You are receiving this email because you signed up to receive our free e-letter Skousen Investor Cafe, or you purchased a product or service from its publisher, Eagle Financial Publications. [Skousen's Investor CAFE] [Forecasts & Strategies]( [Fast Money Alert]( [Five Star Trader]( [Home Run Trader]( [TNT Trader]( A Better Alternative to âLeftâ and âRightâ Politics By Mark Skousen
Editor, [Forecasts & Strategies]( 02/03/2022 Sponsored Content [Looking for extra income in 2022? Read thisâ¦]( If you are looking for extra income, my Weekly Paycheck program can help. This year alone, people using this strategy have been able to collect an extra $515 of low-risk income each week. Best of all, this works in any market condition--up, down, sideways. Iâve laid out the exact steps to generate hundreds to thousands of dollars a week in extra income in this free guide. [Get your copy here.]( âThere is no left or right, only up or down.â -- Ronald Reagan (1964) In todayâs world of divisive rhetoric and hostile debates, itâs easy for the media and pundits to divide people into camps, such as âleftâ wing or ârightâ wing. We see it all the time on cable TV, the internet and the print media. Often, itâs a smear tactic used to demonize people who have different political views than whoever is making the judgment. And once someone is labeled, thinking stops and emotional name calling begins. Fox News identifies perceived political enemies as âfar left radicalsâ or even âcommies,â while CNN and MSNBC label their opponents âfar right extremistsâ and sometimes âneo-Nazisâ or âwhite supremacists.â Thereâs a lot of bad blood, and neither side seems interested in talking to each other anymore. A Better Way: Self-govern or State Govern? The left-right political spectrum is out of date and misleading. My friend Alex Green, chief investment strategist for the Oxford Club and a bestselling author, has a better approach. According to Alex, these days people either lean toward being âlibertarianâ or âauthoritarian.â Libertarians want to make their own choices, while authoritarians want to impose their will on others. We are seeing this distinction being played out in the past two years during the pandemic and lockdowns. Libertarians prefer democratic, decentralized decisions made by individuals, parents, businesses, teachers and local government. Authoritarians favor mandates coming from the top down under central control by the federal or state government. Tom Palmer, senior fellow at the Cato Institute and a vice president at Atlas Network, has written a book with an appropriate title for today: Lin Yutang, the great Chinese philosopher, wrote in âThe Importance of Livingâ in 1937, âClearly two opposite views of human dignity are possible: the one believing that a person who retains his freedom and individuality is the noblest type, and the other believing that a person who has completely lost independent judgment and surrendered all rights to private beliefs and opinions to the ruler or the state is the best and noblest being.â Ben Franklin warned at the Constitutional Convention of 1787 that this âconstant warfare between the governing and the governedâ has in the past led to âoccasioned convulsions, actual civil wars, ending in either dethroning of the princes or enslaving of the people.â Letâs hope it never comes to that. Coming Together at FreedomFest At my FreedomFest conference, we insist on civil discussions and debates. Thereâs a reason why we call it âthe worldâs largest gathering of free minds.â We expect everyone to have an open mind about differing views. Our approach has been highly successful. Last year, we had a record crowd of nearly 3,000 people. In our mock trial, we put the âPandemic and the Lockdown on Trial,â and it was both educational and provocative. Everyone benefited from hearing both sides without rancor. If we truly believe in individualism, then perhaps itâs time to treat each other as individuals, with unique views, rather than immediately labeling them conservative, liberal, progressive or socialist. Unfortunately, the popular trend is to sort people into groups and classes. To quote Lin Yutung again: âWe no longer think of a man as a man, but as a cog in a wheel, a member of a union or a class, a âcapitalistâ to be denounced, or a âworkerâ to be regarded as a comrade. We are no longer individuals, no longer men, but only classes.â Sometimes I think that labels are just a lazy way to put people in political boxes, rather than focusing on the pros and cons of the issue at hand. At FreedomFest, we focus on âbest solutionsâ rather than labels. Check it out at [www.freedomfest.com](. [Top 20 Living Economist Shares the Largest Position in His Personal IRA]( Investing legend Dr. Mark Skousen recently gave a talk to a small group in the heart of Washington, D.C. In it, he revealed the cornerstone of his retirement plan â and the one investment that helped make him a millionaire. [Click here to watch Dr. Skousen's presentation]( â and learn about âthe best way to become a millionaire in America.â Milton Friedmanâs Dream I was a long-time friend with the free-market economist Milton Friedman. He firmly believed that if everyone was given all the facts and an understanding of sound economics, 90% of the people would come to an agreement on a particular issue. In his way of thinking, his opponents were not evil, but just ignorant of the facts and correct theory. Your editor spending time with Milton Friedman at his San Francisco apartment in 1999. I have used this approach in teaching at Chapman University and in my lectures to other colleges and universities. For example, students are divided about the $15 minimum wage debate. Some favor it as a way to help the working poor; others believe it hurts the very people itâs supposed to help by causing unemployment, reduced hours or being replaced by machines. I objectively do a cost-benefit analysis, showing how some people benefit and others are hurt by the government-imposed wage increase. Then I introduce some natural ways to raise wages without resorting to the law, pointing out that increased profits, productivity and education usually result in higher wages. Students love this unemotional approach. After going through this economic analysis, most students reject the artificial means (minimum wage) in favor of natural ways to raise wages. The Spectrum vs. the Totem Pole Approach In my popular book âThe Making of Modern Economics,â now in its 4th edition published by Routledge, I developed an alternative to the standard left-center-right political spectrum (see below), which I regard as misleading at best and divisive at worst. If Karl Marx is "extreme left," representing total government control (totalitarian socialism); Adam