Tom Woods Show: Favorite Episodes So Far

Tom Woods Show: Favorite Episodes So Far.

Within the last couple weeks days I’ve managed to finish up the audiobook version of Mises’ Human Action, catch up on 50 or so episodes of the Tom Woods Show, and start taking the Liberty Classroom Courses. I just thought I would share a few of the Tom Woods Show Episodes I found most interesting.

Interview with Lew Rockwell on October 17th Some interesting anecdotes on the early days of the Mises Institute.

Interview with Gary Chartier on October 25th Gary Chartier patiently picks apart at the edifice of the statist consensus (I actually caught this one the day it was broadcast).

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The Modern Day Django They Call Him

The Modern Day Django They Call Him.

I haven’t seen the movie. (What is with shooters and movie characters anyhow?) But I know what they mean when they call Christopher Dorner the Modern Day Django or the Real Life Django. Something to do with an oppressed black guy practicing vigilante justice or something like that. Well, I wrote a little (ha!) about this stuff on the other site, Notes on Liberty. Go check it out. Don’t be surprised that I delve into other territory. Here is one of the more (but not the most, I hope) controversial tidbits:

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One Year Later at PTPOL

One Year Later at PTPOL.

Well, this blog has been registered at WordPress.com for one year now. It took a while to get it off the ground, but it hit the ground running. (How’s that for a mixed – and contradictory – metaphor, by the way?) Click here to learn more about the blog, and here to learn a little bit about it’s author.

140 posts, 6,602 views, 482 comments, 200 WordPress likes, 192 Facebook likes, 54 followers on WordPress, 1150 followers on Twitter.

Not bad for an amateur one-man team, right? Well, its the readers that are more to thank. Without them there really is no point in writing.

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Tea Party Heroes Ron And Rand Paul Make For A Bitter Brew; Seventh Response

Tea Party Heroes Ron And Rand Paul Make For A Bitter Brew; Seventh Response.

The following is the seventh paragraph of Barry Germansky’s op-ed Tea Party Heroes Ron and Rand Paul Make for a Bitter Brew, from earlier this year, interspersed with my rebuttals from within the last few days.

BARRY GERMANSKY: The Pauls’ default stance of misrepresenting the historical record also helps them peddle the absurd Austrian School idea to deregulate all private businesses and subsequently create a utopian free market.

HENRY MOORE: We have already dealt with the historical record, which you have ignored, but must you now ignore the point of science (economics is a social science, one for which there are many competing theories)? You are here misrepresenting the Austrian School of Economics. To quote Walter BlockNo, Austrian economists can’t oppose or favor anything. To say that they do is to violate the normative positive distinction. Austrians are limited to saying that a given policy will have thus and thus effects; they logically cannot say, qua Austrians, that a policy is good or bad, nor may they favor or oppose it, again qua Austrian economists. Certainly, they can do so as citizens, as ethicists, as philosophers, but economics per se is and must be value free, despite the fact that this stricture is all too often violated, as in the present case.”

So Austrians do not oppose or favor any policy, such as deregulation, privatization, “utopian” free markets, as Austrians. They may do so as libertarians, which many Austrian economists are in varying degrees, but not as members of the economics profession, regardless of the school they find the most useful. Why is adherence to the Austrian school or other free market theories, and to libertarianism often found in the same people? Emphasis on such things as individual choice and individual action, as well as the fact that utility (relative to societal norms) applied to knowledge gleaned from the scientific theory, and the morality of the philosophical/political theory often lead to compatible conclusions.

A general example would be where policy a leads to unintended result b, an Austrian neither favors nor opposes policy a in and of itself, rather its merit depends on whether result b is in line with the original intent of policy a and/or the societal norms that the policy derives from or is in reaction to. To the scientist, the policy and its result have no moral value relative to science, only relative to the purported intentions of the policy in question. To the philosopher, especially one coming from a framework that values liberty highly, the Austrian (though not as an Austrian) may oppose the policy (and favor alternatives) on those grounds, regardless of whether or not he favors or opposes them (or remains objective, in the case of science) on other grounds.

