The New York-based Conference Board raised its forecast of future
economic activity this week, reversing five months of decline, the AP
reported.
The index is designed to forecast economic activity in the next three
to six months based on 10 economic components, including stock prices,
building permits and initial claims for unemployment benefits.
By any logical standard, this should be good news.
Maybe not the kind of news where everybody puts on silly hats and
marches down Main Street, but it is good news. I think. I suppose it
could be argued that it isn't good, or good enough, or stupendous news,
but I think it ought to be difficult to argue that an economic uptick
is bad news.
In what has become the AP's "new" style of mixing facts with opinion
and presenting what emerges as "news," the reverse in America's
economic slide is actually not good news at all.
The AP report stressed consumer confidence and how important consumer
confidence was to the health of the overall economy. The AP's report
about the economic upturn was headlined, "Economy Sends Signals of More
Weakness to Come."
The American economy is backed only by the confidence of those who
invest in it that they will receive a return on their investment. If
people believed that the dollar was in free-fall, then they would move
their assets into some safer, more stable denomination, forcing it into
further decline.
That, in turn, would cause other investors to lose confidence, who
would then also convert their dollars into yen, or euros, or whatever,
which creates a new cycle of divestiture and devaluation, until
eventually, nobody will accept it in exchange for goods or services.
At that point, the dollar becomes as worthless as the paper upon which
it is printed. That's all that keeps our economy going is confidence.
Consider the facts as they exist. America is more than $10 trillion in
debt. To put it into perspective, paying the debt off – at one dollar
per second – America would be debt-free in 375,000 years!
According to the National Debt Clock, the total national debt works out
to roughly $30,978.28 per U.S. citizen. Why is it worked out per U.S.
citizen? Because that is how the debt is apportioned. You owe it. All
that keeps America's debtors from foreclosing is the expectation that
investing in America will produce the best return available over the
long haul.
Think about it from your personal perspective. Where would you invest
your money if U.S. investments were collapsing? And this is your
country! The majority of U.S. investment comes from overseas, so if you
would pull your investments if things went south, why wouldn't they?
All that forestalls that spiral into financial oblivion is that
intangible element of consumer confidence. Seventy percent of U.S.
domestic economic activity is spurred by U.S. consumers. If you aren't
confident you will have a job next year, are you going to risk taking
on five years of car payments to drive a new Ford this year to keep an
American worker on the job? And, if you don't, somebody else will have
to.
Or the spiral will continue. Soon the guy who built the Ford you
couldn't afford to buy will be worried about his job and will decide to
put off buying a new fridge. The guy who works for Frigidaire rethinks
buying a new big-screen TV until next year, and the guy who works at
the TV factory decides he can get through another season on his old
lawnmower.
And so it goes. Why? Because of confidence. If confidence in the
economy tanks, newspapers won't be able to sell advertising, because
advertisers won't be able to sell product. TV networks won't be able to
maintain their presence, and politicians will have to rely on some
other method of maintaining their visibility and therefore their
careers. A total collapse of the U.S. economy would bite deeply across
the board, hurting the common and the elite, the rich and the poor,
Republican and Democrat, liberal and conservative – no one would be
spared.
Moreover, its collapse would leave its creditors holding $10 trillion
in worthless paper, which would predicate a worldwide economic collapse
unlike any the world has ever seen. All because of plummeting consumer
confidence.
So, why is everybody talking down the economy? The baffling answer is
politics. I say baffling, because if the strategy works, everybody
loses.
The Democrats have been searching for an issue they could hang their
campaign on since 2004. They had two choices: the war and the economy.
George Hegel, a 19th century philosopher, developed a three-part
dialectic for popular mass manipulation called "The Hegelian Dialectic"
divided into the thesis, or premise, the antithesis, or method and the
synthesis, or solution.
Once establishing the premise, in this case, that a bad economy will
sway voters a particular way, the methodology is to create, by
repetition and use of the media, the perception that the economy is in
trouble and that they have the solution. Having created the perception,
the public then clamors for the "solution," in this case, vote for the
Democrats.
An identical dialectic was in concurrent operation with the antithesis
being to talk down the war, America's chances for success, and to
highlight enemy successes until the public began to clamor for the
synthesis, which is a vote for the Democrats will end the war before we
lose it.
The war dialectic was hard to maintain; American troops are notoriously
brave and stubborn, and they kept performing such acts of
heart-stopping heroism and making such gains against the enemy that it
prompted Democrat James Clyburne blurt out that, "good news about Iraq
is bad news for Democrats."
Since then, the left has pretty much divided itself evenly between
talking down the war and talking down the economy, either ignorant or
uncaring of the consequences of their actions.
It matters little about the sacrifices made by our forces on the Iraqi
battlefields to achieve victory. Those sacrifices will themselves be
sacrificed in exchange for political power. It matters nothing that
America gave her word to the Iraqi people – promises are made to be
broken.
And if the economy takes a little dip, well, it always came back
before. "So there is a price to be paid for power, after all."
Original
Source
|
|
|||||||||
|
Shabbat Times
Subscribe 4 Updates
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
Power at any price
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||||
|
|
|||||||||


![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)