Smith is "extreme right," representing laissez faire (minimal government); and so, the pendulum settles in the "center," which is Keynes, representing big government and the welfare state. In the introduction to my book, âThe Making of Modern Economics,â I reject this standard approach as misleading and dangerous. Instead, I came up with what I call the Totem Pole approach: âThe Totem Pole of Economicsâ by Jamie Sagui. Here I have Adam Smith and his "system of natural liberty" at the top for maximum liberty and economic growth; Keynes is second -- big government may be more stable than laissez-faire capitalism, but results in slower growth; and the low man on the totem pole is Karl Marx, offering minimal freedom and little or no growth in the economy. Years ago, I stopped using the divisive and misleading âleftâ and ârightâ political labels, and now focus on individual issues and âbest solutionsâ before judging economists up or down. Adam Smith and Karl Marx are not equals! Making a Difference in the Classroom As long-term subscribers know, Iâve made a career of our influencing and transforming the minds of our future generation into understanding how the real world works and what economic policies should be adopted to achieve peace, prosperity and liberty. Iâve taught at major universities around the world, including Columbia University in New York and now at Chapman University in California. Iâve given lectures to around 50 colleges and universities, including Harvard, Stanford University and the University of Chicago. My two most popular textbooks are âEconomic Logic,â now in its 5th edition published by Regnery, and âThe Making of Modern Economics,â now in its 4th edition published by Routledge. [A.I. for Traders, Beat Inflation]( People are desperately searching for more security in their trades and investments - to feel some sense of reassurance that future wealth is still within their grasp. Introducing A.I. for traders. [See a Free Demo Here!]( Steve Forbes Pays Tribute to My Two Books In 2018, Steve Forbes presented me with the Triple Crown in Economics for my role in theory, history and teaching. He stated, âMark is a superb and highly original scholar. Just look at his textbook âEconomic Logic,â now in its 5th edition, which demonstrates Markâs ability to look at the whole economy, the real world and real people. This rigidity between micro- and macroeconomics is not for him. He realizes theyâre all connected together. He began this book with a profit-loss income statement to demonstrate the dynamics of the real-world economy. No other textbook does that. He gets it. âAnd extraordinarily, Markâs book brings in many other disciplines to teach lessons of economics, underscoring crucial lessons, whether it is history, sociology, finance business or marketing management. He recognizes that this rigidity may be nice for departments created at universities. But, in the real world, it does not advance learning. They need to be combined together. In that sense, he goes back 200 years to before mathematicians took over economics. His output is voluminous, with numerous books and articles. And, what is so unusual, is that he combines mastery of math-laden fields with the ability to write clearly and directly in a manner that would have elicited cheers from Ernest Hemingway. Imagine, he gets to the point. âSo, you wonât win an economic argument with Mark by trying to outdo him with regression analysis, graphs and comprehensible equations. Heâll hit you right back. Heâs a master of that. âBut, heâs unique with his fascination with history, with flesh and blood individuals. Read his concise and incisive sketches of numerous economists in âThe Making of Modern Economics.â He brings history to life. People are interested in people. He recognizes that stories are highly instructive." The 4th edition of âMaking of Modern Economicsâ updates the dramatic story of economics with the challenges of modern monetary theory, the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change, minimum wage debates, the new socialists, and more. Both books are available at a sizeable discount -- half the retail price, only $35 each -- if you buy them at [www.skousenbooks.com](. I sign each book and mail them at no additional charge if mailed inside the United States. Good Investing, AEIOU, [Mark Skousen] Mark Skousen
Presidential Fellow, Chapman University
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[FreedomFest]( [You Blew It!] Guess Which City Has the Most Bridges in the World â and One Just Collapsed
By Mark Skousen
Editor, [Forecasts & Strategies]( Itâs hard to believe, but Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, has 446 bridges, the most of any city in the world, even more than Venice, Italy. According to engineers, 40% are in poor condition and need upgrading. Last month, the Frick Park Bridge in Pittsburgh (named after Henry Clay Frick, the famous chairman of Carnegie Steel) collapsed. President Joe Biden previously had schedule a to visit Pittsburgh on the same day to tout his new $1.2 trillion âinfrastructureâ bill, and predicted, âI will fix them all.â If fixing bridges and roads is Bidenâs top priority, then why is it that only $24 billion (20%) of the infrastructure bill was assigned to roads and bridges? The remaining hundreds of billions go to mass transit, Amtrak, windmills and solar panels. Every new upgrade and construction federal site will require union workers, resulting in an unnecessary 25-35% increase in the costs of building. About Mark Skousen, Ph.D.: [Mark Skousen]Mark Skousen is an investment advisor, professional economist, university professor, author of more than 20 books, and founder of the annual FreedomFest conference. For the past 40+ years, Dr. Skousen has been investment director of the award-winning newsletter, Forecasts & Strategies. He also serves as investment director of four trading services: TNT Trader, Five Star Trader, Home Run Trader, and Fast Money Alert. To ensure future delivery of Eagle Financial Publication and emails please add financial@info2.eaglefinancialpublications.com to your address book or contact list. View this email in your [web browser](. This email was sent to {EMAIL} because you are subscribed to Dividend Investor Daily. To unsubscribe please click [here](. If you have questions, please send them to [Customer Service](mailto:customerservice@eaglefinancialpublications.com). Legal Disclaimer: Any and all communications from Eagle Products, LLC. employees should not be considered advice on finances. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized advice on finances. Eagle Financial Publications - Eagle Products, LLC. - a Caron Broadcasting Company
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