American Business,  Current Affairs,  Domestic Policy,  Economy,  Federal Reserve,  Podcast,  World Issues,  Wuhan Flu

A Journal of the Plague Year – A Terrible Choice

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Darrell Castle talks about the war on the virus, how the world’s economies have shut down, the United States has intentionally put itself into negative GDP to fight it, and now faces a terrible choice.

Transcription / Notes:

A JOURNAL OF THE PLAGUE YEAR—A TERRIBLE CHOICE

Hello, this is Darrell Castle with today’s Castle Report. Today is Friday, April 3, 2020, and on this Report I will be talking about the virus because nothing else is happening anywhere except the War on the Virus. The world’s economies shut down and the United States intentionally puts itself into negative GDP in an effort to slow the spread of the virus. It seems to be a World War against an enemy so small only an electron microscope can see it.

Here at the Castle Household we are in day 14 of quarantine, or day 14 of Castles held hostage. I guess that means Joan and I do not have the virus although I’ve seen reports of symptoms waiting a few more days to manifest. Nevertheless, we are grateful that we and our family, as well as our law firm staff and their families, are symptom free. We continue to work in lonely isolation, however, because Caesar has decreed that our isolation must continue for another month. The family daughter continues her symptom free isolation on a small island near the bottom of the world.

I wonder how long this can go on without total destruction of the American economy. The answer is not that much longer as we will see in a moment. Restaurants, bars, retail shopping, churches, whole cities shutting down as the world’s economy contracts radically. Work is not being done, wages are not being earned, and things are not being made for other people to buy. It suddenly seems to have occurred to people that without revenue neither governments nor individuals can pay their bills so perhaps the virus will bankrupt more people than it kills.

In talking with people via the Internet from around the world it seems that the world is teetering on the brink of uncertainty. What will happen to us and to our countries? No one seems to know. We do know the results of uncertainty when we have seen it in the past. The great American detective Lieutenant Columbo once said, to understand something you must understand its past. So we can look at history, when we find it in pure form, and mix in a little human nature, and hopefully, out comes reality, as well as a view of what has happened in the past.

People accept debt and don’t mind leverage when they have confidence of future ability to service that debt. When confidence is high, people are heavily indebted since they don’t wait to buy that new car, or that new house. When people lose confidence in the future, certainty is destroyed and they wonder; will I have a job tomorrow, will I lose the ability to meet the debt service that I have. In that case, we stop spending and circle the wagons. We go into defensive mode and perhaps contemplate what default will mean for us and our families.

The result of all this is that, according to the St. Louis Federal Reserve, second quarter unemployment could reach 32% which would exceed the maximum under the Great Depression. It was 24.9% in 1933 at the peak of the depression. GDP will contract in the 1st quarter by as much as 30% for the first time in many years. According to TSA, airport passenger traffic was down 90% for the month of March. 3.2 million Americans applied for unemployment benefits two weeks ago, a record number many times over, but last week its even worse at 6.6 million. The previous high was 695,000 in 1982. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DOW), which those in power like to use as a re-election measure, is down 34% peak to trough. Call it whatever you want, but I’m calling it the worst collapse of the American economy since the great depression.

People react to all this news in different ways. Some are very nonchalant hardly paying attention at all. These folks seem to believe that the reaction of most is paranoid and way out of proportion. Some people do seem to be at least border line paranoid, afraid to leave their homes to walk out in the sunshine for a few moments. Optimists say the viral infections will peak in May; pessimists say that it will be August. I don’t know which of those I am because I admit that I just don’t know. The response, as usual, is local depending on culture, politics, size, geography, local skills, etc.

I do wonder sometimes if we are shutting down the world for nothing. Is the cure worse than the disease? What matters is not what I think but what the Federal government thinks, and what it will do as a result. When the Federal government portrays itself as the solver of every problem, its natural that the Feds should get the blame when problems go unsolved. We should know from history that World Wars cannot be fought without casualties, but the virus now reminds us. The government tells us that we can expect 200,000 to 240,000 dead before the virus is forced into unconditional surrender. Even then, we are warned that it could return for a second attack when cool weather returns in the fall. Those casualties, I suppose, represent the collateral damage of war, just throwaways along the road to victory.

