Category Archives: History

Updated: Oinkbama: Anti-Occident & A Bit Of A Pig

Africa, Britain, Etiquette, History, Politics, The West

Writes Iain Martin of the London Telegraph:

“President Obama has been rudeness personified towards Britain this week. His handling of the visit of the Prime Minister, Gordon Brown, to Washington was appalling. First Brown wasn’t granted a press conference with flags, then one was hastily arranged in the Oval office after the Brits had to beg. Obama looked like he would rather have been anywhere else than welcoming the British leader to his office and topped it all with his choice of present (*) for the PM. A box of 25 DVDS including ET, the Wizard of Oz and Star Wars? Oh, give me strength. We do have television and DVD stores on this side of the Atlantic. Even Gordon Brown will have seen those films too often already.”

This bout of rudeness was preceded by another, after–or some say before—the inauguration: “the White House sent back to the British Embassy a bust of Sir Winston Churchill that had occupied a cherished spot in President Bush’s Oval Office. Intended as a symbol of transatlantic solidarity, the bust was a loaner from former British prime minister Tony Blair.”

Because they dislike Churchill, the usual, libertarian suspects have applauded this bit of bad manners with the customary childish glee. Without going into Second World War revisionism, one can disagree with many of Churchill’s decisions during the offensive, while at the same time recognizing what defender of the West Diana West put so well:

“It seems that what we are seeing in the return of the Churchill bust is less a personal vendetta against Churchill the man and more an open breach in the Western continuum out of which a new orientation toward the Third World will become increasingly apparent. Having achieved a Washington-like apotheosis in the American imagination, Churchill serves not only as the preeminent symbol of resolve, courage and faith against the enemies of Western civilization. He serves as a symbol of Western civilization, period. One of President Obama’s first acts as president was to consign that symbol to a box and send it packing.” [Emphasis mine]

“Like the symbolic repudiation of Churchill, Obama’s Marxist attack on free markets plays to the same factions of the radical left he once set out to ingratiate himself with as a young man.”

“When the native hears a speech about Western culture, he pulls out his knife,” wrote Frantz Fanon, the seminal theorist of anti-Western Third Worldism Obama mentioned above. When a Marxist, Third World-tilting president of the United States sees a bust of Winston Churchill, he sends it packing. He may have proven once again to the Left that he’s no sellout, but that doesn’t mean he hasn’t just alienated an awful lot of the American people.

Since the media downplayed and excused OinkBama and his Mama’s poor taste, the American people were none the wiser.

Diana furnishes the perfect postscript: “I have to hand it to the prime minister for giving Churchill-dissing Obama the perfectly targeted dig with the gift of the complete set of the official Churchill biography by Martin Gilbert.”

Update (March 6): Oinkbama’s tacky behavior when hosting a foreign dignitary–the prime minister of Britain—conjures the MTV show “Cribs.” Hip-hop gangsters show off their incredibly gaudy homes, and their CD and DVD collections. Then they send the cameraman packing.

Fareed Zakaria/Niall Ferguson Interview

Debt, Economy, Federal Reserve Bank, History, Inflation, Media

Niall Ferguson is right, “Most debt throughout history in fact is public debt.” What he doesn’t mention is that mini-monarchs, principalities, and ruling families did not posses a printing press. Moreover, absent the system of Fractional Reserve Banking, pyramiding debt was not as easy as it is nowadays.

As for Zakaria: is there anyone more inane and wishy-washy than he?

Here’s the exchange between the two:

ZAKARIA: As Barack Obama prepares to take office, he has no bigger challenge than fixing the economy.

On this program, I’ve talked to many esteemed economists, but few with keener insights than the Harvard historian, Niall Ferguson.

I spoke with Niall recently about the crisis, and also his fascinating new book with its grand title, “The Ascent of Money: A Financial History of the World.”

(BEGIN VIDEO)

ZAKARIA: Welcome, Niall Ferguson.

Niall, when you look at the history of financial times, troubles, how bad is the one we’re currently in?

