Orrin Woodward on LIFE & Leadership

Inc Magazine Top 20 Leader shares his personal, professional, and financial secrets.

  • Orrin Woodward

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    Former Guinness World Record Holder for largest book signing ever, Orrin Woodward is a NY Times bestselling author of And Justice For All along with RESOLVED & coauthor of LeaderShift and Launching a Leadership Revolution. His books have sold over one million copies in the financial, leadership and liberty fields. RESOLVED: 13 Resolutions For LIFE made the Top 100 All-Time Best Leadership Books and the 13 Resolutions are the framework for the top selling Mental Fitness Challenge personal development program.

    Orrin made the Top 20 Inc. Magazine Leadership list & has co-founded two multi-million dollar leadership companies. Currently, he serves as the Chairman of the Board of the LIFE. He has a B.S. degree from GMI-EMI (now Kettering University) in manufacturing systems engineering. He holds four U.S. patents, and won an exclusive National Technical Benchmarking Award.

    This blog is an Alltop selection and ranked in HR's Top 100 Blogs for Management & Leadership.

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Small Business Ownership – Solving Problems

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 19, 2009

 

Here is a fantastic video on small business ownership from Ed King, Director of Small Business Services from Wayne State University.  My friend Don passed it on to me and Mr. King’s thinking is spot on!  I love his straight talk on what it takes to succeed in business.  Small business owners have inherent strengths by having the ability to adapt to market conditions much faster than the larger firms.  Business owners solve the customer’s problems.  The more problems in the economy just means there is more opportunity for the business owner.   Instead of being depressed in a down economy, the entrepreneur ought to Identify customer problems, Develop a plan to solve the problems, Share that plan, Implement/Follow Through with the plan, and Celebrate successes.  Business ownership is quite simple when you boil it down, but not easy.  Failure isn’t easy either.  Since easy isn’t an option, you might as well make your life count by applying the discipline up front to win.  Discipline will be applied either way and you have the choice of being internally disciplined by you or being externally disciplined by others.  That choice will make all the difference in your success or failure.  Opportunities abound!  When opportunity and preparedness meet – success must happen.  Start preparing today for your opportunity. God Bless, Orrin Woodward

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RUPQkNb0brU]

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Seth Godin – Tribes

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 18, 2009

Here is a fantastic video from Seth Godin on the power of tribes.  A big thank you to my friend Dat To for passing it on. Tribes are groups of committed men and women who stand for their beliefs and unite around the principles that we hold dear.  Tribes are not positional but leadership led.  The MonaVie Team is a tribe that believes in the philosophy of helping the next person win.  I love the part of this video where Seth describes that 1,000 committed members will go out and generate another 1,000 members and you have 1,000,000 customers!  Boy, that number sounds familiar!  1,000 leaders that build 1,000 people communities will accomplish our first goal of 1 million Team members!  Not everyone is a fit for the Team.  Our role is to find the people who desire to Have Fun, Make Money and Make a Difference.  The MonaVie Team is a learning organization and is cutting edge in Launching a Leadership Revolution!  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q6vpBDFoMqc&w=480&h=295]

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Vince Papale – Opportunities and Dreams

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 17, 2009

Here is an inspirational film clip on the football career of Vince Papale.  Vince was a 30 year old walk on to the the Philadelphia Eagles training camp and he made the team!  Vince Papale never played college football and was the longest of long shots, but he kept his dream in front of him.  There is a saying in life, “When opportunity and preparedness meet, success must happen.”  Vince was prepared and kept himself in top physical condition so when the opportunity arose, he was ready.  Are you preparing for your opportunity?  Do you already have your opportunity, but are not prepared?  Today is a new day – make it the beginning of your masterpiece!  Work as hard on yourself as you do in your business and change will happen.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b38VtYXmiVM&w=425&h=344]

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Zig Ziglar – Attitude Makes a Difference!

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 16, 2009

Zig Ziglar has inspired, taught, and encouraged millions of people over his career.  Zig’s Christian testimony has personally inspired me and many others. I salute Zig for living a life of excellence that is making a difference in other people’e lives.  Here is a short video that captures some of Zig’s thinking on attitude.  Zig teaches us to have an attitude of gratitude.  I believe that to solve your challenges, you must go beyond your challenges and focus on the solutions.  The solution to your problem is not in the problem, so endlessly talking about the problem is counter-productive.  By constantly dwelling on the problem, you cannot move onto the answers.  I love the Albert Einsten quote, “The significant problems that we face in life cannot be solved at the same level of thinking that created them.”  Are you dwelling on the problems in life or dwelling on the solutions?  If you do not have the answers, then find a mentor to help.  The key is to listen and apply the advice of your mentor! The choice to focus and apply solutions instead of dwelling on problems, will make all the difference.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRMogDrHnMQ&w=425&h=344]

