of stars.

Consider where we are now.

We know for certain that our activities are causing global warming by increasing the amount of carbon dioxide and methane — greenhouse gases — blanketing the earth.

We have the technology to use non-greenhouse sources of energy, and we even have developed a financial system — Monetary Sovereignty — that could fund the development and uses of those sources.

Yet we have elected, and we follow, leaders who not only fail to address the problem, but who deny there even is a problem. They have convinced a great multitude that:

  • The world is not warming, or
  • The world is warming but humanity is not responsible, or
  • A warmer world is better, or
  • The problem is not urgent, or
  • The problem is too expensive to fix, or
  • There’s nothing we can do because other people are doing nothing, or
  • We will be dead before anything bad happens so don’t worry.

Millions of us elect and continue to support leaders who claim all of the above.

Are we typical of intelligent life in the universe? Are we the inevitable result of intellectual evolution?

The universe is a harsh place, constantly fighting life, constantly destroying what life has built. Here is Earth, the most life-friendly place we know, yet 99.9% of all the species that ever have lived here, are gone.

Earth has witnessed five mass extinctions when more than 75% of species disappeared. Palaeontologists spot them when species go missing from the global fossil record.

“We don’t always know what caused them but most had something to do with rapid climate change”, says Melbourne Museum palaeontologist Rolf Schmidt.

Climate change always has been a killer. We are smart enough to know this and we are smart enough to know we are causing climate change. But somehow, our smarts don’t seem to work full time.

Experts believe that a sixth mass extinction is on its way. Estimates vary, but somewhere between a few dozen to more than a hundred species go extinct every day.

At that rate, it would only take a few tens of thousands of years to wipe out the same number of species as the third mass extinction.

This time, however, we can’t point to a meteorite as the cause. We only have ourselves to blame.

THIS TIME IS DIFFERENT
A species generally sticks around for anywhere from 1 million years (for mammals) to 11 million years (for marine invertebrates).

But we are the first species on earth, mammal or otherwise, that has had the power to destroy every living thing, and we are using that power right now.

With ecological suicide, war, and our indifference to the lives of our descendants, we greatly have accelerated the speed of our demise.

Has evolution made us this way? Evolution cares only about the near future. The sole question is, will a species survive long enough to create viable progeny?

Survival is a battle. We came from species that had to fight against nature and all other species, from viruses to predators. To survive, we became programmed for the fear and hatred of “others.”

We are evolved to be me-oriented, near-term animals. And though, intellectually, we know we should protect the earth for future generations, we simply are not constructed to worry enough about what happens a few centuries from now.

We burn fossil fuels and cut trees to pollute the air, water, and land. We spread plastics and other poisons into the oceans, lakes, and rivers. Our farming methods damage the land for future farmers. Well-meaning ignorance has banned genetically modified foods that could feed more of us, better.

We follow leaders who preach scorn for the “others” they claim can harm us — the basis for war and bigotry.

Pacifists are jeered. War-mongers are venerated. Love is weak. Hatred is strong. Bigotry is more powerful than compassion.

By what logic can anyone predict that the human species will not destroy itself within the next century? We are heading pell-mell into a dystopian world of misery and extinction.

And we know it. We even predict it. In fact, we love it. When I review Netflix, I see dozens of movies about gloomy, grim, somber, dictatorial, tyrannical, oppressive societies but almost none about joyful life.

Why do we find hell more enthralling than heaven?

It’s because of the battle. We have evolved not only to wage the battle but to enjoy the battle.

Evolution forces us to enjoy what we must do to survive — sex, eating, and killing are examples — so that we will do it willingly, eagerly. We happily battle nature.

We treasure guns. We love hunting animals. We enjoy killing. Animals. Trees. Everything.

As the song goes, “Pave paradise and put up a parking lot.” We bend nature to our will, not understanding that we are part of nature. We bend ourselves.

We battle each other, though the wreckage of our battles diminishes our lives.

Imagine what our first step will be if ever we learn aliens are coming. We will assemble the military for battle. That is who we are.

IS THAT HOW ALIEN SPECIES EVOLVED?
If any alien species evolved intelligence, as we did, did they also evolve the offensive-turned-self-destructive tendencies we have?

Are there no paths evolution can take, in which intelligence leads to compassion and mutual aid?

