In the book of life, the future is always the chapter we havenât read yet. But life follows patterns. Great nations have their days in the sun. What usually brings the darkness is a combination of over-stretching (war) and overspending (expressed as inflation or default). Americans would do better, we said bluntly, to mind our own business and balance our own budget.
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â October 30, 2023 |  [View Online]( |  [Sign Up]( A Note from Addison:A couple of weeks ago, you may recall, we had a bit of a row in our inbox. It seems someone else I know quite well has seen a similar occurrence. Below, youâll find Bill Bonner describing the early days of writing the Daily Reckoning and the themes that appear in our books together. Bill and I are updating our best-seller Empire of Debt to include the pandemic, wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Ukraine and now Israel. We know from experience, when we take on difficult themes, we get a lot of support⦠but we also find the detractors in our mix. Bill begins describing his own experience below. âEnjoy, Addison Lessons From the River of No Returns âWell, everybody does it that way, Huck.â âTom, I am not everybody.â â Mark Twain, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer Dear , Today is a holiday in Ireland. We celebrate the dead saints. Thank God for our Dear Readers. We learn from them. Especially the critics. Weâve been writing daily since 1998. Sometimes right, sometimes wrongâ¦always in doubt. Generally, reader and writer are of one mind. But once in a while, we are at odds â especially when âpoliticsâ are involved. There have been three major waves of dissension, dissatisfaction, and disenchantment among our readers. Each time, the incoming mail was so emphaticâ¦so riled up and outragedâ¦it made us wonder. Had we let the saints down? CONTINUED BELOW... POWERED BY DIGITAL CURRENCY SUMMIT Over $200M Stolen in Crypto In 2022 there was a reported $2.57 BILLION stolen in crypto. If you're not careful when it comes to trading your cryptocurrencyâ¦This could happen to you too. It's important you don't do the right thing the wrong way⦠The steps outlined in "How to Avoid All Crypto Scams" will help you navigate the crypto markets safelyâ¦Start protecting your wealth and thriving in today's market with this step-by-step guide. [Click here now to download it for free!]( CONTINUED... The first came just as we were getting the hang of it. In the late â90s, there was a bubble in âdot.comâ stocks. Information, it was said, greatly reduced the need for real capital investment. Now available for free on the internet, information was supposed to usher in a period of faster GDP growth and widespread prosperity. Dot.com stocks themselves, concentrated in the Nasdaq, couldnât be over-priced, said the True Believers, because they were âinfinitely valuable.â  There was a lot of loose talk at the time, and a mood of such optimism that it made us suspicious. The Nasdaq shot up 85% in a single year â 1999 â more than any US index ever had. And the Dow, in terms of gold, rose to an all-time high. In 1999, you could trade the 30 Dow stocks for 40 ounces of gold (for reference, in 1980, the ratio was nearly 1 to 1).  This looked like a bubble to us. And we said so, warning readers to avoid the dot.com stocks, including Amazon.com. Which just shows how you can be right and wrong at the same time. We were right; the dot.com bubble was about to burst. And we were right to label AMZN the âriver of no returns"; its core retail business never made a decent return on capital. But that didnât mean it wasnât a success. The stock soared and made millionaires out of thousands of people! The surprising thing was that many readers didnât merely think we were wrongâ¦they acted as though we, by calling into question the dot.com bubble, were committing some kind of sin. They cursed usâ¦telling us what idiots we wereâ¦and canceling their subscriptions. And it was a free service back then! We might be wrong; we often areâ¦but why be so upset about it? Nobody knows the future. We just try to connect the dots and guess about what comes next. But, for many people, the dot.com bubble had become very personalâ¦and very emotional⦠We still donât know exactly why, but we have a hypothesis. By 1999, America was at the top of its game. Wall Street boomed. The federal budget was balanced. We were not at war; after the demise of the Soviet Union, we faced no serious enemy. And yet, the typical American had not had a significant raise for a quarter of a century. The rich, on both coasts, were getting richer and richer. But throughout the âheartland,â men lost good-paying jobs in manufacturing and were now locked in a cycle of despair, drugs, unemployment or low-pay service sector jobs. Something was going wrong.  