Robert Ringer

The OWS-Black Friday Connection

By Robert Ringer - Monday, November 28, 2011

The shopping mantra for American consumaholics this year is, “We know the future is hopeless, but we’re not going to allow the bad economy to ruin our holiday season.”  If you doubt their determination to let the good times roll, just ask the crazed shoppers who were pepper-sprayed on Black Friday at a Los Angeles Walmart by a woman who wasn’t about to miss out on one of the most sought after necessities of life — the new Xbox.

Of course, those who were merely pepper-sprayed got off easy.  Being at a Target, Best Buy, Walmart, or Kohl’s store last weekend made Kandahar seem like a safe haven.  During the three-day Thanksgiving shopping marathon, some consumaholics were punched, elbowed, stabbed, and even shot.  You have to admire the brave men and women who put themselves in harm’s way to get their fair share of discounted playthings that they desperately needed to keep their gray matter anesthetized.

You could just picture many of them taking their electronic toys back to their Occupy Wall Street tents and falling into a peaceful slumber, thinking to themselves, “Mission accomplished.”  And today, you can bet they’re right back on the front lines fighting those evil guys on Wall Street — you know, the ones who have given Barack Obama more money than any candidate in history.

If none of this phases you, try imagining what these lost souls will be like when they’re on the hunt for the basic necessities of life — little things like food, water, and weapons.  But, hey … that could be two or three years away, so no sense getting all exercised about it right now.  Today, focusing on discounted Xboxes takes all the energy they can muster.

I do not mean to imply that all Black Friday shoppers are Occupy Wall Streeters or that all Occupy Wall Streeters are Black Friday shoppers.  But the two groups have at least three things in common:  They are very materialistic, they are angry about what they don’t have, and they have no qualms about resorting to mob violence.

When I use the word materialistic, I’m referring to wealth.  And to be clear here, wealth is not what someone earns.  Wealth is what someone owns.  Wealth is cars and buildings and computers and television sets and iPods.

But wealth has to be created.  It takes money, management, and labor to produce all of those cars, buildings, computers, television sets, and iPods.  The predicament that America now finds itself in is that there’s a lot of money and management around, but not enough labor.  At least not enough labor at a cost that allows companies to manufacture goods at prices consumers are willing to pay.

Of course, there’s plenty of labor in places like China, India, Pakistan, Ecuador, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Haiti, Thailand, and many other countries throughout the world.  So it’s no mystery why these countries now produce a great deal of wealth.

The reason the Western world is broke is because it doesn’t have a workforce that is willing to work at wages that are competitive with non-Western nations.  And the reason workers are unwilling to accept competitive wages is because they can afford to be choosy.  Unemployment benefits, food stamps, and other forms of welfare remove the motivation to work at any job that is available to them, at whatever wage is being offered, in order to feed and clothe their families.

Speaking from personal experience, the two threats that motivated me to work so hard early in my career were homelessness and starvation.  But these two factors no longer motivate people who are unemployed, because the government forces those with wealth to provide food, clothing, and shelter to those who don’t have them.

And with these factors removed from the survival equation, people can afford to camp out at Best Buy, Target, and Walmart for days on end and elbow, stab, shoot, and pepper-spray those who would stand in the way of their getting their fair share of stuff at the lowest possible prices.

There’s no way to prove it, but I’d be willing to bet that a disproportionate number of those who had nothing better to do than camp out in front of superstores for several days prior to Black Friday are classified as “poor” by the federal government.  But how in the world can poor people afford to go shopping for electronic toys?

Good question — and here are some facts about people whom the Census Bureau defines as “poor” that may help to answer it:

  • Forty-three percent own their own homes.
  • Eighty percent have air conditioning in their homes.
  • Almost 75 percent of poor households have a car, and 31 percent have one or more cars.
  • Ninety-seven percent have a color television set and 62 percent have cable or satellite TV reception.
  • Eighty-nine percent own microwave ovens.

And much, much more.

