-
Grand Theft America
By Stephen Lendman
9-29-8
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- The crime of the
century. The greatest one ever. Author Danny Schechter calls
it "Plunder." The title of his important new book on the
subprime and overall financial crisis. Economist Michael
Hudson and others refer to a kleptocracy. A Ponzi scheme
writ large. Maybe an out-of-control Andromeda Strain. An
economic one. Deadly. Unrecallable. Science fiction now real
life. Potentially catastrophic. World governments trying to
contain it. Trying everything but not sure what can work.
Maybe only able to paper it over for short-term relief. Buy
time but in the end vindicate the maxim that things that
can't go on forever, won't.
-
- The world as we
know it is changing. Industrial capitalism. The entire
global economic system. Interconnected. What affects one
nation touches others. If the troubled country is America it
reaches everywhere, and if the crisis is great enough, the
disease may be fatal and human wreckage catastrophic.
Precisely the current dilemma that world leaders and
financial experts are scrambling to figure out. Desperate to
contain, and not sure what, if anything, can work. How did
this happen and why?
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- The result of
unfettered capitalism's fatal flaw - unbridled greed in a
rigged system that rewards the few at the expense of most
others. First an explanation of how it works. Free-wheeling,
"free market" Chicago School fundamentalism the way
economist Milton Friedman championed it in his 1962 book
"Capitalism and Freedom" and taught it to students for
decades. He believed that government's sole function is "to
protect our freedom both from (outside) enemies....and from
our fellow-citizens." Preserve law and order. Enforce
private contracts. Protect private property and "foster
competitive (unregulated) markets." Everything else in
public hands is "socialism....blasphemy." Not to be
tolerated.
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- He said "free
markets" work best. Unfettered by rules, regulations,
onerous taxes or any at all, trade barriers, entrenched
interests, and human interference. That anything government
does, business does better, so let it. That the best
government is one that governs least. That public wealth
should be in private hands. The accumulation of profits
unrestrained. Corporate taxes abolished. Social services
also, and that "economic freedom is an end to itself....and
an indispensable means toward (achieving) political
freedom."
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- He called most all
government interference a restriction of freedom. Opposed
foreign aid. Subsidies. Import quotas and tariffs, and
illicit drug laws for being a subsidy to organized crime,
but he found no fault with major banks laundering their
profits. He believed business should be unrestrained in
maximizing them, even the illegal kind apparently.
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- He opposed the
minimum wage and right of unions to bargain collectively on
equal terms with management. He believed high wages and
benefits harm everyone. They raise prices, and in the end,
hurt workers as well as management. He called Social
Security "The Biggest Ponzi Scheme on Earth," even though
it's been the most effective poverty reduction program ever
for millions of seniors who'd be desperate without it.
Especially today given a deepening economic crisis. The
nation's social safety net disappearing, and heading
everyone toward managing on his or her own. Dependent on
their ingenuity, resources, and good fortune. Milton
Friedman's ideal world. For those who can't make it, it's
their own fault. It's everyone for him or herself in his
judgment, and let the devil take the hindmost.
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- As for today's
largest ever unraveling Ponzi scheme, it's just the workings
of the "free market." Creative destruction. "Freedom to
choose." The best of all possible worlds, and unfettered
capitalism will figure out the right solutions. Provided
government gets out of the way and gives it free reign. Free
money also to wreck world economies and human lives even
more than what's already done.
-
- The Chickens Are
Home to Roost
-
- Are they ever, and
here's what we've got. A global asset bubble. A predictable
crisis allowed to build and mushroom. Begun after Chicago
School economics took hold under Ronald Reagan. Continued
under GHW Bush. Became religion under Bill Clinton, and
ultimately fundamentalism under GW Bush.
-
- The result - a
"slow motion train wreck" gaining speed. Banks and other
financial institutions failing globally. On September 25,
the largest bank failure in US history with Washington
Mutual's collapse. Earlier it was giant insurer AIG. Before
that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Lehman Brothers, Bear
Stearns, and Merrill Lynch a forced liquidation to Bank of
America.