NIALL FERGUSON, HARVARD UNIVERSITY AND AUTHOR, “THE ASCENT OF MONEY”: We are now in a financial crisis that bears comparison with the Great Depression. Nobody should have any doubt about that.

The difference is that we’re adopting very different monetary and fiscal policies to try to repress that crisis. That’s why I would call it a Great Repression.

But it is potentially as bad. We’re not out of the woods yet. And it seems to me that we’re looking not only at the biggest post-war recession, but potentially also at an extremely slow, long, lost decade. It’s something that nobody …

ZAKARIA: Sort of like Japan in the ’90s.

FERGUSON: That could be a good scenario. If you think of the Great Depression as the worst case scenario, we would be getting off lightly if we can get by with a decade of one percent per annum growth.

So at the moment, I’m really quite apprehensive that the process of deleveraging has far from run its course. There’s no floor in sight in the real estate market. And these things have a self-perpetuating quality. One of the lessons of history is that depressions tend to feed on themselves. There is, after all, a psychological dimension to this. Once people get really spooked, it’s very hard for the market to find its bottom.

And remember, stocks sold off between ’29 and ’33 by nearly 87 percent. So you have to have a sense of orders of magnitude here.

Financial crises happen infrequently on this kind of scale. And that’s why we need to have historical knowledge to have an understanding of their dynamics.

ZAKARIA: If you want to look at the nightmare scenario, the Japanese people forget — initially pretended they had no problem in the 1990s.

But two or three years into their crisis, they injected capital into the banks, they cut interest rates and they had massive fiscal stimulus — all the things that we’re doing. And it didn’t work.

FERGUSON: The most you can say is that they avoided a Great Depression. I mean, they ended up with very low, almost zero growth for a decade.

But, you know, that’s a better scenario than what happened in the 1930s. Let’s not forget that in the 1930s, the United States — and, for that matter, Germany — saw unemployment of 25 percent of the civilian work force. And output contracted by roughly a third, by roughly 30 percent.

So, if you compare a depression with a stagnation, you’re going to take the stagnation every time. That’s why I say, paradoxically, the Japanese scenario of a lost decade might be a good outcome compared with the Great Depression 2.0 scenario.

ZAKARIA: But the difference this time around is, there are other countries out there that are growing. What does that mean, that China and India will probably have some reasonable growth rates despite all this?

FERGUSON: Well, that’s the hope. But I’m not 100 percent convinced that this is going to work out.

Notice also that the stock markets of countries like China — not to mention India, Russia and Brazil, the BRICs — well, they’re dropping like bricks right now, with sell-offs far in excess of what we’ve seen in the United States.

So, I think there’s a question mark over whether China and these other rapidly industrializing countries can keep the world going. They’re still much smaller economies than the United States.

If the U.S. consumer goes on strike, then I don’t really see how the BRICs are going to substitute. They’re nowhere near big enough, and their consumers are nowhere near rich enough.

ZAKARIA: But wouldn’t you say that, in this scenario which you’re describing, which is very scary, the mistake would be to err on the side of caution? And, therefore, wouldn’t it make sense to have a very, very large stimulus program of some kind?

FERGUSON: What worries me, Fareed, is that each country is going about this in its own way, in an almost uncoordinated way, despite the G-20 summit in Washington.

It’s as if everybody is dusting down their copy of Keynes’ “General Theory” and embarking on a national stimulus package, just in the same way that each central bank is heading towards a zero percent interest rate, but at its own pace.

The thing that worries me is that we seem to be forgetting how globally integrated the world economy now is. Each national action has an international reaction, an international consequence. And…

ZAKARIA: Such as? Play that out.

Suppose we had a $1.5 trillion deficit. You are suggesting there’s a problem, because somebody has to buy this debt.

FERGUSON: Right.

Well, we’ve been confidently assuming that the rest of the world will continue to make its savings available to finance our current account deficit, which isn’t about to disappear overnight.

Even if it’s only a large federal deficit, a large government deficit, the money has to come from somewhere. And $1.5 trillion is serious money in anybody’s book. I mean, this is somewhere close to 10 percent of U.S. GDP.