Clearly, being poor in America is a whole lot better than being middle class in most other countries.  In fact, so-called poor people in the U.S. live as well as those in the median American household of the early 1970s.  So when you get right down to it, poverty is relative.  But as the living standards of the poor rise, vote-hungry politicians simply make those rising standards the new baseline for poverty.

The problem is that the Western world — from Greece to California, from Italy to New York — is running out of wealth.  That being the case, the masses are fully prepared to vote for politicians who will assure them that their benefits will not be cut — provided they aren’t drunk, stoned, dead, or in jail come next November 6.

Now hear this:  There is no constituency for cutting entitlements!

What does this mean?  It means a worthless U.S. currency, which in turn means that, ultimately, the masses will not have the resources to take part in those midnight pepper-spray riots on Black Friday.  And that’s when the Occupy Wall Street crowds will swell, and the anger and violence will ramp up to French Revolutionary proportions.  Mob violence is already programmed into our future.

But, as I said, that probably won’t happen for at least several more years, so, in the meantime, eat, drink, and be merry and enjoy the holiday season.  And, for goodness sakes, be sure to get one of those new Xboxes.  When all hell breaks loose, you might just be able to get some OWS loon to take it in exchange for a Glock 9 — or at least a hunting knife.

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Copyright © 2012 Robert Ringer
ROBERT RINGER is a New York Times #1 bestselling author and host of the highly acclaimed Liberty Education Interview Series, which features interviews with top political, economic, and social leaders. He has appeared on Fox News, Fox Business, The Tonight Show, Today, The Dennis Miller Show, Good Morning America, The Lars Larson Show, ABC Nightline, and The Charlie Rose Show, and has been the subject of feature articles in such major publications as Time, People, The Wall Street Journal, Fortune, Barron's, and The New York Times.

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36 Responses to “The OWS-Black Friday Connection”

  1. Reality Seeker says:

    “The reason the Western world is broke is because it doesn’t have a workforce that is willing to work at wages that are competitive with non-Western nations.”

    Does this mean that I have to work 16 hrs a day for 10 cents per hour in order to compete with a Cambodian serf?

    No, lack of serfs are not among the reasons why the West is “broke.” The primary reason the West is “broke” is simply because the measure of free market capitalism that America once had, has been destroyed and replaced with total market interventionism based on a dishonest medium of exchange i.e. fiat money. The other major factors why most PRODUCTIVE families in amerika have to have two or even three wage earners include an unrestrained military budget, prolific government growth, and the replacement of NATURAL, organic charity with an interventionist welfare/warfare state.

    If you understand free markets as Ludwig von Mises did, then you’d understand that free market capitalism allows markets (i.e. consumers) to decide who are the winners, losers and the recipients of charity. Consequently, when buyers/savers (not voters, politicians, and bankers who print phony money) decide what the market does, then, and only then, will savings, investment capital, profits, wages and prices and *private charity* all NATURALLY order themselves with a far greater efficiency than they otherwise would do under any form of central planning.

    Market interventionism always ends up “counter to purpose,” just as Mises warned.

    • reunion says:

      yes, we have no bananas…lol. but, no serfs?

      ok, but the population at large has been surf ‘n turfed, thoroughly domesticated, en-CAFO’d. it’s been a relentless “growth experience”.

      prominent rings in the dendrochronology of this carnivorous tree include the coup at philly, in ‘87 (aka the constitutional convention); the “civil war”, in ’61-’65; hamilton’s wet dream, finally, the fed, in ’13; fdr outlawing gold for the moos – but inlawing it for his inbred, inlaw drovers & herdsmen, in ’33; Nixon shuttering the last porthole in the gold window, in ’71 (which not coincidentally is when wages went stagnant, and have remained so since); and the 9/11 false flag and its false positive dx/rx, the “patriot” act.

      mean reversion is real. and comparative advantage is liquid, finding its own, albeit constantly shifting, level. but the short, shorter, shortest time preferences on display in the noxious tree’s growth cycles have seen the dial settings move from “reversion”, to “dizzy”, to “puking”, and the once generative amniotic-like fluid has been diverted into the tank used to depict the andrea gail’s deep six demise. 40 days & 40 nights was a pleasant shower, compared to this……

      • Reality Seeker says:

        “comparative advantage is liquid, finding its own, albeit constantly shifting, level.”

