The horizon is not so far as we can see, but as far as we can imagine

It’s Not Your Money

You also didn’t earn most of it.

It seems like every time I discuss taxation, some libertarian will waltz in and say: “It’s my money, and I don’t see why the government should be able to take it.”

So let’s run through why, no, it isn’t your money. We’ll start with two numbers. In 2005, the income per capita for the US was $43,740. The income per capita for Bangladesh was $470.

Now, I want you to ask yourself the following question: Are Bangladeshis genetically inferior to Americans? Since not too many of my readers think white sheets look great at a lynching, I’ll assume everyone answered no.

Right then, being American is worth $43,270 more than being Bangladeshi, and it’s not due to Americans being superior human beings. If it isn’t because Americans are superior, then what is it?

The answer is that if it isn’t individual, it must be social. On the individual — but still social — level, Americans are, in fact, smarter than Bangladeshis because, as children, they are far less likely to suffer from malnutrition. However not suffering from malnutrition when you’re a baby, toddler, or young child has nothing to do with you, and everything to do with the society you live in and your family — two things over which you have zero influence (perhaps you chose your mother, I didn’t!).

Bangladeshis won’t, on average, get as good an education. They won’t get as much education either, since every child is needed to help earn a living as soon as possible. For most Bangladeshis, there’s no room for the extended childhood and adolescence to which westerners have grown accustomed, which often stretches into the late twenties or even early thirties, amongst those seeking PhDs or becoming doctors or lawyers.

When a Bangladeshi grows up, the jobs available aren’t as good. If he or she starts a business, it will earn much less money than the equivalent American business. If he or she speculates in land and is very successful, the speculation will generate much less wealth than it would in the US.

I could go on and on. I trust the point is obvious: The vast majority of money that an American earns is due to being born an American. Certainly the qualities that make the US a good place to live and a good place to make money are things that were created by Americans, but mostly they were created by Americans long dead or they are created by all Americans working together and are not located in the individual.

The same is true of the really rich. Forbes keeps track of the world’s billionaires and almost half of them are in the US. This is because US society, and the US government in particular, is set up to create billionaires. Your odds of being a billionaire take a massive jump if you’re born in the US. Your odds of being a billionaire if you’re born in Bangladesh? Essentially zero. Now, one could point out that billionaires are still so rare that the odds are always essentially zero; how many billionaires are in your circle of friends? Nonetheless, in 2005, the US had 371. Coming in second, Germany had 55.

Bangladesh, you won’t be surprised to hear, had zero.

If you’re a billionaire in the US, you’re a billionaire in large part because you live in the US.

So, if you’re American, a large chunk of the reason you make a lot of money (relative to the rest of the world) is that you are American. The main cause of your relative wealth is not that you work hard or that you’re innately smarter than members of other nations (though you may be because you weren’t starved as a child). It’s because you were afforded opportunities that most people never had and those opportunities existed due to the pure accident of your birth or because you or your family chose to come to the US. The same is true of most first world nations.

Immigrants understand this very well. There’s a reason why Mexicans, for example, are willing to risk death to cross the border. Their average income is $7,310, compared to the US average income of $43,740. They won’t make up all the difference just by crossing the border, but they’ll make up enough that it’s more than worth it. They haven’t personally changed, they don’t suddenly work harder now that they’re across the border. They don’t suddenly become smarter or stronger. They just change where they live and suddenly the opportunities open to them are so much better, their income goes up.

So let’s bring this back to our typical libertarian with his whine that he earned his money and the government shouldn’t be allowed to take it away. He didn’t earn most of it. Most of it is because, in global terms, he was born on third and thinks he hit a triple. This doesn’t mean he hasn’t had to work for it, but it does mean that most of the value of his work has nothing to do with him (and Ayn Rand aside, it’s almost always a him).

Now, in a democratic society, a government is the vehicle through which the population, as a whole, chooses to organize collective action. Government, imperfect as it is, is the closest approximation to the “will of society” that we’ve got.

Because the majority of the money any American earns is a function of being American, and not the result of their own individual virtues, the government has the moral right to tax. And because those who are rich get more from being American than those who are poor, it also has the moral right to take more money from them.

More importantly than the moral right, government has the pragmatic duty to do so. The roads and bridges that government builds and maintains, the schools that it funds, the police and courts that keep the peace, the investment in R&D that produced the internet, the sewage systems that make real estate speculation possible, and on and on, are a huge chunk of what makes being American worth so much more than being a Bangladeshi. Failure to reinvest in both human and inanimate infrastructure is like killing the golden goose, and the US, for decades now, has not been properly maintaining its infrastructure, let alone building it up.

And money itself is something that government provides for its people. It’s not your money, it’s the US’s money and it’s a damn good thing too. If you don’t believe me, try issuing your own money and see how many people accept it. Some will, because when an individual issues money, it’s an IOU (which is essentially what money is). I’ve written a few in my life. In every case, the person I gave it to was less happy to receive it than he would have been to get some nice crisp dollars. And I rested my IOUs on dollars, that is, I promised to repay in my country’s currency. Barring the use of accepted currencies, you’d have to issue an IOU saying: “I will repay you with a bundle of rice.” Or gold or a service. This raises the question of enforcement (one thing even libertarians admit the government should do): What if I suddenly refuse to meet the conditions of the IOU? Even an IOU is based on the sanction of the government. If it isn’t, it’s worth only as much as the good will of the person issuing it or the strong arm of the person holding it.

So, no, it isn’t your money, and it’s a good thing it isn’t. And while you may have worked your butt off for it, you also didn’t earn most of it. The value you impute to yourself (“I’m worth my $80K salary”) is mostly a function of where you live, where you were born, and of who your parents are.

Originally published Feb 9, 2008.  Republished 2010, April 15, 2015 and Sept 7, 2021.

Let’s kick this to the top another time for a new generation of readers. This one of foundational and IMPORTANT.


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67 Comments

  1. dougR

    I LOVE THIS POST.

    I loved it when you first put it up, and have a copy in my archives someplace. Thanks for reposting it. Somehow I think it ought to be in civics textbooks nationwide. (Oops, what’s “civics”?! some kind of arcane subject like “alchemy,” I think)

    I’d also like to recommend a piece that echoes your post in a slightly different way: Wallace Shawn’s extended theatrical monologue, “The Fever,” in which a person of some privilege (like Mr. Shawn, like many of us) comes to grips with the crushing poverty most of the world lives in.

