Trust in Government

What People Say vs. What People Do

Book Cover Full Size.pngThe polls say trust in the federal government has fallen to 17 percent. That number is being repeated everywhere, and it makes for a dramatic headline. But natural law doesn’t measure truth by what people say. It measures truth by what people do. And when you look at behavior instead of survey answers, the story changes.

Polls are emotional. Actions are real. According to the article, trust in Washington has been sliding for decades, from a high of 77 percent in 1964 to today’s reported 17 percent. zerohedge.com That decline is real on paper. But natural law deals with revealed preferences. People reveal what they truly believe through their choices, not their complaints.

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Why Big Tech May Fall Before the Debt Ever Does

Why Big Tech May Fall Before the Debt ever Does

By James Quillian – Economist, Political Analyst, Teacher of Natural Law

Book Cover Full Size.pngLet me start with the simple truth: artificial intelligence will not save the United States from its debt problem. That idea sounds good in a boardroom, but it collapses the moment it touches reality.

This is not coming from someone who dislikes AI. I use it every day. For four dollars a month, I have a research assistant who never sleeps and can pull up more information in two seconds than a whole staff could gather in a week. AI is a tremendous personal asset. But that does not mean it is a national solution.

The trouble isn’t AI itself. The trouble is the system it has been dropped into.

The Second Rat Gets the Cheese

We are living through a classic “second rat gets the cheese” moment. The first rat charges into the trap, eager and confident, and dies. The second rat wanders in later and eats well.

Right now, Big Tech is the first rat. They are pouring billions into AI, convinced it will save their business models, their stock prices, and maybe even the country. They believe AI will create a productivity boom big enough to outrun the national debt.

But the American consumer is not playing along. The public is getting poorer in real terms. They are not attached to AI emotionally or financially. They are not impressed by another subscription, another app, or another “platform” that solves problems they do not have.

There is a better chance that AI will destroy Big Tech than that it will rescue the federal balance sheet. When the trap snaps shut, the second rats will come along, build leaner businesses around AI, and make a profit. They will get the cheese. The current owners will not.

We Replaced the Free Market With a Political Market

In a real free market, price is the main tool for allocating resources. Consumers speak through what they buy. Producers listen or they go broke. That is how a healthy system learns.

We have dismantled that system. In its place, we built a hybrid arrangement where political power quietly replaced price. The biggest corporations prefer it that way. It is easier to manage politicians than to satisfy millions of customers.

AI fits neatly into this world. It is a powerful tool for those who already have power. It helps them centralize, monitor, and cut labor costs. But that is not the same thing as creating broad prosperity. It is not the same thing as paying down a mountain of federal debt.

AI can make some balance sheets look better for a while, but it cannot repeal natural law.

The Hard Reality of Wages and Competence

Here is the part no one likes to say out loud: Americans, on average, are severely dumbed down and overpaid by global standards. That is not an insult. It is a fact of the global labor market.

Natural economic forces are already at work. Wages in the United States will drift down. Wages in foreign nations will drift up. AI may accelerate this, but it did not cause it. Reality caused it.

Consumers will not suddenly “come around” and rescue Big Tech by buying whatever AI products they are selling. Consumers are still bound by the same old forces: budgets, needs, and common sense.

Why AI Won’t Pay the National Tab

Debt is not just a number. It is a record of promises made without the means to keep them. To deal with that honestly, you need lower spending, higher real production, and political honesty. AI can help with the paperwork, but it cannot supply the honesty.

As long as political power—not price—allocates resources, any productivity gains from AI will be captured at the top and used to prop up the same unsustainable promises. That may delay the reckoning, but it will not prevent it.

The Race to Escape Reality

The race to escape reality begins at birth. We are trained to believe that there is always a workaround, a bailout, or a new technology that will save us from the consequences of bad decisions. AI is just the latest costume for that old fantasy.

But reality is patient. It does not shout. It simply follows us. In the end, reality always wins. Debts that cannot be paid will not be paid. Systems that refuse to listen to real people will fail. Tools that do not serve the user will be abandoned.

AI is powerful. Used wisely, it can be a great personal asset. But it is not a magic wand for the federal government, and it is not a substitute for a real free market. It will not get the United States out of debt. And Big Tech may fall long before the debt ever does.