        You describe a free market in its purist and most desirable form. “Finding its[his] own” is what a free market and a free man are all about. This is the gold standard; however, when competing markets and competing men are not finding their own, because of government intervention, then we have a fools-gold standard. And if that’s the starting point, then comparative advantage must be employed as a means for a country to retain its manufacturing base. Comparative advantage must be a voluntary win-win/value-for-value trade or it ceases to be comparative advantage—- just as American exceptionalism ceased to be exceptional when amerika forcefully exported its “exceptionalism” by means of bombs, bullets and fiat dollars.

        I must say that your ideals are absolute and highly desirable; whereas, mine, at best, merely sunset into shadows until a new dawn of enlightenment occurs for mankind—if it occurs at all before nations rip each other apart.

        You define a libertarian utopia whereupon all goals have been achieved. Me, I’m still left with one foot in the collectivist swamp pointing out half-steps in the right direction, i.e. comparative advantage trade which is a step in the direction of free trade based on a gold-currency standard along with other competing currencies which, in turn, are based on free-private choice.

        • reunion says:

          lucky you – or is that skill? how is it you’ve only one foot in the swamp? if it weren’t for my snorkel, I’d be swamp, inside AND out. lol

          in the swamp, cartel is comparative advantage’s evil doppelganger. gov is the swamp. if you want real c/a, the swamp will have to be drained……

          • Reality Seeker says:

            There you go again with your wonderful idealism: e.g. “Draining the swamp,” yes, and when that task is completed, then it is utopia found. Until then, it’s either an adulterated form of comparative advantage or else a rapidly dwindling U.S.a. manufacturing base. Currently, 15 U.S. factories close each day. In 2010 it was 25 per day. In the end, really, it’s no skin off of my nose if the U.S. of a. loses it’s manufacturing base. Personally, I’m fluid and able to flow where I want to, but to the richest serfs in the world (i.e. amerikans) the loss of well paying jobs is going to be a big issue.

            Can you hear the future Revolution?

            Good night reunion—– love your work.

          • reunion says:

            no, not idealism, just diagnosis and simple, but impossible, prescription.

            “adulterated”…by whom, would you suppose? mixed economies are ever metastasizing in a particular direction. you know the direction. there is no 3rd way. the only mechanism that gets you from here to there, is impersonal – the free market, not “markets” in the hands of adulterers (wielding the gov weapon). and what I describe is not utopia, which does not exist (even mythological eden, with serpent & tree of not ignorant, was not utopia), just the next best thing (which has existed).

            continue to maneuver with the ring (tolkien) in the calculus, and you will continue to get what’s been got.

            yes, I can hear it. the latest echo, from down the centuries. but for all the punctuated equilibriums, over and over and over again, there is no evolution. it’s a dead end. it’s the way of the dodo bird. think they’ll quit before they’re fossils? fusileers for fossilization. catchy. One more would make 4f, and a shot at dodo no mo’. ha.

            thanks. i love my work, too. :-)

    • reunion says:

      counterfeiting, albeit “legal”. gresham’s law. bad money drives out good money, all by itself. but where’s the satisfaction, sense of accomplishment, ultra short time preference gratification, in that? so, it often happens, the official counterfeiters, recall, clip, the coins of the realm (shave off some of the gold in each coin before sending them back out into circulation – at same face value, or even higher); or, they recall, and just keep, all the gold (as fdr did).

      monopoly money (the boardgame…yes, get rich buying r/e, pile up those properties and stacks of colorful, crisp, “currency”). scrip, which is how workers {indentured deeper than sharecroppers} in company towns were paid, and what they used – along with company credit – to make purchases at the company store. usaco is a company town; inhabitants lives are movement on a game board.

      that’s the why & wherefore of the “brokeness”.

      end the fed. and end what underlies all feds: gov.

      but how to end what underlies gov? baaaaa…mooooo. is there a doctor dolittle in the house? paging dr. dolittle…

      dr.(doctor) paul speaks only english (with a strong austrian accent). but the cadres of dr’s.(drovers) moreaus and mengeles are fluent in ovis aries & bovinae. also please to remind that austrian accents can be camouflage: arnold schwarzenegger.

