How a Government Shutdown Can Restore American Independence

“Give me liberty or give me death!”

– Patrick Henry

Shutdown Season

The clock is ticking. Congress has until the end of the month to avert a partial government shutdown. Federal agencies, and their dependent employees, are counting on a last-minute deal to keep the money flowing to their coffers.

Certainly, there have been government shutdowns in the past. In fact, since 1976 there have been 20 of them. Typically, they just last for a day or two. But the most recent partial government shutdown, which took place during President Trump’s 1st term – between December 22, 2018, and January 25, 2019 – lasted for 35 days.

Government shutdowns, without question, can be highly disruptive. This is especially true in America in the year 2025 where a good part of the population is dependent on Washington in some form or another. Federal employees, contractors, businesses and individuals who rely on government services will quickly feel the pinch as federal dollars disappear. Continue reading

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Here Comes the September Swoon

“As a dog returns to its vomit, so a fool repeats his folly.”

– Proverbs 26:11

You’re Fired!

Government bureaucrats thought they had it made. High paying jobs that are practically guaranteed for life. Great retirement benefits. A certain air of importance.

Now they’re walking on eggshells. Tiptoeing around. Trying to stay out of President Donald Trump’s crosshairs.

Several weeks ago, Trump fired Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner Erika McEntarfer. If you recall, he blew a gasket following revisions to the May and June jobs report, which adjusted total jobs created from 291,000 to 33,000. He said the numbers were rigged for political reasons and gave McEntarfer a pink slip.

This week, it was Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook’s turn to get the boot. Cook had apparently taken liberties on several mortgage applications in 2021. She claimed two places as principal residences – in Ann Arbor, and Atlanta – to get better mortgage terms.

Trump said this fraud is sufficient cause to remove Cook from her position. Cook disagrees. She has lawyered up. Continue reading

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What a Bull-Runner Can Teach Us About the AI Bubble

Bill Hillmann is an expert bull runner. He’s also a writer. He married his two passions in a book he co-authored in 2014. The book is titled, “Fiesta: How to Survive the Bulls of Pamplona.” It is a guide for anyone foolish enough to run with the bulls in the legendary San Fermín festival.

One month after his book was published, Hillmann put his findings to the acid test. During a run in July 2014, something unexpected happened. A bull named Bravito decided to give him a personal lesson in survival.

Hillmann was gored twice in his right thigh. The horn missed a major artery by a hair. A detail he later said saved his life. He was rushed to the hospital for surgery, but the damage was done.

After Hillmann was gored, his co-author told The New York Times, “We will probably need to update the book.”

You might think that would be the end of Hillmann’s bull-running days. But you would be wrong. The very next year he was back in Pamplona running with the bulls once again.

Hillmann was later gored a second time in the 2017 running of the bulls at Pamplona. True to his book title, he survived. Continue reading

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A World Of Fiat

“Gold is money. Everything else is credit.”

– J.P. Morgan, testimony before Congress in 1912

Impossible Imbalances

There has been a lot of discussion lately about America’s massive trade deficit and how President Trump’s tariff policies are intended to shrink it down while returning manufacturing to the USA. What isn’t often mentioned is how this massive trade deficit ever came about to the extent that it has to begin with. If the world still operated on a gold standard these mega imbalances would have been impossible.

Consider a world where every dollar, yen, or euro was backed by a real, physical piece of gold in a vault. That’s the gold standard. In this system, if the U.S. wanted to buy more goods from other countries than it was selling, it would have to pay in gold. That means gold would be flowing out of the U.S. and into the hands of its trading partners.

As the U.S. gold reserves dwindled, the amount of dollars in circulation would shrink, making dollars more valuable. At the same time, the countries receiving all that gold would see their money supply grow, making their currencies less valuable.

This process would naturally correct the trade imbalance. U.S. goods would become cheaper for foreigners, and their goods would become more expensive for Americans. This would encourage a natural shift back towards balance. A massive, long-term trade deficit would be impossible because a country would eventually run out of gold. Continue reading

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