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Friday, December 19, 2025

Bill Bonner, "The Underlying Malady"

Hippocrates (Primum, non noncere)
"The Underlying Malady"
by Bill Bonner
Baltimore, Maryland - "All we have to go on is the past. The future hasn’t happened yet. So, all we can do is to try to match up what we know from the past with the patterns of today. One of the outlier patterns we’ve been looking out this week is ‘democracy.’ The headlines tell us it is in danger.

Reuters: "Americans worry democracy in danger amid gerrymandering fights, Reuters/Ipsos poll finds."

Demos.org: "Molly, You in Danger, Girl"

Chicago Tribune: "Pete Buttigieg says democracy is ‘in danger’ as Republicans consider mid-census redistricting."

But for all the caterwauling and moaning...America was never meant to be a democracy...and a democracy is not a stable form of government anyhow. As soon as the foxes figure out how to vote themselves a rack of lamb for dinner, the sheep are doomed. A ‘republic’ seems to be transitory too. France has had five of them since 1789...each one reached for perfection, followed by a clumsy flop. No matter what you call it, the elite and their jefes do what they can to 1) shift more and more wealth power to themselves...and 2) keep the masses happy with lies, loaves, and sentimental diversions. How else to explain the latest ‘war’ with Venezuela?

And here’s another one. Newsweek: "Donald Trump’s “Warrior Dividend” checks will cost more than $2.5 billion. President Donald Trump has announced that he plans to issue $1,776 checks to U.S. military service members."

Of course, it is no ‘dividend.’ There is no income source from which to take real earnings. It will be just more money borrowed and spent to secure the support of the lumpenproletariat. Much has been written about this process. The feds spend too much. Then, they go broke.

But the money itself rarely draws the attention it deserves. Almost all instances of imperial decline are accompanied by monetary decline, manifesting itself as inflation, corruption, and/or bankruptcy. But the real process - the underlying malady - is profound and mostly invisible.

Real money keeps people honest and keeps them free. Because it honestly ciphers the crucial relationships...between a pound of ham and a pound of butter...between an hour of work and an hour’s pay...between capitalist and laborer...between creditor and debtor. Without real money, and free markets, you have no way of knowing where you stand…and whether you are going or coming.

Each person’s private calculation - about whether to buy beans or meat...whether to hire someone or do the work himself...whether to be a borrower or a lender depends on a true measure. Neither high. Nor low. Just honest. Proverbs: "Differing weights are detestable to the LORD, and dishonest scales are unfair."

America had real money for nearly 200 years. Gold-backed money. And consumer prices were more or less stable. In those first 2 centuries, the US grew to be the most powerful country on earth. And its government accumulated a total of $4 trillion in debt. Over the following 54 years, it added 8 times as much debt, with another $1 trillion added in the last two and a half months.

The new, post-1971 money, conjured up by the Nixon Administration, and welcomed by almost all economists of the time, was essentially dishonest. The stock market, for example, gradually failed to measure the real worth of America’s leading companies. Investors stopped trying to calculate the value of each company’s expected earnings discounted by a genuine interest rate. How could they; they didn’t know what the real interest rate was? Instead, they began wasting capital by gambling on the Fed’s interest rate policies....on political moves...and leveraged speculations on memes, tokens, and cryptos.

And by artificially making more credit available, the Fed skewed the entire economy and everyone in it. It tilted people away from saving...and towards borrowing. The two are very different. A saver looks ahead, to his earnings. He is naturally ‘conservative,’ master of himself, and eager to protect what he has earned. But a borrower, deep in debt, is a slave to the credit industry. He depends on the government to keep interest rates low and fears the future…when he will have to pay up. As he accumulates more debt, he becomes more desperate. Soon, he has no real wealth...but only monthly credit obligations, expressed in shifting terms.

And then what kind of government does he really have...a democracy? A republic? Forget about it. He is gripped by a system he can neither understand nor control. He may go through the motions of self-government, but he is ruled; he is not the ruler."

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