A specific example following these same lines would be economically interventionist policies that intend to increase homeownership rates because the societal norm is that home ownership is a worthy and valuable goal, which then have the result of decreasing homeownership or stopping the growth of home ownership in the long run, or that have myriad other unwelcome (by society, not necessarily the scientist, who is mostly an observer) effects that outweigh those results considered more positive. The Austrian that is also a libertarian might oppose these policies on the grounds that public policies favoring one group (generally socio-ecnomic, ethno-cultural, political, or regional) at the expense of others necessarily violates the rights of the those in other groups. I just described to you the Housing Bubble and ensuing economic crisis.

[It is sometimes observed that Austrian school luminary Ludwig von Mises, though libertarian in his conclusions, was very much a utilitarian/consequentialist, and when coming to conclusions about the moral worth of a policy, applied this to his scientific knowledge, rather than a deontological libertarianism apart from his scientific knowledge. This is somewhat true, taking into account semantics, but upon further study, when all is put into context, the label is somewhat of an oversimplification.]

Furthermore, your idea of regulation is arbitrary. Because there is a public policy and it is called a “regulation,” that automatically means it regulates? No. Often so called “regulations” create irregularities, and occasionally the blame for economic crises rests on their shoulders. The free market, on the other hand, is capable of regulating without the aid of government so-called experts. Markets can regulate themselves because each person only needs knowledge about a small portion of that which affects him, whereas central planners can not regulate markets because there are far fewer of them and by comparison the knowledge required is too vast for them to master, in a given point in time, let only keep tabs on throughout a large span of time. This is an overly simplistic way of looking at it, of course, but when one clearly can not even grasp this concept, up till now I hope, it is pointless to delve much further. Though I have attempted to do so hereherehereherehereherehere, and here.

BARRY GERMANSKY: The Pauls refuse to believe that deregulation caused the Great Depression and the 2008 recession, despite vast quantities of evidence to the contrary.

HENRY MOORE: There is hardly any evidence (it is certainly not vast) that deregulation caused the Great Depression or the 2008 Recession, unless of course we see deregulation (which is often cleverly misused to refer to not only deregulation, but regulation, reform, and combinations of all the aforementioned) as a mitigating factor (e.g., rapid deregulation of a sector accustomed to regulation can indeed cause “problems,”; a separate issue entirely is the fact that these “problems,” though painful for some, are necessary to liquidate malinvestments and to shift misallocations, and that without these temporary wounds reopening, worse infections would fester).

In fact, it is more accurate to blame regulations. I use the term loosely (but nowhere near as loosely as some use the term “deregulation”) to refer to such things (during the 2008 Recession) as the Federal Reserve’s Dual Mandate of price stability and low unemployment, manipulation of interest and exchange and tax rates, price controls, implicit bailouts (this is the  type of regulation most commonly ignored by progressive-types griping about the so-called “repeal” of the Glass-Steagall Act, which often bears the brunt of the blame for the 2008 Recession), the Community Reinvestment Act and related or similar laws, the financial actions of certain Government Sponsored Entities, and the exacerbation of the ensuing problems with things like explicit bailouts, stimulus, and Quantitative Easing.

BARRY GERMANSKY: Following the Great Depression, when FDR introduced strict, compartmentalized regulation of the marketplace, the United States enjoyed a forty-year period of virtually uninterrupted growth, transforming the country into a superpower.

HENRY MOORE: The growth was not the result of any regulations, it was the result of a reinvigorated post-world war private sector, which had been stifled by the Hoover and Roosevelt economic and foreign policies in the 1930s and early 1940s. Without these policies the boom would have been that much sooner and by the time in question that much bigger. This is part of the reason the US became a superpower (it already was prior to the Great Depression, but after World War Two, increasingly so), but just as significant was what occurred with World War Two. The United States was comparatively insulated from the world wars in terms of structural damage. So it recovered from them more readily than the other superpowers, those in Europe and Asia. The competition, even that from the other supposed superpower, the Soviet Union, simply did not compare.

