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Physical destructive war should be prevented as much as possible and it should not be promoted by government created laws, regulations and other facilitations that make it easier for governments to enter into a physical destructive war. When governments make laws to restrict free enterprise, commerce, economic warmaking ability then there is a much greater tendency for the pressure to build for physical destructive armed conflict.

The following is an article from www.mises.org, an organisation that seeks to promote economic freedom and limit government control.

Mises Daily Article wrote:

 

 

   War and Inflation

 

 *Daily Article* by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.

 <http://mises.org/articles.aspx?AuthorId=275 | Posted on 6/9/2008

 

 This talk was delivered at the Future of Freedom Foundation  <http://www.fff.org/'s conference on "Restoring the Republic: Foreign  Policy and Civil Liberties," <http://www.fff.org/conference2008/ on

 June 6, 2008, in Reston, Virginia.

 

 The US central bank, called the Federal Reserve, was created in 1913.  No one promoted this institution with the slogan that it would make

 wars more likely and guarantee that nearly half a million Americans

 will die in battle in foreign lands, along with millions of foreign

 soldiers and civilians.

 

 No one pointed out that this institution would permit Americans to

 fund, without taxes, the destruction of cities abroad and overthrow

 governments at will. No one said that the central bank would make it

 possible for the United States to be at large-scale war in one of

 every four years for a full century. It was never pointed out that

 this institution would make it possible for the US government to

 establish a global empire that would make imperial Rome and Britain

 look benign by comparison.

 

 You can line up 100 professional war historians and political

 scientists to talk about the 20th century, and not one is likely to

 mention the role of the Fed in funding US militarism. And yet it is

 true: the Fed is the institution that has created the money to fund

 the wars. In this role, it has solved a major problem that the state

 has confronted for all of human history. A state without money or a

 state that must tax its citizens to raise money for its wars is

 necessarily limited in its imperial ambitions. Keep in mind that this

 is only a problem for the state. It is not a problem for the people.

 The inability of the state to fund its unlimited ambitions is worth

 more for the people than every kind of legal check and balance. It is

 more valuable than all the constitutions every devised.

 

 The state has no wealth that is its own. It is not a profitable

 enterprise. Everything it possesses it must take from society in a

 zero-sum game. That usually means taxes, but taxes annoy people. They

 can destabilize the state and threaten its legitimacy. They inspire

 anger, revolt, and even revolution. Rather than risk that result, the

 state from the Middle Ages to the dawn of the central-banking age was

 somewhat cautious in its global ambitions simply because it was

 cautious in its need to steal openly and directly from the people in

 order to pay its bills.

 

 To be sure, it doesn't require a central bank for a state to choose

 inflation over taxes as a means of funding itself. All it really

 requires is a monopoly on the production of money. Once acquired, the

 monopoly on money production leads to a systematic process of

 depreciating the currency, whether by coin clipping or debasement or

 the introduction of paper money, which can then be printed without

 limit. The central bank assists in this process in a critical sense:

 it cartelizes the banking system, the essential conduit by which money

 is lent to the public and to the government itself. The banking system

 thereby becomes a primary funding agency to the state, and, in

 exchange for its services, the banking system is guaranteed against

 insolvency and business failure as it profits from inflation. If the

 goal of the state is the complete monopolization of money under an

 infinitely flexible paper-money system, there is no better path for

 the state than the creation of a central bank. This is the greatest

 achievement for the victory of power over liberty.

 

 The connection between war and inflation, then, dates long before the

 creation of the Federal Reserve. In fact, it dates to the founding

 itself. The fate of the Continental currency during and after the

 Revolutionary War, for example, was a very bad omen for our future,

 and the whole country paid a very serious price. It was this

 experience that later led to the gold clause in the US Constitution.

 Except for the Hamiltonians, that entire generation of political

 activists saw the unity of freedom and sound money, and regarded paper

 money as the fuel of tyranny.

 

 Consider Thomas Paine <http://mises.org/story/2942:

 

     Paper money is like dram-drinking, it relieves for a moment by

     deceitful sensation, but gradually diminishes the natural heat,

     and leaves the body worse than it found it. Were not this the

     case, and could money be made of paper at pleasure, every

     sovereign in Europe would be as rich as he pleased…. Paper money

     appears at first sight to be a great saving, or rather that it

     costs nothing; but it is the dearest money there is. The ease with

     which it is emitted by an assembly at first serves as a trap to

     catch people in at last. It operates as an anticipation of the

     next year's taxes.

