Fit to be Fried

June 4, 2008

Bend over, the cable company’s gonna take it outta your ass now

As if cable prices weren’t high enough, the cable companies have found a way to gouge you even further for using their services. Once again, the bastards are using the powers afforded to their virtual monopolies to squeeze every last dollar out of subscribers who have little or no choice in which services they’ll use. What are you gonna do? Switch to DSL? Not bloody likely, those providers are no doubt only two steps behind the cable companies, like always. Where the hell is Teddy Roosevelt when we need him? Oh right, dead. Sigh…

(more…)

May 22, 2008

You’re too stupid to know what to do with your money

Uncle Sam Is Not Your Mama

  1. Depression’s got ahold of me…
  2. You’re too stupid to know what to do with your money
  3. Gimme Gimme Gimme! Don’t Ask What For!
  4. Death and Taxes. And More Taxes.

OK, so what was I talking about?

Oh yeah, the New Deal, and crippling national debt, and the loooong, slow, agonizing death of the American Spirit.

Proof that the road to hell is paved with good intentions.

Roosevelt adopted the Keynesian model of fiscal policy, which was to run deficits during hard times, for fear that the private sector would not invest enough to bring the country out of a recession. He also followed Great Britain’s lead in abandoning the gold standard in 1933, and forced citizens to sell all but the most trivial amounts of privately held gold to the government. After that number, he raised the price of gold from $20.67 to $35.00 and cut the value of the dollar nearly in half. In the midst of such devastatingly bad decisions, FDR instituted Social Security and what would later become our modern welfare system, and lowered taxes. Contrary to where you might think things are going, these were not in and of themselves bad ideas, and did much to help the economy, although not in the way the Keynesian economists had hoped. Instead of funneling the new income afforded to them through social programs (in combination with a sharp downturn in unemployment) back into the economy,1 people started to pay back the debts they had been accruing over the years.

Things actually looked bright for a while, until a sudden backslide in 1937 caused unemployment to rise again, and production and profits to waste away. Roosevelt’s answer to this was to nearly abandon any attempt to balance the national budget and instead spend money we didn’t have like there was no tomorrow.2Government spending tripled between 1930 to 1940, as did the national debt, from 16 billion to 72 billion.

Though employment was slowly improving even after 1937’s nosedive, numbers would not significantly improve until the advent of World War II and the subsequent drive to provide supplies, men and services to support the war effort. At the height of the big deuce, unemployment dropped to about 3%, and have never risen above 8% to this day3 Even though the economy seemed to be getting better, the damage from FDR’s deficit spending practices had been done. Though most of the New Deal was rallied against and done away with by the advent of the war4, the powers of the federal government were greatly enhanced, and our long slide towards becoming a socialist state had begun.

Did he just say “socialist state”, referring to the United States?

What would you call it?

I began this series intent on filling you in on the decline of the American Spirit , and believe me, this history lesson is leading somewhere. In my next post, “The Land of the Free” keeps taking and giving it away…5

    Footnotes
  1. again, thanks largely to government subsidies
  2. This fine tradition has been carried on by our government ever since.
  3. One has to wonder though, how much of this can be attributed to the New Deal, and how much can be attributed to massive conscription into the armed forces
  4. To his credit, Roosevelt, who personally believed in a balanced federal budget, always intended for most of his social policies to be temporary.
  5. Read more about the Great Depression at Wikipedia.com

May 20, 2008

Depression’s got ahold of me…

semperfried76 is the last hope for humanity.
Too bad he hates you all.

This one goes out to all those who think that it’s the government’s job to provide them with healthcare, free money when they can’t pay their bills, college education, food, a roof over their heads, personal happiness, etc…

“You must obey this now for a Law, that he that will not worke shall not eate (except by sickness he be disabled:) for the labors of thirtie or fortie honest and industrious men shall not be consumed to maintaine an hundred and fiftie idle loyterers”

Captain John Smith of Jamestown Colony uttered that famous phrase back in the early 1600’s, and for hundreds of years, this was the prevalent attitude in America- the term American Spirit came to embody a can-do attitude combining initiative, ingenuity, integrity and ambition. Men made their fortunes from the sweat of their brow and the power of their minds, and, combined with a tradition of inventiveness sparked by founding fathers Benjamin Franklin1 and Thomas Jefferson, this spirit caused America to flourish in the face of constant adversity. America, as a young nation, was beset on all sides with forces that would do anything to see it fail2, and yet it refused to die even through one of the bloodiest Civil Wars the planet had ever seen. Even up to the 1960’s, this was the case, as evidenced in President John F. Kennedy’s famous quote:”Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country”.

Where is the American Spirit now?

Great Depression Breadline

I wish I knew.

What I do know, is how it started to dwindle

In 1929, a combination of rampant debt, a sudden crash in the stock market, a decline in exports, and a shortage of money caused what was known as the Great Depression. Keep in mind that the Great Depression was a worldwide occurrence, not isolated to the U.S.; People worldwide were out of work and starving as a direct result of mistrust on the international trade market, which caused prices to rise uncontrollably while wages and jobs dwindled. The unemployment rate had soared to over 25% by 1932, a rate that has never been exceeded since, nor has been even halfway matched since 1940. To combat the depression Roosevelt instituted what was known as “The New Deal”, which was, in short, an attempt to give everyone everything they wanted 3.

Though the New Deal can be credited with such notable improvements as the repeal of Prohibition, and the stabilization of the banking system, it was criticized soundly by both the right and left wing of American politics and eventually resulted in a national debt that has never been paid off to this day, and in fact never stopped growing in size. 4

More on this Wednesday, I get the feeling this one’s gonna have to be a series…

,,,,,,,

    Footnotes
  1. Pun definitely intended
  2. If you don’t believe me, check out Wikepedia’s American Military History, there hasn’t been five straight years that we’ve gone since before our Nation’s inception that there hasn’t been some kind of military conflict.
  3. wikipedia.com, New Deal Wiki
  4. I tell a lie, as it turns out. After some judicious double-checking, I found that the national debt did indeed slightly drop in 1947, 1951, 1956 and 1957. Four years out of eighty.

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