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Stephanie Kelton MMT & The Deficit Myth
Episode 184th June 2021 • The Supply Side • Jonathan Doyle
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This is the first in a new series of content where I explore Stephanie Kelton's theories of MMT. Is MMT just Keynesianism on steroids? Is there any veracity to the claims of Stephanie Kelton and other advocates of Modern Monetary Theory. I explore the introductory claims in her books and some initial responses to the six myths that she believes must be overcome for MMT to be properly understood.

Transcripts

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Well, Hey everybody, Jonathan Doyle with you here.

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Thanks so much for taking a moment to check out this short video.

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I really hope it's going to be useful for you.

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I hope it's going to be useful for me.

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Uh, I guess in that context, I should give you some backstory.

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I came into this whole area very, very late in life.

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I like to joke that I had the world's worst economics

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teacher back in the 11th grade.

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I won't name names, but, uh, in high school, I had a real love for

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the subject of economics, but I think my teacher was kind of really

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looking forward to retirement.

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And so most of what I learned was straight over the top.

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So, uh, since COVID, and since what I firmly believe is some very

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significant government overreach.

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Uh, the life that I had, the business that I had, uh, was severely impacted

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of course, by many of the things that have played out in recent time.

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So during the lockdown, I was doing a lot of training and I was on my train

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of bike, watching some YouTube stuff.

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And I ended up somehow down the precious metals rabbit hole, which led to me

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thinking about economics in general.

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And then I've been on a journey since that time.

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So if you're watching this, there's a very good chance that, you know,

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Far more about economics than I do.

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So I hope I can have your patience as I work through this.

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I think my background was originally in teaching years ago and I

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enjoy teaching and I think one of the best ways that I learn.

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Is to teach.

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So MMT, modern monetary theory, or as Jim Rogers likes to call it more money.

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Today is a really big thing at the moment.

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Obviously you've heard about it if you've come to this video.

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So I wanted to understand it.

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I think it's very easy.

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To be highly critical of it, especially if you're more of a classical economics

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perspective, a libertarian perspective, it's so easy to, you know, to chant in

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the fed and to critique them in tea.

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But I really felt that I should understand it.

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And to do that.

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What I wanted to explore was the work of Stephanie Kelton.

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Who's written this book called the deficit myth.

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I'm sure many of you be familiar with it.

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The first thing I wanted to say is, well, look, let me give you the

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background, what we're going to do.

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Uh, we're going to work through.

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The key aspects of this book.

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So I'm going to be reading through it forensically, and I'll put

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out a series of short videos about what I'm learning as I go.

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So in terms of housekeeping, I would love you to be commenting on this,

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helping me, helping others, I guess, sharing your thoughts and insights.

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As I worked through the book.

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So the best way to do that would be to come across to the actual

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posts on the supply side websites.

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So if you just go to supply side partners.com, supply side partners.com,

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you're going to find the posts and there'll be spaces to comment there.

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And I know a lot of us in economics really like to do that.

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So please comment.

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And, uh, you may be hearing this in the podcast format, or if you're seeing this

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on YouTube on the supply side podcast channel, Please post some comments there.

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Uh, it's just very helpful for me and helpful for others.

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So I guess what I'm trying to do is start a discussion, a serious discussion

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around Stephanie Kelton's work.

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So before I jump into a few slides, this video will just be an introduction.

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She, she sort of works through six key myths.

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So I want to work through those quickly and give you those in the first video.

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So you got a framework for where we are going to go.

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And, uh, I did have a couple of introductory things I wanted to say to

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you about Stephanie Kelton and her work.

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I spent a lot of time yesterday reading through the introduction

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and what I felt was, and I watched a few videos of her as well.

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And I want to say this, Stephanie Kelton is a serious economist.

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Now you may not agree with where she gets to with any of it.

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But I watched her in a video and I thought this is a serious person.

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It doesn't mean she's right, but it means that she is serious.

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She comports herself.

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I feel with a, with a lot of dignity.

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And, uh, and I, I admired that.

