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Shut up & Grow Some Balls!!

Freaking Heck's picture




 

Originally posted at http://www.capitalistexploits.at/

 

By: Chris Tell

Over the weekend I was watching a movie with my kids…”How to Train a Dragon”.

In the story, a tribe of Vikings live in a particularly inhospitable part of the world. They have some enemies…dragons in this case. Their homes are continuously destroyed and their cattle stolen by these fire-breathing beasts, but as the narrator, a little viking boy mentions at the outset of the film, "they have stubbornness issues”.

This reminded me of many people I’ve met...living miserably in admittedly inhospitable climes, while justifying sticking with the status quo. Why is this?

Why do people lament a system, yet cling to it fervently as if there are no options?

From sea to shining sea the majority of the populace is “educated” in State-run schooling systems. Every single one of these institutions and their governments parrot the same lame story, namely “We are the best country in the world, we have the best education system, we must sacrifice for the good of our country…blah, blah, blah.”Doesn't matter if you're in China, Canada, The USA or Venezuala. Same BS.

The problem with this "flawed" belief system is that it’s complete fiction.

This brain washing, when instilled at a tender young age, is how large swathes of the populace are brought up to think, and brought under control.

Hop on one of those pressurized tin cans that cart us across the oceans, and you'll see immediately that certain countries are far more hospitable than others. Some countries have better educational programs, some have higher literacy rates and some have lower levels of red tape and so forth. Clearly they cannot all be “the best”.

If we look back through history we see that large populations can and will move to places with friendlier climes if pressed to do so, for a myriad of reasons. America itself was founded by people escaping persecution and repression, and seeking a better life.

Unpatriotic bastards?

Some would argue that they were, based on the fact that they refused to abide by the doctrine of their British rulers. Mark and I would obviously disagree!

I touched on the subject of patriotism in a post entitled Military Minds, which drew a few vehement emails and unsubscribe’s.

 

Why patriotism is considered a virtue rather than a severe mental disorder is an unresolved mystery to me.

The political class love it of course…how else do you sell the concept that an individual should sacrifice his life, family and future, while raping, nuking and torturing fellow human beings, all for a political system that keeps bureaucrats in clover? Read any history book and tell me it isn't so.

Of course it's NEVER "sold" like that. Marketing/media/propaganda are all weapons in the same powerful arsenal, yet often bear little resemblance to reality. If the "sell" reflected the truth, nobody in their right mind would "buy" it.

Young Johnny in Oklahoma, fresh out of high school, armed with pimples and some political zest, full of grandiose perceptions of "his country's" place in the world, and possibly some religious fervour is never told he'll be coordinating drone strikes on innocent women and children whom he has never met before.

Lacking any smattering of critical thinking, which was never allowed to take root thanks to mind-numbing television programming, video games and an educational system that apparently teaches nothing other than to expect everything to be given to you on a silver platter (see our post on the Strawberry Generation), he's going to "fight for freedom"...he'll be a hero.

Is this resonating with anyone out there? It's been happening far longer than any of us have been alive, and will continue to happen.

How did we get here?

A subscriber of ours, and a regular correspondent recently sent Mark and I the info graphic below from an article on Zerohedge. It shows how Americans spend their time. Please indulge me.

In short, the average American spends over an hour and half a day watching television, and a whopping 6 minutes a day reading. That reading may well be Glamour, or People Magazine or some other such garbage.

Does this matter? Yes and no.

More importantly, should it matter to YOU...and what are YOU going to do about it?

The world has a ton of problems, they're everywhere. There is also no shortage of people doing stupid things. When someone complains to me about the state of the world, or the state of their country, town, or even household, my immediate thought is “does it matter to me, and what am I going to do about it, if anything?”

If there is nothing that I can do about the situation...then why worry about it? If on the other hand there is a reason for me to get involved, then I can and will.

If someone was to tell you that the Sentinelese people have decided to accept gay marriages, abortion, and outlaw the eating of strawberries you'd likely care less, right?

Sentinelese People

First, it doesn't affect you directly, and second, if it did we would likely be living in the Bay of Bengal, and we'd have the choice to opt out...if we liked strawberries that is.

Instead of lamenting whatever system or setup exists where you are at, you have the choice to either accept it, reject it, or to change it. If you cannot change it, and assuming you disagree with it, then you need to grow some balls and make your own change!

The world, as my young daughter tells me...is a HUMASSIVE place. The truth is that life exists beyond the narrow confines most people so easily limit their view to.

