1. Standard memberGrampy Bobby
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    25 Oct '13 00:541 edit
    "The Tytler Cycle Revisited by John Eberhard"

    "In 2003 I became very interested in a theory developed by Scottish historian Alexander Tytler, and wrote an article on it at the time, which ironically enough is now getting a lot of attention due to being linked to from Wikipedia. Tytler’s theory set forth a cycle that every democracy goes through, which goes like this. Tytler said the cycle starts out with a society in bondage. Then it goes in this sequence:

    Bondage
    Spiritual Faith
    Courage
    Liberty
    Abundance
    Selfishness
    Complacency
    Apathy
    Dependence
    Then starting over with Bondage

    Tytler organized these items in a circle: I was fascinated with this because to me it seemed to explain what we are going through as a country right now, where people are more interested in how they can somehow soak the system to get their free ride, than building anything. Clearly we are on the left side of this cycle, somewhere in the selfishness, complacency, apathy or dependence side. Recently I found an article entitled “An American Tragedy” dated 12/16/08 by James Quinn, a financial writer and senior director of strategic planning for a major university. Most of the article is about disgraced investment guru Bernie Madoff, but a good chunk of it concerns the Tytler cycle and exactly where Quinn thinks we are in the cycle. Here's what Quinn has to say:

    “The following quote attributed to Scottish history professor Alexander Tyler in 1787, seems to portray an accurate reflection of what has occurred during our 200+ years of existence as a democracy. "A democracy is always temporary in nature; it simply cannot exist as a permanent form of government. A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates who promise the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that every democracy will finally collapse due to loose fiscal policy, which is always followed by a dictatorship."

    “The average age of the world’s greatest civilizations from the beginning of history, has been about 200 years. During those 200 years, these nations always progressed through the following sequence:

    • From bondage to spiritual faith;
    • From spiritual faith to great courage;
    • From courage to liberty;
    • From liberty to abundance;
    • From abundance to complacency;
    • From complacency to apathy;
    • From apathy to dependence;
    • From dependence back into bondage

    “These words were written two years before George Washington became our first President. There is so much truth in these words it makes me shudder, especially since we are clearly in stage 7. An honest appraisal of our country’s downward spiral is necessary to begin the process of redemption. We have continually voted ourselves increased benefits, dependent upon the printing presses of the Federal Reserve to sustain our country’s ponzi scheme. We have pawned our future and the bill will eventually come due." (page 1 of 3)

    The Tytler Cycle Revisited by John Eberhard 03/14/09: http://www.commonsensegovernment.com/article-03-14-09.html
  2. Standard memberGrampy Bobby
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    25 Oct '13 00:591 edit
    “The Great American Republic

    “My assessment of the chronological sequence our democracy has progressed through, follows.

    “From bondage to spiritual faith(1760 to 1769)

    • King George III becomes King of England
    • Currency Act, Sugar Act, Stamp Act, Quartering Act, Townshend Act passed by Parliament
    • Sons of Liberty formed by John Adams, Samuel Adams, Paul Revere, John Hancock, Patrick Henry, among others.

    “From spiritual faith to great courage(1770 to 1783)

    • Boston massacre
    • Samuel Adams organizes the Committees of Correspondence
    • Parliament passes the Tea Act
    • Boston Tea Party
    • The First Continental Congress
    • Battle of Bunker Hill
    • Thomas Paine publishes Common Sense
    • Revolutionary War rages for six years
    • British surrender at Yorktown
    • Treaty of Paris ends Revolutionary War

    “From courage to liberty (1784 to 1865)

    • Constitutional Convention
    • Constitution ratified by 13 states
    • George Washington elected President
    • Bill of Rights passed
    • Fugitive Slave Act passed
    • Louisiana Purchase
    • Robert Fulton invents steamboat
    • War of 1812
    • Monroe Doctrine
    • President Andrew Jackson battles bankers which leads to the Panic of 1837
    • U.S. Mexican War
    • California gold rush
    • Compromise of 1850
    • Dred Scott Decision
    • Abraham Lincoln elected President
    • Confederate states secede from the Union
    • Emancipation Proclamation
    • Civil War rages for four years
    • Union is restored
    • 13th Amendment abolishes slavery

    “From liberty to abundance (1866 to 1969)