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Napoleon Hill – Think & Grow Rich Wisdom

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 12, 2009

Napoleon Hill was one of the originators of the field of success coaching.  Napoleon interviewed many giants of the industrial revolution and studied what made them great.  Many of his success thoughts have stood the test of time.  I don’t buy into 100% of his philosophy, but there is so much good that I felt I would share some of the best here.  Napoleon’s classic book, Think and Grow Rich has made a huge impact in many leaders thinking.  This video has captured some of his best thoughts on transforming your thinking to transform your life.  Thank you Napoleon Hill for blazing a trail in the success/leadership field.  Many others have followed your pioneering steps. God Bless, Orrin Woodward

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gz4Wl3jsHMc&w=425&h=344]

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Western Civilization – The Idea of Liberty

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 11, 2009

Today, I am going to share a portion of an article by one of my favorite thinkers of all time.  Ludwig Von Mises is one of the clearest thinkers on economics and human action that has ever lived.  He also was principle centered enough to go against the grain.  It takes guts to follow your principles when everyone else is abandoning them, but that is exactly what Mr. Von Mises did.  The world was plunging into socialism and one lone voice predicted the demise of this unworkable economic scheme.  There has been a rebirth of interest in this great man’s work as so much of what he stated has turned out to be true.  This article is a fascinating look at the world as a struggle for liberty against coercion. Enjoy the article and remember that ideas have consequences.  Keep reading and learning so that you can defend liberty against coercion!  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

 

The history of civilization is the record of a ceaseless struggle for liberty.

 

Social cooperation under the division of labor is the ultimate and sole source of man’s success in his struggle for survival and his endeavors to improve as much as possible the material conditions of his well-being. But as human nature is, society cannot exist if there is no provision for preventing unruly people from actions incompatible with community life. In order to preserve peaceful cooperation, one must be ready to resort to violent suppression of those disturbing the peace. Society cannot do without a social apparatus of coercion and compulsion, i.e., without state and government. Then a further problem emerges: to restrain the men who are in charge of the governmental functions lest they abuse their power and convert all other people into virtual slaves. The aim of all struggles for liberty is to keep in bounds the armed defenders of peace, the governors and their constables. Freedom always means: freedom from arbitrary action on the part of the police power.

 

The idea of liberty is and has always been peculiar to the West. What separates East and West is first of all the fact that the peoples of the East never conceived the idea of liberty. The imperishable glory of the ancient Greeks was that they were the first to grasp the meaning and significance of institutions warranting liberty. Recent historical research has traced back to Oriental sources the origin of some of the scientific achievements previously credited to the Hellenes. But nobody has ever contested that the idea of liberty was created in the cities of ancient Greece. The writings of Greek philosophers and historians transmitted it to the Romans and later to modern Europe and America. It became the essential concern of all Western plans for the establishment of the good society. It begot the laissez-faire philosophy to which mankind owes all the unprecedented achievements of the age of capitalism.

 

The meaning of all modern political and judicial institutions is to safeguard the individuals’ freedom against encroachments on the part of the government. Representative government and the rule of law, the independence of courts and tribunals from interference on the part of administrative agencies, habeas corpus, judicial examination and redress of acts of the administration, freedom of speech and the press, separation of state and church, and many other institutions aimed at one end only: to restrain the discretion of the officeholders and to render the individuals free from their arbitrariness.

 

The age of capitalism has abolished all vestiges of slavery and serfdom. It has put an end to cruel punishments and has reduced the penalty for crimes to the minimum indispensable for discouraging offenders. It has done away with torture and other objectionable methods of dealing with suspects and lawbreakers. It has repealed all privileges and promulgated equality of all men under the law. It has transformed the subjects of tyranny into free citizens.

 

The material improvements were the fruit of these reforms and innovations in the conduct of government affairs. As all privileges disappeared and everybody was granted the right to challenge the vested interests of all other people, a free hand was given to those who had the ingenuity to develop all the new industries which today render the material conditions of people more satisfactory. Population figures multiplied and yet the increased population could enjoy a better life than their ancestors.

 

Also in the countries of Western civilization there have always been advocates of tyranny — the absolute arbitrary rule of an autocrat or an aristocracy on the one hand and the subjection of all other people on the other hand. But in the Age of Enlightenment the voices of these opponents became thinner and thinner. The cause of liberty prevailed. In the first part of the nineteenth century the victorious advance of the principle of freedom seemed to be irresistible. The most eminent philosophers and historians got the conviction that historical evolution tends toward the establishment of institutions warranting freedom and that no intrigues and machinations on the part of the champions could stop the trend toward liberalism.

