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FDR New Deal
Vs Obamanomics -
The First
100 Days
By Stephen Lendman
4-30-9From
www.Rense.com
-
- With good reason,
progressive economists reflect positively on Roosevelt's New
Deal even though:
-
- -- it failed to end
the Great Depression;
- -- had many flaws;
- -- did too little
for blacks, women, immigrants, small farmers, agricultural
workers, and the poor;
-
- -- let blacks be
persecuted, discriminated against, and in the South denied
their voting rights and lynched;
-
- -- 10 weeks after
Pearl Harbor, he signed an Executive Order interning loyal
Japanese American citizens because of their ethnicity;
smaller numbers of German and Italian Americans as well;
-
- -- despite popular
discontent with US broadcasting, he signed the 1934
Communications Act establishing permanent broadcasting law
that handed the public airwaves to entrenched interests and
laid the foundation for today's corrupted media; he called
it a "New Deal in Radio Law," indeed for the broadcasters
that profited;
-
- -- his main task
was to save capitalism, not remake America into a social
democracy beyond what was necessary at the time;
-
- -- like all elected
officials, Roosevelt was above all a politician who wanted
to be re-elected; and
-
- -- it took a world
war to restore prosperity.
- Nonetheless, his
achievements were impressive, and the differences between
then and now are stark - during the two gravest economic
periods in US history. Obama embraces the Money Trust.
Roosevelt, rhetorically at least, confronted "the
unscrupulous money changers."
-
- The problem is what
he did, how, what he didn't do; what he could have done
better; and if he had, maybe the Great Depression might not
have been as Great or, in fact, Great at all.
-
- He failed to do
what Jackson and Lincoln did - return money-creation power
to the people, as the Constitution mandates, instead leaving
it in private hands - the very "moneychangers" he denounced
with the Federal Reserve atop its pyramid.
-
- Rather than finance
New Deal programs with interest-free money, he chose debt
obligations to private bankers, left the Fed's power
unchanged, and turned deep recessionary years into the Great
Depression.
-
- Government-created
money would have eliminated the national debt, income taxes,
and most important given the gravity of the crisis, would
have produced stable growth and prosperity without needing a
world war to get it. Lincoln did it, the Civil War
notwithstanding, and so did early colonists with
interest-free money. Their decision to break free from the
Bank of England (run by bankers) sparked the War of
Independence. Britain wanted its power back, colonists
resisted, hence the war.
-
- A future article
addresses this topic and much more. This one focuses on
Roosevelt's first 100 days v. Obama's and the differences in
their approaches - helping people, not bankers, the above
comments notwithstanding; curbing speculation, not
protecting it; imposing regulations and enforcing them, not
disdaining them; establishing social services, not ignoring
public needs; and much more.
-
- In all, 15 landmark
laws were enacted that (imperfections aside) set a standard
for dealing with a troubled economy - so grave in March 1933
that (except for the Civil War period), machine guns
protected government buildings because the nation's
financial system had collapsed, peoples' life savings and
jobs were being lost, and it was feared they'd react
violently as a result.
-
- The
Emergency Banking Act
-
- Roosevelt took
office on March 4, 1933. The next day (through a special
congressional session), he declared a four-day bank holiday.
On March 9, the Emergency Banking Act passed that closed
insolvent banks, then reorganized and reopened viable ones
under Treasury supervision, with federal loans available if
needed.
-
- By mid-March,
one-half of all banks with 90% of deposits were judged
solvent and reopened. Forty-five percent of the others were
reorganized under "conservators." The rest were shut down.
By mid-April, over 12,800 banks were operating, 4000 fewer
by year end after closures and mergers, and by 1935
one-third were nationalized, an idea the Obama
administration rejects, but sooner or later will have no
alternative but to embrace for the large most troubled ones.
-
-
The Bank Act of 1933 - Glass-Steagall
-
- On June 16, the
Bank Act of 1933 (Glass-Steagall) created the FDIC insuring
bank deposits up to $5000 and separated commercial from
investment banks and insurance companies, among other
provisions to curb speculation. Senator Carter Glass was its
prime mover and got Senator Henry Steagall to go along by
attaching his amendment to protect deposits. For years,
Glass believed bankers should stick to their knitting, not
deal in or hold corporate securities. He blamed them for the
1929 crash, the subsequent bank failures, and Great
Depression that followed. The Bank Act of 1933 passed
quickly to curb them.
