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19 Comments

  1. To solve a problem;We have to get real with ourselves. We have to face the problem to resolve the problem to our max sigma six effectiveness. Lies destroy wealth…and the TRUTH creates wealth. 3 boxes of Kraft macaroni and cheese for $5.00 dollars….i wouldn’t call that a sale. Anyway; We have to face the truth to fix the problem. We can and many have profited from the chaos and rightsizing plus offshore ops and billions spent on oversea adventures. When you tell it like it is you are open to the critics….both constructive and destructive. A pure scientific analysis spelling out the accurate facts. The truth is opposite to the character of the self deceived and a traitor. A true patriot will be honest and his word is golden honorable. An atmosphere of Yes Men,arrogance,fear and BS is what has been the enemy of many a house and many a kingdom.

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  4. Mr. Stansfiled,
    Please read all of these responses carefully because these comments are more spot on than your entire commentary. I gave up on your perspectives when you said President Obama was the most liberal presisident next to FDR. What??? Why are you perpetuating such a blatant myth? Obama is Bush III, giving the elite Republican class everything they’ve wanted, including peopling his administration with their inside handlers.
    He is their puppet, like all POUS are. The heavy-handed corporate welfare is The Entitlement program that is destroying this planet and innocent people who have to live on it and in its pullution. Your Liberatarianism is way too heavy for me, pal. You actually appear to be part of the problem. I keep waiting for someone to really put our massive problems in perspective, but it is indeed, not you.

    • Kay you are correct. What is going to happen next, I don’t even need to read. This will deteriorate into a lot of name calling, no doubt with lots of responses like “you stupid liberals should just go somewhere and die.” What’s wrong with America? The problem is, what’s wrong with me for still being here? Simple – I can’t afford to move. So I’m stuck in this cesspool, listening to all these Rush Limbaugh clones drone on about how “liberals” have ruined our country and unfettered free markets will save the day and blah blah blah, when we all know full well what’s wrong with America. A society based on greed and competition can only work for a few people. There may be plenty of the pie to go around, but that doesn’t mean anyone’s going to share their piece. The problem here is the same problem everywhere – the global corporate economy, enriching a smaller and smaller circle of the already rich. The economy is healthy when people have enough money in their pockets to afford goods and services, with a little left over to save. Period. That’s not happening. Stansberry’s right wing Free Marketeers Tally Ho! rant is as old and tired as calling the idea of a good government that works for the people “socialist,” and still we buy into it.
      American style greed-based cut-throat capitalism is a worldwide cancer. In the day of the mega-corporation that has no loyalty to anything or anyone except its own Allmighty Quarterly Statement, unfettered free markets mean permanent poverty will expand exponentially. And one more thing. FDR saved this country’s butt. If that was socialism, so be it. If money grubbing Republicans hadn’t acted, FDR would’ve served four terms. A government that actually put people to work? Using our tax dollars to fix bridges, roads, provide jobs for hundreds of thousands, pulling us out of the Depression that the banks plunged us into? Imagine that. … Dream over. Start packing up the truck. I hear they’re looking for fruit pickers in California, and the streets are paved with gold.

  5. I would even go so far as to make this connection: people aren’t ignoring the corruption; they see it, see no way to fight it, and decide that the only rational decision is to try to “get theirs” before everything collapses. In a corrupt system, only the corrupt survive? I see it as a vicious cycle with corruption feeding entitlement.

    Having witnessed life in Detroit as well as in the “most corrupt state” over several years, I can only second your observations. Excellent article.

  6. I’m in practically complete agreement with the author on almost every point, but I’d like to point out one fact, which I think is also extremely important. I firmly believe that a huge part of the corruption in America today can be blamed on the whole Red vs. Blue mentality of the voting public. One could go on and discuss the merits or dangers of two party system, but what I kept reading between the lines above is that Republicans are good and Democrats are bad. I, by the way, am neither.

