NOTE: (From The Author): This book is being e-mailed free to all who
wish to read it. 500 copies were printed and sold easily. I have two
left, which I will keep. Why am I literally giving it away? Because I
love America, and my land is in need of a transfusion of logic and action.
This is my contribution to the land I love. I make my living as a precious
metals broker, and this occupation supports me. (1-Guess-786-8822).
I urge everyone receiving this to read it,
print it, and send it to everyone you know who knows how to think, vote, act,
and who loves America. See to it that this gets circulated and read widely,
and perhaps it isn't too late. Enjoy and send it on!
"The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well
meaning but without understanding." - Supreme Court
This book has much original
thought, and overlooked or forgotten observations. The solutions offered are
constitutional and logical, regardless of the fact that many will think them
radical. They aren't!
All actions have reactions, a basic law of physics.
Addictions are actions, usually enjoyable at first, with virtually 100% of them
having disastrous unintended consequences or reactions, after the addiction has
taken hold. It is easy to observe an addiction's consequences, especially to the
non-addicted. I am told that alcohol
addiction is resplendent in the beginning, as are addictions to drugs,
nicotine, runaway credit card spending, gambling, and even over-eating.
The consequences of addictions can have elephantine after
effects on an entire nation, as an example, the importation of Africans as
slaves over three hundred years ago. Slaves doing hard field work, and not having to pay them a salary, was
an addictive disaster for slave holders in the north as well as the south for a
150 year period. While it may not have
been easy to raise a crop without slaves, there have always been tasks and
occupations difficult to perform that would be far easier with slave labor.
Slavery, and the brief, well publicized
addiction to it, is a blot on our history, and the consequences of it are
unmistakable.
The addiction of acquiring handouts from government, with
no immediately observable consequences, has destroyed America, and will be one
of the main themes of this book. Like other addictions, it seems just too good
to be true...at first. We now have a government handing out money to virtually
anyone who needs or desires it. Will wonders never cease? They have. The consequences of this
munificence have unfortunately not become obvious to Republicans and
Democrats. There are alcoholics,
gamblers, over-eaters, and many other types of "anonymous"
organizations and convocations, which may help those who have slipped into the
dreamy world of addictions, but so far, no one has come up with a
"Government Handouts Anonymous," which an entire nation could join,
to get us out of the consequences of our collective addiction.
Some consequences of actions are positive, progressive, or
inevitable, and a change isn’t desirous or necessary. Inventions
have yielded extraordinary consequences, most of which
have been superb. The consequences of
actions by bureaucrats and politicians holed up in Babylon-on-the-Potomac,
especially over the past sixty five years, have headed America on the road to
total decay, the same road uniformly trod by 100% of past civilizations.
We may have gone so far down that road, it
is too late even for deathbed redemption. Governmental and political actions,
with their consequences, have far overshadowed wonderful changes brought about by
invention and technical advances.
Gibbon wrote of the decline and fall of the Roman Empire,
long after it happened, in great part due to senseless moves by ancient Roman
Caesars and their governments, egged on by thoughtless constituencies, who
threatened not to re-elect them unless their demands were met. I see a great
many similarities in 2001. Julius
Caesar was hooked on power, just as are the D.C. snipes.
America was conceived and founded with a totally unique
philosophy. Our Founders did not lust for power and control, subjecting the
populace to their whims and ideas by force. Our philosophy was without doubt
influenced by Aristotle. But Aristotelian philosophy had never been inculcated
into a political act, and certainly not the founding of a nation. The American
Nation was to be founded on the sovereignty of the individual, not a state or
federal government. "To secure these rights, Governments are instituted among
Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed."
The state was to be the servant of the individual, not the reverse. What
a revolutionary idea!
In any society, the "many" are ruled or governed
by a "few." America's
Founders devised a Constitution which had far more of the "many"
governed by far fewer of the "few," and not without the
"many's" permission.
from government, kings, rulers,
monarchs, etc., for the first time in human history.