Animals generally do not destroy their own worlds. Birds don’t soil their own nests. So is there some point at which intelligence inevitably crosses some barrier, and begins to eat itself?

If so, that would explain why we never hear from any aliens. They suicide before they can learn how to communicate across the vast reaches of space.

If an alien species does make that connection, and successfully contacts us, why? Will it be to conquer and destroy, or will it be to make new friends?

Why do we hope to find them out there when our first instinct will be to kill them?

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

You can’t say we weren’t warned

You can’t say we weren’t warned. Hitler warned us, but like the Germans before us, we didn’t listen. Now, we have been repeating Germany’s mistakes. Read this reprint from a post titled “Astounding similarities: Hitler in America. It’s happening now.” It posted way back in September 2016, when Trump was still running for office.
A host of earlier biographers have advanced theories about Hitler’s rise, and the dynamic between the man and his times.
Some have focused on the social and political conditions in post-World War I Germany, which Hitler expertly exploited — a yearning for a return to German greatness; unemployment and economic distress; and longstanding ethnic prejudices and fears of “foreignization.”
Hmmm . . . “Make America great again,” anti-Muslim, build a wall. Now, who is that?
Hitler as a politician who rose to power through demagoguery, showmanship and nativist appeals to the masses.
Hitler was often described as an egomaniac who “only loved himself” — a narcissist with a taste for self-dramatization and what Mr. Ullrich calls a “characteristic fondness for superlatives.”
Image result for trump
Using the Hitler playbook, down to the smallest detail.
What about this: do demagoguery, showmanship, and nativist appeals sound familiar? And which egomaniacal politician describes everything about himself as “incredible.”
A former finance minister wrote that Hitler “was so thoroughly untruthful that he could no longer recognize the difference between lies and truth” and editors of one edition of “Mein Kampf” described it as a “swamp of lies, distortions, innuendoes, half-truths and real facts.”
Which politician not only lies the most of any in recent memory but repeatedly denies the incontrovertible evidence of lies? And this:
Hitler was an effective orator and actor, adept at assuming various masks and feeding off the energy of his audiences.
Although he concealed his anti-Semitism beneath a “mask of moderation” when trying to win the support of the socially liberal middle classes, he specialized in big, theatrical rallies.
Which politician is a professional TV actor? Who boasts about massive rallies with thousands of cheering people? Which politician breeds hatred of minorities? And this:
He peppered his speeches with coarse phrases and put-downs of hecklers.
Even as he fomented chaos by playing to crowds’ fears and resentments, he offered himself as the visionary leader who could restore law and order.
Which politician yells “Get ’em outa here” when heckled? Which politician promises to enforce “law and order”? And this:
Hitler increasingly presented himself in messianic terms, promising “to lead Germany to a new era of national greatness,” though he was typically vague about his actual plans.
He often harked back to a golden age for the country, the better “to paint the present day in hues that were all the darker.
Everywhere you looked now, there was only decline and decay.
Which politician repeatedly tells us we are losing to the Chinese, the Mexicans, and the terrorists- losing, losing, losing- but is vague about plans (sometimes claiming they are “secret.”?) And this:
Because the understanding of the masses “is feeble,” Hitler said, effective propaganda needed to be boiled down to a few slogans that should be “persistently repeated until the very last individual has come to grasp the idea that has been put forward.”
Seen any political slogans printed on hats and constantly repeated in speeches to remind the “feeble” masses? And this:
Hitler’s rise was not inevitable. There were numerous points at which his ascent might have been derailed.
(But) in addition to economic woes and unemployment, there was an “erosion of the political center” and a growing resentment of the elites.
(There was) the belief of Hitler supporters that the country needed “a man of iron” who could shake things up.
“Why not give the National Socialists a chance?” a prominent banker said of the Nazis. “They seem pretty gutsy to me.”
Does resentment of elites (aka “the establishment”) ring a bell? What about the need for change, to “shake things up”? And this:
(Hitler’s) conservative coalition partners believed either that he was not serious or that they could exert a moderating influence on him.
Know of any politicians whose own party continues to try to moderate them? Was there speculation about politicians not really being serious about running for President? And this:
Hitler, it became obvious, could not be tamed.
The independent press was banned or suppressed and books deemed “un-German” were burned.
Think. Which American politician wants to sue the press for unflattering articles? Germans believed, “It cannot happen here.” But, as the author asks . . .
What persuaded millions of ordinary Germans to embrace Hitler and his doctrine of hatred?
How did this “most unlikely pretender to high state office” achieve absolute power in a once democratic country and set it on a course of monstrous horror?
It happened in Germany. Actually, it has happened in many countries. People fundamentally are the same, everywhere, and everywhere they can be led like sheep to the slaughter by Hitlerian leaders. Yes, it can happen here. It, in fact, is happening here, right in front of our noses. Don’t believe, even for one second, that we are immune. Were it not for a few heroes who resisted Trump, we would have lost America’s democracy. Even now, there are Hitler, uh, Trump believers who would sacrifice America for a charlatan. “Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.” George Santayana Learn. Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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THE SOLE PURPOSE OF GOVERNMENT IS TO IMPROVE AND PROTECT THE LIVES OF THE PEOPLE.

