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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Financial bondage is a form of slavery.

Education Precedes Activism – Stephen Palmer

Posted by Orrin Woodward on February 11, 2009

 

Here is an extremely well written impressive piece on the need for education in our communities inside and outside of the MonaVie Team business.  I sat down to write an article on the strong need for the media war in our nations when an email came in from team members Ted and Vickie that nailed it.  Stephen Palmer is a hungry learner on a mission to bring the founding father’s principles back to America and to the world.  His writing style is hard hitting, concise and entertaining.  It is thanks to Americans like Stephen Palmer that I believe we can win the Media War and teach the founding principles that made America the last great bastion of hope for mankind!  What part are you planning on playing on the Media Team? God Bless, Orrin Woodward

By Stephen Palmer

“Force without wisdom falls of its own weight.” – Horace

 A few years ago, I was teaching a class on the constitution where I witnessed a sad, though interesting, phenomenon.

To give context, this was a room full of people wholly dedicated to the cause of liberty — the people who “get it.”

I asked the class, “How many of you agree with William Gladstone’s quote that the Constitution is ‘…the most wonderful work ever struck off at a given time by the mind and purpose of man’?”

100% of the attendees raised their hands.

I told them to keep their hands raised, then asked, “How many of you have actually read it?” A few hands dropped.

“Of you who have actually read it from beginning to end,” I continued, “how many have read it within the last six months?”

Still more hands dropped. I persisted. “Of those who still have their hands raised, how many of you can tell us what Article III talks about?” More hands dropped. By this time only about half of the room had their hands raised. 

By the time I asked who knew what habeas corpus means and what bills of attainder are, not a single person in the room had their hand raised.

Mind you, these are the same people who had just said that they agreed with Gladstone’s quote, yet very few of them could answer the most basic questions about the Constitution.

What would you guess is the most recurring criticism I receive from subscribers and website visitors?

Contrary to what you might think, it’s not from people who take polar opposite positions from the Cause of Liberty content. It’s from freedom-loving patriots who believe that my recommended action steps are “benign.” For example, they tell me that reading classics will do little to solve our looming problems.

I have nothing but respect and admiration for these devoted people. We need many more just like them. But I do have a different perspective on what needs to happen for our Republic to be restored.

America is primed for a French Revolution scenario. To take it even further, we exhibit many of the qualities of German civilization prior to World War II.

We’re a highly-trained, yet poorly-educated populace. We’ve lost our sense of true education. Furthermore, we have staggering discrepancies in wealth distribution. We’re primed for a lot of chaos and pain.

Plainly put, we don’t have enough widespread education to sustain an anger-driven revolution. The People trying to fight Washington and other power interests right now is like replacing a strip club with a flea market.

There’s no use in fighting unless we have quality replacement options. It’s not enough to just be mad — we must also be wise. And turning inward is the beginning of wisdom.

Confucius said it best in his classic essay The Great Learning:

The ancients who wished to illustrate illustrious virtue throughout the kingdom, first ordered well their own states. Wishing to order well their states, they first regulated their families. Wishing to regulate their families, they first cultivated their persons. Wishing to cultivate their persons, they first rectified their hearts. Wishing to rectify their hearts, they first sought to be sincere in their thoughts. Wishing to be sincere in their thoughts, they first extended to the utmost their knowledge. Such extension of knowledge lay in the investigation of things.

Things being investigated, knowledge became complete. Their knowledge being complete, their thoughts were sincere. Their thoughts being sincere, their hearts were then rectified. Their hearts being rectified, their persons were cultivated. Their persons being cultivated, their families were regulated. Their families being regulated, their states were rightly governed. Their states being rightly governed, the whole kingdom was made tranquil and happy.


Not only does turning inward lead to wisdom
, but it also leads to power. This is the core message of the Cause of Liberty. Fixing ourselves as individuals is what fixes the world.

If this sounds “benign” to you, I probably can’t convince you otherwise. But I would point out that the most influential leaders, from Jesus Christ to Gandhi, have taken this approach. And they seemed to have done a pretty good job of improving the world.

There are others who say, “Yeah, we get it. But what do we actually do about it?”

To those I humbly repeat, “Continue working on yourself and your education.” If our education was deep and broad enough we wouldn’t have to ask that question.

I accept that this message may disappoint many. It may seem too simplistic. It may seem to be too little, too late. I’m probably starting to sound like a broken record.

But it’s the light that animates everything that I do and everything I aspire to. It’s the spiritual beating of my heart, the passion blood flowing through my veins, the mission muscles that keep me moving forward.

I’m fed up with the Federal Reserve. But I also don’t have a complete grasp on how our monetary system should operate in the 21st Century, nor do I have a solid plan for making a transition.

So I don’t march on Washington to spit at the Federal Reserve; I stay at home and read everything I can find on monetary policy.

I’m sick and tired of weaseling, compromising, ignorant, money-and-power-grubbing politicians. So I prepare myself to be a political leader with integrity, knowledge and wisdom.

I’m dismayed by the decay of the family. But I’m further dismayed by the times when I’m angry and impatient with my wife and children. So I focus my dismay on doing all I can to improve as a husband and father.

This is what the Cause of Liberty stands for. This is the message you’ll hear for as long as I have breath.