    In reality, they’re both status-quo, and both continue to lead the US down the path to destruction as so correctly detailed in the above article. The American people need some real help in understanding this problem and with voting in real change, which will never, apparently be accomplished under the current political system. This may have to do with factors such as the government’s ability to influence elections and perpetuate itself for the benefit of a certain minority, etc.

    Back to my point, the author has done a very good job of providing evidence that America is undergoing a total collapse on many levels. I’d just like to complain that he has also helped to bolster that collapse by implicitly perpetuating the whole Dem vs Republican issue which is at the core of American political corruption today.

  7. I loved the phrase, “the complete collapse of Western civilization,” in regard to inner city neighborhoods across the US. Many Americans are well aware of this collapse, which was recently chronicled in Clint Eastwood’s “Gran Torino,” in which the “Gran Torino” symbolized the once grand American industrial base and civilized way of life. The new “way of life” (which the movie correctly noted is more of a way of death) was symbolized by a great Korean war metaphor, in which Clint’s character, Walt, used his wartime combat skills to good effect battling gang members in his Detroit suburb. We’re all quite well aware that America is falling apart – that’s why we empathize with Clint’s character who is desperately, though unsuccessfully, trying to make some kind of sense of it all.

    That we now need a group called “The Institute for a Civil Society” is proof enough that America is in a bad way. Corruption exists from street gangs at the bottom of society to corporate heads, like Wes Bush, CEO of Northrop Grumman corporation, who is right now trying to destroy the Northrop Grumman pension program. Ford and GM bosses who ruined our once “Gran” auto industry proceeded him by 40 years, and these are the people who I blame for our economic collapse, not Porter. These idiot tycoons, motivated only by short term greed, are the people who who destroyed Detroit… and America. Unlike Porter, I’m not optimistic that things will ever turn around, for the simple reason that the corporate CEOs got to be CEOs not through brilliance, but through treachery. Many haven’t had an original thought in their lives, so like Wes Bush, when confronted with a challenge do the stupid thing and, rather than fighting for a bigger niche of the business, sell off assets and layoff employees. Very few CEOs other than Steve Jobs even know what their people are capable of doing if given the chance.

    The slide will NOT abate, and that’s why I’ll be an ex-pat within 5 years.

    • Becoming an ex-pat in 5 years is great for you, but what about the rest of us that can’t become an ex-pat 9even IF we want to)?

    • I also agree with the idea that we as a Nation are sliding away. I have really noticed it since the 1980′s. In my opinion, all that has happened – has happened and it’s in motion. What I’m saying is, it’s water over the damn.
      What I want to see from ANYONE is what can we do as individuals or as organized groups to fix this mess?
      And PLEASE don’t say elect new officials. Because ALL of the candidates talk about “CHANGE”. But so far, I have seen None of them able to bring about any real change. I think it is because the powers that be are too well entrenched in Washington and in the State governments to EVER really allow any good change happen, just more of the same old CRAP that they have handed us ever since the 1960′s.
      So what can we do, if anything, to stop the slide or salvage this mess?? I don’t like the idea of running off to another country and becoming an ex-pat [even if I could afford to do this]. America did not become the great Nation it was [up until recently, that is] by it’s citizens running away. And we should NOT start now.

      • Why are you reading a publication targeted at expats, PT’s and sovereign libertarians if you don’t want to move abroad? The world is a big place with lots of wonderful places. You cannot truly experience the world sitting at home at 5566 Southwyck Blvd. Toledo OH.

  8. I’m sorry, but as an economist you should recognize that a chart like your linkage of Government Spending to Unemployment shows far too much correlation to be indicative of cause and effect – economics doesn’t have such clear linkages. The chart probably actually just shows the effect of GDP – when economic activity is down in the private sector, government spending stays the same, GDP goes down – so the percentage rises. And guess what happens when GDP goes down? … Yup – unemployment goes up!! So your chart is spurious – if you really want to argue “from the facts” you should probably reconsider.

