Editorial
Silver and Opium
The opium wars do not belong to the glorious episodes of Western history. Rather, they were instances of shameful behavior the West still has not lived down. Mercantilist governments resented the perpetual drain of silver from West to East in payment for Oriental goods (tea, silk, porcelain) that were in high demand in the Occident, facing low demand in the Orient for Occidental goods. From the mid-17th century more than 9 billion Troy ounces or 290 thousand metric tons of silver was absorbed by China from European countries in exchange for Chinese goods.
The British introduced opium along with tobacco as an export item to China in order to reduce their trade deficit. Under the disguise of free trade, the British, the Spanish and the French with the tacit approval of the Americans continued sending their contraband to China through legitimate as well as illegitimate trade channels even after the Chinese dynasty put an embargo on opium imports. Because of its strong appeal to the Chinese masses, and because of its highly addictive nature, opium appeared to be the ideal solution to the West's trade problem. And, indeed, the flow of silver was first stopped, and then reversed. China was forced to pay silver for her addiction to opium smoking that was artificially induced by the pusher: the British.
Thus silver was replaced by opium as the mainstay of Western exports. In 1729 China, recognizing the growing problem of addiction and the debilitating and mind-corrupting nature of the drug, prohibited the sale and smoking of opium; allowing only a small quota of imports for medicinal purposes. The British defied the embargo and ban on opium trade, and encouraged smuggling. As a result, British exports of opium to China grew from an estimated 15 tons to 75 by 1773. This increased further to 900 tons by 1820; and to 1400 tons annually by 1838 – an almost 100-fold increase in 100 years.
Something had to be done. The Chinese government introduced death penalty for drug trafficking, and put British processing and distributing facilities on Chinese soil under siege. Chinese troops boarded British ships in international waters carrying opium to Chinese ports and destroyed their cargo, in addition to the destruction of opium found on Chinese territory. The British accused the Chinese of destroying British property, and sent a large British-Indian army to China in order to exact punishment.
British military superiority was clearly evident in the armed conflict. British warships wreaked havoc on coastal towns. After taking Canton the British sailed up the Yangtze River. They grabbed the tax barges, inflicting a devastating blow on the Chinese as imperial revenues were impossible to collect. In 1842 China sued for peace that was concluded in Nanking and ratified the following year. In the treaty China was forced to pay an indemnity to Britain, open four port cities where British subjects were given extraterritorial privileges, and cede Hong Kong to Britain. In 1844 the United States and France signed similar treaties with China.
These humiliating treaties were criticized in the House of Commons by William E. Gladstone, who later served as Prime Minister. He was wondering "whether there had ever been a war more unjust in its origin, a war more calculated to cover Britain with permanent disgrace." The Foreign Secretary, Lord Palmerston replied that nobody believed that the Chinese government's motive was "the promotion of good moral habits", or that the war was fought to stem China's balance of trade deficit. The American president John Quincy Adams chimed in during the debate by suggesting that opium was a "mere incident". According to him "the cause of the war was the arrogant and insupportable pretensions of China that she would hold commercial intercourse with the rest of mankind not upon terms of equal reciprocity, but upon the insulting and degrading forms of the relations between lord and vassal." These words are echoed, 160 years later, by president Obama's recent disdainful pronouncements to the effect that China's exchange-rate policy is unacceptable to the rest of mankind as it pretends that China's currency is that of the lord, and everybody else's is that of the vassal.
The peace of Nanking did not last. The Chinese searched a suspicious ship, and the British answered by putting the port city of Canton under siege in 1856, occupying it in 1857. The French also entered the fray. British troops were approaching Beijing and set on to destroy the Summer Palace. China again was forced to sue for peace. In the peace treaty of Tianjin China yielded to the demand to create ten new port cities, and granted foreigners free passage throughout the country. It also agreed to pay an indemnity of five million ounces of silver: three million to Britain and two million to France.
This deliberate humiliation of China by the Western powers contributed greatly to the loosening and ultimate snapping of the internal coherence of the Qing Dynasty, leading to the Taiping Rebellion (1850-1864), the Boxer Uprising (1899-1901) and, ultimately, to the downfall of the Qing Dynasty in 1912.
The present trade dispute between the U.S. and China is reminiscent of the background to the two Opium Wars. Once more, the issue is the humiliation and plunder of China as a "thank you" for China's favor of having provided consumer goods for which the West was unable to pay in terms of Western goods suitable for Chinese consumption. The only difference is the absence of opium in the dispute.