      • reunion says:

        btw…just saw that both spielberg & redford have movies on lincoln coming out. the hollywood machinery will present as history, buttress, add cement to the mythology. but it will also make for a target rich environment – one or both of the things will probably even win political/sentimental oscars (like sandra bullock did, for “the blind side”).

        if you’re not already familiar with the material, starting practice now will assure you your share of kewpie dolls when the shooting gallery opens. your bullet holes can let the light in, even as they let the gas out….

  2. topeka says:

    Just sayin…

    Wealth and income are not the same. After 36 years, e.g., my income has increased 20fold, but my lifestyle has not moved one tittle. I still work 6-7 days a week without a vacation to pay rising costs (especially taxes/SS/etc.) Real inflation, counting taxes, runs far higher than any “CPI” focusing on toys. Many who had wealth are far better off today than in 1975, but for those who had zilch, many are still at zilch.

    The principal reason being few can create wealth through income because the taxes, regulations, debts, barriers of entry, etc. narrow the way. Making an argument is even harder when one person must work years and spend (“invest”) thousands of dollars to receive a “permission” to interview for work which another person merely has to show up and vote “present” to receive. This feature poisons the well.

    I have often lived in welfare neighborhoods, and there is no doubt the effect on those who actually work is demoralizing and degrading. Those who work drive older, beaten vehicles, live in smaller abodes at higher rents, while those who do not work live in subsidized housing and drive success statements.

    The impact affects accommodations, vehicles, toys, leisure time, education, and even who sleeps with whom.

    The welfare state effectively makes the virtue of work a mark of a LOSER.

    Liberals see these effects, and demand more government. The Right usually ignores or neglects the impact, if they are aware of it.

  3. The idea of a free market is great @Reality Seeker however we have not had a free market in 100 years. The wage is not the issue, look at the real wages the German workers earn and look at what they produce ! World’s number one auto maker ! This may not make a lot of sense but we are in the Fourth Reich. From a plan laid out in 1943, because they are hard people in face of their country. We have a dimwitted president. A scene right out of the movie ‘Being There’ ! The end game is up to the fight, we needed the 9-9-9 plan it would work, I will post the video of the graphs in the next weekend to prove how strong growth is.

    Now the universe is huge, with a dark side and a bright side, the government has lied for years about most things. However in that dark side somewhere in time sits Hitler, Bormann and the Devil having a cup of coffee and a nice strudel smiling and enjoying the day and Der Fuehrer smiles at Bormann and says ‘Well you did it” The devil says ‘you both did, but it was my injecting Obama that made the difference”. And they lean back to watch Germany take over the EU then England. Two wars could not do it but they got there. Somewhere in the light side Obama gets out of his Golf cart and the caddy turns to walk away looks back as the so called president looks up to hear the caddy say “who is John Galt”? and it starts again !

    • Reality Seeker says:

      “We have not had a free market in 100 years.”

      Yes, I would agree that “we” have not had nor have “we” ever had a “free market”—- only a free(er) or less free market.

      I would also agree that “we” do need a plan, a real plan, not a 9 9 9 tax scheme—i.e. a 9 plan ( as in only one 9) that sunsets into a totally voluntary tax system is what is needed. And amerika is capable of such real, meaningful change, contrary to what the collecto-interventionists assert.

    • reunion says:

      on 11/23 germany threw a bond auction, and bidders decided to stay home. bundesbank stepped in to make up for the missing bidders, buying 39% of the offering. sound familiar?

      false premises cannot be escaped, or set aside indefinitely. not ever. not even by germans. your take on germany is incorrect.

