The Competition of Crooks

Comments by Michael McKay

Every person that has had the pleasure to listen to Professor Hans-Hermann Hoppe or to read any of his excellent work knows of his razor intellect and crystal clear explanations.

Great news: Dr. Hoppe has a new book out.

Unfortunately, at the moment, it is only available in German (Der Wettbewerb der Gauner, “The Competition of Crooks”).

Fortunately a recent interview by Andreas Marquart at misesinfo.org has been translated into English and can be found in its entirety at www.thegodthatfailed.org.

Here is a tantalizing tidbit from that interview:

“Democracy…is nothing more than an especially insidious form of communism.”

I will bet that most people have NEVER thought of democracy in this way. In the interview, Dr. Hoppe explains why this is the case.

There are several other wonderful – and clarifying – insights as well. I believe his most important is that most people are looking at the wrong “clash of interests … between employers (capitalists) and employees (workers), or between the rich and the poor.”

Professor Hoppe states that “As long as this myth prevails in public opinion, nothing at all will change and disaster is inevitable.”

Then Dr. Hoppe makes this key point:

“A fundamental change can only occur if, instead of this, the correct realization becomes generally accepted that the only antagonistic conflict of interest in society is the one between tax-payers, i.e. the exploited, and tax-consumers, i.e. the exploiters.”

Dr Hoppe states that the key to being liberated from the parasitism of the State is a change in the class consciousness of the population.

I highly recommend you read this short interview and for those of you who have not done so please read Dr. Hoppes “Democracy the God That Failed” and “The Ethics and Economics of Private Property.”

Please read this interview in its entirety here.

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** New Book About Ron Paul ** with Dr. Walter Block

Radio Free Market is proud to air an interview with Dr. Walter Block author of “Ron Paul for President 2012”.

This book has been endorsed by Dr. Ron Paul and contains everything one would wish ti know about Ron Paul’s positions as a presidential candidate.

Learn why our world-wide military presence actually detracts from our national security.

Learn what Dr. Paul says about the link between the Federal Reserve and our out-of-control federal government spending.

Learn why Dr. Paul is NOT a conservative but a libertarian, (and learn the crucial difference).

Learn how Dr. Paul so ably handles hostile interviews!

Learn why Dr. Paul is the only candidate who will both revive our economy AND restore our liberties.

(Hint: the other candidates think that reviving our economy and restoring our liberties are not compatible.

Please listen to this interview and learn why you will want to not only read but purchase for many others.

With Radio Free Market Contributor Mr. Patrick Barron.

Listen here (~20 minutes).

Posted in All Archived Shows, Austrian Economics, Federal Reserve, Liberty | Leave a comment

** How To Be A Dictator In A Few Easy Lessons ** with Mr. Harry E. Teasley, Jr.

Mr. Harry Teasley, Jr.

This show was developed from an essay about Mr. Teasley which can be found here. Teasley has spent his life confronting and triumphing over bureaucracy. His business career was spent at the Coca-Cola Company as head of various lines of business. His nickname was “Thor” for his willingness to confront the evils of bureaucracy and its mindless agents.

Mr. Teasley’s experience with bureaucracy included federal, state, and local government, labor unions, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), environmental protectionists, Coca-Cola itself and other corporations. Since retiring, Mr. Teasley has served as the chairman of the Reason Foundation and has successfully defeated numerous government attempts to infringe on the free market and usurp private-property rights in Tampa, Florida.

All Dictators and Bureaucrats want to know:

1. How can I make my bureaucracy last as long as possible?

Answer: Just look after your own self-interest… but use other people’s money instead of your own!

2. What if my bureaucracy doesn’t solve the problem it is supposed to solve?

Answer: Excellent! That means more revenue for your bureaucracy, a bigger bureaucracy, and more power for you and your bureaucrat friends.

3. What if the bureaucracy actually makes the problem better?

Answer: Red Alert!

You need to convince the public that there still is a crisis, whether a crisis actually exists or not.

Harry Teasley explains how most crises are simply cover stories invented by the industries that will benefit from the crisis.

4. What if the people find out that the crisis doesn’t exist and/or the bureaucracy is not accomplishing its stated aims and/or is incredibly corrupt?

Answer: A better idea than damage control is DO NOT allow the public access to the information that will enable them to see through the fog in the first place.

Control the flow of information, and the game is largely won.

This interview will give you new eyes to see how abusive bureaucracies are

  • Formed
  • Fed and
  • Made permanent

We cannot get rid of the excesses of Big Government unless we all clearly understand how the individual pieces of Big Government – each bureaucrat – thinks and how they struggle to make their “small kingdom” bigger and more “important”.