    Thank you for this piece, and for everything else you’ve written.

  2. S Brennan

    Dear Ayn Rand & her band of juvenile followers…did somebody say Greenspan:

    “In healthy people, the more you activate a portion of your frontal lobes, the more accurate your view of yourself is…And the more you view yourself as desirable or better than your peers, the less you use those lobes.”

    http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/01/100109232919.htm

    Long story short, libertarian types, with their inflated sense of self worth, arrive at that conclusion because they don’t use their cognitive abilities, they rely on their reptilian brain functions.

  3. Oaktown Girl

    Like Doug R, I had your original posting of this saved, but lost in when my computer crashed in August last year, so I’m very glad you’ve re-posted it.

    And Doug – I’ll be sure to look up that Wallace Shawn bit you mentioned. It’s ironic that despite My Dinner with Andre, I know him best for his excellent acting work playing the leader of the ultra-materialistic/patriarchy- driven* planet Ferenginar on Star Trek Deep Space Nine.

    S Brennan – very interesting (but sadly, unsurprising stuff) about the brain lobe study. Will check that out too.

    *Yes, even more materialistic and patriarchy-driven than our planet.

  4. Lori

    Wow, great post. I’ve never heard it expressed so clearly and so simply. Good work.

  5. marcopolo

    I’m living in a ‘third world’ country and experience poor people’s vibrant native intelligence every day. There’s a guy who has been lumping foreign language newspapers around town for years. He’s practically hunchbacked from the effort. He started out doing this as a kid. Now he’s expanded, and has kids working for him. There are many enterprising people like him. I often wonder how they’d have fared in a more forgiving economic climate. He might well be a millionaire with a bit of education and a little start up capital. I don’t especially admire ambition, and try not to confuse success with wealth or status, but if it’s a goal, you have to admit luck plays an essential role in non-relative, quantifiable (monetary) terms. Barbara Ehrenreich touches on this in “Bright-sided: How the Relentless Promotion of Positive Thinking Has Undermined America” (and a lot of her other work).

    All by way of saying: Yes, Ian, I agree! Excellent point.

  6. Ed

    I hate these comparisons. And I’ve travelled in poor countries, though admittedly nowhere as poor as Bangladesh.

    I live in New York. If I made $470 a year, I would literally starve to death. A hotdog from a street vendor here costs $2. A bottle of water costs $1, water from the tap is free but you need a place to live for that and you won’t get that for $470 a year in New York. Since $470 a year comes out to about $1.30 per day, every third day I could afford to buy a hotdog and drink a bottled water. I probably couldn’t afford to construct a shack in a park, not that the police would let me.

    You see these annual income figures for southern countries because lots of people in the world have no income -they just don’t live in a cash or credit economy. Now there are real problems with hunger in the world, but if you translate these figures into what they could buy in the US you would get the impression that, for example, the entire population of Bangladesh, one of the world’s great breadbaskets, is starving. You have to at least adjust for purchasing power parity.

    Actually $43,000 doesn’t get you far in New York City. At least a third of it will disappear into taxes. You can get a roach infested apartment, in a slum, for maybe $12,000 a year. You presumably need to go to a job somewhere to earn the money, thats another grand for subway fares. After paying the various fees and rents, $43,000 in New York translates into at the most $15,000 a year of actual discretionary income, but remember if you eat ramen noodles for every single meal in the US you still blow a Bangladeshi budget. The police are quick to dismantle any shacks or gardens on any pubic or even unused land.

    The big difference between the US and developing countries is that in the latter, people can still squat somewhere and raise their own food. The US is more like a company store, everyone has high income but than it disappears as the system charges one non-discretionary expense after another.

    Also income per capita is the mean, not the median.

    Really this post is more similar to work by right wing hacks than anything that has a appeared on this blog. It borrows all of the rhetorical devices they use when they explain that there is no malnutrition in the US because, of course, everyone here is rich.

  7. Terrific article, Ian. I just love it when people claim that they’re the ones responsible for their success. That’s not to say they had no part in it – certainly, everyone’s ambition and talent can be the determining factors. But there’s a whole world of stuff that other people did and made so that you could acquire that talent.

    Anyone who thinks he’s a self-made man is invited to walk into the wilderness naked with nothing in his hands. If he comes out at the end of a year, then he’s a self-made man.

  8. Uhmmm, no. You can’t just walk into the countryside in Bangladesh, and start farming. The land is virtually all spoken for.

    And yes, many of them are starving. I did live there, and I know how far the local currency goes, and trust me, a huge chunk of the population is borderline starving. While it’s certainly true that to do it right I’d have to use PPP numbers, it is also true that even PPP adjusted Bangladesh’s income numbers are much much smaller than the US’s. Nothing in the article would need to change except some nominal numbers. Nothing.

    And despite being one of the world’s most fertile areas, the heavy population and primitive agriculture means that Bangladesh has a food deficit, not a food surplus.

  9. Mike Huben

    This is an excellent concrete version of Mark Twain’s more abstract What Is Man?

    I’ll have to add this one to Critiques Of Libertarianism as well.

  10. peon

    Ian, I have never lived in Bangladesh, but I have lived in Nairobi and you could make a similar comparison. Ed, when you are poor you don’t buy your food prepared from vendors, and you don’t buy meat and bottled water, even in the US. I work with poor people in rural USA and if any of my clients had $15,000 of discretionary income after taxes, transportation costs, and housing costs (even roach infested) they would not be my clients.
    The difference for the poor I work with and the poor in Nairobi is stark. I remember a conversation I had with a Kenyon friend of mine who was trying to understand poverty in the US. This man was affiliated with a Kenyon/US NGO whose mission was to ensure secondary education to Masaai girls. Kila Nafasi
    He understood we had poverty, as he had seen the pictures of Katrina and other American slums. He wanted me to confirm that school was free. Then he wanted confirmation that transportation was provided to school for free. Then he posited the family being too poor for books. I explained books were free. Next he posited the family being too poor for food. I explained food stamps and the school lunch and breakfast programs. He thought he had me when he said, “And what if the family is too poor to buy the girl shoes?” I had to explain the American glut of clothes, Salvation Army, Goodwill, and yard sales, all mind-boggling concepts in Kenya. At this point he threw up his hands in disbelief and frustration and said “Then how can people be poor?” I realized at that moment that by Kenya standards we don’t have poverty. Then I realized how much of our advantage comes from having a functioning federal, state, and local government, supported by taxes, that positions each successive generation of Americans for a chance at a better life.
    Masaai women, in particular, and African women in general are some of the hardest working people on earth. “African Mama” (a termed used for adult women) is synonymous with strength in Kenya. If there is something difficult to do someone will say, “get an African Mama”. They are not poor because they are not working as hard as Americans. They are poor because they don’t have the government sponsored institutions we take for granted: good roads, good schools, libraries, mail delivery systems, police, fire departments, subsidized housing, food stamps, etc. , all paid for by taxes.
    Great post Ian, thank you.

