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All We Like Sheep
Joseph Sobran column ^ | 01-01-04 | Sobran, Joseph

Posted on 01/16/2004 5:58:18 AM PST by Theodore R.

All We Like Sheep

January 1, 2004

Once upon a time, my father bought Time magazine every week, as I do now. He paid 20 cents per issue; I’m paying $3.95. In my teens I bought paperback editions of Shakespeare’s plays for 35 cents each; now they cost about five bucks.

I’m no economist; these are just some of my rough indices of how prices have risen in my memory. Things in general now cost ten to twenty times as much as they used to. Don’t even ask about groceries or cars. If prices increased 1000 per cent overnight, we’d notice. Spread over decades, it seems natural. We hardly notice, let alone suspect mischief.

What’s going on? Is America under the sway of an enormous counterfeiting ring? That’s one way to put it. The funny money operation is formally known as the U.S. Government.

The money supply is now managed by the Federal Reserve System, which was created in 1913 and was supposed to protect the dollar from inflation. It obviously hasn’t quite worked out as planned. Or maybe it has, but the public wasn’t let in on the real plan. Somebody must benefit from the constant sapping of the dollar, but don’t look at me.

Originally the “dollar” was more than a piece of paper with some president’s face on it. It was a fixed amount of precious metal. When paper money came in, you could demand, and get, solid gold or silver for it.

Over time, the government took the dollar off the gold standard, meaning that it was now just a piece of paper. Most people were a bit foggy about that anyway, since they were used to paper money and supposed it had some intrinsic value. In fact, its only value now lay in its relative scarcity; it was no longer a promise to pay in precious metals.

All this would have shocked the Framers of the U.S. Constitution, who authorized Congress to “coin” money, not private bankers to “print” the stuff. The eventual decline of the dollar is just what they would have expected when the Constitution’s prescription was abandoned, which amounts to counterfeiting dollars with the permission and encouragement of the government itself.

Our forebears would have seen this as a moral issue — a government conniving in the defrauding of its own citizens. But we accept it, take it for granted, don’t get riled up, any more than sheep get indignant about being sheared.

The chief business of the U.S. Government today is fleecing us — through taxes, spending, creating debt, and ensuring that we’re paid in shrinking dollars. It may look like a conspiracy, but I’m inclined to think it’s just the aggregate result of the doings of men who are at once powerful and weak, venal and short-sighted, taking the path of least resistance for men in their position.

And if the public puts up with it, why not? Are your grandchildren going to be furious at having to pay off huge debts bequeathed to them? Probably no more furious than you are about the national debt you’ve been paying off all your adult life.

I can’t really get angry about it myself, even though I sense what’s happening to us every time I notice another price increase. I almost admire the people who do make a fuss about it, but there are so few of them that they sound crazy, like Ezra Pound ranting about “international financiers.”

No, it’s hard to make a melodrama out of a slow process. The government is less like a bank robber who storms in with ski mask and pistol than like a timid little bank clerk who quietly, over the years, embezzles a large fortune without setting off alarms or getting caught.

That timid clerk may look like nobody’s idea of a criminal, but he may be an all-the-more-effective enemy to trusting people just because they’d never suspect him of breaking the law. Why, they assume he shares their concern about the general moral deterioration of society! Crime has no better mask than outward respectability. And a man who sticks up a bank for $50 is more noticeable than a man who embezzles a million bucks over many years, while carefully fixing the books.

So when the government tells us it’s protecting us from the world’s most ruthless criminals, we ought to wonder if perhaps we need to be protected from criminals a little closer to home. The chances of your being harmed by terrorists are mathematically minute. The chance of your being robbed by your own government? That’s easy: 100 per cent.