 

II

 

In dealing with the preponderance of the liberal social philosophy there is a disposition to overlook the power of an important factor that worked in favor of the idea of liberty, viz., the eminent role assigned to the literature of ancient Greece in the education of the elite. There were among the Greek authors also champions of government omnipotence, such as Plato. But the essential tenor of Greek ideology was the pursuit of liberty. Judged by the standards of modern liberal and democratic institutions, the Greek city-states must be called oligarchies. The liberty which the Greek statesmen, philosophers and historians glorified as the most precious good of man was a privilege reserved to a minority. In denying it to metics and slaves they virtually advocated the despotic rule of an hereditary caste of oligarchs. Yet it would be a grave error to dismiss their hymns to liberty as mendacious. They were no less sincere in their praise and quest of freedom than were, two thousand years later, the slaveholders George Washington and Thomas Jefferson. It was the political literature of the ancient Greeks that begot the ideas of the Monarchomachs, the philosophy of the Whigs, the doctrines of Althusius, Grotius, and John Locke, and the ideology of the fathers of modern constitutions and bills of rights. It was the classical studies, the essential feature of a liberal education, that kept awake the spirit of freedom in England of the Stuarts and George III, in France of the Bourbons, and in Italy, subject to the despotism of a galaxy of princes.

 

No less a man than Bismarck, among the nineteenth-century statesmen the foremost foe of liberty, bears witness to the fact that even in the Prussia of Frederick William III the Gymnasium was a stronghold of republicanism.[1] The passionate endeavors to eliminate the classical studies from the curriculum of the liberal education and thus virtually to destroy its very character were one of the major manifestations of the revival of the servile ideology.

 

It is a fact that a hundred years ago only a few people anticipated the overpowering momentum which the antiliberal ideas were destined to acquire in a very short time. The ideal of liberty seemed to be so firmly rooted that everybody thought that no reactionary movement could ever succeed in eradicating it. It is true, it would have been a hopeless venture to attack freedom openly and to advocate unfeignedly a return to subjection and bondage. But antiliberalism got hold of people’s minds camouflaged as superliberalism, as the fulfillment and consummation of the very ideas of freedom and liberty. It came disguised as socialism, communism, and planning.

 

No intelligent man could fail to recognize that what the socialists, communists, and planners were aiming at was the most radical abolition of the individual’s freedom and the establishment of government omnipotence. Yet the immense majority of the socialist intellectuals were convinced that in fighting for socialism they were fighting for freedom. They called themselves left-wingers and democrats, and nowadays they are even claiming for themselves the epithet liberals.

 

These intellectuals and the masses who followed their lead were in their subconsciousness fully aware of the fact that their failure to attain the far-flung goals which their ambition impelled them to aim at was due to deficiencies of their own. They were either not bright enough or not industrious enough. But they were eager not to avow their inferiority both to themselves and to their fellow men and to search for a scapegoat. They consoled themselves and tried to convince other people that the cause of their failure was not their own inferiority but the injustice of society’s economic organization. Under capitalism, they declared, self-realization is only possible for the few. “Liberty in a laissez-faire society is attainable only by those who have the wealth or opportunity to purchase it.”[2] Hence, they concluded, the state must interfere in order to realize “social justice.” What they really meant is, in order to give to the frustrated mediocrity “according to his needs.”

 

As long as the problems of socialism were merely a matter of debates people who lack clear judgment and understanding could fall prey to the illusion that freedom could be preserved even under a socialist regime. Such self-deceit can no longer be nurtured since the Soviet experience has shown to everybody what conditions are in a socialist commonwealth. Today the apologists of socialism are forced to distort facts and to misrepresent the manifest meaning of words when they want to make people believe in the compatibility of socialism and freedom.

Posted in Finances, Freedom/Liberty | 2 Comments »

America’s Founding Principles

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 10, 2009

Here is an excellent article from Steven Yates on America’s Founding Principles.  Techniques will change, but principle never do.  In today’s turbulent changes in technology and techniques, let us not forget our founding principles that provide a firm foundation to leap forward.  Enjoy the article and please share your thoughts on America’s Founding Principles.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

Signing of declaration of independence picture

Exploring America’s Founding Principles:

The Need Has Never Been Greater

by Steven Yates

        

On September 16 our city newspaper published a special section entitled “America: What We Value As a Nation.” That such sections are being published, probably in many newspapers across the land, should come as no surprise. The attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon have left in their wake a sense of instability. Efforts are underway to assuage this instability by a variety of means, some good, some not so good. Journalists making efforts at articulating American values amount to one such effort, one worth evaluating.

 

The values identified in our section were four: generosity, service, courage, resilience.

