STRIFE, FEAR, GREATNESS, AND THE MYSTERY OF TRUMP

STRIFE, FEAR, GREATNESS, AND THE MYSTERY OF TRUMP

STRIFE:

The universe is not favorable for life. Unimaginable cold, unfathomable heat, deadly radiation, crushing gravity, poisonous elements — they all abound.

Even mother earth tries to kill her children. She sends us ice ages, volcanos, earthquakes, windstorms, floods, droughts, and meteors, while her “red of tooth and claw” children try to kill each other.New study estimates the odds of life and intelligence emerging beyond our planet

Every living creature, from viruses (living?), through plants, through animals, all have enemies, living and inert, that threaten the delicate, interconnected web we call “life.”

Survival has required a constant struggle, life vs. anti-life. To survive, fragile life must defeat vigorous anti-life in a battle that continually is lost, or rather, continually almost is lost, every second of every day. We stand on the point of a needle.

Yet, here we are, we humans who have struggled best, survive.

We survive partly because we have the best brains, joined to marvelous hands, and voice boxes for the best communication, and among animals, we are large. We survive partly because good fortune has spared us the worst the universe has to offer.

But mostly we survive because nature has given us the tools to become the greatest killers this planet ever has known.

We are social animals, but we use our sociability to facilitate our killing. We kill them all, from viruses to bacteria, to whales, to fellow sapiens. Even our pleasures, our games, involve a ritualized form of killing called “winning.”

Evolution is based on strife, the survival of the fittest. We are programmed for strife. Throughout history, humans never have been without war.

The vast majority of our games are selfish, competitive, killing games. We win and the other side loses. In essence, we survive and they die. Only the genes that compete best are allowed to fight another day.

Our species is so enamored with strife, we not only wage war, we enjoy watching it. From Roman gladiators to today’s boxers, to all spectator sports, we become emotionally involved in the battles and the victories and defeats.

Watch the passionate fans at an American football game, and you will see bloodlust in action. Even flag football or touch football are not enough. It has to have crushing tackles and broken bodies to titillate the hoi polloi.

Some of us do exhibit compassion and charity, but scientists will tell you the ultimate purpose of charity is to effect species victory. Helping even the weak, the aged, or the ill assures their knowledge will not be lost — beneficial for a society’s survival.

And this is the important point. Though as individuals, we are efficient killers, and killing eliminates competitors for resources, as a society, we do not spend our lives killing. We need our family, friends, and neighbors to find and create resources, and for defense.

Those who show no compassion, and solely are ego-driven, seemingly would have a personal survival advantage, but because they do not contribute to species survival, they often are punished by the species, directly via physical attacks or indirectly via various forms of shunning.

TRUMP

Millions voted for Donald Trump. Why does he appeal to so many people?

Before he became president, he had failed in businesses where failure is nearly impossible: Gambling casinos and real estate. A casino is a guaranteed money-printing device, and real estate generally had increased in value for more than 60 years.

Repeatedly, Trump had been bailed out of his foolish predicaments by his father, only to fall into bankruptcy, yet again.

He was a Democrat who decided to switch parties to one that would accept is morals, a thrice-married womanizer, who never stopped cheating, a notorious liar and con man, whose reputation was so bad he still today is unable to obtain loans from any American bank.

His money kept him from Trump University and Trump Foundation prison.

He has cheated everyone, not only lenders and investors, but also swindled his workers out of their salaries.

Yet he was elected by the self-proclaimed “party of law and order.” During his four-year term, his prime accomplishments included giving tax breaks to the rich, attempting to destroy health-care insurance that protected millions of people, eliminating consumer protection laws, and hiring incompetent agency heads whose main efforts were to sabotage the primary missions of their agencies.

History will find him wanting.

He was impeached by the House of Representatives, and narrowly saved by the Senate, and was voted out of office. But, still he received more than 70 million votes.

Why?

Trump is a pure warrior. Lacking all compassion and human kindness, he is a psychopath, totally devoted to personal victory. He lives for strife.

