Dear Reader,
For today's edition of these musings, I want to relate some observations arising out of a conversation I had yesterday with constitutional lawyer and monetary expert Dr. Edwin Vieira. I first became acquainted with Dr. Vieira, who holds four degrees from Harvard and has extensive experience arguing cases before the Supreme Court, at our recent Casey Research Summit in Boca Raton, where he spoke on how far off the constitutional rails the nation has traveled.
Because I think what Dr. Vieira said needs to be heard by a wider audience, I arranged for the follow-up interview that I conducted with him yesterday as a special feature for subscribers to The Casey Report. Even so, I wanted to share with all of you dear readers a couple of quick but important observations that came out of our long conversation.
Precedents for a Police State
Dr. Vieira and I covered a lot of ground in our lengthy conversation, most of it related to the U.S. monetary system - its history, nature, and likely fate. But in between the details and analysis of how it is that the nation's fiscal and monetary affairs have deteriorated to the current dismal state - and how the global sovereign debt crisis is likely to be resolved - a couple of deeply concerning truths emerged.
Concerning because, taken together, these truths have set the stage for a full-blown police state.
The first of these two truths has to do the nature of today's money. To set the stage, I present the following excerpt from Dr. Vieira's paper A Cross of Gold related to the original Federal Reserve Act.
Section 16 of the Act provided that:
Federal reserve notes, to be issued at the discretion of the Federal Reserve Board for the purpose of making advances to Federal reserve banks are hereby authorized. The said notes shall be obligations of the United States, and shall be receivable by all national and member banks and Federal reserve banks and for all taxes, customs, and other public dues. They shall be redeemed in gold on demand at the Treasury Department of the United States, or in gold or lawful money at any Federal reserve bank.
Observe: From the very first, Federal Reserve Notes were denominated "advances" and "obligations"-that is, instruments and evidence of debt. True "money", however, is the most liquid of all assets, not a debt that might be repudiated, and certainly not a debt that has been serially repudiated.
And if Federal Reserve Notes were from the start to be "redeemed in gold or lawful money", they obviously were never conceived to be either "gold" or "lawful money". So, because by definition the only "money" the law recognizes is "lawful money", by law Federal Reserve Notes were never (and are not now) actual "money" at all, but at best only some sort of substitute for "money".
The monetary conjurers' trick has been, slowly, steadily, and stealthily, to reverse this understanding in the public's mind. That is, to make the substitute pass for the real thing, and then remove the real thing from the operation.
This subterfuge was not overly difficult to put over. After all, in the term "redeemable currency", which is the noun and which the adjective? When people deal with a "paper currency redeemable in gold", the natural uninstructed inclination is to treat the paper currency as "money" and the gold as something else. The paper currency, as the saying goes, is merely "backed" by gold-but of course is not itself gold. And because the currency is not itself gold, the money-manipulators can remove the gold "backing" farther and farther into the background, without affecting the nature of the paper as "currency" (at least nominally).
Thus, a "redeemable currency" can be converted into a "contingently redeemable" or "conditionally redeemable" currency, through temporary suspension of specie payments (as happened repeatedly during the Nineteenth Century); and then into a full-fledged "irredeemable currency", through permanent suspension of specie payments, as with Federal Reserve Notes after 1933 domestically and 1971 internationally.
Yet, to the average citizen (whose most serious liability is mental inertia), even though a paper currency's promise of redemption has been dishonored, it nonetheless remains "currency".
Thus one grasps that the so-called "right to redemption" attached to any paper currency is actually a liability, inasmuch as it exposes the holders of that currency to repudiation, because they possess only the paper, not the gold.
Even in the best of times, the holders of redeemable paper currency are not economically and politically independent. Rather, they depend upon the honesty and the competence of the money-managers.
This is why America's Founding Fathers, realists all, denominated redeemable paper currency as "bills of credit". They knew that such bills' values in gold or silver always depended upon the issuers' credit-that is, ultimately, the issuers' honesty and ability to manage their financial affairs.
The unavoidable trouble with "bills of credit", though, is that they can (and usually do) turn out to be "bills of discredit", when the holders discover that the money-managers are dishonest and incompetent-or worse, as is the situation today, highly competent at dishonesty. Then the holders of the paper currency (if they are sufficiently astute) realize how unwise it is to allow the gold to be held by the very people with the greatest incentive, and the uniquely favorable position and opportunity, to steal it.
But when the money-managers refuse to redeem their currency, what can the holders of that currency do to protect themselves? Well, what were they able to do in 1933 and in 1971? Nothing. If the holders of Federal Reserve Notes had enjoyed an effective, enforceable "right" to the gold that the Federal Reserve System and the Treasury of the United States promised to pay in redemption of those notes-that is, if the currency had been "redeemable" in the only meaningful sense that redemption was absolutely assured as a matter of law and especially fact-the gold seizures of 1933 and 1971 would never have happened.
Thus, the ostensibly "redeemable" character of paper currency of the pre-1933 and pre-1971 type did not protect the holders of that currency. Instead, it turned out to be the very device used to deceive, defraud, divest, and dispossess them of gold-proving in the most palpable manner that a society's acceptance of "redeemable currency" is the product of confusion and the invitation to inevitable economic and political disaster.
(Ed. Note: You can read the entire text of A Cross of Gold at the GATA website. Here's a link.)
Before going on, a caveat that I'll be paraphrasing Dr. Vieira going forward, sharing my interpretation of his views, giving rise to the possibility that I may miss an important detail or nuance that would otherwise be revealed in the full interview.
In our conversation, Dr. Vieira ticked off eight specific ways in which the current monetary system is unconstitutional. While I won't go into the specifics here, the important thing to understand is that, as currently operated, the federal government has managed to manipulate things to avoid any constitutional restrictions on its ability to spend.