 

There is abundant evidence that these are indeed values held by many if not most Americans. Generosity? Consider the lines of people outside Red Cross facilities, which here stretched half a city block. When they heard about the attacks in New York City and Washington, there were more people willing to donate blood than there were Red Cross volunteers capable of accommodating them. Americans are among the most generous people in the world. Service? Business enterprises flourish because they service markets. While profit may be the motive, the service must be a genuine one. Many other enterprises (e.g., think tanks, research institutes) provide services without earning a profit. Sometimes profit isn’t the point. Sometimes we take an action not to gain monetarily but because it is the right thing to do. Writing columns for the Internet can be regarded as a service in this sense. So can volunteering at a local Red Cross facility, for those so inclined. Courage? Consider the handful of passengers who fought to retake control of Flight 93. They knew they would probably not get out alive and that their deed might never be known, but they fought back anyway, realizing the importance of preventing that plane from reaching its destination, most likely the White House. Todd Beamer has rightly been dubbed a hero. No doubt, though, there are other Americans who would have done the same thing. A writer from whom I receive frequent emails recently spoke of courage “not [as] the absence of fear [but] the decision that something is more important than the fear.” Resilence? Another American trait, which applies particularly to the U.S. economy. Presently the economy is taking a beating. It will come back. The “economy” is just the aggregate actions of millions of people: producing, selling, buying, saving, investing, and so on. Whatever else occurs, and although it may take some time, the economy will rebound from the events of September 11 – if, of course, the federal government will allow it.

 

This list is not wrong, therefore, but it is incomplete. It suggests that certain values are desirable, but without going to the core issue: what makes them right. The need for a complete understanding of what once made America a special place has never been greater. President Bush spoke last Thursday about our being “called to defend freedom.” What does this mean? Is this more than political jingoism? Without a clear conception of what we are defending, we might find ourselves doing quite the opposite. Therefore I will endeavor to complete the list here. Hopefully it will place the above values into a larger context. My list includes: individual liberty, personal responsibility, Constitutionally limited government and the rule of law. In large measure, of course, America has drifted from each. This spells trouble, because taken together these are the principles of a free society. Since they haven’t been taught in the government schools in quite a while now, few Americans – even those who think of themselves as “conservative” – can articulate them very well. But if we cannot reassess where the country stands in light of its founding principles, then we are in more danger than ever of losing them altogether. And then the terrorists will have won. For example, if law-abiding American citizens find themselves hysterically embracing national ID cards, wiretapping, massive searches of private property by federal agents and so on, all in the name of feeling secure, then the terrorists will have destroyed that which made America great – namely, freedom!

 

So let us begin anew. Individual liberty is the state of affairs, within important limits, in which law-abiding citizens can live according to their own choices rather than those of someone else. If you want to obtain an education, you can. There are no significant restrictions on what you can read, or where you may travel. If you want to start a business, no one will stop you. Your business may make you rich, and no one will plunder your wealth or tell you how you must spend it. If you wish to own a gun, that is your prerogative. In a free society, you may worship God as you see fit, or not worship anything at all. This is quite unlike most of the rest of the world, and increasingly unlike the America we live in today.

 

Of course, individual liberty does not mean the freedom to do anything one pleases. Freedom is not anarchy. Genuine freedom recognizes bounds placed on human conduct by common morality. Moral citizens have learned to restrict their own basic impulses in specific ways. It would be fair to say that genuine freedom involves a kind of paradox (the “paradox of liberty,” I sometimes call it): freedom flourishes when citizens embrace restrictions on their conduct imposed from within, to avoid their being imposed from without. The basic moral limit to individual liberty is the familiar barring of the initiation of force against others. Using force automatically means taking others’ liberties away. It is also illegitimate to defraud others, or cheat them. Sometimes all this is cashed out in the language of rights: individuals have a right to live in accordance with their own choices so long as they do not violate or forcibly interfere with others’ right to do the same. This all brings us to the second.

 

Personal responsibility. At base, individual liberty works under the assumption that individuals take care of themselves. The world does not take care of the individual. The ideal is that individuals take care of themselves by taking necessary actions – getting an education and then either working in an occupation for which they were educated or starting a business and supplying a market with some good. This calls for individuals to develop a sense of personal responsibility.

 

