–How not to kill yourself with a defibrillator

The debt hawks are to economics as the creationists are to biology. Those, who do not understand Monetary Sovereignty, do not understand economics. Cutting the federal deficit is the most ignorant and damaging step the federal government could take. It ranks ahead of the Hawley-Smoot Tariff.
==============================================================================================================================================================================================

In this never-ending effort to save my fellow humans, I’ll take a momentary respite from explaining the implications of Monetary Sovereignty, to offer you this important information.

Background: NewScientist Magazine, a terrific little science summary publication from England (a clone of a domestic magazine called Science News) ran an article listing a few clever inventions. I wrote the following letter, which was published in the January 8th edition:

Your Feedback article proposing a shoe defrillator was truly a shocker (20 November 2010). It said: “In case of need, you take the shoes off, pop your hands inside , and apply the soles to your chest to administer the required electric shock.” Yikes!

The purpose of a defibrillator is to start a stopped heart. If you are awake, your heart is beating. Never, never use a defibrillator on a conscious person. It can stop a beating heart. In short, you could kill yourself.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

While this blog is designed to save your and the nation’s economic life, the above advice might save your or your loved one’s physical life.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
http://www.rodgermitchell.com

No nation can tax itself into prosperity, nor grow without money growth.

–How America is destroyed by metaphors

The debt hawks are to economics as the creationists are to biology. Those, who do not understand Monetary Sovereignty, do not understand economics. Cutting the federal deficit is the most ignorant and damaging step the federal government could take. It ranks ahead of the Hawley-Smoot Tariff.
==========================================================================================================

Intuition and symbolism are powerful learning devices. Because knowing all the facts surrounding any situation often is impossible, humans have developed intuition and symbolism, in short, metaphor – a quick way to learn.

The atom is a miniature solar system in which the nucleus is the sun and the electrons are the planets. That metaphor helps us to visualize the atom, except for one small detail. The atom is nothing like the solar system, the nucleus is nothing like the sun, the electrons are nothing like planets, and the gravitational force holding the planets in place is nothing like the forces holding the electrons and the nucleus together.

Yet the power of that metaphor is so great, if any of us were asked to visualize the atom, we would imagine something that looks like a solar system. Metaphor precludes our need to understand quantum mechanics.

Metaphorical respect for America’s flag is illogical. As a nation, America may deserve respect, and more accurately, many of its people may deserve respect, but the flag is nothing more than printed cloth or paper, neither of which deserves respect. Yet, so powerful is this metaphor, some wish to jail people who burn, tear or step on that piece of cloth. This vast country of 300+ million people can be visualized as a printed piece of cloth, which is why liars, frauds and cheats are the ones most likely to “wrap themselves in the flag,” a metaphor for claiming love of country more than the people in it.

Religion is a metaphor for morality, to the degree it would be a brave politician indeed, who would admit to not worshiping God. Such an admission would make him/her an immoral person, despite the factual lack of relationship between piousness and morality.

As a species, humans have come to treat many metaphors (and their cousins, similes and analogies) as fact, perhaps influenced by our complex language. Nouns themselves are metaphors for physical objects. Our reliance on metaphors is our strength and our weakness, for metaphors assist our creative ability to visualize and to communicate, but this visualization can be deceptive.

Among the public, and sadly also among many professors and the press, personal finances are used as a metaphor for federal finances, though there is scant similarity between the two. Personal debt is unlike federal debt; personal spending is unlike federal spending and personal borrowing is unlike federal borrowing. To make matters more confusing, personal debt, spending and borrowing are very much like state, county and city debt, spending and borrowing. There are governments and then there are governments, that is, monetarily non-sovereign governments and Monetarily Sovereign governments, and the three “P’s, professor/ press/ politician triumvirate does not understand the difference. As a result, neither does the forth “P,” the public.

The press loves to say the federal debt is a “ticking time bomb,” a colorful metaphor for something that soon will explode, suddenly and disastrously. Though there is nothing about the federal debt that can explode suddenly or otherwise, the metaphor effectively frightens people who properly are afraid of ticking time bombs.

Then there’s “profit.” The government lent Chrysler money and could make a profit on the deal. Profit is good, right? Except, you should ask yourself, what is the effect of profit on a government that has the unlimited ability to create dollars? I’ll tell you the effect. Federal profit removes money from the economy. When the government profits, we all lose. Everyone cheered when General Motors paid much of its debt to the federal government, early yet. Unfortunately, that repayment came out of the economy – out of “your pocket,” to use the metaphor. GM could have used the money to pay salaries and for growth. Now that money is gone.