BARRY GERMANSKY: Then, when Reagan took office in the 1980s, he was aided by Alan Greenspan and company to remove the historically-proven regulations.

HENRY MOORE: The regulations were not historically proven. They led to the end of Bretton Woods in 1971, and the regulations imposed because of that (which were diminished some by Carter, Reagan, and Volcker), including wage and price controls, and the slow unravelling of the currency, both of which were major factors in 1970s Stagflation.

A lot of the regulations that Reagan got rid of were not just FDR’s. Some of them were also Nixon’s. Paul Volcker (under Carter and Reagan) actually did more to deregulate than Greenspan (only briefly under Reagan, more closely associated with Bush Senior, Clinton, and Bush Junior) ever did. A lot of Reagan’s policies, including deficit spending were the opposite you make them out to be. Supply-side economics is not the same thing as free market economics. Any “economics” that puts too much (i.e., artificial) emphasis on either the supply side or the demand side (or on both as they are not mutually exclusive) is liable to create distortions. It is true that supply drives demand, but this does not mean supply should be propped up in any way by government. For the record, supply-side economics is subtle corporate welfare (as opposed to that which artificially prop up demand which is things like wage and price controls and welfare for the poor) and has been practiced by every administration and Congress going back for decades, including FDR, often in combination with more policies aimed at propping up demand.

Greenspan’s policies were far from free market reforms. For a former proponent of the gold standard and follower of Ayn Rand, he had comparatively little to show for it in his actual policies, often moving in the opposite direction.

BARRY GERMANSKY: This helped big businesses make more profits while sending the rest of America into the gutter. This culminated in the 2008 recession.

HENRY MOORE: So is it deregulation or profit that causes recessions? Which is it? Didn’t small businesses get profits too? And didn’t some wages go up in real terms? And weren’t the wages that didn’t go up start on that trend before Reagan and Greenspan? What is it about profit (or deregulation) that sends “the rest of America” to the gutter? Is it that some of these new profits are not in fact new, but simply the same profits but less of them stolen through taxation? In other words, is the reason that some of these Americans were no longer permitted to live off of someone else? If you want a policy to blame for making the middle class poor and the poor desperate, look at things like minimum wage laws, which take the bottom rungs off the employment ladder; unsustainable lines of production encouraged by an elastic currency and cheap credit; dependence on high priced foreign cartel energy sources because the Executive Office, Department of Energy, Environmental Protection Agency, and public rent seeking special interests don’t want the United States to access her own abundant natural resources; and outsourcing caused by high tax rates, onerous regulations and managed trade. Those are your culprits.

BARRY GERMANSKY: The Pauls are able to ignore all of these historical events because they treat their personal ideology as more credible than primary evidence. This is a big no-no for any serious historian.

HENRY MOORE: You mention few, if any, actual historical events, and virtually no reliable evidence. Mostly personal ideology and vague platitudes.  And hardly any context to accompany them. You are not a serious historian. Neither are most of the people you have been reading or listening to. You are all certifiable laughing stocks. You and your arguments have no credibility whatsoever.

Tea Party Heroes Ron And Rand Paul Make For A Bitter Brew; Fifth Response

Tea Party Heroes Ron And Rand Paul Make For A Bitter Brew; Fifth Response.

The following is the fifth paragraph of Barry Germansky’s op-ed Tea Party Heroes Ron and Rand Paul Make for a Bitter Brew, from earlier this year, interspersed with my rebuttals from within the last few days.

BARRY GERMANSKY: Of course, nothing about the free market is “voluntary.”

HENRY MOORE: I don’t see what is so non-voluntary about a system in which, if we apply your narrow definition (though not your other arguments) of what it is, absolutely no one is forced to participate. Nor do I see it in a system in which most people, given the more accurate definition, choose to participate anyways, whether they fully recognize the fact or not.