He deems anyone, who exhibits even an ounce of kindness and mercy, a “loser,” the single worst epithet he can imagine. For a soldier who dies or is captured or wounded fighting for his country, Trump has only one question, “What was in it for him?”

He cannot imagine doing any unrequited kindness; everything must accrue to him, personally.

Seeing acclaim go to someone else is anathema. Trump has fired people whom he thought received more credit than him. His favorites are those sycophants who give him glory for everything good. (See: Mike Pence)

Trump preaches strength and patriotism, while he himself is a weak anti-patriot, who fearfully avoided the risks of battle by claiming heel spurs.

He admires dictators, the more brutal and unforgiving the better. Vladimir Putin, Kim Jong-un, Rodrigo Duterte, Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud — murderers all — are Trump favorites.

In rising to power, he has followed Hitler’s playbook.

FEAR

The most powerful human emotions are fear and hatred. They are so closely related that the former breeds the latter.  It is almost impossible to hate someone of whom you have no fear.

Tyrants understand this, thus we see the use of scapegoats, which generates fear and loathing among the populace.

Trump’s scapegoats are Mexican “rapists,” Muslim “terrorists,” the “fake” media, black “thugs,” “extreme” leftists, socialists, whistleblowers, Barack Obama — all the people Trump fears and thus hates — and these are the people he has taught his followers to fear and hate.

When people suffer fear, they seek protection. They are more likely to buy guns. They are more likely to join cults like the white supremacists, that are based on fearing people of color.

When people are in fear, they look to a strong leader who will protect them. Trump feigns strength. He promises to protect his followers from the people he himself fears and hates.Mahatma Gandhi quote: It is weakness which breeds fear, and fear breeds distrust.

We live in fearful times. Many people are impoverished or fear poverty. Many people are jobless or fear joblessness.

Many people fear the “Godless” left, who “kill babies.”

Bigotry is a representation of fear. Trump’s appeal is to bigotry, hatred, and fear.

Trump’s most ardent followers are America’s most fearful people.

Compassion and generosity require the courage to give of oneself — the courage to overcome the Gap psychology that urges us to distance ourselves from those “below” us on any social or economic scale.

And so, despite all his flaws, Trump has retained much of his base. And he will retain them until a principled leader arrives to assuage the fears we all suffer to some degree and teaches us we can be both compassionate and safe.

GREATNESS

Trump promised to make America great, again, then proceeded to make America small.

He promised we could cower safely behind his Wall, though a great people does not cower or need a wall. His promised wall only told the world and us that we are weak.

America was great when we followed Franklin Roosevelt and gave our lives and fortunes against the Axis oppressors.

America was great when, under Harry Truman, we instituted the European Recovery Program (Marshall plan), that gave billions of our dollars to war-devastated European nations.

America was great when under Harry Truman we didn’t wreak vengeance on Japan, a nation that had attacked us. Instead, we made Japan an ally and helped its people recover.

America was great when we followed John Kennedy and courageously flew the dangerous path to the moon.

America was great when we instituted Lyndon Johnson’s “Great Society.” to unselfishly help the poor and the weak.

Those were unselfish times. Those were compassionate times. Those were great times.

Those were NOT “America first” times.

Had Trump encouraged the wearing of masks, he could have saved well more than 100,000 Americans. Despite all his other failings, he could have been great, for that alone.

Instead, his personal insecurities caused him to fear looking weak. So he discouraged mask-wearing to prove his strength, and our families, friends, and neighbors died.

Trump poisoned the GOP and drained its strength. Today, it is an assemblage of toadies, fearing to say anything that will crack the ego of the bully.

The bully is not strong. Continual strife is not strength. The weak are those who most fear looking weak.

Trump is a weak man, supposedly diminished by his tyrant father. When Americans begin to understand Trump’s weakness, we will not fear to welcome a wise and compassionate leader, and the age of Trump and fear will end.

Only then will America become great, again.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

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 or a reverse income tax
  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 has the GOP gone “full Trump”?

