A  hive of bees is in a field,
Within  a climate sunny.
It  will survive to multiply
If  work supplies the honey.
The  queen supplies a stream of eggs
Which  soon turn into workers.
Except  for one dependent class
Who  live full-time as shirkers.
These  are the drones, and every hive
Supplies  them with a living.
They  dance and sing and whoop it up,
Consuming,  but not giving.
The  drones spend days and nights enthralled
By  pleasures of a season.
Convinced  that life is far too short
To  waste on prayer or reason.
They  are supported by the queen,
The  mistress of seduction.
She  has a plan to make them wish
They’d  labored in production.
But  that comes later, this is now.
Each  drone, content, relaxes.
So,  worker bees work extra hard
And  grumble at the taxes.
And  so, drones while away their time
In  games and food and squander.
That  is her plan, because she knows
That  drones are prone to wander.
The  drones play on and on for weeks,
Oblivious  to hunches
That  there might come a time to pay,
For  hives have no free lunches.
To  serve the drones, some other bees
Supply  a range of vices
That  only queens can subsidize
So  high are vices’ prices.
But  where, you ask, does cunning queen
Accumulate  the treasure
That  celebrating hordes of drones
Can  waste in weeks of pleasure?
The  hive itself, without a plan,
Produces  streams of honey.
The  system runs on payments made
In  liquid golden money.
The  queen has passed a law of iron
That  drones must gain a portion
Of  honey gold, which they will spend,
Which  workers think extortion.
So,  in the hive two classes form
Which  scheme like rival brothers
To  profit from the hive’s output
Without  the claims from others.
One  class grows rich by selling goods
To  drones, who live by spending.
The  other class works day and night,
In  labor never-ending.
The  drones grow fat, and specialize
In  ever-greater pleasures.
While  worker bees begin to plan
A  host of counter-measures.
The  workers come before the queen
Ten  thousand wings a-humming.
She  says to bide their time instead;
Payday  is surely coming.
They  are not sure she speaks the truth,
But  great is their devotion.
They  give her time to prove her case,
Suppressing  dark emotion.
The  merchants of the drones grow rich.
For  honey flows like water.
The  hive’s economy hums on,
And  drones foresee no slaughter.
The  drones resent worker bees
Who  grouse about the favors
Displayed  to drones, who spend the wealth
Produced  by others’ labors.
They  set aside some honey sweet
To  hire a solution.
A  group of masters of the arts
Of  specious elocution.
These  hired experts write reports
That  show that flowing honey
Can  only be preserved intact
If  drones are spending money.
They  say that worker bees do not
Perceive  what makes hives wealthy.
To  stop the flow of funds to drones
Is  fiscally unhealthy.
You  see, they say, the flow of funds
Must  without drones be severed.
Without  our drones, the stimulus
Can’t  save the banks, full-levered.
Without  the banks, which serve the drones,
As  well as worker legions,
The  wealth of all will disappear
Into  the nether regions.
So,  we must save the hive without
The  envy-driven blaming
Of  useful drones who make us rich
By  partying and gaming.
The  worker bees do not perceive
How  this concatenation
Of  arguments implausible,
is  valid explanation.
But  these are experts with degrees
From  famous institutions,
Which  get their funding from the queen
And  rich bees’ contributions.
Therefore,  the worker bees begin
To  doubt their own suspicions
That  drones are liabilities
Not  worthy of provisions.
The  hired experts collect their pay
For  having duped the masses.
Then  chortle in contempt of those
Whom  they regard as asses.
They  take their graphs and charts and chalk
And  go back to their places
Of  tenured and secure success
With  academic graces.
And  so the drones indulge themselves,
Which  they find stimulating.
For  that’s what stimuli are for:
“Let’s  not be hesitating!”
Whenever  their accounts run low,
And  bankers grow suspicious,
The  queen expands the flow of funds,
Which  bankers find delicious.
And  so the lending class gets rich,
For  drones have endless shop lists.
To  lend to them is safe, they think,
The  queen will never stop this.
The  lending class then borrows short
To  lend long-term to spenders,
Short  rates are low, long rates are high:
The  system has defenders.
The  experts back on campus see
The  many permutations.
They  think that they may strike it rich:
Computerized  equations!
And  so the tenured quants come forth
To  serve the lending classes.