 

 But the wisdom of this generation, attacked by Lincoln, was finally

 thrown out during the Progressive Era. It was believed that an age of

 scientific public policy needed a scientific money machinery that

 could be controlled by powerful elites. The dawn of the age of central

 banking was also the dawn of the age of central planning, for there

 can be no government control over the nation's commercial life without

 first controlling the money. And once the state has the money and the

 banking system, its ambitions can be realized.

 

 Before the creation of the Federal Reserve, the idea of American entry

 into the conflict that became World War I would have been

 inconceivable. In fact, it was a highly unpopular idea, and Woodrow

 Wilson himself campaigned on a platform that promised to keep us out

 of war. But with a money monopoly, all things seem possible. It was a

 mere four years after the Fed was invented under the guise of

 scientific policy planning that the real agenda became obvious. The

 Fed would fund the US entry into World War I.

 

 It was not only entry alone that was made possible. World War I was

 the first total war. It involved nearly the whole of the civilized

 world, and not only their governments but also the civilian

 populations, both as combatants and as targets. It has been described

 as the war that ended civilization in the 19th-century sense in which

 we understand that term. That is to say, it was the war that ended

 liberty as we knew it. What made it possible was the Federal Reserve.

 And not only the US central bank; it was also its European

 counterparts. This was a war funded under the guise of scientific

 monetary policy.

 

 Reflecting on the calamity of this war, Ludwig von Mises wrote

 <http://www.mises.org/store/Nation-State-and-Economy-P320.aspx in

 1919

 

     One can say without exaggeration that inflation is an

     indispensable means of militarism. Without it, the repercussions

     of war on welfare become obvious much more quickly and

     penetratingly; war weariness would set in much earlier.

 

 There is always a price to be paid for funding war through the central

 bank. The postwar situation in America was a classic case. There was

 inflation. There were massive dislocations. There was recession or

 what was then called depression, a direct result of capital

 dislocation that masked itself as an economic boom, but which was then

 followed by a bust. The depression hit in 1920, but it is not a famous

 event in United States economic history. Why is that? Because the

 Federal Reserve had not yet acquired the tools to manufacture an

 attempt to save the economy. Instead, neither the Fed nor Congress nor

 the president did much of anything about it a wholly praiseworthy

 response! As a result, the depression was brief and became a footnote

 to history. The same would have happened in 1930, had Hoover not

 attempted to use the government as the means of resuscitation.

 

 Sadly, the easy recovery of 19201922 tempted the central bank to get

 back into the business of inflation, with the eventual result of a

 stock market boom that led to bust, then depression, and finally the

 destruction of the gold standard itself. FDR found that even

 fascist-style economic planning and inflation could not restore

 prosperity, so he turned to the ancient method of looking for a war to

 enter. Here is where the history of the United States and the Fed

 intersects with the tragic role of the German central bank.

 

 The German government also funded its Great War through inflation. By

 war's end, money in circulation had risen fourfold. Prices were up

 140%. Yet, on international exchange, the German mark had not suffered

 as much as one might expect. The German government looked at this with

 encouragement and promptly attempted to manufacture a complete

 economic recovery through inflation. Incredibly, by 1923, the mark had

 fallen to one-trillionth of its 1914 gold value. The US dollar was

 then equal to 4.2 trillion marks. It was an example of currency

 destruction that remains legendary in the history of the world all

 made possible by a central bank that obliged the government and

 monetized its war debt.

 

 <http://www.mises.org/store/Nation-State-and-Economy-P320.aspx

 

 But did people blame the printing press? No. The popular explanation

 dealt directly with the Treaty of Versailles. It was the harsh peace

 imposed by the allies that had brought Germany to the brink of total

 destruction or so it was believed. Mises himself had written a full

 book <http://www.mises.org/store/Nation-State-and-Economy-P320.aspx

 that he hoped would explain that Germany owed its suffering to war and

 socialism, not Versailles as such. He urged the German people to look

 at the real cause and establish free markets, lest imperial

 dictatorship be the next stage in political development. But he was

 ignored.

 

 The result, we all know, was Hitler.

 

 Turning to Russia, the untold truth about the Bolshevik revolution is

 that Lenin's greatest propaganda tool involved the suffering of the

 Russian people during World War I. Men were drafted and killed at a

 horrific level. Lenin called this capitalist exploitation, based on

 his view that the war resulted from capitalist motives. In fact, it

 was a foreshadowing of the world that socialism would bring about, a

 world in which all people and all property are treated as means to

 statist ends. And what made the prolongation of the Russian role in

 World War I possible was an institution created in 1860 called the

 State Bank of the Russian Empire the Russian version of the Fed.