Joseph Sobran


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government
KEYWORDS: biggovernment; coinage; federalreserve; government; printingmoney; sobran; thedollar; theft; thesheeple
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1 posted on 01/16/2004 5:58:19 AM PST by Theodore R.
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To: Theodore R.
D@mn Bildergurgers!
2 posted on 01/16/2004 6:02:36 AM PST by 50sDad (Hey Vegans! More people were killed this year by dirty onions than by Mad Cows!)
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To: Theodore R.
Ensign favors end to all limits on campaign spending-Campaign Finance Reform thread-day 36

3 posted on 01/16/2004 6:03:33 AM PST by The_Eaglet (Conservative chat on IRC: http://searchirc.com/search.php?F=exact&T=chan&N=33&I=conservative)
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To: 50sDad
The Bildergurgers are only a front group for the Masons.
4 posted on 01/16/2004 6:11:47 AM PST by DugwayDuke
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To: Thomas
Thanks for the post. I think as we keep getting further in debt, people are starting to pay more attention the devaluation of $.
5 posted on 01/16/2004 6:14:48 AM PST by PersonalLiberties (Between Life and the Pursuit of Happiness you Need Liberty)
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To: DugwayDuke
Yeah, And the Illuminati runs them all.
6 posted on 01/16/2004 6:15:10 AM PST by OXENinFLA
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To: Theodore R.
I not like sheep, so NOT all we.
7 posted on 01/16/2004 6:16:09 AM PST by Xenalyte (I may not agree with your bumper sticker, but I'll defend to the death your right to stick it)
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To: Xenalyte
All sheep not bad, I like SOME sheep, so not all.
8 posted on 01/16/2004 6:17:45 AM PST by humblegunner
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To: humblegunner
That sheep's a damn liar....
9 posted on 01/16/2004 6:19:24 AM PST by Tijeras_Slim (Death before dhimmi.)
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To: humblegunner
I feel like that anti-Harry Potter FReeper has moved into my brain!
10 posted on 01/16/2004 6:19:30 AM PST by Xenalyte (I may not agree with your bumper sticker, but I'll defend to the death your right to stick it)
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To: humblegunner; Xenalyte
Sheep are GREAT ... with mint jelly. The chief chef at Macaroni's in Stafford does a great job with them. It happens I first met him in a bar in Bergen, Holland ... but that's another story.
11 posted on 01/16/2004 6:22:22 AM PST by HoustonCurmudgeon (PEACE - Through Superior Firepower)
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To: Theodore R.
John Birch....white courtesy phone
12 posted on 01/16/2004 6:22:34 AM PST by AppyPappy (If You're Not A Part Of The Solution, There's Good Money To Be Made In Prolonging The Problem.)
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To: PersonalLiberties
Thanks for the post. I think as we keep getting further in debt, people are starting to pay more attention the devaluation of $.

I'm not so sure. It's lost about 1/2 it's value over the last few years, we're calling it a stock market rally.

13 posted on 01/16/2004 6:22:38 AM PST by steve50 ("There is Tranquility in Ignorance, but Servitude is its Partner.")
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To: humblegunner
All not sheep. Some are fish.

I like not all fish.

14 posted on 01/16/2004 6:23:08 AM PST by G.Mason ("The strength of a nation derives from the integrity of the home" - Confucius)
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To: arete
Ping!
15 posted on 01/16/2004 6:25:31 AM PST by BureaucratusMaximus (Principled conservatives need not apply...we're all centrists now. Shut up & pay your taxes.)
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To: steve50
"I'm not so sure. It's lost about 1/2 it's value over the last few years, we're calling it a stock market rally."

If the dollar has lost half its value, why haven't prices doubled? I think your statement is overbroad.
16 posted on 01/16/2004 6:25:41 AM PST by Capt. Jake
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To: G.Mason
Not all fish, but only some sheep?
Or all sheep? But not all fish.
17 posted on 01/16/2004 6:25:44 AM PST by humblegunner
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To: Theodore R.
Now I'll be humming Handel all day...
18 posted on 01/16/2004 6:26:39 AM PST by bonfire
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To: Theodore R.
bump
19 posted on 01/16/2004 6:26:39 AM PST by Lady Eileen
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To: Tijeras_Slim; Xenalyte; HoustonCurmudgeon
I think we are seeing a classic phrase in the making.
20 posted on 01/16/2004 6:27:02 AM PST by humblegunner (All We Like Sheep)
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