Tuesday, December 6, 2011

History: The Great Teacher, or Not

Summit Point at the Lake

The following is a small excerpt from a recent article in the Vancouver Sun written by Frank Giustra, a Vancouver business executive involved in the mining and the film making industries and a noted philanthropist.


To get a proper understanding of the current situation, we should start by ignoring all the noise propagated by the experts, media and elected officials.

Our global financial system is based on the very simple and fragile concept of confidence. So you can’t really blame the policy-makers and politicians for not telling the public the “entire” truth; feeding us constant reassurances, peppered with a little mendacity. And to make things worse, it’s just human nature for us, the recipients of this information, to reject the idea that the worst can happen, hence our willingness to find reassurance in the misinformation we are fed. But folks, the worst CAN happen.

I doubt the citizens of Imperial Rome ever considered that their empire, which stretched from the Atlantic Ocean to the Caspian Sea, would eventually collapse on itself from the sheer weight of effort and resources needed to maintain it, or that 16th-century Spaniards ever thought their high standard of living, sustained by the plundered riches of the New World, would disintegrate once the supply of gold dwindled.

Or that the upper-class 19th-century Brits leading up to 1918 ever fathomed that the sun could cease to set on lands ruled by the British Empire. History has shown that when great nations mature and over-extend themselves, they revert to the paths of least resistance: borrow and/or print money. They all did it and they all failed; this time will be no different.

If Einstein’s definition of insanity — doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results — holds true, we should move to have all of America’s and European policy-makers locked up in padded cells.

This hubris — holding on to time-worn ideas about what made a nation great in the first place, but ignoring the hard sacrifice that went with it — has prevailed throughout history and is as relevant today as it was for every great nation that came before America and the European Union.

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