And when you see me march on Washington, it won’t be because I’m “angry as hell and I’m not going to take it anymore.” It will be because I actually have real, sustainable solutions and the ability to carry them out.

Until then, I’m working on myself. Care to join me?

 

Posted in Finances | Comments Off on Education Precedes Activism – Stephen Palmer

Frederic Bastiat & The Fallacy of the Broken Window

Posted by Orrin Woodward on January 28, 2009

Frederic Bastiat pictureThe following article is a condensed version of Frederic Bastiat – “What Is Seen and What Is Not Seen.”  I found this condensed version of the classic text from the French economist while searching online.  I wish every highschool level student would read classic economic literature to get the other side of the story.  The principles in Bastiat’s work are timeless and as important today as the day they were written a century plus ago.  In fact, maybe more important today as government and the media feed us words that tickle our ears on bailouts (handouts to the few at the expense of the many) and government intervention.  Only an educated & courageous electorate can stem the tide towards socialism.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

 

Bastiat was an economist who was also a member of the French parliament in the middle of the nineteenth century. Interestingly, the issues he raises are as valid today as they were over 150 years ago. In the economic sphere an act, a habit, an institution, a law produces not only one effect, but a series of effects. Of these effects, the first alone is immediate; it appears simultaneously with its cause; it is seen. The other effects emerge only subsequently; they are not seen; we are fortunate if we foresee them. There is only one difference between a bad economist and a good one: the bad economist confines himself to the visible effect; the good economist takes into account both the effect that can be seen and those effects that must be foreseen. Yet this difference is tremendous; for it almost always happens that when the immediate consequence is favorable, the later consequences are disastrous, and vice versa. Whence it follows that the bad economist pursues a small present good that will be followed by a great evil to come, while the good economist pursues a great good to come, at the risk of a small present evil.

 

[This pamphlet, published in July, 1850, is the last that Bastiat wrote. It had been promised to the public for more than a year. Its publication had been delayed because the author had lost the manuscript when he moved his household from the rue de Choiseulto the rue d’Algen. After a long and fruitless search, he decided to rewrite his work entirely, and chose as the principal basis of his demonstrations some speeches recently delivered in the National Assembly. When this task was finished, he reproached himself with having been too serious, threw the second manuscript into the fire, and wrote the one which we reprint]

 

The Broken Window

 

Have you ever been witness to the fury of that solid citizen, James Goodfellow, when his incorrigible son has happened to break a pane of glass? If you have been present at this spectacle, certainly you must also have observed that the onlookers, even if there are as many as thirty of them, seem with one accord to offer the unfortunate owner the selfsame consolation: “It’s an ill wind that blows nobody some good. Such accidents keep industry going. Everybody has to make a living. What would become of the glaziers if no one ever broke a window?” Now, this formula of condolence contains a whole theory that it is a good idea for us to expose, flagrante delicto, in this very simple case, since it is exactly the same as that which, unfortunately, underlies most of our economic institutions. Suppose that it will cost six francs to repair the damage. If you mean that the accident gives six francs’ worth of encouragement to the aforesaid industry,

 

I agree. I do not contest it in any way; your reasoning is correct. The glazier will come, do his job, receive six francs, congratulate himself, and bless in his heart the careless child. That is what is seen. But if, by way of deduction, you conclude, as happens only too often, that it is good to break windows, that it helps to circulate money, that it results in encouraging industry in general, I am obliged to cry out: That will never do! Your theory stops at what is seen. It does not take account of what is not seen. It is not seen that, since our citizen has spent six francs for one thing, he will not be able to spend them for another. It is not seen that if he had not had a windowpane to replace, he would have replaced, for example, his worn-out shoes or added another book to his library. In brief, he would have put his six francs to some use or other for which he will not now have them. Let us next consider industry in general. The window having been broken, the glass industry gets six francs’ worth of encouragement; that is what is seen. If the window had not been broken, the shoe industry (or some other) would have received six francs’ worth of encouragement; that is what is not seen. And if we were to take into consideration what is not seen, because it is a negative factor, as well as what is seen, because it is a positive factor, we should understand that there is no benefit to industry in general or to national employment as a whole, whether windows are broken or not broken.

 

Now let us consider James Goodfellow. On the first hypothesis, that of the broken window, he spends six francs and has, neither more nor less than before, the enjoyment of one window. On the second, that in which the accident did not happen, he would have spent six francs for new shoes and would have had the enjoyment of a pair of shoes as well as of a window. Now, if James Goodfellow is part of society, we must conclude that society, considering its labors and its enjoyments, has lost the value of the broken window. From which, by generalizing, we arrive at this unexpected conclusion: “Society loses the value of objects unnecessarily destroyed,”… “To break, to destroy, to dissipate is not to encourage national employment,” or more briefly: “Destruction is not profitable.” The reader must apply himself to observe that there are not only two people, but three, in the little drama that I have presented. The one, James Goodfellow, represents the consumer, reduced by destruction to one enjoyment instead of two. The other, under the figure of the glazier, shows us the producer whose industry the accident encourages. The third is the shoemaker (or any other manufacturer) whose industry is correspondingly discouraged by the same cause. It is this third person who is always in the shadow, and who, personifying what is not seen, is an essential element of the problem. It is he who makes us understand how absurd it is to see a profit in destruction.

 

Theaters and Fine Arts – Should the state subsidize the arts?

