Our Mission

Reader Feedback

Things to Ponder

Links of Interest

Recently Added

February 09 2012
Company Files
New Zealand Energy Corp.
NZEC – what's going on?

February 06 2012
Commentary - Of rights and responsibilities

February 02 2012
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - Have I got a stock tip for you!
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

January 19 2012
Recommended Reading
I like a good mystery

January 13 2012
Commentary - Shawn Ryan says YES YOU CAN!

January 10 2012
Recommended Reading
A Tale of Two Employees

January 09 2012
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - The demons within… or choose your battles carefully
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

January 03 2012
Guest Article
Money is time: Chris Bart responds
Chris Bart

December 22 2011
Commentary - Money is time

December 14 2011
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - Mud puddles at your feet
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

December 13 2011
Company Files
New Zealand Energy Corp.
NZEC – what you know and who you know

November 17 2011
Recommended Reading
Steve Jobs: Obsessed… or possessed?

November 05 2011
Recommended Reading
The Rare Find – spotting exceptional talent before everyone else

November 02 2011
Links of Interest
Gold ready to attack prior highs in the 1900’s
David Banister

October 29 2011
Commentary - Desperadoes and thieves

October 27 2011
Links of Interest
A rally for gold
David Banister

October 17 2011
Commentary - Like silent raindrops fell…

October 12 2011
Commentary - Go to pancake mix

October 03 2011
Commentary - Idle hands are the devil’s tools

September 30 2011
Commentary - Choosing the best tool

September 25 2011
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - I have nothing more to say…
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

September 14 2011
Links of Interest
Gold heading to $2,350 per ounce after 4th wave consolidation
David Banister

September 12 2011
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - The Rule of Law on West Lombok
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

September 11 2011
Commentary - Bill and Bella

September 7 2011
Links of Interest
Bull Market In Gold Over With Double Top?
David Banister

September 5 2011
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - Perception versus reality
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

September 3 2011
Commentary - Five Star Help!

August 27 2011
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - One leads to the other, of course!
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

August 20 2011
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - Multiple tens of dollars
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

July 27 2011
Commentary - Shoot the middleman!

July 20 2011
Commentary - Critical conversation

July 08 2011
Properties - West Lombok - Way Linggo and its relevance to Southern Arc (video)
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

June 22 2011
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - Connecting the dots
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

June 14 2011
Toolbox
Simplify Insider Trading Reports

June 03 2011
Links of Interest
Crucial Pivot Point for the CDNX Index in Canada

June 01 2011
Toolbox - What’s the grade between the highlights?

June 01 2011
Toolbox - Calculating Tonnage

May 31 2011
Commentary - A Revolution in Education

May 29 2011
Comparative Companies - East Asia Minerals (EAS.V) - Somebody’s gonna be pissed!
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

May 15 2011
Properties - West Lombok - Pelangan - Remember though. I’m just an English major.Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

April 29 2011
Links of Interest
Where next for Gold-Silver and the SP 500 Indexes?
David Banister

April 19 2011
Feedback on 'A=B'

April 14 2011
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - Pelangan and Mencanggah: IF A=B and IF B=C, then…
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

March 13 2011
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - Say “Hello” to my little friend!
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

February 13 2011
Commentary - Trust me!

February 12 2011
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - All Systems 'Go!'
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

January 31 2011
Key Personnel - Mate in Three?
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

January 19 2011
Feedback on 'Sunday Afternoon'

January 17 2011
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - A Pleasant Sunday Afternoon
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

January 17 2011
Properties - Pelangan Drilling Results Released
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

January 17 2011
Properties - West Lombok IUP Issued
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

December 9 2010
Toolbox:
To Suppress or Not to Suppress

December 8 2010
Feedback on 'Relationships'

December 7 2010
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - Relationships
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

November 24 2010
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - Big Picture… Little Picture – another walk around the barn
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

November 24 2010
Properties - Taliwang - Southern Arc and Newcrest Sign a Heads of Agreement
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

November 24 2010
Key personnel - Mike Andrews
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