Sure, maybe those that do not participate will starve, but that is more a proof of the free market’s necessity than it is one of its supposed despotism. Some might say, “of course they won’t starve; there is, after all, such a thing as mutual aid.” Well, it works just fine in small enough, homogenous enough, communities. And there’s nothing about a free market system that precludes their existence.

In fact, such alternative systems are merely market choices, like, get this, Coca-Cola, Staples, Barnes and Nobles, cable television, marijuana, Samsung, microwaves, Taco Bell, and going to the movies on Friday night. So you are right, in a sense, that a market system is not voluntary. But it is not because, as you suggest, anyone is forced to participate in a particular activity or within a particular set or range of activities, the exceptions being personal self-inhibition of violence and fraud. And this last point is no contradiction. They are the exceptions that prove the rule. For were violence and fraud to be permissible, that would be an even greater contradiction for a system based on voluntary choice. As would a prohibition on defense against these things.

So long as you are able to participate, you already are participating, even if you pretend you are not by going off into the middle of nowhere to play at being a collectivist/communitarian/egalitarian. Nothing short of squashing voluntary choice, within a given society or region or group, can alter this fact. The only way to not participate, then; rather than choosing not to, which is inherently impossible because it is a choice and this means participation; is for someone else, “the people” perhaps, to take choice away.

There are, of course, several layers. If someone takes away your choice in one area, you may have it still in another. But its removal from one sector will not be so clean and predictable as to not affect the other sectors. There is no amount of expertise in existence able to sanitize and predict all possible outcomes of a policy, let alone with time enough to prevent adverse consequences.

So we come to that old charge: technocracy. That is what in essence, in its worst possible form, you advocate. And No one denies that every field has its experts, or that those experts shouldn’t be the ones we look to when a solution to a problem is desired. But even experts, intelligent, credentialed, respected, are subject to the downsides of human nature, that is revealed at its worst when great power is involved

BARRY GERMANSKY: It functions by its own set of rules.

HENRY MOORE: And so, the only rules are that you can not dictate the rules to someone else. This is the Golden Rule, the non-aggression principle. This means, perhaps ironically, that you can not keep someone from allowing themselves to be dictated to if that is their choice, even if, unbeknownst to them, that choice is a detriment to themselves. Only where this detriment spills over to others, and there is no escape from it, is it in any way their concern.

BARRY GERMANSKY: The Pauls treat the free market as truly “free,” but are simply ignoring the fact that it is nothing more than another restrictive ideological construct.

HENRY MOORE: What are these restrictions? Restrictions against positive rights and entitlements! Be they blatant or subtle. Is this what you truly hate about a free market? That no one is entitled to what others may more properly make claim to because it is in their possession, was created by their faculties, or came to them first? The alternative is a also a restrictive ideological, where creators and earners and receivers of gifts, and even the “fortunate,” are the ones upon whom restrictions are placed.

BARRY GERMANSKY: They happen to prefer it to other theories, but that does not make the free market a universal fact of life.

HENRY MOORE: Universal as in “accepted everywhere,” or universal as in “natural?” If the former, there is no disagreement here, though I wonder why you even bring it up. No one is making such outlandish claims. And if the latter, I am tempted to say that there is something very natural about the underlying foundations of a choice-based system, though am not so presumptuous as to say everything to do with it is. And to the extent that it is not, I fail to recognize this as a automatically a problem. Is a stone preferable to a hammer when driving a nail?

BARRY GERMANSKY: But just watch how the Pauls, in their unique brand of economic collectivism, dismiss all non-economic concerns and aspects of human existence. One swipe of their wrists makes the public’s multi-faceted social concerns disappear from the political agenda.

HENRY MOORE: Again. Not true. What you are saying here is that they ignore everything that does not have something to do with economics. Elsewhere, you have made the case that the Pauls try to make every issue an economic one. This is a contradiction. You make two conflicting statements. And as if that wasn’t bad enough, neither one is entirely accurate.

