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1776. Reborn.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Proof Source- John Galt Happens

From the NYPost:

New Yorkers are fleeing the state and city in alarming numbers — and costing a fortune in lost tax dollars, a new study shows.

More than 1.5 million state residents left for other parts of the United States from 2000 to 2008, according to the report from the Empire Center for New York State Policy. It was the biggest out-of-state migration in the country.

The vast majority of the migrants, 1.1 million, were former residents of New York City — meaning one out of seven city taxpayers moved out.

“The Empire State is being drained of an invaluable resource — people,” the report said.
What’s worse is that the families fleeing New York are being replaced by lower-income newcomers, who consequently pay less in taxes.

Overall, the ex-New Yorkers earn about 13 percent more than those who moved into the state, the study found.

And it should be no surprise that the city — and Manhattan in particular — suffered the biggest loss in terms of taxable income.

The average Manhattan taxpayer who left the state earned $93,264 a year. The average newcomer to Manhattan earned only $72,726.

That’s a difference of $20,538, the highest for any county in the state. Staten Island was second, with a $20,066 difference.

It all adds up to staggering loss in taxable income. During 2006-2007, the “migration flow” out of New York to other states amounted to a loss of $4.3 billion.

While we are on the subject, don’t forget to take your own John Galt Oath here.

posted by Luke at 12:19:23  

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Reducing The Impact Of The Federal Reserve Through Self-Sufficiency

Many people predicted the economic collapse of 2008 and yet very few listened. Economists like Peter Schiff and Lew Rockwell were mocked as doomsday soothsayers rebelling against a postmodern age. Those of us who advocate a sound economic system are seen as enemies of modernity and the status quo. And this much is true, someone born into the Fractional Reserve System advocating sound currency, well that is postmodern rebellion.

But, as we know from the economic and social pains from the fourth quarter of 2008 the system does indeed appear unstable. The question is what do we do about it?

LewRockwell.com: The ‘No Problem’ Mindset: Guaranteed Destruction

For students of Austrian economics we know the truth: 

We know that the Federal Reserve System creates economic bubbles through manipulation of interest rates.

We know that the Federal Reserve System creates inflation by obligating the taxpayer to debt based currency.

We know that the Federal Reserve System, like all central banks, inherently seeks to consolidate national power and autonomy to the state.

We know that wealth without value is no better than the paper it is printed on.

In our parents’, grandparents’, and great grandparents’ lifetimes great nations have risen and fallen. As someone interested in history I always worry about the families and individuals who were conscripted into the Nazi party, forced to serve on one side or the other in the civil war (often times family against family), or forced to march with Napoleon simply because they were not prepared and had no other economic choice but to serve.

Some ideals are worth fighting/dying for. Liberty. Freedom. Representation in government. Protecting our inalienable rights. But at some point the social contract must cease its infiltration into everyday affairs. Freedom isn’t defined as reliance on one another.

Let’s start with the basics: food, clothing and shelter.

Do you know how to grow a garden? What about reseeding?

Do you know how to raise chickens, cows, or pigs?

Do you know how to can and preserve food?

Do you know the basics of food storage?

And clothing: have you ever made your own shirt, pants? What about the fabric? Or even more basic, have you ever repaired your own clothing when worn down? And on shelter, how much of what permeates your household is produced by someone other than yourself? Are you electrically self-sufficient? In an emergency do you have water for bathing, drinking and cooking?

Clearly I think we can all agree that the free-market can provide all of this so we don’t need to know. But given the state of affairs, are we safe to assume that the current system will always be able to provide the goods and services that we need? We must assume that in a total economic collapse there would be some times of uncertainty, even more so when an economy is based on central reserve banking.

We must be more like our ancestors if we are to shed the shackles of tyranny that have crept into our lives. Ayn Rand once penned a line for the infamous John Galt, “an honest man is one who knows he can’t consume more than he has produced”. Are you an honest man? Can we live more simply and be free? Or worded better, is a postmodern world an inherit enemy to liberty and freedom?

I am not saying pack up and go mountain-man, well that is unless you choose to do so. I am just saying let’s get ourselves better prepared for the next time the Federal Reserve puppeteers choose to crash the party. We can do this by becoming more self-sufficient and wiser in our investments.

One idea is to have a garden, even it it doesn’t provide all of your food. We do this so that if we had to rely on our own gardening skills we would know how to do it. Even if we only grow ten percent of our own food, aren’t we that much more free should things get that much worse? Besides, kids love watching plants and animals grow.

Or let me simplify this entire argument: If the only thing you need to worry about is paying the mortgage, what does it matter what the rest of society does? Self sufficiency my friends, not quite the dirty word it was come late 2008.

posted by Luke at 13:53:18  

Sunday, February 22, 2009

New Lede Feature- Take The John Galt Oath

Post your John Galt Oath here. No other comments on the John Galt page will be approved.

posted by Luke at 05:30:09  

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