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I watched the debate with her and, uh, the other person was just the typical

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rant about we are going to be Venezuela.

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We're going to be grace, but didn't really engage.

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Or I thought she held her composure really well.

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So on my notes here, I think we need to take her very seriously,

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uh, you know, for better or worse.

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She's making us all think about the nature of political economy.

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And, uh, she's somebody that's done a huge amount of work.

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I mean, she's, she's studied at the highest level.

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She's been immersed in this for many years.

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And as I said, she may be wrong, but let's not fall into

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the habit of blah, blah, blah.

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She's this she's that because we, none of us know her personally, we don't

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necessarily know her motivations.

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But we just need to engage with the ideas and, you know, here ends the homily

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here, ends the sermon, but I think you'd probably agree with me that so much

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of what we're seeing in social media and in general public discourse in the

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public square, it's extremely vitriolic.

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And I think the best way to beat about idea is with a good one.

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So let's explore the ideas, uh, a couple of opening thoughts about him in T.

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One thing I've noticed when you listen to people talking about him and T

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uh, who are advocates, proponents of it is they, they seem to say

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that, uh, NMT is, is descriptive.

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They're sort of saying it's descriptive of what's actually happening.

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I felt there's a bit of sophistry there.

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Yes.

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MMT is quite descriptive of what's happening in our sort of global

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shadow banking reserve system.

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But.

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It's not simply descriptive.

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I think there's a bit of sophistry in that.

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It's kind of like saying that, um, you know, lethal injection.

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Is, you know, just describing something that's happening.

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I was thinking about that driving this morning, you know, lethal injection

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is the end result of a whole bunch of other beliefs and processes around, you

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know, society, jurisprudence, justice, natural law, all these sorts of things.

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So.

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You know, lethal injection is the end point of a whole bunch of things that

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came before it that bring about that reality, whether you afford or against.

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It's not my point.

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I felt a little bit that what are some of the M and T people are doing

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is just saying, oh, you didn't teach.

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Just descriptive.

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It just describes what's happening.

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For me, that is so frustrating.

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It's more than that.

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I mean, it's a set of beliefs about how economies and, uh, finance, both monetary

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and fiscal stimulus should be handled.

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So I think a little bit more honesty, there would be a good thing.

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MMT is not just descriptive.

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It's, it's a genuine belief about how things should happen.

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And in these videos, we want to sort of see where that's likely to take us.

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Last few opening reflections from me was as I read through her opening chapters,

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what really seemed to strike me.

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And I hope you can add something about this in the comments is that

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it all seems extremely statist.

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You know, it's her fundamental, I guess, idea at the start and the

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opening chapters, at least as I read it.

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Was you either position government at the center of reality, or you position

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the individual at the center of reality.

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And I know where you libertarians out there would be nodding, but I don't,

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you know, here in Australia we don't have a huge libertarian tradition.

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So I kind of came to this, just gravitated, this sort of by osmosis, as I

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read it, I was like, you know, Why do we think that the government automatically

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knows best how to do all this?

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Uh, and the more that I read, it just felt very status.

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And as we hit the slides in just a moment, I want to show you a quote

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that Stephanie Kelton uses in the book from Robert Kennedy, which

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when I read it, I was like, It's a little creepy, just a little creepy.

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So we're gonna look at that.

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Um, you know, she makes the point early on that, that the

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government doesn't need our money.

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So one of the central tenants of M and T at least as she's communicating,

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it is the difference between currency users and currency issuers.

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So we are all currency users, but of course, none of us are currency

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issuers, and she makes the point that basically the government.

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As money creates currency, let's get the definitions of currency and money.

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Correct.

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Obviously creates currency so that we have something to pay our taxes in.

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And the reason we need that is the government doesn't need money from us.

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And what, this is what she says.

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She says what the government needs is to provision itself.

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What the government needs is to provision itself, to provide for all of its,

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uh, agendas and processes and systems.

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And it needs us to work.

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There's sort of the language he's using that it needs us to work.