 

 The Russian war itself was funded through money creation, which also

 led to massive price increases and controls and shortages during the

 war. I'm not of the opinion, unlike the neocons, that the Russian

 monarchy was a particularly evil regime, but the temptation that the

 money machine provided the regime proved too inviting. It turned a

 relatively benign monarchy into a war machine. A country that had long

 been integrated into the worldwide division of labor and was under a

 gold standard became a killing machine. And as horrific and

 catastrophic as the war dead were for Russian morale, the inflation

 affected every last person and inspired massive unrest that led to the

 triumph of Communism.

 

 At this juncture in history, we can see what central banking had

 brought to us. It was not an end to the business cycle. It was not

 merely more liquidity for the banking system. It was not an end to

 bank runs and bank panics. It certainly wasn't scientific public

 policy. The world's major economies were being lorded over by money

 monopolies, and the front men had become some of the worst despots in

 the history of the world. Now they were preparing to fight each other

 with all the resources they had at their disposal. The resources they

 did /not/ have at their disposal they would pay for with their beloved

 machinery of central banking.

 

 In wartime, the printing presses ran overtime, but with a totalitarian

 level of rationing, price controls, and all-around socialization of

 resources in the whole of the Western world, the result of inflation

 was not merely rising prices. It was vast suffering and shortages in

 Britain, Russia, Germany, Italy, France, Austria-Hungary, the United

 States, and pretty much the entire planet.

 

 So we can see here the amazing irony of central banking at work. The

 institution that was promoted by economists working with bankers, in

 the name of bringing rationality and science to bear on monetary

 matters, had given birth to the most evil political trends in the

 history of the world: Communism, socialism, Fascism, Nazism, and the

 despotism of economic planning in the capitalist West. The story of

 central banking is one step removed from the story of atom bombs and

 death camps. There is a reason the state has been unrestrained in the

 last 100 years, and that reason is the precise one that many people

 think of as a purely technical issue that is too complicated for mere

 mortals.

 

 Fast-forward to the Iraq War, which has all the features of a conflict

 born of the power to print money. There was a time when the decision

 to go to war involved real debate in the House of Commons or the US

 House of Representatives. And what was this debate about? It was about

 resources and the power to tax. But once the executive state was

 unhinged from the need to rely on tax dollars and did not have to

 worry about finding willing buyers for its unbacked debt instruments,

 the political debate about war was silenced.

 

 In the entire run-up to war, George Bush just assumed as a matter of

 policy that it was his decision alone whether to invade Iraq. The

 objections by Ron Paul and some other members of Congress and vast

 numbers of the American population were reduced to little more than

 white noise in the background. Imagine if he had to raise the money

 for the war through taxes. It never would have happened. But he didn't

 have to. He knew the money would be there. So despite a $200 billion

 deficit, a $9 trillion debt, $5 trillion in outstanding debt

 instruments held by the public, a federal budget of $3 trillion, and

 falling tax receipts in 2001, Bush contemplated a war that has cost

 $525 billion dollars or $4,681 per household. Imagine if he had gone

 to the American people to request that. What would have happened? I

 think we know the answer to that question. And those are government

 figures; the actual cost of this war will be far higher perhaps

 $20,000 per household.

 

 Now, when left-liberals talk about these figures, they like to compare

 them with what the state might have done with these resources in terms

 of funding health care, public schools, Head Start centers, or food

 stamps. This is a mistake because it demonstrates that the Left isn't

 really providing an alternative to the Right. It merely has a

 different set of priorities in how it would use the resources raised

 by the inflation machine. It's true that public schools are less

 costly in terms of lives and property than war itself. But the

 inflation-funded welfare state also has a corrosive effect on society.

 The pipe dream that the inflation monster can be used to promote good

 instead of evil illustrates a certain naïveté about the nature of the

 state itself. If the state has the power and is asked to choose

 between doing good and waging war, what will it choose? Certainly in

 the American context, the choice has always been for war.

 

 It is equally naïve for the Right to talk about restraining the

 government while wishing for global war. So long as the state has

 unlimited access to the printing press, it can ignore the pleas of

 ideological groups concerning how the money will be spent. It is also

 very silly for the Right to believe that it can have its wars, its

 militarism, its nationalism and belligerence, without depending on the

 power of the Federal Reserve. This institution is the very mechanism

 by which the dreams of both the fanatical Right and the fanatical Left

 come true.

 

 The effect of the money machine goes well beyond funding undesirable

 government programs. The Fed creates financial bubbles that lead to

 economic dislocation. Think of the technology bubble of the late 1990s

 or the housing bubble. Or the boom that preceded the current bust.

