Byron King remembers an old book that looks like art imitating reality. July 25, 2024 [WEBSITE]( | [UNSUBSCRIBE]( King: “It Can’t Happen Here”? Hey, It Just Happened Here! BYRON
KING Dear Reader, Yes, it just happened, and you witnessed it. We all just watched a new, dark chapter of American history unfold, with more to come, no doubt. Shamelessly, the Empire of Lies showed us the raw, rancid stuff of which it is made, and the ugliness of the spectacle is beyond appalling. If you’re like… oh… me, perhaps, you’re working to process the recent, midnight defenestration of President Joe Biden by power players within the Democrat Party. That, and the backroom, rigged, wired elevation of Vice President Kamala Harris to the role of presidential nominee. What the hell just happened? If nothing else, hang onto your wallet and protect your wealth; I’ll hit that point in a moment. But first, an eighty-nine-year-old book comes to mind. I read it long ago, back in college (not 89 years ago; I’m not that old). Over the weekend, I pulled my copy and skimmed through it. Dystopian novel published in 1935. An Old Dystopian Novel on My Mind… In the depths of the Great Depression, Sinclair Lewis wrote a dystopian tale about what might happen if the U.S. followed the political path of Germany, Italy, and Japan. Fearful of the rise of fascism abroad, Lewis explored the idea of “What will happen when America has a dictator?” Note that exact question, highlighted on the dust jacket image, above. Lewis’s mid-1930s vision of the future was rooted in his own time and circumstances. He laid out a series of possible events in the then-upcoming election year of 1936. In essence, a populist-nationalist, demagogue, who distinctly resembled Governor/Senator Huey Long of Louisiana, came along to unseat President Franklin Roosevelt and take over the U.S. government. Then America’s new Chief Executive turns the nation into a police state. Per Lewis, this new authoritarian regime bans public dissent and wraps an iron grip of narrative control around all media. The country is blanketed with fake news and one-sided, party-line political opinion. Routinely, powerful bosses arrest and jail opponents, and employ thuggish paramilitary groups to keep resistance under control. In Lewis’s fictional, remade America, federalism dies as the country’s governance goes central and national. All matters of import are run by a greedy, grifting, ignorant cabal that installs itself in corridors of power across Washington, D.C., while state boundaries become near irrelevant and serve only as dividing lines between the new administrative units of a totalitarian polity. In characteristic fascist fashion, dominant political elements partner with large banks and business groups to run the economy. Yet despite the efforts of these new helmsmen, the ship of state founders, prosperity declines, and the land suffers. It seems that America’s new gang of incompetent, ideologue rulers is just not very good at their control-freak dictatorship. In due course, people go hungry and become angry. In response, the big shots take the country to war, a historically proven means to distract the masses. But in the end, there’s no theory of victory amongst these power-mad fools. They muck it up like they’ve mucked up everything else before. Per Lewis’s vision, things go from bad to worse. Eventually, deep sociological fault lines move, and America descends into a new civil war. This point reflected a concept that resonated viscerally within a country and society in the 1930s, where elderly veterans survived who could recall the first great period of unpleasantness, 1861 – 65. You have [(1) item]( on hold at our warehouse: Item #: [51987](
Status: On hold
Value: Approx. $300
Claim by date: 07/27 at 11:59 PM To see how to claim yours simply [click here]( our Head of Customer Experience will show you what you need to do. [Click Here To Learn More]( For Nine Decades, This Has Been a Lodestone of the Political Left When It Can’t Happen Here was published, the book was a bombshell, so to speak; an instant best-seller that was widely reviewed and discussed. Lewis’s book hit political nerves and, just now, editorial brevity forecloses a longer discussion of the cultural-political milieu of Depression era America. Suffice to say, though, that the above-noted Louisianian Huey Long played a major role in the prevailing national discourse, abruptly truncated by his assassination in September 1935, on the cusp of a planned campaign to unseat President Roosevelt in 1936. Since the day It Can’t Happen Here hit the bookstore shelves, the novel has served as a lodestone of the American political left. Indeed, this tome ranks high among the left’s model ideas of how dangerous it is to cede power to the country’s conservative, nationalist, populist political elements. Over the past nine decades, across almost five generations, this novel has been assigned reading in many