-
- Much more as well
and largely people-oriented, not Obama's agenda to reward
banksters with trillions of public dollars. More on that
below.
-
- Other economic
measures enacted were:
-
-
The Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC)
-
- In 1932, Herbert
Hoover created it, but Roosevelt streamlined its bureaucracy
and increased its funding to recapitalize troubled banks and
corporations. Under Hoover, it had $500 million in capital
with authorization to borrow up to $1.5 billion more. In its
first six months, it loaned banks over $800 million but
didn't halt the crisis. Like today, they retained their
reserves, shunned lending, and, besides, public trust was
lacking.
-
- Roosevelt's New
Deal changed things. Under the 1933 Emergency Banking Act,
RFC could buy bank equity and within a year bought more than
$1 billion, or about one-third of total banks' capital. At
the same time, government measures and oversight restored
public confidence enough to attract hundreds of millions in
deposits that pumped life into troubled banks if only for
starters.
-
- During his tenure,
Roosevelt used RFC funding for agencies like the Home
Owners' Loan Corporation, Farm Credit Administration, Rural
Electrification Administration, Public Works Administration,
and others as well as emergency relief loans to states,
something Hoover never did, let alone establish New Deal
policies to let him.
-
- The
Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 - Following the
Securities Act of 1933
-
- The 1933 law
(enacted May 27, 1933) required that offers and sales of
securities be registered, pursuant to the Constitution's
interstate commerce clause. Previously, they were governed
by state laws, known as "blue sky laws" to protect against
fraud.
-
- The 1934 law
(enacted June 6, 1934) regulates secondary trading of
financial securities and established the SEC under Section 4
to enforce the new Act, then later the Trust Indenture Act
of 1939, the 1940 Investment Company Act and Investment
Advisers Act, Sarbanes-Oxley of 2002, and the 2006 Credit
Rating Agency Reform Act.
-
- Overall, it's to
enforce federal securities laws, the securities industry,
the nation's financial and options exchanges, and other
electronic securities markets unknown in the 1930s along
with derivatives and other forms of speculation. Then and
now, it's charged with uncovering wrongdoing, assuring
investors aren't swindled, and keeping the nation's
financial markets free from fraud. At least that was the
idea. Eventually, the fulfillment fell far short of the
promise.
-
- In the 1930s,
regulation worked by requiring that salesmen and brokers be
licensed, prospectuses be used, full disclosure provided,
and enough enforcement as well to cut fraud significantly.
In addition, Glass-Steagall eliminated many 1920s
shenanigans, a decade, like today, when Wall Street did as
it pleased, created speculative excesses, and caused the
inevitable crash.
-
- Reforms were
simpler to implement at a time fewer than 5% of the public
owned stocks compared to 50% today, and most were
sophisticated enough to know what they were doing or thought
so. Also, there were no 401ks, IRAs, or a proliferation of
mutual and hedge funds like today let alone:
-
- --
securitization/structured finance asset-backed securities (ABSs),
mortgage-backed securities (MBSs), collateralized mortgage
obligations (CMOs), collateralized debt obligations (CDOs),
collateralized bond obligations (CBOs), credit default swaps
(CDSs), and collateralized fund obligations (CFOs) -
combined, sliced, diced, packaged, repackaged, and sold in
tranches to sophisticated and ordinary investors, many to
mutual fund buyers, never knowing they owned any, let alone
were being swindled; and
-
- -- derivative
futures, options, forwards, swaps, warrants, leaps, baskets,
swaptions, and whatever else Wall Street minds can invent,
package, and sell in various ways and forms - too much of it
not on the up and up as the current crisis revealed.
-
- Home
Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC)
-
- It was established
in 1933 under the Homeowners Refinancing Act to refinance
homes and prevent foreclosures, something largely missing in
Obama's Homeowners Affordability and Stability Plan, the
so-called mortgage bailout. It mainly helps lenders, does
nothing for homeowners under water or those with second
mortgages. Nor does it address plunging property valuations
and its affect on millions.
-
- In contrast, HOLC
extended short and longer-term loans for up to 30 years and
prevented the loss of over a million homes (about one-fifth
of those owned with mortgages, the equivalent of 10 million
today) at a time half were in default, and annual mortgage
lending and residential construction was down 80%.