In order to establish these wonderful new ideals, the Founders
indeed did commit their, "lives,
fortunes, and scared honor. The Founders realized there are but two
methods of dealing with people, and they are by (1) reason and (2) force. Force
had been in operation for thousands of years; but reason, freedom, liberty,
individual responsibility, and the concept of being responsible for one's own
life, and not being a servant of the state, were so unique, that the Founders
became the laughing stock of Europe, with its thousands of years of kings,
wars, and bloodshed. As a result of this singular experiment in history,
America inculcated in its citizens a still evident trait of generosity and love
of freedom.
Americans are the most benevolent, generous, unselfish
people in the entire world. We are
innovative, inventive, and prosperous. Of all the inventions in current use,
be it movies, TV, automobiles,
airplanes, radios, railroads, medicine, or computers; covered by millions of
patents, which expand thought processes to their most distant vistas, America
has usually been the inventor, developer, or manufacturer of them, leaving the
rest of the world in the dust. Our
successes have resulted from being blessed with freedom of the marketplace,
religion, association, and travel. We vote in secret, and our legislative,
judicial, and executive divisions are open and publicized daily by the media,
to the great befuddlement of the still extant slave states of the world.
We are a combination of all races in the
world, and have assimilated them with relative ease. We allow foreigners to own
property and even receive welfare, although I can not understand why.
America has defended freedom around the
world for over a hundred years, and usually with an affirmative vote of the
Congress. We have bankrupted ourselves
defending others, dispensing cash as limitless as the contents of a turn of the
century Sears catalog, making us the one remaining "super power" in
the world. The pickpockets in the former Soviet Union, Cuba, China, and North
Korea are total frauds, stealing our secrets, ideas, and inventions;
counterfeiting our currency, and getting away with the deceit. Even as this is
being written, former Soviet satellites are still attempting to rid themselves
of the Russian-communist infiltration and influence. The Berlin wall wasn’t put
there to keep people from getting into East Berlin, but to keep those captives
imprisoned. Our border patrols aren’t there to keep Americans from migrating
into Mexico, but in 100% of the cases, to keep the hoards of insolvent, illegal
Mexicans out. American voyagers abroad aren’t caught trying to sneak into
China, Russia, North Korea, or Cuba; other than for the wonder of seeing just
how destitute a totalitarian state can make its subjects.
Slavery still exists around the world, and has not been
limited to the enslavement of African Negroes.
America, a hundred and thirty years ago, was the first, and still among
the few to outlaw slavery. Britain's King George, due to his stupidity, greed,
and lack of the most basic common sense, caused us to revolt, and later his
army burned our Capitol and White House with seeming mirth and abandon a few
decades later, during the pointless War of 1812.
Having sacked Washington D.C., they were about to destroy
Baltimore. Fort McHenry held out for 25 grueling hours. King George's redcoats
were raining down bombs, rockets, and all sorts of firepower on the beleaguered
fort. Francis Scott Key was watching
throughout the night, and penned the poem that became our National Anthem.
Nice guy, King George! Forgiving Americans have gone to bat and
given of ourselves time after time since then, to defend Britain, and they have
a history of only attacking us. We have
helped just about everyone; anytime they have asked, and unfortunately still
do. Be it a tiny island in the Caribbean, a mid-east sheikdom, or an entire
continent, America has usually helped to defend the weak.
We are truly remarkable!
Every single action has a reaction or consequence.
America has experienced many bad reactions
or consequences from ill-considered actions, but far too many of late,
especially in the last sixty-five years. These consequences have hit us right
in the solar plexus, and hit us hard. We are in a bankrupt, declining
state. Our cities, education, general
morality and health, are in poor circumstance.
While the rest of the world may not be much better, and in most cases is
much worse, we have set the example for everyone else's degradation. We have
been the pillars of freedom for two centuries. Our Constitution has been
copied, as have our inventions and life style.
One of the strangest manifestations of the times, is that
here at home, epic confusion and heinous problems having to do with virtually
every segment of society are dimming the splendor once ascribed to us by
foreign viewers. Our cities are ruined,
our schools don't teach, gangs roam the streets, illegitimacy is 80% in one
sector, and the rest are pretty bad.