schoolrooms, from English classes to courses in history, government and political science. It’s been adapted into plays, acted out in movies, and broadcast to television sets across several eras. In 2016 and early 2017, It Can’t Happen Here rocketed once again to the top of the best-seller lists (Amazon, for example) based on fears of the then-looming presidency of Donald Trump. Major media, from the New York Times to CNN and many other outlets, ran long articles about Sinclair Lewis’s storyline. Predictably, Orange Man Trump was the archetypal populist bad guy, preparing to seize power, line his pockets, fill the jail cells, and generally oppress anyone who doesn’t toe the proverbial line. This new interest in an old novel arose because, of course, left-wing American political culture despises any politician who operates outside of the Progressive thought bubble. Per the left, these days, there’s no room in American politics for anyone to champion the core, working class population of flyover country; those deplorable Walmart shoppers, so to speak. Thus, from Berkeley to Cambridge, and in newsrooms across the land, lefties live in mortal fear of Huey Long, 2.0, their bete noir who now is embodied by the trope of Trump, that horrid real estate developer from Queens, New York. And understand this; it’s not because Trump is Trump. No, it’s because Trump represents a credible threat to the left’s long-term grip on American culture and political power. Irony of Ironies: Who’s Doing the Power-Grab Now? Now, return to the events of this past month. There was that so-called “debate” on June 27, broadcast on CNN, the home field for leftist media, refereed by two talking heads who are, on their best days, no friends of Trump. Then and there, with zero assist from “the previous president,” as Trump is constantly called by people who can’t bear to say his name, Biden totally crashed before the entire world. Were you surprised? Well, not if you’ve been reading Paradigm Press if you’ll allow a bit of puffery on this end. Because we knew it was coming. Indeed, we’ve banged the drum about “Joe will go” for perhaps eighteen months, maybe more. I definitely recall an event in Las Vegas in the fall of 2022, when Jim Rickards and I discussed how Biden likely won’t be on the ballot in 2024. It was always going to be just a question of when, where, and how he moved towards the exit. And now we know. In many respects, the next chapters of this unfolding saga aren’t even all that much about Biden the man, not anymore. That is, Biden’s an older guy whose physical and mental decline has long been on display. His problematic effects were evident to anyone who picked up glaring signals that ranged from his stiff gait to slurred speech and mental drift. C’mon, man, you know what I mean. It’s the thing, right? Well, whatever… So what was the plan for Biden and his enablers? Another episode of Weekend at Bernie’s, so to speak, except at the White House? That, and continue the massive charade for a few more months, at least through election day? Generally, Biden’s problem has always been that nobody can keep such a big lie so deeply hidden for so long. Sure, the juggling act worked for a while—pick a number: two, three, even four years. His handlers kept the man wrapped up good and tight. Biden was down in the basement, in a manner of speaking, or off to the beach house, if not Camp David. He held few press availability, and even then, everything was scripted down to those large-print cue cards. Yet still, Biden muffed many shots. Routinely, he embarrassed himself, his handlers and supporters, and the country. Recall the wristwatch scene at Dover Air Force Base in 2021, while caskets of fallen Americans were coming off the transport plane. Or more recently, the G-7 meeting in Washington comes to mind. These, and many others. Through it all, the compliant, state-supporting, sycophant media played the coverup game, singing along in support of Biden like the Mendelsohn Choir bellowing out Ode to Joy. Of course, until just a few days ago, Biden remained on the glide path to being nominated and running again for president. “Four more years!”… and all that rot, as the British say. “He’s fine,” said the handlers. “Fit as a fiddle.” Press reports to the contrary, meaning stories about Biden’s infirmities, were dismissed as raw partisanship. A recent account published in the Wall Street Journal picked up little traction in other media and even drew a sniffy rebuke from the New York Times. Besides all that, went the tired rejoinder, Joe Biden had a stutter when he was a young fellow, and nobody should make fun of something like that… right, you bullies? Now, though, the legacy of lies is fast unraveling. And to follow the outline of Sinclair Lewis’s novel, one can rightly ask, who is pulling the power-grab in America this time? Brighter Than a Thousand Suns Blow away the toxic smoke and shovel off the stinking manure from