November 12 2010
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - Straight and to the Point
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

November 12 2010
Properties - Tirtomoyo/Karang Tengah
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

October 29 2010
Indonesia - The "Fifth BRIC"
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

October 28 2010
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - What’s Southern Arc worth?
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

October 7 2010
Key personnel -Insider Trading Summary Report
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

October 4 2010
Properties - East Elang/ Sabalong - Southern Arc Strikes First Joint Venture Deal
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

September 15 2010
Toolbox: In Situ Valuation Calculator

September 10 2010
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - Various and Sundry
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

August 30 2010
Properties - West Lombok Maps Update
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (map update)

July 12 2010
Properties - Taliwang - Taliwang IUP Issued
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

July 12 2010
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - Bureaucratic
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

June 8 2010
Risk assessment/Risk reduction - Fundamentals - Nickel Oil & Gas Corp.
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page (updated)

June 7 2010
Southern Arc Minerals Inc. - Main page

March 30 2010
Recommended Reading
Cigars, Whiskey & Winning

March 23 2010
Recommended Reading
The Greatest Trade Ever

March 22 2010
Size and staying power...

March 14 2010
… but the greatest of these is charity!

October 23 2009
New Additions to Library

September 10 2009
TEGWAR

September 9 2009
Just one more barrel of flour

June 30 2009
Survey Reports
Impact Silver Corp (updated)

June 19 2009
Guest Article
If I'm So Smart, How Come
I Don't Run PIMCO?

Gabriel Gray

June 19 2009
Is Indonesia ready to play
in the big leagues?

Kevin Graham

April 9 2009
Short Selling is Bad
for the Market

April 2 2009
Epithermal Gold for Explorationists

March 31 2009
Epithermal Deposits –
gold and silver

March 31 2009
Epithermal gold deposits, geothermal systems and volcanoes

March 22 2009
Southern Arc Minerals – Valuations for Selodong

February 12 2009
Guest Article
The Obama Stimulus:
All Porked Up and
Nowhere to Go

Gabriel Gray

December 27 2008
Canadian Crisis?
Give me a Break!

December 23 2008
Wheel of Misfortune

December 16 2008
Metal Markets?
Go East Old Man!

November 29 2008
You can get it wrong and still you think that it’s all right

October 31 2008
Winners and Losers

September 19 2008
The Indonesia Factor, or… Can’t see the Forestry for the Greed

September 10 2008
Survey Reports
Impact Silver Corp (updated)

September 9 2008
Survey Reports
Silvermex Resources

August 6 2008
Survey Reports
Oroco Resource Corp.

July 15 2008
Southern Arc and
Canada Nickel

July 10 2008
Guest Article
I May Be Drunk, But You're A Nincompoop.
Gabriel Gray

June 20 2008
The TSX Venture Exchange: Fire in the Hole!

June 16 2008
Pediment readies itself for a major step forward

June 10 2008
Survey Reports
Puma Exploration

June 4 2008
Toolbox:
Mining Company Survey Form

June 2 2008
Run fast, run far!

May 30 2008
Survey Reports
Tarsis Capital Corp.

May 30 2008
Survey Reports
Impact Silver Corp

May 27 2008
Survey Reports
Dajin Resources Corp

May 26 2008
Engagement is Everything!

May 26 2008
Guest Article
A Case Study in Due Diligence: Southern Arc Minerals
Omar Boulden

May 22 2008
When the ‘fan club’ wins,
due diligence loses

May 22 2008
Survey Reports
Garibaldi Resources Corp.

May 21 2008
Survey Reports
Grenville Gold Corp.

May 20 2008
Insider Holdings Summary Reports

May 12 2008
Guest Article
The Zoo Needs More Animals
Gabriel Gray

May 8 2008
Mineral Mining and Exploration Companies on the Venture

May 6 2008
Insider Trading Summary Reports

May 6 2008
British Columbia Securities Commission List of Disciplined Persons

May 5 2008
Insider Trading – Transparency for Lay Investors?

April 28 2008
Would you like some fries
with that investment?