Who  borrow even more from fools
Who  wear rose-colored glasses.
And  so the permutations spread
Throughout  the hive’s insiders
Complexity  now reigns supreme,
With  kooks the sole deriders.
And  then, one summer’s day, the queen
Calls  forth her close attendants.
She  lays the eggs that will decide
The  future of descendants.
Each  egg is fed, at her expense,
To  test the heirs’ survival.
One  will emerge first and impose
A  death sting on each rival.
Then  up she flies, drones in pursuit
In  hope of one last action.
A  few achieve what all would like:
Their  last full satisfaction.
“Payday  has come,” the queen declares.
“Free  lunches now have ended.”
The  worker bees blockade the hive,
The  golden fund defended.
The  drones, now spent in every sense,
Beg  for continued feeding,
But  worker bees ignore their pleas:
The  new hive needs no breeding.
Word  spreads among the lending class:
The  formulas so splendid
Have  crashed the flow of funds outright:
Liquidity  suspended.
And  then the sellers who rode high
On  drones’ relentless spending
Discover  they must switch careers:
Their  sector is descending.
The  money that the drones had spent
Will  now be spent by others.
The  queen cuts taxes and declares:
“You  now can have your druthers.”
The  flow of funds continues on,
Though  drones are not surviving.
The  experts with their charts and graphs
Were  wrong: the hive is thriving.
The  lending class must now survey
The  shape of new conditions
Without  the hope of queen-backed funds
To  guarantee ambitions.
The  tenured experts, still employed,
Release  a memorandum.
They  all insist that these events
Were  all black swans and random.
And  so we see that scarcity
Asserts  its jurisdiction.
There’s  greater wealth for workers now,
Due  to the drones’ eviction.
The  worker bees survey the scene
Of  greater wealth for labors.
There’s  always more down at the store
When  drones are not your neighbors.
One  worker bee begins to think
About  the drones’ defenders.
The  tenured masters of the charts
Who  justified the spenders.
“It  seems to me,” declares the bee,
“That  other drones are living
High  on the hog, beyond the rules:
They’re  taking without giving.”
Considering  consumption by
Those  bees in tenured splendor,
The  other bees begin to doubt
Their  claims to legal tender.
Why  should these experts with their charts
And  graphs and dense equations
Be  paid by all to generate
Post-crisis  explanations?
What  is the use of expertise
When  experts tell you little
Of  what will happen next, and why?
They’re  always noncommittal.
And  so a wave of terror spreads
In  tenured education.
To  meet a market on your own:
A  frightening innovation.
They  live secure from having to
Explain  their public errors.
Without  the queen’s own guarantees,
The  world is filled with terrors.
And  so they send a delegate,
A  master of compliance,
To  once again persuade the queen
Against  their self-reliance.
She  welcomes him into her court,
And  smiles at his submission.
She  loves to see her experts squirm
When  facing competition.
“My  queen,” he says, “you must beware
Of  worker bees’ complaining.
You  still get value for your grant
Of  pay for all our training.”
“We  serve the court, and serve it well,
Delaying  that dark day.
When  worker bees at last decide
It’s  time to disobey.”
“I  see your point, and see it clear,”
She  says to feckless minion.
“You  serve me as the shapers of
The  climate of opinion.”
“And  so I’ll still extend your pay,
To  guarantee the ridding
Of  competition’s terrors,
But  you all will do my bidding.”
“We’ve  always understood the deal,”
Is  his firm declaration.
“When  it comes time to praise the court,
Expect  no hesitation.”
And  so the minion brings the news
For  academe’s elation.
Between  the market and the school:
A  wall of separation.
So  now I end my poem short
Of  hival operations,
Of  politics and pay and deals,
And  queenly expectations.
But  this one fact I hope prevails
From  concepts you’ve now seen.
There’s  always value rendered sure
For  benefits from the queen.
Author: Dr. Gary North
Gary North received his Ph.D. in history from the University of California, Riverside in 1972. Gary is the author of over 42 books including "The War on Mel Gibson: The Media versus The Passion," "Unconditional Surrender," "Conspiracy: A Biblical View," and "Crossed Fingers: How Liberals Captured the Presbyterian Church." Gary is one of the most insightful and thought-provoking historians and economists in modern times.






