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many files updated with trivial fixes. modified: docs/design/TCP.md modified: docs/design/peer_socket.md modified: docs/design/proof_of_share.md modified: docs/estimating_frequencies_from_small_samples.md modified: docs/libraries.md modified: docs/libraries/scripting.md modified: docs/manifesto/May_scale_of_monetary_hardness.md modified: docs/manifesto/bitcoin.md modified: docs/manifesto/consensus.md modified: docs/manifesto/lightning.md modified: docs/manifesto/scalability.md modified: docs/manifesto/social_networking.md modified: docs/manifesto/sox_accounting.md modified: docs/manifesto/triple_entry_accounting.md modified: docs/manifesto/white_paper_YarvinAppendix.md modified: docs/names/multisignature.md modified: docs/names/petnames.md modified: docs/names/zookos_triangle.md modified: docs/notes/big_cirle_notation.md modified: docs/number_encoding.md modified: docs/scale_clients_trust.md modified: docs/setup/contributor_code_of_conduct.md modified: docs/setup/core_lightning_in_debian.md modified: docs/setup/set_up_build_environments.md modified: docs/setup/wireguard.md modified: docs/writing_and_editing_documentation.md
235 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
235 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: >-
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Sox Accounting
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...
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Accounting and bookkeeping is failing in an increasingly low trust world
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of ever less trusting and ever less trustworthy elites, and Sarbanes-Oxley
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accounting (Sox) is an evil product of this evil failure.
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Enron was a ponzi scam that pretended to be in the business of buying and
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selling. They would sell stuff cheap for cash on the barrelhead, then buy it
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dear on credit, and have the seller deliver the stuff to the buyer, without
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themselves ever going near the stuff, or knowing anything about the stuff.
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And, as ponzi scams tend to do, need to do, they grew and grew and grew,
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resulting many excited investors buying Enron shares.
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And some people wondered, “where are these mighty profits coming from? How
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can you create value without ever getting anywhere near anything that actually
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has value?”. To which Enron replied “financial wizardry”, which was, in a
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sense, true.
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But Enron kept books.
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Enron hired the very best and most respectable accountants to go over its
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books with the greatest of thoroughness, and paid them very well indeed
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to do so.
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The very respectable accountants turned somersaults to avoid seeing evil.
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Some suspicious investors hired a bunch of accounting students, who were
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not employed by a respectable accounting firm, nor subject to any
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respectable authority of respectable accountants properly established in the
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respectable accounting profession, to go over Enron’s books with a fine
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tooth comb.
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It quickly became obvious to these disreputable accounting students that
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Enron was a ponzi scheme, that the books were the books of ponzi
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scheme, that the books were true though misleading, and truly reported a
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ponzi scheme losing money hand over fist.
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The investors made the results of this examination of Enron’s books
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public.
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When the whole thing blew up, a great many discussions came to light
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which amounted to Enron asking the very respectable accountants how to
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help the very respectable accountants refrain from seeing what they were
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seeing, the very respectable accountants asking each other and other very
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respectable accountants how to not see what they were seeing, and the
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very respectable accountants then telling Enron how protect the very
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respectable accountants from seeing what they were seeing.
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And suddenly people stopped being willing to pay Enron cash on the
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barrelhead for goods, suddenly stopped being willing to sell Enron goods
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on credit. Suddenly Enron could no longer pay its employees, nor its
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landlord. Its employees stopped turning up, its landlord chucked their
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stuff out into the street.
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Problem solved.
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If only it had stayed solved, but much bigger trouble was in store.
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Suddenly people started not respecting very respectable accountants.
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Suddenly people started not trusting books kept by very respectable
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accountants for very respectable businesses.
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The accountants rushed to the government, and said “Accounting is
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collapsing. Business is in chaos. You must *force* people to respect us. (And
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also regulate the hell out of us to ~~make our crimes legal~~ ensure that none
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of us commit these crimes again)”
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Investors who had purchased Enron’s shares, and sellers who had sold Enron
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stuff on credit, rushed to the government and said “Accountants are
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untrustworthy, businesses are untrustworthy. We have a crisis of trust. You
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must regulate the hell out of them to *force* them to be trustworthy.”