This, of course, gives the government free rein to reward favored voting blocs with expensive social programs, buy fleets of limousines, launch expensive overseas adventures, bail out well-connected donors, and otherwise spend the country into ruin.
To understand why this is so important as a precedent to the evolution of fascism, view the matter in reverse by considering how different things would be if the constitutionally mandated requirement that the government's currency be redeemable in good money - gold or silver - was still enforced. In that case, the government's ability to spend would be effectively limited by what it collected in revenues. That, in turn, would have greatly curtailed its ability to grow into the bloated juggernaut it has.
In other words, the American ideal of a limited government would have been hard wired.
As it stands, though, exactly the opposite has been allowed to evolve - unchallenged by anyone, including the Supreme Court. Why has the nation's highest court chosen not to tackle this clear breach of the Constitution? According to Dr. Vieira, it is likely because if they were to void the current system as being unconstitutional, they would effectively blow apart the U.S. and global economy. But as they have no authority to even suggest an alternative system, they are faced with the reality that while they have the power to do great damage, they have no power to cushion the blow. And so, the Supreme Court does nothing.
As a result, the ability of the federal government to continue its insane spending and rolling out new initiatives designed to win over voters continues with no legal restraints - the latest example being the health-care initiative. Put another way, in cahoots with the Fed, the federal government is able to wage war, bail out the banks, foster socialism, and otherwise bankrupt the nation - to do whatever it wants - largely thanks to its continued operation of an unconstitutional monetary system.
It Gets Worse...
The second fundamental truth is that the Supreme Court has been a co-conspirator and instrument of the government's degradation of individual liberty.
Dr. Vieira and I spent a fair amount of time on this topic - of how the nation's highest court could let stand the egregious excesses of recent decades; the Patriot Act, Guantanamo, institutionalized torture and renditions, domestic spying, eminent-domain abuses, warrantless searches, etc., etc. In his view, there can be only one of two reasons that the Supreme Court has been so accommodating - one is that the justices are incredibly incompetent, and the other is that they are working within the context of an unseen agenda.
Ruling out the first, his final conclusion is that they are operating with an unseen agenda in mind. In his view, that agenda revolves around the rising potential for widespread social unrest emanating from the nationwide monetary Ponzi scheme. Doing its part to prepare, the Supreme Court has been establishing the precedents necessary for the government to cope with that unrest.
Too radical a thought? Returning to Dr. Vieira's point - ask yourself how else to explain the Supreme Court's actions. Are they collectively of low intelligence, or otherwise so stupid as to be unable to understand the Constitution? Or do they now view the Constitution and the Bill of Rights as dead letters, freeing them up to respond to the government's overheated demands for new and previously unimaginable new "emergency" (read "fascist") powers?
Is there an alternative explanation?
On this general theme, Dr. Vieira correctly points out that, in order for a fascist state to exist does not require the government to actually arrest anyone - but only that they can arrest anyone. Do you think you broke a law over the past week? I can assure you that every one of you dear readers broke a lot of laws. Sure, you may not have realized you were breaking a law - but, as the old saying goes, "Ignorance of the law is no excuse."
The Stage Is Set
Unrestricted in its growth by any constitutionally mandated limits on its ability to create and manipulate money - the official currency now being nothing more than IOUs redeemable in nothing more tangible than coins made out of base metal alloys with inflated face values - and supported by a Supreme Court that has unequivocally demonstrated a willingness to ignore or sign off on egregious tramplings of the Constitution, the stage is set for the U.S. government to evolve into something far more dangerous on the domestic front.
All it requires now is a triggering event, and it would be naïve to think that such an event won't occur. Maybe not tomorrow, maybe not this decade - but when it inevitably does, the federal government already has all the precedents it needs to do "whatever it takes." This absence of legal restrictions on its actions is the very foundation of fascism.
When I asked Dr. Vieira how the nation has progressed on a scale from 1 to 10 towards becoming a police state, with 10 being a full-blown version, he put us currently at about 7.
There really is no investment angle to be derived from this situation - well, at least nothing new. Owning tangible investments that will hold up in the face of a continued currency debasement continues to make sense - but with the caveat that FDR's unconstitutional gold confiscation of the 1930s was let stand and there is zero reason to think that the accommodating Supreme Court wouldn't go along with it again. One would hope to see straws in the wind before any moves toward confiscation would begin. Until those straws start flying, the precious metals - as well as other tangibles - belong as part of your portfolio.
And once again, I'll mention the importance of politically diversifying your life and your money as one of the few steps you can take to avoid the serious risk that comes from being "all in" in a single jurisdiction.
(If you haven't done so, check out www.InternationalMan.com - a new site that is picking up where Doug Casey's book The International Man left off. It may be of some use and interest.)
In my Friday column last week, I touched on the idea that one's perspective on the world can be heavily influenced by the media one exposes oneself to... negative begetting negative and so forth.
That makes it kind of ironic - an irony I picked up on myself while writing that article, and was mentioned by several readers - that I often write on what might be considered gloomy topics.
To which I would respond, as I did to one dear reader, that if you are sitting in a theater and see a fire breaking out, would you fail to make others aware of it, because you didn't want to interrupt their entertainment?
Well, we can see a fire blowing up - the kindling for which has been piled up deep by a series of out-of-control governments. Unless and until there is something akin to an "American Spring." this fire is going to spread and consume even more of the accumulated wealth of the broader public - and maybe worse.
Do what you can to protect yourself and your families - then get on with your life. You may not be able to do much about the bigger-picture trend, but you can certainly take steps on a personal level to mitigate the ill effects.
Hope for the best, plan for the worst... but then live life to the fullest.