Now, the savings are out there in the surplus countries right now. But if the Chinese decide they’d rather deploy their resources into growing their own consumption, I don’t see how they can simultaneously buy a trillion dollars of freshly printed 10-year Treasuries.

ZAKARIA: So what happens? Suppose we start running these deficits, the Chinese don’t want to buy U.S. debt. Our interest rates have to start going up dramatically.

FERGUSON: Oh, we could see a sell-off, exactly, in the bond market. The price of U.S. bonds could go down. We could then, therefore, see the yields go up. And suddenly, you’re looking not at a 3.5 percent rate on the 10-year, but something much higher.

The other problem is, of course, in the currency markets. We’re assuming that the dollar will be the international reserve currency for the rest of time. But that’s no way a historical lesson.

It seems to be clear from the experience of the British currency that reserve currencies are not forever. They’re not like diamonds. And at some point, questions are going to be asked about how far the American currency really is the most reliable currency.

ZAKARIA: What is the back story of what is going on now?

When people look back 50 years, 100 years from now, and they watch the United States in this extraordinarily vulnerable position because of all this debt — somewhat true of Western Europe as well, perhaps in some ways more true — and they watch China, with $2 trillion of surplus savings, with a budget surplus, growing still, for the most part, robustly, what will they say about the trajectory of these countries?

FERGUSON: I think they’ll look back and say, you know what? There was actually one country at the heart of the global economy in the early 21st century, and it was called Chimerica — China plus America. And these two economies were symbiotically linked. They were intertwined with one another.

China did the saving, America did the spending. China made its funds available through currency intervention, the United States took the money and piled on the debt.

And this worked pretty well for nearly a decade. It took us from the Asian crisis of ’97, ’98, right down to the American crisis that began in 2007.

The question that historians will grapple with — and this is the thing that fascinates me now — is whether or not Chimerica was able to survive this crisis. If China and America continue to interact economically, then it seems to me we’re in with quite a good chance of avoiding another Great Depression.

So the Chinese …

ZAKARIA: In a sense you mean, the Chinese have to save America in this crisis.

FERGUSON: Well, somebody has to finance all of this borrowing. And somebody has to make sure that there are still markets for Asian exports.

There is a reasonable argument for saying that the Chinese will continue to buy 10-year Treasuries and other dollar-denominated securities in order to maintain the global trade that goes on between China and the rest of the world.

But there is an alternative that they can choose. They can say market socialism in one country. We’re going to focus on our resources, our own consumption. We’re going to say good-bye to the world market and revert to being a rather introverted Middle Kingdom.

It’s happened before in history. It wouldn’t be the first time.

Now, if that happens, it’s the end of globalization. If Chimerica turns out, if you’ll forgive the pun, to be a chimera, then we really do risk being taken back to something like the 1930s. Because remember, the key to the Depression wasn’t just the banking crisis or the stock market crash in the United States. It was the breakdown of globalization as a result of protectionism and a collapse of international trade.

That’s what made the Depression so protracted and so deep.

And my worry is that we could inadvertently allow the same kind of thing to happen if there isn’t adequate coordination between Washington and between Beijing. That’s the key relationship that future historians will talk about.

ZAKARIA: All right. We’ll be back with some good news, maybe, with Niall Ferguson.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

ZAKARIA: And we are back with Niall Ferguson of Harvard University, and the author of “The Ascent of Money.”

Niall, take us through the past and shed some light on the present. So, right now we have this kind of financial collapse of confidence. Credit has dried up.

When has that happened before? And does it always have a serious impact on the economy?

FERGUSON: Well, I think it’s worth cheering ourselves up with the reflection that, in the very, very long run, financial history is a good news story. It’s a success story.

That’s why I called the book “The Ascent of Money.” It hasn’t just ascended to be the dominant subject of conversation in this country. It’s also ascended from extraordinary, simple beginnings to produce a system that integrates the world economy and facilitates all kinds of transactions.

It’s been a bumpy ride, though, because as you say, this isn’t the first major crisis that we’ve experienced.