 These are all a result of the monopolization of money.

 

 These days, the American consumer has been hit very hard with rising

 prices in oil, clothing, food, and much else. For the first time in

 decades, people are feeling this and feeling it hard. And just as in

 every other inflation in world history, people are looking for the

 culprit and finding all the wrong ones. They believe it is the oil

 companies who are gouging us, or that foreign oil dealers are

 restricting supply, or that gas station owners are abusing a crisis to

 profit at our expense.

 

 I wouldn't entirely rule out the possibility that price controls are

 around the corner. When Nixon imposed them in 1971, neither he nor his

 advisors believed that they would actually result in controlling

 inflation. Rather, the purpose was to redirect the target of public

 anger from the government and its bank over to retailers, who would

 become scapegoats. In this sense, price controls do work. They make

 people believe that the government is trying to lower prices while the

 private sector is attempting to raise them. This is the real political

 dynamic at work with price controls.

 

 The question is whether you will be taken in by these tactics. It is

 long past time for us to take note that the cause of the real trouble

 here is not the manufacturers, or even the war as such, but the agency

 that has been granted a legal right to counterfeit at will and lower

 the value of the currency while fueling every manner of statist

 scheme, whether welfare or warfare. We need to look at the Fed and

 say, /this/ is the enemy.

 

 Note that the Federal Reserve is not a political party. It is not a

 recognized interest group. It is not a famed lobby in Washington. It

 is not really even a sector of public opinion. It seems completely

 shielded from vigorous public debate. If we truly believe in liberty

 and decry the leviathan state, this situation cannot be tolerated.

 

 "So long as the state has unlimited access to the printing press, it

 can ignore the pleas of ideological groups concerning how the money

 will be spent."

 

 I say to the sincere Right, if you really want to limit the state, you

 will have to give up your dreams of remaking the world at the point of

 a gun. Wars and limited government are impossible. Moreover, you must

 stop ignoring the role of monetary policy. It is a technical subject,

 to be sure, but one that we must all look into and understand if we

 expect to restore something that resembles the American liberty of the

 founders.

 

 I say to the sincere Left, if you really want to stop war and stop the

 spying state, and put an end to the persecution of political

 dissidents and the Guantánamo camps for foreign peoples, and put a

 stop to the culture of nationalism and militarism, you must join us in

 turning attention to the role of monetary policy. The printing presses

 must be unplugged. It's true that this will also hit programs that are

 beloved by the Left, such as socialized health care and federalized

 education programs. But so long as you expect the state to fund your

 dreams, you cannot expect that the state will not also fund the dreams

 of people you hate.

 

 And let me say a few words to libertarians, who dream of a world with

 limited government under the rule of law, a world in which free

 enterprise reigns and where the state has no power to interfere in our

 lives so long as we behave peacefully. It is completely absurd to

 believe that this can be achieved without fundamental monetary reform.

 And yet, until the most recent Ron Paul campaign and aside from

 Murray Rothbard and the 26-year-long work of the Mises Institute I

 don't recall that libertarians themselves have cared much about this

 issue at all.

 

 <http://www.mises.org/store/Gold-Standard-Perspectives-in-the-Austrian

 -School-The--P61.aspx

 

 In 1983, the Mises Institute held a large academic conference on the

 gold standard, and we held it in Washington, D.C. (There were

 scholarly papers and Ron Paul debated a Fed governor. Ron won.) Even

 back then, I recall that D.C. libertarians ridiculed us for holding

 such a meeting to talk about the Fed and its replacement with sound

 money. They said that this would make the Mises Institute look

 ridiculous, that we would be tarred with the brush of gold bugs and

 crazies. We did it anyway. And all these years later, the book that

 came out of that conference

 <http://www.mises.org/store/Gold-Standard-Perspectives-in-the-Austrian

 -School-The--P61.aspx remains a main source for understanding the

 role of money in the advance of despotism or resistance to it, and a

 blueprint for the future.

 

 Of course the Austrian tradition fought paper money and central

 banking from the beginning. Menger was an advocate of the gold

 standard. Böhm-Bawerk actually established it as finance minister to

 the Habsburg monarchy. Mises's book on the topic from 1912 was the

 first to show the role of money in the business cycle, and he issued

 dire warnings about central banking. Hayek wrote powerfully against

 the abandonment of gold in the 1930s. Hazlitt warned of the inevitable

 breakdown of Bretton Woods and advocated a real gold standard instead.

 And Rothbard was a champion of sound money and the greatest enemy the

 Fed has ever had.

