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Are Americans Ready to Storm the Bastille?

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Recipe for Revolution | Are Americans Ready to Storm the Bastille? - Anti-justice? - A civilizatio

Recipe for Revolution [The Daily Reckoning] March 15, 2023 [WEBSITE]( | [UNSUBSCRIBE]( Are Americans Ready to Storm the Bastille? - Anti-justice… - A civilization can go from prosperity to barbarism faster than you think… - History might not repeat, but it rhymes… [WARNING: Major Disruption To U.S. Stock Market Scheduled For March 20 At 10:00 AM?]( Heads up… If you plan to buy or sell any stocks on Monday, March 20… Then you must prepare for this major disruption to the U.S. stock market which is scheduled to take place on that date. Otherwise, you’re placing yourself at direct and immediate risk of the shockwaves that will follow. [Click Here For My Warning]( Annapolis, Maryland [Brian Maher] BRIAN MAHER Dear Reader, “Give a man a gun and he will rob a bank,” claimed fictional television character Tyrell Wellick, adding pithily: “Give a man a bank and he will rob everyone.” The bank — the banking system — will shortly be robbing everyone. This it will do to make whole the moneyed depositors of Silicon Valley Bank, presently in receivership. The regulatory authorities insist the robbing is not a “bailout.” That is because the taxpayer is not being tapped directly on the shoulder. And it is true, he is not. Yet the taxpayer is likely an account holder. And the costs imposed upon the banks to make whole the moneyed depositors of Silicon Valley Bank they will passing along to the account holder in the form of higher surcharges and fees. It constitutes an indirect robbery — a robbery at one remove. It is nonetheless a robbery. Justice? Is a man with $250,001 to sink into a bank account unaware that the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation will only guarantee the $250,000? That every dollar beyond that he will lose if the bank buckles under? We hazard he is well aware of it. Even a man of modest means… such as your editor… is aware of it. Yet Mr. Moneybags and many of his fellows willfully and knowingly emptied more than $250,000 into individual accounts at the Silicon Valley Bank. Do they suffer justice under the system of profit and loss, under the established rules of banking? No they do not. They are instead issued a very large cheque — while others are issued a very large bill. It is a very strange justice indeed. Do you wish to label it anti-justice? We will merely say that you enjoy our permission. Will Americans Reach the Breaking Point? We realize that the vast majority of rescued depositors were not individuals but business concerns. Yet a rescue is a rescue is a rescue. Can a system rotted through with anti-justice endure? We are not half so convinced that it can. It has endured for a very long time, we concede. We concede further that it may endure yet. But we are also aware that “breaking points” exist. A man will be pushed and pushed… until he will be pushed no longer. Shall we consider the French Revolution of 1789? On this, the Ides of March, we shall. Perhaps by glancing backward… we may in some sense look forward. There Will Never Be a Revolution Here From our co-founder, Mr. Bill Bonner: By the 18th century, France had become the greatest power in Europe, the richest and most populous country in the Western world and the clear leader in art, science, philosophy, education, cuisine, fashion, architecture…and, of course, viticulture. It had the richest people in the world, the prettiest women and the best booze. It also had the most enlightened economists – the physiocrats – from whom Adam Smith was boosting some of his best ideas. A poll taken in the early 1780s might have shown the French to be extremely optimistic and confident. And why shouldn’t they be? The last major financial crisis – caused by John Law’s Mississippi Bubble – blew up over 60 years before. And had the world ever seen anything approaching the splendor of Versailles? [New Biden Bucks Follow-Up Available Now]( Hey, it’s Jim Rickards. Since posting my original Biden Bucks presentation online, millions of people have viewed it. Snopes and the Associated Press have even attempted to “fact check” me and claim my warnings are false: [Click here for more...]