Today’s so called "music" is a dissonant, elaborate hoax, and
its performers are disgusting. Taxes are outrageous, our government is out of
control, and big brother takes more and more of our money and freedom each
day. We are never far from a snooping
bureaucrat who will tell us how much to grow, how much to charge, how much to
pay, how we must design our buildings, furniture, clothes, and
automobiles. Our manufacturing sector
has gone south, east, west, and every other direction imaginable, leaving our
cities with empty factories. As of 1998, General Motors alone had over 85,000
workers in Mexico. Many unemployed factory workers are on the dole or selling
drugs, stunting and frying the brains of young and old alike. Governments at
the state level rob the ignorant with their lotteries, which one has less
chance of winning than being struck by lightning.
Choked roads and erroneously dubbed "freeways," are
parking lots, which have made our air death dealing and thick with poisonous
chemicals. Food stamps are used by 30 million, and there are hundreds of
various types of federal doles, not counting thousands of godawful
"programs" and assorted federally invented and administered
gimcracks, that suck the very life blood out of every one of us, transfusing it
to various special interest groups such as manufacturers, farmers, retailers,
and wholesalers, not to mention those who may consider themselves entitled to
government largess because of a real or imagined physical deformation, extreme
age, and of course we must not forget the ever present
"homeless." There's plenty to
be enraged about, in the main due to the perfidy of elected politicians, who
look out for themselves by keeping their constituency feeding at the public trough
as much as possible, calling it by various fallacious titles that sound just
awesome...but are just the opposite. Currently, the federal government spends
over 1.7 trillion dollars a year, and collects hundreds of billions less with
the outrageous IRS "service," as they like to be called. The rest is
borrowed from our kids and grandchildren, unless we officially declare
bankruptcy first. In reality, we have
been bankrupt for decades.
America's current condition has come about fairly
gradually; at about the same speed as the human body ages. When you look in the
mirror each morning, it is impossible to detect a change from the previous
day. It is only by viewing old
photographs, or coming upon a long lost friend after 35 years, that the
enormous changes can be discerned. My
children cannot possibly know America, as it was 40 years ago, because they are
not yet 40 years of age. Being of a more advanced age, although not yet coming
face to face with the grim reaper, I know what has happened, and do not take
the conditions of the cities, schools, means of travel, economics, and other
ills casually. Those born into slavery in Russia or China cannot possibly
understand the comparative free beauty of America. Imagine the wonder of a
Russian who could browse in an American super-market. I would love to take everyone
under the age of 40 back to the date of their birth, so they could see how we
have degenerated. They might then
understand how America used to be, but no longer is.
I often wonder if the Romans, or even Germans knew they
were crashing, even when everything seemed so glorious. In the 1930's, the
Germans thought their meretricious world was so wonderful, that Hitler's
"Third Reich" would last for a thousand years.
To help celebrate Hitler's birthday on April
20, 1945, the Allies sent 1,000 bombers over Berlin, utterly destroying
it. Before his suicide ten days later,
and the absolute end, Hitler married his mistress Eva Braun, to make himself
'right with God' I suppose, and was still fondling the models of glorious
buildings he had planned for his opium dream of opulence. Days before Berlin's
ultimate destruction, Nazi planes dropped thousands of leaflets on the populace
telling them German victory was at hand. All civilizations decayed without the
knowledge of their citizens, till it was crashing about them. The relentless
slow death from disease is often unrecognizable until it has reached an
advanced and even fatal stage. We are sick, but most have not the slightest
inkling of the seriousness of our illness.
I know the problems, what got us here, and although there
is only a small chance of correcting them, perhaps a hundred years from now
someone will dig up this screed, and as they sift through the remains of
America, realize I had been prescient. A thousand years from now, when
archaeologists unearth those absurd Washington D.C. government buildings built
in the last fifty years, they will probably wonder what kind of gods those
people worshipped. Are we going down
without knowing it, as did previous civilizations?