There is certainly a great deal to say on this subject pro and con. In favor of the system of subsidies, one can say that the arts broaden, elevate, and poetize the soul of a nation; that they draw it away from material preoccupations, giving it a feeling for the beautiful, and thus react favorably on its manners, its customs, its morals, and even on its industry. One can ask where music would be in France without the Théâtre-Italien and the Conservatory; dramatic art without the Théâtre-Français; painting and sculpture without our collections and our museums. One can go further and ask whether, without the centralization and consequently the subsidizing of the fine arts, there would have developed that exquisite taste which is the noble endowment of French labor and sends its products out over the whole world. In the presence of such results would it not be the height of imprudence to renounce this moderate assessment on all the citizens, which, in the last analysis, is what has achieved for them their pre-eminence and their glory in the eyes of Europe? To these reasons and many others, whose power I do not contest, one can oppose many no less cogent.

 

There is, first of all, one could say, a question of distributive justice. Do the rights of the legislator go so far as to allow him to dip into the wages of the artisan in order to supplement the profits of the artist? M. de Lamartine said: “If you take away the subsidy of a theater, where are you going to stop on this path, and will you not be logically required to do away with your university faculties, your museums, your institutes, your libraries?” One could reply: If you wish to subsidize all that is good and useful, where are you going to stop on that path, and will you not logically be required to set up a civil list for agriculture, industry, commerce, welfare, and education? Furthermore, is it certain that subsidies favor the progress of the arts? It is a question that is far from being resolved, and we see with our own eyes that the theaters that prosper are those that live on their own profits. Finally, proceeding to higher considerations, one may observe that needs and desires give rise to one another and keep soaring into regions more and more rarefied in proportion as the national wealth permits their satisfaction; that the government must not meddle in this process, since, whatever may be currently the amount of the national wealth, it cannot stimulate luxury industries by taxation without harming essential industries, thus reversing the natural advance of civilization.

 

[Alphonse Marie Louis de Lamartine (1790-1869), one of the great poets of French romanticism and subsequently a distinguished statesman. First elected Deputy in 1834, he attained his greatest glory at the time of the Revolution of 1848, when he was a prime mover in the establishment of the Republic. By his eloquence he calmed the Paris mobs that threatened to destroy it and became the head of the provisional government. More an idealist and orator than a practical politician, however, he soon lost influence and retired to private life in 1851.—Translator.]

 

One may also point out that this artificial dislocation of wants, tastes, labor, and population places nations in a precarious and dangerous situation, leaving them without a solid base. These are some of the reasons alleged by the adversaries of state intervention concerning the order in which citizens believe they should satisfy their needs and their desires, and thus direct their activity. I confess that I am one of those who think that the choice, the impulse, should come from below, not from above, from the citizens, not from the legislator; and the contrary doctrine seems to me to lead to the annihilation of liberty and of human dignity. But, by an inference as false as it is unjust, do you know what the economists are now accused of? When we oppose subsidies, we are charged with opposing the very thing that it was proposed to subsidize and of being the enemies of all kinds of activity, because we want these activities to be voluntary and to seek their proper reward in themselves. Thus, if we ask that the state not intervene, by taxation, in religious matters, we are atheists. If we ask that the state not intervene, by taxation, in education, then we hate enlightenment. If we say that the state should not give, by taxation, an artificial value to land or to some branch of industry, then we are the enemies of property and of labor. If we think that the state should not subsidize artists, we are barbarians who judge the arts useless.

 

I protest with all my power against these inferences. Far from entertaining the absurd thought of abolishing religion, education, property, labor, and the arts when we ask the state to protect the free development of all these types of human activity without keeping them on the payroll at one another’s expense, we believe, on the contrary, that all these vital forces of society should develop harmoniously under the influence of liberty and that none of them should become, as we see has happened today, a source of trouble, abuses, tyranny, and disorder. Our adversaries believe that an activity that is neither subsidized nor regulated is abolished. We believe the contrary. Their faith is in the legislator, not in mankind. Ours is in mankind, not in the legislator. Thus, M. de Lamartine said: “On the basis of this principle, we should have to abolish the public expositions that bring wealth and honor to this country.” I reply to M. de Lamartine: From your point of view, not to subsidize is to abolish, because, proceeding from the premise that nothing exists except by the will of the state, you conclude that nothing lives that taxes do not keep alive. But I turn against you the example that you have chosen, and I point out to you that the greatest, the noblest, of all expositions, the one based on the most liberal, the most universal conception, and I can even use the word “humanitarian,” which is not here exaggerated, is the exposition now being prepared in London, the only one in which no government meddles and which no tax supports.

 

Returning to the fine arts, one can, I repeat, allege weighty reasons for and against the system of subsidization. The reader understands that, in accordance with the special purpose of this essay, I have no need either to set forth these reasons or to decide between them. But M. de Lamartine has advanced one argument that I cannot pass over in silence, for it falls within the very carefully defined limits of this economic study. He has said: The economic question in the matter of theaters can be summed up in one word: employment. The nature of the employment matters little; it is of a kind just as productive and fertile as any other kind. The theaters, as you know, support by wages no less than eighty thousand workers of all kinds—painters, masons, decorators, costumers, architects, etc., who are the very life and industry of many quarters of this capital, and they should have this claim upon your sympathies! Your sympathies? Translate: your subsidies. And further on: The pleasures of Paris provide employment and consumers’ goods for the provincial departments, and the luxuries of the rich are the wages and the bread of two hundred thousand workers of all kinds, living on the complex industry of the theaters throughout the Republic, and receiving from these noble pleasures, which make France illustrious, their own livelihood and the means of providing the necessities of life for their families and their children. It is to them that you give these sixty thousand francs. [Very good! Very good! Much applause.]