With Donald Trump now trying to persuade members of the Electoral College to subvert America’s democracy and vote against their legal mandate, it should have become clear, even to the most hardened Republican, that Trump cares nothing for America, nothing for democracy, and nothing for anyone or anything but himself.

According to the Hare Psychopathy Checklist-Revised, Trump is a psychopath, which four years of him amply have demonstrated.

The GOP is not a ship of fools. On average, they are intelligent people. Obviously, they must intellectually recognize Trump for the incompetent ego-maniac he is.

So why do they continue to back him? Why do they countenance the democracy-shredding attempts to invalidate an entire state’s election?

This is an image of Adam and Eve being cast out of the Garden of Eden. Curley's wife was supposed to be like Eve, as… | Adam and eve, Bible pictures, Garden
Angelic Trump casts out the RINOs.

Why indeed, during the time of Trump’s greatest insanity, has the GOP gone “full Trump”?

Many pundits ascribe this to fear — fear of retribution, fear of the millions who voted for Trump, fear of losing office.

The feeling is that Trump always will hold power over Trumpers, who will do his bidding, no matter how insane that might seem to rational people.

And while that partly might be true, I suggest there is yet additional motivation.

I suggest that the GOP has gone “full Trump”, for the same reasons his followers close their eyes to his failings: He hates the same people they hate, and he projects the faux strength that promises to protect them from what they fear.

It is, in essence, the appeal of a cult or a religion.

Members of a cult look to the powerful leader to supply all answers and solutions to life’s problems.

Similarly, members of a religion look to guidance from religious leaders, who receive their instructions from an all-powerful God, who reveals to them the Path to safety and away from damnation.

For the GOP, Donlad Trump (and to a lesser degree, Mitch McConnell) supply that strong leadership.

There is great comfort, especially for the weak-of-mind, to be relieved of all decision obligations.

In going “full Trump”, Republicans don’t need to think about what is right vs. wrong, or what is best. They need only to do what their leader tells them. So simple.

In this way, they cannot be blamed for errors, and they will be protected from those they fear.

Trump defends his followers from the hated and feared “Mexican criminals and rapists.” He defends them from the hated and feared “Muslim terrorists.” He defends them from hated and feared liberals and socialists, and from those who would take away their guns, and from gays who would take away their traditions and religion.

So many fears, so many hatreds, so many threats — and Trump promises to build walls to protect his followers from all of them.

His lies don’t matter; it is his promises that are important. “Follow me and I will lead you to the promised land,” and since no one else makes that promise, they follow him.

It’s hope over reason, just as with all cults and religions.

Republican politicians are people. They bear the pain of fears and unrequited desires. We all do. They too want to be relieved of that pain by allowing a strong leader to guide them. They love to hear the promises of life in the kingdom of Trump heaven.

So, they follow Trump, not just because they fear Trump or even elections, but more, they fear life without Trump, when bands of Mexicans, Muslims, liberals, aliens, socialists, scientists, and gays supposedly will have free reign to ravage, plunder, and rape America.

Fear begets anger; anger begets hatred; hatred defeats logic and sense.This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is gop.png

Loyalty for the leader or for God is perceived as superior to loyalty to fellow men. Trump repeatedly insults those “disloyal” who might stray as RINOs — Republicans In Name Only.

He casts out any who dare to think for themselves or speak truth to power.

In all cults and religions, morality is what the leader says it is.

Separating young children from their parents, denying refuge to life-endangered immigrants, taking healthcare from the poor, denying marriage rights to gays, denying voting rights to blacks, urging people not to wear masks, stealing money from students of Trump University, stealing money from donors to Trump Foundation, cheating on wives, attacking women, subverting America’s elections — all these, and more, become moral in the world of the cult.

There are few who dare to criticize an infinitely moral God, who in anger murdered all the men, women, and children of Sodom and Gomorrah. It was moral because God said so.

There are few Republicans who dare criticize Trump who has murdered by his denial of COVID, 250.000 American men, women, and children.