April 24 2008
Southern Arc Minerals Inc.
Survey report

April 23 2008
You say you want a revolution…

April 23 2008
Rare Element Resources Ltd.
Survey report

April 17 2008
Such stuff as dreams are made on… a teaser

April 17 2008
Guest Article
Let's call it the LIE-BOR
Gabriel Gray

April 16 2008
Guest Article
Inflation vs. Hyperinflation
Gabriel Gray

April 9 2008
Hard Rock Miner’s Handbook and Rules of Thumb

April 8 2008
An Introduction to Geology and Hard Rock Mining

April 5 2008
So you think you can geo?

April 4 2008
Southern Arc Minerals Inc.
Toss a Pebble in a Pond

April 3 2008
Required Reading
Exploring Geology

March 31 2008
Guest Article
What if it's not a bubble? – Bubbles past and present
Gabriel Gray

March 28 2008
If it’s neither informative nor entertaining, what’s the point?

March 25 2008
Guest Article
Gold + Money Supply =
A Tool for Gold Analysis

Kim Brasington

March 24 2008
Rare Element Resources Ltd.
Preliminary Report

March 24 2008
Insider Trading Tutorials

March 16 2008
Pediment Exploration Ltd.
Site Visit Report

March 14 2008
Southern Arc Minerals Inc.
PDAC Workshop

March 13 2008
Toolbox: Cubing the Hole

________________________

To be notified of new company reports and updates, click here.

 

… but the greatest of these is charity!

March 14, 2010

A friend recently linked to a Doug Casey piece entitled, “Charity? Humbug!” It’s worth a read, if only to understand my vehement objections to its central thesis.

http://libertyunbound.com/archive/2006_11/casey-charity.html

Doug Casey is world renowned as a free market economist, investor, and best-selling author. He describes the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Warren Buffett’s donation to it as “harm done in the name of charity.” Labelling Buffett and Gates as “idiot savants” for giving their billions away, Casey enjoys the luxury of one sitting safely on the sidelines.

Keep your wealth, he argues, and leave it to your children. Let your money beget more money. This, according to Casey, is the greatest legacy of the very wealthy. Hold on to it, invest it, employ it. Gather more and more money to your own hoard. This is the greatest gift you can give to the world.

By your success, he poses, these resources are most efficiently allocated, and hence, maximize the benefit to all those touched by your wealth. Being the best at whatever it is you do, your wealth provides employment to those willing to work. This coalition of the willing deserves the scraps and crumbs that may fall from your tabletop. Those who cannot, “get out of bed” do not deserve your help. Tough noogies. That’s just life, so get used to it.

Casey summarily dismisses the Gates Foundation as doomed to be “blown on non-productive Band-Aids applied to people who will just get used to having Band-Aids provided for them.” Easy to say for someone on the sidelines, or rather, for someone who successively moves from country to country as newer more attractive tax regimes are identified. I’m sure this practice can be rationalized as Darwinian theory playing itself out in the purest form. Those who do not threaten my wealth deserve my company. Those who threaten my wealth should wither and die. Nice theory. Reality is something else.

Too bad the whole world can’t move to Argentina, eh? Of course, Casey would argue, it seems, that as more and more people move into attractive tax jurisdictions, the rest of the world will fall dutifully into line. Right… follow this reasoning to its natural conclusion and we’ll all be living in that libertarian delight of no government, no taxes, no roads or bridges, but rather fiefdoms ruled by those few very who engineer total and spectacular concentration of the world’s wealth. Gee, that sounds familiar. Not sure we want to go back there again.

Hospitals, he says, should all be privatized. He argues the same for libraries, universities, and research centers. By this logic, the same would apply to policing, firefighting, and national security. Government wastes resources at such a level that it should not exist. Leave to the free market all matters of communal interest. Regulations be damned. The free market knows what’s right. Leave it alone.

Been there. Done that, Doug. We’re now paying the price of the free market being given free reins. So far, I don’t see many benefits accruing to the folks on Main Street. No thanks, indeed.