The most important problems in economics involve:
  1. Monetary Sovereignty describes money creation and destruction.
  2. Gap Psychology describes the common desire to distance oneself from those “below” in any socioeconomic ranking and to come nearer those “above.” The socioeconomic distance is referred to as “The Gap.”
Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics. Implementation of Monetary Sovereignty and The Ten Steps To Prosperity can grow the economy and narrow the Gaps: Ten Steps To Prosperity:
  1. Eliminate FICA
  2. Federally funded Medicare — parts A, B & D, plus long-term care — for everyone
  3. Social Security for all
  4. Free education (including post-grad) for everyone
  5. Salary for attending school
  6. Eliminate federal taxes on business
  7. Increase the standard income tax deduction, annually. 
  8. Tax the very rich (the “.1%”) more, with higher progressive tax rates on all forms of income.
  9. Federal ownership of all banks
  10. Increase federal spending on the myriad initiatives that benefit America’s 99.9% 
The Ten Steps will grow the economy and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

An open letter to Justice Clarence Thomas

Dear Justice Thomas;

You have written that the rights to contraception (Griswold v. Connecticut, 1965), same-sex consensual relations (Lawrence v. Texas, 2003), and same-sex marriage (Obergefell v. Hodges, 2015)—all of which you explicitly named in your opinion overturning Roe v. Wade, should be “revisited” (Your word).Who is Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas?

May I ask you about the rights to contraception that you wish to “revisit.” Since Americans currently have the right to use many forms of contraception, your desire to “revisit” those rights can only mean that you oppose contraception.

Otherwise, why would you need or desire to revisit an existing right?

It’s reasonable to assume then, that since you oppose contraception for others, you and your partners do not use contraception. Surely, you would not be so hypocritical as to oppose it for others, but make use of it yourself, when you have sex.

Ordinarily, I wouldn’t ask you or anyone such personal questions. But, you broached the subject of contraception, and you wish to intrude on millions of married couples’ privacy, so it is reasonable to ask whether you practice what you preach.

You married Kathy Ambush in 1971 and divorced her in 1984. That’s 13 years. Yet you have only one child.

We assume you enjoy sex.

Anita Hill testified under oath, to that effect. 

And Lillian McEwen, in her book, said of you: 

“He was a ‘national treasure,’ she said, one she shared with other women in ménages à trois and in a voyeuristic pleasure palace. And she described her then-lover (Thomas) as being “easily aroused,” with a “strong interest in pornography.”

He “was always actively watching the women he worked with to see if they could be potential partners,” and noted he was “partial to women with large breasts.”

She detailed explicit details of her relationship with you,, which she said included a freewheeling sex life.

Moira Smith claimed you groped her at a 1999 dinner party in Northern Virginia.

And yet, with all these women and all those years and all your interest in sex, you have birthed only one child. How is that possible?

Presumably, you aren’t sterile.

So, it would seem to any logical thinker that you and/or your women partners must have been using some sort of contraception. Were your women on a pill or IUD? Did you use a condom? Have a vasectomy? 

Lest America and the world believe you are nothing but a mean-spirited, lying, immoral hypocrite, who only wishes to exert power over women and their husbands, you might wish to clarify.

Thank you in advance for your comments.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell