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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The Effects of War on Society and State

Posted by Orrin Woodward on October 2, 2013

Here is another segment of the new book I am working on detailing how war affects society and the state. I am not sure what is more fun, doing the research to prepare the book, writing the book, or sharing these segments with the readers. 🙂 Ok, they are all equally important to me as I love learning, writing, and sharing. Fortunately, all of my friends in LIFE Leadership have the same mindset of learning, writing/speaking, and sharing which makes associating with them so enjoyable. We must get government narrowed to the specific task it was assigned to do and liberate the rest of society to produce, serve, and love. In any event, here is the next segment. Sincerely, Orrin Woodward

Military Cemetery

Military Cemetery

Unfortunately, however, when government exceeds its delegated role of defender of internal and external justice, it damages the duplication duty of society in a much worse way than discussed above. For the Five Laws of Decline (FLD) predict that, when a state has the power to exploit a weaker nation’s wealth, history reveals that it does so by launching a war against its weaker rival. The states political conflicts digress into war when one, if not both, sides believe that the risk of war are outweighed by the potential rewards. In general, if one state has the power to plunder without penalty and the other has products to pillage without protection, then war, with few exceptions, is the natural result. War is an unjust aggressive act by one nation against another to increase its power, plunder, and prestige through pillaging its weaker foe. Indeed, war is the great bane of civilization. The state, without exaggeration, through its use of war, has damaged the duplication duty of society severely through killing more of society’s members than any other activity. Remarkably, the government, delegated the “monopoly of force” to protect society from internal and external aggression, instead uses the “monopoly of force” to intervene into areas of the Six Duties of Society (SDS) where it is not needed nor allowed. Eventually, when the state power has grown sufficiently through repeated interventions within the SDS, the state uses its increased power to exploit its weaker neighbors. Not shockingly, the weaker nation will attempt to defend its members life, liberty and property and war, violence, and injustice results. For the limited-government, originally assigned to ensure justice, has now become a powerful state used by ruling exploiters as a tool of unjust gain. Ironically, the former limited-government created to protect life, liberty, and property of society’s members has been transformed into a powerful state that attacks the life, liberty, and property of another society’s members. 

However, it isn’t just the weaker society’s members that suffer injustice here. For the injustice committed against the weaker nation is paid for by the loss of life, liberty, and property of the aggressor state’s society members. This point cannot be repeated enough! Simply stated, none of society’s members win in a war. In fact, the only “winners” are the successful ruler/exploiters who have gained through increasing the power, plunder, and prestige of the victorious state. In contrast, the members of both societies have lost their inalienable rights, delegated by the members to the governments for it to defend. Of course, the members of the defeated society lose life, liberty, and property, but what cannot be overlooked is the victorious society has also lost its inalienable rights. For when the state goes to war, it does so by sacrificing the lives of society’s members to achieve its military objectives, making the rulers “reasons of state” more important than society’s members inalienable rights. Moreover, during the conflict, liberty is sacrificed on the altar of regimentation to align society’s members towards the important task of destroying the “enemy.” Above all, the military campaigns cost copious amounts of money that is paid for by the property of society’s members. The plunder, in other words, won by the sacrifice of the society’s members life, liberty, and property, is not shared with society, but rather reserved for the state rulers.

Can anyone truly argue from an inalienable rights perspective that the victorious state’s increased power is worth society’s subsequent loss of life, liberty, and property through war casualties, increased regimentation and increased taxation? War evidently, appears to be the best method for the state to aggrandize its power through rapid intervention within the SDS beyond its delegated sphere of activity. In order to check the FLD, the ability to make offensive war must be checked or the nation will quickly digress from a limited-government to a practically unlimited-state. In fact, it has been the repeated failures of society to check the FLD in this crucial area that has caused the transformation of every limited-government into a powerful state. The unjust offensive wars are lose-lose proposition for both society’s members because they lose inalienable rights while state rulers gain power of society. Accordingly, the only just war is in defense against another countries unjust aggression of the society’s members inalienable rights. In historical hindsight, it is this increased accumulation of state power that destroys the SDS by using force where persuasion is needed, leading to the decline of the SDS as the FLD rise.

Posted in Freedom/Liberty, Leadership/Personal Development | 20 Comments »

Debasement Leads to Inflation

Posted by Orrin Woodward on September 26, 2013

Yesterday, I shared what debasement of the money supply was. Today, I am going to share what it leads to – a secret tax called inflation. I know this can be complicated stuff and some of my readers may have to read it several times, but the reader’s liberty and justice are at stake, so I encourage all to keep slogging through. 🙂 LIFE Leadership is creating a group of men and women who seek truth so they can act upon it. The LeaderShift is coming!

Sincerely.

Orrin Woodward

Debasement Leads to Inflation

German Hyper-Inflation

German Hyper-Inflation

Nonetheless, this gain to the state’s coffers is no free lunch; rather, society pays in full for the state’s abuse of its powers. For debasement leads to a hidden tax on society’s members known as inflation. Society’s members recognize that prices are rising, but cannot identify its true cause. Ignobly, the government, instead of ensuring justice through protecting society against fraud and counterfeiters, has entered the counterfeiting business to benefit the ruling elite. To be sure, the government hammers anyone else attempting to benefit at society’s expense through the printing of fake dollars that cause inflation within society. Evidently, however, this aggressive government action is less about ensuring justice and more about ensuring the exclusive rights on the systematic counterfeiting fraud. Furthermore, since inflation is a disguised tax upon society, it is one of the safest methods of exploitation. Rothbard observed:

Direct, overt taxation raises hackles and can cause revolution; inflationary increases of the money supply can fool the public— its victims—for centuries. Only when its paper money has been accepted for a long while is the government ready to take the final inflationary step: making it irredeemable, cutting the link with the gold. After calling its dollar bills equivalent to 1/20 gold ounce for many years, and having built up the customary usage of the paper dollar as money, the government can then boldly and brazenly sever the link with gold, and then simply start referring to the dollar bill as money itself. Gold then becomes a mere commodity, and the only money is paper tickets issued by the government. The gold standard has become an arbitrary fiat standard. The government, of course, is now in seventh heaven. So long as paper money was redeemable in gold, the government had to be careful how many dollars it printed. If, for example, the government has a stock of $30 billion in gold, and keeps issuing more paper dollars redeemable in that gold, at a certain point, the public might start getting worried and call upon the government for redemption. If it wants to stay on the gold standard, the embarrassed government might have to contract the number of dollars in circulation: by spending less than it receives, and buying back and burning the paper notes. No government wants to do anything like that.

Manipulation of Money Supply

Simply stated, inflation, through society’s ignorance, allows exploiters to bilk society with little resistance. Governments, in effect, as they transform into powerful states, promote monetary sophisms to disguise its scheme of systematic exploitation of the nation’s money supply. Indeed, without public acceptance of the state’s control of the monetary system the Five Laws of Decline would be severely limited. Unfortunately, however, most of society’s members remain ignorant of monetary matters, leaving them susceptible to state propaganda. For the state and its servants argue that, since all production is good and increases wealth, the state must increase the money supply to increase wealth in society. The fallacy, however, in this argument is, unlike all other consumer goods, money is not used up in the consumption or production process. True, it is indispensable to both steps, but only as a medium of exchange for goods and services. To quote Rothbard one more time:

Unlike consumer or capital goods, we cannot say that the more money in circulation the better. In fact, since money only performs an exchange function, we can assert with the Ricardians and with Ludwig von Mises that any supply of money will be equally optimal with any other. In short, it doesn’t matter what the money supply may be; every M will be just as good as any other for performing its cash balance exchange function.

Society, in other words, can practically use any stable non-manipulated money supply level to use in its role as a medium of exchange for all other goods and services; however, the exploiters resist this economic truth for they cannot manipulate a money supply operating within free market environment. Accordingly, the state utilizes all the means at its disposal to gain control of a nation’s money thus ensuring its ability to exploit society. Interestingly, American President James Garfield emphasized the FLD risk when the state’s “monopoly of force” controlled the money supply when he declared, “He who controls the money supply of a nation controls the nation.” Garfield understood that, since money is the lifeblood of the entire economy, when the state is given control of the economy’s blood, it controls its life. For if the money supply can be expanded and contracted at will, the state can bankrupt any person, business, or political rival it chooses. Perhaps the simplest way to clear the fog on the false reasoning of financial elites is to ask: in what other field would it be proper for government to cartelize the entire field and claim the procedure is for society’s benefit?

For instance, if a monopoly was delegated complete control over car manufacturing in the USA, would that improve or hinder the quality, quantity, and price of future cars? Historically, when competition is reduced, so is the quality. In fact the only thing that increases is the price. All of this, in short, because the monopoly has no competitors for customers to flock to when the entity is unresponsive to their needs. However, if monopolies and cartels are damaging to the Six Duties of Society in every other field, why does the state/financial elites insist on making an exception when it comes to banking and the money supply? Indeed, because the money supply is used for all other businesses transactions within society, the monopoly control over the monetary policy indirectly allows one to control all other economic activities. This is summum bonum for exploiters, allowing them to profit through foreknowledge of the inflation and deflation cycles under their control. In fact, for society to remain free, there is no greater assignment for the people than to ensure the FLD do not infect the nation’s money supply. Paradoxically, however, in no area of society is the state given a freer reign than in the nation’s money supply. In consequence, since men are not angels, the FLD temptation to expropriate the wealth of society is too great for the state’s rulers to resist.

Posted in Freedom/Liberty, LIFE Leadership | 23 Comments »

The State and Monetary Debasement

Posted by Orrin Woodward on September 25, 2013

There is probably no area of government where the Five Laws of Decline (FLD) are harder at work than in the monetary system. I cannot emphasize enough for citizens in every society to understand how the monetary system works and how to check the FLD from destroying justice. Simply stated, justice within society leads to production and prosperity. In contrast, injustice within society leads to exploitation and poverty. Everywhere we identify the FLD at work is an area where injustice is destroying society’s prosperity. Therefore, men and women of character must ensure the injustice stops and society provides justice for all.

If you haven’t read LeaderShift, I encourage the reader to do so as a primer for the new book coming out. LIFE Leadership is capturing truth in the 8F’s and sharing with the world! 🙂

Sincerely,

Orrin Woodward

Monetary Debasement

USA Monetary Debasement

USA Monetary Debasement

The second way that government damages the distribution of goods is through manipulation of the monetary units. Although many believe the state created the monetary units within society, in fact, as Ludwig von Mises demonstrated, money originated through the free market process of bartering. Therefore, the only valid governmental function, with respect to money, is to ensure an honest Bureau of Weights and Measures to protect against the debasement of society’s money. Unfortunately, as Murray Rothbard, so aptly explained in his classic book Mystery of Banking, government routinely violates this sacred responsibility:

The problem is that governments have systematically betrayed their trust as guardians of the precisely defined weight of the money commodity. If government sets itself up as the guardian of the international meter or the standard yard or pound, there is no economic incentive for it to betray its trust and change the definition. For the Bureau of Standards to announce suddenly that 1 pound is now equal to 14 instead of 16 ounces would make no sense whatever. There is, however, all too much of an economic incentive for governments to change, especially to lighten, the definition of the currency unit; say, to change the definition of the pound sterling from 16 to 14 ounces of silver. This profitable process of the government’s repeatedly lightening the number of ounces or grams in the same monetary unit is called debasement.

In other words, the government delegated to protect against debasement and ensure justice has, instead, monopolized the monetary system and debased currency for the political leaders benefit. Regretfully, because society’s remains woefully ignorant of government’s systematic fraud, governments increasingly have used debasement to meet its financial obligations. In fact, the Five Laws of Decline thrive within most nation’s  monetary systems as debasement and inflation lead to further exploitation. Rothbard, again, cogently explained how debasement leads to the state accumulating unjust profits when he wrote:

How debasement profits the State can be seen from a hypothetical case: Say the rur, the currency of the mythical kingdom of Ruritania, is worth 20 grams of gold. A new king now ascends the throne, and, being chronically short of money, decides to take the debasement route to the acquisition of wealth. He announces a mammoth call-in of all the old gold coins of the realm, each now dirty with wear and with the picture of the previous king stamped on its face. In return he will supply brand new coins with his face stamped on them, and will return the same number of rurs paid in. Someone presenting 100 rurs in old coins will receive 100 rurs in the new.

Seemingly a bargain! Except for a slight hitch: During the course of this recoinage, the king changes the definition of the rur from 20 to 16 grams. He then pockets the extra 20 percent of gold, minting the gold for his own use and pouring the coins into circulation for his own expenses. In short, the number of grams of gold in the society remains the same, but since people are now accustomed to use the name rather than the weight in their money accounts and prices, the number of rurs will have increased by 20 percent. The money supply in rurs, therefore, has gone up by 20 percent, and, as we shall see later on, this will drive up prices in the economy in terms of rurs. Debasement, then, is the arbitrary redefining and lightening of the currency so as to add to the coffers of the State.

Posted in Freedom/Liberty, LIFE Leadership | 22 Comments »

Division of Labor & Government Five Laws of Decline

Posted by Orrin Woodward on September 23, 2013

I am wrapping up the chapter where I display how the Five Laws of Decline (FLD) attack each of the Six Duties of Society (SDS). The more I write, the clearer I see what has gone wrong in America and Western Civilization. For if society destroys the Virtuous Business Cycle, then it destroys the process by which wealth is created for all producers. LIFE Leadership has created a society of leaders to maximize the SDS and minimize the FLD.