With Radio Free Market Producer and Special Guest Host, Patrick Barron.

Thank you for listening!

You can find the link to the mp3 of the show here.

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Euro Bank Holidays Ahead

By Andy Duncan

And no, we’re not talking about the nice kind of English bank holiday in the sunshine.

We’re talking about the kind of ‘bank holiday’ where you are frozen out of your own assets, and then these assets are stripped of value to save banks, bankers, governments, bureaucrats, and politicians from having to face up to the consequences of their own mistakes. After they have eaten their fill of your wealth, you are then handed the scraps (if you’re lucky).

Some interesting thoughts then, from Sir Martin Jacomb, about how the same governments which led the people of Europe into the horrible paper scrip known as the Euro, should lie them out of it, too:

Here’s a quote, with my emphasis:

"Experience shows that currency break-ups, like devaluations, have to be handled so as to avoid anticipatory speculative activity. The essential requirement is a single, unequivocal decision to revert to national currencies, reached confidentially by all 17 governments and announced without prior notice."

Nice

I love the political process.

Deception is openness. Ignorance is knowledge. Lies are truth.

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Another New Surveillance Law (2012)

Another Surveillance Law:
One More Step towards the Big Brother State
By Sean Gabb
(Published in
The Barrister, May 2012)

At the beginning of April 2012, the BBC and a couple of newspapers reported that the British Government was considering a new surveillance law. This would allow it to monitor the telephone calls, text messages, e-mails and website visits of everyone in the United Kingdom. There was a flurry of debate about civil rights and the need to protect us all against terrorists. There was a side argument between those who said the law was required by the European Union, and those who said it would be in breach of European Union law. Since then, the various debates have gone quiet. Possibly, the Ministers have decided to drop the matter. More likely, the initial leak was to soften us up for something less ambitious to be announced in the Queen’s Speech. The Ministers will say they have “listened” to our concerns – and will use the lesser measure they had in mind all the time as a precedent for moving to the full measure in later stages. This being so, whether greater or lesser, another step will have been taken to a Big Brother police state.

In common with other civil libertarians, I have been arguing for thirty years that Britain is heading towards a police state. There are two main reasons why we were, until recently, ignored. The first is the residual inability to believe that a police state could emerge here. England is the land of the common law and habeas corpus and trial by jury, of freedom of speech and religious toleration, of accountable and representative government, of privacy and individualism. We have enjoyed these things, at least in outline, since the middle ages. We taught them to the rest of the world. The doctrines known as classical liberalism are, however abstract their statement can often be, a meditation on English history. That eight hundred years of development – and perhaps longer, if we look beyond the Conquest – could be swept aside in one or two generations is hard to conceive.

The second reason is that a police state is commonly defined by its extreme manifestations. We have no obvious secret police in this country, nor any counterpart of the Soviet and national socialist concentration camps. Children are not given medals for informing on their parents, and we can make jokes about our rulers. Oh, nasty things are beginning to happen. Last year, for example, Mark Duggan was dragged by the police from a taxi in London and shot to death. In general, the police are increasingly partial to killing members of the public – sometimes at random. Or there has been the arrest and prosecution of Emma West, for being rude to the other passengers on a South London tram. But these events are still exceptional. If you want to define a police state by South American or old East European practice, Britain is not a police state.

However, a police state is less about enforcement than control. Its function is to make a ruling class irresistible when robbing and oppressing, or when imposing its utopian fantasies. If people can be made to obey without being clubbed to death in a police cell, why bother with violence? There is no British Gestapo or KGB or Stasi, because our own police state rests on a foundation of changes of investigatory and criminal procedure and of omnipresent surveillance. When people know that they are being watched in all that they do, and when they know that stepping over some invisible line will put them to great inconvenience and expense, they will change their behavior and their attitudes to authority. It is not illegal to buy most kinds of pornography. It is not illegal to buy a bottle of whisky every day, or two hundred cigarettes a week. It is not illegal to join a group that works for the mass-conversion of the white population to Islam, or to join the British National Party. But how many people will decide not to do these things if the details are being logged against their names in a central database? After all, being a known consumer of pornography may bring the police to the door when a child goes missing from down the road. Smoking and drinking may compromise the right to NHS treatment, or to adopt children, or even to continue looking after their own without supervision and preaching by the authorities. Membership of disapproved organizations may bring all manner of quiet persecutions.