  4. topeka says:

    As for competition with foreign markets this is an effect of fiat currency transferring wealth from everyone to the financial sector (and particularly those with power to siphon off the lucre).

    No starving Indian teenager working for a dime an hour can do what any American who Works can do. But, a Chinese engineer who has spent the last 20 years engineering can out perform any American engineer who has spent the last 20 years moving from one sub-professional contract job to the next.

    Meanwhile, comparing dollars to yuan, bhat, or rupees is literally comparing apples to oranges.

    I will always recall the Indonesian engineer we trained:

    Our salaries: $80-120k
    His salary: $25k

    Our lifestyle: 3-2-2, a car, a vacation, two kids (if our spouse can pay for it)
    His lifestyle: A 4-3-3 spread with servants quarters and a pool, maid, chef, chauffeur, vacation, six kids, all the toys, etc.

    Another typical story is the Chinese civil engineer making $15k USD. His terrible problem: His high rise condo ran out of parking, so he had to walk across the street to his (then new) 2001 BMW. Oh the pain.

    When making comparisons between nations using X and Y fiat currency, one should compare apples to apples. Ideally one would also add education costs, commercial financing, “Jim Crow” laws (in their country), and other obstacles in addition to “toys.”

    My marginal taxes alone could support an Indian engineer in the lifestyle of a rock star. If I had passive income…

    • Reality Seeker says:

      I enjoyed reading your experiences, Topeka. I, too, have travelled, worked, studied, lived and been a charitable resident inside of Asia.

      The logical question is how does a country that supposedly espouses free market capitalism then trade with an Asian country that tightly controls both the means of production and the division of labor from the top down? How does a democratic republic which is based on civil liberties compete with a country which is absent any social welfare or safety nets, any civil liberties whatsoever and, to top it all off, a country that steals intellectual property from other countries and subsidizes its exports by labor and wealth redistribution?

      A country containing a slave-labor workforce, subsidized industry with no environmental controls coupled with a highly motivated population that is forced to produce or starve is an exceptional adversary, is it not? The kind of adversary that builds Great Walls and other such natural wonders.

      The Western powers have decided to control and receive tribute from China and others by means of currency, military and propagand(ic) hegemony, rather than head to head free market capitalism and COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE TRADE. Unfortunately for the West, the concept of comparative advantage trade has been shelved by the kleptocratic centralized-governments which rule over the ignorant masses.

      The reality is that .01% out of the 99.9% are intervening with the goal of transferring both wealth and power to themselves.

  5. Gene Ingle says:

    If you think anarchy is years away, you might wish to obtain a ticket to the Republican national convention in Tampa. The cops (and others) are gearing up for another Chicago 1968, Don’t believe me? Read the St. Pete Times stories on the security preparations for the convention. I’m not sure that whatever happens there will even faze most brain-dead conservatives.

    • reunion says:

      chicago ’68 wasn’t anarchy. so if tampa reprises, it won’t exemplify anarchy, either. or maybe you’re suggesting tampa could lead to anarchy? chicago didn’t.

      the an prefix means “lack of a leader”, but more accurately, it means lack of followers. no wonder would be “leaders” emphasize the self serving caboose meaning (along with falsehoods like “chaos” and “lawlessness”).

      likewise, the mon and olig prefixes refer to who the followers follow. even theoretical, mythical, democracy is an oligma. (play on words…glioma is a rarely curable brain cancer; democracy’s devotees are typically as intractable, and the condition is similarly fatal…).

      anarchy is decentralization of leadership to where it naturally, correctly, belongs – individuals, leading themselves. and that state of affairs has occurred, is not theoretical, or mythical utopianism. but it is as close as human life can get to utopia. some historical examples are somalia (believe it, or not), rhode island, pennsylvania.

      btw, conservatives, liberals too, are much more like servo mechanisms, so “brain dead” qualifies as an optimistic anthropomorphism… :-)

      and the oligma enigma is simply explained: “liberty means responsibility. that is why most men dread it.” ~ g.b.shaw

  6. Absolutely brilliant! Just look and examine what China is doing to rich resource nations like South Africa, and you’ll see where were headed, from the sluice end of a toilet bowl, I mean. 67% of their poor are on the China-India entitlements never-guaranteed and never backed with phoney (like our own) treasuries, as useless as the paper they’re printed on, one day very soon. They’re running the black ANC of South Africa, and killing off the opposition: Well isn’t that Obama’s dream world in 2013?