Speaking of your pocket, the press also loves to say that any federal spending uses “taxpayers’ money.” But, tax collections have no relationship to federal spending. Why would they? Think about it; the federal government creates money at will. What possible use could it have for your tax money? The money you send to Washington is not stored in some vault, nor is it saved in a spending account. That tax money simply disappears at the stroke of a computer key, just as the federal government creates new money, also at the stroke of a computer key. Everything the federal government does with dollars is effected by that computer key.

Consider “surplus, a very good word. But, a federal surplus is an economic deficit. And though the government doesn’t need the money, the economy does. “Save” is another good word and “waste” is a bad word. Yet when the federal government “saves” money, less money goes into the economy, and when the federal government “wastes” money, more money goes into the economy. The infamous Alaskan “bridge to nowhere” would have been far more beneficial to the economy than any spending cut.

Public “servant” is a metaphor for a politician, even when he/she votes against your interests. Some servant.

Those are bad metaphors. There are good metaphors. Warren Mosler uses a good metaphor when he compares federal dollar creation with points on a scoreboard. There are many similarities between the two, particularly the lack of limits and cost. The scoreboard can produce unlimited points at no cost; the government can produce unlimited dollars at no cost. The scoreboard doesn’t need to borrow points nor to levy a tax to obtain points. The federal government doesn’t need to borrow dollars nor to levy a tax to obtain dollars. The scoreboard gives points to each team, and never asks for them to be returned. Why the federal government lends dollars to corporations, then asks for the dollars back, is a mystery.

The right wing engages a bad metaphor in using the word “freedom,” when it really means “anarchy.” In railing against “big” government (whatever “big” means), the right wing expresses the desire to be free from their need to obey laws. Ironically, these same people are very much in favor of laws when the laws apply to other people, for instance undocumented immigrants. Here, the right supports “law and order,” a metaphor for a harsh interpretation and implementation of the law, and in the case of undocumented immigrants, wishes to make the law even harsher and more restrictive.

Unfortunately for immigrants, they are mere humans and not guns. Were they guns, the right would support weaker restrictive laws.

“Socialism” is a currently epithetic metaphor for federal spending, though true socialism requires government ownership, not just government support, else all government spending could be considered socialist. So those opposed to federal support of universal health care insurance describe it as “socialism.” One wonders whether they similarly object to receiving their Social Security and Medicare payments, which are an appropriate model for universal health care.

When you hear “fiscal responsibility,” “budget busting” or “financial prudence,” ask yourself, would the described situation apply equally to people and to the federal government? If the answer is, “Yes,” the speaker probably doesn’t know what he is talking about. The federal government is different from you and me. What applies to one seldom applies to the other.

Metaphors are not reality, though reality can be twisted by metaphors. Ours has been.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
http://www.rodgermitchell.com

No nation can tax itself into prosperity, nor grow without money growth.

–J’accuse mainstream economists

The debt hawks are to economics as the creationists are to biology. Those, who do not understand Monetary Sovereignty, do not understand economics. Cutting the federal deficit is the most ignorant and damaging step the federal government could take. It ranks ahead of the Hawley-Smoot Tariff.
==========================================================================================================================================================================================

America struggles, has struggled and will struggle, unless one fundamental changes, and that fundamental is economics. We have had an average of one recession every five years. The recovery lags. Again and again, our people lose their homes, their livelihoods, their lives. Who is at fault for our repeated economic problems?

I accuse you mainstream economists, with special mention of those who have won prestigious awards, for leading America astray. I accuse you mainstream economists for lying to America. I accuse you mainstream economists who:

1. Refuse to understand Monetary Sovereignty, which reveals that the federal government has the unlimited ability to create money, restricted not by taxes nor by borrowing, but only by inflation. You who do not understand the implications of Monetary Sovereignty do not understand economics, yet the nation relies on your ignorance for leadership.

2. Refuse to acknowledge that the so-called federal “debt” merely is the total of outstanding T-securities created at will, from thin air, a process that has become unnecessary since August 15, 1971, when President Nixon took America off the gold standard. Rather than creating T-securities from thin air, then trading them for dollars previously created from thin air, all federal debt could be eliminated if T-bill creation were eliminated. The Treasury is required by law to create T-bills in an amount equal to the federal deficit, the difference between taxes and spending. This is not a financial need; it is a legal requirement, made obsolete in 1971. You mainstream economists don’t explain this to the people.