 

For my part, I am forced to say: Very bad! Very bad! Confining, of course, the burden of this judgment to the economic argument which we are here concerned with. Yes, it is, at least in part, to the workers in the theaters that the sixty thousand francs in question will go. A few scraps might well get lost on the way. If one scrutinized the matter closely, one might even discover that most of the pie will find its way elsewhere. The workers will be fortunate if there are a few crumbs left for them! But I should like to assume that the entire subsidy will go to the painters, decorators, costumers, hairdressers, etc. That is what is seen. But where does it come from? This is the other side of the coin, just as important to examine as its face. What is the source of these 60,000 francs? And where would they have gone if a legislative vote had not first directed them to the rue de Rivoli and from there to the rue de Grenelle?

 

[This refers to the Great Exhibition, in Hyde Park, London, in 1851, sponsored by the London Society of Arts, an association devoted to the development of arts and industries. The first in a series of great international exhibitions, or “world fairs,” it was famous for the Crystal Palace, a remarkable architectural structure, in which the exhibitions were displayed. Albert, Queen Victoria’s Prince Consort, presided over the exhibition.]

 

That is what is not seen. Surely, no one will dare maintain that the legislative vote has caused this sum to hatch out from the ballot box; that it is a pure addition to the national wealth; that, without this miraculous vote, these sixty thousand francs would have remained invisible and impalpable. It must be admitted that all that the majority can do is to decide that they will be taken from somewhere to be sent somewhere else, and that they will have one destination only by being deflected from another. This being the case, it is clear that the taxpayer who will have been taxed one franc will no longer have this franc at his disposal. It is clear that he will be deprived of a satisfaction to the tune of one franc, and that the worker, whoever he is, who would have procured this satisfaction for him, will be deprived of wages in the same amount. Let us not, then, yield to the childish illusion of believing that the vote of May 16 adds anything whatever to national well-being and employment. It reallocates possessions, it reallocates wages, and that is all. Will it be said that for one kind of satisfaction and for one kind of job it substitutes satisfactions and jobs more urgent, more moral, more rational? I could do battle on this ground. I could say: In taking sixty thousand francs from the taxpayers, you reduce the wages of plowmen, ditchdiggers, carpenters, and blacksmiths, and you increase by the same amount the wages of singers, hairdressers, decorators, and costumers. Nothing proves that this latter class is more important than the other.

 

M. de Lamartine does not make this allegation. He says himself that the work of the theaters is just as productive as, just as fruitful as, and not more so than, any other work, which might still be contested; for the best proof that theatrical work is not as productive as other work is that the latter is called upon to subsidize the former. But this comparison of the intrinsic value and merit of the different kinds of work forms no part of my present subject. All that I have to do here is to show that, if M. de Lamartine and those who have applauded his argument have seen on the one hand the wages earned by those who supply the needs of the actors, they should see on the other the earnings lost by those who supply the needs of the taxpayers; if they do not, they are open to ridicule for mistaking a reallocation for a gain. If they were logical in their doctrine, they would ask for infinite subsidies; for what is true of one franc and of sixty thousand francs is true, in identical circumstances, of a billion francs. When it is a question of taxes, gentlemen, prove their usefulness by reasons with some foundation, but not with that lamentable assertion: “Public spending keeps the working class alive.” It makes the mistake of covering up a fact that it is essential to know: namely, that public spending is always a substitute for private spending, and that consequently it may well support one worker in place of another but adds nothing to the lot of the working class taken as a whole…

 

Questions for thought 1. The proponents of government spending on sports stadiums often argue that this spending expands employment. Evaluate this view. 2. The U.S. federal government spends billions of dollars subsidizing agriculture. Do these subsidies increase employment and output? Explain.

Citation: Bastiat, Frederic, Selected Essays on Political Economy. The Foundation for Economic Education, Inc. 1995. Trans. Seymour Cain. Ed. George B. de Huszar. Library of Economics and Liberty. 30 September 2006.

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Henry Hazlitt – Economics in One Lesson

Posted by Orrin Woodward on January 19, 2009

Here is one of the classic economic books of all-time.  Henry Hazlitt was a journalist with a keen mind for economic issues.  I recommend Economic in One Lesson to all readers as an introduction to everyday economics.  Here is a long video with interviews from the top Austrian school economists reviewing each chapter of Hazlitt’s book.  You can watch this video in 15 minutes snippets and it would be well worth your time.  Turn off the TV and tune in to real learning from the top economic minds.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VD28vNVovow&w=425&h=344]

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Paul Pilzer – MonaVie Team – Health & Wellness