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Of course you cannot force people to be trustworthy. You can, however force
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people to act as if they trusted people that they do not in fact trust.
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Which prevents people from freely associating with trustworthy people
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and from refusing to associate with untrustworthy people, the crisis being
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in large part that people were disinclined to associate with very respectable
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accountants, and were instead inclined to associate with the thoroughly
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disreputable accounting students and the investors who had hired them.
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So there was in practice a great deal of overlap between very respectable
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accountants asking government to force business to use their services and
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naïve idiots asking government to force business and accountants to
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behave in a more trustworthy manner.
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And so, we got a huge bundle of accounting regulation, Sarbanes-Oxley.
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Sox required publicly traded companies to keep their books in accordance
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with certain rules, and has in fact successfully prevented any publicly
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traded companies from doing an Enron in the exact same way that Enron
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did it, though what MF Global did was not hugely different.
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But it directly contributed the Great Minority Mortgage Meltdown. The
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purpose of book keeping is to track the movement and creation of value.
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Accounting is the art and science of making sense out of the books, and
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making sure the books make sense. In the aftermath of the Great Minority
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Mortgage Meltdown, a whole lot of entities went belly up, and when the
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creditors went through the books, they found all the mortgages the entities
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supposedly owned, but were frequently unable to find the physical people
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supposedly responsible for paying these mortgages,
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and were sometimes unable to find the physical properties that
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were supposedly security for these mortgages.
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Sox books just tend to not track value very well, because they
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just don't track physical reality, being designed for a
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different, more complex, and difficult to define, task. Sox books tend to
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track official reality and disregard the reality of the ground beneath your
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feet, the things in your hands, and what is before your eyes, with the result
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that they tend to track the creation of holiness and ritual purity, rather than
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the creation of value.
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From the seventeenth century to the nineteenth, bookkeeping was explicitly Christian.
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The immutable append only journal reflected God's creation, the balance of the books
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was an earthly reflection of the divine scales of justice and the symmetry of God’s creation.
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When the dust settled over the Great Minority Mortgage Meltdown it became apparent that
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the books of the financial entities involved had little connection to God's creation.
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The trouble with postmodern accounting is that what goes into the asset column,
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what goes into the liability column, and what goes into the equity column
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bears little relationship to what is actually an asset, a liability, or equity,
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little relationship to God Creation.
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(Modernity begins in the seventeenth century, with joint stock
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publicly traded limited liability corporation, the industrial revolution,
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and the scientific revolution. Postmodernity is practices radically different from,
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and fundamentally opposed to, the principles of the that era. Such as detaching
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the columns of the books from the real things that correspond to those names. If
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science is done by consensus, rather than the scientific method described in "the
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skeptical chymist", it is postmodern science, and if the entries in the books do not
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actually correspond to real liability, real assets, and real equity,
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it is postmodern bookkeeping. Postmodern science is failing to produce the results
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that modern science produced, and postmodern bookkeeping is failing
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to produce the results that modern bookkeeping produced.)
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The state has been attacking the cohesion of the corporation just as it has been attacking
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the cohesion of the family. Modern corporate capitalism is incompatible with SoX,
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because if your books are detached from reality.
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lies that hostile outsiders demand that you believe,
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the corporation has lost that which makes it one person.
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When the books are a lie imposed on you by hostile outsiders you lose cohesion around profit,
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making things, buying, selling, and satisfying the customer,
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and instead substitute cohesion around gay sex, minority representation, and abortion rights.
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If the names of the columns do not mean what they say, people do not care about the effects
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of their actions on those columns.
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Notice Musk's tactic of making each of his enterprises a moral crusade,
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and also of giving them a legal form that evades SoX accounting. Which legal form does
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not permit their shares to be publicly traded.
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To believe the corporation is real, for the many people of the corporation to believe the
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corporation is one person, the books have to reflect reality,
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and reality has to have moral authority.