-
- Others are now
teetering on the edge. Strapped by toxic debt. The result of
out-of-control greed for easy profits. Massive fraud to get
them. Thinking they're the best and brightest, and only mere
mortals mess up. Knowing Fed moral hazard will cushion them
if they do. True for some. Not for others, and learning that
the Federal Reserve (the world's key central bank) failed in
its primary job. To protect the country's financial system
from insolvency. By contributing to a financial crisis and
one of confidence. By creating near-limitless amounts of
capital. Fueling a housing bubble. Outsized consumer debt,
and irresponsible investments free from government
oversight. Fraudulent ones involving multi- trillions of
dollars.
-
- Partnering with
government to make it easy. Risking a global economic
meltdown as a result. Scrambling to find solutions. Unsure
if there are any. The present crisis is unparalled. Maybe it
can be fixed, and maybe not. The problem is multi-fold. A
perfect storm involving:
-
- -- residential
housing;
- -- commercial real
estate;
- -- consumer
over-indebtedness;
- -- unknown amounts
of toxic debt (in the multi-trillions);
- -- affecting world
finance and economies;
- -- causing
bankruptcies;
- -- many more will
follow;
- -- selected ones
bailed out;
- -- the entire
system endangered;
- -- consumer money
market, bank accounts and private pension funds as well;
government backing is needed to protect them; there's not
enough money to do it; and
- -- the contagion is
spreading; threatening world economies and people
everywhere.
- This time is really
different. A $700 billion bailout (called the Emergency
Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 - EESA) is just a down
payment. Trillions will be needed in the end. Other nations
contributing to help. The problems are deeper and more
intractable than anyone expected. Before this ends,
unimaginable amounts of capital will be written off. Too
much to even contemplate. Bad investments contaminating good
ones. Threatening world financial structures with paralysis.
Severe economic damage to their economies as a result.
-
- Eroding industrial
capitalism as we know it. At best managing a short-term fix
and delaying a final denouement for a later time. Under new
management with the current and past ones claiming no
responsibility. And unmindful of millions of homeowners
facing foreclosure and bankruptcy. One in ten currently
behind in their payments. Others losing their jobs and way
of life. They're the most vulnerable. Least able to cope,
and for some their ability to survive.
-
- According to The
New York Times, here's how the Paulson scheme helps them:
"it requires the government to use its new role as owner of
distressed mortgage-backed securities to make 'more
aggressive' efforts to prevent home foreclosures." Weasel
words. No specifics. No assurances, and nothing apparently
for homeowners already in foreclosure.
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- On September 22,
ahead of the announced agreement, American Research Group
(ASG) published its latest public sentiment poll results,
and they were stunning. At 19%, George Bush scored lowest
ever for a US president, surpassing Harry Truman at the
depth of the Korean War and Richard Nixon during Watergate.
It came at a time ASG's results showed 82% of Americans
believe the economy is getting worse, and only 17% approve
of how Bush is handling it. Among registered voters, the
number is 18% at a time no one surveyed (zero percent) said
the economy is improving and 68% say it's in recession. True
or false, it's how they feel. How the crisis affects them,
and that's what counts most.
-
- Yet on September
24, the president addressed the nation audaciously.
Callously dismissing public pain and anger. Deceitfully
stating outright lies. A typical performance. Demanded that
Congress give the treasury secretary carte blanche authority
over $700 billion to address "a serious financial crisis."
Asked taxpayers to pay for corporate fraud. Reward criminals
and ignore their crimes. Said nothing about the root cause.
The effect on ordinary people, or how Paulson's scheme will
help them. Ignored growing public opposition. Large numbers
of credible observers believing the proposed solution is
worse than the problem. The most honest of them saying it
will enrich fraudsters and offer no help for homeowners.
-
- Yet Bush concluded
that "democratic capitalism (is the) best system the world
has ever devised" in spite of clear evidence that it's
broken and corrupted. Exploits people for profit. Enriches
the few at the expense of the many. Rewards criminals for
their crimes. Protects the rich from beneficial social
change.
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- Ahead of the
president's address on September 24, The New York Times
showed a rare display of candor in a critical Timothy Egan
opinion piece. About "nearly nationalizing the banking
system and giving the treasury secretary more power than a
king....whose decisions may not be reviewed by any court of
law or any administrative agency." He asked readers to
remember "where the biggest heist took place, and how Wall
Street dragged down the rest of the country once before,"
referring to the Great Depression but leaving out everything
in between.
