The Subtle Change from Principles to Rules Part I – Introduction

5/4/2012 Portland, Oregon – Pop in your mints…

Today we wish to take you, fellow taxpayer, on a brief trip back to where it all began, to one of the origins of the agitation which causes your author to pen his thoughts in an attempt to understand the world about him:  The Subtle Change from Principles to Rules. 

The Subtle Change from Principles to Rules
The Subtle Change from Principles to Rules

This collection of essays is more an observation than an explanation, which is why we so enjoyed writing it.  Over the next few days we will be presenting to our faithful readers our soon to be released ebook.  It will be offered  for free through Smashbooks.com in all common ebook formats in the coming months.

It is the glory of God to hide things, and the glory of man to discover them.  It is a beautiful, mysterious existence which we live in, and there is a tension between what is revealed to us and what is to remain a mystery.  This tension is inescapable, and the best one can hope for is to find satisfaction within this tension.  Clinging to mystery is to operate in darkness.  Clinging to revelation is to live in the past as the future races by.

Thank you for joining us in our observation of what is happening all around us.

The Subtle Change from Principles to Rules

INTRODUCTION

In the lazy summer days of 2007, the world appeared to be getting its groove back.  Few, if any, were the signs pointing to the financial catastrophe that was about to unfold.

Yet despite the feeling of relative calm and optimism, it was clear that a deep and permanent change was occurring at the very base of society.  Suspicion was beginning to replace trust and goodwill amongst men.

This brief book is a compilation of three essays that were written during the summer of 2007 and first published in October 2010.  They deal with a revelation that was given to us as we were attending a breakfast presentation on upcoming changes to the US accounting standards.  Instead of fighting off the drowsiness which usually accompanies listening to accounting jargon, we found ourselves grappling with a deeply disturbing truth that increasingly defines life in America to this day.

American society, which had built itself and created an unprecedented dynamism by operating on the basis of tacitly agreed upon principles, was now turning to the blunt instrument of rules as the basis for relationships.

An understanding of this subtle shift in American thinking will greatly aid one in understanding the seemingly inexplicable changes that they see all around them.

Clearly, rules have always been a part of life.  They are nothing new.  What was, and is new, is the power that is now being ascribed to rules. In America, it was often the case that a rule would be written and modified on the basis of an underlying principle.  Rules for the sake of having them did not make much sense.

Now, circa 2012, the power is continuing to shift to the rules themselves.  While the hallmark of principles is that they are flexible enough to adapt to constantly changing circumstances, rules tend to serve as a kind of concrete for society which, as they harden, completely paralyzes anything that finds itself trapped amongst them.

Societies based on rules are nothing new.  In fact, they are sadly becoming the norm throughout the world.  Perhaps the clearest high level distinction between a society that operates on the basis of principles and one that operates on a basis of rules is whether it finds its legal basis in English Common Law, which generally produces outcomes based on equity before the law and a reasonable standard; and Napoleonic Code with its strict adherence to written rules which often has little flexibility regarding the individual circumstance that is being examined

These essays deal with the shift, then, from America’s predisposition to operate on the basis of English Common Law to that of the rigidity of Napoleonic Code, and the inevitable consequences of making this shift.

The eternal question that we present here, “deer” reader, is whether or not one will stay in the meadow once as they see this shift occur.

Stay tuned for further sections and Trust Jesus.

Stay Fresh!

David Mint

Email: davidminteconomics@gmail.com

Exiting the work force, stage left

5/4/2012 Portland, Oregon – Pop in your mints…

Today, a couple of things occured which, on the surface, seem to contradict each other.  First, the official unemployment rate ticked down slightly from 8.2% to 8.1%.  While nothing to write home about, this generally would be seen as good news.  However, in the parallel universe of government statistics, the number itself is decieving.

Why?  Quite simply, labor participation, which, for better or worse, is the denomenator of the Unemployment rate equation, dropped to a level not seen in the US for 30 years, as in, circa 1982.

In other words, people are leaving the labor force for good or are returning to school, effectively leaving the government’s unemployment dole and joining the government’s student loan program, or what we like to think of as “ultra extended unemployment.”

In other words, the productive economy is continuing to shrink. 

While a lower unemployment rate will give both the Obama campaign something to tout and the hacks at the FED academic ammunition to speak of raising short term rates, very few people outside of the ivory halls of Washington can count this jobs report as good news.

It should come as little surprise, then, that there was a widespread drop in most markets today, save US Treasury yields, which inversly correlate with broad market drops.

The M1 money supply is expanding rapidly.  Ben’s helicopters have arrived.

Stay tuned and Trust Jesus.

Stay Fresh!

David Mint

Email: davidminteconomics@gmail.com

Key Indicators for May 4, 2012

Copper Price per Lb: $3.75

Oil Price per Barrel:  $98.49

Corn Price per Bushel:  $6.62

10 Yr US Treasury Bond:  1.88%

FED Target Rate:  0.15%  ON AUTOPILOT, THE FED IS DEAD!

Gold Price Per Ounce:  $1,642

MINT Perceived Target Rate*:  0.25% AWAY WE GO!

Unemployment Rate:  8.1%

Inflation Rate (CPI):  0.3%

Dow Jones Industrial Average: 13,038

M1 Monetary Base:  $2,275,100,000,000

M2 Monetary Base:  $9,832,700,000,000

However, this news came against the backdrop of