-
- States began
enacting foreclosure moratoriums at a time the average owner
was two years in delinquency and three years behind on
property taxes. In today's dollars, relative to current GDP,
HOLC was initially authorized to issue $200 billion in
bonds, acquire defaulted properties in exchange for them
from lenders and investors, then refinance mortgages at
lower rates (at a maximum 5%) to keep owners from losing
their homes.
-
- An essential HOLC
element was for lenders and investors to take losses to
provide more affordable mortgages for their holders -
something missing in Obama's plan that lets issuers add
unpaid balances to principal in return for lower rates and
term extensions, meaning defaults are delayed, not stopped,
and as valuations keep falling, millions more may lose their
homes.
-
- HOLC was hugely
successful but not perfect. Given the dire conditions of the
times, around 200,000 owners eventually defaulted but 80%
were saved, far different from today with over four million
foreclosures and 2009 estimates ranging from three million
more to much higher numbers, plus many more in 2010.
-
- The
Economy Act
-
- It was enacted on
March 14, 1933 to deliver on Roosevelt's campaign promise to
balance the "regular" non-emergency budget, be fiscally
prudent, and do it by cutting government employees' salaries
and veterans pensions by 40% for a $500 million savings at
the worst possible time to do it. As a candidate, Roosevelt
said deficit spending impaired recovery and hurt business
confidence. However, as president, New Deal spending took
precedence. By 1936, even four million veterans got their
$1.5 billion bonus, in Bonus Bill cash and welfare benefits
over Roosevelt's veto.
-
- The
Beer-Wine Revenue Act
-
- On February 17,
1933, a dismal experiment ended when the Blaine Act repealed
Prohibition, the Constitution's 18th Amendment, then
formally adopted it in December under the 21st Amendment.
-
- On March 22,
passage of the Beer-Wine Revenue Act levied a $5 tax on
every barrel of beer and wine and reenacted parts of the
Webb-Kenyon Act to protect states with laws prohibiting
alcoholic beverages in excess of 3.2%. States also were left
in charge of the sale and distribution of spirits.
-
- The
Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
-
- The March 31, 1933
Emergency Conservation Work Act (CCC) put unemployed men to
work on numerous projects - building roads, bridges, parts
of dams, developing state parks, planting trees, and various
forestry and recreational programs for the Forest Service,
National Park Service, Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of
Reclamation, Bureau of Land Management, and Soil
Conservation Service.
-
- Reportedly, it was
FDR's favorite initiative. On April 5, Executive Order 6101
launched it by appointing a Director of Emergency
Conservation Work "By virtue of the authority vested in me
by the (CCC) Act of Congress...." It had great public
support. By year end 1935, it employed over 600,000 in 2650
camps (including supervisors and administrators) in every
state engaged in more than 100 kinds of work.
-
-
Civilian Works Administration (CWA)
-
- On May 12, 1933,
enactment of the Federal Emergency Relief Act established
the Federal Emergency Relief Administration (FERA) to
provide funds to states (from May through December 1935) to
reduce unemployment. It set up CWA, supplied over $3 billion
for various work and transient projects, created temporary
jobs for over 20 million, then was gradually ended in favor
of the Works Progress Administration (WPA).
-
- Before it did, it
was considered a significant initiative with Washington
taking responsibility for the welfare of millions, both
employable and unemployable, at a time of desperate need.
Its flexibility and high administrative standards made it a
model for later relief efforts.
-
- The
National Industrial Recovery Act (NIRA)
-
- Passed on June 16,
1933, Roosevelt called it "the most important and
far-reaching (law) ever enacted by the American Congress."
It established the National Recovery Administration (NRA) as
an initiative to revive economic growth, encourage
collective bargaining, set maximum work hours, minimum
wages, at times prices, and forbid child labor in industry.
-
- Business response
was mixed. GE helped write it, and the Chamber of Commerce
said it was "a most important step in our progress towards
business rehabilitation." In contrast, the National
Association of Manufacturers and Henry Ford, among others,
opposed it.
-
- So did the Supreme
Court unanimously in its Poultry Corp. v. United States (May
1935) ruling that NIRA/NRA "lay outside the authority of
Congress," infringed on states' rights, unreasonably
stretched the Commerce Clause, and gave legislative powers
to the president in violation of the Nondelegation doctrine.