everything about the Biden health coverup, and the illuminating burst of this sordid American scandal is brighter than a thousand suns. It’s Watergate, times three orders of magnitude. Indeed, the Biden health lie goes far beyond the defensive, comical, Baghdad Bob-like antics of a series of pathetic White House press secretaries, let alone the ignorant trash-talk of MSNBC studios (yes, the usual suspects). It’s worse than bad; it’s ethically outrageous, revealing moral foundations that are rotten to the core, and which indict an entire cadre of the country’s governing class and related, highly privileged elements. Think about it: U.S. presidents – all of them – encounter hundreds of people every day, many in close proximity. An American president crosses paths with aides, secretaries and staff, Secret Service and military support, and innumerable visitors, including the press, who walk through the White House doors. With Biden, there can be no doubt that they saw what was going on. They all have eyes and ears, and it’s fair to say that people who rise to a position high enough in life to enter the White House tend not to be totally stupid. Yet for several years, in an ongoing fairytale, the public was told that President Joe Biden was el supremo. He was a man in charge, a voracious reader, and a detail-oriented guy who ran circles around his staff. Biden was, allegedly, a visionary leader, or so the thread of his tapestry went. Plus, by some accounts, Biden was a heroic “wartime president,” a la FDR. Promoters pointed to Biden’s deft, now-legendary, strategic planning; he and his brilliant team. Surely you recall the “successful” (Biden’s word) Afghanistan withdrawal and then the long-term commitment to the Ukraine conflict, yes? “Whatever it takes,” said Biden. How is it all working? Oh, what? You didn’t see the worthy banners of glorious victory in these martial enterprises? Look harder, people. Cuz as the tale is told by Biden’s aides and acolytes, the president is worthy of military praise in terms and verbiage that would make Generalissimo Marshal Stalin blush. And yet, despite all the press release archives of past brilliance, within four weeks of said recent debate, Biden is gone. He’s off the ticket and no longer running for president. Indeed, at least figuratively, he’s underground and perhaps far sicker than we are being told. Right now, Biden is political history, other than the scary fact that he remains as titular U.S. President for another (almost) six months, and a lot of bad things can happen in six months – speaking of hanging onto your wallet. Looking ahead, beware of political uncertainty as one giant lie after another evaporates, and more and more bitter truth unfolds. There’s risk in revelation, and as rotten foundations become evident and are revealed, so be sure to keep your stash of gold and silver in a safe place. Who’s Running Things? Now comes the next question, namely, who runs the country? That is, who exercises what the Constitution broadly describes as “the executive power” of the nation? Cuz it sure ain’t Joe Biden, and likely hasn’t been for quite some time. Who makes up the committees of governance within the regime? At Paradigm, we foresaw this. Long ago, we discerned a broken train rolling down the tracks, so to speak. Broadly speaking, we knew what the destination would be, although perhaps not the exact last whistlestop, which was last weekend’s letter of withdrawal, typed not on White House stationery, and apparently signed with a rubber-stamp fake signature. Again, what has recently unfolded was always just a question of where, when and how. Still, as with any locomotive, when it leaves the rails, the event shocks you, right? Now, we face a looming national argument over the very nature of American governance. As in, how many lies can a government tell its people? How can this particular cabal of power-mad people lie so much, so brazenly, with such gigantic implications? What kind of morally bankrupt, poisoned culture is this, anyhow? There’s more to come, no doubt. We will learn more, and we will continue to be shocked at the depravity of much of the American political and media class. To be fair and balanced, the scandal will be bipartisan. If there’s a positive side, perhaps we can find perspective in the words of the ancient Greek writer Aeschylus, known as the father of tragedy, that “wisdom comes through suffering.” Because in so many ways, the country will suffer as the Biden medical debacle unfolds. For starters, the Biden scandal illustrates how people in power and positions of trust simply lie through their teeth and, sad to say, how many others have bought into so many things that are simply, deeply, and objectively not true. Over time, one might avoid reality, but over enough time, no one avoids the consequences of avoiding reality. So, I believe hard times lie ahead. Now the country – the United States of America, and likely many other people, institutions, and even nations across the world – must relearn fundamental lessons of self-governance. It must happen, if for no other reason than to borrow from the title of an old book, “It Can Happen Here.” And God help us if we can’t fix it. Thank you for subscribing and reading. Best wishes, Byron W. King Rate this email Like Dislike Thanks for rating this content! Looks like something went wrong. Please try to rate again. In Case You Missed It… Nothing is Biden’s Fault SEAN
