Fake Money Is Backed by Fake Statistics


Jon Forrest Little Jon Forrest Little

Jon Forrest Little

October 20th, 2022 Comments

We live in times where The Joe Rogan Experience is more popular than CNN. This says a lot.

We have one man and a microphone kicking the crap out of a media conglomerate. People trust a dude who’s winging it more than scripted and slick newsrooms.

Let's talk about trust.

Trust in government officials and the products they promote are collapsing. One of their worst products is the dishonest paper version of the dollar.

Historically speaking, the real dollar is a certain weight in silver, convertible to a certain weight in gold.

But the Federal Reserve note “dollar” is ONLY backed by the U.S. government's full “faith and credit.” It’s a debt instrument that, in effect, is everyone else's liability.

Through sleight of hand, 20th Century central bankers first passed their “dollar” notes into circulation… and then pulled the sound money out. The final act was President Richard Nixon’s “temporary suspension” of gold convertibility in 1971.

To keep today’s debt-based currency scheme alive and running, many dishonest acts have followed.

This is why we use terms like “honest money.” It’s precisely because unbacked currencies, by design, are fraudulent.

Some financial terms are misrepresented by mainstream media that pulls their news copy from Washington-sourced press releases.

A Growing Economy Does Not Necessarily Equate to Prosperity

People grow up believing that the U.S. thrives because its gross domestic product (GDP) is higher than in other nations. The components of the GDP are consumption, investment, government spending, exports, and imports.

When federal projects like a war in Afghanistan cost five times more than Vietnam, all those salaries and weapons get counted in the GDP. (Remember what happened in Afghanistan? After 20 years, we replaced the Taliban with the Taliban.)

If we have a federal project to build 20 pyramids and the next president orders them to be removed, all the effort in constructing and destroying those pyramids count in the GDP.

That’s called “make work.”

It sounds ludicrous, but we have a horde of conflicting, confusing, and overlapping bureaucracies whose activities are largely unproductive.

Remember hearing how the Orwellian-named “Inflation Reduction Act” funds the hiring of 87,000 more IRS agents? Their salaries are part of the GDP. But does it make us more prosperous?

And when GDP growth isn’t adjusted to account for the true rate of inflation, that’s not real growth either.

Inflated Dollar

Meanwhile, the recent attempt to redefine the meaning of the word “recession” is another dishonest act.

The term “inflation,” however, is especially misunderstood because people are led to believe that it's "rising prices" instead of an intentional government policy of debasement.

Once the government steps in to manage the economy through currency manipulation (money supply expansion, bailouts, below-market interest rates), big trouble follows.

While trying to put energy producers out of business, President Biden has been draining the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to put a lid on oil prices before the midterm elections.

But what happens when this draw-down ends and can no longer help ease the public’s pain? Oil prices will soar further. And the cost of oil is the predominant variable in the price of nearly everything.

Rising Prices Are Merely Symptoms of Inflation

The way the government measures the effects of inflation is flawed, to begin with. The basket of goods that go into the government’s CPI statistic is cherry-picked.

My parents' "basket of goods" in their assisted living facility is nowhere near the same "basket of goods" purchased by young adults (who are often now living together in unaffordable apartments.)

But no matter how it’s measured, no one can deny costs are soaring any longer.

Our government abandoned the gold standard because a constrained monetary system would create pressure for balanced budgets. It’s more politically convenient to look to the Fed than to cut federal spending or raise taxes.

But when the Fed creates new currency units and adds them to the trillions already in circulation, it steals value from the existing pool. The politically connected are the first ones at the trough. Savers and consumers aren’t invited to partake... and instead, foot the bill.

Suppose you ask random people what causes inflation. Most would blame the grocery store, restaurant owner, energy companies, corporate CEOs, or a foreign scapegoat (“Putin's price hikes”).

Domestic media treat inflation like it’s some mysterious market-driven economic force, not an intentional act by central bankers to transfer wealth.

The truth is, as Milton Friedman once said:

Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon, in the sense that it cannot occur without a more rapid increase in the quantity of money than in output.

Money Supply as Represented by M2 (Percentage Change) (the Pickaxe Chart)

I recently spoke with a pizza restaurant owner in Pittsburgh, a mom in San Diego, and a gas station operator in New Mexico; all their stories were eerily similar. They are suffering from intensifying inflation.

The sad thing is they are kept in darkness as to how inflation became the ferocious beast that now wreaks havoc in their daily lives.

A return to sound money is the path out of the darkness.

Jon Forrest Little

About the Author:

Jon Forrest Little graduated from the University of New Mexico and attended Georgetown University's Institute for Comparative Political and Economic Systems. Jon began his career in the mining industry and now publishes "The PickAxe" which covers topics surrounding precious metals, energy, history, and politics.