• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Fat Tail Daily

Investment Ideas From the Edge of the Bell Curve

  • Menu
    • Commodities
      • Resources and Mining
      • Copper
      • Gold
      • Iron Ore
      • Lithium
      • Silver
      • Graphite
      • Rare Earths
    • Technology
      • AI
      • Bitcoin
      • Cryptocurrency
      • Energy
      • Financial Technology
      • Bio Technology
    • Market Analysis
      • Latest ASX News
      • Dividend Shares
      • ETFs
      • Stocks and Bonds
    • Macro
      • Australian Economy
      • Central Banks
      • World Markets
    • Small Caps
    • More
      • Investment Guides
      • Premium Research
      • Editors
      • About
      • Contact Us
  • Latest
  • Fat Tail Series
  • About Us
No Index

Invitation to Larceny

Like 82

By Bill Bonner, Thursday, 15 May 2025

You can blame white men for the world’s ills. But when it came to plumbing and internal combustion engines, white men were on the ball. Not a single one of them was carrying out a government policy.

Another day. Another whiny intellectual who tells us we need to throw capitalism overboard.

Here’s a nutty opinion piece from Newsweek:

Capitalism Isn’t Working for the Poor. Let’s Try Something Else.

There are two parts to the above headline. Both of them are absurd.

First, how do they know ‘capitalism isn’t working for the poor?’ We’d say that whatever system we have has done a fair job of making the poor poor…and keeping them that way.

But it has also made America’s poor richer — in material terms — than the richest people of generations past. What Pharaoh had air-conditioning? Did Louis 14th or Madame de Pompadour get to watch TV or get pizzas delivered to their front doors? Did King Midas get anaesthesia when his teeth were pulled?

Napoleon didn’t even have central heating. John D. Rockefeller didn’t have the internet. Genghis Khan didn’t have running hot water.

Capitalism made these improvements. To be more precise, they were almost all made by the White Patriarchy. Yes, you can blame white men for the world’s ills. But when it came to plumbing and internal combustion engines, white men were on the ball. And not a single one of them was carrying out a government policy.

In America today, it is no longer easy to be genuinely poor. Who wants to live without a working HVAC? Who wants to carry water from a nearby stream… or keep a fire going in the winter months?

And few poor people today have a lean and hungry look. A much bigger risk is obesity, diabetes, and immobility.

Over many thousands of years, humans probably developed a deep preference for idleness. Hunting used up calories. And storing food was difficult, so there was no reason to kill more than you could eat. Nor were there any Rolex watches or giant mansions to prove your superior status.

The best you could do was to hunt and gather efficiently, so you were left with the most leisure time possible.

That taste for sloth, despite two thousand years of capitalism, is still with us. And today, most of America’s poor probably choose to be poor; after all, the path to not being poor is pretty well sign posted. All you have to do, statistically, is to get married and stay married…and get a job and keep it. Then, of course, make sure you spend less than you make.

Is that so hard?

Disagreeable and boring, perhaps. Keeping a job…like keeping a spouse… can be a real drag. But according to the labor department, there are more jobs on offer than there are people to take them. As for the marriage market, we don’t know…but we see people get married once… twice…even three times, so it can’t be that tough.

The poor people we’ve known danced to their own feckless tune. ‘Capitalism’ had little to do with it. But the success of capitalism makes it possible for a whole class of people — who might otherwise be foraging for food or standing in line to get a loaf of bread — to spend their time thinking about how to improve it.

That is where the second idiotic part comes into play. “Let’s try something else,” is an invitation to larceny. Either people do the best they can in a more-or-less honest economic system…or one group uses ‘politics’ to steal from another. There is no other ‘else’ to try.

You’d think the writer — Thomas C. Foley, former GOP candidate for governor of Connecticut — would know better. But he proposes a two-tier system… in which one group gets to go about its business as it chooses (the capitalists)… and the other group (the poor) gets free money:

At age 20, young Americans would choose whether they want to be in the free-market system or the stabilized income system. Enrollment in either system would be voluntary based on individual preference, subject to the maintenance of the roughly 70 percent to 30 percent workforce breakdown. Before age 30, workers would have the option of switching systems once. After 30, switching would be possible, but expensive. Each year the stabilized income amount would be adjusted for new entrants to keep the number of participants between 25 percent and 30 percent of the workforce.

Talk about being born yesterday. Mr. Foley must have just dropped from the womb. How many times and places have experimented with improvements to capitalism?

Just in our lifetimes we’ve seen the Soviet Union, Kampuchea, and North Korea…not to mention the many more modest improvements wrought by the Fed, the War on Poverty, trade policy, DEI programs and many others. How many successes are on this long list?

None!

But maybe this time…

Regards,

Bill Bonner Signature

Bill Bonner,
For The Daily Reckoning Australia

All advice is general advice and has not taken into account your personal circumstances.

Please seek independent financial advice regarding your own situation, or if in doubt about the suitability of an investment.

Bill Bonner

Bill’s Premium Subscriptions

Publication logo
Fat Tail Investment Research

Latest Articles

  • OpenAI and Microsoft Divorce?: Why this could be good for you
    By Charlie Ormond

    While breakups are rarely pretty, this one might actually benefit investors willing to look beyond the drama.

  • Three Lithium Stocks in the Buy Zone
    By Murray Dawes

    Lithium stocks jumped this week, so Murray and Callum discuss whether this could be the beginning of the second boom in lithium stocks. They also discuss a fund manager that is recovering and looking cheap

  • Every Australian Investor Has a Stake in Mining
    By James Cooper

    With its deep pool of retirement capital, Australia is on track to become the world’s primary destination for resource markets.

Primary Sidebar

Latest Articles

  • OpenAI and Microsoft Divorce?: Why this could be good for you
  • Three Lithium Stocks in the Buy Zone
  • Every Australian Investor Has a Stake in Mining
  • The next wave of AI winners
  • Could the US People Repudiate the National Debt?

Footer

Fat Tail Daily Logo
YouTube
Facebook
x (formally twitter)
LinkedIn

About

Investment ideas from the edge of the bell curve.

Go beyond conventional investing strategies with unique ideas and actionable opportunities. Our expert editors deliver conviction-led insights to guide your financial journey.

Quick Links

Subscribe

About

FAQ

Terms and Conditions

Financial Services Guide

Privacy Policy

Get in Touch

Contact Us

Email: support@fattail.com.au

Phone: 1300 667 481

All advice is general in nature and has not taken into account your personal circumstances. Please seek independent financial advice regarding your own situation, or if in doubt about the suitability of an investment.

The value of any investment and the income derived from it can go down as well as up. Never invest more than you can afford to lose and keep in mind the ultimate risk is that you can lose whatever you’ve invested. While useful for detecting patterns, the past is not a guide to future performance. Some figures contained in our reports are forecasts and may not be a reliable indicator of future results. Any actual or potential gains in these reports may not include taxes, brokerage commissions, or associated fees.

Fat Tail Logo

Fat Tail Daily is brought to you by the team at Fat Tail Investment Research

Copyright © 2025 Fat Tail Daily | ACN: 117 765 009 / ABN: 33 117 765 009 / ASFL: 323 988