It added that "extraordinary conditions do not create or
enlarge constitutional powers."
-
- By then, the Act
was increasingly unpopular, and many doubted its
effectiveness. Some economists called it counterproductive
and damaging to economic stability by weakening antitrust
laws and allowing collusion.
-
- Public
Works Administration (PWA)
-
- It was created by
NIRA for PWA-initiated projects to provide jobs, increase
purchasing power, improve public welfare, and help revive
the economy. Some called it designed to prime the pump and
spend "big bucks on big projects," including
electricity-generating dams, airports, schools, hospitals,
affordable housing, even aircraft carriers.
-
- While it operated,
it spent over $6 billion but did little to lift the economy
or reduce unemployment because it didn't do enough toward
for either. When the nation moved toward war production, PWA
became irrelevant and was ended.
-
-
Works Progress Administration (WPA)
-
- It was a post-first
100 day initiative funded by the April 1935 Emergency Relief
Appropriation Act and launched by Roosevelt's May 6
Executive Order 7034 "to move from the relief rolls to work
on (various) projects or in private employment the maximum
number of persons in the shortest time possible."
-
- It replaced FERA,
CWA and PWA to became the largest New Deal agency, employing
millions in every state, especially in rural and western
areas - those able to work, not the aged, handicapped or
otherwise unemployable to be helped mostly at state and
local levels. It and other programs eventually found jobs
for about 60% of the nation's unemployed, paying around $50
a month (on WPA jobs) that went a lot further then than now.
-
- WPA focused heavily
on construction and developmental programs but also in areas
of education, the arts, health, and other community projects
for professional and white collar workers as well as efforts
to feed children and redistribute food, clothing and provide
housing.
-
- Most observers
called WPA a success. Others, however, objected to its
competing unfairly with business, dispensing jobs as
political favors, undercutting prevailing wages, and letting
social protest themes be part of various arts projects. Once
war production began, WPA shifted focus in that direction.
By mid-1943, most alphabet soup agencies ended in favor of
business as usual taking over post-war.
-
-
The Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA)
-
- On May 18, 1933,
the Tennessee Valley Authority Act became law creating TVA
as a federally-owned corporation to provide navigation,
flood control, electricity generation, economic development,
and promote agriculture in the depression-impacted Tennessee
Valley area covering most of Tennessee as well as parts of
Alabama, Mississippi, Kentucky, Georgia, North Carolina, and
Virginia. It was the federal government's largest regional
planning agency and remains so.
-
- From 1933 - 1944,
it built 16 dams and a steam plant, produced electricity
cheaply, and by 1941 was its largest producer in the
country. It also established the Electric Home and Farm
Authority (EHFA) to help farmers buy major electric
appliances with EHFA low-cost financing.
-
- In Ashwander v. TVA
(February 1936), the Supreme Court ruled it constitutional,
noting that regulating interstate commerce includes doing it
for streams. They require flood control for navigability,
and electricity generation is a by-product of this effort.
-
- Today, TVA remains
America's largest public power company, with over 34,600
megawatts in generating capacity serving about 8.5 million
customers.
-
-
The Agricultural Adjustment Act (AAA)
-
- Enacted on May 12,
1933, it restricted production by paying farmers to reduce
and/or destroy crops and kill livestock at a time millions
were impoverished and hungry. The idea was to decrease
supply and raise prices (at the worst possible time) with
farmers getting government payments for agreeing not to
plant specific crops, not produce milk and butter, nor raise
pigs and lambs. In addition, the Agriculture Secretary had
exclusive powers to license food processors to control
supply and raise prices.
-
- In United States v.
Butler (January 1936), the Supreme Court ruled that the tax
underwriting AAA was unconstitutional because, among other
reasons, it assessed one farmer to pay another. Congress
later achieved part of AAA's goals through the 1935 Soil
Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act until enactment of
the second AAA in February 1938. It was funded through
general taxation and thus constitutionally acceptable to the
High Court.
-
- AAA was
conceptually flawed. It ran counter to vitally needed policy
to produce low-cost food, make it affordable for millions,
and relieve hunger. It also subsidized owners, not tenant
farmers or sharecroppers, and ended up depressing incomes
and increasing unemployment at the worst possible time.
