So says Gerald Celente, in a display of cognitive dissonance
in today’s
interview at the Daily Bell. He does a good job of pointing to the
criminality of the system, and then looks to the system to provide salvation.
First, the criminality in foreign policy:
I can tell you how much immoral. How
about starting wars in Afghanistan and Iraq – in Iraq with the proof that a war
was started that killed at least a half a million people that was started under
fake reasons; lies that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction and ties
to al Qaeda. An Afghan war that's the longest war in American history, the war
in Libya that they called a time-limed, scope-limited kinetic action that's
destroyed the entire nation.
Then the criminality of crony-capitalism:
You want to talk about immorality?
How about the "too big to fail"? The government mandated immoral act
of stealing money from the American people to give it to the banks, financiers
and favored corporations?
This sums up pretty well the current situation.
He is able to glimpse the solution:
Under capitalism there's no such
thing [as too big to fail]. You're not too big to fail; you fail. Big, small,
medium, you fail – it's capitalism.
Yet he cannot draw logical conclusions from this
insight. His solution?
…put back the laws and acts that
were passed that prohibited the multinationals from taking over the world,
particularly the United States, laws such as the Sherman Antitrust Act, the
Clayton Antitrust Act, the Robinson-Patman Act and, of course, in the banking
sector, the Glass-Steagall Act.
Please stop. The criminal
enterprise known as the state, described so well in the paragraphs cited above,
somehow is able to morally and judiciously implement monopoly-enforced regulations
that will be successful at taming the corruption?
Why not let the market regulate, as is implied in Celente’s
advocacy of allowing failing enterprises to fail?
Celente moves on to big-business bashing…for all the wrong reasons:
You probably could not count the
hundreds of thousands of mom-and-pop businesses and entrepreneurs that have
been wiped out because of Walmarts. You couldn't count how many hardware
stores, stationary stores, pharmacists, small farms have been put out of business
because of the ConAgras of the world and the CVSs and Home Depots and Staples
and Office Depots and Lowes.
The Wal-Marts of the world survive and thrive because they
satisfy customers. That they also
advocate for and are beneficiaries of government intervention in the market is
the issue that should be addressed. Yet,
Celente calls for more regulation, and at the same time advocates that the
market (meaning the individual “votes” of each customer) should not be allowed
to determine winners and losers.
Now to the oft-repeated shell game regarding the “private”
central bank:
Most people don't even know what a
central bank is and they still believe the lie that the Federal Reserve is a
quasi-government institution when it's not. It's a totally private bank. Most
people don't even know that. So most people are uninformed and like in all
countries, they follow their leaders. Very few people rebel.
Different central banks around the world have different legal
structures. Getting into a debate about
what is private and what is public is a shell game and is completely
immaterial. Central banks are monopolies
created by the state. Full stop.
Legislatures passed laws to create central banks – in whatever
form they take. They passed the laws,
they can repeal the laws. That the bank
is public, private, or some-combination is immaterial – central banks are
creatures of state creation, and can be eliminated by legislative action.
Instead of calling for the panoply of regulation as he does
in this interview, might Celente just call for the repeal of legislation that
has enabled central banking? Simple.
Celente is also anti-immigration:
I'm in favor of bringing in all the
people we need but when you can't take care of your own, you want to bring in
more?
Who is this “we”? Who
is the “your” that is not able to “take care of [their] own”? Who is the “you” that wants to bring in more?
Stop talking in terms of government action, when you complain
about the immorality of government action.
Celente is one of several who are very well able to identify
the state as a criminal enterprise in foreign and crony-capitalist matters, yet
looks to the state in terms of salvation via regulation.
For his efforts in terms of pointing out the immorality, he
should be commended. However, he does a
disservice by advocating government action and abandonment of market principles
as the solution.
It is not possible.
Thank You, Mosquito, Thank You! I could not quite put my finger on what, exactly, was uncomfortable to me in Celente's interview. You pointed out every single discrepancy that came to my mind.
ReplyDeleteI swear, I learn more from you than even LRC!!
You are very kind. If not for sites like (and especially) LRC, I wouldn't have in my head the basic building blocks necessary to add my two cents.
Delete"Please stop". Ha. I love it, how many times must I say this to myself every day reading the usual propaganda?
ReplyDeleteCelente and others like him have always perplexed. They seemingly grasp the problems so well, and then when you wait for the payoff it's…we need more government to fix this evil government!
At least he's gotta hint…seemingly sorta kinda maybe getting something of what real capitalism should be.
Could make a fun guest for me someday.
I think I will post this one on Lions, likely Tuesday.
Broken Record Libertarian Says: Continue to keep up the great work, BM.
Marc, I always appreciate the encouragement. Thank you!
DeleteGreat review of Celete's B.S.He never makes any sense.He always making
ReplyDeletesome salacious rant.Does he sit in front the mirror and watch himself?
Ever since the little exposure received a few years ago the ego has been
off the charts.Does he still have scarf on when and where ever speaks??
Does he need to read some Merrill Jensen??