Of course, the ideal is not always realized and there are some obvious exceptions to it: we do not come into the world as fully formed, thinking, acting adults but as helpless babies. It is easy to cash out individualism in an excessive, atomistic fashion. We are all individuals, and all our actions are individual actions, but we are not atoms; as individuals we are members of families, formal organizations such as businesses and churches, and more loosely structured ones such as communities. In a free society there is no supervening entity (a central government, for example) whose purpose is to take care of the individual, whether to provide safety nets, guarantee good health, or whatever. But sophisticated, as opposed to atomistic, individualism embraces the fact that we are members of larger systems such as families, businesses, churches, and communities. Individuals, in their efforts to be independent, sometimes suffer setbacks, and sometimes these setbacks are personally devastating. At these times, the resources of one’s family members can prove invaluable. Within other organizations are other resources through which people can help each other, creating local “safety nets” for one another. The important point to note is at this local, community level, such actions between people who have sometimes known each other all their lives are voluntary and not forced. The benevolence between people that emerges, especially in times of crisis, is sincere, not artificial. Central government, with its army of bureaucrats coming into communities from the outside, cannot achieve the level of trust and benevolence that exists among members of a community who grew up as neighbors, played on the same sports teams, graduated from the same high schools, and so on. Moreover, bureaucracy causes harm in at least two other ways. The taxation needed to support the bureaucrats drains resources from where they may be employed more effectively, and the presence of bureaucrats may lead people who haven’t seen anything different to take for granted that providing “safety nets” is a job only bureaucrats can perform. This brings us to the third.

 

Constitutionally limited government. Government, as every libertarian knows, is the one institution in society with a legal monopoly on the use of force. This makes it the most dangerous institution in any society, and the one most important to limit. The Framers knew this, and while they may have wanted a government more centralized than the one defined by the Articles of Confederation, all understood well the importance of setting limits. So in what became known as the Constitutional Convention of 1787, they spelled out those limits, dividing the intended federal government into its familiar three branches, designating specific powers to each and building checks on the power of each into the others. Example: the President (executive branch) is designated Commander-in-Chief, but under Constitutionally correct government, only Congress (legislative branch) has the power to declare war.

 

Limitations on government are, however, fragile and must be preserved by vigilance, as Thomas Jefferson observed (“vigilance,” he said, “is the price of liberty.”). This is, in a nutshell, the central problem of political philosophy: not how to build the ideal society but how to control power. A Constitution is merely a written document; it won’t protect itself. The need for vigilance is one of our responsibilities, and arguably we have fallen down badly in this area. In recent years, “undeclared wars” have allowed two generations of presidents to thwart the check on the power of the executive branch. The Clinton Regime’s end runs around Congress were blatant. If Clinton wanted to bomb someone, he did. This, of course, barely scratches the surface. To see how far we have drifted from Constitutionally limited government, we have only to look at the Constitution and realize that there is nothing in it about education, for example. Nor will one find anything allowing for taxation on one’s personal income or for social security or for affirmative action or many other things now taken for granted.

 

The Constitution, moreover, makes no provisions for a federal government large enough and powerful enough to police the rest of the world, whether to impose “democracy” on peoples who don’t want it or for any other purpose. It does make provisions intended to ensure that the checks on government power have teeth in them. These were insisted upon by the critics of the original Constitution – the so-called Antifederalists. We owe them the Bill of Rights, the first ten amendments to the Constitution. The First Amendment grants citizens the authority to criticize official government policy without being arrested and thrown in jail; the Second, arguably, was intended as a separate check on government power by means of an armed adult citizenry (the original meaning of militia). Other amendments place additional limits on the power of government; the Ninth and Tenth, finally, underscore the rest of the document by designating that in a Constitutional republic the states are sovereign. The federal government is their servant, not their master. Moreover, the enumeration of certain rights in the Constitution and Bill of Rights was not to be taken as exhaustive of all rights, the clear implication being that rights antecede legal authority. Here we arrive, again, at a moral and metaphysical / theological basis for Constitutionally limited government. Most of the Framers, of course, believed that rights as moral claims with teeth in them can come only from God, the Author and Final Arbiter of justice in the universe.

 

The rule of law. The Constitution was intended to be the supreme law of the land. While cashing out what this meant took some doing, the idea was to build up – for the first time – a society whose government answered to the authority of its own founding documents as understood above. There were, of course, antecedents such as the Magna Carta. That document made specific claims on the king, John, but didn’t provide a larger philosophical framework. By and large, in the past the king was the law and could do as he pleased. The Framers of the U.S. Constitution set out to change that.

 

The struggle toward controlling power with something other than a greater power was long, hard, and is far from over. There is, I am firmly convinced, a minority in any population that is fascinated by power and understands people and relationships only in its terms. Many members of this minority in our population end up in politics where they can thwart the intentions of the Framers. They have had plenty of help from the academic and educational worlds, where ideologies emphasizing power have flourished. For a few years I debated the topic of power and restraints on power (mostly through the mail and eventually email) with a professor of public administration at a major northeastern university. My position: a government worthy of loyalty and support adheres to the rules it sets for itself, and does not try to micromanage everything in sight. His position: all truth and morality is determined by authority or power, so that power gets the last word in any event. He believed we ought to abandon the Constitution. His position held that science alone, with its special method, would get us past the temptations of power. As to how and why we could expect this from an institution no less a product of human beings than any other institution, he had no answer.

