Posted on 11/16/2012 11:48:09 AM PST by PieterCasparzen
I'm exploring a startup entrepreneurial, free-enterprise, Judeo-Christian advocacy group, a think tank of, by and for non-elites.
If you have either a little time or a little money (or both) that you can dedicate to a strictly right-wing think tank, you may be interested.
Some are no doubt familiar with my focus on NGOs (non-governmental organizations), the most infamous of which being the Soros network. While many are leftist, there are also those that purport to be right-wing, though most often they are heavily influenced by big business and academia - and virtually not at all by real-world small business viewpoints.
I'm developing a model for countering the influences of NGOs that, among other things, hurt small business, which negatively impacts families and local economies.
It struck me that small business offered a more manageable member base than the general public and also closely aligns with principles of the rule of law and economic liberty. By being by, for and of small business pure academia is avoided.
Interested parties, constructive comments are sought at this time.
So far in the exploratory phase, this is a high level of the vision (see first post):
I agree.
Hurdles:
a) the establishment keeps them out if they can’t be controlled, so the GOP-e needs to be replaced in order to get elected
b) decl. of war: We are outright re-making dozens of countries for the past few years - this is on gov’t websites, hidden in plain sight (join the MEPI ping list)
c) inflation: government spending requires it (bubble will burst)
d) make what consume: small business wants that, but big biz takes the easy way out and outsources
But I agree w/ what you said !
Test tagline...
One more time...
Think of your "think tank" as a network.
Thanks PieterCasparzen.
What I have noticed with left wing ideas, is that when the "research" is in place, the legislators seem to have the legislation written up and ready to go, then the media blitz begins.
It's like rolling a snowball downhill in wet snow, in that it starts out small, with deniably minor bits like this : Drug dealers, tax cheats boost $100 bill demand?
Inference?
Hundred dollar bills are the favorite of drug dealers and tax evading crooks in the underground economy.
The pushed concept:
That those who carry/use hundred dollar bills are crooks or drug dealers.
The Alinsky payoff:
People don't want to be considered drug dealers or tax cheats so they won't carry hundred dollar bills, and use plastic instead (which means they won't have much cash on hand).
The eventual target:
A more vulnerable population and...
The accepted confiscation of any stash of hundred dollar bills, or any "large" (how big is big?) stash of cash, for that matter, which would be justified in the public consensus (including Conservatives, the group which should most strenuously object) because "only drug dealers and tax cheats would have a lot of cash on hand".
The Liberal counter argument to objections would be something on the order of: "I thought you were a Conservative, how could you be for Drug Dealers and Tax Cheats profiting from their illegal activities?"
The real downside:
Any prepper, or for that matter any prudent person who realizes banks can fail, will have some cash on hand as well as some stash of silver and/or gold, just in case the normal economic system is interrupted.
Credit/Debit cards are just so much plastic if the lights go out, and cash is king. Money talks, after all, and if the dollar is suddenly worthless, silver, gold, ammo, or other items of barter might carry the day.
Not having a stash of cash, at least enough to pay a month's bills, (and double that when you consider that in stressed supply situations, prices rise quickly), leaves one very vulnerable to government relief mechanisms or the absence thereof in more ordinary, temporary emergencies (like hurricanes).
Now, add in the fact that filling up your gas tank, a couple of bags of groceries, or even a modest dinner for two in many places will eat the lion's share of a C-note, and that a wad of fifties is twice the thickness of hundreds, it appears the whole idea is to get people away from having/using cash, or being able to summarily vilify them for having " a lot" of cash, to the extent that the pop consensus is that ...
They deserved to have it confiscated because everyone knows only drug dealers and tax cheats would have that much cash around.
Once the media meme is in place, the snowball gathers momentum and grows. Televised content will contain a few emotional dramatizations via the 'entertainment media', maybe even a 'made for TV movie', a couple of well-harped and filtered news stories, some "Evil Cash.com" type websites pop up along with focus groups (seeking, ironically, for you to donate some 'evil cash' to the cause via PayPal or Credit card), and when the ball is really rolling, the Bill to confiscate "large sums of cash" goes in the hopper and is passed by public acclaim.
Mission Accomplished!
...and our liberties just took another hit.
Of course, in an economy which has unprecedented numbers of people on food stamps, for many, the once not so rare $100.00 bill seems like a lot of money--a lot more than it did when they were working, anyway, and it is surprising how fast the concept of how much is "a lot" changes with the transition from good employment to unemployment or back again--especially if you have your own business on the return leg.
While the venerable 'Benjamin' might seem like 'a lot', it buys less than ever before in terms of day-to-day supplies.