  11. Great post. Anyone who has spent a few days in poor countries and witnessed the level of tax-avoidance of the rich and the backbreaking work done by the poor knows that Western wealth is at best primarily a function of Providence, secondarily a function of adequate public services, and finally a function of colonial interference and resource “acquisition”. (That latter may rank higher on the scale if I weren’t being charitable today.)

    The libertarian/anarcho-capitalist argument, though, is not merely that “it’s my money” because “I deserve” it in some sense (I’ve rarely ever seen one argue that Bengalis, etc are stupid), but that property is an inalienable right no matter how “I” acquired it, and that my gold is “proper” to me the way my finger is “proper” to me.

  12. “Since the majority of the money any American earns is a function of being American, not of their own individual virtues, the government has the moral right to tax. ”

    Since I agree with the need for taxation in order to fund the creation of infrastructure and I agree with the relativistic monetary valuation assessment you’ve made via Bangladesh and the United States of America, I am left wondering why I don’t like this article.

    And the above statement is why. There is no link between the relative wealth of a nation and it’s mandate to tax it’s citizens. Should Bangladesh, for moral reasons, stop taxing it’s citizens because they are poorer than citizens of the U.S.A.?

    I could go into all kinds of rants here, for example that inheritance is a root cause of wealth and should be abolished. I could hold umbrage at your innocent but inaccurate us of the term “American” to indicate citizens of the United States of America. I don’t need to. I’m sure that will all show up shortly after I post.

  13. Ian Welsh

    You kind of missed the point about taxation. Maybe I’ll explain at some future point, maybe not.

    As a Canadian, I have no desire to use the word American to describe anyone else but residents of the US. And as Canadian, I feel not guilt for using the word Americans.

    PC has never been my priority.

  14. Tom Robinson

    I reposted this essay as a link in my Facebook account yesterday. Seems especially relevant as more come to understand the grinding hardships of Haiti this week. Great essay, Ian.

  15. I have a similar problem: every time I write that some sort of government regulation will be required to limit greenhouse gas emissions, the Libertopians come out of the ether to explain to me that no, the magical market will take care of it and government regulations are teh devil.

    In fact, dare to utter the words “global warming” or “climate change” or anything related and they attack, often viciously, exclaiming it’s all some sort of scam to impose one-world government. Perhaps they are so sensitive because Nicholas Stern stated the obvious: climate change is “the greatest market failure the world has ever seen.”

    I can hardly wait to see what they think of tomorrow’s post: Food Security or Free Trade: Pick One (http://www.briangordon.ca/2010/01/food-security-or-free-trade-pick-one/), in which I point out two rather obvious facts: First, free trade and food security are incompatible, and second, the first real food shortage scare we have will likely mean the instant end to most free trade agreements. Everyone will suddenly realise it makes a lot more sense to have protectionist policies for necessities like food.

    A real-life spam filter is needed for Libertarians. As far as I can tell, they are ineducable; only if time brings some maturity will they realise the folly of Libertopia.

  16. If I may add one of my favourite John Kenneth Galbraith quotes:

    “The modern conservative is engaged in one of man’s oldest exercises in moral philosophy; that is, the search for a superior moral justification for selfishness.”

    Substitute Libertarian for conservative and you have it.

  17. I don’t think that most Libertarians are against taxes. We’re against unfair application of taxes (meaning tax loopholes, etc.), and reliance on/responsibility to the government instead of the individual.

  18. People don’t seem to realize that if the income tax were done away with suddenly, they wouldn’t benefit at all.

    Their employers would just keep paying them their net pay, and pocket the difference themselves.

    Carolyn Kay
    MakeThemAccountable.com

  19. Angela Wynne

    Ian,
    I have to say that I agree with John Lewis. The relative wealth of a country should not dictate how much the people in that country are taxed. Also, the taxation of the citizens of a certain country cannot be justified by the conditions in another country. This is a fundamentally flawed argument.

  20. Ian Welsh

    Since I didn’t make that argument, I feel no need to defend it. At most, it could be taken from what I wrote that if a government is not spending the money it taxes in the interests of those it taxes, it loses the moral right to tax.

    Certain Americans, around 1776, seem to have held that belief.

    The point of my piece is that the value of money is societal, not individual and that most of the value of one’s labor is not located in oneself, but in the society one lives in.

  21. jr

    Totally dippy. It is the culture, stupid ! It always has been.
    You are trying to justify all the wrong things.
    We got rid of your goofy way of thinking 400 years ago
    and have been improving life ever since. Get a clue.

  22. Angela Wynne

    Thanks for your reply to my earlier comment. I’m still fascinated by this discussion.

    first point:

    I think it would be more relevant to disucuss the current situation in America. The real question is, why does America foster more billionaires?? You correctly state that it has little to do with Americans being inherently smarter and better and harder working.

    America has more wealth because we live in a system that DOES value individual wealth. We value entrepneurship and encourage the power of the individual. America encourages wealth because the money we make IS our money.

    I think that if the government took the stance that ‘it is not your money’. America would quickly be in a similar situation to what we see in developing countries.

    Second point:

    You seem to assume that the goverment will spend the money in better ways then the wealthy individual. Of course, goverments have to tax in order to upkeep roads and schools, and general infrastructure. But there are also examples of horrendous, monumental wastes of tax dollars. The defense budget and our current occupation in certain countries, for example.

    third and final point:

    I agree that the situation of each American (impoverished, wealthy, educated, etc) is, ” a function of where you live, of where you were born and of who your parents are.” But why does this change whether or not your money belongs to you?

    A lot goes into the situations of each indivual American. It is overwhelmingly likely that the doctors and lawers had relatively wealthy parents. But this does not change that they went through years of higher education, worked hard and provide valueable services to the rest of society. Or in the case of Doctors/lawers that have private practices or business owners/entrepreneurs, these people are responsible for hiring, paying, and providing a living for countless employees, which helps society also.