Posted by Orrin Woodward on January 6, 2009

I am in the community building business today thanks to Paul Pilzer.  I listened to a 1993 tape from Paul Pilzer on Economic Paradigms and was hooked.  I loved the idea of building my own business and Having Fun, Making Money and Making a Difference.  I went from a broke engineer to a multi-millionaire business owner by becoming a student and doing the work.  Thank you Paul Pilzer for sharing the dream of a better future with a young man who was losing hope in his future.  I spend my life focusing on helping the next generation of hungry students have the same opportunity that I was blessed with.  Paul Pilzer states that the Health & Wellness field is the fastest growing field for community builders.  Paul has never led me wrong and the MonaVie Team plans on playing a big part in helping the 500 billion industry hit 1 trillion over the next fives years, like Pilzer says.  What part are you going to play in the next generation of millionaires and the Health & Wellness revolution?  Enjoy the video and make a decision to shine in 2009!  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y2jsvBNKtYs&w=425&h=344]

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Money, Banking & the Federal Reserve

Posted by Orrin Woodward on January 2, 2009

I have one more post on the money supply and the Federal Reserve.  2009 is going to be a big year and knowledge applied is the key.  Here is another fantastic video that will arm you with the facts as you go out into the world.  Today is the first day of the rest of your life.  Make your decision to day to live a life of excellence.  Reading, listening, thinking and praying everyday are habits worth cultivating.   This video is from the Ludwig Von Mises Institute and is another classic. God Bless, Orrin Woodward

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iYZM58dulPE]

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Booms, Bust & Balderdash – Inflationary Business Cycles

Posted by Orrin Woodward on January 1, 2009

 

If Congress can employ money indefinitely to the general welfare… they may appoint teachers in every state… The powers of Congress would subvert the very foundation, the very nature of the limited government established by the people of America. – James Madison

 

Happy New Year everyone!  2008 was a year of Booms – 2008 was a year of Bust and 2008 was a year of “get on your boots” Balderdash!  I have been doing research in an area that I believe will be important for anyone interested in securing their financial futures.  The citizens of any country rely on their political leaders to produce money only in relationship to the wealth of the country.  Money cannot be created out of thin air by government fiat.  Sure they can print the paper, but the paper has no wealth unless backed by real wealth.  Gold, silver and other forms of backing have been used throughout the centuries.  A government that would run the paper presses and double their money supply without any real wealth increase from the people has effectively cut the value of all the existing dollars in half. 

 

All the perplexities, confusion and distress in America arise, not from defects in their Constitution or Confederation, not from want of honor or virtue, so much as from the downright ignorance of the nature of coin, credit and circulation. – John Adams

 

 

Imagine owning a one unit of stock in a company that has 100 shares and has a net worth of $1000.  You own 1% of the value of the company for a $10 stake.  Now imagine that the owner prints another 100 shares and sells them on the open market.  Someone may pay close to $10 per share through ignorance that the owner produced 100 more shares early in the cycle, but eventually the market will realize that the shares are watered down.  The true wealth of the company has not changed overnight, but now there are now 200 shares of stock on the market representing the company of a total worth of $1000.  This means the effective value of the stock has been cut in half.  Your $10 stock has now dropped to $5 after all the buyers learn the full information.  Wealth cannot be created without providing something of value and printing paper is not providing real value.  Through no fault of your own, you have lost half the value of your stock because the owners greed.  There are protections in place to ensure that this does not happen to your stock, but no protections in place to ensure this doesn’t happen to our money supply!

 

I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. Already they have raised up a monied aristocracy that has set the government at defiance. The issuing power (of money) should be taken away from the banks and restored to the people to whom it properly belongs. – Thomas Jefferson

 

 

When you save money, you are counting on the “powers that be” to not print more fiat money and destroy the effective value of your earned dollars.  But this is exactly what the American government is doing when it produces more money without the financial backing of gold or other real wealth.  No other corporations could get away with this type of behavior without major consequences and yet our government does this as a matter of business.  Has anyone felt the pinch of the dollar being less valuable?  Have you noticed that in most fields, the costs are rising precipitously?  The housing bubble is a good example of the analogy I used.  Mortgages from our government were flooding the market which means that you need more dollars (stock options) to buy the same house.  This created an illusion of wealth for people who owned houses, but actually, it was just inflated money that required more of the paper to buy the same house.  When people started borrowing against the inflated worth of their house, the bubble was set to burst. The higher housing prices created less demand and less people qualified for the inflated housing prices.  What goes up through fiat money – must come down. When it does, everyone scratches their head and wonders how it all happened.

 

A nation of well informed men who have been taught to know and prize the rights which God has given them cannot be enslaved. It is in the region of ignorance that tyranny begins. – Benjamin Franklin

 

If you really want to know, you must go back to the only people allowed by law to produce our money.  Our government is no longer tied to any standard to regulate how much money is produced.   Money should only be produced when the real wealth of the country increases through better productivity.  Since the Civil War, money has been slowly freed of the moral restraints imposed by the founding fathers.  In the Nixon presidency, our money was completely separated from gold and financial common sense entirely.  We now rely on a non-federal cartel of banks to determine our money supply and have a Financial Czar known as the Federal Reserve Chairman who can choose to produce more money.  Why not have our money supply and values regulated by the free market compared to other countries?  The free market could quickly ascertain the amount of money on the market and assign a value to each dollar.  This would force our government leaders to operate like a business man and his stocks.  He could only produce more money when the market communicated to the country a real increase in the worth of the dollar.  The government leaders would also have to balance the budget because they would not have fiat money available to print anytime they are in a pinch. 