-
-
The Farm Credit Act of 1933
-
- Enacted on June 16,
1933 (the last of FDR's first 100 days), it was established
to help farmers refinance mortgages over an extended time at
below-market rates, and by so doing, helped them stay
solvent and survive. It also created the Farm Credit
Administration to make loans for the production and
marketing of agricultural products as well as regulate and
examine banks, associations, and related Farm Credit System
entities - a network of borrower-owned financial
institutions to provide credit to farmers, ranchers, and
agricultural and rural utility cooperatives.
-
- The May 1933
Emergency Farm Mortgage Act, established during the time of
the Dust Bowl, provided refinancing help for farmers facing
foreclosure.
-
-
An Overall Assessment
-
- Despite its flaws
and failures, FDR's New Deal was remarkable in what it
accomplished. It helped people, put millions back to work,
reinvigorated the national spirit, built or renovated
700,000 miles of roads, 7800 bridges, 45,000 schools, 2500
hospitals, 13,000 parks and playgrounds, 1000 airfields, and
various other infrastructure, including much of Chicago's
lakefront where this writer lives. It cut unemployment from
25% in May 1933 to 11% in 1937, then it spiked before early
war production revived economic growth and headed it lower.
-
- The Great
Depression was, in fact, two severe recessions:
-
- -- from summer 1929
- March 1933;
-
- -- followed by a
1933 - 1937 recovery; impressive enough for the Dow
Industrials to rise from a July 1932 low of 43 to 187 in
February 1937 for a near-335% gain; however, the rally
followed an 89% decline so even the new top ended up 50%
below the 1929 peak of 385, a level it took 25 years to
regain; then
-
- -- from May 1937 -
June 1938, another slump followed (and a 47% Dow average
decline) in response to reduced government spending before
early war preparations produced recovery.
-
- It might have been
stronger and quicker had Roosevelt embraced all of Keynes'
advice in a December 31, 1933 New York Times "Open Letter"
(republished on November 25, 2008 in the London Guardian)
to:
-
- -- "spend, spend,
spend;"
-
- -- supply "cheap
and abundant credit;"
- -- stress "speed
and quick" recovery over reform that can come later;
-
- -- hold back on
recovery-impeding reforms initially;
-
- -- direct recovery
to "increas(ing) the national output," increasing purchasing
power, and "put(ting) more men to work;"
-
- -- let rising
output, not government policies, produce price increases;
"increasing aggregate purchasing power is the right way to
get prices up and not the other way around;"
-
- -- undertake "a
large volume of Loan-expenditures under Government auspices"
but work cooperatively with business; and
-
- -- concentrate on
projects that "can be made to mature quickly on a large
scale, as for example the rehabilitation of the physical
condition of the railroads."
-
- Roosevelt did much
of the above, but not enough of it, then in 1937 declared
victory too early and precipitated another downturn.
Nonetheless, he deserves praise for what he accomplished
during the gravest ever economic period to that time. He
confronted it head-on with emergency first 100 days measures
and vital reforms, Keynes advice notwithstanding, including:
-
- -- the above-cited
"first 100 days" legislation, then later
-
- --
the National Labor
Relations Board
with the passage of
the 1935 Wagner Act,
that, for the first time, let labor bargain collectively on
equal terms with management - something very much eroded in
today's environment;
-
- --
the 1935 Social
Security Act
that to this day is the single most important federal
program responsible for keeping seniors and others eligible
out of poverty;
-
- --
unemployment
insurance in partnership with the states;
by 1935, nearly all the unemployed got social benefit
payments;
-
- --
the Revenue Acts of
1934 and 1935,
so-called "Soak the Rich" ones to make high income earners
pay their fair share;
-
- --
the Revenue Act of 1936
that established an
"undistributed profits tax" on corporations;
-
- --
the Revenue Act of 1937
that cracked down on tax evasion;
-
- -- a minimum
wage, a 40-hour week, and time-and-a-half for overtime
guarantees under
the 1938 Fair Labor
Standards Act (FLSA);
-
- -- public housing
under the
1934 National Housing Act (creating the Federal Housing
Administration - FHA)
to make housing and mortgages more affordable through FHA
and Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC)
financing;
-
- --
the May
1935-established Rural Electrification Administration (REA)
to bring electrical power to rural and remote areas;
-
- --
the 1937 Housing Act
(Wagner-Steagall Act)
providing subsidies to
local public housing agencies;
-
- --
the Railroad
Retirement System,
separate from Social Security, administering a social
insurance program for railroad workers and their families;
- --
the National Youth
Administration (NYA) under WPA
to help youth unemployment through grants to high school and
college students in return for work; it also aided
unemployed young people not in school with on-the-job
training in federally-funded work projects to provide
marketable future skills; and -- more initiatives in an
effort to reform and revive the economy.