It is an inescapable fact that every single nation or
dynasty that ever existed...from the beginning of time...has actually committed
suicide. Look at Egypt, Assyria, Babylon, Greece, or Rome, right on down to the
Twentieth Century. Britain never used
to see the sun set on some part of its empire.
It controlled two fifths of earth's land mass, and now has sold some of
its railroads to an American company, the Wisconsin Central. All of these
"suicides," if examined, will be seen to have been consequences of
actions taken by that nation's government, and gradually forced upon its
subjects without their consent or even knowledge, the decay happened so
slowly. Hitler might rule the world
today if he hadn't double crossed old "Uncle Joe" Stalin. Stalingrad
and Moscow ruined the Third Reich, not just because Hitler lost a quarter of a
million troops, but the consequences of his attempted conquering of Russia, in
violation of an agreement, loosed an additional nation on him. Russia began
producing tanks, planes and ammunition so speedily, and pushing the Germans
back so swiftly, that Hitler was doomed.
Russia lost 20 million in World War Two (WW II), fifty times more than
did America. After Japan bombed Pearl
Harbor on December 7, 1941, Emperor Hirihito thought winning the Pacific war
was a done deal...until a short 6 months later, when the Japs lost the war for
all practical purposes, thanks to the uncanny judgment of one American Admiral,
who sank four of her aircraft carriers in one day at the Battle of Midway.
They were irreplaceable, and Japan's Rising
Sun had begun to set, although she didn’t know it at the time.
We didn’t arrive at our present state with bad intentions.
"Liberals" and "conservatives" both do and vote for what
they think to be right. Politics will
be dealt with, but in the main, we got here because we are a wonderful,
generous, quiescent people, who dissolve in tears when we see a needy person, a
good cause, or the opportunity to correct a bad situation. During the Christmas
season of 1995, a supposedly homeless 13-year-old boy called the Salt Lake City
Human Services Department, and told a pitiful story. "He" was
abandoned, his mother couldn't care for him, his father had died of AIDS, and
could they help? It hit the wire
services, and thousands of dollars rolled in automatically from a caring
America. It was quickly discovered that the 13-year-old waif was indeed a
25-year-old woman, Birdie Hoaks, who had a rap sheet literally 6 feet
long. She had pulled off that stunt at
least five times previously. As usual, America gave of itself. In April 1996,
the media showed the hidden face of a mother supposedly dying of cancer.
She needed just enough money to buy a ticket
for her seven-year-old child, so it could be with its father, since mom was
dying with rapid dispatch. Instantly, over $100,000 came in, as if by
magic. It was another fraud, but
marvelous America came through...as usual. In 1998, President Bill Clinton was
exposed as being morally corrupt, a sexual pervert, liar, cheat, and a few
other things. In spite of the facts,
tens of millions of Americans wanted him to stay in office, and not be
punished. No nation ever went down the tubes with a clearer conscience than
America’s. Our nation has gone on for two hundred and twenty four years, about
a quarter century longer than the normal historic life span of most
nations. Might we defeat the odds and
continue for another two centuries?
Few people are evil.
Millions are misguided, uninformed, and act foolishly, but neither
liberals nor conservatives, Democrats or Republicans are evil.
They merely do and act as they perceive to
be proper, with a sprinkling of an ego trip at times, in keeping with their
being a member of the most generous group of people that ever lived: Americans.
I will elucidate on what is wrong and right, and how we got here...with the best
of intentions of course, but first things first.
Let's go back a couple of centuries and examine some of the non
political changes and inventions and their consequences which have advanced
civilization enormously, and most of which are American in origin, development,
manufacture, and use. An American, John
Deere, invented the steel plow in 1837, and it was so efficient it became known
as the "Singing Plow." It revolutionized farming around the world.
The invention of gunpowder and its commercial exploitation
by DuPont resulted in warfare killing far more, and being over much
faster. Sam Colt's six shooting
revolvers, Winchester's repeating rifles, Smith and Wesson's self contained
bullets, and Sharpes #3 Buffalo Guns are said to have tamed the west and beaten
the Indians. When rifles and sidearms
were obtained by the Indians, all hell broke loose, with the Indians being the
losers. It has been said by reliable medical historians that syphilis was given
to the white man by the Indians and carried around the world, a fact that will
undoubtedly be heartily disparaged by some, true or not. The gun, rifle, and
other assorted firepower did change the world.