Posted in Freedom/Liberty | 2 Comments »

Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation – Joseph Ellis

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 7, 2009

Today’s blog post will highlight an era in America’s history that looms larger every day.  I believe, more than ever before, that American’s must remember there founding history.  So many people will dismiss the founding documents as mere scraps of paper and irrelevant for today’s problems.  In my opinion, nothing could be further from the truth.  Principles stand the test of time and the Declaration of Independence, Federalist Papers, and The U.S. Constitution are all full of principles from thousands of years of governing principles.  Why is our culture so elitist minded that we act like nothing learned from the 18th century could have any bearing on our decisions today?  Everyone in America can see the lack of leaders being developed in a country of nearly 300 million.  Where are the leaders with the qualities of our Founders?   We must read the Founders to see our culture’s personality based leadership style in contrast to the character based leadership of our Founders. Does this mean the Founders always lived up to their ideals?  No, but at least they had ideals to call someone a hypocrite when they didn’t live up to their professed principles.  Our modern culture has lost the ability for self examination, but no great character based leadership is possible without it! 

 

I recommend everyone to read the The Founding Brothers by Joseph Ellis.  If you have never read anything on the Founders, this will be a great place to start.  This was the first book that I read from Mr. Ellis and he is now one of my favorite authors on the Founders.  Maybe it is time for you to start your journey through the founding history of the U.S.  History matters!  I love living my life based upon principles and not just the latest techniques.  I don’t fulfill my principles everyday and when I don’t, I examine where I went wrong to improve the next time.  I love reading books to learn the underlying principles that our greatest men and women applied to their lives.  What do your read and why do you read it?  Learn from experience, preferably someone else’s.  Does virtuous behavior matter to you?  It certainly did for the Founders.   Is your leadership style more like  George Washington or Aaron Burr?  Please share your thoughts on Joseph Ellis’s book or share your thoughts on why the America’s Founders matter today.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

Posted in Freedom/Liberty | 1 Comment »

Austrian Economist Do Have a Better Plan

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 4, 2009

Here is a fantastic thought provoking article from Robert Murphy.  Massive government intervention is responsible for the economic mess that America is experiencing in the first place and the Obama plan adds more government intervention to allegedly get us out of the mess.  I believe the Austrian economists have a better plan.  I don’t care if you are a Democrat, Republican, Libertarian or other, read these proposals and think for yourself about this common sense approach.  America lasted nearly 150 years without an income tax, so don’t tell me that society would crumble without it.  I agree that massive government would crumble without our money, but government in America was never intended to be the behemoth that it has become.  We need honorable statesmen who will balance the budget and tell Americans to work for their own rewards and not beg for government doles.  Leadership is a tough business and if they can’t stand the heat then they need to get out of the kitchen.  Robbing our future generations to pacify slothfulness will never make America great, loved, nor respected.  Immigrants flocked to America for an equal opportunity not government handouts!  Why are we robbing our future generations of their opportunities to experience the hope and ideas that made America the envy of the free world for centuries?

No one can legitimately explain why we have troops in at least 135 other countries.  Why should American taxpayers foot the bill for another sovereign country’s defense needs?  We are massively going into debt while having troops in Germany, Italy, Brazil etc. (see the complete list below) that are protecting who from what?  Are you telling me that German, Italian, and Brazilian (along with the rest of the countries) cannot raise men to defend their own countries on their own dime? If a country cannot legitimately do this, then I doubt the sovereignty of the country in the first place.  Can you imagine a foreign military establishment protecting our borders?  This hasn’t happened since America was an English colony. America must balance our budget and having a defense budget that is nearly 10 times higher than the next nation is sheer madness.  Is there not anyone capable of balancing a budget (a skill set that every American working family must do) in Washington?  Read the article and please share your thoughts.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

Foreign Countries with American Troops

 

Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Antigua, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Bahamas, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belgium, Belize, Bolivia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Botswana, Brazil, Bulgaria, Burma, Burundi, Cambodia, Cameroon, Canada, Chad, Chile, China, Colombia, Congo, Costa Rica, Cote D’lvoire, Cuba, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Djibouti, Dominican Republic, East Timor, Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, Eritrea, Estonia, Ethiopia, Fiji,  Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Ghana, Greece, Guatemala, Guinea, Haiti, Honduras, Hungary, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Iraq, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Latvia, Lebanon, Liberia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia, Madagascar, Malawi, Malaysia, Mali, Malta, Mexico, Mongolia, Morocco, Mozambique, Nepal, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua,  Niger, Nigeria, North Korea, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Romania, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Serbia and Montenegro, Sierra Leone, Singapore, Slovenia, Spain, South Africa, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Suriname, Sweden, Switzerland, Syria, Tanzania, Thailand, Togo, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Uganda, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, Uruguay, Venezuela, Vietnam, Yemen, Zambia, Zimbabwe

Military Expenditures picture

Article by Robert Murphy – Faculty member of the Mises Institute

 

A lot of people get annoyed with Austrian economists because they tend to be so dogmatic (we prefer the term consistent) and because they cloak their strictly economic claims with self-righteousness (we prefer the term morality). After a good Austrian bashing of the latest call to steal taxpayer money and waste it on something that will make a given problem worse, the stumped critics will often shout, “Oh yeah? Well do you guys have a better idea?”