When watched in this way, people will be more inclined to conform to whatever may be the current preferences of those in authority. Moreover, many will be inclined to show cheerfully willing – after all, a state able to persecute is also able to reward. Perhaps, when it has become enough of a habit, cheerful obedience will even ripen to love of the authorities. After all, resistance to oppression has always been less common than loyalty to the oppressors. When Stalin died, it was not only from prudence that millions in Russia broke down and wept in public. Possibly much of the grief when Kim Jong II died the other month was also genuine. Show most people a stick, and beat them with it, and their response will eventually be to kiss it.

And this is what makes the logging of our electronic communications so important. It is a central component in the apparatus of surveillance and control. Of course, the Ministers and the general authorities will never admit that this is its purpose. They insist on its need so we can all be kept safe from terrorists and other criminals. They tell us that no ordinary people will be affected – that those with nothing to hide have nothing to fear. Well, this argument should by now be seen with the contempt it deserves. We all have something to hide, even if it is not presently against the law. And the argument has been used again and again. How often have we been told that a deviation from the old constitutional norms is needed in the face of some exceptional danger, and that the new powers will only be used against that danger? How often have the new powers been immediately used to spy on and control ordinary people?

Well, there was the Drug Trafficking Offences Act 1986. This made it possible for criminal proceeds to be confiscated after conviction, and by reversing the burden of proof, so that the defense had to argue that any assets in question were not the proceeds of crime. Enoch Powell denounced this in the Commons as a gross breach of our due process rights. The Ministers in the Thatcher Government replied that the evils of drug trafficking were so great, they justified a specific departure from due process that would never be allowed to form a precedent. This “specific departure” was made general in the Criminal justice Act 1988, and was eventually widened and consolidated into the Proceeds
of Crime Act 2002 – a law that abolishes financial privacy for everyone but the rich, and that enables something like the American civil asset forfeiture.

Or there was the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000. This law to enable snooping, for any purpose, by any public authority, was brought in amid promises that it was needed for the fight against serious crime, and that it would never be used for normal crime investigation. The Act is mostly used by local authorities to check whether people are recycling their waste as demanded, or to check whether parents really are living in the catchment areas they put on school allocation forms.

Or there was the Extradition Act 2003. This made it possible for British citizens to be deported to face trial in the United States for actions committed in the United Kingdom that may not have been offences under British law. We were assured by the Home Secretary that this was needed for the fight against terrorism and “serious international crime.” Look at these uses of the Act:

  • Giles Darby, David Bermingham and Gary Mulgrew (the “NatWest Three”) extradited on charges of fraud committed in the United Kingdom
  • Babar Ahmad – awaiting extradition on charges of running web sites supporting the Chechen and Afghan insurgencies, without having left the United Kingdom
  • Ian Norris – eventually extradited on charges of price fixing that were not currently illegal in the United Kingdom
  • Richard O’Dwyer – facing extradition on charges of copyright infringement
  • Christopher Tappin extradited on charges of breaching American sanctions against Iran, though the alleged offence was committed in the United Kingdom, and though he was entrapped by American officials who swore that no law was being broken

Even in the case of Abu Hamza – no doubt a very wicked man – the charge was only of conspiracy. If we add to all this a discussion of how the European arrest warrants have been used in practice, we see that the Extradition Act has been less about protecting us from global terrorists and Bond villains, than about exposing British citizens and residents to arbitrary deportation to foreign countries, usually with lower standards of justice than our own, and often for acts that are not criminal offences here.

This is how every law allegedly made to protect us from terrorism and serious crime has been used in practice. This is why we should be so suspicious of the new electronic surveillance proposals.

But, even if the authorities are acting this time in good faith, the proposals ought still to be resisted. Our British police state is extraordinarily careless about the data it collects. This is always being lost or stolen. In 2007 alone, the Department of Work and Pensions lost the personal details of 45,000 claimants; a London education authority lost the personal details of 160,000 children; HM Revenue and Customs lost the personal details of 25 million families who were claiming child benefit; The Driving Standards Agency lost the personal details of three million candidate drivers. Even if it does not hand them over to despotic foreign governments, or sell them to multinational corporations, can the British State be trusted to keep our electronic communications secret? How unlikely is it that a database of our credit card purchases will not be left on a memory stick in a pole dancing club?

