03/16/10 Mumbai, India – This must be some kind of golden age for government. In the US, the feds have seized major stakes in banking, autos, insurance and mortgage finance industries.
The Chinese are paying for their enterprises. They already own footholds in some of the most important companies in the US. Yesterday, they announced another big move. CNOOC, China’s state-owned energy company, is buying half of Argentina’s second largest oil producer, Bridas. The Chinese have described the deal as giving them a “beachhead” for entry into Latin America.
The world’s richest people (two of the top five are Indians)…its biggest markets…it largest financial reserves…its most profitable companies – all are moving away from the US.
And now the Chinese are proposing to help the US upgrade its transportation system. Word from Beijing is that Chinese contractors are pitching high-speed rail lines to California, Florida and Illinois.
What next?
Empires you can trust…
At least there is one area in which the US maintains a clear and decisive lead – the military. Nobody comes close. No navy. No air force. No army. We’re number one.
The trouble with being number one in military power is that you need to find a way to pay for it. Which brings to mind a recent book by Thomas F. Madden, Empires of Trust. We spent the weekend sitting in a wicker chair by the pool reading it, drinking lime sodas and red wine.
The book is a delightful history book, recounting Hannibal’s war against the Romans and the Romans’ many wars against the Greeks. It is a marvelous book of history. It’s too bad the author draws conclusions that are comically out of sync with his own tale.
The storyline is that the US, like ancient Rome, is a very different empire from most. It is a good empire…based on strong family and religious values…which wants only the best for the rest of the world and only peace and security for itself. The Roman Empire succeeded, he says, because you could trust it. America will endure, he believes, for the same reason.
If this were true of Rome, it makes the Romans the most hopelessly incompetent race of humans that ever existed. They sought peace? The record shows a thousand years of wars; the history of Rome is a history of war. They fought the…
Sabines & various other tribes
Fidenates
Veientes
Albans
Latins
Samnites
Greeks
Carthaginians
Illyrians
Macedonians
Syracusians
Spartans
Doric Cretans
Argosians
Seleucids
The Aetolian League
The Ebro
Lusones
Various Celt-Iberian Tribes
Lusitani
This leaves out the small fry and only brings us up to 139 BC… They had another 500 years of hard fighting ahead of them. If there was anyone in the ancient world with whom the Romans didn’t kick up some dust, we have never heard of them.
And security? Mr. Madden seems to think Roman armies went all the way from the banks of the Tiber to the banks of the Tyne, the Rhine and the Euphrates just so as to make the walls of Rome itself more secure. Having beaten one neighbor, they then faced another, who was naturally nervous about Rome’s next move.
As its circle moved outward, Rome found itself with more and more neighbors to defeat. Where once it had only a few potential enemies, it soon found itself ranged, albeit with allies of more-or-less questionable loyalty, against half the world, including against the world’s best military powers of time. In the name of security, in other words, it put the ancient world’s leading military geniuses to work trying to destroy it.
Mr. Madden really ought to get out more. He seems to know a lot about Roman history. The problem is that he knows not much about other people…their history…their motivations…and their empires. While there are vast differences in the character and the style between various empires, they all are alike in that they are all run by humans who are all after the same heady mix of power, money and status. All use both carrot and stick – insofar as they can. Some were better with the carrot. Others were better with the stick. Using the carrot was often the cheapest way for an empire to get where it wanted to go. But all empires were also capable of making and winning wars, often ruthlessly and cruelly, when the occasion called for it.
Ultimately, an empire is a protection racket. The imperial power provides protection and demands tribute in return. If he gets no tribute…or cannot provide protection…he is out of business. Trust is useful to empires, as it is to the Mafia; it is a tool, not the core business.
This is clear from Mr. Madden’s own recounting of the Punic Wars. After the Romans had conquered all of Italy, they looked across the straits of Messina at Sicily. There, the Carthaginians were trying to take control. Naturally, the Sicilians of the time looked for support wherever they might get it, and signaled to Rome that it could use help.
Trouble was, the Romans had an understanding with the Carthaginians. Like Hitler and Stalin before the invasion of Poland, the two had agreed to respect each other’s spheres of interest. The Romans, who desired no conquest, according to Madden, had agreed to leave the rest of the world to the Carthaginians; the Romans got free run of Italy in return.
But the empire of trust betrayed Carthage; it went to war in Sicily and won the island for itself. This was the first Punic War. The second came about as had the first; this time the Romans breached their agreement by meddling in Carthaginian affairs in Spain.
