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The Great Depression, economics professor debunks libertarian myths. I'm in a bad mood.

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Democracy for Breakfast posted on Mon, Sep 28 2009 9:17 PM

I haven't taken an economics class, but I'm not sure how to refute the popular theory that nobody trusted Banks because of the lack of regulation and fractional reserve banking.

 

So I was debating with my egotistical friend, who came to me about it because his economics professor tore apart Ron Paul's book in class, and debunked all the libertarian myths about the Depression. FUCK I am pissed.

 

What, in detail was it that caused it?

 

Him: you're only against the fed bank rev because Rob Paul is
Me: you really need to get overyourself
Me): -_-
Him: is that man said sex & reproducing is bad you'd be promoting cloning as an alternative
Him (9:33:24 PM): if*
Him (9:33:36 PM): try thinking for yourself
terrabahamut101 (9:33:50 PM): I've done my own research, on the federal bank
Him his book is a load of crap my economic professors tore it apart in lecture
Him: the federal bank needs better leadership & oversight
terrabahamut101 (9:34:06 PM): lol @ economic professors

 

Him: but it's an integeral part of the capitalist system
terrabahamut101 (9:34:25 PM): and biased
Him(9:34:26 PM): not really
terrabahamut101 (9:34:38 PM): Ron Paul was the first to introduce me to the idea
Him: see there's your ingorance & racism again
Him: you want ron paul
terrabahamut101 (9:34:48 PM): But I did my own research on it
Him: so that's what you want
Him): but you've never even taken an economics class
Him: explain to me how the federal reserve works
terrabahamut101 (9:35:18 PM): Its too complex
terrabahamut101 (9:35:19 PM): But
Him: no it's not
Him: it's quite simple
terrabahamut101 (9:35:47 PM): If you let a privately owned investor own the entire economy, they easily become corrupt
terrabahamut101 (9:36:05 PM): The Federal Reserve prints money respond to commercial demand
Him: & the fed bank got congress's permission to rescue those companies
terrabahamut101 (9:36:17 PM): since fiat currency expands with the economy
Him: so if you're against them blame congress
terrabahamut101 (9:36:25 PM): OF course, but it doesn't mean it was a good decision
Him: it wasn't
Him but it wasn't the fed's fault
terrabahamut101 (9:36:41 PM): A transfer of wealth through bailouts to incompetent companie
terrabahamut101 (9:36:44 PM): companies*
Him): congress shoulda blew a whistle
Him: i agree it's a free system so they should have been free to fail
Him): that's congress's fuck up
terrabahamut101 (9:37:06 PM): Dude, congress doesn't have to, The Federal Reserve was made private so taht it isn't involved in politics
Him: the reserve did what any bank does
Him: it loans money
terrabahamut101 (9:37:19 PM): so taht politics don't interfere with it
Him: when you were actually working
Him: did you have a savings account
Him: or a checking account
terrabahamut101 (9:37:45 PM): Lends money to what? theres shitloads of private banks
terrabahamut101 (9:37:46 PM): yeah
Him: you realize
Him: they don't keep your money
terrabahamut101 (9:37:59 PM): The fed also lends money to the Government.
Him: the banks invest & spend it
Him: no it doesn't our government prints & borrows money
Him: without the fed
Him: the fed requires banks to keep X amount of dollars are all times
Him: to make sure if you want your money back
terrabahamut101 (9:38:38 PM): Yeah fractional reserve banking
Him: you can go get it
Him: and the fed INSURES your money
Him: so when fucking dumb banks lose all that money they invested
Him: it comes out of their profits
Him: & you are still GARUNTEED
Him: to get the money back
Him: that you gave them for a saving/checking account
Him: i can give you 100% assurance
Him: if you get rid of the FED
Him: we'll be worse off than in the 1940's
no one will trust banks & we'll be in one hell of a depression
terrabahamut101 (9:40:12 PM): God
terrabahamut101 (9:40:17 PM): We had the fed in the 1940
terrabahamut101 (9:40:33 PM): The fed was the fucking reason the depression happened, as well as Hoover's intervention policies
Him: yeah i know
Him: no it wasn't lol
terrabahamut101 (9:40:44 PM): Hoover raised tariffs on imports
Him: the fed didn't regulate banks then
terrabahamut101 (9:40:54 PM): cut the interest rates too low
terrabahamut101 (9:41:14 PM): That has nothing to do with it, the theory is that becuase of the gold standard
Him: would you put money in savings account or buy CD investments
Him: if there was a good chance you'll never see that money again
terrabahamut101 (9:41:27 PM): the fed wouldn't expand the credit to fight deflation
terrabahamut101 (9:41:37 PM): But in truth, they had access to an excess of gold to do it
terrabahamut101 (9:41:43 PM): they just simply didn
terrabahamut101 (9:41:44 PM): t
terrabahamut101 (9:41:55 PM): Which is what caused the depression
Him: right because it had nothing to do with the stock market collapse
: you're fucking amazing
): you're so ignorant & endoctrinated it's unbelievable
terrabahamut101 (9:42:35 PM): the stock market collapsed because the interest rates were too low