 

Now, in truth, someone doesn’t have to have a better suggestion in order to point out that a recommended strategy will exacerbate the situation. If an allergic man has been stung by a bee, I don’t know what to do except rush him to the hospital and maybe scour the cupboards looking for Benadryl. But I’m pretty sure drawing blood from his leg, in order to inject it into his arm and thus “stimulate his immune system,” is a bad idea on numerous accounts — not least of which, is that I’m pretty sure an allergic reaction means your immune system needs to calm down. But the point is, if a bunch of guys hold the man down — he has to be forced to endure the procedure for his own good, don’t you know — I feel perfectly qualified in yelling, “Stop!”

 

If you grasped that analogy, you can understand my feelings about anything Paul Krugman writes.

 

(All joking aside, I am pretty proud of the above analogy. But to make it even more accurate, let’s stipulate that a blind heroin addict, who has been convicted of manslaughter on three separate occasions, is the one entrusted with making the transfusion. Naturally he will use one of his own needles for the procedure.)

 

An Austrian Recommendation for President Obama

In one sense, the critics are right when they ask, “Oh, so we should just sit back and do nothing and let the market fix itself?” Yes, that would be a perfectly good idea. The whole reason we are in a recession in the first place is that the capital structure of the economy had become unsustainable due to the Fed’s massive credit expansion following the dot-com bust and 9/11 attacks. Resources — most notably, labor — are currently idle, because the economy needs to readjust. Overextended lines such as housing and finance need to shrink, while others need to expand. (And no, I don’t know what those understaffed lines are; that’s why we have a price system.) Because Americans lived beyond their means for so many years, they now need to live below their means, consuming less while they rebuild their checking accounts and portfolios.

 

Given the diagnosis, we can be sure that efforts to borrow and spend our way back into prosperity, or massive bailouts of the banks and homeowners, are only pumping air into a flat tire with a gaping hole. And Bernanke’s unbelievable injections of new funny money into the credit markets will only ensure that those failed institutions remain afloat, paralyzing true recovery in the loan market, and risking very large price inflation if Bernanke does not soon reverse course.

 

However, even though “nothing” would be much, much better than all of the alleged remedies being bandied about, the Austrians actually do have concrete proposals for President Obama. The following list includes items that I would have endorsed even before the crisis, but inasmuch as they would definitely help things, I offer them with sincerity to the new administration.

 

One last caveat: I know there are many purists who read the Mises Daily, and will be aghast at my watered-down recommendations. Yes, yes, I agree that the best thing would be for Obama, Pelosi, Reid, and all my friends to say, “You know, if you look at the history of this company, it always ends up wasting money and getting innocent people killed. I think we should just quit and go volunteer at a church instead.”

 

But, if I said that as an Austrian recommendation, it would be dismissed as “unserious,” a very grave charge indeed. Thus, the following list of recommendations are not politically impossible, just exceedingly unlikely:

 

Eliminate the personal and corporate income tax. Don’t put in a flat tax or a fair tax or a VAT or any other cute name for a very uncute process. To make sure that individuals and corporations realize you are serious, blow up the IRS building. (Have everyone vacate the premises first, of course.) Tell all of the displaced workers that they have 9 months of full pay, plus whatever pension and health-care benefits they had contractually earned to that point. If the workers get new jobs 3 days after being laid off from the IRS, that’s fine; they still get their full 9 months’ pay. But if they haven’t found a new job after 9 months, tough.

 

Unfortunately, dismantling the Social Security system will have to wait. (That means some of the IRS personnel would — sigh — have to be retained. But they would move to a different building.) Getting rid of the income tax will knock out much of the federal revenues, and taking out all payroll “contributions” would take us into the realm of “unserious.” Note that in 2007, even without the personal and corporate income tax, the federal government still took in more than $1 trillion in receipts.

 

The loss of some $1.5 trillion in annual tax receipts sounds absurd, but the actual figure would be lower, because of “supply-side” effects. That is, the true stimulus to the economy from such an enormous tax cut would cause the revenues from other sources to grow. So long as the federal budget were cut by, say, a trillion dollars, within a few years it would be in the black.