Trump and his Trumpers follow the traditions of cults and cult leaders, and religious leaders who have been committing justified crimes for centuries, shielded by the cult’s or religion’s mores.

In summary, the Republicans in Congress have turned “full Trump” not only by their fear of losing an election but additionally by something far more visceral. They fear being cast out of the cult and having no one to protect them from the cruel, real world. They fear having to make decisions that they alone will be forced to justify.

They fear reality and responsibility far more than they fear Donald Trump’s brand of dictatorship or even anarchy.

As with all cult members, they are frightened people, going full Trump by lashing out at anyone who attempts to open their eyes to the truth.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

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 or a reverse income tax
  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

The solution to America’s student debt problem.

My favorite fountain of economic ignorance, the Libertarians, write about the student debt problem.

Senate Democrats Want Biden To Unilaterally Forgive Billions of Dollars in Student Loans
Legally, he might be able to do it. Fiscally, he shouldn’t.
MIKE RIGGS | 11.17.2020 3:10 PM

With Democrats staring down the possibility of Republicans maintaining control of the Senate, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.) and 12 other Democratic Senators want President-elect Joe Biden to forgive hundreds of billions of dollars in student loan debt by using the Education Department’s power “to modify, compromise, waive, or release student loans.”

Warren promised during her own presidential campaign that she would, if elected, “direct the Secretary of Education to use their authority to begin to compromise and modify federal student loans consistent with my plan to cancel up to $50,000 in debt for 95% of student loan borrowers (about 42 million people).” It appears she’d like Biden to do the same.I Have No Budget, am Buried in Debt, but I'm Going on Vacation : Enemy of Debt

Aside from the question about whether a President has the power to cancel any amount of student loan debt, why just $50,000? Why only 95% of students?

Much of the rationale probably goes to the “Who will pay for it?” question, a question that in itself demonstrates ignorance of federal financing.

Just to reiterate what has often been revealed in this blog, no one pays for a Monetarily Sovereign government’s spending. To pay for anything, our federal government, which unlike state/local governments is Monetarily Sovereign. To pay for anything, it creates brand new dollars, ad hoc.

Despite those misleading “debt clocks,” and warnings about federal debt being a “ticking time bomb,” your federal taxes do not pay for federal financial obligations.

In fact, federal taxes pay for nothing. Future generations of federal taxpayers will pay for nothing. Federal tax dollars, unlike state/local tax dollars, are destroyed upon receipt. The moment they are received they cease to exist as part of any money-supply measure.

This would be quite a gift for many student loan borrowers who still have outstanding balances (myself included).

As the Manhattan Institute’s Beth Akers noted last year, the typical four-year college graduate completes their degree with less than $30,000 in student loan debt.

Meanwhile, the College Board’s most recent effort to calculate the lifetime earnings premium of a college degree finds that the average four-year degree holder makes $400,000 more over their working lifetime than someone with just a high school diploma.

In 2015, researchers Christopher R. Tamborini, ChangHwan Kim, and Arthur Sakamoto published a paper in Demography that measured the 50-year lifetime earnings gap between high school graduates and bachelor’s degree holders at $896,000 for men and $630,000 for women.

In 2011, Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce pegged the B.A. earnings premium at $964,000. Whether the premium is shrinking or we’re just getting better at measuring it—or some combination of both—it’s still a good return on what comes out to roughly $7,000 in interest for borrowers who repay the average-sized loan in the standard 10-year timeframe.

While the “typical” (median?) four-year graduate may owe “only” $30,000, that isn’t the whole, financial point.

  1. Many students graduate owing far more than $30,000
  2. Even students with “only” $30,000 in debt may have been depleted financially if they paid cash for as much as they could, so as to minimize the student debt.
  3. Some students can’t afford to repay even $1 in debt.
  4. Attending college also has a hidden cost: Students are less able to earn money while in school, so the difference between what they could have earned and actually earned is one, often unrecognized, cost of college. It is the reason for Step #5 in the Ten Steps to Prosperity — Salary for Attending School (below). Many families do not want their children to attend college, because of the need for current income.