 

I place economy among the first and most important virtues, and public debt as the greatest of dangers to be feared. To preserve our independence, we must not let our rulers load us with perpetual debt. If we run into such debts, we must be taxed in our meat and drink, in our necessities and in our comforts, in our labor and in our amusements. If we can prevent the government from wasting the labor of the people, under the pretense of caring for them, they will be happy. – Thomas Jefferson

 

 

Murray Rothbard wrote a book, “What has Government done to our Money”.  This would be a great place to start to learn the proper and improper role of government in our money supply.  This video is something that should be watched by all Americans.  Very informative and will help you understand the Booms and Bust cycles without swallowing the media version that free enterprise no longer works.  Like the old saying goes, “The person with the facts, is never at the mercy of the person with an opinion.”  Enjoy the video, it is the best that I have watched on what is happening to our money. I encourage you to take notes for future reference. God Bless, Orrin Woodward

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Xt5US8FUpw]

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Success World-View – Putting Gas in your Engine

Posted by Orrin Woodward on December 31, 2008

Today’s discussion is designed to make you think.  I am going to share some of my personal story today.  This is not done to make you believe the way I believe, but to help you understand the process that ideas have on your thought life.  Please think through your own beliefs and convictions as you are reading about mine.  My goal is to help you think better by understanding the power that ideas have to change lives.  I like to review my core beliefs every year to ensure that my beliefs are corresponding with the world that I am living in.  I think this is a good thinking habit for all of us to practice.

 

Yesterday, we talked about how encouragement is the oil to keep the engine cool.  Today, let’s talk about the gas that powers the engine.  Human beings act on the ideas contemplated in their minds.  Better ideas lead to better actions, just as better gas leads to better performance in an engine.  I have had a couple of breakthrough years that led to better thinking. 1993 was a groundbreaking year for me, because I learned the power of better ideas leading to better results.  I read extensively on personal development and improved my outer results greatly.  Outside, I was achieving great results, but inside I was miserable and unhappy.  1997 was another groundbreaking year.  This was the year that I truly surrendered to Jesus Christ.  Until then, I had my will and I thought I had added Jesus to my team on a part-time basis.  After 1997, I realized it was His team and my part was to do His will on earth fulltime.  A major idea shift!  When it was my team, the roadblocks and setbacks stopped me because I was never sure that the price was worth the reward.  When I joined Christ’s team, I no longer doubted that any price is worth the rewards – even if the rewards were not on earth. 

 

Think about the gas that you are pouring into your tank.  Are you beset by doubts and fears?  My good friend Tim Marks says, “Know why you believe what you believe.”  Every great achiever is a believer in something bigger than themselves.  Protagoras said, “Man is the measure of all things.”  This was my philosophy for several years and I personally found man to be too small a measurement.  If man is the measurement of all things, then there are no absolutes that relate to all men.  Each man will set his own measurements.  If there are no absolutes, then there are no convictions that relate to all mankind. If there are no convictions, then courage is weakened.  Less courage leads to less leadership.  A leader leads with the courage of their convictions and people follow people with convictions.  I say all of this to ask a few questions.  What are your convictions?  What principles do you feel so strongly about that you would suffer for them?  Are you willing to die for your convictions?  In our post-modern world, few people have convictions worth dying for. 

 

Patrick Henry’s famous statement, “Give me liberty or give me death”, rings hollow in today’s relative world.  We can laugh at Mr. Henry or we can ask what beliefs gave him the courage to stand against the overwhelming force of England and King George?  No one who reads the history books can doubt that the founding fathers had beliefs that were non-negotiable.  No one doubts that they were not perfect and fell short of their ideals. but at least they had ideals.  What concerns me about the daily buffet of post-modern ideas is the glorification of the cynic over the courageous.   Please tell me what countries erect statues in the main square to the cynic who said it couldn’t be done?  Or the cynic who said it isn’t worth being done?  Only someone who is fixated on themselves (man being the measure) could say that.  Anyone with the courage of their convictions and focused on the welfare (economic, political, and spiritual) of others would never say it isn’t worth it.   When you are setting your goals for 2009, I ask that you begin with the end in mind.  Start with your core beliefs and convictions.  Why do you believe what you believe?  What are the long-term results for believing this?  Do these beliefs lead to a world-view that accurately describes the world that we live in?  The closer your world-view accurately describes reality, the better you will do at living in the world.  These are some points to ponder as we move into 2009.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

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Milton Friedman – Free to Choose

Posted by Orrin Woodward on December 29, 2008

Milton Friedman is another famous economist with a critical message for our generation.  Milton and his wife Rose both taught the importance of freedom for the individual in making economic choices.   A video series was produced based upon their best selling book Freedom to Choose.  Here is the first video in the series.  I particularly like the introduction from Arnold Schwarzenegger as he describes why he wanted to come to America.  America has always been the beacon of freedom and hope for the rest of the world and we must not lose this on our watch.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KKbHA76-Hi0]

Posted in Finances, Freedom/Liberty | 3 Comments »

America & Free Trade

Posted by Orrin Woodward on December 27, 2008

I have been asked my thoughts on free trade numerous times.  I believe the World is Flat as Thomas Friedman says and that America must learn to compete with the world.  Protectionism does not work and we know this from the world of sports.  Can you imagine going to the Olympics and learning that certain countries were penalized for being too competent?  The Olympic ideal is may the best person win and the best country win.  In economic parlance, their win does not have to be another countries loss.  Adam Smith, at the time of the American Revolution, clearly spelled out the advantages of specialization and economies of scale in his Wealth of Nations.  America must not fear other countries, but embrace a win-win trading policy with other countries. 