You know, you can go right back to the early history of banking, go right back to the Italian city states of the Medieval and Renaissance period, and it’s striking how often financial crises came along and blew banks up back then. The immediate predecessors of the hugely successful Medici Bank went bust when, among others, the English king defaulted on his debts.

So, financial history has a kind of familiar, repetitive quality to it.

ZAKARIA: Now, in those days, am I right in thinking — I mean, really back over most of it — the big crises were often because governments, kings, bankrupted themselves by overspending because of wars?

FERGUSON: Right.

ZAKARIA: We are now overspending because of, in effect, citizens and consumers who over-consume. Is that…

FERGUSON: Most debt throughout history in fact is public debt until relatively recently. It was governments that could borrow on a really large scale, and ordinary citizens simply didn’t have the collateral to do that. I mean, consumer credit is really a 20th century phenomenon.

The only people who could put on substantial amounts of leverage before that were the aristocrats who had large estates and were effectively mini-monarchs.

ZAKARIA: And did they? Were there aristocrats and financiers that did the kind of thing that hedge funds do today?

FERGUSON: Oh, absolutely. I mean, the Duke of Buckingham is a particularly fine example of a 19th century tale of disaster in the leveraged real estate market.

The second Duke of Buckingham was a pretty high-living kind of character, who lived life to the full. And there was nothing that he wasn’t prepared to throw money at, from mistresses and other men’s wives, to the most extravagant furnishings that have ever been seen.

And I paid a visit to Stowe House, which was once the grandest private residence in all of England. It’s now a rather forlorn accommodation for a minor public school. But back then, this was a symbol of aristocratic living.

The trouble is, it was all financed by debt. Buckingham put on, in many ways, the mother of all mortgages. And there came a point in the 1840s with declining revenues from his agricultural estates, when the creditors called time.

And there was an absolutely humiliating scene when the entire contents of Stowe House were auctioned to the public. The Economist, the magazine which observed these sorts of things very closely, commented that this was a sign of a fundamental shift in the social order, to have a duke’s private possessions auctioned off because he’d gone bust.

You see, real estate can get you into trouble even if you have a hereditary title.

ZAKARIA: Now, are we going to look back on these times in that way? In other words, have the last 20 years been a kind of high point of finance and finance capitalism, and perhaps over the next 30 or 40 years we won’t see anything like this again, with hedge fund managers making $1 billion a year and birthday parties that cost $3 and $4 million?

FERGUSON: Well, think of it in terms of a planet — Planet Finance that grew to be even larger than Planet Earth — when we had the notional amounts outstanding of derivatives by the end of 2006 somewhere in the region of $500 trillion, you know, more than 10 times the annual output of the entire world economy. Or think of it as an era — the Age of Leverage, a period in which it was easy for households and banks to borrow ever more money, until finally we maxed out.

And I think one of the lessons of history is that it doesn’t matter what form your debt takes, whether it’s public debt or private debt, whether your government has run up an enormous amount of external borrowing, or whether your households have taken on mortgages that they simply can’t service.

Sooner or later financial history tells us these debts have to go one way or the other. They can go through default. They can simply be canceled.

That happened, incidentally, in ancient times. It was called a jubilee. The debts got canceled, and it was pretty hard luck on the creditors when it happened.

The other way that they can be reduced is through inflation. And this has been a recurrent feature, as I try and show in “The Ascent of Money,” of financial history — times when suddenly the value of money itself collapses and, therefore, so too does the value of debts denominated in that money.

That happened to Germany twice in the 20th century. And we shouldn’t rule out the possibility that, at some point in this sequence of events, we get ourselves out of this intractable debt problem by letting the printing presses roll and letting the money supply finally generate an inflation in double digits or even treble digits.

ZAKARIA: All right. Give us a last thought that’s good news.

You say, in the end, at the end of the day, this is a good news story, and that’s why you call it “The Ascent of Money.”

So what’s the good news here?

FERGUSON: The core, the heartbeat of economic growth, if you like, is innovation — technological innovation, managerial innovation and financial innovation.