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It needs us to become teachers and doctors and solicitors and all these things.

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And it gets us to do that by forcing us to pay taxes.

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And of course we have to pay taxes in their currency.

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So it's almost as if for the government, you know, Currency

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really is a little bit irrelevant.

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What matters is whether they can use currency to make us do things.

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And as I read that it did sound of course, very stainless, but it

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also sounded a lot like a hive.

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Like we serve the hive, you know, that we exist to serve the hive.

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My second master's program.

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It was in philosophical anthropology.

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And so I've got a very big interest in something called ontology, which

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is kind of the study of essence, the study of being what things are.

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And as I read this work, I was struck with this idea that.

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What about the human desire to work for its own sake, the desire to produce

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beautiful, interesting, valuable things.

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You know, if we were simply working just to pay taxes, to provision the state,

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then why create something beautiful?

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And I guess you could make an argument that, well, we create beautiful

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things because they have some kind of subjective, extra value in there.

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They get more money and, but I was really interested in it.

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It's a very reductionist view of reality to say that we only want to work.

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To get tax money, the money to pay taxes, and then we can provision the state.

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So I want us to think about that.

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Uh, last couple of things, uh, Yeah.

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As I read through that kind of that as that status thing emerged inside

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me, as I read it, I couldn't help thinking that command economies

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don't have the best track record.

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You know, I, I'm a reasonable student of history and you look at command

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methodologies and modalities of political economy and they are as best I can tell.

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And please add something in the comments, if I'm wrong.

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I absolute train wreck, but reading George Gilda's knowledge and power.

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I mean, I, to him about the inflammation theory of capitalism, right?

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Where the, the genius of capitalism is its ability to coordinate

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these vast numbers of signals.

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These vast plethora of informatory signals, whereas command economies don't

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have that sophisticated sophistication or can they, it's also the idea that

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you know, that there's a certain group of bureaucrats that are just

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so much better at knowing how to allocate resources than we might be.

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So I not a big fan command economy.

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So I want to see, as I read the book, how that question gets resolved for

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Stephanie, she also sees Texas as a tool for wealth redistribution.

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And if you're anything like me, that makes you feel rather nervous when you

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hear that word wealth distribution.

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So I think part of this conversation that we want to be having about M and T.

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Is really this conversation around, should there be wealth distribute

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redistribution, uh, at what level, who would make the decisions about it?

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You know, soak the rich doesn't tend to work in practice particularly well.

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The rich have a very, very long history of, uh, finding other

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ways to survive being soaked.

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If you will, last thing, she talks about taxes as a government form of,

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uh, discouraging undesirable behavior.

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Undesirable behavior.

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When I read that, I was like, who gets to decide what's

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undesirable right on what basis?

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See, when I get out of the studio here today, I'm going

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to be drinking some bourbon.

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It's Friday afternoon, it's freezing card.

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I'm having a bunch of friends around me, a lot of big fire.

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I'm going to be drinking some really good American whiskey.

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And I'm pretty sure that there's plenty of people that would say

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that's an undesirable behavior and it needs to be taxed.

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So I stop it.

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I ain't going to stop it.

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I'm going to be smoking a pipe as well.

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I don't smoke a pipe a lot, but when it's called and I've got American

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whiskey, I mean, it's like a pipe.

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So taxation has implications for some things that I really enjoy.

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And look, I'm having a joke here.

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I mean, well sort of, because I am actually going to be doing

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nice things, but what right.

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Does it the state have at what level to tax on desirable behavior.

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So we need to have that discussion too.

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All right.

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That's it for my opening bits and pieces.

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What I wanted to do now was just flip you into a few slides that I put together

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that will give you the, uh, the process that Stephanie Kelton is undertaking here.

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The myths.

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And then over these next series of videos, I'm going to try and

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go through each chapter carefully.

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So with the magic of zoom, let us see if I can effectively

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share this screen, which I can.

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So let me do this.

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Unfortunately, I can't see what screen is coming up, but I'm pretty sure the first

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one is where we're talking about statism.

