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FEATURE ARTICLE |
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Doug Casey on the US Constitution
Doug Casey Website: Casey Research Date: 04-16-2012 Subject: Casey Research Articles Legendary contrarian investor and the original International Man
Doug Casey takes aim at the US Constitution, from its sneaky beginnings
to its encroachments on individual liberty and free markets. Louis:
Doug, we've threatened to talk about the Constitution many times. Since
there's increasing interest in the country's economic and political
future, maybe now is a good time to put that into a fuller historical
context.. Doug: Good idea. I confess I suspected
this was coming up, so I just now read the Constitution again. This is
actually something I recommend to everyone. Unfortunately, the
Constitution is now a dead letter, but reading it is instructive in a
number of ways, and it only takes about ten minutes. One should know the
law of the land, even if it no longer applies. That will probably
be enough for one conversation, but we should probably also take up the
amendments, especially the Bill of Rights, in a future conversation,
and then maybe another on the Declaration of Independence â€" another
short document everyone should read. L: Well,
some might argue that since the Constitution was ratified with the Bill
of Rights attached, they really ought to be considered together, but I'd
certainly agree that the later amendments â€" like the ones establishing
and repealing Prohibition â€" should be a separate conversation. Doug:
Thank heaven for the Bill of Rights; it slowed the descent of the US
considerably, while it was still taken seriously. So, where to begin… L:
How about with the fact that there wasn't supposed to be a
constitution? The Continental Congress authorized delegates to gather to
amend and improve on the Articles of Confederation, not to replace them
with a new form of government. Doug: I've read
that James Madison of Virginia showed up with a document called the
"Virginia Plan," bearing close resemblance to the current Constitution,
except that it clearly described a single, national government. That
didn't sit too well with the more independent-minded delegates, so they
struck the words "national government" and replaced them with "United
States," which went over a lot better. Now, I wasn't there â€" and
the convention was held behind closed doors â€" so I hope readers will
give me a little wiggle room if they read a book that tells a different
story, but my impression has long been that the adoption of the
Constitution was actually something of a coup. It replaced a
confederation of separate governments with a single super-government.
Many people didn't realize this at the time, or they would have
objected. The War Between the States demonstrated the reality of the
matter, when people did object. L: I think I've read the same books you have. Or maybe I'm just remembering our conversation on the Civil War. Doug:
People often gush about what a wonderful thing the Constitution is, but
I've always suspected that US and world history would be different â€"
and better â€" if those delegates had done as they were told and just
smoothed over the rough spots in the Articles rather than replaced them
with the Constitution. Greater independence among the states could have
led to more innovation, and I doubt there would have been the
unpleasantness of 1861-'65. People with differing ethical values and
economic interests would not have been forced to obey the same laws. L: Perhaps. But they did, and we're stuck with the Constitution we have, for now. Doug:
For now. Sometimes I think those who've called for a new constitutional
convention are on to something, because the one we have now has fallen
into almost complete disuse. People talk as though it were carved into
the sacred bedrock of the universe, but few people have actually read
it, and most of those who have seem to spend their time trying to figure
out ways to get out of the clear and simple rules it set out, rather
than abide by it. People talk about how it should be a "living document"
that evolves with the times. But those people almost always want to
abolish what few limitations there are on the government. They want to
change the actual working parts of the Constitution, the ones that
define and shape the government, not the tedious pages with "Robert's
Rules of Order" type stuff governing how motions are passed in Congress
and the like. Curiously, this trivia â€" about how the president of the
Senate is elected and so forth â€" is the only part of the Constitution
that the government still adheres to. It follows the trivia fastidiously
but disregards the important parts that designate what the government
may and may not do. L: Ah, the irony. But a
constitutional convention is a terrible idea, Doug; you know that if we
had one now, we wouldn’t get anything like enumerated and restricted
powers or the Bill of Rights. The average "educated" person in the US
has been taught that the Great Depression proved that capitalism doesn't
work; and the average couch potato believes that work is a tedious
imposition to be avoided, rather than a virtue. If a new constitution
were drafted today, we'd get unlimited and expansive powers and a Bill
of Entitlements. Doug: [Sighs] You're absolutely
right. All institutions â€" countries, companies, clubs, whatever â€"
inevitably degrade and become corrupt over time. That's one reason why
revolutions occur in countries. But okay, let's look at the one
we've got. Some things stand out. Let's start with the item you tripped
over, the power given to Congress to regulate commerce with foreign
nations, Indian tribes, and between the states. That was a problematical
idea from the get-go. There should be separation of economy and state
for the same reason that we have separation of church and state. And
there should be a separation of state and education, and everything else
that might be provided by society. Otherwise the state will insinuate
itself and eventually try to usurp the whole area. Even though the
founders' idea of "regulate" was very different from the current one of
total control, it left the door open to misinterpretation. In those
days it meant simply to "make regular" or to normalize. The idea, as I
understand it, was to ensure a level playing field between the states,
since some of the states had sweetheart deals with some states and trade
barriers with yet others, greatly complicating business concerning them
all. Over the years, this concept has devolved into a blanket power to
control every minute detail of any good or service that might cross
state lines â€" or might not even do that, but could affect prices in
other states simply by existing wherever it is. What was a very
reasonable intent has opened Pandora's box. And now corporatists,
lobbyists, bureaucrats, and influence-peddlers completely control the
coercive power of the state and use it to destroy their competition and
enrich themselves. L: As opposed to beating the competition in a fair contest in the marketplace. Doug:
Yes; we're told competition is supposed to be "fair," not "cutthroat" â€"
although both terms are ridiculous misnomers. But Article I, Section 8
is full of things that have been perverted or really shouldn't be there
to start with. It says the Congress has the power to coin money and
regulate its value, as well as establish weights and measures. Any
sensible person could have told the guys who wrote this that that's like
asking the fox to guard the henhouse. Money is a market phenomenon
that's quite capable of orderly evolution in a free-market environment.