Sincerely,

Orrin Woodward

Division of Labor and the Five Laws of Decline 

Referring back to the Six Duties of Society chapter, the Virtuous Business Cycle (VBC) occurs when society saves its capital, leading to further investments in labor-saving devices. This, in turn, leads to an increased division of labor which then leads to expanded production. The greater production, subsequently, leads to further distribution and trade with members of society and other societies. Finally, this culminates in an increase in the capital of society’s members leading to more savings and the cycle begins anew. For review purposes, the six steps in the Virtuous Business Cycle are:

  1. Increased Savings which leads to
  2. Increased Investment in Business Enterprises which leads to
  3. Increased Division of Labor which leads to
  4. Increased Production of Goods and Services which leads to
  5. Increased Distribution of Goods and Services which leads to
  6. Increased Wealth for Society’s Members which leads to back to Savings
The Fall of Roman Empire

The Fall of Roman Empire

In essence, free societies, through ensuring justice, predictably leads to a (VBC) of expanding capital, savings, investment, production, and trade. In fact, when government is focused within its appointed sphere of ensuring justice through checking exploitation, the VBC is an unbeatable system for wealth creation. In point of fact, every single wealthy nation, that has produced its wealth by just means, has utilized the Virtuous Business Cycle as the method to create it. Unfortunately, however, when the state tampers with the VBC, hammers the producers, rather than the exploiters, the people through excessive taxation (beyond the necessary minimum for defense and justice), are bilked of their savings, thus denying society the needed capital to initiate the VBC.

If, in other words, the wealth is expropriated from the people, by exploiters within society or in government, capital savings are diminished and the Virtuous Business Cycle is impaired.  Because, as John Marshall once explained, “the power to tax is the power to destroy,” government’s ability to tax must be strictly limited just like its delegated sphere of operation. For government’s “force hammer” is delegated by society to ensure internal and external defense (justice for all) by ensuring exploiters are nailed. Regrettably, however, the biggest historical exploiter of the people has been the government itself when it transforms from a limited government into a powerful state. The state, in short order, usurps its delegated boundaries and enters into the economic area where it doesn’t belong and can only harm the VBC. Consequently, governments must be prohibited from interfering with the capital accumulation process within society (outside of the absolute minimum need of ensuring justice for all); otherwise the VBC is damaged. For when exploiters can wrongfully plunder the capital of society, the Virtuous Business Cycle is stunted. Then, as plunder increases, society dies. In conclusion, when the state becomes the tool of injustice, society divides into the few, who plunder, and the many who are plundered.

Posted in LIFE Leadership | 17 Comments »

How Do the Six Duties and Five Laws Interact?

Posted by Orrin Woodward on September 17, 2013

When I look back on my life, one of the things that I am so thankful for today is my training in systems thinking as a Manufacturing Systems Engineer at GMI-EMI (now Kettering University). This mindset of seeing the world from a systems perspective has been invaluable to me personally and professionally. In RESOLVED, I shared an entire chapter on systems thinking, but now will share systems thinking as it relates to the Six Duties of Society and the Five Laws of Decline. This material is so exciting to me, because I believe I have pinpointed how every society I have studied cycled through the “rise and fall” story. For only when we understand why something occurs can we make the changes needed to stop it.

LIFE Leadership applies the same principles to one’s life. For only when someone understands why he is not getting the results he desires can he make the needed changes to produce the right results. Here is part of the chapter on the SDS and FLD interactions within society.

Sincerely,

Orrin Woodward

Knocking Down the Berlin Wall

Knocking Down the Berlin Wall

Government, accordingly, must be strong enough to restrain the strong from exploiting the weak within society to ensure justice for all, fulfilling the SDS. However, government, even though it is society’s delegated agent for justice, must be watched and restrained. For negligence will lead to the exploiters gaining control of the government’s “monopoly of force,” activating the FLD by redirecting government into an agent of injustice through the systematic exploitation of society. The exploiters do not intend to destroy society, for a long life of the host ensures more plunder for the parasites. However, the greater the unchecked exploitation becomes, the greater the reduction in production of society as the exploited resist the unjust exploitation. For society’s members, if they cannot legally stop the exploitation, will, at a minimum, refuse to produce above what they are allowed to keep. In other words, the SDS and FLD counteract one another, for the FLD thrives in injustice and the SDS prospers in justice. Therefore, when government protects the inalienable rights of its members by performing its delegated assignment of justice, society will rise; however, when government is either too powerless to ensure justice or, worse yet, becomes the agent of injustice, society begins to fall. Indeed, one could compare the SDS to an airplane, lifting society upward and the FLD to gravity, forcing the plane to fall. Thankfully for society, just like a plane can overcome gravity, the SDS can overcome the FLD when society applies the proper policies.

Nonetheless, for an airplane to stay in the air, there must be a refueling plan; otherwise the plane will fall when it runs out of power. In a similar fashion, a society can “rise”, but it must also designs checks to prevent the parasitic FLD; otherwise the society will fall when the FLD consumes the production of the SDS. Ideally, with an understanding of the negative symbiosis between the SDS and FLD, today’s political leaders could radically change the position of the Power Pendulum within society by ensuring justice for its members. For just as the laws of nature are predictable, so too are the laws of human nature when studied systematically within society. Although each person is unique and will respond in his own way to various stimulus, in mass, human nature is surprisingly predictable. Consequently, society can be studied to identify the systemic response of its members to specific government policies. If society allows the FLD to increase, people react, in mass, in specific patterns that will become clear when we examine the six case-studies. For now, its important to understand that society’s responses to the systemic processes and interactions of the SDS and FLD are predictable. Indeed, just as aeronautical engineers, through comprehending the laws of nature, design airplanes for flight; so too can political scientists, through comprehending human nature, design policies for society’s rise.