RING Dear Reader, As we sat here patiently waiting to see if Joke Biden was a breathing corpse or a dead one, I received this comment in the mailbag I must address. Shame on you, Sean. Your grasp of economics alone tells you most headline events have a time lag from their causes. Case in point: saying "Biden caused massive inflation" when it simply came to a head on his watch; one cause was the lockdowns Trump initiated. Biden just made it worse. Your cohorts at Paradigm have been warning about low rates and "helicopter" money printing since the 2007/2008 mess, and the hammer finally dropped. The rest of that list is as follows: The Keystone XL pipeline was only popular with oil companies. Environmentalists—and Sioux who had it forced onto their land—were fighting it for years. Canadian oil, sent to Louisiana to be processed by multinational firms for sale overseas, did not profit anyone else. The $85B in gear was abandoned because Biden did not want to break the word of a US President (Trump) who agreed to a sudden pullout. The southern border 'mess' is decades old, numbers and issues are exaggerated, and don't forget Trump ordered the bipartisan bill killed for election politics. "Lawfare" is a vague accusation -- it may just be a lot of individuals jumping on the opportunity to "finally nail that slippery sucker". Europe and Ukraine -- I agree the US has always been too involved in the affairs of a continent determined to screw itself. The American people are mostly isolationist/libertarian, but the neo-cons who profit from war have always been good at waving the flag and crying wolf. Damon C. Damon, I will take each of these in turn because I think you’ve got the wrong end of the stick on most of them. Biden’s inflation: You’re right to point out that most Austrian, Classical, and Monetarist school economists have been warning about inflation since the Fed started to print money to “save the economy” in 2008. All of us were wrong because the kind of inflation we had was asset price inflation, not consumer price inflation. That’s because our big banks would redeposit their excess reserves at the Fed for 25 basis points overnight and not lend them to questionable credit risks in the economy. That is, money never comes into the hands of the US consumer. As you can see from the chart below, we didn’t get out-of-control consumer price inflation until Biden was president. But that’s not because of a magical 12-year time lag. That’s because the stupid old goat printed stimulus checks like they were going out of style. The direct dumping of money into the hands of the US consumer almost certainly caused that insane spike in consumer price inflation in recent years. The Keystone XL pipeline: Environmentalists are against everything. Capitalism provides them with something to be against. Biden scored cheap political points for a green lobby that holds the Democrats to ransom. Without pipelines, oil transportation relies more on rail and trucks, which can be less efficient and pose environmental risks. Of course, no one mentions that. It costs much less to transport oil by pipeline—about $5 per barrel, compared to $10 to $15 for rail transport. The U.S. State Department's final review in 2014 estimated that the pipeline would create around 42,100 direct and indirect jobs during the two-year construction period and 35 permanent positions for maintenance afterward. I guess the Sioux didn’t want any of those jobs. And yes, oil companies would profit. That’s what we want them to do when they ship energy more cheaply. Who else would you like to have profited from this? It also strained US-Canadian relations because of all the jobs lost north of the border. As Thomas Sowell once said, “There are no solutions, only trade-offs.” The $85 billion in equipment in Afghanistan: Stop it. What president cares about a promise a previous president made? That’s weak sauce. Biden botched the pullout because he can’t organize a party at an amusement park. [Here’s Trump calling Mark Milley a f*cking idiot at Mar-a-Largo over it.]