    • Civil Rights Act of 1866
    • First Trans-Continental Railroad
    • Alexander Graham Bell invents the telephone
    • Industrial Revolution
    • General Electric founded
    • Spanish American War
    • U.S. Steel founded
    • Airplane invented
    • Automobile invented
    • Federal Reserve created
    • World War I
    • Great Depression
    • New Deal programs implemented by FDR
    • Golden Gate Bridge completed
    • World War II
    • Holocaust
    • Atomic bomb used to end war with Japan
    • Marshall Plan rebuilds Europe & Japan
    • US emerges from the war as the only great economic power
    • Cold War
    • Korean War
    • Interstate highway system built
    • Civil Rights Movement
    • John F. Kennedy assassinated
    • Vietnam War
    • Great Society programs implemented
    • Civil Rights Act of 1964
    • Martin Luther King assassinated
    • Neil Armstrong walks on the moon

    The Tytler Cycle Revisited by John Eberhard 03/14/09: http://www.commonsensegovernment.com/article-03-14-09.html
    (page 2 of 3)
  3. Standard memberGrampy Bobby
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    25 Oct '13 01:051 edit
    “From abundance to complacency (1970 to 1989)

    • Roe vs Wade
    • President Nixon resigns in disgrace
    • Oil embargo
    • Ronald Reagan elected President
    • Military buildup and tax cuts
    • Fall of the Soviet Union

    “From complacency to apathy (1990 to 2000)
    • Gulf War
    • Bill Clinton elected President
    • Stock market boom
    • Gridlock between Congress & President leads to budget surpluses
    • President Clinton acquitted in impeachment trial

    “From apathy to dependence (2001 to 2007)

    • George W. Bush elected President
    • Nasdaq stock bubble bursts
    • 9/11 attack
    • Alan Greenspan lowers rates to 1%
    • Invasion of Afghanistan
    • Department of Homeland security created
    • Invasion of Iraq
    • Hurricane Katrina
    • Home prices double
    • Financial derivatives grow to over $100 trillion

    “From dependence back into bondage (2008 to ????)
    • Housing prices collapse
    • Financial firms collapse
    • Government and Federal Reserve intervene to prop up the worldwide financial system
    • Government bailouts of financial firms and auto manufacturers
    • Federal Reserve & U.S. Treasury commit over $8 trillion of taxpayer funds
    • Barrack Obama elected President
    • Immediate borrowing & stimulus packages exceeding $1 trillion are discussed
    • Federal Reserve lowers rates to below 1%”

    "I tend to believe the above is pretty accurate, because we can see right now that the US government under Obama-Reid-Pelosi is making an unprecedented power grab, by increasing spending dramatically, and increasing their socialistic hold over American life. The current Democratic Party leadership is the most radically leftist/socialist we have ever had. One of their recent actions was to basically repeal the welfare reform which was enacted in the 1990s, and which was so successful too. Obama’s new budget document blatantly outlines his goals to punish high producers because they have broken the rules, which is as Marxist a plan as I have ever seen.

    The question I have had for some time is whether this will continue through the entire cycle of Bondage, Spiritual Faith, Courage, Liberty, Abundance, Selfishness, Complacency, Apathy, Dependence, then starting over with Bondage; or whether concerned and knowledgeable individuals can somehow halt the decline and keep us from going into a new period of bondage? Clearly we see the American public being apathetic and willing to allow the US government to take over more and more of our lives, and thus becoming more and more dependent.

    And yet, at the same time, I see outrage and a building frustration by a large segment of the population, with protest events (the recent spate of Tea Party events), petitions, and a plethora of columns in the conservative press, decrying the power grab. Will it be enough? Can we prevent a new period of bondage?"

    The Tytler Cycle Revisited by John Eberhard 03/14/09: http://www.commonsensegovernment.com/article-03-14-09.html
    (page 3 of 3)

    Your thoughts?
  4. The Catbird's Seat
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    25 Oct '13 01:06
    Originally posted by Grampy Bobby
    [b]“The Great American Republic

    “My assessment of the chronological sequence our democracy has progressed through, follows.

    “From bondage to spiritual faith(1760 to 1769)

    • King George III becomes King of England
    • Currency Act, Sugar Act, Stamp Act, Quartering Act, Townshend Act passed by Parliament
    • Sons of Liberty formed b ...[text shortened]... of 1964
    • Martin Luther King assassinated
    • Neil Armstrong walks on the moon
    (page 2 of 3)[/b]
    I wonder if the cycle is reversible?
  5. Joined
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    25 Oct '13 05:23
    Originally posted by normbenign
    I wonder if the cycle is reversible?
    Since each global state is engendered by the one before, no, it is not reversible even if there are local reverses. It is a loop that continues until the resources run out or are poisoned, and then the planet will go on in an even larger loop, and then the sun will expand to consume the earth, etc. I give it 50 billion years, max.
  6. Joined
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    25 Oct '13 10:581 edit
    Originally posted by normbenign
    I wonder if the cycle is reversible?
    It struck me as kind of odd that one would take as a reliable guide to the inevitable progress of a democracy a text written at a time when there weren't really any democracies in the world...