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The Christian doctrine of the Logos gives reality moral authority,
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since reality is a manifestation of will of God.
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In the Enron scandal, the books were misleading to the tune of about seventy billion dollars,
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in that they creatively moved their debts incurred by buying things on credit off the books,
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and that was the justification for SoX accounting.
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Which is very effective in preventing people from moving debts off the books.
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In the Great Minority Mortgage Meltdown, the SoX books were misleading to the tune
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of about seven *trillion* dollars, about one hundred times as much money as the Enron scandal,
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largely due to the fact that the people responsible for paying the mortgages could not be found or identified,
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frequently had about as much id and evidence of actual existence as a democratic party voter,
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and many of them probably did not exist, and many of the properties were not only grossly overvalued,
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but pledged to multiple mortgages, or were impossible to identify,
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and some of them may not have existed either. It usually said that the losses in the
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Great Minority Mortgage Meltdown were the result of housing prices being unrealistically inflated,
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but they were unrealistically inflated because people who, if they existed at all,
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had no income, job, or assets, were buying mansions at inflated prices.
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To 2005, it looks like poor people who actually existed were buying
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mansions they could not possibly afford at market prices, but market prices were artificially inflated
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because of this artificial demand. From 2005 to 2007, it looks more like people who did not actually exist
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were buying houses at prices far above market price and market prices were irrelevant.
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And that the alleged sale price of the property underlying
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the mortgage had been inflated far above realizable value,
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and often far above even what the prices had been at the peak
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of the bubble in 2005 was not the only problem. The creditors frequently
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had strange difficulty actually finding the houses.
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A person who actually exists and actually wants the house is going to sign the papers at a location
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near the house. Towards the end, most of the mortgages were flipped, and the alleged flippers signed
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the papers in big financial centres far from the alleged location of the alleged houses.
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The mortgagees did not demand id, because id racist. Much as demanding id is racist when
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you want to ask voters for id, but not when you want entry to a Democratic party gathering.
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Enron's books implied that non-existent entities were responsible for
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paying the debts that they had incurred
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through buying stuff on credit, thus moving the debt off the books. In the Great Minority Mortgage Meltdown,
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the banks claimed that people who, if they existed at all, could not possibly pay,
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owed them enormous amounts of money.
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Sox has prevented businesses from moving real debts off the books. But it failed spectacularly
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at preventing businesses from moving unreal debts onto the books. In the Great Minority Mortgage
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Meltdown, the books were misleading because of malice and dishonesty, but even if you are doing your
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best to make SoX books track the real condition of your business, they don't. They track a paper
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reality disconnected from reality and thus from actual value.
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But the biggest problem with Sarbanes-Oxley is not that it has failed to
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force publicly traded companies and their accountants to act in
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a trustworthy manner, but that it has forced them to act in an untrustworthy
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manner.
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It is not only very difficult and enormously expensive to comply with Sox.
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It is also *impossible* to comply with Sox. What publicly traded companies
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do instead is hire an accounting firm so well connected to the regulators
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that when it blesses the books it has prepared as Sox compliant, the
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regulators will pretend to believe. Which is great for the very respectable
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accountants, who get paid a great deal of money, and great for the
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regulators, who get paid off, but is terrible for businesses who pay a great
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deal of money and do not in fact get books that accurately tell
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management how the business is doing, and considerably worse for
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startups trying to go public, since the potential investors know that the
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books do not accurately tell the investors how the business is doing.
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What established businesses do instead is prepare one set of books for
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Sox compliance, and another illegal and forbidden
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set of books for management that do not comply
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with Sox but which actually do reflect the movement and creation of
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value, but a startup is not allowed to tell potential investors about the
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real books that actually reflect the movement and creation of value for the
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purpose of an IPO.
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Which has killed off startups and IPOs, which used to be my bread and
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butter.
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To do a startup again, we are going to have to do it on a blockdag.
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(Blockdags being the latest advance in blockchains, an unbalanced Merkle
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dag instead of an unblanced Merkle tree.)
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