Now I have used this (currently) non-issue as an example, partly because the story linked is new, and this may be the start of yet another assault on conservatives, preppers, and ordinary Americans' liberty, but mainly to illustrate the sequence of events, the pattern, which even now is being used in order to try to gather steam against the RKBA and virtually any other aspect of the fundamental Liberty Americans had come to take for granted.
That assault on fundamental Liberty, in typical Obamite fashion, is coming from many directions simultaneously in an attempt to overwhelm resistance, but typical of the Left, it follows the same playbook.
I can't agree with that assessment, and here is why. Big business spawns small business development, because, at least in my industry (Oil and Gas) it is smaller businesses which form the logistical support of Big Business.
In the course of drilling a well, the Operator hires the drilling rig, earthworks contractors, surveyors, roustabouts, rig moving specialists, drilling fluids companies, consultants, directional survey companies, and buys products ranging from shipping, salt and fresh water, material for surfacing the drill site, a host of rental equipment, casing crews, etc, ad infinitum. Some of these businesses on the vendor list are large, multinational conglomerates, some are as small as one-man LLCs. They are all jockeying for a competitive edge in their niche, and it is those edges, primarily ones which save the operator money, which are the source of innovation in the industry, as well as reducing their costs while maintaining quality or improving the quality of their services in a cost neutral fashion.
Sure, no one is going into a direct face-off with Exxon/Mobil or BP, but there is a question of capital outlay involved as well.
It is not uncommon for the really big companies to buy up innovative smaller companies as well, and often the small oil companies (you seldom hear about "Small Oil") are the ones which take risks which lead to discovering big plays. While they aren't out drilling deepwater GOM wells or the North Sea, especially of late, the power of drilling something different becomes manifest when one considers the Elm Coulee Field (the first major Bakken Field, in MT) was estensively (about half of the wells) drilled by one company few had heard of, and the others at the onset were not "big" oil companies, either.
The Big Boys only got interested when the reserve estimates were revised, and bought out some of the smaller companies at a handsome profit for their developers.
From the risks taken by a few smaller companies came one of the biggest booms in the Oil Patch.
I concur with those well-formed thoughts.
Plastic, i.e., an account, can be locked and also it’s use tracked. It’s very difficult to be a “Jesse James” style outlaw today, every time you use plastic you can be tracked. Accounts can be frozen and confiscated.
On the one hand, this brings to light why swat teams are largely unnecessary, and should be replaced by simple invitations to come to court. Let’s hear the case, and if Johnny is a drug dealer, that will come out in a proper trial, if not, he’ll be exonerated. If a person does not come to court, after years of contacts, at a certain point, IMHO, just have the trial in absentia. The big drug kingpin types could have their lives made miserable if they had no access to banking or accounts of any kind and had to run a 100% paper currency business. Little people who are mistaken for drug dealers, being good citizens, would certainly come to court to clear their name. Of course, it is a major inconvenience, but certainly better than having a swat team drop by at 5:00am and kill your family and your dog, just to find out they were at the wrong address.
On the other hand, if Johnny is not a drug dealer, not a murderer, etc., but he’s being set up by a few people that can’t stand his printing the truth or speaking the truth, etc., of course, that pursuit of him is illegitimate. A “good guy” might be on the run as well as a “bad guy”. If we find ourselves in a much degraded statist society, the “good guys” being illegitimately pursued may be a large part of society but will continue to conduct business, and paper currency will be used.
In either case, there should always be a currency that by design is not linked to any particular person, so someone can simply pay “cash” for an item, and not be traced or tracked and not suddenly find their account confiscated.
Such a currency is fundamental to freedom, and people will always develop such a currency where there is none, not so much so individuals will have a stockpile of currency, but to enable people to conduct transactions. (We would do well to remember that we earn the most by employing capital (investing in a small business), and should keep levels of cash at just what is prudent). Such a currency is a basic building block of commerce, and it is an essential element for people who have experienced catastrophe to rise from the ashes of failure. It enables us to pick ourselves up, etc., and start selling things for money and buying what we need and want, regardless of our status on anyone else’s books.
But I digress,.
As far as the coordinated efforts of the “thinkers”, media and legislators, IMHO, people would profit from thinking about what you’ve laid out.
Here’s to you, Smokin’ Joe.
Sub-prime lending did not cause a 30% loss of home values. Rather what it did was compel people who wanted to legitimately buy a home in certain years to bid against other "purchasers" who didn't have to spend real money. This increased the amount of money the legitimate purchasers had to pay, with much of the money being distributed among those fortunate enough to be selling at the right time. The increase in prices didn't represent a real increase in value, nor did the fall represent a real decrease in value. Those who bought at the wrong time got burned, but they were burned when they made their purchase; the market correction didn't cause their loss--it merely revealed it.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.