What will the Federal Government do to prevent a total collapse? In conjunction with the Federal Reserve, some 6 trillion dollars will be infused into the economy to replace that which is being lost. Some of that money is apparently earmarked for small businesses to prevent their laying off workers, thus sending them to the unemployment line where they would require government relief anyway. Eighty per cent of Americans will get a direct cash payment which will require 560 billion of the 2.2 trillion allocated. The Federal Reserve has earmarked 3 trillion that doesn’t need Congressional approval for its own use with the banks and debt markets.

Bond and stock markets are backstopped with infinite cash. There is no hole deep enough to prevent the Federal Reserve from filling it with cash. The Federal Reserve, under congressional rules, is not permitted to be in the bond buying business but who cares about the law in time of crises. Municipal bonds are in trouble as cities can no longer meet their expenses so the Federal Reserve steps in to buy the bonds, thus pushing municipal debt piles higher and higher so next year it will require even more to keep the plates in the air.

Corporations are also obviously in trouble. The list of failing corporations is very long, and so the Federal Government has allocated hundreds of billions to bail them out, ostensibly to keep them from laying off workers. Sometimes it doesn’t work, and the Kennedy Center is exhibit number one. The Kennedy Center got 25 million to help avoid layoffs but not a penny went to employees and many were laid off anyway. The Federal Reserve is prohibited from buying corporate bonds but now it does anyway to keep the bond market from collapsing.

I wonder if the Federal Reserve can make a real depression go away with phony money. It seems that we are about to find out. There were some ominous cracks in the American economy before war was declared against the virus. It was a very fragile economy dependent on infinite expansion of credit. Although unemployment was low and the stock market was high, much of the manufacturing base had already been transferred offshore, primarily to China. The last U.S. aspirin plant closed in 2002, the last penicillin plant in 2004. 97% of antibiotics used in the U.S. are made in China.

The U.S. economy is 70% consumption. We buy stuff that we consume and that is 70% of it. 70% of that is tied to service, not goods made and sold. Most of the losses in the service industries could turn out to be permanent. Those types of businesses do not build pent up demand as do the manufacturing industries.

The U.S. buys and does not make or sell. How did the U.S. lose its industrial base, one factory at a time? The Feds are going to save us though. They are giving away so much money that it takes some 880 pages just to list it all. Special rules must be adopted to shovel out all the money. The Sunshine Law was lifted for the Federal Reserve, so we are not allowed to know exactly how much money is being created, and how much is going to what. Lobbyists line up to gain money and favor for their clients. Just look at how the Kennedy Center got its 25 million. That’s a nice contribution and I’m sure all the wheat farmers in Kansas are pleased to do their part for the Kennedy Center, as are the coal miners in West Virginia.

There are other suggestions for how to win the war against our invisible enemy than printing money we don’t have. Gordon Brown, the former Prime Minister of Great Britain, has said that we need a world government whose authority supersedes that of sovereign nations to coordinate the global response for health and economy. He suggested that the efforts to build and fund such a government should began yesterday at the G-20 summit. He was disappointed that the UN Security Council had not been invited to the meeting. Will he get what he and many others want, we’ll see?

A global crisis needs global money our world leaders say. We need to empower the International Monetary Fund (IMF) with special power to create and distribute global money called SDR’s, or Special Drawing Rights.

Bill Gates says that when we have a vaccine in a few months we need a “digital certificate” to note who has recovered and who has received the vaccine. I suspect that digital certificate will be necessary to enter any federal property, board an airplane or other public transportation and ultimately to buy gasoline, food or a housing contract. Government has already taught us that it can do whatever it wants without restraint, and government alone determines what is essential.

Government has no money to hand out, it can only print it, but Feds who hand out more money get more power, so they print and hand it out. Democrats and their followers in the media and in the polls often extol the virtues of socialism and condemn capitalism and blame it for the problems. What they don’t understand is that what we have, and have had for many years, is not capitalism because if it were capitalism it would not be failing. For capitalism to work, corporations must be allowed to fail. The bankruptcy system works quite well to repair it all.

What we actually have is fascism or corporatism as defined by Benito Mussolini. Never mind the silly uniform and strutting posture for those were just the trappings. Fascism is a union between government and corporations to run a country. The corporations of a large enough scale run the country and game it for the benefit of their insiders, and the government backstops their mistakes and gambling losses with taxpayer money. Corporate boards become revolving doors for high ranking officials both elected and bureaucratic. Everybody wins and nobody loses, as the Godfather used to say.