( Point being, my message has raised a storm and caused a lot of controversy. But in the time between my message and now, a lot of new developments have come to light. That’s why I’ve just released an update to my original prediction… one which will likely be even more controversial. [Access My New 2023 Biden Bucks Follow-up Here]( Then came 1789 and its revolutionary deliriums: But in 1789, Paris mobs came to the crossroads of history and veered left. They replaced an absolute monarch who had very limited power, with a people’s republic restrained neither by common sense nor common decency. Adds Austrian political scientist and journalist Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn (dates 1909-1999): Much of what may appear positive to us today – liberality, intellectuality, humanitarianism – had all been already brought to us by the liberal, courtly absolutism, while the French Revolution which used all these words in reality did nothing more than brutally extinguish them. Revolutionary Sparks What spark — or which sparks — set the revolutionary fires arage? Caveat lector: You do not hold a history book in your hands. You hold instead a financial newsletter in your hands… and a disreputable one at that. Its editor is not a historian at a lectern. He is instead a popinjay in an armchair who is given to the simplifications, half-truths, errors and pomposities of the type. We nonetheless proceed… in the spirit of scholarly inquiry… First, there was the estates system; a feudal hierarchy, a social pyramid. At the pinnacle was the First Estate — the church and its officiating clergy. Wedged in the middle, in the Second Estate, was the nobility. Below the nobility squatted the remaining 98% of France, the massive base of the pyramid — the Third Estate — merchants, tradesmen, lawyers, peasants, etc. The government squeezed the majority of its tax revenues from this Third Estate. That is, the lower 98% hauled the bulk of the freight. The 98% kept the 2% bouncing along in a sort of opulence. Naturally… the 98% bristled and bridled under the burden. But they had been accustomed to the business for generations. Why finally raise a mighty rumpus in 1789? The Hungry Times An army marches on its stomach, it has been said. A people too marches on its stomach. And in the 1780s, the people of France were falling out of formation… France was the most populous nation in Europe. It thus required the most foodstuffs. A fantastic volcanic eruption in 1783 — in present Iceland — threw out so much soot it blew out the sun. Winter was grim. And the 1784 harvest yielded lean, lean pickings. The following summers witnessed drought, busted harvests… and famine. 1787 and 1788 brought more hungry times. With them, inflation. That is because slender harvests raised the price of flour — hence, the price of bread. Hunger plus inflation is a dreadful combination. A shrinking belly… twinned with a shrinking currency… equals a growing crisis. It means a heart filling with resentment and a head filling with ideas. It meant — in this instance — revolution. It meant the slaughter of civilization. It meant rivers, lakes, seas and oceans of blood. It meant war… ultimately. It meant two centuries of ideological mischief of one sort or other. Lenin, Mao, Pol Pot, Castro and other 20th-century hellcats took their examples from the French revolutionists and their great bloodlettings. The Alan Greenspan of the 18th Century We have neglected the crucial role of a critical actor… “the Alan Greenspan of the 18th century” — Monsieur Jacques Necker — to whom we now turn. As Mr. Bonner explains: None of this might have happened, however, except for the efforts of the Alan Greenspan of the late 18th century — Jacques Necker. It was Necker who replaced laissez-faire economist Jacques Turgot as French finance minister in 1776. Turgot’s free-trade policies had the fatal flaw of all sensible rules – they benefited everybody to the advantage of nobody in particular. Turgot dissolved the guild system, eliminated the corvee (the forced labor of the peasants), imposed a simple property tax and opposed all forms of economic privilege at the expense of the common good. He even set himself against Marie Antoinette, by refusing to grant favors to her cronies. Since everybody in France in the 18th century as well as every American in the 21st wanted the privilege of picking someone else’s pocket, Turgot eventually made enemies of nearly every class. Louis XVI, though responsible for the well-being of the entire nation, had not the strength to stand up to the special interests. [Over 62 And Collect Social Security? Take Action Immediately!]( [Click here for more...]