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I spent a lot of time over the weekend hitting the malls, watching the crowds,
and noting the prevailing sentiment. The feeling I got was "escape and
fantasy," a subtle but overwhelming sense of unreality.
These days the kids are heavily into sex, sexy clothes, near-nudity, cartoons,
funny-paper movies, pseudo-violence. Look at your local newspaper and observe
the new movies that are coming out. Nine out of 10 appear to be aimed at teenagers,
and most have little to do with anything resembling reality. It's all escape,
escape, escape.
I've been on this earth for quite a while, and I've been a pretty good observer
of the so-called "human condition." I was in high school during the
'40s along with Jack Kerouac who was one class above me. So I was there when
the "beats" shocked America with their protests against this nation's
old, up-tight ways. But the beats were protesting in their own way, and Kerouac's "On
the Road" became the cry for a new freedom.
I was there in World War II, which brought on a seminal change in America's
thinking. Suddenly, we went international. And we went triumphant. We were
king of the world, and everybody knew it.
I was there in the '60s, lived in a commune for a while, and was writing against
the Vietnam War in the face of protests from many of my own subscribers. The
kids at Berkeley started the revolt against the Vietnam War, and the revolt
quickly spread across the nation. Those were the hippie days, but the hippies
were protesters -- protesting first against the War and then against up-tight
America and its love of violence and its sexual repression. Drugs became the
order of the day.
In the late-80s, the lust for money and success began to take over, and by
the late-'90s everything was money, more money -- and profits above all, even
if you had to lie about your profits.
What I see now is ESCAPE. Nobody's protesting -- Americans are just escaping.
People somehow sense that "something is wrong," but they don't want
to deal with it. So today it's all about celebrities, parties, big cars, second
homes and lots and lots of sex. Sex is the greatest escape mechanism that God
ever invented. Like cholesterol, there's good sex and bad sex.
And there's a third division, it's called LOTS of sex. You want to see lots
of sex, turn on TV, go to any movie or better still -- watch MTV. I'm not saying
that what hundreds of millions of kids are seeing on MTV is good or bad, I'm
just observing that MTV has turned into an over-the-top "girlie show." Talk
about escapism, this is it.
So what are people escaping from? I believe that consciously or unconsciously,
they're escaping from our future. And what is our future? I'll say it once
more -- our future is "INFLATE OR DIE."
What - you don't understand what that means? Then I'll rephrase it. Our future
is "INFLATE OR REPUDIATE."
You see, the 1990s under Fed Chief Alan Greenspan was a decade of over-spending
and debt creation. Half of all our Federal debt was created during the 1990s.
During the 1990s our government ran up $2.87 trillion of new debt. This was
more than all the debt the US government had built up since the United States
were first formed.
But that's just part of the story. Coming up is roughly $44 trillion of unfunded
liabilities, which includes Social Security, Medicare, normal government expenses
and interest on the national debt.
We have a $10 trillion economy. How on earth is a $10 trillion economy going
to service what's coming up in the way of $38 trillion in debt?
There are two choices. Repudiate a good chunk of this debt or at least cut
it back drastically. Or finance the debt via the printing presses. Which one
do you think the US government is going to choose? Look, if we're running the
printing presses full speed now, and the BIG expenses haven't even hit yet,
what do you think our leaders are going to do when the "debt hits the
fan?" You guessed it, they're going to inflate at a level that has never
been seen before.
Right now we're seeing just the tip of the mess. Our federal budget deficit
is now half a trillion dollars, and our current account deficit is another
half trillion. This is bad enough, but it's financial peanuts compared with
what lies ahead.
And the irony is this -- here's the US, the world's biggest debtor nation,
playing policeman to the world, running up bills of $3.9 billion a month in
Iraq alone and placing our military all over the world. It's obvious that our
government leaders are totally refusing to face the situation, and in fact,
they're rapidly making it worse.
So changes will have to happen. One change is that free spending by Americans
will have to stop -- and the new trend, forced upon Americans, will be savings.
A second change will be parsimony -- American consumers will have to scrimp,
to cut back, to economize in order to pay their bills.
A third change will be employment. Jobs will be increasingly difficult to
find. Unemployment will remain high as America's manufacturing and service
bases are exported to low-wage nations overseas.
A fourth change will be recognition. Slowly but surely Americans will be forced
to face the truth -- this nation is spent-up, it's over-spent -- we've spent
our future and more.
A fifth change will be the recognition that the US can no longer be the undisputed
world's hyper-power. Sure we'll have the world's biggest and baddest military,
but that's actually going to be a problem. The problem is expenses. It's just
too darn expensive to be military master of the world. It will be too expensive
when you're building debts of a trillion dollars a year.
A lot of our success is due to one extraordinary phenomenon. That phenomenon
is the acceptance of the dollar as the world's reserve currency. Up to now
we've been able to print our debts away. Up to now the world has been willing
to accept dollars for their goods and merchandise. But as the mountain of dollars
builds up, the world will begin to choke on dollars. The world may even begin
to question whether the dollars are a valid holding. When that happens, everything
changes. And I mean everything.
Bond holders are beginning to bail out. They're jumping the ship. As I write,
the 30-year Treasury is down over a point to new lows. This means mortgage
rates are heading up. This means debt will be more expensive to carry. This
means people and pension funds and mutual funds which are holding the long
bonds are already down better than 15% since mid-June.
The Fed has forced savers either to take big losses in bonds or to earn literally
nothing in T-bills or CDs. The Fed's low-interest policy has forced oldsters
to spend their savings or lose their shirt in bonds.
Subscribers, listen to me. The future is being carved out as I write. The
future is going to be the US government printing massive amounts of Federal
Reserve Notes (we call them "dollars") in order to pay off debts
and unfunded liabilities coming due.
The future is going to be dollar-deterioration and a move out of financials
and into tangibles. The future is going to be a flow of funds out of paper
and into real wealth -- gold and silver.
I don't know how many of my subscribers have moved into gold and silver and
gold and silver shares. In my opinion, the precious metals are still on the
bargain table. Compared to the amount of paper that has been printed, the precious
metals are ridiculously cheap. Gold was $850 back in 1980. Gold today is less
than half its 1980 peak price. Before this bull market in the metals is over,
I expect 1980's peak price to be far surpassed.
This isn't just a case of making profits. This isn't just a case of "beating
the market." Buying the metals and the metal stocks here has to do with
financial survival. It has to do with arming yourself against a mighty tide,
and I don't know how I can make the case any stronger.
It's time for all my subscribers to get into a new and unfamiliar mindset.
The mindset is based on a Federal Reserve which has allowed this nation to
move toward a position which I can only describe as "technical bankruptcy." We've
got a $10 trillion economy but we're going to deal with unfunded liabilities
of over $40 trillion plus our "normal" ridiculous budget and current
account deficits.
Think about it -- or join the "escape generation." The choice is
yours.
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