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And I want to give you this rather creepy quote that she uses from Robert Kennedy.

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Not sure.

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I want to be taken too much moral gardens anyway, enough said he's

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the quiet if I've got it right.

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Fingers crossed.

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Government belongs wherever evil needs an adversary.

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And there are people in distress.

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Government belongs wherever Naval needs an adversary.

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And there are people in distress.

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Yeah.

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Okay.

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One level.

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I get it.

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Uh, if you know, If you're a in world war two and the Nazis

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are burning down your village.

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And then, you know, the, the, uh, the us army comes through the hedgerow.

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That's a good thing because you've now got an advocate on your side against

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the axis of evil and you're in distress.

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So yeah, I get that.

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The context in which government does belong, where evil needs an

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adversary and people are in distress.

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But I think if you look at that quite.

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Well, you know, what kind of track record does government have at knowing

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when to stop and who made government the arbitrary of what exactly is evil

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and what exactly constitutes distress?

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So again, we look, it's amazing as I talk about it, I keep finding myself in this

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libertarian kind of perspective here.

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Don't I, uh, in the sense that.

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Who is the best to decide, uh, what is necessarily evil and, uh, and what

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is necessarily distress and how much help do we need from the government

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to deal with, excuse me, justice, to deal with these complex issues.

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So let's get into this now.

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I think what we've got here is the first myths.

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I'll start to spin you through these myth.

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One, the federal government should budget like a household.

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So what I'm taking you through here, Is what, uh, what's Stephanie Kelton's

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doing is going here are these six major myths and these myths, uh,

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I'd completely untrue and M and T is going to help us resolve them.

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So, so that's the myth, this idea, of course, that governments

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should stop spending money.

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They should be like a household.

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So her basic premise in chapter one is the government's absolutely nothing

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like a household, of course, because they're an issuer of their own currency.

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So the reality, according to Dr.

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Kelton, Is unlike a household, the federal government issues, the currency, it spins.

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So I'm not going to go down the rabbit hole with these yet.

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This'll be the purpose of the following videos.

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So we'll do a video just on myth one as I work through it.

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So, uh, she does make an interesting point though, in, in Jessie talks about this.

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She does make the point that politicians tend to use the myth to

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their own advantage considerably.

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So we're all very familiar with politicians in opposition and saying

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the government's living beyond its means the government's doing this.

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The government's doing that.

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These deficits are unsustainable.

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We've all heard that.

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So.

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In M and T she's making the point that, uh, governments aren't anything like

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a household because, uh, where you and I are constrained by finance and the

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inability to produce Fiat currency.

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The government is not.

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So she wants us to understand an MMT that, uh, there's no relationship

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between our own experiences, our own personal experiences of finance

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and what the government can do.

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And she, you know, she makes the point that the question isn't what can be done.

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It's what should be done.

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So she sort of, I think she's making the point that

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basically printing is unlimited.

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And I know many of us are very much aware of that, how fast it's growing.

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So she's basically going, yes.

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Printing of the sovereign currency is essentially unlimited, but, uh, it's

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like, she's basically saying it doesn't matter because they can just go forever.

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So that's the first myth it's getting the second one.

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Myth two deficits are evidence of overt spending.

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So this is the idea of course, that, uh, when we see different

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deficits, it's simply because the government is living beyond its means.

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And, uh, the reality, according to Stephanie Kelton is.

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If you want to see where the evidence of overspending,

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you simply look at inflation.

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So an MMT deficits are irrelevant.

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It doesn't matter whether it's a trillion dollar deficit or a $10 trillion deficit.

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All that matters is whether or not you're seeing inflation.

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Now I know many of you are gonna have thoughts on that.

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So please let me know what you think in the comments.

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And this will come out.

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Of course, when I do a video just on this second chapter,

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so really it's about inflation.

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And as best I can tell, uh, central banks are having a fair bit of

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trouble getting inflation over the last, uh, decade or so to move north.

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Of course, recently we've seen, uh, at least CPI evidence that

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that's really beginning to shift.