    It would be deplorable to assume that the gas station attendents, minimum wage workers at walmarts, chain restaurants, and construction laborers are inherently lazier or “worth less” than wealthier Americans. But, these people still benefit from a system that encourages indivuals to make their own money, rather than depending on the government.

    So my words here are similar, but my conclusion is absolutely opposite. The money you make is largely defined by where you live, where you were born and who your parents are. But none of these conditions change the ownership of money. It doesn’t matter how much or how little money you have accumlutated over your lifetime. If you are not a criminal, then you deserve every cent.

  23. Ian Welsh

    Oh my. America has more billionairies per capita because of specific policies like low marginal tax rates.

    2. Government often wastes money. It still generally spends it better than billionaires do. See “Crisis, Financial”. But, more to the point, my argument would be that government hasn’t been spending money as well as it should be. (For example, you get almost no value for the huge amount you spend on your military.)

    3. The vast majority of the money any American makes is not a function of their individual effort. If you want to continue to have a prosperous society (and if you do, your philosophy won’t succeed at it, I will add) then you have to take that into account.

    Two generations ago the US had the most inter-class mobility in the western world. Today it has the least. The last decade saw median Americans actually lose ground economically.

    That is specifically because you are letting rich people have and keep too much money, and specifically because you are not reinvesting properly in society. (For example, on an inflation adjusted basis university is far more expensive than it was 30 years ago. Far far more expensive.)

    The sort of philosophy you espouse is exactly the sort of philosophy which wrecks nations. If the US wasn’t the world hegemonic power, it would have crashed out Argentina style years ago.

    But even being the world hegemonic power will not save the US forever, it is just spreading out the ruin over a longer period and will end up making it worse.

    This moves far beyond the original point, and would take a book to explain properly. Maybe I’ll write it someday. In the meantime, if Americans keep thinking money belongs to them individually, and is a result only of their individual efforts, they will find that money becomes increasingly worthless.

    At this point, my long term assumption is that within 30 years the US and China will have equal median wages. And most of that won’t because of Chinese wages increasing, it will be because of US wages crashing.

    That’s not necessary, but it’s what’s going to happen, because it’s what Americans keep voting for, both at the ballot box and in their day to day decision making.

    And, frankly, it bothers me less and less. People often don’t get what they deserve, but Americans have asked for this repeatedly.

  24. Angela Wynne

    And what exactly is wrong with billionaires?

    There is a long history of ‘my philosophy’ succeeding all over the world. This philosophy being that it is valuable to reward people who participate in enterprise and business with wealth and a higher standard of living. China is actually a good example that you brought up. I think wages will increase in China over the next 30 years as a direct result of applying a more capitalist worldview. People in China will no longer have to hide their productivity to prevent their property from being stolen from them.

    It’s important to mention that these values depend on keeping a society open enough to allow opportunity for any enterprising person. No country is perfect and I think there needs to be a constant fight to prevent the balance from tipping too far in either direction.

    Your opinions here are completely focused on America, shouldn’t a coherent philosophy apply to the entire world? Which country comes closest to your ideals? If you actually plan on writing a book about the emminent destruction of the United States you should be prepared to offer causes and solutions. Please steer clear of the strange, unsubstantiated ranting about hegemonics and I think you might have some good points.

  25. Ian Welsh

    Thanks for the advice on what to write. I’ll ignore it, thanks.

    I have predicted every major economic event for the last 12 years or so, the last 6 of them in blogs (and the others on forums and there are people who can attest to the fact), though I haven’t always gotten the timing exactly right (otoh, sometimes I have been spot on). My track record is just fine, which indicates my model is working rather well. I’ll keep refining it.

    I have frequently explained to Americans what needs to be done to fix America. I have also explained causes, frequently. This is a blog post, not a book, I can’t cover everything in one post and people who demand I do are very tiresome. If you want a book that explains a fair bit of it, read Kevin Phillips “Wealth and Democracy”.

    But you folks won’t do what needs to be done, so America’s going down. And unless, you, personally, are in the top 1% or one of their retainers, you personally are very likely to go down as well.

    Read up on what happened to Russia in the 90’s. That’s your future.

    And “your money” will be virtually worthless. Because, in large part, you thought it was your money and located its value in the work you do rather than in the value of your society as a whole.

  26. Jake Glatzy

    It’s not your money and you didn’t earn it. It’s because you were lucky enough to be born with well-functioning lungs. You probably wouldn’t be surprised to learn that those with malfunctioning lungs earn far, far less than those with good lungs. After all, those without working lungs tend not to live very long. Since those with poor lungs are not in any other way genetically inferior, we can conclude that earning more money has nothing to do with motivation, self-direction, or industriousness. It’s all due to being lucky enough to be born with working lungs. Since most of that success can be attributed to that luck, those people don’t have a moral right to their money and the government should tax it from them.

  27. Ian Welsh

    Kicked back to the top, as this hasn’t been front paged in over 5 years.

    I will mention, for the obtuse, that changing this to PPP would not change the overall picture. Stuff in Bangladesh is not /that/ much cheaper. You’re a moron if you think it is. (This is especially true of stuff you need to import.)

  28. Tom

    You could also expand on how many of these nations are poor because Europe raped them for money and resources to fight their wars and destroyed any attempt to build democratic institutions and backed strong men post colonial period to continue the rape just with a different asshole.

    If the Moors had managed to hold onto Spain just another century, the European Renaissance would have crashed without the New World Gold that enabled them to negate their losses from their ruinous wars and enabled them to rape Africa and Asia. The Ottomans would have stabilized and been the new Roman Empire with a far better record on integrating locals than Europe did.

    Could you imagine the Europeans holding Vienna in 1529 if not for the large influx of New World Gold from the Rape of the Aztecs in 1520? That gold paid for the city’s defenses.

    Could Europe have bounced back from the 30 years war without the influx of New World Wealth or weathered the pandemics without the Potato?

    Answer is no because they couldn’t keep their lands from being fought over. Britain got as powerful as it did because it had a navy to protect its heartland and raped its colonies to provide a relatively high quality of life for its mainland.

    France recovered from mass destruction of its wars by doing the same thing.

    Had I been FDR, I would have told the European allies, my terms for bailing their asses out would be they vacate their colonies immediately and renounce all claims to them and leave the colonies to local groups at the village level and tell them to start meeting with their neighbors and work out whether you want to join together as a nation, or be city states. Then leave and let the Africans and Asians own their transformation without outside interference.