And so, when the Information Revolution cameâ¦it seemed like a prison door had suddenly been kicked open. What followed was the great escape. Investors gave each other high fivesâ¦and bought Webvanâ¦Global Crossingâ¦or pets.com. This was the big breakout they were waiting for! Alas, the inmates didnât appreciate it when we told them they would soon have to return to their cells. They reacted bitterly.    What did it mean? Why get so worked up about a financial forecast?  Whatever else it signaled, it told us that there might be an even bigger sell-off than we anticipated. In the event, after rising 800% from 1995 to March, 2000, the Nasdaq turned down. Two years later, it was almost back to where it started. By 2004, more than half the dot.coms had disappeared. Fred Wilson, whose venture capital firm funded many of the start-ups, lost 90% of his fortune. We had urged readers to buy gold and sit out the bear market. The idea was not to make moneyâ¦but simply not to lose it. Most people make their money from incremental savings and investments built up over the course of their careers. Then, the worst thing that can happen to them financially is to take the Big Loss. After a certain age, it is very hard to recover. Then, as now, our main goal was to avoid the Big Loss. The next big source of discontent among readers came only a couple years later. The US invaded Iraq. We thought it was a mistake, and said so.  In the book of life, the future is always the chapter we havenât read yet. But life follows patterns. Great nations have their days in the sun. What usually brings the darkness is a combination of over-stretching (war) and overspending (expressed as inflation or default). Americans would do better, we said bluntly, to mind our own business and balance our own budget. For many readers, this was tantamount to treason. Readers left us by the thousands.  Here, the ground beneath our feet was less solid. This was not finance or economics we were commenting on. What qualified us to have an opinion?  But we were connecting the dots. And they were beginning to show how money and power can come together in a disastrous way. It was beginning to look like America had peaked out after 1999â¦that its elite had been corrupted by unearned wealth and unbridled powerâ¦and its common people had been addled by its propaganda media, fake money and (later) stimmie checks. CONTINUED BELOW... POWERED BY SAFE HAVEN METALS The Secret Wealthy Insiders Are Using To Escape The Stock Market Why are central banks "panic-buying" gold at historic rates? A new consumer guide exposes their secret plot. Revealing how banks are legally protecting themselves and supercharging a new gold rush before it hits the floodgates. A massive opportunity to protect and grow your retirement is unfolding. [Click here before your cash is officially obsolete..]( CONTINUED... The feds said the war against Iraq would cost $75 billion. Hereâs the news item from 2003: WASHINGTON (CNN) â President Bush gave key lawmakers Monday the administration's first estimate of the cost of war with Iraq -- about $75 billion, according to members of Congress who attended a White House briefing. This estimate turned out to be about as close to the truth as the âweapons of mass destructionâ allegation. We estimated $1 trillionâ¦and people said we were crazy. But guess what. In 2020, Boston University researchers put the total cost at nearly $2 trillion. And after the 20-year debacle in Afghanistan, Brown University put the final tab for the War on Terror at $8 trillionâ¦with nearly a million people dead. This was no longer a âpoliticalâ matter. This was no longer just foreign policy. With the dead saints hanging their heads in pity, the US was headed down that long, lonely road towards inflation and war â and the biggest loss in history. Spending was needed because it was how the elite got rich. War was needed to justify spending. Money was âprintedâ to cover the spending. America did not have $8 trillion lying around. So, grosso modo, it âprintedâ the extra money. The Treasury issued bonds; the Fed bought them with printed-up money. Not entirely coincidentally, the Fedâs balance sheet (its holding of US bonds) increased from 1999 to 2021 byâ¦about $8 trillion. As early as 2006, in our book âEmpire of Debt,â written with Addison Wiggin, we looked ahead: WASHINGTON (CNN) â President Bush gave key lawmakers Monday the administration's first estimate of the cost of war with Iraq -- about $75 billion, according to members of Congress who attended a White House briefing. That is what happened 3 years later. More to come⦠Bill Bonner Bonner Private Research P.S. from Addison: Weâll follow up with more from Bill tomorrow, in the meantime, please see our latest video The Great American Shell Game, [here](. 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