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All right.

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Myth number three.

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Deficits will burden the next generation.

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If you've heard me talk on the podcast, I've said to many guests, I'm pretty

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sure it's George Washington said this, that, that no generation should

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incur debts, that it cannot pay, cannot pay off in its own lifetime.

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I'm pretty sure that was George Washington.

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Somebody might correct me on that.

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So there's this deep idea that many of us hold that it is wrong to incur

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a debt that will be then transferred to future generations for our own

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profit as a result of our own.

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Profligacy you know, uh, I said to Karen, my wife, just before I came

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to the studio, I said, uh, You know, it'd be like Karen and I, you know,

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remortgaging our properties to the hilt, spinning everything we could

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on credit cards and then dying and saying, Hey kids, good luck with that.

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Uh, so there is this strong idea, isn't it?

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We all feel that it is not appropriate just to keep spending and spending,

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especially on so many unusual wealth transfer and entitlement programs.

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If it means that future generations are going to be impacted yet, according to Dr.

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Kelton, the reality is in fact that.

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The national debt poses, no financial burden whatsoever.

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For me, that was one of those moments when the, uh, you know, the record

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scratches on the rate, you know, the needle scratches on the record.

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I'm like the national debt poses.

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No financial burden whatsoever.

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Okay.

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Okay.

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Uh, had a conversation with someone earlier today and I've had this

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same conversation a few times.

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Much of NNT seems to subvert the laws of the cosmos.

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I said to this friend on the phone today, point to something in nature

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that just is super net natural, supernatural above the natural order.

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Show me a true perpetual motion machine.

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Show me, you know, the ability to make unicorns appear out of thin air.

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Uh, you know, it seems that the universe is constrained by laws of reason and

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rationality and mathematical order.

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Everything in the cosmos except MMT.

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I'm not being flippant there.

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I know it does sound it, but I'm interested in, in how we

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can incur debt and it had no ramifications for the future.

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So again, in humility, I I'm going to read the chapters.

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I'm going to see what her perspective is.

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And I know some of you are picking your jaw up off the floor after reading that

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last reality, let's do number four.

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Now we have a firstly, we've got quite, let me do that for you.

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I'm going to give you a direct quote on no national burden, no

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financial burden for the future.

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Here's a quote from Dr.

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Kelton.

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She says government deficits don't force financial burdens

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forward onto future populations.

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Increasing the deficit.

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Doesn't make future generations poorer and reducing deficits.

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Won't make them any better.

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I don't know what to say about that.

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Speechless.

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And again, you know, I'm going to read and find out and hopefully get educated

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and you're welcome to post in the comments and say, Jonathan, when you put that slide

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up, and if you want to get these quotes on the websites, buy-side partners.com.

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I'll put the slides up as well.

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So I'll have a series of PDF or PNG files there.

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You can go through these direct quotes is from page 10, by the way.

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So how she says that, I don't know.

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So let's press on myth.

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Number four.

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Government deficits, proud out prov private investment, making us poor up.

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So the huge amount of spending and printing has no impact

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on private investment.

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And according that's the messy.

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He thinks that many of us believe, but the reality, according to MMT is drum roll.

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Please.

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Fiscal deficits increase our wealth and collective savings.

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I think I'm feel like I've stepped through a wormhole fiscal deficits, increase

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our wealth and collective savings.

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I don't know what to say about that.

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I really have nothing to offer.

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Uh, I'm going to read the chapter.

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I'll get back to you.

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Uh, we often myth number five deficits, make the United States

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dependent upon foreigners.

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So all that money flying out of the country, that massive

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global Exodus of us dollars.

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I'm looking over the other side of the studio towards, I think it's Richard

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Duncan's, uh, So the dollar collapsed.

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Now I'm looking at, uh, another dollar crisis by Richard Dunkin, where he

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forensically goes through the movement of us dollars into China and overseas.

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And basically how that money.

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I mean, Dr.

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Kelton makes the point to that money comes back and people simply buy us treasuries.