Oops, I take it back. The role of opium in the current dispute is played by paper. Paper dollars, to be precise. In 1971 an atrocity was made that I call the Nixon-Friedman conspiracy. To cover up the shame and disgrace of the default of the U.S. on its international gold obligations, Milton Friedman (following an earlier failed attempt of John M. Keynes) concocted a spurious and idiotic theory of floating exchange rates. It suggests that falling foreign exchange value of the domestic currency makes it stronger when in actual fact the opposite is true: it is made weaker as the terms of trade of the devaluing country deteriorates and that of its trading partners improves. Nixon was quick to embrace the false theory of Friedman. No public debate of the plan was permitted then, or ever after. Under the new dispensation the irredeemable dollar was to play the role of the ultimate extinguisher of debt, a preposterous idea. The scheme was imposed on the world under duress as part of the "new millennium", shaking off the "tyranny of gold", that "barbarous relic", the last remnant of superstition, the only remaining "anachronism of the Modern Age". The ploy was played up and celebrated as a great scientific breakthrough, making it possible for man to shape his own destiny rationally, free of superstition, for the first time ever. Yet all it was a cheap trick to elevate the dishonored paper of an insolvent banker (the U.S.) from scum to the holy of holies: international currency. The fact that fiat paper money has a history of 100 percent mortality was neatly side-stepped. Any questioning of the wisdom of experimenting with is in spite of logic and historical evidence was declared foggy-bottom reactionary thinking.
The amazing thing about this episode of the history of human folly was the ease with which it could be pushed down the throat of the rest of the world, including those nations that were directly hurt by it, such as the ones running a trade surplus with the U.S. Their savings went up in smoke. The explanation for this self-destructing behavior is the addictive, debilitating and mind-corrosive nature of paper money, in direct analogy with that of opium. The high caused by administering the opium pipe to the patient (read: administering QE) had to be repeated when the effect faded by a fresh administration of more opium (read: more QE2).
If the patient resists, like China did in 1840, then a holy opium war must be declared on it in the name of the right of others to free trade. 170 years later a New China once more demurred against the paper-torture treatment it was subjected to by the American debt-mongers and opium pushers.
But beware: if the West starts another Opium War, this time it is not China that will be on the losing side.
Reference
Opium Wars, Wikipedia, June 29, 2010.
Latest Daily Bell Articles
Feedback


Posted by John Smith on 03/23/11 11:36 AM
Posted by IndianaJohn on 02/19/11 07:42 PM
To the party liners on the dope thread above; I did not and do not suggest prohibition. I suggest eradication. I know what that means. I once had rats in the barn.
Reply from The Daily Bell
People are not rats.
Posted by Ryan on 02/18/11 05:17 PM
Posted by Ryan on 02/18/11 01:42 PM
The naive "cutting of supply" approach means the rest of the supply who remains are incentivized even more due to the increase in profits. Not to mention that he who is powerful enough to determine the supply gets to also determine for whom he looks the other way, as in the CIA and South America and Southeast Asia. Why don't you read even the more basic material about the economics of prohibition before embarrassing yourself in public?
Click to view link
By the way, when you call for prohibition as a supposed solution, you are indeed playing 'Baptist' to the 'Bootleggers' in terms of the old allegory from alcohol prohibition, another prohibition that did not work, increased crime, potency, and impurity. Those who call for prohibition are patsies for those who will be getting rich in the crime world, both on the crooked police side and the black-market drug dealer side.
Posted by Agent Weebley on 02/18/11 08:51 AM
Click to view link
... just to give you an example of what opium did to Edgar Allan Poe.
snip----
...and publishers often refused to pay their writers or paid them much later than they promised...
snip---
Click to view link
God has helped his poor soul . . . delusion . . . nevermore.
Posted by IndianaJohn on 02/18/11 08:50 AM
I mostly agree with your well presented points, but not with your conclusion. Dope Inc. has entered our lives in tandem with social decay. Only the cutting of supply will work.
I do not know why a panel of top-notch big city dope cops, from street level, are not brought into the discussion. They would bring in some meaningful experience.
For now we can read a smart and savy gal, Catherine A. Fitts.
Click to view link
![]() |
Posted by Leonardo Pisano on 02/18/11 05:14 AM
Prohibition indeed is the ultimate market distortion, cutting supply while demand is not affected. Logical consequence: high prices. To fund their purchases the desperate addicts (in the case of drugs) do everything they can to get the money (stealing, etc). Education and awareness building is much more effective, long term anyway.
Drugs enforcement is just government muscle showing. If they are really serious about drugs, why are alcoholic beverages still freely available?
Posted by Vauung on 02/18/11 12:21 AM
The drug prohibition topic is not very tightly connected to the hopium bucks focus of Antal Fekete's essay, but it's of clear interest to libertarians. I think that even granting all of your points, it's not clear that prohibition works well as a solution. A very high level of totalitarianism is required to make it effective, and that results in a level of social devastation exceeding anything drugs can do.
I'm sure you're familiar with the arguments, but it's worth quickly repeating some, because they stack up quite fast to make a near-irresistible case. It's not only that prohibition fails to deter consumption (under non-totalitarian conditions), whilst creating organized crime syndicates plus their attendant violence and corruption, it also makes drugs more dangerous.
There's a very clear trend among illegal drugs towards super-concentration. Thus beer is replaced by moonshine, opium by heroin, coca leaf by cocaine powder and then crack. Super-concentrated drugs are convenient for illegal trafficking at every level from bulk importation to street retail, whilst the separation of drug consumption from wider social norms allows it to follow its own trajectory without traditional constraint. Prohibition also complicates quality control, whether spontaneous or state-regulated, placing consumers at increased risk. Everyone knows that powder drugs are cut with all kinds of chemical garbage that a non-illegal manufacturer could never get away with.