Him:try reading a textbook

terrabahamut101 (9:43:27 PM): A lot of textbooks are biased
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So let me get this straight.... Your "friend" takes a class, where the professor spews one-sided vitriol that arouses an emotional response from him, and he suddenly thinks that he's the unfalsifiable master of economics and the universe?

I'm guessing he does this every time he looks at a Wikipedia page.

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When dealing with people like this, you can't rely on blanket statements like "in truth [blah blah blah]".  Establish a set of factual records by which you can both verify or deny the veracity of each others' statements.

Statements like "no one trusted the banks without regulation" are incredibly stupid.  First off, American banks have always been both regulated AND protected, if not at the national level, then the state level.  American banking history is rife with laws allowing banks to suspend redemption of notes, as well as creating central banks and national banking cartels.  Secondly, there has never been a period in history when the banks were blatantly not trusted and subject to constant bank runs.

Larry White and George Selgin have posted some very powerful information about why thousands of American banks failed in 1930-33 vs. 0 in Canada.  For one, states were granting banking holidays, which basically froze the banks.  Depositors could not withdraw their money, nor could they claim a share of the bank's assets through bankruptcy proceedings.  There was rumors FDR would do this nationally.  Also, there were rumors that FDR would debase the dollar.  This prompted depositors to run on the banks.   The rumors proved true, and FDR debased the dollar 44%, a quite substantial amount.  And finally, branch banking was outlawed in America.  Canada did not make these mistakes and no banks failed, despite a massive deflation of their money supply, a greater drop than in America.

Here's a better explanation:

http://www.richmondfed.org/publications/research/region_focus/2009/winter/full_interview.cfm

So to suggest that a lack of regulation caused the bank runs is false.  If anything the opposite is true.  The federal reserve DID have regulatory authority over its member banks at the time.  It regulated them (and itself) poorly.

And to suggest deposit insurance is both limited to bank profit and effective in creating bank stability is not backed by any evidence.  The S&L crisis is the primary example.  Depositors put their money in whatever S&L offered the highest rate, independent of risk.  At the same time, they were regulated to only hold 30 year mortgages as assets.  So when interest rates spiked, they had to pay more to depositors to receive deposits that regulations forced them to hold than their borrowers owed them on outstanding loans.

So just call him a cheerleader for a lie that the government and public schools want him to believe.  If he wants to discover the truth, tell him he better look at facts.

Check my blog, if you're a loser

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Again, your friend hasn't made an argument.

Democracy for Breakfast:
My friend responded: "FDIC is funded by the federal bank, the fed regulates the money supply & the fed gave money to priv instituitions because of Congress, getting rid of the fed is a ridiculous idea that no one takes seriously.

In what way is the notion of dissolving the Fed ridiculous?  Oh, and argumentum ad populum.

Democracy for Breakfast:
without the fed inflation would run rampart not to mention 80% of all US dollars are digital, moved from credit account to bank account to credit account & is never a real dollar in hand.

This would effect a "rampart" rise in prices how? Ask him to make an argument and not just declarative statements.

Democracy for Breakfast:
Also the fed bank manages monetary policy which often supersedes fiscal policy (i doubt you know the difference between the two or even why either is important).

Pure condescension. 

Democracy for Breakfast:
Lastly I live in the Midwest the people here are conservative, I got in trouble for having a purple Mohawk while promoting the school. So don't say the people are liberal when you don't know, you're just ignorant & blindly following the politician you want to have your baby

Okay.

Democracy for Breakfast:
Lastly professors have a doctorate degree that means they've spent at least 15-20 years in their field of interest so I think they'd know a hell of a lot more than Ron Paul.

Argumentum ad verecundiam.

