Monday, August 6, 2007

Launching of the Money and Ethics Blog!

It may appear that this blog is politically motivated, but really it is apolitically motivated! To explain the distinction I refer you to the divine economy theory. In reality there is no political role in the economy - which I realize is a jolt to contemporary thinking - and that is because every act of intervention is a source of disruption, an extention of corruption into the economy, and a cause of a cascading series of injustices.

This blog is also apolitical in the sense that it is not partisan. All parties are seen as intent on intervening for their own sake. All intervention - all acts of political involvement in the economy - are seen as unethical.

One of the keys to prosperity, stolen by the thieves and used repeatedly and surreptitiously, is money! Control of the money system enables the politically motivated to intervene in the economy.

Consider the implication of the following sequence:

  • Financing a war is only possible when the money supply can be expanded; combined with any and all propaganda to convince people that the enemy is vile. Even when public opinion turns sour the war can still continue because the money supply can be expanded.
  • However, a day of reckoning is on the horizon, as a consequence of the counterfeiting by the ego-driven interventionists, but the goal of the interventionist is to shift the blame politically, with total disregard for the pervasive impoverishing of the nation.
  • Now an unforeseen problem appears: a bridge on a major thoroughfare collapses and the structural soundness of bridges all over the nation become suspect. The only recourse to the interventionists is to throw money at the problem and to do that it is necessary to crank up the printing presses and print more money. This politically sanctioned counterfeiting operation can take no repose, which means that it becomes more difficult to hide itself from scrutiny plus the time horizon for the subsequent disasterous effects on prosperity becomes much abbreviated.


This blog will sometimes show the natural relationship between money and ethics but most of the time it will point out the detrimental effects of artificial money - more frankly, of corrupt fiat currency - and the ethical consequences.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Now that we face hard times ahead, it is probably best that you know as much as you can about money (fiat money). This is a good article, and check out this report on fiat money; I found it very useful.

Fiat Currencies

-Cheers!