In conclusion, I want to tell you the terrible choice the government is facing and must make right now. Perhaps the choice has already been made, I don’t know. On the one hand we have a large group of highly vulnerable people, including diabetics, heavy smokers, heavy drinkers, and especially the very frail elderly. When positive for the virus a great many of these people die with or without ventilators, I heard a doctor in NY say that 80% of those over 80 in hospitals die with or without ventilators.

On the other side of the equation, we have an economy that’s rapidly sinking into depression, perhaps fatally. Should we start now trying to restart this economy before its too late. Should we continue as we are going and just try to print our way out of it knowing that Zimbabwe may lie at the end of that road. With the bailout funds we have bought possibly a 3-month window of opportunity. What do we do with it, that is the question? Do we sacrifice the elderly, or do we sacrifice the economy? The next month or possibly less will tell us what has been decided. If we go back to work, we have probably decided to let the young and healthy workers who pay taxes go back and build herd immunity, while the weak and elderly are on their own. If we do not go back to work, then we are risking an entire national economy into the hands of a printing press. The result could be economic catastrophic collapse with the resulting social chaos and martial law. Not a pretty picture and no easy choices just bad ones and worse ones.

Finally, folks, here at the Castles we endeavor not to fiddle away our time while Rome burns. We continue to work hard each day although we work at home. After 14 days of quarantine, we have declared ourselves virus free, at least covid-19 free. We continue to pray for our daughter who remains stuck on a small island on the other side of the world. There are lots of storms that ravage those islands, so we watch, and we pray for both her and her husband as well as the internet’s survival.

At least that’s the way I see it,

Until next time folks,

This is Darrell Castle.

Thanks for listening.

10 Comments

  • Mary Winton

    Well spoken. Our bibles and the good Lord told us this day was coming. Our family will pray for your family and their soon return back home

  • Jonathan Taub

    well i am close to 60 but i think in a time of triage we have to give priority to the young both literally in the hospital and figuratively in policies

  • tom blair

    I have not seen your report before. This is excellent. It is a stark choice but one that needs to be understood and made. God gives us a time on Earth and we are to leave it a better place for our children. But this generation, as it has done in the past, is being selfish, the worst kind of selfish; stealing from our children.

    • Darrell

      Tom: Thank you for listening to the Castle Report. Keep in mind that if such a choice that I describe is made in the manner that you suggest it will be made by old people who will not be subject to the triage because they have money and power. The government is always very good at maneuvering us into accepting the premise that what they want from us is inevitable and must be done whether going to war or sacrificing the elderly. It’s not liberty that’s for sure and it’s unnecessary. As for as a selfish generation what about the spring break generation who abjectly refuse to restrain themselves apparently because they are young and not yet subject to the triage. It’s all a long time dream dream of the power mad. War between the generations with the losers being the ones who can no longer be afforded under the new vote buying system of gaining power.

    • Andrew White

      And advocating euthanasia is not selfish? What about the current moms that give up their unborn out of convenience? I didn’t see the previous generation do that on such a mass scale. You would probably not be here if that were true. I suppose raising you, feeding you, sending you to school, etc, was all selfishness.

      That is a sickening comment, Tom.

  • Sharon

    Blessings Always, Mr. Castle. I had voted for you in 2016 , because your Godly convictions and principles are in line with mine. I have supported our President Donald J. Trump when he is right and have written that to him. I believe he does love
    America and her people. I believe he is more intelligent, compassionate and full of energy than all of the liberal naysayers put together. I have wondered if you were ever offered a position in his administration. You would have so much common sense to offer. We must remember that with every sunrise, we have another great day ahead. And, as we look forward to commemorating another Easter SONRISE April 12, let us pray for revival in
    America.

  • Mark

    Appreciate your background of knowledge and insightful comments. Praying for our President and conservative leadership to make right choices. Asking for God’s intervention to spare us from this prevailing evil, understanding that He is in control and His program will ultimately be worked out in His time.

  • Cameron

    We all knew something was next after the impeachment fail. The true powers that be done care how many die, the more the better. I’m over 70 and a combat veteran, I got used to the idea that the next breath could be the last along time ago. I’m not going anywhere until the LORD decides it’s time. Until then I’m going to keep on working and living just like always.

  • Jermaine

    Hello Mr. Castle,
    I am glad that you, your family and team have remained safe. I have read your articles for quite a time and would value your guidance. I am a single male in my late twenties. I am a college graduate, I have no debt, and both my body and mind are strong. I have been working in the financial services for about four years and I recently begin selling medical devices with a start-up company. What should someone in my position do to prepare for the future that is approaching?