( Here’s [a CBC article outlining the mistakes](. The Southern Border: my parents lived not far from there in Texas, and I’m so glad they’re nowhere near it anymore. There are degrees for everything. It’s true, the southern border has always been porous. But 11 million people porous? That’s plainly absurd. Biden opened the gates without even making the enemy build a horse. Lawfare: Here’s Andrew Cuomo commenting on Donald Trump’s hush money case in New York. That case, the Attorney General's case in New York, frankly should have never been brought. And if his name was not Donald Trump, and if he wasn't running for president from the former AG in New York, I'm telling you that case would have never been brought. And that's what is offensive to people. And it should be. Because if there's anything left, it's belief in the justice system. [Here’s the video]( if you need further proof. And here’s Byron King’s excellent Rude contribution titled, you guessed it, [Lawfare](. Europe and Ukraine: I largely agree with you on that one. [Florida Man Wields Odd Device on Virginia Farm]( He traveled 1,000 miles away from home… To show you this strange device on a farm in rural Virginia. You won’t know by looking at it, but a secret company behind this strange device could hold the potential to make you rich over the coming years. [Click here to find out how.]( [Click Here To Learn More]( Bankers’ Notes Your recent Rude prompts me to do something I have thought of many times over the several years Sean has been the driver of The Rude === asking if there is any way to purchase his lecture notes used in training fledgling bankers. --------- Yes or no? Guy S. Thanks for writing, Guy! Alas, the notes I use belong to my training company, so I can’t. However, if you’re really interested in me doing an equivalent lecture series or live online teaching events, please badger Dustin Weisbecker at feedback@rudeawakening.info. I’d consider it an honor to teach you and put something like that together. America Dodged a Bullet One of the best, most informed articles Sean Ring has produced. I wish I could tell you directly, but I don’t use Twitter or X. In total agreement, Charles C. (Regarding your America Dodged a Bullet article) Thank you for the kind words, Charles! Piemontese Wines Sean, You've mentioned this wine as one of your favorites. I had never heard of it. We recently visited our local Total Wine store and picked up a bottle of Tesoro Della Regina Barolo. Drank it last night, and it was excellent. Thanks for the tip. Tom C. (I think the wine you mentioned was Barolo) Awesome, Tom! I love Barolo. It’s full-bodied and delicious. If you want something a touch lighter, try Barbaresco. I also love Nebbiolo and Barbera. There are so many good wines up North in Italy. No Idea Before spewing information about the law, get your facts straight first. It’s obvious you didn’t. I suspect most of your “Rude Awakening” is similar to other Dem/Pelosi talking points. Remove me from your email blasts. You have no idea what’s been in the law for over 240 years do you? Chuck M Chuck, I posted this so everyone else who reads the Rude can laugh at you. That is all. Wrap Up Many wrote in wondering why I excluded “impeachment” from Presidential punishments. I did that because impeachment is brought by The House and tried in The Senate. It has nothing to do with our present lawfare dilemma. That’s the only reason. Thanks again for writing in. Continue to do so at feedback@rudeawakening.info. All the best, Sean Ring
Editor, Rude Awakening
Twitter: [@seaniechaos]( ☰ ⊗
[ARCHIVE]( [ABOUT]( [Contact Us]( © 2024 Paradigm Press, LLC. 1001 Cathedral Street, Baltimore, MD 21201. By submitting your email address, you consent to Paradigm Press, LLC. delivering daily email issues and advertisements. To end your Rude Awakening e-mail subscription and associated external offers sent from Rude Awakening, feel free to [click here.]( Please note: the mailbox associated with this email address is not monitored, so do not reply to this message. We welcome comments or suggestions at feedback@rudeawakening.info. This address is for feedback only. For questions about your account or to speak with customer service, [contact us here]( or call (844)-731-0984. 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 financial advice. We allow the editors of our publications to recommend securities that they own themselves. However, our policy prohibits editors from exiting a personal trade while the recommendation to subscribers is open. In no circumstance may an editor sell a security before subscribers have a fair opportunity to exit. The length of time an editor must wait after subscribers have been advised to exit a play depends on the type of publication. All other employees and agents must wait 24 hours after on-line publication or 72 hours after the mailing of a printed-only publication prior to following an initial recommendation. Any investments recommended in this letter should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company. Rude Awakening is committed to protecting and respecting your privacy. We do not rent or share your email address. Please read our [Privacy Statement.]( If you are having trouble receiving your Rude Awakening subscription, you can ensure its arrival in your mailbox by [whitelisting Rude Awakening.](