    However, I discover that (although Tytler was noted for his jaundiced view of democracy), there's actually no evidence that these specific sentiments were Tytler's at all:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Tyler

    There is no reliable record of Alexander Tytler's having made the statement. In fact, this passage actually comprises two quotations, which didn't begin to appear together until the 1970s. The first portion (italicized above) first appeared on December 9, 1951, as part of what appears to be an op-ed piece in The Daily Oklahoman under the byline Elmer T. Peterson. The original version from Peterson's op-ed is as follows:

    Two centuries ago, a somewhat obscure Scotsman named Tytler made this profound observation: "A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the majority discovers it can vote itself largess out of the public treasury. After that, the majority always votes for the candidate promising the most benefits with the result the democracy collapses because of the loose fiscal policy ensuing, always to be followed by a dictatorship, then a monarchy."

    The list beginning "From bondage to spiritual faith" is commonly known as the "Tytler Cycle" or the "Fatal Sequence". Its first known appearance is in a 1943 speech "Industrial Management in a Republic" by H. W. Prentis, president of the Armstrong Cork Company and former president of the National Association of Manufacturers, and appears to be original to him.
  7. Houston, Texas
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    25 Oct '13 11:07
    What I find interesting is that no matter the time period, people always think they are in the Selfishness/
    Complacency/Apathy/Dependence stages.

    I am sure Americans thought such in 1800 or Romans in 100 BC.
  8. Joined
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    25 Oct '13 15:59
    Originally posted by Grampy Bobby
    [b]"The Tytler Cycle Revisited by John Eberhard"

    "In 2003 I became very interested in a theory developed by Scottish historian Alexander Tytler, and wrote an article on it at the time, which ironically enough is now getting a lot of attention due to being linked to from Wikipedia. Tytler’s theory set forth a cycle that every democracy goes throug ...[text shortened]... Revisited by John Eberhard 03/14/09: http://www.commonsensegovernment.com/article-03-14-09.html[/b]
    Re Abundance > Selfishness > Complacency

    I've seen old money do that, its sad watching families fight over inheritance and worrying when you know that mentality could never of made the money in the first place. But maybe your a little pessimistic to think it always works that way?
  9. The Catbird's Seat
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    25 Oct '13 22:08
    Originally posted by Teinosuke
    It struck me as kind of odd that one would take as a reliable guide to the inevitable progress of a democracy a text written at a time when there weren't really any democracies in the world...

    However, I discover that (although Tytler was noted for his jaundiced view of democracy), there's actually no evidence that these specific sentiments were Tytler' ...[text shortened]... r president of the National Association of Manufacturers, and appears to be original to him.[/i]
    Democracies of the Greeks and Romans were studied for centuries, and compared with other forms of government.

    I don't see Tytler's view as jaundiced, just realistic. It may be that the cycle applies as well to other forms of government as well. After all no empire has lasted for more than a few hundred years, before consuming itself.
  10. The Catbird's Seat
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    25 Oct '13 22:10
    Originally posted by e4chris
    Re Abundance > Selfishness > Complacency

    I've seen old money do that, its sad watching families fight over inheritance and worrying when you know that mentality could never of made the money in the first place. But maybe your a little pessimistic to think it always works that way?
    And we wonder why guys like Buffett and Gates don't want to leave their estates to their heirs?

    But clearly they don't want the government to get it either, so the alternative is charitable trusts.
  11. Joined
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    26 Oct '13 10:283 edits
    Originally posted by normbenign
    Democracies of the Greeks and Romans were studied for centuries, and compared with other forms of government.

    I don't see Tytler's view as jaundiced, just realistic. It may be that the cycle applies as well to other forms of government as well. After all no empire has lasted for more than a few hundred years, before consuming itself.
    Well, indeed! An author writing in 1787 would have seen the historical precedent of democracy giving way to dictatorship in ancient Greece and Rome. But he would not have seen the reverse - the numerous monarchies and dictatorships that have collapsed in the last two centuries or so. Had Tytler written that no tyranny could prove lasting, his prediction would have been amply borne out by the subsequent centuries. In fact, if we see one basic trend in the recent history of the world, it's the movement away from dictatorship and towards democracy, not the reverse.
  12. Germany
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    26 Oct '13 11:07
    Originally posted by moon1969
    What I find interesting is that no matter the time period, people always think they are in the Selfishness/
    Complacency/Apathy/Dependence stages.

    I am sure Americans thought such in 1800 or Romans in 100 BC.
    People tend to listen to doomsayers more than they do to optimists or even realists. Not sure why that would be the case, though.

    With regards to the "cycle": modern civilization has been around for such a short time looking for "trends" such as these is a pointless exercise.
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