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eliotn replied on Thu, Oct 1 2009 12:45 PM

Democracy for Breakfast:
getting rid of the fed is a ridiculous idea that no one takes seriously

No argument here.

Democracy for Breakfast:
without the fed inflation would run rampart

He uses a vague definition of inflation, and does not show how the removal of the Fed would cause inflation.  There is no argument.

Democracy for Breakfast:
Also the fed bank manages monetary policy which often supersedes fiscal policy

Monetary Policy and Fiscal Policy for dummies:

Fiscal Policy: Borrowing money from investors who would use it in otherwise profitable ventures, and using it unprofitably.  The borrowing is done with the implicit guarentee of using coercion to pay it back.  It does not boost the economy, but impairs it as government outbids others with the promise of stolen funds.

Monetary Policy: Subsidizes interest rates/creates temporary money with FRB.  This causes people to borrow too much, investing in unprofitable ventures.  However, it takes time for these flawed investments to be revealed.  It creates boom and bust cycles.  While the FED is not necessary for this to occur, it prevents the banks from collapsing in the bust phase.

Note that when he says inflation, he means increasing prices.  The problem is that increasing prices is too difficult to measure, and there are several different causes for it.

Democracy for Breakfast:
Lastly professors have a doctorate degree that means they've spent at least 15-20 years in their field of interest so I think they'd know a hell of a lot more than Ron Paul.

Appeal to authority.  While expertness may make one's arguments more compelling, it has no bearing on its validity.

Democracy for Breakfast:
That's why Obama is trying to crack down on lobbying & lobbyists becoming elected officials or vice versa.

He won't crack, because it would damage political support from lobbyists.  Additionally, the presence of lobbying may or may not make government more repressive.

Schools are labour camps.

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You should refer him to that chart of inflation since the inception of the Federal Reserve, because, frankly, he doesn't have any idea about what he's talking about.  You should point to the fact that during the late 1870s and early 1880s there was actual mild deflation (as there should be), not inflation, and there was no central bank.  The fact of the matter is that central banking has led to more widespread inflation, because it's impossible to centrally calculate how money the economy really needs.

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More:

"clearly your ignorant so let me explain how inflation works since instead of educating yourself you're just making a fool of yourself. Inflation isn't simply caused by printing more money & commodity money A money unit whose value is backed by the value of another physical good such as gold or silver would cause our country to revert to the times of colonialism in order to constantly expand our economy we would need to constantly acquire more worth (Gold Silver etc), this time was known as Merchantalism and was generally bad. However Adam Smith & every economist since him has argued the wealth of a nation comes from it's output & therefore a Fiat money system would be more effective because a country could focus are more important things than continually searching for more gold/silver/etc. The most simple way to define inflation is more money pursuing the same amount of goods. If a jeweler sells his jewelery for $100 a piece & the government starts printing more money the jewelery will find there's more people willing to buy his jewelery but he hasn't (& in often cases) cannot increase his output. So he simply raises his prices so that now his jewelery is $125. That's how inflation works when you increase the money supply if pushes the prices up. If we went back to a commodity standard we would still have inflation because the majority of our money is digital. Every time some bank issues a credit card, (or any other type of loan in which they're not directly handing dollars to the borrower) the bank IS CREATING MONEY. If BofA issues 10,000 new credit cards with a credit limit of $1,000 each. Then BofA essentially just created $10,000,000 more USA $ which will lead to raises of prices of the items the customers buy & if they buy the items measured by economists to determine inflation than INFLATION WILL INCREASE WITHOUT THE FED HAVING DONE ANYTHING. Lastly I don't care how many people oppose the fed my point is you didn't give a damn until Ron Paul did."

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Some intellectual.  He seems like a total idiot.

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Juan replied on Thu, Oct 1 2009 10:11 PM
If it wasn't sad it might be funny.

February 17 - 1600 - Giordano Bruno is burnt alive by the catholic church.
Aquinas : "much more reason is there for heretics, as soon as they are convicted of heresy, to be not only excommunicated but even put to death."

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Democracy for Breakfast:

I haven't taken an economics class, but I'm not sure how to refute the popular theory that nobody trusted Banks because of the lack of regulation and fractional reserve banking.

 

So I was debating with my egotistical friend, who came to me about it because his economics professor tore apart Ron Paul's book in class, and debunked all the libertarian myths about the Depression. FUCK I am pissed.