Governments are not necessary to establish money and should never be
trusted with a monopoly power over money â€" when they have it, they always abuse it and debase the currency. It happened in ancient Rome and has
happened again and again throughout history; it's the easiest â€" but also
the most destructive â€" way for the state to get revenue. L:
Fine, but you're an anarchist, and the writers of the Constitution were
not. They were practical men of their day, trying to set up a system
they thought would work. Keeping the state's grubby hands off the money
supply was not an idea they would have been familiar with… Doug:
Not really. Bank notes back then were issued by private companies â€"
banks, gold- and silversmiths, and such. They issued notes stating that
so-and-so had X amount of gold or silver on deposit. Many people used
all sorts of gold and silver not issued by nor regulated by their local
governments for money. If memory serves, in the original colonies that
formed the United States of America, Spanish pieces of eight were among
the most common items used for money. The framers of the
Constitution should have known better. And maybe they did; the
Constitution gives Congress the power to coin money, but it doesn't
forbid anyone else from doing the same thing. So anyone could have gone
into the business of minting coins for use as means of exchange and
stores of value. The market would decide which were the most reliable. L: I wonder when and how competing with the government on that front became a crime. Doug:
I'm not sure it is, even today. What the government has done to people
who've issued private money in recent times, like the creators of the
Liberty Dollar, is to prosecute them for counterfeiting, which is spelled out as a crime in the Constitution â€" but only if you
counterfeit the currency of the United States. During the War Between
the States, a printer in Philadelphia hit upon the idea of
counterfeiting Confederate currency and made a huge amount of money for
himself. He was never prosecuted. Washington overlooked it because it
aided its war effort. But by late in 1863 it was no longer even worth
the man's effort, because the Confederate dollar had lost so much value â€"
due mostly to the foolish policies of the Confederate government in
Richmond. I suspect that was a major, but generally overlooked,
contributing factor to the collapse of the South. L:
I've long thought the North's victory was largely economic, not
military. "Unconditional Surrender" Grant's bloody march into Virginia
was an insanely expensive way to beat Lee. Anyway, you may be right
about counterfeiting, but everyone has gotten the message: Money is the
state's turf, and woe unto ye if you trespass. Doug: Yes, we live on a prison planet. Trapped here by the aberrations of human psychology. L: So, what else would you list among Doug Casey's top ten gripes with the US Constitution? Doug:
The provision to establish post offices and post roads. The post office
is a paragon of inefficiency and bad service, was never necessary as a
government function, and absolutely should never have been a monopoly.