Horses are not native to America.
Early Indians had no horses, regardless of what the movies may
infer. They didn't chase the buffalo with horses, but drove them off cliffs to
their death so as to eat their meat and use the hides for tipis. Horses were
imported from Spain to Mexico in the 14th century, quickly caught
on, and proved to be a reliable form of transport. Horses brought towns closer
together, helped to open the broad borders of America to hearty explorers and
settlers, and even helped Paul Revere to spread the word that
"The British are coming." Actually,
Revere didn’t make that announcement, as the British had detained him for
several hours. Since all were British
anyway, that wasn't what was said. The actual announcement was,
"The regulars are out!" Without horses,
620,000 men may not have died in the War Between The States, incorrectly called
the Civil War, and farming would have been primitive, to say the least.
Horses pulled carriages, guns, plows, and
pre-electric streetcars. Horses made
racing and betting practical, and were in large part responsible for the early
development of America.
When Col. Drake struck oil in 1849, "petroleum"
eliminated the need for whale oil to illuminate buildings, and greased the
wheels of progress beyond most imaginings of the time. Kerosene, an easy
by-product of crude, was quickly adopted by millions to cook, light, and fuel
all sorts of newly invented appliances.
Heat from oil eliminated the need to cut trees for heat, and quickly
displaced candles as the main source of illumination. The consequences of Col. Drakes'
oil, and subsequent explorations in America, immediately created an entire new
industry, and millionaires by the dozen.
Six years later, oil was discovered in Argentina, but no wealth was
created, because the contents of underground resources was, and 155 years
later, still is owned by the state, whereas in America the owners of land
generally own what is underneath it. Argentina still has never experienced
prosperity, thanks to governmental, rather than citizen ownership of wealth. As
the various inventions dealing with oil came on line, the consequences were
wondrous, and even death dealing, right down to today's 40,000 deaths a year in
America from the automobile alone, not to mention polluted air above our
cities. Oil lubricates, cools, powers, and gives other side blessings such as
plastics.
Drilling for oil brought a new fuel: natural gas. Natural
gas has largely replaced oil for home heating, with only 12% of American homes
still heating with oil. Natural gas creates no smog, burns cleanly, and gas
furnaces do not have to be cleaned every year. Compressed natural gas now
powers thousands of automobiles and trucks. This technology is now coming on
line with vehemence, and will eventually replace oil to a great degree.
Natural gas has replaced coal and oil in
power plants as well, eliminating much pollution.
When the first primitive railroads were run in the 1820's,
no one imagined what was to come of them. After all, at 15 miles per hour with
sparks occasionally igniting the passengers, they didn't seem to have much of a
future. It was the accidental discovery
of steam hundreds of years before that made railroads possible.
Water, when boiled, converts into steam, expanding
to 1600 times its original space, a spectacular force still used in power
plants to this day. Steamboats were limited to operating on rivers, canals,
lakes, and eventually oceans, but railroads eventually traversed entire
continents at breathtaking speeds of over one hundred miles an hour.
Railroads spelled the end of horse powered
long distance travel, canal usefulness, and made the shipping of goods
incredibly cheap. Railroads allowed farmers to ship their produce to markets
economically, reduced the prices of just about everything, and greatly raised
living standards. Railroads allowed foods, passengers, manufactured goods, and
raw materials to travel thousands of miles at microscopic cost, compared to
previous canal and horse travel.
When lightening struck old Ben Franklin's kite, the world
was off to one of the greatest discoveries ever.
Electricity eliminated kerosene lamps, powered railroads,
elevators, appliances, motors of all sizes, and made life ever so much cleaner
and more comfortable. Edison's invention of the incandescent light bulb in
1879, after hundreds of failed experiments, illuminated the world. Among his
hundreds of patents were the motion picture and phonograph. Can you possibly
imagine life without Edison's inventive genius?