As much as this guy is being a prick, you are just feeding the flames by being argumentative, defensive, & taking his snide attitude personally.  He is the one who should be on the defensive, not you. 

Your are also both lucky this is online, as text can be far less emotional & personally offensive (yet lack the proper emotional tones one might want to give off, such as earnest questioning & not trolling), & unlucky because you've already 

The average person in this society rewards anti-intellectualism, populist folk economics, & other misconceptions merely because the person who is utilizing such sounds more confident, or sound right* 

*Despite secularism, people will often substitute Gods for people that they agree with or make them feel better. 


This is a bad example (since I do not agree with the Presidency at all, obviously), but this extends as far back as the Kennedy vs. Nixon debates on television. 

The moment that happened, a similar pattern of this superficial judgment on who sounds better & "smarter" can be seen throughout popular culture ever since. 

Argument is one part intellectual, one part memetic, & one part psychological.  I would advise watching Walter Block in some of his debates where he took on people of a mainstream opinion, because you'll need all the patience you can muster. 

If it helps, imply that you are both students in this debate, & that we must respect, to a certain extent possible, the possibility that we are both wrong on certain things.   

Also, to prevent from a rational tone being mis-interpreted as "arrogant", occasionally get on their "side" by asking them to explain it, why do they think it's important, admit that you used to think that was correct but you've come across new information; this is where you can cite a source, book, or a person, & ask the person you are arguing with if they've heard of them, & and if they haven't, that they should definitely check them out merely for an interesting read, not propaganda.

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Democracy for Breakfast:

Him: our current fed system was established in 1944


I like how ambiguously he phrases this statement.

Democracy for Breakfast:

Him: the current monetary policy & fed reserve were over hauled in & completely changed in 1944 & then in the 70's we went to fiat systen

So he could fall back this one, after your responded, to incriminate you as an ignoramus. Oh look, he's also begging the question.

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If we went to a fiat system in in the 70's pray tell what did we use from 1933 to the 1970's? Sexual solicitation?

'It is difficult to imagine any normal person wishing to meet Marx for a third time.' - Alexander Gray, The Socialist Tradition

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After reading this whole thread, I have concluded that your "friend" is an idiot, and is probably not a good friend if he can't respect you in political conversation.

"Anxiety is the dizziness of freedom." Soren Kierkegaard 

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Juan replied on Sat, Oct 3 2009 2:38 PM
If we went to a fiat system in in the 70's pray tell what did we use from 1933 to the 1970's? Sexual solicitation?
Well, the dollar became fully fiat, so to speak, in 1971. One could produce a couple of graphs showing how nominal prices started to increase dramatically after that. Of course, correlation is not causation =P

February 17 - 1600 - Giordano Bruno is burnt alive by the catholic church.
Aquinas : "much more reason is there for heretics, as soon as they are convicted of heresy, to be not only excommunicated but even put to death."

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Libertyandlife:

After reading this whole thread, I have concluded that your "friend" is an idiot, and is probably not a good friend if he can't respect you in political conversation.

I totally agree with both points.

A third conclusion is that you should be studying the stuff on this site till you can answer all his points on your own. There is a video here about the Fed that is very enlightening.

Just a thought. When he is a prick again, [if you decide it worth your while to associate with him], you might consider saying something like, "So you have no logical argument going for you, only personal attacks?"

 

 

 

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Tell your friend to come on this forum and then we can have a discussion of what his professor has debunked.

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Your friend is just way too immature to have any breakthroughs with. He needs to deal with his own issues and insecurities- its obvious he has a whole lot of them, he projects it right away.

 

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auctionguy10:

Your friend is just way too immature to have any breakthroughs with. He needs to deal with his own issues and insecurities- its obvious he has a whole lot of them, he projects it right away.

Sorry, but he isn't like that at all. Hes 27, almost 10 years older then I am. He's known me for 4-5 years. He just seems to try to discourage me, crush my beliefs, imagination, ect whatsoever. He talks to me about how immature,ignorant and racist I am. He refuses to believe I'm good at anything, and sees me as a defunct being with no intellectual value, who's inept at life. Also, I'm the only one he doesn't really get along with, so maybe its true.

 

It seems a lot of adults would agree that I am ignorant and immature person. *sigh*

 

I don't see how he doesn't have a right to get frustrated at me so easily, its mostly just because hes honest but he swears a lot. Saggittarius and Pisces don't really get along.

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