    I can’t disagree with the moral turpitude of financiers and politicians. However I think you have underestimated the role that the globalization of the workforce has on the earning power of labor. The contract implicit in the American Dream – that by working hard you can better yourself (because you share in the wealth that you help create) – i.e. capitalism – has been broken – probably irreparably. Businesses strive to always avoid competition – you can’t make profits in a perfectly competitive market – but that is what the global workplace has become for labor. This is why we have declining wages, and the middle class is being crushed – it has nothing to do with socialism and an entitlement ethos, and everything to do with the fact that we are all now competing against someone sitting in a mud hut with a laptop in the middle of china, earning 50 cents a day. This happened immediately after the first wave of industrialization (in the textile industry, for example). It is now happening in every single business in America.

    A third factor – America has what is probably the most regressive taxation system in the world – meaning the poor are being asked to pay much more than “their fair share”. Sales taxes, fixed $ amount health-care taxes (in the form of health insurance), and capital gains at 15% have led to this (you might have heard of this as the Buffet Rule).

    You are right in that the Government has a role in all this, but I’m not sure about whether the role is completely what you are suggesting.

  9. The essay above purports to dilate on the failings of “socialists” and renegade capitalists in equal measure. But I detect the masking fragrance of cheap cologne, liberally sprinkled on the rotting corpse of “Anglo-Saxon” capitalism itself.

    It’s not an accident that the widest gulf between rich and poor in the industrial world is to be found in America, Australia, New Zealand, and Britain. And it’s not a surprise that the divide is greater in America than Britain, in spite of the latter’s historically wretched class system.

    In all these nations, but especially in America, capitalism has been sanctified into a secular religion. And as with any sacramentalized belief system, the masses have been warned off by the threat of social sanction from any criticism of the holy doctrine.

    The rot at the core of this system is inflation. A co-morbidity is rapacity, the maniacal craving for even more riches, which has plagued America since its industrialization in the 19th century.

    Inflation stands in parasitical relationship to our economic system in that it eventually kills the host (leads to a crash). But because our system is sacrosanct, inflation cannot be remedied, or even studied, except by the priests of Wall Street. However, just as with our Constitution, or our risible non-parliamentary national legislature, what is sacrosanct cannot be questioned, let alone reformed. Be warned — “When all is holy, evil has already prevailed.”

    While there are several reasons for the American plight, I disdain the idea above that the abandonment of the missionary position or Puritanical strictures in minority neighborhoods is a crucial component of American failure. Southern blacks migrated to Detroit in the 1940s and later because there was war WORK and JOBS available there (jobs that paid a LIVING WAGE), in addition to a modicum of social acceptance. Down South then, just like today, feudalism dictated that there would be two classes: “Massa,” who would prefer free labor but after 1865 had to settle for really, really cheap labor … and the tenant farmers of both races who mostly lived in a state of peonage. (Whites had the anodyne status of “the yeomanry” to sooth their grievances.)

    With the Republican adoption of the “Southern Strategy” 40 years ago, one of our only two viable political parties began advancing the agenda of a demonstrably neo-feudal society. What does that look like? Drive through the paint-peeling squalor of downtown, and then to the outskirts of many a burg down there, and marvel at the opulence of the squirearchy’s genteel habitations.

    The squirearchy holds the interest of their fellow citizens in contempt. So do their Copperhead sympathizers elsewhere … and most particularly, so do our unlovely plutocrats (aka, the Malefactors of Great Wealth). They constitute the real “entitlement society,” for like antidemocratic oligarchies in more “benighted” lands, their staunchest belief is that their interests define the national interest.

    It’s no good cursing “both their houses,” no matter how eloquently or disinterestedly. Democracy has its precepts, and they are binding on any nation that would thus style itself. While I refuse to turn these precepts into Scripture, it is against them that our economy and politics shall be measured.

    • Bully for you! You have read a dictionary.
      Instead of trying to impress readers with how advanced your education is, I wish you would have used everyday language in your response. That way people would possibly take the time to read it and actually understand what you are trying to say.

      • Maybe you can have your kids read you the big words. Or maybe you should look within yourself to understand why you don’t understand the author.

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  1. For our American "Friends": Corruption

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