Interestingly, the systemic effects of the SDS and FLD interactions have been remarkably consistent within Western Societies. This indicates that, similar to scientist predicting responses in the laws of nature, the systemic reactions of human beings to government policies can be consistently predicted. For the application of human nature to predict societal events isn’t a new concept. For instance, insurance companies have, for centuries, made predictions based upon human nature. Has anyone noticed that when car drivers apply for insurance, the insurance companies assess different rates based upon the insured’s age and family status? But how can they possible do this without evaluating a person’s actual driving abilities? Just because, in other words, one driver is an 18 year old doesn’t necessarily mean he is a poorer driver than a married 35 year old driver with children. Statistically, however, for drivers in mass, the average 18 year old is simply a higher risk than the average 35 year old. Consequently, the insurance rates are adjusted accordingly with an impressive degree of accuracy. Warren Buffet, in fact, once remarked, “there is no such thing as bad insurance, only bad rates.”  Man, in other words, as an individual, is unpredictable, but when studied in mass, he is extremely predictable. Insurance companies, in sum, have utilized the laws of human nature to predict mass behavior for centuries; likewise, why aren’t societal leaders using the same methods to enhance the SDS and check the FLD within society?  For although it may be difficult to forecast how each individual will respond to a specific policy, society, in mass, will respond to the SDS and FLD with astonishing consistency based upon justice or injustice of the policy proposed.

Through the systematic study of the SDS and FLD, political leaders can better comprehend how their legislation affects these crucial systems and adjust accordingly. The political leaders main objective is to ensure all legislation enhances the SDS without initiating the FLD. To rephrase Buffet’s dictum for political purposes, “There is no such thing as bad society, only bad policies.” Government, in other words, becomes bad when its “monopoly of force” is used to plunder the people rather than ensure justice for all. Unfortunately, when the SDS is fulfilled and society prospers, the FLD temptation, for those who rule the government’s “monopoly of force,” to use it as a hammer of exploitation becomes increasingly difficult to resist. Society, as a result, must set up the proper checks on governmental power or it will fall victim to the FLD. In effect, the unchecked FLD produces a class of plunderers (the state) within society who sponge off the producers. This parasitic condition worsens until the flourishing FLD eventually destroys the SDS. The producers, sick of the few siphoning off the many’s wealth by the thriving FLD, refuse to produce anymore, killing the SDS as poverty replaces prosperity. This, in fact, is exactly how the Soviet bloc collapsed just a few decades ago. 

Posted in Freedom/Liberty, LIFE Leadership | 23 Comments »

The Five Laws of Decline Within Society

Posted by Orrin Woodward on September 15, 2013

Today, I am wrapping up the chapter on the FLD and society. I am always amazed how one might think he knows a subject, but when he starts to write, he realizes how many more connections there are than he had originally identified. At least, this is what typically occurs in my writing. The Six Duties of Society are what’s good in human nature, working together in cooperation to produce results which leads to prosperity and justice within society. In contrast, the Five Laws of Decline are what’s wrong with human nature, working selfishly to exploit others production which leads to poverty and injustice within society. Soberingly, both of these natures are inside of all of us. Indeed, it’s only when society learns to systematically magnify the good, while checking the bad, that it becomes possible for the quest for concord and justice for all to be achieved. LIFE Leadership intends to play its part in helping society fulfill the quest.

Sincerely,

Orrin Woodward

Dwelling inside of every human being is the ability to do remarkable acts of good and evil. In fact, its the good actions of cooperating human beings within society that satisfy the SDS. However, as mentioned in the previous chapter, mankind also has a darker side. In essence, the Five Laws of Decline (FLD) capture this darker side by systematically describing man’s inhumanity to man. For in his core, man is tempted to reap where he hasn’t sown, seeking to exploit from other’s production rather than producing himself. Accordingly, when the SDS is fulfilled and society prospers, the exploiters have greater opportunities to siphon the wealth of others into their unearned pockets. The FLD, in other words, is the author’s systematic method for describing how man’s inhumanity to man destroys cooperation within organizations and societies. This concept was first introduced in my book RESOLVED: 13 Resolutions for LIFE and then expanded upon in the book LeaderShift, co-authored with Oliver DeMille. Basically, when the FLD are not checked, society is split into two groups – those who produce wealth and those who plunder it. James Madison described man’s nature accurately when he wrote, “If men were angels, no government would be necessary.” Men, however, are not angels; therefore, if tempted by large enough rewards and low enough risk, the historical record displays mankind will exploit his fellow man. Governments, in sum, were created by society to restrain man’s desire to exploit others through decreasing the potential rewards available greatly increasing the risk of punishment if exploitation is attempted.