And the first roads in America were private toll roads. L:
I remember reading that Lysander Spooner competed with the US Post
Office in the 1840s, and did a better job at lower cost until the
government shut him down. Doug: Once again, the
power to establish post offices and post roads is given, but the
authority to crush private competition is not. The first power was later
interpreted to include the second, and so it's been with everything in
the Constitution ever since it was written. Things like this and the
power to coin money were the camel's nose under the tent flap; now the
state camel has filled the tent, and there's hardly any room for
individual freedom. L: Okay, what else? Doug:
The item setting up copyrights and patents was, at least arguably,
another mistake along these lines, and for the same reasons. As a writer
who wants to benefit from the effort I put into using words to
communicate valuable information, I'm a bit ambivalent about that, but I
don't see how it's possible for anyone to own an idea, and I'm sure
getting the government involved is a bad move. L:
We published a conversation with our friend Paul Rosenberg on the
subject of "intellectual property." His conclusion was that the state's
involvement has become useless anyway. All creators can do now is adapt
to the marketplace. Doug: It's interesting to me
that in spite of all the hand-wringing on this subject, the ongoing
demise of patents and copyrights has not stopped inventors from
inventing, nor musicians or writers from creating. In fact, wikis and
open-source projects have created many valuable things. Patents,
copyrights, and trademarks really just turned into a bonanza for
lawyers. I do want to benefit from my intellectual work, but I suspect
Paul is right; all we can do is adapt. It's also interesting to me
that aside from counterfeiting, which we've already mentioned, there
are only two other crimes mentioned in the Constitution. One is piracy,
and the other is treason. Today, nobody knows for sure how many crimes
there are on the books, but it's thought that there are over 5,000
crimes defined in federal law. I've read that the average US citizen
breaks three federal laws every day, intentionally or otherwise. And now
many federal agencies have armed â€" sometimes heavily armed â€" branches
that round up people and prosecute them for these so-called crimes. I suppose I could live with just three federal laws â€" piracy, counterfeiting, and treason would be easy to remember, at least. L: But counterfeiting wouldn't be a federal crime if we got the government out of the money business, as you suggest. Doug: That's right, and piracy could be handled by letters of marque and reprisal, as it was in the old days. L: What about treason? Doug:
Well… you could look at that as the state's right to self-defense â€" but
let me just ask: when the state becomes unjust, what is a just man or
woman to do? L: On an ethical plane, the answer is clear, but on a practical plane, that's a tough one. Doug: Indeed. Another
thing worth covering is the power to declare war. The authors of the
Constitution were rightly worried about leaders with the power of kings
to plunge nations into war for personal or imagined grievances, so they
gave the power to declare war to Congress. But like everything remotely
sensible about the Constitution, that too has been set aside. The US has
had numerous wars, one after the other, for decades â€" but the last time
Congress actually declared war was World War II. L: Really? I thought Korea was declared. Doug:
No, that was a "police action." Technically, it was a UN police action
against North Korea, but in reality it was a war between the US and
China. At any rate, it's just another example of how thoroughly ignored
the Constitution is in the US. The president can now unilaterally send
US troops anywhere to do almost anything. In fact, he can do almost
anything, period… at least, if media lapdogs are able to justify and
rationalize it. L: Wasn't it Henry Kissinger who
said that doing something illegal was no problem and that doing
something unconstitutional just took a little longer? Doug:
"The illegal we do immediately, the unconstitutional takes a little
longer." You've got to admit Henry is a clever guy. Come the day I write
an obit for him, perhaps I'll subtitle it: Comedian and War Criminal. L:
Okay, okay, I get the picture. I don't think we need to go through
every clause to see how far the US has fallen from the America That Was.
That prompts me to say to those who think this conversation shows that
we hate America that just the opposite is true. Personally, I love the
idea that was America, and I still love the land of America, from sea to
shining sea. What I loathe and despise is the corruption being visited
upon her by the maggots in Washington, D.C. who've been gutting all that
is good and noble about her. At any rate, we've been saying for a
long time that all is not well in Mudville. Are there any practical
implications to this conversation? Investment implications? Doug:
It's yet another sign that the US has gone way beyond the point of no
return. You can't make a sensible investment in a country which doesn't
have the rule of law; you can only speculate â€" which is to say, try to
capitalize on politically caused distortions in the market. There's no
way the US federal government can or will return to observing the
Constitution; it's just something it pays lip service to â€" and then only
rarely. When you're on a slippery slope that's rapidly turning
vertical, it's no longer a question of if there will be a painful stop at the bottom, only when. L: Does your guru sense give you any feeling for how close we are to that crash? Doug:
You know I don't like to predict what and when at the same time, but I
can't make myself believe it can be put off too much longer â€" a couple
of years at most. And it could still quite possibly happen this year. L: In which case we invest for crisis, as you've been saying all along. Doug: Yet another reason, yes. We're headed for a genuinely historic time of troubles. L: Roger that. Until next week, then. Doug:
Travel safe, and see you soon. Personally, I dread and despise the
interrogation and searching one gets from ICE when entering the US. But I
suppose it's no more degrading than the grope from the TSA. No problem
though â€" it must be somewhere in the Constitution. I better read it
again. L: Sure, Doug, it's right next to the clause granting everyone free health care, free education, and a free lunch. Doug: [Laughs] [The government's trampling of the Constitution threatens to wipe out the wealth of countless savers, but you can protect yourself if you act in time.] |