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- He stressed,
however, "how Wall Street brought down main street," and
things have now come full circle. Deregulation unleashed
casino capitalism, and bankers made a killing. Now they're
in trouble and Bush demands "the biggest bailout in American
history....or the world will crumble. He said the a similar
thing in the run-up to war" so who can believe him now. Egan
quotes a dirt farmer asking why not the same "concerns (for)
average Americans." Because "we the people" Bush speaks for
are them, not us.
-
- As for Paulson's
plan, here's what the Financial Times writer Martin Wolf
said on September 23. He called it "not a true solution to
the crisis." It doesn't address the "fundamental problem."
It's "neither a necessary nor an efficient solution. It is
not necessary because the (Fed can) manage illiquidity
through its many lender-of- last resort operations. It is
not efficient because it can only deal with insolvency by
buying bad assets (overpriced junk) at far above their true
value, thereby guaranteeing big losses for taxpayers and
providing an open-ended bail-out to the most irresponsible
investors."
-
- Wolf also objects
to Paulson getting unchecked powers. Providing little or no
help to the poor and "ill-informed" (read duped) borrowers,
and lists other operational suggestions "essential for the
long-run health of any financial system" without needing "a
penny of public money." Among them, forcing creditors to
take losses and not taxpayers.
-
- Unmentioned in his
article is the underlying fraud behind the crisis and a lack
of regulatory oversight that made it easy. Also, omitted was
what's covered in the section below.
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- The 1937 Housing
Act's Empowering Section 8 Authority
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- One Section 8
sentence provided the basis for the treasury secretary's
empowerment. It reads:
-
- "Decisions by the
Secretary pursuant to the authority of this Act are
non-reviewable and committed to agency discretion, and may
not be reviewed by any court of law or any administration
agency."
-
- In other words,
unchallengeable czarist powers. In contrast to the 1930s
Reconstruction Finance Corporation's (RFC) closely
supervised operations. That era's Home Owners' Loan
Corporation (HOLC) that refinanced homes to prevent
foreclosures. And the 1980s Resolution Trust Corporation
(RTC) mandate to liquidate assets from failed S & Ls. Not
dispense free money for bad investments unchecked. The above
authorities subject to judicial review. Not governed by a
financial boss to run as he pleased.
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- The Announced
"Bailout" Deal - The Emergency Stabilization Act of 2008
(ESA)
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- According to The
New York Times, EESA calls for "strict oversight of the
program by a Congressional panel and conflict-of-interest
rules for firms hired by the Treasury to help run the
program." Also "a change in the bankruptcy laws sought by
some Democrats to give judges the authority to modify the
terms of first mortgages."
-
- Given the
bipartisan blame for today's crisis. The post-9/11
willingness to give the administration near-carte blanche
authority across the board. Eight years of indifference to
social needs and public welfare. Who now believes that
policy going forward will change and that the agreed-on
scheme will protect people or curb the secretary's
authority. On his own initiative, George Bush usurped
supreme power post-9/11 while few in Congress blanched. None
in leadership positions. Little today has changed.
-
- Disclaimers
notwithstanding from both sides of the aisle, Wall Street is
pleased. Paulson got what he wanted. The plan's fine print
will assure it. Public money. Far more, if needed, than $700
billion. The power to dispense it freely. With weak at best
oversight and judicial review, and the ability to conceal
fraud and malfeasance. In short, the between-the-lines
meaning of Paulson saying: "We have made great progress
toward a deal, which will work and be effective in the
marketplace."
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- The same one that
fleeced the nation and betrayed the public trust. Now
empowered to take more with the full faith and blessing of
the government from both sides of the aisle. Belying George
Bush's insult that "The rescue effort....is not aimed at
Wall Street; it is aimed at your street." And Nancy Pelosi's
hypocrisy that: "All of this was done in a way to insulate
Main Street and everyday Americans from the crisis on Wall
Street....I want to congratulate all of the negotiators for
the great work they have done." Who in banker boardrooms
would disagree.