  7. Robert J. Chiavetta says:

    As usual,Robert Ringer is right on about everything he says. Things are way too far gone in this country, with the huge welfare-entitlement-nanny state to be fixed by just another election. Oh, that may result in some positive changes around the edges, but the real changes needed can only come about by coup and/or revolution, that will trash this whole sick, dysfunctional government system we have and replace it with a strict, conservative, constructionist, and fiercely nationalistic regime, with broad, sweeping powers to make the broad, sweeping changes that will pull us back from the abyss of socialism. Total war must be waged to completely cleanse this country of every last vestige of liberalism, democratic socialism, secular-progressive humanism, and environmental wacho-ism.
    A new constitution can then be put in place that is firmly and deeply rooted in traditional values and morals, conservative-libertarian economic principles, and a fierce new spirit of patriotism and nationalism.
    Strict litmus screening tests must be implemented to insure that the likes of Obama, Biden, Pelosi, Reid, ad nauseum, are never again permitted to even run for public office.
    These are all very extreme steps, but things have become very extreme, and extreme times call for extreme measures!
    Robert J. Chiavetta,

  8. DoctorBob says:

    >>>>”Does this mean that I have to work 16 hrs a day for 10 cents per hour in order to compete with a Cambodian serf?”<<<

    Only if you have no more education than a Cambodian serf. Hopefully you went to school and learned a useful trade? NOOOO, Tamborine Playing is NOT a useful skill. NOOOOO, Finger Painting is NOT a useful skill. NOOOOO, playing a guitar is not a useful skill. NOOOOO, Social Justice is a worthless field. But if you worked your buns off in school, learned math, chemistry, physics, sciences, tngineering, biology, a medical skill or perhaps computers, THEN you'll make a good salary. You're not entitled to $60-$100 per hour for sticking a bolt in a car door handle; those days are OVER! But if you can repair a transmission or restart someone's heart, or research how to get greater yields from grains, then you'll certainly find jobs all over the place that pay $20-$25 per hour. And that's ALL they're worth.

    Now, if you wasted your time in school and took the easy courses, then you're not much good to anyone, and you'd better get used to that fact!

  9. reunion says:

    that x-boxer, having sustained too many blows to the head, from kindergarten through, possibly, university, may have been merely emulating the cordons of fascisti drone muscle that went forth and did likewise to the ows drone mushle.

    materialistic… 1939. the holy day fell on 11/30. the national retail dry goods association didn’t care for that. they petitioned fdr to move “thanksgiving” to the previous thursday (11/23), to ‘facilitate’ an additional week of xmas xboxing. and fdr did just that. i admire the kokomo shopkeeper’s wit, he who hung a sign in his window that read, “do your shopping now. who knows, tomorrow may be christmas.” for the rest of the story (remember paul harvey’s sign off?) see “the grinch who moved thanksgiving” over at lewrockwell dot com.

    if materialism was not virgin birthed, neither was the holy day, which sprang athena-like (and I mean the uncoiling spring, not athena’s attributes, well, except for warfare…), from that amerikan zeus, and republican nee whig, lincoln. talk about deus ex machina (which my spell checker amusingly changed to dues ex machine, ha!). turkey day opus dei is one more lincoln ploy, among several. cue paul harvey…details in dilorenzo’s essay (he’s the go-to, one of them, on lincoln, and the so-called civil war…), “the most cynical & hypocritical speech ever delivered”, also at lewrockwell.

    the problems are not due to undersubscribed leadership…the problems are due to massively oversubscribed followership….