-
-
Obamanomics - Obama's Bad Deal
-
- As stated above,
Roosevelt confronted "the money changers," even though
mostly through rhetoric. Obama, like Bush, embraces them
openly to the tune of $12.8 trillion "spent, lent or
guaranteed," according to Bloomberg on March 31 while people
needs go begging at a time they're most essential. He leads:
-
- -- an imperial
enterprise presided over by a war cabinet engaged in
unbridled militarism, aggressive wars and occupation with a
budget well above $1 trillion annually;
- -- a bogus
democracy under a homeland police state apparatus;
- -- an anti-labor
job destruction offensive, from 800,000 - one million a
month since his inauguration, compared to FDR creating
employment for most workers and reviving the national
spirit; and
- -- a criminal cabal
in charge of the greatest ever wealth transfer in history -
from the public to the top 1%, mainly powerful corrupt Wall
Street institutions.
- As Michel
Chossudovsky explains, his budget reflects "the most drastic
curtailment in public spending in American history." It's a
"War Budget (affecting) all major federal (programs except):
1. Defense and the Middle East War(s and whatever new ones
are planned); 2. the Wall Street bank bailout, (and) 3.
Interest payments (approaching $500 billion annually) on a
staggering (growing) public debt."
-
- People needs don't
matter. They get little more than lip service, and in his
April 14 Georgetown University economic policy speech, Obama
promised disappointment. When he should have been
Rooseveltian, he defended bank bailouts, suggested more are
coming, championed "free market" rubbish, and presented
"five pillars (to) make the new century another American
(one):"
-
- -- no-teeth
financial regulations;
-
- -- education
reform, meaning the Bush agenda to end public education;
-
- -- renewable energy
and technology investments, likely to be far less than
needed and for the wrong things;
- -- health care
reform minus Medicare-for-all to assure profits trump human
need; and
-
- -- "restoring
fiscal discipline (by) reduc(ing) discretionary spending for
domestic programs" at the same time it's been recklessly
abandoned for bankers and militarism....we (cannot solve
this problem by trimming a few earmarks; (the) biggest
(budget costs) are entitlement programs like Medicare,
Medicaid, and Social Security all of which get more
expensive every year....So if we want to get serious about
fiscal discipline - and I do - we will have to get serious
about entitlement reform" - meaning phase them out in future
years, or something close to that.
-
- Unless policies
like these are reversed, this agenda is heading the nation
toward insolvency, tyranny and ruin with ordinary people
hurt most.
-
- Simon Johnson is a
former IMF chief economist, now teaching at MIT's Sloan
School of Management. His article in the Atlantic's May
issue, titled "The Quiet Coup," suggests that Wall Street (a
"financial oligarchy") is turning America into a "banana
republic," given the depth, similarities and shock
"reminiscent of" earlier crises in Southeast Asia, Russia,
Latin America, and other developing countries.
-
- His analysis is
long and detailed, concluding as follows:
-
- "The conventional
wisdom among the elite is still that the current slump
'cannot be as bad as the Great Depression.' This view is
wrong. What we face now could, in fact, be worse than the
Great Depression - because the world is now so much more
interconnected and the banking sector so big. We face a
synchronized downturn in almost all countries, a weakening
of confidence among individuals and firms, and major
problems for government finances. If our leadership wakes up
to the potential consequences, we may yet see dramatic
action on the banking system and a breaking of the old
elite."
-
- So far policy is
mirror-opposite, hugely destructive, publicly papered over
but evident in divergent G 20 views, raging on London and
other European streets, to a lesser degree in America, and
openly stated by Czech prime minister/EU president Mirek
Topolanek calling Washington's stimulus "a way to hell (that
will) undermine the stability of" global finance.
-
- Obama is wrecking
America. Roosevelt determined to revive it and help people
as the way to do it.