 

David Ricardo shared the concept of Comparative Advantage that is essential for the specialization between trading partners.  As I began my research for this paper, I realized that Alan S. Binder had already captured all the essentials in his excellent article.  I will share his well researched and reasoned article with you.  Great job Professor Binder in providing quality information that is explained simply.  America must remain free for the best entrepreneurs to try different ideas and processes to satisfy customers’ wants.  Every time we lose freedom, we lose the ability to compete.  Let’s replace fear with hunger to learn and grow.  Chris Brady and I wrote our WSJ #1 Best Seller, Launching a Leadership Revolution to encourage all people from every country to grow personally and be part of the global community.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

 

About the Author:

Alan S. Blinder is the Gordon S. Rentschler Memorial Professor of Economics at Princeton University. He wrote, from 1985 to 1992, a regular economics column for Business Week and is the coauthor of one of the best-selling textbooks on economics. He has served as vice chairman of the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors and as a member of President Bill Clinton’s Council of Economic Advisers.

 

For more than two centuries economists have steadfastly promoted free trade among nations as the best trade policy. Despite this intellectual barrage, many “practical” men and women continue to view the case for free trade skeptically, as an abstract argument made by ivory tower economists with, at most, one foot on terra firma. These practical people “know” that our vital industries must be protected from foreign competition.

The divergence between economists’ beliefs and those of (even well-educated) men and women on the street seems to arise in making the leap from individuals to nations. In running our personal affairs, virtually all of us exploit the advantages of free trade and comparative advantage without thinking twice. For example, many of us have our shirts laundered at professional cleaners rather than wash and iron them ourselves. Anyone who advised us to “protect” ourselves from the “unfair competition” of low-paid laundry workers by doing our own wash would be thought looney. Common sense tells us to make use of companies that specialize in such work, paying them with money we earn doing something we do better. We understand intuitively that cutting ourselves off from specialists can only lower our standard of living.

 

Adam Smith ’s insight was that precisely the same logic applies to nations. Here is how he put it in 1776:

 

It is the maxim of every prudent master of a family, never to attempt to make at home what it will cost him more to make than to buy.. . . If a foreign country can supply us with a commodity cheaper than we ourselves can make it, better buy it of them with some part of the produce of our own industry, employed in a way in which we have some advantage.

 

Spain, South Korea, and a variety of other countries manufacture shoes more cheaply than America can. They offer them for sale to us. Shall we buy them, as we buy the services of laundry workers, with money we earn doing things we do well—like writing computer software and growing wheat? Or shall we keep “cheap foreign shoes” out and purchase more expensive American shoes instead? It is pretty clear that the nation as a whole must be worse off if foreign shoes are kept out—even though the American shoe industry will be better off.

 

Most people accept this argument. But they worry about what happens if another country—say, China—can make everything, or almost everything, cheaper than we can. Will free trade with China then lead to unemployment for American workers, who will find themselves unable to compete with cheaper Chinese labor? The answer (see comparative advantage), which was provided by david ricardo in 1810, is no. To see why, let us once again appeal to our personal affairs.

 

Some lawyers are better typists than their secretaries. Should such a lawyer fire his secretary and do his own typing? Not likely. Though the lawyer may be better than the secretary at both arguing cases and typing, he will fare better by concentrating his energies on the practice of law and leaving the typing to a secretary. Such specialization not only makes the economy more efficient but also gives both lawyer and secretary productive work to do.

 

The same idea applies to nations. Suppose the Chinese could manufacture everything more cheaply than we can—which is certainly not true. Even in this worst-case scenario, there will of necessity be some industries in which China has an overwhelming cost advantage (say, toys) and others in which its cost advantage is slight (say, computers). Under free trade the United States will produce most of the computers, China will produce most of the toys, and the two nations will trade. The two countries, taken together, will get both products cheaper than if each produced them at home to meet all of its domestic needs. And, what is also important, workers in both countries will have jobs.

 

Many people are skeptical about this argument for the following reason. Suppose the average American worker earns twenty dollars per hour while the average Chinese worker earns just two dollars per hour. Won’t free trade make it impossible to defend the higher American wage? Won’t there instead be a leveling down until, say, both American and Chinese workers earn eleven dollars per hour? The answer, once again, is no. And specialization is part of the reason.

 

If there were only one industry and occupation in which people could work, then free trade would indeed force American wages close to Chinese levels if Chinese workers were as good as Americans. But modern economies are composed of many industries and occupations. If America concentrates its employment where it does best, there is no reason why American wages cannot remain far above Chinese wages for a long time—even though the two nations trade freely. A country’s wage level depends fundamentally on the productivity of its labor force, not on its trade policy. As long as American workers remain more skilled and better educated, work with more capital, and use superior technology, they will continue to earn higher wages than their Chinese counterparts. If and when these advantages end, the wage gap will disappear. Trade is a mere detail that helps ensure that American labor is employed where, in Adam Smith’s phrase, it has some advantage.