  29. Stefano Gorda

    Tom, I fully agree with that, ecxept for FDR: he knew US were going to take Europe’s part in raping colonies (followed by CCCP and now PRC); moreover Europe needed to be the next market (if only Germany understood this about Greece!)

  30. Tom

    @Stefano Gorda

    I know FDR was just as much about raping Africa and Asia as Europe, he was already raping South America since the Wilson Administration.

    My point was is if I got dumped into his brain, that is what I would have done.

  31. nihil obstet

    You’re wrong about FDR. Churchill needed the U.S. in the war, but was bitterly opposed to FDR because FDR made clear his intent to end colonialism. FDR ordered Undersecretary of State Welles to make clear the application of the Atlantic Charter to all peoples, and approved the following text: “`If this war is in fact a war for the liberation of people, it must assure the sovereign equality of peoples throughout the world, as well as in the world of the Americas. Our victory must bring in its train the liberation of all peoples. Discrimination between peoples because of race, creed, or color must be abolished. The age of imperialism is ended.”

    Churchill tracked FDR’s health carefully, expecting him to die before he would be able to follow up, as in fact happened. Churchill was then very happy to instruct Truman in foreign policy, including the continuation of colonialism and the necessity of a Cold War against Russia.

  32. Ian Welsh

    For the post-colonial period/liberal period, the 3rd world actually grew at a good clip – faster than population growth. This includes Africa. That changes with the rise of neo-liberalism.

    The evidence I am aware of is that FDR genuinely opposed European colonialism and wanted them free.

    I’ll note that that’s rather a side-issue.

    “you could explain” — yes, yes I could. And actually, an article on the effects of colonialism is on the list (yes, I have a list). But the bottom line on such things is that I write WHAT I WANT, WHEN I WANT and I don’t appreciate concern-trolling. The polite thing is to say “Ian, I was wondering if you’d consider writing an article on how colonialism contributed to the poverty of non-European countries.” Someone using your method makes it LESS likely that I will write about what you want, not more.

    (or you can donate $500 and REQUEST such an article. If I have something to say on the subject I will almost certainly accede to such a request.)

    For now, the topic of this article is not /why/ third world nations are poorer.

  33. Tom

    @Ian

    My apologies, I should have worded that differently so it didn’t sound demanding you to write something, that wasn’t my intent. I was trying to point out much of the West’s wealth also comes from raping de jure and de facto colonies.

    @nihil

    Then what was the rape of Latin America then or did Polio break him to the path of good? If FDR truly was for liberalism, he should have met his words with actions and desegregated the Military immediately and made lend lease contingent on the European States giving up the colonies and staying out, he also should have eliminated the poll tax and literacy tests keeping Blacks from voting, and gone after the Klan.

    JFK had the courage to match his word to deeds in politics when he tackled racism in the South and was punished politically for it by Southern Democrats who then cock blocked his plans to reduce poverty in the Appalachians.

  34. EmilianoZ

    I see it as compound interest in civilizational term. Cumulated over many generations, the divergence becomes dramatic.

    For sure colonization was important. The industrial revolution maybe even more so.

  35. Ian Welsh

    Fair enough, Tom.

    Yes, for example, when Britain started conquering India they had more industrial capacity than the Brits. It was deliberate policy to get rid of that capacity.

  36. ekstase

    Thanks for writing this. I missed it in 2010. I think for some groups in America, they know this inequality; they know it down to their toes. And the blinders are coming off for the rest.

  37. youngNAtionalist

    ” are Bangladeshis genetically inferior to Americans? Since not too many of my readers think white sheets look great at a lynching, I’ll assume everyone answered no.”

    I am a White Nationalist. I have been reading your blog for years. Prove that they are not genetically inferior.

  38. nihil obstet

    @Tom

    I’m weak on the details of FDR’s actions in South America. During the war, he sent Wallace to South America. Wallace persuaded 12 countries to declare war as a U.S. ally. He also negociated trade treaties (rubber was really important during the war) that included labor provisions mandating fair wages and safe working conditions — the sort of thing that, decades later, NAFTA left out. It’s hard for me to see that as a rape. It is true that FDR did not refuse assistance to Britain against Nazi Germany until Britain had freed its colonies, but I think your characterization of his policies and actions is excessively demonic, as I think your assessment of JFK, whom I also admire, is excessively hagiographic.

    As Ian says, this is rather a side issue.

  39. Jeff W

    So, if you’re American, a large chunk of the reason you make a lot of money (relative to the rest of the world) is that you are American. The main cause of your relative wealth is not that you work hard, or that you’re innately smarter than members of other nations (though you may be since you weren’t starved as a child). It’s because you had opportunities given to you that most people will never had…

    University of Cambridge economist Ha-Joon Chang makes a similar point with regard to productivity, in the context of, specifically, Southern European peoples, who are, the interviewer says, characterized in the media “as lazy, as unproductive and people who simply don’t work hard” here:

    Well, first of all, what is this notion of being lazy? It’s based on even racist kinds of stereotypes, the stereotype that people who live in cold countries work harder and people who live in warm countries like Greece and Italy don’t work very hard. But if you actually look at the real statistics, you will find that on average, a Greek worker works for 2,040 hours, this is from 2011, and this is 40 percent more than the Germans and 50 percent more than the Dutch. So who’s the lazy one? Italians work over 1,700 hours per year and that is 25 percent more than the Germans. So it’s based on this completely mistaken idea that they are lazy, but that’s not why countries like Greece and Italy have problems.

    The problem in those countries is that they have lower productivity than Germany or the Netherlands; their workers produce less income even though the hours they work might be much longer. This problem of low productivity is not really the fault of the workers. It’s the fault of their capitalists and the government, because unless your capitalists and your government invest in productive machines, invest in research and development to develop new technologies, invest in infrastructure like roads and ports and so on, national productivity isn’t going to rise. So if it’s anyone’s fault, it’s the fault of Greek capitalists and the Greek government, not Greek workers. So I think that this story of lazy Greeks and Italians is just an excuse invented by people who don’t want to do anything fundamental about the problems with those countries in the context of the European Monetary Union, and it’s very unfortunate that this kind of groundless theory circulates and is so widely accepted. We have to really rectify this kind of misconception.

  40. V. Arnold

    We have to really rectify this kind of misconception.
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    You cannot and won’t.
    Because it’s based on stereotypes/racism.