The debate between government intervention in a command economy and a complete free market is one of continuum. Each of us resides somewhere on this continuum, few at either extreme, and most within some striking distance of the centre. One’s place of residence on this continuum depends largely on one’s particular loyalty to rights. At one end, the rights of the individual supersede those of the collective. At the other, the rights of the collective supersede those of the individual. It’s pretty clear at which end Mr. Casey resides. That’s his choice. At the same time, I take exception to his specious rationalization of this position by way of attacking those more charitable than he. I’m a selfish bastard and it works for me. By the way, other people benefit from the fruits of my selfishness so it must be the correct position to take. If only we had more selfish bastards, the efficient market principle would make this world a much better place.

A standard cheat in debating is to associate the opposing view with something roundly despised. Casey accomplishes this by describing the invasion of Iraq as a ‘charitable’ event. Well, if that’s charity, then charity must be a bad thing. Sorry. I’m not buying.

He argues: “Charity is done for the psychological and social benefit of the giver, far more than for the welfare of the recipient.” He may be correct in this. It’s hard to say. I guess it depends on both the motivations of the giver and the ultimate impact of the charity on the recipient. Many times, I’ve wondered on the notion of ‘selfish altruism’. Can we separate the gift from the donor? Perhaps not. Perhaps it’s only another matter of degrees. I’m a fan of measuring a man by his intent. In the end, however, we must measure charity by what is achieved.

I agree with Casey that governmental re-distribution of wealth often locks in welfare recipients “at the bottom of society”. This is absolutely true. Our government handouts too often make it unattractive for otherwise capable people to work. Moreover, these programs do create a multi-generational welfare class. I fully agree with him when he says this is “perverse and shameful.” This phenomenon, however, is not universal.

Where we part ways is in his description of the charitable donor as poorer as a result of making his gift, and of the recipient as necessarily “degraded by the receipt of an unearned, and likely undeserved, good.” I’m sure that many donors feel richer by far for having made their gifts. No doubt, many recipients of these gifts find themselves raised up, not degraded.

With only privatized universities, not one of my parents’ children would have graduated from the 500 square foot bungalow that housed eight people, one dog, one cat, the occasional rat and regular flooding due to poor drainage of the neighbouring creek. I would not have had the distinct pleasure of pursuing studies past high school… no wait! Would there be a high school in Mr. Casey’s model?

Without (God help us) socialized education, there’s not a chance in the world for me to be holding a degree in English Literature topped by an MBA. Come to think of it, even in our socialist Canada – whereas my tuition for the MBA (more than 25 years ago) was something in the range of a couple of thousand dollars per annum – nowadays, you have to be rich enough not to need an MBA to be able to afford one. Now that’s ironic! Without socialized education, I’d likely be still sucking up rubber dust in the tire repair factory. No… actually, I’d likely be dead from sucking up rubber dust in the tire repair factory.

My wife was raised in Kyrgyzstan, the poorest of the former Soviet republics, in a sod-brick house with no electricity and no running water. Without socialized education, she would not have attended university, and graduated summa cum laude, to become a successful university instructor in Moscow. (Nor would we have met. Best argument by far.)

I once heard the story of a Canadian woman who, as a single parent of two teenaged girls, by aid of government support, took night courses to finish high school, attained a B.Sc., gained entry to and completed medical school, and carried on through her year of internship and four years of residency to become an obstetrician/gynaecologist. Her story is by no means unique in Canada. Historically, our education system has enabled capable people to raise themselves up to a level where they can make a meaningful contribution to society. Doug Casey’s model would restrict such access only to the whims of the wealthy. The wealthy and their children are limited in what they can do for society. Genetic regression toward the mean, I’m afraid, leaves us in need of every bit of potential we can find. Often, this resides untapped in the lowest of socio-economic strata. What a waste! What a shame to conclude, as Casey does:

“In a rich country, why are poor people poor? Sometimes, it's true, bad luck can strike, and a person may need help. But that's what friends and neighbors are for. And if a person doesn't have any friends, and his neighbors won't help him, chances are he's not worthy of help. Over a lifetime, most people get what they deserve. The fact is that most people who experience perennial bad luck simply have bad habits. They drink too much, they don't care for themselves, they're ignorant, they're lazy, or they have other vices. In a free society, someone who's poor almost certainly deserves his fate. To hell with him.”