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- Some Relevant Facts
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- Clearly the present
crisis is unprecedented. As stated above, maybe it can be
fixed and maybe not. No one is sure because no one
understands it fully. Where all the problems lie. To what
degree can they be contained. How great their fallout may
be. Their full effect on world economies. How bad things may
get before they stabilize and improve, and the way the world
will look like when they do.
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- Whatever's coming,
industrial capitalism is eroding. A kleptocracy replaced it.
If the system is saved, it will be temporary, and an even
greater one will emerge. Why this article is called Grand
Theft America. A criminal class runs it, and they're
rewarded for their crimes. Backed by the full faith and
credit of the government with taxpayer money. A
near-limitless amount created and borrowed. Who said crime
doesn't pay!
-
- For over 30 years,
an unimaginable wealth transfer to the rich has been
ongoing. To the top 1% and corporate America from most
others. It proves the failure of a system that rewards the
few at the expense of the many. Licenses greed and creates
this kind of global financial crisis so far uncontained. It
begs the questions: what caused it and what's the fallout:
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- -- the ruinous
effects of militarization; insane amounts of spending on it;
"military Keynesianism;" believing capitalism thrives on
foreign wars; "Global Wars on Terrorism" currently; their
costs are unsustainable and are heading the nation toward
bankruptcy;
- -- the drain on an
already weakened economy;
-
- -- maxed out
consumers now debt slaves;
-
- -- so is government
from unrepayable obligations in the tens of trillions; not
the fictitious "official" reported numbers;
-
- -- the possibility
of future default; hyperinflation; national bankruptcy, and
the demise of the republic;
-
- -- human default as
well: mass bankruptcies; home foreclosures; rising
unemployment; increased poverty; and growing numbers of
families unable to survive;
-
- -- the subprime
crisis is just part of it; seven million mortgages sold to
the unwary; the idea was to criminally defraud them; offer
two-year teaser rates; then reset them higher semi-annually
based on an interest rate benchmark; payments soared as much
as 30% and became unaffordable; the scheme was to cash in at
the expense of mortgage holders, and five million risk
losing their homes and life savings;
-
- -- an "economic
Pearl Harbor" for Warren Buffett; for Senator Chris Dodd a
"50-state Katrina;" a "house of cards (built on) reckless
finance" for author Kevin Phillips; Frankenstein finance;
casino capitalism; for most Americans, a human catastrophe;
- -- the demise of
our manufacturing base; letting malls replace factories as
the economy's engine;
-
- -- permitting the
financialization of the economy; speculative finance writ
large; replacing productive investment; totally deregulated;
run by fraudsters; free from government oversight; letting
investment banks game the system at up to 40 to 1 leverage;
until 2004, 12 to 1 was the maximum;
-
- -- a government -
business conspiracy for global dominance and the
single-minded pursuit of profit; unfettered amounts of it
through cleverly manipulated schemes; transferring
multi-trillions of dollars from workers to the most wealthy;
doing it without people even noticing;
-
- -- creative
destruction to let giant businesses grow larger by removing
and devouring smaller ones; even large ones;
-
- -- permitting
and/or ignoring massive fraud; involving multi- trillions of
dollars; the largest ever Ponzi scheme; a calculated crime
with media complicity through silence; not reporting a
growing problem as it emerged; waiting until it mushroomed
and still not explaining it accurately and honestly; and
-
- -- wondering won if
the best and brightest can fix things or if no amount of
money or ingenuity can do it.
-
- The Plan's
Architect - Henry Paulson
-
- From a Nixon
administration staff assistant to the assistant secretary of
defense. To assistant to key Watergate official John
Erlichman. To Goldman Sachs in 1974. To a partnership in the
firm in 1982. Then Chief Operation Officer (COO) in 1994 and
CEO in 1998 by a palace coup against co-chairman and now New
Jersey governor Jon Corzine, according to New York Times
columnist Floyd Norris.
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- Even before the
current crisis, Goldman was the preeminent Wall Street firm.
A survivor. The largest, and along with Morgan Stanley, the
remaining two Street giants left standing. But no longer as
investment banks after the Federal Reserve's September 21
announcement that both companies will become bank holding
companies after a mandatory five-day waiting period, now
over.