Cameras recorded early history with now priceless images.
George Eastman, inventor and founder of Kodak, (the word has no meaning)
committed suicide after making millions, his suicide note saying,
"I have done my job." Movies, still photos, Polaroids, and related
photographic inventions allowed the recordation of events, decided winners of
races, and gives hundreds of millions entertainment on TV and movie screens
around the world. Without Alexander Graham Bell's remarkable invention,
communication would be virtually impossible, and we may not have the National
Geographic Society. The telephone and
related wires allows voice and visual communications to exist around the world,
connects computers with the "internet," and has been of inestimable
value to civilized man. Newly developed "Internet phones" will
undoubtedly give the phone companies an extremely difficult time in the not too
distant future. The field of electronics encompasses radio, TV, satellites,
computers, health care, X-ray, radar, sonar, and myriad’s of fields, without
which our life span would be about two thirds of what it is now.
As variations of the above inventions were brought on line,
previously used machines became less valuable for other than specialized or
preservation uses. Railroads and
tractors replaced horses; TV replaced radio and movies to a large extent. Light
bulbs replaced kerosene lamps, electric motors replaced steam engines in the
majority of uses, airplanes cut into railroad travel, guns replaced bows and
arrows, steam boats replaced sailing vessels, and automation replaced manual
tasks, ranging from operating elevators to assembly line functions. Computer
E-Mail will reduce the mailman's job severely in the future, and inventions,
discoveries, and progress in general, have consequences that are for the most
part beneficial, making our lives longer, healthier, and more comfortable than
would have been dreamed possible a short hundred years ago. Notice that all of
the above-mentioned consequences of progress, invention, and development,
occurred without government sponsorship, subsidy, or assistance.
Government built interstate highways have had the
consequences of ruining the railroad freight and passenger trade, driving
thousands of innocents out of business because of being bypassed by the super
roads, as well as dividing cities when the interstates ran through them rather
than to them, as was the original plan. Interstate highways have lured freight
off the tracks and on to the highways, causing untold deaths when huge trucks
crash into small passenger vehicles, run out of control down mountain grades,
and in general get in the way. It has
been reliably estimated that one 85,000-pound tractor-trailer going down a
highway does as much damage as 80,000 automobiles, yet these hundreds of
thousands of huge trucks pay for but a small fraction of the costs to repair
the damage they cause. There are many unintended consequences of inventions and
developments. The replacement of a thousand miles of electric railway in the
Los Angeles area with "freeways" has not been good, as far as I can
discover, visiting there a couple of times a year as I do.
Similar unintended consequences abound around the world.
Television closed thousands of theatres and caused a vast
cessation of conversation. People now
seem to 'watch' rather than read, discuss, or visit, certainly an unintended
consequence. Millions of jobs have been lost in America by the automating of
radio stations, theatre projection booths, and elevators. Radio killed
vaudeville, and TV killed radio; a chain of events spurred by American
inventiveness. Yes, I said American, because of all the above inventions and
discoveries, 90% occurred in America and were invented or discovered by free
American minds; not government; an extraordinary heritage.
Inventions and discoveries, which had nothing to do with
government, have been beneficial, giving us great pleasure, gratification, long
life, and comfort. In 1997, the average
life span for a male in Russia was 20 years less than for an American male.
Conversely, the consequences of political and governmental actions have a
threateningly dark side in almost 100% of the cases.
While an initial glance at a government action, program, or
regulation may seem to be wonderful and beneficial, such is not usually the
case, as we will see. They become addictions and albatrosses around our
collective necks. Inventions and
discoveries have usually yielded profits for both inventors and stockholders,
plus increased convenience for the users of the product or service. Government
programs and actions are supremely expensive to those of us who have to pay
dearly for, or suffer from, such extravagant whoopdedos. This book has, as its
main purpose, examining the consequences of political and governmental actions
most think are so wonderful. To quote a
famous Cole Porter song, "It Ain’t Necessarily So."