  10. Robert, the behavior behind the blood lust and flat intellects pummeling each other over electronic gadgets is nothing new.

    Juvenal’s 2000 year-old quote about pannem i circences and the more recent of H.L. Menken’s, “the masses are as$es” describes a little changing aspect of human nature, it’s just in a more virulent form of hyper-consumerism and plain for all to see thanks to the ubiquitous recording and broadcasting devices carried in our pockets.

    But there’s little linkage between the Black Friday throngs and the current vanguard of the Occupy protesters.

    The UC Davis students were a paradigm of Gandhiesque conscience and restraint in the face of an ill trained and bullying paramilitary force.

    Ditto for multi-tour Iraqi war vets Scott Olsen and recently Kayvan Sabehgi who got a busted spleen as a reward for his tremendous self-restraint while exercising his 1st Amendment right.

    Besides these obvious examples there are many, many thinking middle class and even upper class Americans who recognize the kernel for the OWS movement — the rampant criminal and fraudulent behavior of the most powerful financial institutions… which continues.

    Gov. Corzine criticized the dangerous/reckless leverage of Lehman in 2008 and went on to top them in his shop, MF Global, by betting 40 to 1 on EU Sovereign debt. Money still missing.

    Bank of America (who absorbed Countrywide & Merrill) uses the FDIC as a backstop for its derivatives wagers.

    Who funded them? We the people.

  11. I dont’t buy into the OWS crew also being part of Cyber Monday or Black Friday.I also dont buy the factor of OWS personalities pepper spraying fellow shoppers and acting like wild west gun slingers robbing shoppers in parking lots.I DO believe that these scenarios are symptomatic of the tension across America due to the pathetic social disorder prevailing.Crazy tense people exercise crazy behaviors.Because of the Internet the issues get amplified and magnified. There has always been theft and robberies in shopping malls since these venues were conceived.It is called human nature.Theft,robberies,and people getting shot happen as easily on Easter weekend shopping scenarios as they evolved now.Youre afraid of getting shot at a shopping mall? Shop online.Use Amazon or EBay.Youre afraid of getting into a barroom brawl like confrontation to grab XBoxes? Same deal.Am I a realist? Absolutely. Will mob violence escalate? Once gas hits $4.75 a gallon,a McDonalds meal costs $9.95,and other commodities double in price I can fully see things unglue.Call it a knee jerk response to leadership that has simply not delivered on promises expressed.The same “calculus of the equation” took place when Jimmy Carter was US President.November 1980 was also quite the landslide for Presidential Candidate Ronald Reagan.

    • Curmudgeon says:

      I sure hope so. Unfortunately, I see no latter-day Reagan character emerging in 2012 to (1) lead the Republican Party in a less “mee-too” statist direction, (2) defeat the Demunists and crush the Commiecrats. I am more than happy to be proven wrong.

  12. If women were willing to work in the workforce making romantic relationships their career the problem will be solved. So we come to the issue that intimidates Robert Ringer, man hatered in America.

    • reunion says:

      i don’t hate red; it’s just not my season.

      don jaun isn’t daddy devlin’s career, either, is it? lol….

      • reunion says:

        too bad there’s not an edit button/feature here. but transposition does make me think of an inversion: nod nauj
        :-)

        btw, asked before, anybody know why “respond to writer” is here again gone again?

  13. James Dohm says:

    Believe it or not, many of us who read and subscribe almost religeously to Mr. Ringer’s column and philosophy are neither as smart or well-read as many responders to Robert’s column. I personally am an undiagnosed sufferer of dyslexia until about 5 years ago when I turned 57. I am as a result a very slow reader and simply don’t have the time to discover the meaning of many references made within, I assume, your astute reply’s. Would it be asking too much that you worry less about your perceived intellect among your enlightened brethren and more about being understood by those of us less learned? Or are us low-class dumbies not worthy of such efforts. I personally find Mr. Ringer to be a major intellect, yet he manages to be both succinct and understandible.