    I came to Thailand in 2003 as a cad design/production “engineer”. For the majority of the year I was the only westerner in a factory of 12o. This gives me first person knowledge of Thai workers (for the most part only H.S. educated); they are hard working, diligent, and innovative.
    Westerners walk into shops and stalls at the markets and the owners are napping and their first thoughts are; see, they’re lazy, always sleeping.
    What those morons (westerners) don’t know is that the owner was buying supplies at the night market at 4 am; then setting up their shop and staying open until 8 or 10 pm before closing up and going home.
    I have chewed out so many westerners spouting their racist screed I’ve lost count. I no longer bother because it does no good; and besides, I don’t any longer know any westerners here.

    I hardly know why I post any more; and mostly don’t. I guess Jeff W’s post dredged up the unpleasant past on a very sore subject for me.

  41. Barry Fay

    There is a much more basic and devastating attack on “libertarianism”: the fact is that there simply is no such thing as an “individual”. Humans do not exist as individuals any more than bees do. Additionally, the most important aspect of being human is language – without it humans would not exist. And language, obviously, can only exist in a group.
    My brother has another tact: “what´s the first thing someone does when he has a good idea?” He goes to OTHER PEOPLE in an effort to bring about its realization. Alone, NOTHING WILL TRANSPIRE!
    None of this is very hard to see once one open one´s eyes.

  42. V. Arnold

    @ Barry Fay
    April 16, 2015

    With all due respect: Hogwash!

    We are not Borg!

  43. I’ve been trying my ass off for years to explicitly express what you stated in that final paragraph.

    About currencies essentially being a contrived entity by whatever government issued such.

    So much of any society and the lifestyles lived in said is by default.
    We don’t have anywhere NEAR the control over things (even in our personal lives) as we think we do.

  44. zncx

    The PRC not overthrowing the governments of its trading partners is “raping”…what would constitute “not raping”?

  45. Jeff W

    Humans do not exist as individuals any more than bees do.

    I think the point isn’t whether humans are primarily social animals or solitary animals, although they are undoubtedly social. The point is to what extent and how the environment enables or prevents certain behaviors. Place a solitary animal like a tiger or a bear in an environment where its prey doesn’t exist and that animal will not be a successful hunter, no matter what.

    Social animals, such as humans, differ from solitary ones in that other members of their species support their behavior—that is, they’re part of the environment that enables some behavior—in a way that is not true for solitary animals but that does not speak that closely to libertarian claims. Libertarians do not address the supporting role of the environment, of which other people are a part, at all; in the libertarian viewpoint, if Bangladeshis or Greeks are not as wealthy or productive as North Americans, it’s the fault of Bangladeshis or Greeks as individuals, rather than, as is undoubtedly the case, a product of the environment in which the Bangladeshis or Greeks find themselves—and that environment might include, or not, productive machines, infrastructure, the wealth of their parents, etc. as well as other people. (And one of the reasons we have regulation, so derided by libertarians, as part of the environment, is to counteract other aspects of the environment, such as profit, that might exert too powerful a pull on in producing undesirable behavior without it.)

  46. anon

    >Are Bangladeshis genetically inferior to Americans

    Here is where you’re argument falls apart, ie immediately.

    Firstly given they have a mean IQ of 80, the whites(excluding hispanics) in the US have a mean IQ of 103-104 depending on the year. They certainly do appear to be inherently inferior, as has been seen when IQ testing is standardized income and environment does not correlate nearly as well with IQ as race. For example in the USA those whites born into the lowest income bracket have higher mean IQs and higher mean test scores on all forms of standardized testing than blacks born into the highest income bracket. The Minnesotta Transracial Adoption and ever other transracial adoption study every conducted have also confirmed that mean IQ does not correlate with the income or race of the adopted parents. Rather blacks(who are still 15% white genetically) still had a mean of 85 and whites still had a mean of 103.

    Race is real and so long as you refuse to admit it your economic models will never be predictive outside of a racial homogeneous society your have exclusively collected data from.

    This is not bigotry this is reality, reality is not kind.

  47. anon

    >double the number of workers for unskilled non-physical labor by including women in the work force
    >be surprised when the wages of those jobs decline
    >hard labor wages remain just as high or even increase slightly when compared to inflation
    Yes obviously is ONLY richierich who is causing a devaluation of labor of course, no other contributing factors at all.

    >median income decrease
    >90% white in the 1970s
    >65% white in 2010
    Well what a shocker, a lower percentage of productive people(NE Asians per capita have remained relatively constant so they haven’t effected it for good or ill) and larger numbers of unemployed creates a lower median and mean.

    >White Americans have a adjusted Disposable Income of $39,000 – the highest in the OECD (even when adjusted for the benefits of the welfare state and government healthcare).
    http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/docserver/download/3010161ec007.pdf?expires=1361821064&id=id&accname=guest&checksum=111DB29091BC3407ECF14955A76F6434

    And that is excluding the top 10% of income earners.

    If Blacks left America

    If all blacks suddenly left America…
    (keep in mind blacks only make 13% of the US population)
    >The prison population would go down by 37%
    >There would be almost 50% less gang members
    >Rape would go down significantly
    >Overweight and obesity percentage would go down by 10%
    >Average IQ would go up 7 points, putting the USA tied for third with Japan
    >SAT scores would go up by about 100 points
    >ACT scores would go up by 5.5 points
    >AIDS and HIV would go down by over 67%
    >Chlamydia cases would go down by 50%
    >Gonorrhea would go down by 69%
    >Syphilis would go would go down by 58%
    >The average income would be over 20k more per year
    >The amount of people in poverty would go down by over 30%
    >Homelessness would go down by 57%
    >And the number of welfare recipients would go down by about 40%

    Sources:
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_the_United_States

    http://www.bop.gov/news/quick.jsp#1
    kff.org/other/state-indicator/adult-overweightobesity-rate-by-re/
    http://www.nytimes.com/books/first/j/jencks-gap.html
    http://www.amfirstbooks.com/IntroPages/NonToolbarTopics/IdeologicalQuiz/Quiz-3-Commentary/IdeolQuiz_Answer_02.html
    aids.gov/hiv-aids-basics/hiv-aids-101/statistics/
    http://www.cdc.gov/std/stats11/gonorrhea.htm
    http://www.cdc.gov/std/stats11/syphilis.htm
    http://www.cdc.gov/std/stats11/chlamydia.htm
    http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/2012/tables/12s0697.pdf
    kff.org/other/state-indicator/poverty-rate-by-raceethnicity/
    homeless.samhsa.gov/ResourceFiles/hrc_factsheet.pdf
    http://www.statisticbrain.com/welfare-statistics/
    http://www.nationalgangcenter.gov/survey-analysis/demographics
    nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=171
    nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d10/tables/dt10_155.asp
    Anthony Walsh (January 2004). Race and crime: a biosocial analysis. Nova Publishers. pp. 23?24. ISBN 978-1-59033-970-1. Retrieved 1 October 2011.