Mark and I believe that the best opportunities to actually effect some change are by putting our capital to work in small, growing frontier markets. Attempting to affect change in societies which are moving in the wrong direction amounts to swimming upstream. We shouldn't lament the breakdown of certain markets, we need to be aware of it and adjust accordingly. In doing so we are taking action, even if that action is saying, "I'm not playing in this sandpit anymore".

Consider the following:

  • Germany - that stalwart of European economic growth has enjoyed, on average, a whopping 1.4% GDP gain year over year, during the last TEN years.
  • USA - The world leader? A GDP growth rate of 1.7% for 2012.
  • United Kingdom - The once great land of the Queen, 1.25% for 2012.
  • Libya - a growth rate of 22% for 2012.
  • Mongolia - a growth rate of 15% for 2012.
  • Myanmar - a growth rate of 7-8% in 2012.

The flip side is that the Frontier Markets where Mark and I prefer to operate are places where small amounts of capital can, and do, change lives - literally - both for us as investors, but more importantly for those entrepreneurs who are growing businesses which impact their societies...bringing goods, services and wealth to their people.

As far as "not playing in the lamenting sandpit" goes, we have found our own personal Shangri-La, a place where we can grow our own food, harvest our own rainwater (try that in Oregon), have little or nothing to do with bureaucrats, enjoy inexpensive living, warm sunshine on our faces year-round and be marveled every day by some of the most spectacular beauty and the happiest people we've encountered - bar none.

What is this marvelous place? For us it's Fiji.

- Chris

“Be the change that you wish to see in the world” – Mahatma Gandhi

 

 

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Wed, 07/10/2013 - 07:45 | 3736866 Dingleberry
Dingleberry's picture

Fiji's nice.

Just try and overlook the occasional governmental coup.

Wed, 07/10/2013 - 10:23 | 3737233 Vooter
Vooter's picture

And the constant fucking SUN. If there is a nightmare scenario for me, it's living anywhere that doesn't have a change of season. Believe it or not, I LOVE COLD WEATHER. And storms. And spring and fall (or what's left of them...). I realize that that's not the point of this piece. But the whole "We're going to take our hard-earned capital and move to a desert-island paradise" is just so...precious....

Wed, 07/10/2013 - 10:53 | 3737355 otto skorzeny
otto skorzeny's picture

+10-only a simpleton enjoys the sun.

Wed, 07/10/2013 - 11:08 | 3737430 lotusblue
lotusblue's picture

The sun is nice when it doesn't burn.

This blog buys into the BS elites (Banksters wish all ascribe to)

Our society has been deeply manipulated to conform to the "boot strap" Myth.This may have been possible in earlier centuriy but no longer.

Check reccent Bill Moyers documentary. "Two American Families  "

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/two-american-families/

Pretty much the experience most on this site have.

 

Wed, 07/10/2013 - 10:37 | 3737284 Imminent Crucible
Imminent Crucible's picture

If Fiji is a "desert island", then this is false advertising:  http://www.richard-seaman.com/Travel/Fiji/Highlights/Savusavu.jpg

Or else...maybe you don't know a lot about Fiji.

BTW, if you like crap weather, cold and storms, I know just the place for you: Northern Indiana.  I spent seven lifetimes there one winter.  Minus 10 degrees, 87 sunny days a year, and all the pig fumes your little heart desires.

Wed, 07/10/2013 - 12:51 | 3737899 Vooter
Vooter's picture

Yeah, I know, I was throwing "desert island" around way too loosely--Aruba is a desert island, Fiji is not. I imagine you still get the point. And as far as Indiana goes, cold and stormy is one thing. Having to live in the Midwest is another...

Wed, 07/10/2013 - 14:17 | 3738331 Imminent Crucible
Imminent Crucible's picture

Now you've really hurt my feelings. I was born in SoCal and lived in the Mojave Desert for years. I love the desert. Until 2007, I had 36 acres of mesa in Arizona above the Rim and liked nothing better than sitting outside on my own private mesa, watching that horrible nasty sun go down behind the junipers every evening.

Poor Otto below--he's gone completely bonkers.  I got so sick of 20 or 30 sunless days in a row in Indiana, I developed Seasonal Affective Disorder just so I had a reasonable excuse to tell my wife "I'm out of here. You going or staying?"

 

Thu, 07/11/2013 - 10:39 | 3741403 Vooter
Vooter's picture

Don't get me wrong: I LOVE the desert. I lived in AZ for a couple of years, have spent tons of time in the California desert (was just in Bombay Beach on the Salton Sea a couple of months ago) and am a big land-speed racing fan. I just don't think I could do it full-time... :-)

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