UnknownFor just as a pickpocket typically avoids practicing his craft in the vicinity of police officers, so too do exploiters usually avoid practicing plunder where government is performing its proper role. However, it’s crucially important to remember that government itself is an organization consisting of men and women who also have sinful natures; thus, if society isn’t diligent, the government’s “monopoly of force” can be redirected from its proper role of protector into an unjust role of exploiter. In fact, much of third-world poverty is a disgraceful result of government force being used as a tool of injustice rather than justice. Although Western Society governments are, of course, less overt than their third-world counterparts, but the same principle still holds true – that all governments must be diligently watched to ensure that exploiters do not gain control of government and set up systems of exploitation, using the “monopoly of force” for unjust ends. Indeed, the real challenge to taming the FLD within society is that any government with sufficient power to protect, is, by definition, also given enough power to exploit. The paradox of government’s “monopoly of force” is clearly revealed in the need for delegated force within society but also ensuring this force is used to restrain the FLD not encourage them.

For exactly how does a society delegate to government a “monopoly of power” to restrain exploitation, but then ensure no group of exploiters gain control of the government to use its “monopoly of force” for unjust ends? Indeed, if a group of exploiters did manage to legally control the government, how would society stop them from gradually passing laws to “legalize” societal plunder for the rulers benefit?Furthermore, if society’s members object to the government’s violations of inalienable rights, the exploiters, unbelievably, can now access the “monopoly of force” to intimidate the protesters into compliance of the “laws”. Shockingly, the government’s hammer, instead of pounding exploiters to ensure justice for all, is now in the exploiters’ hands to pound society, ensuring plunder for rulers and injustice for the ruled. In truth, this isn’t just hypothetical reasoning, for this scenario has occurred numerous times in history. Probably the best known historical case, for instance, was Hitler, who, learning from his aborted Beer Hall Putsch, followed quasi-legal methods to seize control of government when he was elected democratically elected and then appointed Chancellor by President Von Hindenburg.

Posted in LIFE Leadership | 21 Comments »

Rise and Fall Societies

Posted by Orrin Woodward on September 13, 2013

Here is the close to my Six Duties of Society (SDS) chapter that capture why all previous Western Societies have experienced “Rise and Fall” cycles through the effects of the SDS and Five Laws of Decline (FLD). I am getting more excited about this book every day. The more I write, the more everything appears to be connecting together. In other words, either I am going mad (wouldn’t be the first time people said that about me 🙂 ) or I am really onto something here! LIFE Leadership is changing lives one person at a time. In any event, here the SDS close.

Sincerely,

Orrin Woodward

Six Duties of Society & Five Laws of Decline

John F. Kennedy Quote

John F. Kennedy Quote

The six duties work together to satisfy man’s needs within society. Providing mankind with the liberty to think, dream, and work to turn these ideas into reality is the purpose of  the Six Duties of Society (SDS). Give man liberty and justice and many of the challenges facing the world today would evaporate. Unfortunately, however, those benefitting from today’s injustice will fight relentlessly to maintain their special deals regardless of how much damage it does to the total society. For instance, the tyrannies that bind most of South America and Africa create billions for the few at the pain and misery of the man. The courage to implement the SDS in protection of life, liberty, and property for all would change this dismal condition. Historian, Johan Norberg, although applying different terms, explained the difference between how society’s members perform, under a successful and unsuccessful application of the SDS, better than anyone else when he wrote:

The growth of world prosperity is not a “miracle” or any other of the mystifying terms we customarily apply to countries that have succeeded economically and socially. Schools are not built, nor are incomes generated, by sheer luck, like a bolt out of the blue. These things happen when people begin to think along new lines and work hard to bring their ideas to fruition. But people do that everywhere, and there is no reason why certain people in certain places during certain periods of history should be intrinsically smarter or more capable than others. What makes the difference is whether the environment permits and encourages ideas and work, or instead puts obstacles in their way. That depends on whether people are free to explore their way ahead, to own property, to invest for the long term, to conclude private agreements and to trade with others. In short, it depends on whether countries have capitalism.