And one of the fascinating things that struck me as I worked on the 1930s and the 1970s, and looked even further back to the first great depression that struck in the late 19th century, when prices fell for more than two decades, is the fact that innovation can keep going even in the toughest times.

Even in the 1930s, American corporations were still making major advances in technology. This was a time when IBM was laying the foundations for the computer, a time when RCA was transforming broadcasting. This was a time of great innovation. General Electric was in its heyday.

In the same way, in the 1970s stagflation, new companies were formed. Microsoft was one of them, Apple was another.

Necessity, Fareed, is the mother of invention. And even in the toughest crisis, I have confidence that in the United States there will be innovators who set, as it were, the path for the next era of economic expansion.

And in that sense, we’ll see the ascent of money resume. And we’ll look back and say, well, we fell off a cliff then. But we picked ourselves up, and we climbed up the next mountain.

Update II: Avoid The American English Department

Education, English, History, Literature, Multiculturalism, Propaganda, The West

It is old news that the academy has been contaminated by postmodernism.

For example, academic historians and their acolytes have worked overtime to replace the impartial, non-ideological study of American history and its heroic figures with “history from below.” This postmodern tradition regularly produces works the topics of which include, “Quilting Midwives during the Revolution.” Or, “Hermaphrodites and the Clitoris in Early America.”

As you well imagine, the libidinized annals of the “Hermaphrodites and the Clitoris in Early America” is not flying off the printing presses.

The deconstruction of fields of study has engulfed universities, not sparing the hard sciences. Women’s Studies courses and English departments are most likely to be littered with the ideology’s lumpen jargon. There, text is routinely deconstructed and shred. Subjected to this “academic” acid, Shakespeare, Tolstoy, and T. S. Eliot are whittled down to no more than ruling class oppressors, their artistry reduced to the bare bones of alleged power relationships in society.

Easily the worst offender is the American English Department. Phyllis Schlafly wrote the following in “Advice To College Students: Don’t Major in English”:

“In the decades before ‘progressive’ education became the vogue, English majors were required to study Shakespeare, the pre-eminent author of English literature. The premise was that students should be introduced to the best that has been thought and said.”

“What happened? To borrow words from Hamlet: ‘Though this be madness, yet there is method in it.’ Universities deliberately replaced courses in the great authors of English literature with what professors openly call ‘fresh concerns,’ ‘under-represented cultures,’ and ‘ethnic or non-Western literature.’ When the classics are assigned, they are victims of the academic fad called deconstructionism. That means: pay no mind to what the author wrote or meant; deconstruct him and construct your own interpretation, as in a Vanderbilt University course called ‘Shakespearean Sexuality,’ or ‘Chaucer: Gender and Genre’ at Hamilton College. …”

“Twenty years ago, University of Chicago Professor Allan Bloom achieved best-seller lists and fame with his book The Closing of the American Mind. He dated the change in academic curricula from the 1960s when universities began to abandon the classic works of literature and instead adopt multicultural readings written by untalented, unimportant women and minorities.”

“Bloom’s book showed how the Western canon of what educated Americans should know – from Socrates to Shakespeare – was replaced with relativism and the goals of opposing racism, sexism and elitism. Current works promoting multiculturalism written by women and minorities replaced the classics of Western civilization written by the DWEMs, Dead White European Males.”

“Left-wing academics, often called tenured radicals, eagerly spread the message, and students at Stanford in 1988 chanted ‘Hey hey, ho ho, Western civ has got to go.’ The classicists were cowed into silence, and it’s now clear that the multiculturalists won the canon wars.”

“Shakespeare, Chaucer and Milton have been replaced by living authors who toe the line of multicultural political correctness, i.e., view everything through the lens of race, gender and class based on the assumption that America is a discriminatory and unjust racist and patriarchal society. The only good news is that students seldom read books any more and use Cliffs Notes for books they might be assigned.”