But let us join this theme of incompetence to the main subject of a police state. I have admitted there is much that distinguishes us from really nasty places like East Germany. But one of these points of difference is that the East German police state at least kept people from being robbed in their homes or beaten up in the street. Whatever the price in human rights, the East German police state gave people a country in which they could feel safe. Our own situation is best described as “anarcho-tyranny.” People who urinate in bus shelters, or dig up and steal copper wiring from the National Grid, or make life hell for their neighbours, or may be involved in real terrorist offences, are not prosecuted, or are defended by an army of human rights lawyers at our expense. The police state never touches them. Instead, the rest of us get our post opened by town hall snoops, who think we are trying to get our children into a better school. A man gets an ASBO for standing alone beside the Cenotaph and reciting the names of our war dead in Iraq. A student gets arrested for suggesting a police horse might be gay. Christian evangelists get arrested for quoting some of the less charitable verses from the Bible about homosexuals.

I suggest, given all the available evidence, that this county is ruled at best by some very stupid and incompetent people. At worst it is ruled by people who say they need a police state because they want to fight crime and terrorism, but in fact need fears of crime and terrorism because they want a police state. Whatever the case, they should not be given the right to gather and store details of our electronic communications.

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Recommended Reading

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Tax-Haven Tales: Kooks, Crooks and Con Men in the Offshore World

Dear Laissez Faire Club Member,

Charles Adams is a legendary specialist and historian. His book For Good and Evil ranks as among the most influential policy works of the late 20th century. It revealed the largely unknown history of how high taxation has wrecked peae and prosperity from the ancient world to the present, and how revolts have been the hidden motivation behind many great political upheavals.

Taxation has been Adam’s journalistic and academic beat for his entire life. This is why Laissez Faire Books is honored to be the publisher of another wonderful book by Adams. In Tax-Haven Tales, Adams reveals his firsthand knowledge of life in the tax-haven world throughout the 1970s and 1980s, peeling back the curtain to show the workings of a world that very few people will ever otherwise discover.

Adam’s extremely valuable book is the most thorough, most authoritive and certainly the msot entertaining account of life in tax havens to ever appear in print. You will be intrigued at the financial high jinks common in the secret world, and how the very rich navigate its dangerous but profitable waters.

The 1970s and ’80s were the salad days of tax havens, and wealthy Americans were flocking to them as means of escaping the confiscatory rates of taxation in the U.S. Adams’ book gives you an inside look at the “Wild West” of finance that continues to draw interest today.

His account of financial life in the Bahamas and Cayman Islands and beyond is drawn from firsthand experience — he was called upon to handle many accounts in these years — and he shares some amazing stories for the first time.

The subtitle is Kooks, Crooks and Con Men because there were (and probably are) plenty operating in hopes of bamboozling the super-rich out of their money. In Adam’s account, they were often very successful! As Adams puts it, “life in tax havens is like the days of our grandparents and great-grandparents, when taxes were few and government was limited, when you had to fend for yourself and keep your guard up.”

At the same time, Adams argues that tax havens have always been with us, even since the ancient world, and serve an extremely crucial function of preserving wealth in times when governments are otherwise determined to destroy it.

Many people have heard of offshore banks and wondered whether they are really viable options for protecting wealth. In fact, many people were shocked at the news that Mitt Romney himself keeps offshore accounts, as do many major American corporations.

Is there a case for cracking down on them? Adams says absolutely not. He covers the government’s extremely wicked and pointless war on tax havens during these years. Governments pressured banks to open up and end secrecy, rat out those who were using the banks for illicit purposes, and cooperate more closely with tax authorities in the United States. This ended many major advantages of tax havens, yet some remain to this day.

For example, it is to the utter disgrace of the American political class that Eduardo Saverin, the Brazilian-born co-founder of Facebook, had to flee the U.S. to avoid having his wealth confiscated by capital gains taxes. His tax haven is Singapore, but there are many other places that Americans can shoose to go in the in the interest of keeping what they earn from the tax police. Tax havens — whethere tiny islands or large countries — will always be with us, and to this we owe them a great debt for preserving private capital.

Adams praises their role in history but adds a cautionary note: Buyer beware! Governments aren’t the only institutions that make a business out of confidence games and outright stealing.

Tax-Haven Tales will introduce you to a wild, exciting adn crazy world that youmight never otherwise encounter.

Enjoy!

Remember, you can download any of our e-books by going to the e-book archive. And be sure to stop by the forum and share your reactions with your fellow members and me.

See you there!

Sincerely,

Jeff Tucker

Primus inter pares, Laissez Faire Club

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The Fastest Way to Understand the Achilles Heel of Socialism – and Government

Recently we posted on RadioFreeMarketWorldReport.com the excellent one hour and twenty minute interview of Andy Duncan by Mr. Greg Moffit discussing Hans-Hermann Hoppe’s historically important book Democracy: The God That Failed. 

I highly recommend you top off your coffee cup or glass of wine and listen to the entirety of that excellent interview (which you can find here).