( If you’re over the age of 62 and currently collect Social Security, you need to prepare now. Because Biden has given our country the worst inflation in decades – and many warn things will only get worse from here. Worse yet, the Social Security check you receive now may not keep pace with inflation… Which is why, if you don’t act now, you could fall behind in the months ahead. Is your retirement at immediate risk? [Click Here To Find Out]( Turgot even had a prophetic intuition and a view of history similar to our own. Periods of civilized progress are followed, he noted, by periods of barbarism and madness… Necker… favored particular privileges at the expense of everybody else. Rather than tax people to pay for state expenses, Necker borrowed — taking short-term, high-interest loans that brought the government close to bankruptcy. Then, Necker turned to accounting tricks to show that the government was actually running a surplus! The patsies loved it. Pushed out for the first time in 1781, Necker was called back on the eve of revolution in 1788 for another dose of his financial magic. But it was too late. The old miracle elixirs — heavier debt and cooked books — wouldn’t work any longer; bankruptcy was unavoidable. The aristocrats got rid of him again — on July 14, 1789. The mob, which still had faith, was so disappointed… it headed for the Bastille. History Doesn’t Repeat, But It Rhymes History does not repeat. But it does rhyme, as said the great scalawag Mark Twain. Will Americans head for their own Bastille? Perhaps they already have in one sense… Substitute July 14, 1789, for January 6, 2021… substitute the Bastille for the United States Capitol… and you may have yourself a rhyme. The cadence is a bit off, of course. The only blood at the Capitol came spilling out of a 35-year-old Air Force veteran’s neck, shot through by the pistol of a Capitol policeman. No heads went up on spikes — feet merely went up on Nancy Pelosi’s desk. And the marauders walked out shortly after they walked in… and went home. Nor were they famished. By the appearance of many, rather the opposite was true. In brief, 2021 America is not 1789 France. The Church is punchless, American nobility is a contradiction in terms, no king beleaguers us. Rhymes But do millions of Americans believe they are being bossed and exploited by an overbearing elite? Do they believe they are languishing at the base of the economic pyramid… while the pyramid’s tip lives grandly — almost royally? Many do, yes. Do they believe the Federal Reserve chairman — whoever it may be — is a modern Jacques Necker? Again, many do. Are they ready for a man upon a white horse? We do not know. But many believe, rightly or wrongly, that a man with white hair was fraudulently elected over a man with orange hair in the presidential election of 2020. Here is another possible historical rhyme: As in 1789 France, inflation is loose. Take a frustrated population sat upon by elites… many wallowing economically… losing faith in elections. Now set an inflationary fire… and history’s rhyme might just become an awful clang. A prediction? No, of course not. We merely suggest a possibility. It is unlikely. Yet so was the French Revolution in 1780… Regards, [Brian Maher] Brian Maher Managing Editor, The Daily Reckoning [feedback@dailyreckoning.com.](mailto:feedback@dailyreckoning.com) Editor’s note: First it was Silvergate. Then Silicon Valley Bank. Now Signature Bank’s doors have been closed. How many more are next? How far will the contagion spread? Jim Rickards isn’t waiting around to find out. [And neither should you.]( So we have one simple question for you: Will you wait, keeping your money in cash, all at the risk of the regulators? Or will you heed Jim’s [Biden Bucks: The Final Countdown]( warning and take back control? You have a choice. [Click here now to take back control.]( Thank you for reading The Daily Reckoning! We greatly value your questions and comments. Please send all feedback to [feedback@dailyreckoning.com.](mailto:feedback@dailyreckoning.com) [Brian Maher] [Brian Maher]( is the Daily Reckoning's Managing Editor. Before signing on to Agora Financial, he was an independent researcher and writer who covered economics, politics and international affairs. His work has appeared in the Asia Times and other news outlets around the world. He holds a Master's degree in Defense & Strategic Studies. [Paradigm]( ☰ ⊗ [ARCHIVE]( [ABOUT]( [Contact Us]( © 2023 Paradigm Press, LLC. 808 Saint Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21202. By submitting your email address, you consent to Paradigm Press, LLC. delivering daily email issues and advertisements. To end your The Daily Reckoning e-mail subscription and associated external offers sent from The Daily Reckoning, 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@dailyreckoning.com. 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. 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