Predictability, Natural Law, and the Imaginary Economy

Predictability, Natural Law, and the Imaginary Economy

Book Cover Full Size.pngEvery so often, a reader offers a thoughtful comment that still manages to miss the point. Not because the person is unintelligent, but because they are reasoning inside an imaginary system — a system built on labels, theories, and institutional storytelling. That is exactly what happened here.

THE READER’S COMMENT

READER:
Thanks for breaking that down — it’s a refreshingly blunt way of putting it. I agree that a lot of modern economic theory and forecasting can feel overcomplicated, especially when the core dynamics — debt, taxation limits, and inflation — are actually pretty straightforward.

That said, while the logic is simple, the outcomes aren’t always predictable. Global markets, supply shocks, and public reactions can throw a wrench in even the clearest plan. But your point about the incentives and behavioral factors is spot on — it’s a big part of why inflation persists even when it’s painful for ordinary people.

This is a polite, well‑intentioned response. But it rests on a common assumption: that outcomes are unpredictable because the modern economy is too complex. That assumption is the very thing that keeps people confused.

MY ANSWER

MY ANSWER:
Actually, outcomes are easy to determine. The key is to live in the light of reality. Using quantitative analysis is no way to determine an outcome, although explanations sound incredibly sophisticated. Also, it pays well.

As an economist, my work is rooted in natural law. Natural law is never wrong.

Here is an example of an easy‑to‑determine outcome: the U.S. is entering a horrible depression from which there will be no recovery. Why? A genuine recovery cannot be launched without free‑market influences. Over the past four-plus decades, the U.S. has dismantled its free‑market system and replaced it with central planning.

Resources are now allocated according to levels of political power. In a free market, incomes are determined by price. You are describing an imaginary system. I am focusing on what is real. That is based on natural law, and natural law is never wrong.

Correcting the Reasoning

The reader’s mistake is subtle but important. He assumes unpredictability because he is looking at the economy through the lens of modern economics — a field that treats the world like a giant spreadsheet full of variables, coefficients, and “shocks.”

But natural law does not work that way. Natural law is not a model. It is not a theory. It is not a forecast. It is simply the observation of how human beings behave when they are free, and how they behave when they are controlled.

The reader is describing an imaginary system

When someone says outcomes are unpredictable because of “global markets” or “supply shocks,” they are describing a system that exists mostly in academic literature and government press releases. That system is built on:

  • quantitative models that fail more often than they succeed,
  • assumptions that contradict human nature,
  • and a belief that complexity equals truth.

But the real economy — the one governed by natural law — is far simpler.

Natural Law Makes Outcomes Predictable

Natural law says:

  • When you destroy price signals, you destroy productive coordination.
  • When political power replaces market power, resources flow to the politically connected.
  • When debt becomes unpayable, it will be liquidated — honestly or dishonestly.
  • When a nation chooses dishonesty, inflation becomes policy.

None of this is unpredictable. It is as reliable as gravity.

The coming depression is not a mystery

A real recovery requires:

  • free prices,
  • free exchange,
  • and free entry into markets.

The United States has spent more than forty years dismantling all three. What replaced them? Central planning — not the Soviet kind, but the modern American kind, where political power quietly determines who gets what.

When you allocate resources by political influence instead of price, you guarantee stagnation. When you guarantee stagnation, you guarantee collapse. When collapse comes, you cannot recover without the very forces you dismantled.

That is not a forecast. That is natural law.

THE HEART OF THE MATTER

Reality Is Predictable — Imaginary Systems Are Not

The reader is correct about one thing: the imaginary system is unpredictable. But that is because it is imaginary. It is built on abstractions, not on human behavior.

Natural law strips away the abstractions. It looks only at:

  • incentives,
  • power,
  • and the consequences of interfering with voluntary exchange.

When you think in those terms, outcomes are not mysterious. They are obvious.

CLOSING

So yes — I corrected the reader’s reasoning. Not to win an argument, but to bring the conversation back to reality. The economy is not unpredictable. Human nature is not unpredictable. Natural law is not unpredictable.

The only unpredictable thing is how long people will cling to imaginary systems before they finally look at what is right in front of them.