While federally issued and guaranteed loans have made it possible for the poorest Americans to attain education, those subsidies have also driven up the cost of education at a rate multiple times higher than inflation.

It is also now quite clear that making student loan debt easy to accumulate but nearly impossible to discharge in bankruptcy has helped millions of students get ahead while enabling a smaller (but still large) number of students to borrow money they can’t repay in order to purchase degree programs they can’t complete, can’t utilize, or can’t recognize as crap.

Loans have not made it possible for the poorest Americans to attain education. Some families need their young people to work, and bring dollars into the family. These families discourage finishing high school, much less than attending college.

The U.S. federal government never should lend dollars to anyone, much less to students. The government neither needs nor uses paid-back dollars. It already has infinite dollars. If the government deems any project to be worth financial support or encouragement, it should give, not lend, money to that project.

The sole function of lending to students is to tie a repayment anvil to their ankles at the time of their greatest money need for business creation and entrepreneurship.

As for the “degree programs they can’t complete, can’t utilize, or can’t recognize as crap,” this is akin to the old, childish, “Why do I have to learn algebra” complaint. Schooling has many benefits, most of which are realized only much later, if ever.

For many students in elementary school, algebra, history, art, sports, etc., etc. never are used in later life. Yet they are taught. Why? Because no one knows which people will benefit from which courses. The same is true of a college education.

The more people who attend college, the more likely some of them will use what they learn, and the more likely benefits to society will accrue.

Additionally, college is a time of life-learning and maturation, among young people of common ages, while being instructed by adults. It is a time of learning how to learn, rather than merely carrying forward ignorant beliefs from generation to generation.

Actually people who borrow the least amount of money that have the hardest time repaying it:

Defaults are concentrated among the millions of students who drop out without a degree, and they tend to have smaller debts. That is where the serious problem with student debt is.

Students who attended a two- or four-year college without earning a degree are struggling to find well-paying work to pay off the debt they accumulated.

That is the “anvil tied to the ankles” we mentioned. These drop-out students struggle to find well-paying jobs, even under the best of situations. But being also liable for debt repayment can lead to destitution.

And many of the drop-outs occur for financial reasons, a self-fulfilling burden on the poor, whose major crime is wanting to extricate themselves from poverty and believing a college education could help.

If the Education Department forgave up to $50,000 in student loan debt for every borrower, it would be helping many people like myself who don’t need it at the expense of the public fisc (and where is the “free” money for people who paid off their student loans, or haven’t gone or won’t ever go to college?).

The “public fisc” presumably is the U.S. Treasury, which never can run short of dollars. The “public fisc” easily could fund millions, billions, or trillions in additional expenses, simply by creating the money.

And then the author, Mike Riggs, offers the, “If I can’t get mine, he shouldn’t get his” reason for the elimination of federal spending.

The foundation of Libertarianism is to oppose all government and all government spending as being “too much. Because all government spending goes to some people and not to others, it all can be criticized on the basis of “If I can’t get mine, he shouldn’t get his.”

This devolves to zero government and zero government spending, which presumably is what Libertarians want.

The stimulus effect would likely be small, considering that the money a liberated borrower would now have to spend on something other than student loans is not the full amount of the loan, but the monthly payment.

As with the COVID-19 stimulus checks, borrowers might bank that amount or put it toward other debts.

The first sentence is a confused mystery. The stimulus effect would be the amount of each loan plus future anticipated payments.

From Forbes, “There are 45 million borrowers who collectively owe nearly $1.6 trillion in student loan debt in the U.S.”

If 45 million students each were given $50,000, that would be an immediate infusion to the economy of $2.7 Trillion. Or if those students merely were given what they owe, that would amount to a $1.6 infusion to the economy. This is not “likely to be small.” It would be a significant stimulus to the American economy, as well as to the individuals receiving the money.

And even if much of the money is banked or used to pay off other debts, it still is a stimulus to the economy.