 

Those who are still not convinced should recall that China’s trade surplus with the United States has been widening precisely as the wage gap between the two countries, while still huge, has been narrowing. If cheap Chinese labor was stealing American jobs, why did the theft intensify as the wage gap fell? The answer, of course, is that Chinese productivity was growing at enormous rates. The remarkable upward march of Chinese productivity both raised Chinese wages relative to American wages and turned China into a world competitor. To think that we can forestall the inevitable by closing our borders is to participate in a cruel self-deception. Nor should there be any worry about failing to forestall the inevitable. The fact that another country becomes wealthier does not mean that Americans must become poorer.

 

Americans should appreciate the benefits of free trade more than most people, for we inhabit the greatest free-trade zone in the world. Michigan manufactures cars; New York provides banking; Texas pumps oil and gas. The fifty states trade freely with one another, and that helps them all enjoy great prosperity. Indeed, one reason why the United States did so much better economically than Europe for more than two centuries is that America had free movement of goods and services while the European countries “protected” themselves from their neighbors. To appreciate the magnitudes involved, try to imagine how much your personal standard of living would suffer if you were not allowed to buy any goods or services that originated outside your home state.

 

A slogan occasionally seen on bumper stickers argues, “Buy American, save your job.” This is grossly misleading for two main reasons. First, the costs of saving jobs in this particular way are enormous. Second, it is doubtful that any jobs are actually saved in the long run.

 

Many estimates have been made of the cost of “saving jobs” by protectionism. While the estimates differ widely across industries, they are almost always much larger than the wages of the protected workers. For example, one study in the early 1990s estimated that U.S. consumers paid $1,285,000 annually for each job in the luggage industry that was preserved by barriers to imports, a sum that greatly exceeded the average earnings of a luggage worker. That same study estimated that restricting foreign imports cost $199,000 annually for each textile worker’s job that was saved, $1,044,000 for each softwood lumber job saved, and $1,376,000 for every job saved in the benzenoid chemical industry. Yes, $1,376,000 a year!

 

While Americans may be willing to pay a price to save jobs, spending such enormous sums is plainly irrational. If you doubt that, imagine making the following offer to any benzenoid chemical worker who lost his job to foreign competition: we will give you severance pay of $1,376,000—not annually, but just once—in return for a promise never to seek work in the industry again. Can you imagine any worker turning down the offer? Is that not sufficient evidence that our present method of saving jobs is mad?

 

But the situation is actually worse, for a little deeper thought leads us to question whether any jobs are really saved overall. It is more likely that protectionist policies save some jobs by jeopardizing others. Why? First, protecting one American industry from foreign competition imposes higher costs on others. For example, quotas on imports of semiconductors sent the prices of memory chips skyrocketing in the 1980s, thereby damaging the computer industry. Steel quotas force U.S. automakers to pay more for materials, making them less competitive.

 

Second, efforts to protect favored industries from foreign competition may induce reciprocal actions in other countries, thereby limiting American access to foreign markets. In that case, export industries pay the price for protecting import-competing industries.

 

Third, there are the little-understood, but terribly important, effects of trade barriers on the value of the dollar. If we successfully restrict imports, Americans will spend less on foreign goods. With fewer dollars offered for sale on the world’s currency markets, the value of the dollar will rise relative to that of other currencies. At that point unprotected industries will start to suffer because a higher dollar makes U.S. goods less competitive in world markets. Once again, America’s ability to export is harmed.

 

On balance the conclusion seems clear and compelling: while protectionism is sold as job saving, it probably really amounts to job swapping. It protects jobs in some industries only by destroying jobs in others.

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George W. Bush – Abandoning Free Enterprise to Save it?

Posted by Orrin Woodward on December 23, 2008

Here is a question to all the thinkers on this blog.  What is wrong with the thinking on this video?  I will share my thoughts when I have a little free time.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

Great job to all the commenters.  You have nailed the key points!  How can you abandon your principles to save your principles.  I respect George W. Bush and I believe that he is doing his personal best, but I cannot sit by and let this thinking go unquestioned.  The Republican party has lost its way.  Similar to the split in the part when Barry Goldwater and Nelson Rockefeller were fighting for party leadership.  Republicans are terrible me-too Democrats and must quit trying to play that role.  Republicans must go back and read the history of their party during the 1960’s if they wish to be relevant in the 21st century.  History is repeating itself again.  The Great Depression has been aptly explained by Murray Rothbard in his book with that title.  Government abandons Free enterprise is principles, socialism doesn’t work and government’s answer is to abandon free enterprise even further.  It is like taking a healthy patient; drugging them to “improve their life”, realizing the drug has bad side effects, and drugging them further to “save” the patient.   Here are some other future quotes if this thinking goes on unchecked.

1. We have abandoned chastity to save our purity.

2. We have abandoned faithfulness to save our faith.

3. We have abandoned our wealth creating principles to save our wealth.

4. We have abandoned our Christian principles to save Christianity.

5. We have abandoned defense of our country to save our country.

6. We have abandoned our our families to save our families.

7. We have abandoned thinking to save our thoughts.

8. We have abandoned convictions to save our character.

9. We have abandoned belief to save us from unbelief.

10. We have abandoned holiness principles to save holiness.

11. We have abandoned the principles of leadership to save our leadership.

12. We have abandoned our brains to save our butts.

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