If Western Society truly aspires to fulfill the quest for concord and realizes justice for all, then satisfying the SDS to create liberty for society’s members is the only viable path. Nevertheless, the SDS, by itself, cannot rest the Power Pendulum in concord. For even when the SDS is fulfilled, the increased wealth awakens the Five Laws of Decline (FLD) within society. The expanding wealth, in effect, increases the enticement and temptation for potential plunderers, motivated by greed and power, to live off the efforts of others. For if the fulfilled SDS stimulates a society’s rise, then the unchecked FLD activates its decline. The SDS, in other words, solved only half the riddle perplexing Western Civilization. Indeed, to complete the quest for concord and justice for all, not only must the society enjoy the productive effects of the SDS, but just as importantly, it must negate the parasitical effects of the FLD. Simply stated, what the SDS creates through production, the unchecked FLD destroys through exploitation. Accordingly, Western Civilization continues to repeat the “rise and fall” cycle from satisfying the SDS to “rise” only to leave the FLD unchecked causing “fall”. Therefore, in the next chapter, the Five Laws of Decline will be explained and analyzed to determine the proper checks upon its destructive effects.

Posted in Freedom/Liberty | 14 Comments »

And Justice For All

Posted by Orrin Woodward on September 12, 2013

I am continuing to write away on my new book describing man, society, and government’s true responsibilities in the quest for concord and justice for all. What a fascinating study this has been for me. I know, I am strange, but I love seeking for answers as to why all society’s seem to leave concord and die in either chaos or coercion. I am so pumped, because I truly believe I have discovered the key to the answer. In fact, I cannot find any historical case-study that doesn’t display the predictable effects of the Six Duties of Society and the Five Laws of Decline. LIFE Leadership will get the inside exclusive on this book as I intend to publish this under Obstacle’s Press. Here is another segment on society, justice, and injustice.

Sincerely,

Orrin Woodward

At any rate, the State of Nature for man is similar to the status of sovereign-nations in the world. For each nation must rely upon its own resources to protect its right to life, liberty, and property from potential aggressor nations. Likewise, man, in the State of Nature, must rely upon his own resources to protect his inalienable rights from potential aggressor neighbors. In both instances, with no higher authority to help adjudicate the dispute peacefully, the conflict must either be settled by peaceful negotiation or through violent force. Unfortunately, just as the history books are filled with unjust wars among nations, as man entered society, the right and responsibility for each person to protect his life, liberty, and property became unjust and unwieldy. Consequently, society, in an effort to systematically ensure justice, created a government to defend each of the members life, liberty, and property in a systematic fashion. Now, instead of each member having the dual responsibilities of both production and protection, could specialize further on his production, because the government was now delegated the responsibility of protection. Government, accordingly, was society’s solution to the increasing division of labor through assigning all force-functions within society to a government in the narrow sphere of the protection of each members life, liberty, and property. In short, society delegated to government the force necessary to protect its members inalienable rights to ensure justice for all.

East German Injustice vs West German Justice

East German Injustice vs West German Justice

The historical record, not surprisingly, reveals that society seems to flourish under liberty and justice while floundering under oppression and injustice. For when injustice within society is not immediately punished, it opens the door for more injustice and the concurrent loss of liberty. Indeed, there are three main avenues for injustice within society. The first is when society’s members oppress one another. For man seeks the satisfaction of his wants with the least amount of effort, and since plunder is easier than production, without government force to check aggression, the strong will predictably plunder the weak, leading to an unjust society. The second type of injustice occurs when the government exceeds its delegated boundaries and uses force where freedom is the norm. Government, in other words, is delegated a limited force in a limited sphere to protect man’s inalienable rights by coercing exploiters to cease from unjust actions and return to just methods of production. However, when government force is used beyond this limited sphere, it begins coercing members in areas where liberty and freedom should reign; thus, violating its reason for existence. The third form of injustice in when an external foe attacks and defeats another society. The victors create an unjust state to systematically plunder the production of its defeated victim.

Each of these three injustices are met by society’s members in a predictable pattern. For mankind fights injustice and when the force is too great to fight physically, he will resist mentally. In other words, when injustice abounds within a society, repeatedly violating the people’s inalienable rights, they simply reduce their productive efforts accordingly. Why, for example, should a person work hard to increase his wealth if it will just be taken from him anyway? In effect, when injustice becomes large enough to deny the society’s members the right to their life, liberty, and property, the oppressed members will produce just enough to sustain life. An unjust society, however, that produces just enough for man to live at subsistence levels, will soon collapse under its own oppressive weight. Interestingly, the historical record, in contrast to Locke’s theory, indicates that most states were founded upon military aggression, oppression, and injustice, rather than the people’s will. For when a productive society is weaker than one of its surrounding neighbors, the hostile invader seeks to reap what it hasn’t sown. Of course, the subsequent state, created to rule the society, is formed by the victors to systematically plunder the production of its defeated rival. Not surprisingly, though, the unjust society displays little productive capacity beyond the satisfaction of its members hunger. Society simply doesn’t flourish under injustice.