3. Refuse to adapt your philosophies to post 1971 economics. Ask many of you mainstream economists a question about federal debt, deficits, taxes, spending, inflation, deflation or stagflation and your answers today likely will not differ in any fundamental way from your answers pre-1971, though coming off the gold standard made a vast change in economics. It’s as though physicists gave all the same answers post-Einstein as they had given pre-Einstein.

4. Refuse to acknowledge that a balanced federal budget would mean disaster for America. A large economy, by definition, has more money than does a small economy. Therefore a growing economy requires a growing supply of money. And federal deficit spending creates the money to grow the economy.

5. Equate federal debt with personal debt. You tell the populace a large federal debt is “unsustainable” and a “ticking time bomb,” when neither is true. Because the U.S. government creates money by clicking a computer key, which it can do endlessly, any amount of federal debt is sustainable. While personal debt is a danger to the debtor, requiring income to service, federal debt is no danger to the federal government, and its service does not require income. You mainstream economists fail to explain this.

6. Insist that federal initiatives be “revenue neutral,” depriving Americans of the benefits federal spending can provide. Example: You falsely tell us America cannot afford universal health care, and that paying for universal health care would require tax increases for our children and grandchildren, when neither is true. U.S. government spending is not constrained by taxes. Thus, you mainstream economists deprive millions of our children and grandchildren of their health and their lives.

7. Equate financial problems in the euro nations with America’s finances. The euro nations are not Monetarily Sovereign; they cannot create euros at will. America is Monetarily Sovereign. It can create dollars at will. The difference is as black is to white.

8. Fail to reveal that our monetarily non-sovereign governments — the states counties and cities — cannot survive long-term on taxes alone, and must have money coming in from outside their borders. Monetarily non-sovereign governments, unlike the federal government, do pay their bills from tax money received. But because their citizens also pay federal taxes, which remove money from the local government, substantial federal input is needed, else the local government continually will lose money. Yet the federal government, misled by you mainstream economists, asks state governments to pay for such things as Medicaid, housing, schooling, security, infrastructure, etc. – all responsibilities that could and should be met by the federal government.

9. Fail to reveal that Social Security and Medicare are not supported by FICA and will not go bankrupt when FICA payments don’t equal benefit payments. Medicare and Social Security are but two of the more than 1,000 federal agencies, all supported by the federal government, and not by taxes. Among the other 1,000+ agencies, not supported by taxes, are all federal courts including the Supreme Court, the Army, Navy, Marines, Air Force, the Army Corps of Engineers, Justice Department, Bureau of Prisons, Census Bureau, Congress, Consumer Products Safety Commission, Customs and Border Protection, CIA, FBI, Department of Energy, Department of Education, Treasury Department, EPA, Federal Reserve System, FDA and on and on. We don’t hear about these federal agencies going bankrupt. Yet you mainstream economists continually warn us about the impending bankruptcy of Social Security and Medicare, warning that result in reduced benefits and higher taxes.

10. Fail to acknowledge the need to eliminate business taxes. Such taxes hamper business –our economic engines — while providing nothing useful for a Monetarily Sovereign government that neither needs nor uses taxes.

11. Fail to inform the American public that recessions and depressions are not part of a normal economic “cycle,” but rather are the result of errors made by our political leaders, who take their lead from misinformation supplied by you mainstream economists.

12. Fail to explain that for a Monetarily Sovereign nation, exports are not better than imports. When China exports to America, it expends massive amounts of energy, manpower, time and scarce resources to create products, which it sends to us in exchange for dollars, which we create at no cost, by touching of a computer key. Thus, China is our slave, working and sweating essentially for nothing.

13. Fail to explain that immigrants do not take jobs from citizens nor do they commit more crimes nor take federal benefits from taxpayers. Immigrants, being consumers, create jobs by buying. They are not more likely to be criminals, for fear of being deported. And taxpayers’ money does not pay for federal benefits, the simple reason being that taxes do not pay for federal benefits. You mainstream economists do not explain this to an innocent public motivated by fear-mongering politicians.

14. Fail to speak against the federal debt ceiling, when such not only is unnecessary but harmful to economic growth.

15. Fail to inform the public that nearly every recession and depression has resulted from a series of years in which federal debt growth declined.