    I haven’t yet accounted for the hispanics unfortunately.

    Hey maybe all the failed leftist urbanite whites and shitskins are the problem not the rural whites. Maybe many of the problems have been caused by kikes and libtards pushing immigration. Ever notice that many of the rich as social liberals? Just a thought.

    Oh and I know you will delete this, the important thing is that YOU see it you boomer faggot.

    Your day is ending, the Day of the Rope is coming.

    And don’t bother reporting this to anybody I live in the US were there are no hate speech laws

    Liberals aren’t breeding anymore and temperament and predilections to certain political positions are very much inheritable, the 2010 US survey and Europoll 2011 both found that 93%+ of individuals had the same political and religious affiliation as their parents once they were older than 25. Indicating some form of heritable trait is being passed on.
    You can see it in the birthrates by political affiliation across many nations. Republicans: 2.7, Democrats: 1.2, Social Democrats: 0.9 Labor: 0.8, Tories: 1.5, Christian Democrats: 2.5. White Democrats in America now have a birthrate of 0.9, blacks have a birthrate of 1.4, and spics sit at 1.6. White republicans are between 2.6 and 2.9 depending on whose numbers you use.

    By 2050 only 20% of individuals in the US will be descended from habitual Democrat voters or self described liberals and only 7% will be black.
    http://jaymans.wordpress.com/2012/08/27/the-liberalconservative-baby-gap-time-depth/

    And we currently have net negative spic immigration; so long as they don’t give them amnesty the dropping birthrates of spics in Mexico will further reduce it. We should still deport them all though.
    http://www.pewhispanic.org/2012/04/23/net-migration-from-mexico-falls-to-zero-and-perhaps-less/

    And mudslime birthrates are dropping like stone even in Shitstainistan.
    http://www.frontpagemag.com/2013/dgreenfield/muslim-fertility-rates-dropping-faster-than-western-fertility-rates/
    Jews are also dying by inches. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/jews-could-die-out-by-next-century-1319030.html
    http://www.independent.ie/world-news/americas/american-jews-in-danger-of-dying-out-survey-shows-25932714.html

    Those Christian converts that took over old Roman land? That’s what conservative whites are http://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/magazine/breedingforgod/

    We’ve seen bullshit like the libtards before, the Cathars were excepting of homosexuality, vice of all sorts, and even murder. They encouraged people not to breed, and thought that because the world was filthy and fallen nobody should have children and that no authority should control them because it was temporal, except for the Cathar Elect of course. Sound familiar? How many times has a libtard bitched to you about overpopulation and how you are selfish for bringing children into a world were they suffer, you are selfish for not adopting a little nignog because muh overpopulation, you are selfish for doing anything biologically adaptive and placing your family before shitskins you’ve never met. And when you point out that we could just stop feeding the shitskins and billions would die off in the first ten years they have no material rebuttal they and only sputter and stammer “W-W-WACIST!”

    This is the same sickness we have always had. The Catholic Church organized the extermination of all adult Cathars under the request of France and the German states because these faggots were trying to destroy society. But they didn’t purge enough it seems, the Cathars were never that big and the Inquisition was created to prevent another heresy of that sort. And it did, and it only cost 4,500 lives at most over an 800 year period to do it. The Inquisition essentially invented modern investigative law because they weren’t a secular court looking for scapegoats to throw to the outraged mob. They were actually trying to stop heresy.

    But it was a mistake and yes any NatSoc plan of forcing these fags to act like humans would also be a mistake. We should just let all those who don’t have a predisposition to survive die off, ZA VINAL ZOLUTIN IV YOU VILL!

  48. Hugh

    Hey, we only get about 99.999% of who we are from society. Take away the language, knowledge, power, wealth, and life, we owe to the society we are born in, and the rest is ALL US.

    My definition of money is that it is a medium to direct resources within and between societies. We should be thinking about where we want those resources going and what we want them doing, and then direct the money to those purposes. Instead we get money treated as if it was some primeval matter of the universe instead of a social construct. So “Just try living without money” makes as much sense to us as “Just try living without food.” But if you are shipwrecked on a desert island, which would you want: food or money? When we say money, what we mean is society and access to its resources.

    As for your commenter above who seems to have a problem with everyone not like him, the Cathars were an ascetic reformist religious sect. France seemed to get one of these every century or so. In the South of France where the Cathars were located, the Albigensian crusade directed against them is still resented, an excuse for Northern second sons who weren’t going to inherit anything to loot their, at the time, richer and more sophisticated Southern neighbors. Their real sin was that they contested the power of the Catholic church, and so had to be destroyed.

  49. somecomputerguy

    In “Atlas Shrugged”, there is a long, long exposition about gold.
    What Rand is reaching for, and failing to establish, is a source of value that is external to human beings. This is a fundamental flaw. Without it, there can be no ‘objective’ measure of human achievement separate from collective judgement. No measure of virtue not based on the judgement of others.

    All value is collectively constructed.

    Including those related to individual survival. There was never a time when humans lived as isolated, atomized individuals, because it is not possible to survive that way. No war of all against all.

  50. Stephen Bobb

    One item that bears mention when discussing money in America. it’s not your money, those are Federal Reserve notes, legal tender for all goods and services. When it’s your money, agents will eventually come and disrupt your counterfeiting operation. The very notion that it’s “your money” is the false premise from which libertarianism is developed.

  51. Willy

    Our proudly racist Anon sure went to a lot of effort to ignore that China and Scandinavia appear to be next world leaders when it comes to building foundations of mass-citizenry prosperity cultures. Maybe he’ll return with a buncha links describing how a Chinese-Norwegian America would be preferable to an Mexican-Afghani one?

  52. Ché Pasa

    I’m glad Ian left in the white supremacist rants. A lot of white supremacists claim to be libertarians, but of course they’re not; or rather, they’re followers of the unspoken libertarian creed:

    I demand the liberty to impose my authority on you without government intervention.

    “You” being whom- or whatever.