The Pauls know that there is more to “the” (collectivize much?) public agenda than economics/economy how Barry Germansky narrowly, arbitrarily defines it. And they also know that the more literal definition of economics/economy is inherently broad. As I have said before, they both mean, “household customs.” Another word for economy/economics, catallaxy/catallactics, admittedly coined by self-proclaimed free marketeers, means, all at once, from the Greek, “to exchange,” “to admit in the community,” and “to make friends.”

I implore you to please tell me what human activity, the people’s multi-faceted social concerns made manifest, besides theft, murder, rape, and other violent crimes, falls outside of one of these definitions! In fact, even these, to some degree, might be considered to be contained within that definition, because “the people” as a collective entity have, at times, democratically decided these things are necessary means to noble ends, virtues even. No less so than individual tyrants or coteries of oligarchs have done much the same. Unfortunate in all cases.

No doubt that there is the issue of semantics to be resolved between the Pauls and you Barry, yet I would have thought that one such as yourself, one so concerned about abstractions and contradictions, one so highly intellectual and logical and educated, would at least learn how others define words that they use before you use your own faulty definition, apply it to their arguments, and then destroy the same. I will not even tell you what fallacy that is because its name has become so cliche.

From the Comments: Loose Fiscal and Monetary Policy is the Cause of the Problem, not the Solution

From the Comments: Loose Fiscal and Monetary Policy is the Cause of the Problem, not the Solution.

There is a comment on one of my posts. It is really off-subject, but since I rarely get comments that aren’t pure spam (I even suspect that the comment in question is cleverly disguised spam), and since it is something that I talk about here on the site, replying to it and bringing it to my readers’ attention seemed like a good option. I don’t do this with all of the comments, just the ones that give me a clear opportunity to get a point across. It is probably bad blogger etiquette to do it at all, but at the moment I am working on several fairly extensive projects so I need a quick and easy post.

Mercadee: We have used both monetary and fiscal policy to battle this recession, and without the Fed’s actions to limit the downturn things would have been much worse. Fiscal policy in the form of the stimulus package, though too little, too late, and too tilted towards tax cuts, also helped to limit the damage to the economy. But when it comes to promoting a faster recovery, both monetary and fiscal policymakers have failed to do enough to help the economy return to full employment.

Me: Wrong! You are suggesting that policymakers should do those things which brought about the bubbles in the first place. What caused the depressions of 1920-1921 and 1930-45, and what made the latter one so long that did not occur in the case of the former? Loose fiscal and monetary policy. Stimulus to fund World War One, stimulus to pay off debts accrued from World War One, stimulus to fund public works projects, and stimulus to fund World War Two. What caused the housing bubble and its burst? The malinvestment that arose from the stimulative monetary and fiscal policy that was supposedly necessary to soften the blow of the dot-com burst, which was itself the result of prior loose policies. And here you are arguing for the same thing again. This time the bubbles are in student loans, car loans, and sovereign debt. It would be fine if there was a never ending series of bubbles that could burst and re-inflate, but there isn’t. Sovereign debt and government bonds are the end of the line. When that bubble bursts it will destroy the dollar, as the bubble and the false confidence it gave rise to is the only thing that has been propping it up. What gave rise to this bubble? There are many factors, and I suspect that, unlike the case of the other bubbles, this one was intended. Whether it is/was the Nixon Shock and completely detaching from a commodity standard; or wars for oil (the first one arguably being World War Two, as evidenced by the events leading up to Pearl Harbor, but perhaps more notable than this being the 1953 coup in Iran); or the creation of Bretton Woods in 1945; or the creation of the Fed in 1913; or the strengthening of the Fed in 1917; or the price controls and confiscation of gold in 1933; or the social programs and public works projects that created the current high levels of National Debt and Unfunded Liabilities, leading to the need to print more unbacked dollars; that is/was the chief cause I know not. And I care not as they are all contributing factors and all were misguided policies. The effects of these policies must be diminished. And similar policies must be prevented.