However, for those of you that have only eight minutes to spare we have prepared an edited segment where Andy brilliantly outlines the essential two problems of Socialism:

  • Incentive, and
  • Calculation

I have never heard such a lucid and succinct synopsis that so perfectly boils down the problem and makes clear why Socialism cannot work. 

However, if you think just a minute longer you can see how Andy is also presenting the main two problems that prevent government from working:

  • Incentive, and
  • Calculation

A week ago I was talking to a gentleman who has been deeply involved with Party Politics in the USA for many years. 

He made the remarkable admission to me that he is starting to think that government itself is the problem. 

I jumped on this by asking  

Would you like to know why? It’s because government suffers from the same two problems that guarantees that Socialism cannot work:

  • Incentive, and
  • Calculation

From here it was easy to point out why Hans Hoppe’s rallying cry to PRIVATIZE EVERYTHING seriously deserves exploration. 

Andy’s short eight minutes of enlightenment will give you multiple arrows with which to bring down the Beast of Socialism and how we can transition into a broader ecology of Peaceful Cooperation. 

Please listen to the MP3 below.

 

Michael J. McKay

Founder

RadioFreeMarket.com

[audio http://radiofreemarket.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/democracy–the-god-that-failed-andy-duncan-8-seg.mp3]
Download MP3

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**Is Gold the Way of the Future?** A book review of “In Gold We Trust” with authors Michael Green & Matthew Bishop 04/26/12

A book review of “In Gold We Trust”with authors Michael Green & Matthew 

Interview with author’s Michael Green and Matthew Bishop.

Michael Green is an economist/writer based in London and graduate of Oxford University.

Matthew Bishop is the US Business Editor and New York Business Chief of The Economist.

Why is the price of gold risen so high?  Is a new gold standard the way of the future?  Or, what about a Keynes’ style global fiat currency managed by the IMF or World Bank?

Why do hedge fund managers like John Paulson and Thomas Kaplan remain bullish on gold while others like Warren Buffet remain skeptical or disdainful of gold?  

Is it time for government to remove itself from monetary policy affairs and de-nationalize money as proposed by F.A. Hayek and Ron Paul?

These are questions we discuss with authors’ of the new book, In Gold We Trust.

Please tune in for this week on Radio Free Market with Hosts Aaron Brown and Special Commentator Andy Katherman.

Play mp3 here    Michael and Matthew Bishop interview

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***Nullification Now! Why we Cannot Trust the Federal Government to Police Itself*** with Mr. Michael Boldin 04/23/12

Mr. Boldin is the Founder and Executive Director of the Tenth Amendment Center.

We are all taught in High School that the Three Branches of the US Federal Government insures ‘Checks and Balances’ that protect our Constitutional Rights. But, as we have all seen, this is not true; Unconstitutional Laws have been passed and upheld since the earliest days of our country…Why?

Because when something is Unconstitutional it is the STATES that must tell the Federal Government it has crossed the line. The tool we STILL have, but is under appreciated, is Nullification.

In this interview Mr. Boldin explains how we can use Nullification and why our Founding Fathers believed it was the most powerful tool to a) stop Federal grabs for Central Control and b) still keep us Unified as a Nation.

By declaring an Unconstitutional Federal law null and void – as we’ve seen some States do with the Real ID Act and Medical Marijuana – State legislatures are upholding their Constitutional duty by making sure the Federal Government does not erode our Liberty or further Centralize it’s power.

We also discuss whether the Federal Government responds to you – or is it DEAF to your voice?

With 100 to 1 telephone calls to the Congressional switchboard against bailouts in the autumn of 2008, it only took 4 days of sweetening the legislation that was then pushed through both the House and Senate. Again, when Congressional phone lines were jammed for days due to outrage over Obamacare, Congress maneuvered an extremely speedy passage of the 2,400 page health care bill – without even reading it!

At the nerve center of the Nullification Movement, Michael Boldin tells us about the initiatives on the horizon, including State Action To Nullify Obamacare, Firearm Protection Bills, Trade Laws, Currency Laws, and more. This show presents the opportunity to learn where, across the country, Americans are effectively fighting to restore Constitutionally Lawful Government.

This show builds on our July 24, 2010 interview with Tom Woods, available in our Archives here, where we reviewed his excellent book, Nullification.
With Radio Free Market Producer and Special Guest Host, Ms. Zoe Russell.

Play mp3 here    RFM_Michael_Boldin_Final_0042312

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Communists at Carthage!

A very enjoyable video.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oBi9KX_5AC4]

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