 

 But generally, I've long detected a tendency in libertarian circles to

 ignore this issue, in part for precisely the reasons cited above: it

 is not respectable.

 

 Well, I will tell you why this issue is not considered respectable: it

 is the most important priority of the state to keep its money machine

 hidden behind a curtain. Anyone who dares pull the curtain back is

 accused of every manner of intellectual crime. This is precisely the

 reason we must talk about it at every occasion. We must end the

 conspiracy of silence on this issue.

 

 I was intrigued at how Ron Paul, during his campaign, would constantly

 bring up the subject. Most politicians are out to play up to their

 audiences, so they say things that people want to hear. I promise you

 that early in the campaign, no one wanted to hear him talk about the

 Federal Reserve. But he did it anyway. He worked to educate his

 audiences about the need for monetary reform. And it worked. For the

 first time in my life, there is a large and very public movement in

 this country to take this topic seriously.

 

 Salerno on C-SPAN

 <http://www.c-spanarchives.org/library/index.php?main_page=product_vid

 eo_info&products_id=205361-2

 

 Monetary economist Joseph Salerno was called the other day by C-Span,

 which wanted to interview him on television on the need to restore

 gold as the basis of our currency. As I watched this excellent

 interview

 <http://www.c-spanarchives.org/library/index.php?main_page=product_vid

 eo_info&products_id=205361-2, I was struck by what a great triumph it

 truly is for liberty that this topic is again part of the national

 debate <http://www.mises.org/story/3006. In the 19th-century, this

 was a topic on everybody's mind. It can be again today, provided we do

 not eschew the truth in the formation of our message.

 

 It might be said that advocating privatization is politically

 unrealistic, and therefore a waste of time. What's more, we might say

 that by continuing to harp on the issue, we only marginalize

 ourselves, proving that we are on the fringe. I submit that there is

 no better way to ensure that an issue will always be off the table

 than to stop talking about it.

 

 Far from being an arcane and anachronistic issue, then, the gold

 standard and the issues it raises get right to the heart of the

 current debate concerning the future of war and the world economy. Why

 do the government and its partisans dislike the gold standard? It

 removes the discretionary power of the Fed by placing severe limits on

 the ability of the central bank to inflate the money supply. Without

 that discretionary power, the government has far fewer tools of

 central planning at its disposal. Government can regulate, which is a

 function of the police power. It can tax, which involves taking

 people's property. And it can spend, which means redistributing other

 people's property. But its activities in the financial area are

 radically curbed.

 

 Think of your local and state governments. They tax and spend. They

 manipulate and intervene. As with all governments from the beginning

 of time, they generally retard social progress and muck things up as

 much as possible. What they do not do, however, is wage massive global

 wars, run huge deficits, accumulate trillions in debt, reduce the

 value of money, bail out foreign governments, provide endless credit

 to failing enterprises, administer hugely expensive and destructive

 social insurance schemes, or bring about immense swings in business

 activity.

 

 State and local governments are awful and they must be relentlessly

 checked, but they are not anything like the threat of the federal

 government. Neither are they as arrogant and convinced of their own

 infallibility and indispensability. They lack the aura of

 invincibility that the central government enjoys.

 

 It is the central bank, and only the central bank, that works as the

 government's money machine, and this makes all the difference. Now, it

 is not impossible that a central bank can exist alongside a gold

 standard, a lender of last resort that avoids the temptation to

 destroy that which restrains it. In the same way, it is possible for

 someone with an insatiable appetite for wine to sit at a banquet table

 of delicious vintages and not take a sip. Let's just say that the

 existence of a central bank introduces an occasion of sin for the

 government. That is why under the best gold standard, there would be

 no central bank, gold coins would circulate as freely as their

 substitutes, and rules against fraud and theft would prohibit banks

 from pyramiding credit on top of demand deposits.

 

 <http://www.mises.org/store/Revolution-The-A-Manifesto-P481.aspx

 So long as we are constructing the perfect system, all coinage would

 be private. Banks would be treated as businesses: no special

 privileges, no promises of bailout, no subsidized insurance, and no

 connection to government at any level.

 

 This is the free-market system of monetary management, which means

 turning over the institution of money entirely to the market economy.

 As with any institution in a free society, it is not imposed from

 above and dictated by a group of experts, but is the de facto result

 that comes about in a society that consistently respects

 private-property rights, encourages enterprise, and promotes peace.

 

 It comes down to this. If you hate war, oppose the Fed. If you hate

 violations of your liberties, oppose the Fed. If you want to restrain

 despotism, restrain the Fed. If you want to secure freedom for

 yourself and your descendants, abolish the Fed.