Yes mainstream economists, Nobel-winning, article-writing, much admired and much feted mainstream economists, I accuse you of harming America, harming our children and our grandchildren. You have done us more damage than all the Communists, all the Fascists, all the drug dealers and murderers, all the terrorists and traitors. You have undermined our nation at its very economic core.

Why do you do this to us?

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
http://www.rodgermitchell.com

No nation can tax itself into prosperity, nor grow without money growth.

–Big government is bad. It takes our freedoms. Let’s eliminate it.

The debt hawks are to economics as the creationists are to biology. Those, who do not understand Monetary Sovereignty, do not understand economics. Cutting the federal deficit is the most ignorant and damaging step the federal government could take. It ranks ahead of the Hawley-Smoot Tariff.
==========================================================================================================================================================================================
When people become frustrated and angry, they seek a focus for their anger. Often a scapegoat will do. It doesn’t matter whether the scapegoat is the primary cause of their anger, so long as a quasi-logical case can be made for the scapegoat’s culpability.

Aliens are frequent scapegoats, because the quasi-logical cases can be made that they take jobs from citizens, commit crimes, don’t pay taxes, and will mongrelize the true patriotic mores and beliefs of our fair nation. Minority religions (Jews in Germany, Christians in Muslim nations) are frequent scapegoats for all the above reasons and for fears of proselytizing, whether these fears are invented or real.

Air travelers become angry at the airline personnel behind the desk, though these workers seldom are at fault for the travelers’ problems. We get angry at that customer support guy in India, who neither understands, nor has the power to cure, our problems, when the real fault may lie with the president of the company he represents.

Today, people are angry and frustrated by the recession and the slowness of recovery. The Tea Party has used this anger to finger-point at “big government.” Yes, some of our political leaders are at fault. The ignorance about Monetary Sovereignty, surely has exacerbated, if not outright caused, the recession.

But the United States is a huge country, which has a huge government, and not all elements of our “big government” should be eliminated. We need the army. We need the roads and bridges our big government builds. Shall we eliminate the Medicare and Social Security paid for by our government? (No, FICA doesn’t pay for these programs. See: Ten Reasons to Eliminate FICA,) Shall we eliminate food inspection, drug inspection, weather forecasting, the Coast Guard, the FBI, the CIA, Homeland Security, the FDIC to insure our deposits or the SEC to supervise investing? Shall we eliminate the police and the fire department? Shall we eliminate all laws? There are more than 1,000 federal agencies and a thousand times that number of state and local agenies. Shall we eliminate them all, or just some of them, and if some of them, which?

Most rational people understand the need for a big country to have a big government. But for personal gain, the political parties have tapped into the irrational part of our psyches, and have condemned all federal initiatives as taking away our “freedoms.”

Yes, laws take away freedoms. You are not free to steal, murder, rape and pillage. To have a viable society, we give up many freedoms. It’s the tradeoff most of us willingly make.

Now, there are those who wish to eliminate the new health insurance program in its entirety. Why? Some say it is because of the requirement that everyone have health insurance. If you already have health insurance, this requirement doesn’t affect you. If you are poor or don’t have insurance because of a pre-existing condition, it doesn’t affect you, either. In fact, it affects only those few who either are so wealthy they can afford to be self insuring, or those who plan to cheat their doctor and hospital, when they need medical help. If you’re not in one of those two groups, you have no problem.

Or, are you merely standing on the principle that all government is bad, and whenever you see government you want to eliminate it? Is this vague, anarchist principle so powerful it overrides the needs of America’s millions who are too poor to afford health care insurance? Does your anarchist principle override the needs of Americans whose existing illness prevents them from obtaining insurance? Does your anarchist principle override the needs of Americans who lose their insurance because they have lost their jobs?

The “I-don’t-like-big-government” screamers really are saying, “I have mine and I don’t give a damn about anyone else. I want the freedom to do whatever I want, and the hell with you.” How ironic that these selfish “freedom only for me” people actually portray themselves as patriots and fly the flag at every opportunity. Some patriots they are.

Yes, like any organization, large or small, our government has good points and bad points. But to take out your spite on the health care law – to throw out the baby with the bathwater – is selfish, un-American and misguided. Anarchy is ugly.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
http://www.rodgermitchell.com

No nation can tax itself into prosperity, nor grow without money growth.