-
- He had his "Brain
Trust," notable figures like Felix Frankfurter, (a future
Supreme Court justice), Justice Louis Brandeis,
consumerist/labor supporter Frances Perkins, economist
Rexford Tugwell, educator/author Adolph Berle, and close
personal confidant Louis Howe, among others - officials and
advisors dedicated to reviving the economy by putting people
back to work. One other was prominent as well, his wife
Eleanor.
-
- Rexford Tugwell
said this about her:
-
- "No one who ever
saw Eleanor Roosevelt sit down facing her husband, and,
holding his eye firmly, say to him, 'Franklin, I think you
should....or, 'Franklin, surely you will not....' will ever
forget the experience....It would be impossible to say how
often and to what extent American governmental processes
have been turned in new directions because of her
determination."
-
- At first, she
worried she'd be marginalized as first lady, unable to speak
publicly about causes she championed. But it didn't stop
her. She held press conferences for women reporters only;
pressed FDR to appoint more women and much more:
-
- -- she urged the
creation of the National Youth Administration;
-
- -- became a civil
rights champion and pushed for including blacks in
government programs;
-
- -- supported the
Southern Tenant Farmer's Union;
-
- -- worked with the
PWA's Housing Division for planned communities ("greenbelt
towns") and slum clearance;
-
- -- backed Federal
Arts Projects, even ones with "controversial" themes;
-
- -- supported worker
rights and lobbied for the Wagner and Fair Labor Standards
Acts;
-
- -- visited coal
mines, migrant camps, homes of sharecroppers and
slum-dwellers;
-
- -- wrote articles,
spoke publicly and on radio;
-
- -- traveled widely
to see firsthand how the Depression affected the most
vulnerable; and
-
- -- displayed an
unmatched spirit, passion and dedication, and, by so doing,
set a standard never matched by another first lady; few, in
fact, even tried.
-
- That Was Then, This
Is Now - A Different Time, A Different President, A
Different Agenda
-
- The differences
between FDR and Obama are stark during the two gravest
economic crises in our history. Obama chose a financial coup
d'etat "dream team" to address it. It includes a rogue's
gallery of 1990s and earlier retreads, many of them proteges
of former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin who plundered
world economies during his tenure, then led Citigroup close
to collapse - disciples like Treasury Secretary Timothy
Geithner, former New York Fed president who partnered with
Ben Bernanke and Hank Paulson's Treasury-looting under Bush.
-
- Reportedly he was
also one of the architects behind the Bear Stearns bailout
and various others, including Fannie, Freddie, AIG, Merrill
Lynch, Washington Mutual, and Lehman Bros.' suspicious
collapse that shocked financial markets globally. He now
runs the Treasury and continues looting on a grander scale
on the pretext of reviving the economy. Instead, he's
wrecking it - by design.
-
- Others like
Lawrence Summers, a former Reaganite and World Bank chief
economist before becoming Clinton's Under-Treasury Secretary
for International Affairs, then Treasury Secretary from 1999
- 2001. He helped deregulate financial markets and played a
key role in the 1999 Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act that repealed
Glass-Steagall and opened the door to the kinds of rampant
speculation, fraud, and abuse that created today's crisis.
-
- He was also
instrumental in the passage of the 2000 Commodity Futures
Modernation Act (CFMA). It legitimized "swap agreements" and
other "hybrid instruments" at the heart of today's problems
by preventing regulatory oversight of derivatives and
leveraging that turned Wall Street into a casino.
-
- Now he's do for
Obama what he did earlier - as Director of the National
Economic Council where he's part of a criminal cabal
triumvirate in charge of economic policies along with
Geithner and Bernanke.
-
- Another Rubin
protege, Peter Orszag, heads the Office of Management and
Budget. Earlier he was on Clinton's Council of Economic
Advisors, then was Congressional Budget Office Director from
early 2007 to late 2008. He's for destroying Social Security
through a combination of payroll and "benefits adjustments"
as a way of cutting retiree payouts.
-
- Also close to Rubin
and for Social Security privatization is Jason Furman,
Deputy Director of the National Economic Council. In the
Clinton administration, he served as Special Assistant to
the President for Economic Policy and on the Council of
Economic Advisors.
-
- UC Berkeley
economist Christina Romer chairs the Council of Economic
Advisors where she's close to the president but with less
clout than Geithner, Summers and Bernanke. Her idea of good
government - the less the better, except for handouts to the
rich. In praise of Ronald Reagan she once wrote: "The costly
wrong turn in ideas and macropolicy of the 1960s and 1970s
has been set right, and the future of stabilization looks
bright," meaning, of course, to take from the many for the
few.