The Second Punic War saw Hannibal cross the Alps. Then, we got to see how strong those bonds of trust in Italy really were. Given the choice between weak Rome and the strong Carthaginians, dozens of Italian cities switched alliances – including the second largest city on the peninsula, Capua.
The Romans could be trusted, as long as trust worked for them. When it didn’t, they turned to violence – just like everybody else. In the case of the Punic Wars, and all of Rome’s wars, it was violence that settled the issue, not trust.
Madden spends considerable ink telling us how nice the Romans were in their wars against the Greeks. But when push came to shove, that is, when trust no longer paid, Roman forces looted the treasures of Corinth, and leveled the city.
Mr. Madden misses the point about Rome. He misses the point about the US too. Like Rome, America uses carrot and stick. Carrots are usually cheaper. But, in the end, it’s the stick that counts. Americans were able to calm indigenous peoples with treaties and reservations; but if they had not been ready and willing to go to war against them, they would never have been able to colonize the continent. Then, they used big sticks against their own people too. In their war against the Confederacy, Sherman did to Atlanta almost exactly what Mummius had done to Corinth. He destroyed the city…and laid waste to the countryside around it.
Brief dummies guide to empire: A coalition of the willing is all very well; but when they’re not willing to go along, get out the stick and whack them hard.
Regards,
Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning
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Off to the races yet again!! Glad to see you took down your “crash flag” LOL!
US isn’t the Roman Empire. Anyone who even remotely thinks there is a comparison is naive and foolish. We sit in a global economy now. While the US is still and will remain the dominant player, we are in an era of global co-operation. That’s the difference now.
Meanwhile, the greatest Fed Chairman in our history has made another statement and the market loves it! Good job Mr. Bernanke, good job Fed.
ok … time to short …
VIX is below 18, already a few days …
the last times it was this low were
- medium May 2008
- medium August 2008
- Jan 10th 2010
but this time it might be different …
Harry what are you smoking, I want some…
John: Smoking the same thing that I’ve been smoking since posting here when SPX was below 1000. I’m smoking truth. I’m smoking reality. The truth and reality both point to an economic recovery stronger than what anyone thought.
And what’s even better, many still don’t think it’s real. The more the doomers continue with that line of thinking, the higher we go!
For a look at a shorter period, see Adrian Goldsworthy’s “Caesar” (2006, ISBN 978-0-300-12048-6). Good insights into Caesar and into the motivations of the Roman empire.
Dear Bill,
Since this book focuses strongly on the economic system of Ancient Rome, I think you would really enjoy it. It is by Rupert Matthews and is entitled
The Age of the Gladiators ~ Savagery & Spectacle in Ancient Rome.
Mr. Matthews breaks it down nicely into the following four parts:
I. Arenas of Blood
II. Circuses
III. Roman Triumphs
IV. Bread and Debauchery
However, I would not suggest Pool Side. On the plane, late at night, returning to America might be better.
Harry I heard Phoenix has a lot of hot property on the cheap now. Better get in while you can, before you’re priced out there.
This to will go the way of the dodo bird. With the added need of $M more for social needs(?) and to only place that the liberal/lefties can get it is from the military. That also will kill two birds (not dodo) with one act.
Here’s the deal … every one else has tied to take over the world … the Germans and Japan in WWII and then Russia after and The British and French well before. The point we are at now is where we have struck everyone else down and forbid them to take over anything, however without any imperial goals of our own we are simply tasked with keeping everyone else safe. That’s why our military is the greatest.
Is this the whole article? The introduction never gets revisited.
Anyone who doesn’t think our currently military goals are to control the entire world never read the Project for a New American Century’s mission statement before they took it down. Signed by none other than Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz, and a whole lot of other folks who are costing me money.
BTW, since someone else mentioned stocks, I hope everyone got in on Ford when it was 2 & under. Ooh boy, tell you what…
ROFLMAO….Finally…someone who understands humans. The whole point of dominance breeds a ‘by any means necessary’ philosophy. No matter how you disguise it: left or right, fascist or communist, democrat or republican (lower-case intended), if you have an empire you remove SOMEBODY’S “right” to self-determination. It really doesn’t matter who the victim is…the perpetrator can’t preach rights and free will to subjects of an empire of any sort. The arena, economic or political, will be biased toward the dominator….benevolence is imaginary to the defeated.
Thank you, BB, for an interesting thought. Might agree with it, might not. Let’s have a cup of tea in 50 years.