    • Reality Seeker says:

      Mr. Dohm,

      As I’ve stated previously and on numerous occasions: The genius of RJR is his gifted and finely honed ability to take complex subjects, break them down and educate the hoi polloi.

      Have you read RJR’s magnum opus, “Restoring The American Dream?” If not, then you have missed out on Libertarianism 101. Order it today online. It would also make a great Xmas gift. And, remember, don’t sell yourself short by claiming that “you’re not so smart.” You just need to take time to think things out, that’s all.

      By the way, I would like to thank all those who participate by offering their thoughtful and educated commentary, argument and opinions. What ever you do, please don’t dumb down your remarks.

      • James Dohm says:

        Downloaded the free on-line chapter, was #48 in line at my local library for the three copies in the system. Other than that, I’ve copied his entire site and read it all. That’s why I keep coming back. Question for you. Why do you suppose so many of my acquaintences call themselves “liberal democrats”, vote democrat, yet agree so wholeheartedly with so much RJR’s written when I expose them to it?

        And to reunion, you’re right, I do tend to think in pictures, and it takes a long time and considerable effort to translate them into words.

    • reunion says:

      james…if i worried about that, i’d be writing for the wrong reasons. my writing needs to satisfy me first, and whoever else, if anybody, after that, to put it as succinctly as possible. am always happy to clarify anything I’ve written, tho. just ask, we’ll get a conversation going.

      my kid brother was dyslexic. never diagnosed officially. but when I read about it, years later, and remembered trying to help him read, write, and how he would draw perfectly mirror-reversed letters on the page, that’s when I knew – it was how he saw things. he was no dummy, & i doubt you are, either. he could do anything mechanical; could drive, or ride, anything, like a savant. i think he thought in pictures, not words.

      the archetype “renaissance man”, leonardo da vinci, may have been dyslexic. and there have been many famous others. so, if that’s a chip, it’s not one I’ll be knocking off.

  14. AixSponsa says:

    I couldn’t help but notice this comment near the end of the article:

    “That being the case, the masses are fully prepared to vote for politicians who will assure them that their benefits will not be cut — provided they aren’t drunk, stoned, dead, or in jail come next November 6.”

    Mr. Ringer, were you referring to the people or the politicians in that condition next Nov.6? Seriously.

  15. frank says:

    dear right again robert:

    the short hand for all this is a trend of major ….inflation ..which then means ‘social unrest’…..and eventually war….at some point the world is going to demand gold or hard currency instead of our worthless usa fiat paper..that is when the music stops…and the choices for the us politicians will be grim…desperate….. in being forced to take what they need in the world to keep the us socialist police state engine running…

    from the democrats we get socialism..from the gop after 9/11 a police state..thanks alot washington dc..!..

    “Now hear this: There is no constituency for cutting entitlements!

    What does this mean? It means a worthless U.S. currency, which in turn means that, ultimately, the masses will not have the resources to take part in those midnight pepper-spray riots on Black Friday. And that’s when the Occupy Wall Street crowds will swell, and the anger and violence will ramp up to French Revolutionary proportions”….

  16. Scott says:

    A wealthy man once told me; “don’t tell me how much you earn, show me how much you save.”

    Even the so-called wealthy are found filing bankrupcty now and then. What you manage to keep and leverage is the true measure of financial wealth. One of the reasons that entitlements are such, is because folks have not learned, or have forgotten how to ” save for a rainy day!” So, they have this great sense of “entitlement” which only sets them up for dissapointment.

    The two must-reads on this subject are: “The Richest Man in Babylon” by George Samuel Clason and “The Way to Wealth” by Benjamin Franklin.

  17. Poor America, indeed. Poor in gratitude! One thing I know for sure; in fact, I have been, and always will be, right about this. There WILL be Christmas! People fight over bargains on Black Friday–hey, how about gratitude that there is something (probably whimsical and pointless, yet enticing)to grab in the first place! Only in America…Thank you for your blog–I’M grateful!

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