The most libertarian policy preference in my view is two-pronged: get the federal government out of the lending and guaranteeing game, and make student loan debt reasonably dischargeable in bankruptcy.

These two policies would realign the incentives of colleges, lenders, and students to bring down prices and saddle fewer potential students with loans they are unlikely to repay.

The Libertarian policy always is to reduce government, no matter the current size. They have the weird belief that federal spending takes away their freedoms, which is utter nonsense.

Do government-funded roads, bridges, dams and streets take away your freedoms? What about the government-funded military, fire departments, and police departments?

How about the government agencies that assure safe food, safe air travel, national parks, museums, and schools. And then there is the government-funded judiciary, Congress, national banks, CIA, FBI, NASA, and the myriad other government agencies that protect our lives?

And then comes the Libertarian solution: Make bankruptcy easier. That is, cheat non-government lenders while lowering your credit score, making future borrowing more difficult. Perfect.

If that is a bridge too far for Biden and a Democratic Congress—and it probably is, considering those policies would also make it harder for low-income students to borrow and the market upheaval would probably snuff out a significant number of schools—Dynarski’s writing has convinced me that rethinking repayment timeframes is an acceptable middle way:

One solution is to lengthen the timeframe of loan repayment. In the U.S., the standard is for borrowers to repay their loans in ten years. Other countries let students pay back their loans over a far longer horizon. In Sweden, students pay their loans back over 25 years. For a $20,000 loan with an interest rate of 4.3 percent, this longer repayment would mean a monthly payment of $100 instead of $200.

This is the classic “Lower your payments” scam, which is accomplished by lengthening the payment period. The credit card companies use this scam when they tell people they can pay a minimum amount every month for many years.

Borrowers with very low earnings will struggle with even a payment of $100. Some countries, including England and Australia, therefore link payments directly to income, so that borrowers pay little to nothing during hard times.

Income-driven repayment (IDR), various forms of which U.S. borrowers have been able to apply for since 2009, caps your monthly payment as a percentage of your income and extends the repayment period from 120 months to 300 months. Make 25 years’ worth of payments under any one of several IDR plans, and your balance is forgiven, with the forgiven amount taxed as income.

People with very low incomes, who barely can pay their rent or put food on the table, will be required to pay an unaffordable amount for the rest of their lives, thereby dooming them to poverty, forever.

Some estimates predict 33 percent of IDR participant will fail to pay off their balance after 25 years, but the amount they pay over 300 months could still exceed the amount they borrowed for all but the poorest loan holders (and you’re not getting blood from those stones no matter how hard you squeeze).

Based on typical Libertarian economics ignorance, the author thinks liberty and freedom must be paid for by impoverishing the populace, rather than by a government that cannot be impoverished.

In summary:

  1. All school loans should be paid off
  2. Free school should be made available for all ages, all income groups, and all levels, not just for grades K-12. This will enhance America’s  standard of living and international competitiveness.
  3. The dollars spent will stimulate economic growth
  4. The federal government easily can pay for it all without levying any taxes.
  5. The cost of scholarships will be eliminated, allowing schools to devote more financial resources to teachers’ salaries and to educational hard assets (modernization of buildings, electronics, student transportation, etc).
  6. Contrary to popular wisdom, federal spending for college does not represent a transfer of funds from the middle-classes to the upper classes. It does not represent a transfer from anyone. It represents a transfer from the federal government to the economy.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

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 or a reverse income tax
  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 closing down the economy for COVID-19 is a bad idea

From the 11/15/2020 Chicago Tribune”

Biden aide says lockdown would be ‘last resort’
One of President-elect Joe Biden’s top coronavirus advisers said Sunday that a national lockdown of businesses and schools would be a “measure of last resort” to fight the ongoing surge in COVID-19 cases across the United States.

The number of infections has grown by 5 percent or more in 47 states in the past week, with a national average over the past week of 145,401 new cases per day.

“In the spring we didn’t know a lot about COVID, we responded, in a sense, with an on-off switch,” Dr. Vivek Murthy, a former U.S. surgeon general tapped to help lead Biden’s newly named COVID-19 task force, told Fox News Sunday.