[SNIP]

In its December 12, 2008 issue, the Times Literary Supplement has some fun at the expense of a pompous graduate of this pathetic tradition. The incomprehensibility factor, as they call it:

“Once the habit of writing comprehensible English has been unlearned, it can be difficult to reacquire the knack. Here is an example of a sentence which purports to be written in English, but which, we propose, is incomprehensible to all but a few. It is taken from Coincidence and Counterfactuality: Plotting time and space in narrative fiction by Hilary P. Dannenberg”:

Historical counterfactuals in narrative fiction frequently take an ontologically different form in which the counterfactual premise engenders a whole narrative world instead of being limited to hypothetical inserts embedded in the main actual world of the narrative text.

About Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park Dannenberg the dolt writes that it “undertakes a more concerted form of counterfactualizing, in which both the character and the narrator separately map out counterfactual versions of the concluding phase of the novel’s love plot.”

In studied contempt, the TLS marvels that Coincidence and Counterfactuality “is published by the University of Nebraska Press. Just think: someone read the book and endorsed its publication, someone edited it, someone else set it in type, designed a cover, compiled an index, read the proofs—yet hardly anyone can understands what’s in it.”

Now that’s good, clear English everyone gets.

Update I (December 22): a good friend of mine, also a fine and successful novelist, relates this amusing incident:

“I once got hired by the U of Chicago to edit their academic press. The manuscripts were atrocious. I could not understand what was written, and used a red pen heavily in the margins of the manuscripts. After my corrections arrived, I was fired immediately. They told me I was not ‘intellectually sophisticated’ enough for the job. To which I replied: ‘You’re right: Fuck you.'”

Update II: Would I have, like my friend, responded so confidently and cleverly, as our reader suggests? I don’t think so. I’d probably become defensive, and return an analytical evisceration, which would have been wasted on the these literary offenders. My friend’s repartee is much more effective: it’s economical and intellectually apt, given its targets.

Updated: O’Reilly Won The Battle But Lost The Debate

Christianity, Constitution, Democracy, History, Israel, Media

The excerpt is from my new WorldNetDaily.com column, “O’Reilly Won The Battle, But Lost The Debate”:

“O’Reilly’s defense of the Christmas display was inadequate ..He fiddles with the icing rather than the cake…

O’Reilly defends the country’s founding faith on … the frivolous grounds that it is a State-designated holiday; a harmless and happy day. This is O’Reilly’s problem. He’s forever arguing his case from the stance of the positive law.

Christmas ought to be defended on the basis that Christianity is America’s founding faith.

To defend Christian America with reference to Un-Christian State law that has all but banished Christianity from the public square is worse than silly.”

The complete column is “O’Reilly Won The Battle – But Lost The Debate.”

Update (Dec. 20): HITLER AND DEMOCRACY. Ken Kelley asserts:
History records Hitler’s accent to power without a vote by the people.

Perhaps history taught in the public schools. Writes Ian Kershaw, professor of modern history at Sheffield University, author of Hitler, the Germans and the Final Solution:

“Hitler came to power in a democracy with a highly liberal Constitution, and in part by using democratic freedoms to undermine and then destroy democracy itself. …The Nazis’ spectacular surge in popular support (2.6 percent of the vote in the 1928 legislative elections, 18.3 percent in 1930, 37.4 percent in July 1932) reflected the anger, frustration and resentment — but also hope — that Hitler was able to tap among millions of Germans.”

Hitler was democratically elected as Chancellor of Germany in 1933, writes “Atlas of the Twentieth Century.”

“However, because the office of Chancellor was not filled by popular election, it might be more accurate to say that Hitler was constitutionally chosen to be the Chancellor of Germany, a democratic nation. The point is, there was nothing about Hitler’s appointment as Chancellor (30 Jan. 1933) which violated the Constitution of Germany. President Hindenburg legally selected the leader of the largest party in Parliament to head up a coalition government. It has happened hundreds of times throughout history without being considered undemocratic.”

This is exactly how democracy, “The God That Failed,” works. A leader is elected with a slim majority. He puts together a coalition which guarantees he’ll have a majority in parliament, and together they proceed to put one over the people.

Democracy is despotism by any other name.