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You know, they get interest bearing treasuries, but it also drove huge

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amounts of malinvestment in property, in stocks, in equity markets.

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So.

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The idea, at least from my understanding at this point, is that, that huge,

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those huge deficits, those trade deficits, uh, you know, have had

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enormous negative effects, particularly upon the U S general population.

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But according to MMT drum roll, please.

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Reality is not that we become dependent upon foreigners, but wait for it.

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America's trade deficit is it's stuff.

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Surplus.

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America's trade deficit is it's surplus of extra stuff.

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So this is some kind of double, double entry bookkeeping, master Yoda, Jedi

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mind trick thing that I don't fully understand, but I will read the book

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and I'll get back to you on that too.

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So I hope you will subscribe wherever you're watching this.

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Please subscribe YouTube on the website.

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Uh, you can just email me direct jonathan@supplysidepartners.com.

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I'll get you on the list.

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So, cause I've.

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I'm recording this, but I'm actually pretty curious

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about what I'm going to land.

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Let's see some Jedi magic happening here in MMT.

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All right.

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I've got a quote here we do.

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If we wanted to, we could pay off the debt immediately with

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a simple keystroke page 11.

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If we wanted to, we could pay off the debt immediately with a simple key stroke.

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You know, this is another one of those things where if you're I did that.

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We go to jail.

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Uh, and I'm kind of thinking that if I was holding huge amounts of U S debt and the

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U S government deleted it, I'd be cross.

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I'd be just a tad on the miffed side.

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Miffed, not furious, just cross.

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Wow.

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All right.

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Myth number six.

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Myth number six, entitlement programs are financially unsustainable.

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We can't afford them anymore.

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So my understanding is that a future commitments to social security,

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Medicare, or like something like 130, 170 trillion give or take over

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the long haul, uh, unfunded, but according to MMT and Stephanie Kelton.

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You can do this entitlements don't need to be touched.

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Here is the reality.

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According to MMT reality, as long as the federal government commits to

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making the payments, it can always afford to support these programs.

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What matters is our economy's long run capacity to produce the real

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goods and services people will need.

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I like the line here, as long as the federal government

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commits to making the payments.

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B because we can trust them when they say they're going to commit to it.

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Trust us, vote for us.

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We will keep the Punchbowl exactly where it is.

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Uh, I want to be cynical.

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But if the government promises to maintain something.

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Hmm.

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So you're in the second part of this.

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Obviously Stephanie Kelton is talking about this idea that what we need to

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do, it doesn't matter what the debt is.

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All we need to do is grow GDP.

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Right?

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You grow the economy, uh, then you can deal with your huge deficits in your debt.

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Uh, now, how do you do that?

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When you've got a demographic time bomb everywhere.

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I mean, everyone talks about China, but the Chinese demographic issue is just off

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the scale, you know, one child policy.

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Um, yeah.

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Okay.

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Not a thing.

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So China's, uh, Demography issues.

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The U S as most of the developed worlds, demographic issues, you

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know, as one great historian famously said, friends, demography is destiny.

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Demography is destiny.

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So I don't see how you grow your economy indefinitely with a shrinking population

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and an I or an aging population.

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To which people of course reply.

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Well, you do it through technology.

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You, uh, you get massive productive gains because of the application of technology.

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You know, you go back to the 1860s, you get the industrial revolution, you

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get the steam engine, you get this huge productivity growth because of technology.

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I don't know about you, but, you know, go and read Ross, do this book, the

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decadence society, uh, uh, two seconds.

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I got it right here.

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So this is a roster.

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That's a roster.

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That's awesome.

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He is.

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In fact, he is rarer than a unicorn with a pocket full of hen's teeth.

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Ross do that is the only conservative writer at the New York times.

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All the other ones were taken out and sent to the Gulag

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friends, but Ross is still there.

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He wrote this book, the decadence society, you need to read it.

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Uh, he makes the point that basically the developed world is out of ideas.

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And technology is actually atrophied.

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I mean, think about it, right?

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Yeah.

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We've got nanotech.