 

Reducing annual federal expenditures by $1 trillion sounds inconceivable, but it actually could be phased in. The government has many assets that it could auction off into private hands, so that in the first year or two, the government could take certain programs and say, “This will have its budget cut by one-third over each of the next three years.” The auction receipts would fill the gap until these phased-in reductions had fully occurred. Some of the obvious auction items would be the oil in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (current value of about $35 billion at $50/bbl oil), as well as all of the mineral deposits (both onshore and offshore) technically owned by the federal government. It is difficult to come up with an estimate of how much the latter properties would fetch in an auction, since the proposals right now are for leasing extraction rights. But since the Outer Continental Shelf is estimated to have some 86 billion barrels of oil, presumably the government could receive many hundreds of billions of dollars — and possibly trillions — from an orderly and staggered sale over a few years of the most lucrative (and environmentally noncontroversial) lands.

 

Now, where to start cutting?

 

Eliminate the DEA and the SEC. Since the SEC failed to catch Madoff, despite nine years of warnings, I think its $950 million annual budget is obviously a waste of money. The DEA’s $1.9 billion budget in 2007 also strikes me as counterproductive. Beyond the issues of violent gangs and judicial corruption, there is the fact that this is a recession and we need to cut costs. If you’re afraid of your kid doing drugs, have a serious talk and then make him watch this movie. And if he’s still keen on the idea, I’m not sure the DEA is going to stop him. (By the way, the DEA and SEC employees get the same deal as the laid-off IRS personnel.)

 

Cut the Pentagon budget in half. In FY 2008 it was (officially) some $460 billion, so that cut alone would free up $230 billion per year. This isn’t an article about foreign policy, so we won’t be specific about how the military could achieve such cuts. But if you’re worried that the country would suddenly be overrun by Iranian tanks, the following chart should reassure you:

 

Top 10 Countries by Military Expenditure, 2007

Eliminate the Department of Education. That would save $68.6 billion a year, based on its latest budget. Does anyone want to argue that Americans are well educated? And incidentally, I was a college professor for a few years, so I can say from personal experience that there are way too many kids going to college. If you think “everyone should get a college degree,” let me ask you this: Should everyone get a PhD? If not, then why a bachelor’s degree? The more kids crammed into the school, the harder it is to teach to the truly academic, and the less of a signal the diploma provides. Plus, $68.6 billion is some serious money.

 

Cancel all the pending “stimulus” and other bailout packages. Tell the Big Three that small is beautiful. Tell the banks, “OK your ‘short-term’ loan from the Fed has expired, here are your mortgage-backed securities back, and we’ll be taking our reserves. Good luck to you. This is a capitalist country, where you keep your earnings if you forecast well (we just eliminated the income tax!) and where you go bust if you don’t realize real estate sometimes drops. Have a nice day.” Yes, this would cause some banks to immediately go bankrupt, but the big banks aren’t doing anything now anyway. The dreaded liquidation would actually wipe the slate clean so recovery could begin. As it is, trillions of dollars in capital is now locked up in undead institutions that can’t make new loans but won’t mark their assets at true values, since they are insolvent. And with the income tax being wiped out, the toxicity of these troubled assets would come way down.

 

Allow unrestricted immigration so long as the incoming folks had a secure job in which the employer (a) paid three years in advance on any state and local taxes that would accrue from the employment and (b) bought at least a $100,000 house for the immigrant and his or her family. (Yes, yes, the last point is silly, but it will help sell the package.)

 

Abolish the minimum wage. That — coupled with the elimination of the income tax — will take care of unemployment within 6 months.

 

The above steps are incomplete, and I’m sure many readers will email me with snags in them. Fair enough. But I am confident that the above would make a heck of a lot more sense than letting blind heroin addicts borrow an extra trillion dollars to “stimulate” the economy.

 

Robert Murphy, an adjunct scholar of the Mises Institute and a faculty member of the Mises University, runs the blog Free Advice and is the author of The Politically Incorrect Guide to Capitalism, the Study Guide to Man, Economy, and State with Power and Market, and the Human Action Study Guide.

Posted in Finances | Comments Off on Austrian Economist Do Have a Better Plan

Team Cultural Regeneration

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 3, 2009

Here is a fantastic video that is deceptively simple and yet says so much.  We can reverse any trend by discipline around the fundamentals that made America great in the first place.  Success is deviance.  Success requires a level of commitment and discipline that is beyond the norm.  Wherever you see consistent success, I promise you that you are witnessing deviant behaviors from the norm.  I think it is time to have more leaders step up to deviant behavior in a success oriented way.  Why can’t we change the country?  Why can’t we change the world?  Throughout time, a dedicated minority has alway moved the apathetic masses.  The first decision is to choose which group you are part of and the second is to grow youself to start the change process.  The MonaVie Team plans on playing its part by changing our own lives through listening, reading and associating.  One life can make a difference as this video so aptly displays.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=42E2fAWM6rA&w=425&h=344]

Posted in Faith | Comments Off on Team Cultural Regeneration