The conclusion I draw from this is that, whatever you think of junkies, you're likely to get more damaged, degraded, and obnoxious junkies under conditions of prohibition than those of liberty.
Posted by IndianaJohn on 02/17/11 11:30 PM
Reply from The Daily Bell
Sorry. Not purposeful. Resend if you wish.
Posted by IndianaJohn on 02/17/11 11:26 PM
So I did go thru the Forbes link and found it to be a very hollow, one dollar analysis of the subject.
You make some sort of 'Baptist' assumptions and that is hollow in itself.
The dopee' is a lost soul. The hatred of dope is due to the things that the dope monkey has done to and with the healthy people who have been unfortunate enough to come in contact with the dope monkey's ways.
It seems to me that you are somewhat short of street sense in the ways of the junkies. Make no mistake, junkie is the apt term.
Posted by Vauung on 02/17/11 08:30 PM
While the moral case against the mercantilist opium assault on China is impregnable, the outcomes insinuate some slight ambivalence into those who appreciate the contribution of Chinese East Asia to global capitalism. The Opium Wars blackened the reputation of capitalist modernization for over a century and helped to legitimate autarkic totalitarianism (which proved quite effective at stamping out opium usage after 1949). On the other side of the ledger, without the Treaty of Nanjing there would be no Hong Kong and no Shanghai, at least as we understand them (dynamic, commercially adventurous cities).
Today's turbo-charged China is a child of the Opium Wars, at once scarred by the arrogant criminality employed, and shocked out of its civilizational complacency by its failure to effectively respond. These twin legacies have made the country both cynical about foreign intentions, and vastly more competitive at every level. I think Dr Fekete is right to conclude that this 'New China' is unlikely to succumb to the fraudulent bullying of the 'smoke our magic paper' gang.
One missing element from the article though: an "America is a paper tiger" joke.
Posted by Pete 8 on 02/17/11 08:07 PM
Sweet little clean green NZ (cough cough) is still helping the CIA grow a million tonnes of heroin! It's helping pay for a whole new fleet of ministerial BMWs.
Some Ministers and staff seem to prefer meth and ecstacy from my own afterhours observations.
Now where did I stash that SD card with the photos?
Have a nice day all.
Posted by Capn Mikey on 02/17/11 07:49 PM
Lotsa homework tonight!!!
Thanks to you all!!
Posted by SP on 02/17/11 05:21 PM
The number of people that we killed doing this time is the biggest crime. Silver and gold are flowing in the China faster than during the wars.
Posted by Henri on 02/17/11 03:52 PM
Posted by Ryan on 02/17/11 03:46 PM
Click to view link
@IndianaJohn
Why are 'Baptists' like yourself so obsessed with enriching 'Bootleggers' in order to cure 'addiction'? Prohibition laws have never cured a thing, but certainly increased potency of the drugs, not to mention ruined the lives of the addicts to a degree that the drug could never accomplish in a free market. Hope your computer and internet use is never classified as an 'addiction'.
Posted by Bionic Mosquito on 02/17/11 03:12 PM
Foolish Insect. That's funny. Hahaha.
Do you believe twisting my name into such childish derogatory terms helps make your point?
Please, show more intelligence than this. Or lacking intelligence, at least show some maturity. Then someone might actually find it worthwhile to pay you some attention.
Posted by SEAN on 02/17/11 03:07 PM
China clearly lost the Opium Wars. The Bank of England/Rothschilds/Illuminati won. It is likely that China, beginning under communistic Mao and continuing through today, is simply at the beck-and-call of the central bankers and the powers that be.
Though I am not as knowledgeable as I would like to be regarding the growth of Communist China, I would imagine that the state had similar "investors" as Nazi Germany, including elites, banks, and transnational corporations.
China may not be happy about holding worthless FRNs and treasuries, but that doesn't mean that they are in charge. It is my presupposition that the New World Order tested out their complete totalitarian state in China, which served many functions. First of all, it gives Westerners a terribly oppressive society that they can compare their own society to. This allows people to continually think, "It's not that bad, at least it's not China". In addition, the creation of China as the manufacturing powerhouse will allow the central bankers at the Fed (and elsewhere) to continue to inflate the credit bubble, which they hope will occur into perpetuity.
When the other shoe drops, the US dollar (or some other currency) will be revalued with precious metal backing. At some point this will have to come to pass, as all fiat currencies have collapsed throughout history.
China is not in charge. They answer to the Fed. End the Fed. Free Humanity.
Posted by 10hawks on 02/17/11 02:32 PM
![]() |
Posted by Darby Jie on 02/17/11 02:09 PM
"The reason for not legalizing dope on any terms can be and has been experienced by those of us who have lived on a daily basis with a dope addict. Even if that dope addict is ourself.
Dope addiction is the process of dissoulation from a functioning being to a craven mess who has lost all moral and scocial sensibilities. No tax will solve this."
Ahhhh. The refreshing breeze of reality and common sense 8-)
|
|

l 