-
- That's also true
for Paul Volker (former Fed chairman, Trilateralist,
corporatist and no friend of working people), now serving as
1st Chair of the President's Economic Recovery Advisory
Board, a position with lots of bark and little bite, but
enough to pay attention to nonetheless, especially when he
differs on public policy.
-
- Former Washington
governor Gary Locke is the new Commerce Secretary, hailed as
"safe (and) strait-laced," but his record shows otherwise.
He skirted campaign finance laws; handed Boeing a $3.2
billion tax break; paid Boeing's private consultant and
outside auditor $715,000; and arranged favors for his
brother-in-law's business above and beyond what's ethical.
-
- Former Colorado
senator and rancher Ken Salazar heads the Interior
Department. He backed the worst of Bush administration
appointments, including Alberto Gonzales for Attorney
General and right-winger Gale Norton for Interior. He's an
anti-environmentist and is staunchly pro-business, clearly
why he was appointed in the first place.
-
- That's true as well
for Tom Vilsack, former Iowa governor, chair of the right
wing Democratic Leadership Council (DLC), now new
Agriculture Secretary. Agribusiness loves him. He's for
ethanol and other biofuel production, big subsidies for the
giants, and the proliferation of harmful GMO seeds.
-
- As new Education
Secretary, Arne Duncan will do for the nation what he did to
Chicago - preside over public education's destruction by
privatizing it for profit, and in the process, destroy the
futures of millions of youths in the country.
-
- The 1934 Securities
and Exchange Act created an SEC with teeth and, for a while,
it worked. At least since the 1980s, it hasn't, and under
George Bush it became a travesty of non-enforcement.
-
- Mary Schapiro is
its new head, hand-picked by the industry she'll regulate so
there's no doubt where her allegiance lies. She's a
high-level insider, former FINRA and NASD head and earlier
CFTC chairperson. In each job, she was a facilitator, not a
regulator, credentials making her perfect for SEC where
industry interests matter, not enforcing the nation's
securities laws.
-
- Other Obama
officials are as tainted - his top team and their
underlings. Roosevelt promised change and delivered. So did
Obama - for his Wall Street backers and beneficiaries.
-
- Stephen Lendman is
a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on
Globalization. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
-
- Also visit his blog
site and listen to The Global Research News Hour on Republic
Broadcasting.org Monday - Friday at 10AM US Central time for
cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on world
and national issues. All programs are archived for easy
listening.
-
-
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=13326
Pictures
added by Gnostic Liberation Front
|
The Fleecing Of America
By Stephen Lendman
10-6-8
.....This article follows from an earlier one
titled Grand Theft America. On the crime of the century.
The greatest one ever. Unbridled excess gone awry.
An economic system built on a foundation of greed
and fraud. Threatening the country with insolvency and ruin.
World economies with it. Plundering the national treasury
to save it. Bailing out criminal bankers.
Rewarding fraudsters with public funds.
Making the world safe again for capital (or trying to)
and heading it for an even greater calamity ahead.
Maybe next time (or this one) one
no financial engineering can fix....
NO To The Paulson-Bernanke
Derivatives Scam Bailout
Bail Out the American People,
Not Wall Street!
An Economic
Recovery Strategy for Protectionists,
Dirigists, Mercantilists, and Populists
By Webster G. Tarpley
9-23-8
Barack Obama - Crime Boss
By Stephen Lendman
4-18-9
...Since taking office, Obama, wittingly or otherwise,
has headed the largest criminal enterprise
in history - the mass looting of national wealth
to enrich his Wall Street benefactors.
He assembled a rogue economic team of
Clinton/Robert Rubin retreads - to fix the
current crisis they engineered...
Barack Obama -
America's
First Jewish President
By James Petras
12-13-8
.....Think about it:
Not only do the Zionists
and their embedded clones rule the White House,
they also have the political apparatus
(left, liberal, center and right) to silence, insult,
witch hunt and isolate any critic of their agenda,
their organizations and of the State of Israel.
When confronted by a critic the entire apparatus
brays in unison about 'anti-Semitism'
and follows up with severe civil sanctions...
by Hartmut
Cramer
This speech appeared in the
June 16, 2000 issue
of Executive Intelligence Review.
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