It’s difficult for me to imagine someone actually saying such a thing. I’m sorry, but I can find no better words than to describe this as ‘the arrogance of the unwilling.’

While I agree wholeheartedly with Casey that governments do an extremely poor job in the application of charity, I don’t find this to be a compelling argument by which to discard the concept of charity altogether. Dirty bath water does not guide us to throw out the baby. That the optimal model for charity may not yet have been discovered does not justify a dismissal of the concept. More work remains to be done. No doubt of it.

Casey reports that he does give to charity, “but strictly on a person-to-person basis.” How many people does he think Warren Buffett can touch on a ‘person-to-person basis’ with his $31 billion ‘misguided’ gift to the Gates Foundation? Just as Mr. Buffett and Mr. Gates have gathered enormous wealth by virtue of scale, they apparently feel that they can bring others into the world of the productive by virtue of scale. Note the distinction in my description of this charitable act. While Mr. Casey feels that their collective efforts do nothing more than feed fish to people who will come back next day for another serving, he would do well to better study the objects of his disdain. A primary focus of Bill Gates’ work is in the area of education. Education is an equalizer across society and around the world. It is also the great enabler in a global marketplace. Better education leads to participation by a broader group of both producers and consumers. Teach a man to fish and tomorrow he will open a seafood restaurant. What goes around comes around.

By Casey’s argument, however, I can only conclude that we should not expend so many resources in educating the masses. If we teach them how to read (as argued by the medieval church), they might start thinking for themselves. Better to keep them in their place of ignorance. Better to make more money for ourselves. Better to keep them employed. Better for everybody, non?

When I read Mr. Casey’s words, “… altruism means sacrificing your own values and welfare for those of someone else, which is always a bad idea…” and “… making a sacrifice should be morally repugnant to any self-respecting individual,” I can only reach for my neck brace from excessive head-shaking.

How he sees a gift to someone in need as a sacrifice of one’s own values I cannot understand. Is he so wrapped up in the ‘self’ that he cannot see the world around him? He argues mistakenly that, “Money… is evidence that its owner has created wealth… Making money and getting wealthy is therefore the greatest act of benevolence you can provide the world.” Such arrogance smacks only of rationalization and self-justification in a lack of charity. Money is not evidence of wealth creation. Money is evidence of wealth accumulation. Zero sum game at work in his model. That’s all there is to it.

Nations of people stricken with hunger, disease, and natural disaster, by his logic, deserve what they get. If I happen upon one or two, or maybe three individuals within those nations who warrant my support, they’ll have it. However, because I cannot trust the delivery of support in existing mass charitable institutions, these people will be better off if I just keep my money to myself. Eventually, I’ll be so rich that these people will all be employed by one of my enterprises. Everybody wins.

To my way of thinking, all of this boils down to how one finds meaning in life. Mr. Casey conveniently finds meaning in how much wealth he amasses for himself. In this accumulation of wealth is his embodiment of efficient market theory. On a superficial level, there is clearly some truth to this notion. Stepping back a few steps, however, the big picture tells an entirely different story. We do not live in a closed economy. The potential for greater total wealth should not be reflected in the number of plantations we own, but in the number of full partners at work in the global economy. The potential for efficient market theory is not defined in the accumulation of wealth by the few, but in the synergistic creation of wealth by the many.

This world will be a richer place, and each of us, in turn, wealthier players with an eye on the larger stage outside of ourselves. Happily, most people find life’s meaning in how they touch others. Mr. Casey is without a doubt a leader in his field. In circles of investment, I suspect he touches many hundreds of thousands of people on a daily basis. With his commentary on the folly of charitable giving, he has touched me.

I only wish I could be more charitable in reply.

With respect,

Kevin Graham

Spam Filter Security Code:

captcha