    The arguments for why WhiteSupremacist X should have this liberty to impose his *almost always male* authority upon the Other may no longer use the same language, but it is always about the “proven” or “known” or “obvious” inferiority of the Other, thus a charitable act, no?

    It’s toxic, yes, but it is also very dangerous to anyone (or thing) designated Other by these people because it only takes a relatively few of them acting in concert overwhelm the very idea of government, public or private.

    By comparison our NeoLiberal Overlords are almost compassionate and moral.

    Sad, isn’t it?

    This toxic social poison is proving harder to control than we thought. Kind of like that ever-mutating virus…

  53. Plague Species

    Is this our purpose as humans if we are to have a purpose? To be productive? To compete with one another for who can be the most productive?

    Human productivity at this point and gains in it, be it by machine or more efficient processes, is anathema to a healthy living planet.

    Productivity needs to become a dirty word. So does “work.”

  54. Soredemos

    The anon comment above is genuinely the saddest thing I’ve ever seen posted here, and I kind of appreciate Ian letting it through moderation.

    anon, you don’t have to be this way. You don’t have to wallow in hate and stupidity.

  55. Synoptocon

    What goes oft unremarked is that the free-riding billionaires aren’t just free-riding off the median earner, they’re free-riding off millionaires and billionaires who understand the importance of continuing investment in the Commonwealth. That’s a lever.

  56. Synoptocon

    Oh, forgot.

    Don’t diss productivity – it’s the thing paying for your ability to sit around and bloviate on comment threads rather than spending your day walking behind a mule.

  57. Joan

    Not quite on-topic, but adjacent: I think middle-class Americans need to think about what is viewed as a “wealth flex” by those below them on the economic ladder. There is likely to more mugging and looting/robbery in the coming years, and it won’t be of the rich who can afford a gated community with an armed guard. Things would have to deteriorate much further for the armed guard to turn on the rich and let the looters through the gate.

    For now, it’s of the middle class, perceived as the American Dream. If you live in a standalone home, it doesn’t matter if you’re up to your ears in debt: that’s viewed as a wealth flex. People are going to think you’ve probably got some nice electronics in there that they could resell.

    Your car should look dumpy. Your clothes should look dumpy.

    I personally wouldn’t be seen in public with an Apple product. Whenever I see an iPhone, I wonder whether that phone cost a thousand dollars, and whenever I see an Apple laptop, I wonder whether that thing cost four thousand dollars or something. That’s not what you want the people around you to be thinking.

  58. A good argument for sharing the wealth. I’d add that it is a good argument also for sharing more broadly. Contemporary Americans, and others, are beneficiaries of social knowledge and technology developed over thousands of years, from people in every part of the world–for example, writing, language, agriculture, printing, and more recently, the internet. Those who think they deserve every penny they get are ignoring history.

  59. nihil obstet

    Technically, “productivity” means output per unit of input. Over the last 40 years, our friends the economists have helpfully framed this as reduction in costs to businesses per dollars in sales. Thus, much of the increase in productivity has simply been cost shifting. The business used to need telephone receptionists to take your call. Now, the automated phone answering takes more of your time — that is, your input goes up — but the business eliminates a service.

    Cost of living calculations use hedonic adjustments to keep the official inflation rate low. They don’t use hedonic adjustments to correct fake productivity rates.

  60. Hugh

    Productivity is a good thing up to a point. But it is not an end in itself. In modern econo-speak it is just cover for abusing workers and destroying the environment.

  61. Plague Species

    Walking behind a mule all day is also productivity but by all means, carry on and cheer productivity.

    Humans have been productive at destroying the planet and with attitudes like the bloviating Synopticon’s it will until humans and the living planet are no more. A fairer more equitable growth, drive by productivity gains no less, is still growth. If a fairer and more equitable growth is even possible, you’ve only managed to solve half the equation and the half you didn’t solve for is the half that will do humans and the living planet in.

    If human is to survive and somewhat thrive, it will have to learn to be content with possessing nothing and providing its own self-generated and self-contained stimulation and yes, that means no internet for me, for you, for everyone and anyone.

  62. Plague Species

    While we’re at it, let’s also cheer ingenuity. It’s as important if not more important to growth as is productivity considering ingenuity can result in massive improvement s to productivity.

    As an example of ingenuity, think organ transplants. Mary Shelley was way ahead of her time. Fast forward two hundred years and now rich scum can now extend their lives another ten, twenty or thirty years or more with a new heart or kidney or liver despite their lives of hedonistic debauchery (think Dick Cheney). It’s only a matter of time, time humans don’t have thankfully, until there are brain transplants and won’t that be fun.

    Man’s clever enough to escape the planet if only temporarily, but he’s not clever enough to escape himself.

  63. Soredemos

    @Plague Species

    ‘Organ transplants are bad because sometimes rich people get them’ is a truly awful take.

  64. Plague Species

    @ Soredemos

    “I like to have my cake and eat it too.”

    Organ transplants are an absurdity, an abomination, when you take EVERYTHING into account. Like so much else, entirely inequitable and entirely unsustainable. Just one more example of an ocean of examples as to how human society is out of balance and off the hook.

    But hey, I guess so long as organ “donations” keep Bangladeshis financially viable, ever just barely, they’re a good thing. The AASP would say it’s Bangladeshis’ right to sell their organs to privileged Americans with means. Yves is a Bircher, who would have thought? Me, that’s who. Except these days, the Birchers are communist sympathizers. Truly an upside down world.

    Inside Bangladesh’s Organ Bazaar

  65. Hugh

    Universal healthcare is an important area where our resources/money should be going. It wouldn’t help eliminate foreign organ bazaars, but it might with better and more equal treatment in this country. I am reminded of the case of Steve Jobs who was diagnosed with a treatable pancreatic islet cell cancer in October 2003. Nevertheless, he dinked around for 9 months with alternative medicine therapies until he had it removed in July 2004. By January 2006, some eighteen months later, it had, I assume, metastasized to his liver. I do not know why this didn’t disqualify him from transplant consideration, but it didn’t. Add to this that the organ waiting lists are not first come first served and are split into 11 regional and 58 local components. So the possibilities of manipulating the system if you’re ungodly rich like Jobs and jumping to the head of the line are considerable. So Jobs got a liver transplant in Memphis in April 2009. He died two and half years later in October 2011 in Palo Alto, not exactly a suburb of Memphis.

  66. Soredemos

    I ‘m beginning to think PS is legitimately mentally unwell.

  67. Synoptocon

    I look forward to hearing of your experiences down on the farm PS.

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