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Yeah, we've got some things, but you go back to the fifties and

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sixties and you know, the U S space program was really quite seismic.

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We've had the same iPhone for about 15, 20 years.

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Give or take, I don't remember when it came out, but guess what?

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Here's a phone.

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It looks like the first one.

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What does it do now?

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Well, nothing different, except record everything you

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say and send it to Jeff Bezos.

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That's all it does now.

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Right?

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So technology is, you know, but also I think the gains of technology are

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captured in a very, in a relatively small section of the economy.

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And they're not huge employers of having read, you know, huge

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biographies of people like Rockefeller.

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You know, the gilded age did actually employ a lot of people.

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There was a lot of labor force participation, whereas, you know, your

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Googles, your Amazons, your apples, they employ, you know, Give or take

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a couple hundred thousand people, but that's on a planet of what?

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7 billion.

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So just all I'm saying here is I'm not sure that we're going to see the

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ability to massively grow GDP simply through technology or whatever.

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Got anything else for you.

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Um, so there's a quote, I think.

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And the quote is this.

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There is absolutely no good reason for social security benefits.

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This is a quote from Dr.

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Kelton, for example, to ever face cuts.

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How government will always be able to meet future obligations because

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it can never run out of money.

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Now I was thinking about this before, uh, yeah.

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More holes than a Swiss cheese factory.

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I think.

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That, uh, if there's no reason for them to ever face cuts, is this logically

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inconsistent to save the world?

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Therefore shouldn't we just grow them exponentially.

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And then we're just in UBI territory, right?

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Universal, basic income.

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Why work, which takes me back to the ontological argument about the need for

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work, the human need for work, you know?

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So, uh, I don't have to think about that.

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So that's a quite from there.

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Uh, what else?

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Okay.

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That's it for me on that.

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Uh, look while I've got you here, I'm going to wrap up, but if you

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are saying this, hopefully grab your phone right now and just hit that

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QR code that will take you through to the, uh, supply side website.

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Hit that button for, I want to join the podcast or whatever it is.

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It'll take you down to the sign up box.

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I'd love you to do that.

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You've got your phone with you right now, because that will

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help me to send you out the next episodes and keep you in the loop.

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So please rewind this video.

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You need to hit that with your QR code and make sure you come across to the website.

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All right.

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That's it.

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From the sharing side, hopefully you just back to me on screen.

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Now, your lucky things summary.

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I hope that didn't come across as too cynical.

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I don't mean to be cynical.

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I think there are some huge problems here with MMT.

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There's a great deal that I want to learn.

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And as I worked through the book over the next few days, I'm going to be putting

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these out and just trying to learn.

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I think we, we, oh, uh, Dr.

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Kelton the, uh, the time and the effort to understand the ideas.

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So from here, please add a comment.

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If you're seeing this on YouTube, or we seeing this on a website, supply side

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partners.com, let me know what you think.

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Uh, tell me, uh, where, where I'm wrong.

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Tell me if you've got extra information.

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If you've got links that people would find useful, please do that.

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Uh, you're going to find the podcast on every podcast player.

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So.

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On Spotify, Amazon, wherever, just type in the supply side podcast with me, Jonathan

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Doyle, you'll find that last thing.

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Uh, if you would like to support me on Patrion, if you like what you're

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hearing, and this is interesting, you're getting some value from it.

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Then there will be a link, uh, to the pie chart of Canada.

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Love you to come and make a contribution on Patrion.

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So I can keep doing this.

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I just want to go deeper into this and keep trying to bring you value.

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So I love your support on Patrion to, uh, to keep financing

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what I'm trying to do here.

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And otherwise just go to patron and just do a search for Jonathan Doyle.

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You're going to find me there.

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All right.

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God bless everybody.

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I hope that's useful.

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I hope that's useful.

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Let's uh, let's get into this.

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Let's see where it takes us.

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My name's Jonathan Doyle.

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This is the supply side podcast, YouTube website thing.

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I'm going to have another video for you on M and T very soon.

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