“We just shut things down because we didn’t know exactly how this was spreading and where it was spreading, but we learned a lot more since then.”

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Closing down the economy for COVID-19 is a bad idea because:
1. It causes massive suffering for too many American businesses, workers, consumers, and students.
2. It’s bad politics
and the most important reason:
3.It’s unnecessary

1. It causes massive suffering for many businesses, workers, and consumers, and students.
Congress, falsely claiming the federal government can run short of dollars, has been reluctant to send more stimulus dollars into the economy.

So, hundreds of thousands of businesses, especially restaurants, food-service, and travel-related businesses either have gone out of business or have been forced to lay off employees.

The human toll in lost income has been, and will be, monumental. America will be headed toward 3rd-world status, as poverty creeps across the land.

As for students, distance learning simply does not cut it. The education is inferior. American students are losing months from their best learning and best-earning lives, months that cannot be made up.

Today’s students rapidly are becoming America’s “Lost Generation.”

2. It’s bad politics
As foolish and harmful as Trump has been, in his demands that states and cities “open up,” without offering any COVID-19 response plan, he is politically astute.

The people are dying, Trump knows their immediate concern is feeding their children, paying their rent, and avoiding financial destitution. They are so desperate, they will risk their lives to have income.

The politician who closes his/her economy is the politician who will have a more difficult fight in the next election.

3.It’s unnecessary
The combination of 100% mandatory mask-wearing, plus moderate social distancing, would be sufficient to create the equivalence of “herd immunity.”

We as a society all give up a few our liberties so that our entire social structure can function.

We wear set belts in the car (“Click it or ticket.”) For modest discomfort, we save our lives and those of our passengers.
We don’t smoke in airplanes, buses, elevators, restaurants, theaters, and most other public venues.
We wear helmets when riding motorcycles.
We vaccinate ourselves and children, which has substantially eliminated childhood diseases, and reduced influenza.
We don’t urinate, defecate, or go naked in public.
We don’t talk in a theater.
We give some of our money to charity.
We attend funerals and wakes.
In most places, we don’t carry machine guns.
We don’t beat people.
We obey laws.

America is not a one-person island. We cooperate, and cooperation requires doing some things, not for ourselves only, but also for others.

There are dozens of ways we give up freedoms, and one of those many ways would be to wear a mask, for the good of society.

Everyone would prefer not to wear a mask, just as everyone would prefer not to be forced to wear a seat belt. Wearing a mask can be uncomfortable, hot, sweaty. and cumbersome. You have to remember to take one with you. And, masks hide our facial expressions, which are a primary method for our communication.

But wearing a mask is the single, most effective way, to end the COVID — more effective than washing your hands or disinfecting surfaces, and probably more effective even than social distancing.

With the exception of restaurants, most businesses could operate with everyone wearing masks. Most offices could operate. Most production and delivery facilities could operate. Most schools, hospitals, and doctors could function.

With the exception of the players themselves, most sports could operate.

Masks work. If you wear a mask and I wear a mask, the likelihood that either of us would communicate the virus to the other is quite low.

A nationwide mandate that everyone must wear a mask, would effectively end the transmission of COVID. This surely is a small price to pay for herd immunity to a deadly disease.

Had we done this back in May, the disease would be rare, if even existent, today.

I urge each “no-masker” to be a patriotic American, thinking not only of yourself, but of your fellow Americans, and agree to a nationwide mandate.Watch Trump Fondle an American Flag at CPAC

We are all on this lifeboat together, and this is not a good time to demand your right to do as you please.

Patriotism is more than hugging a flag. It take unselfish cooperation to “make America great, again.”

Given the choice of closing the economy or a national mask-mandate or doing what we are doing, I would choose the mask mandate.

People are getting sick. People are dying. America is dying.

We can’t continue to do nothing.

We must take action. The national mask mandate is the path out of this mess.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

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

The most important problems in economics involve:

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 or a reverse income tax
  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