Posted in Freedom/Liberty, LIFE Leadership | 18 Comments »

Government & State

Posted by Orrin Woodward on September 10, 2013

I am continuing my work on my new book. In this segment, I share what the proper role of government within society. LIFE Leadership, in essence, is a society where rule of law reigns. The role of the owners of LIFE is to ensure no special deals and justice for all. Similarly, this is the proper role of government. I truly believe the way to change society is to change individual lives and over time build a big enough community that believes in “justice for all” that we can end the exploitation of the few over the many. This is my lifetime purpose and I am honored to be working with the greatest students of leadership anywhere!

Sincerely,

Orrin Woodward

Governments and State

However, even man’s liberty must have limits. For, unfortunately, one of the darker sides of mankind is the desire to satisfy its wants with the least amount of effort. And, since exploitation of other people’s production is easier than a person producing himself, society must check this antisocial behavior of both internal and external aggressors to plunder others production. Indeed, James Madison, describing man’s dilemma, once wrote, “If men were angels, there would be no need for government.” Needless to say, mankind is not part of the angel family; consequently, society created government and delegated it the “monopoly of force” to protect its members from potential plunderers. In other words, government is the only part of society founded upon force, not freedom. For while the rest of society secures cooperation through persuasion, the government, in contrast, secures justice through threatening violence to anyone attempting to live by plunder rather than production. For most people, the threat of violence is enough to deter plunder, but in cases where force is needed, as in defense of one’s country, government is provided the force to fulfill its purpose.

Economic Freedom

Economic Freedom

As discussed earlier, in a healthy society, the Power Pendulum is balanced between the untenable extremes of chaos and coercion. In truth, historically, chaos appears to be the least desirable state of all and the pendulum rarely stays there long. Coercion, on the other hand, although not the desired state, seems to be patiently tolerated until the coercion becomes all-consuming. Evidently, people can suffer with societal tyranny easier than they suffer with the randomness of societal chaos. For on one side, chaos occurs when government is too weak to maintain peace within society. This power vacuum quickly leads the the Power Pendulum into chaos as different groups battle for sovereignty within society. On the other side, when government has too much force, the Power Pendulum drifts into coercion as people lose their liberty as the government transforms into an all-powerful state. Ideally, society’s goal is to rest the Power Pendulum in concord, providing the government with sufficient force to ensure justice, but denying it the power to become the plunderer of society’s production. Although numerous methods have been attempted to check government’s “monopoly of force,” sadly, none have proven to be effective with the passing of time.

There is an old joke that if the only tool one has is a hammer then everything looks like a nail. Similarly, government force is like that hammer and works well when confronting internal and external aggressors in pursuit of justice. However, since government’s modus operandi is force, it hammers everything it meets in society. Consequently, the government hammers should only be pointed at the specific targets it is delegated to nail, nothing else. Unfortunately, however, few seem to remember this crucial point, and when society permits government force to flow into areas it does not belong, the productive members of society, from the government’s perspective, begin looking, not surprisingly, like nails to be hammered. Indeed, when government exceeds its assigned boundaries, it no longer functions as the defender of a free society, but becomes an all-consuming State, oppressing the citizens it was assigned to protect. If society’s method is elasticity then the State’s method is rigidity and the proper balance between the use of freedom and force, resting the pendulum in concord, is crucial.

There are four underlying questions that must be answered in order to ensure justice for all and produce concord within society. This book will review how previous Western Societies attempted to answer each of these question before closing with the author’s proposed answer to the following questions:

  1. What areas of society prosper under freedom?
  2. What areas of society need force to ensure justice?
  3. How much force is needed in the proper areas to ensure justice reigns?
  4. How does society check the delegated “monopoly of force” from flowing into areas of society better served by freedom than force?

Unfortunately, Western Civilization has never answered all four questions within one society. Nonetheless, the author still believes it is possible to do so. For history has recorded periods of concord within Western society and now must learn how to rest the pendulum in concord. However, in order to still the pendulum in concord, today’s political leaders must solve the paradox inherent within “monopoly of force” and limited-power concepts. How, in other words, can an entity that is delegated a “monopoly of force” in specific spheres not use that monopoly to expand its power past the prescribed limits? Traditionally, when society delegates a “monopoly of force” to government, the initial limited government transforms itself into an all-powerful state. This is the unanswered challenge that has prohibited Western Civilization from achieving its quest for concord and justice for all.

Posted in LIFE Leadership | 27 Comments »

Leadership Foundations: Hungry, Honeable, & Honorable

Posted by Orrin Woodward on September 6, 2013

The foundational leadership attributes for successful leadership, according to my co-author Chris Brady and my NY Times bestseller Launching a Leadership Revolution is Hungry, Honeable, and Honorable. For without these crucial qualities, leadership will never blossom inside of a person. LIFE Leadership teaches these principles consistently to build a proper leadership foundation. In the following video, I elaborate on the three key principles.

Sincerely,

Orrin Woodward

Posted in LIFE Leadership | 9 Comments »