-
- In theory, they'll
be under stricter Fed oversight but will get Fed help to
complete their transition and thereafter. As a well-
connected financial powerhouse, whatever Goldman wants,
Goldman gets. Always in the past by recycling top executives
into Democrat and Republican administrations, and now more
than ever given Henry Paulson's extraordinary financial czar
powers.
-
- Before his $700
billion giveaway plan, the 2008 Housing and Economic
Recovery Act gave him authority to fleece taxpayers by
rescuing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as well as raise the
national debt by over $5 trillion dollars. He also
orchestrated the demise of Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers and
Washington Mutual. The forced sale of Merrill Lynch, and
arranged the government takeover of AIG.
-
- He has near-open
checkbook authority to reward close allies with loans and
free money and let them acquire troubled assets on the
cheap. This from a man with much responsibility for today's
crisis. A June 12, 2006 Business Week cover story titled
"Mr. Risk Goes to Washington" called him "one of the key
architects of a more daring Wall Street, where securities
firms are taking greater and greater chances in their
pursuit of profits." Such as assuming huge amounts of debt
and "placing big bets (with their own money) on all sorts of
exotic derivatives and other securities." Advising clients
to do the same. Casino capitalism at up to 40 to one
leverage. Hugely profitable in up markets. Disastrous in
down ones.
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- Paulson earned
millions and now has an estimated $700 million + net worth.
For 2007 overall, according to Bloomberg.com, "Wall Street's
five biggest firms (paid out) a record $39 billion in
bonuses (and did it in) a year when three of the companies
suffered the worst quarterly losses in their history and
shareholders lost more than $80 billion."
-
- Speculative finance
pays well, even in down years, and it even raised
Bloomberg's ire in a Michael Lewis September 24 commentary
titled "America Must Rescue the Bonuses at Goldman Sachs."
It reflected on a possible global financial collapse but
sacrificing Goldman bonuses is another matter. If firm
"employees (take) pay cut (s), it will be (tantamount to
failure and) our country may never recover." How will the
company induce new talent to come aboard. Goldman is
well-positioned to get maximum gain from its former CEO's
$700 billion handout.
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- Why else would
Warren Buffett bet $5 billion on the firm! For preferred
shares paying an annual 10% dividend. Warrants as well to
buy $5 billion in common stock at a $115 a share strike
price. Well off its $251 peak and below the latest September
26 $138 a share.
-
- Joseph Stiglitz on
the Economy
-
- Stiglitz was
formerly part of the system he now criticizes. Free market
fundamentalism in its most extreme form. For many months, he
warned about a worsening global economy and growing
financial crisis that's as bad or worse than the Great
Depression.
-
- He sees similar
problems now as then:
-
- -- outsized
speculation through excessive leverage;
-
- -- pyramid schemes;
-
- -- multiple bubbles
through so-called Wall Street innovations; and
-
- -- a lack of
transparency and government oversight.
-
- Combined they
created a crisis "so great that no one knows exactly the
magnitude of the risk they face. It is particularly bad
because our financial institutions are based on trust. You
put money in the bank and you trust that you can get (it)
out, so trust is absolutely essential for the functioning of
our financial markets and economy."
-
- The problem is
exacerbated by those providing the news. The dominant media
and frequent spokespeople. Industry representatives like
Lehman Brothers CEO saying last April that "we turned the
corner, and the economy is on the uptick." Also from the
president, treasury secretary and others in government as
things keep worsening.
-
- Stiglitz calls this
a "top down crisis." The "$3 trillion cost" of foreign wars
a key. Creating huge deficits and consuming vital resources
needed for growth. "This is the first war in American
history that has been totally financed on the credit card.
For the last five years....we have been a debt economy." Not
since the Revolutionary War have "we have had to turn to
foreigners," so now "40% of our national debt is financed by
(them). Even as we went (to war) we had a big deficit, and
yet the president called for tax cuts for upper middle class
Americans." Insane but we did it.
-
- Another factor is
other countries trusting that our economy is working well,
and when the president says it is he's believable. "This
administration burned that trust....no wonder everybody
around the world is losing confidence." Even worse is that
the administration isn't dealing responsibly with these
problems, mostly because they're of our own making.
-
- Stiglitz worries
about the "real economy:" home prices dropping; owners
forced into foreclosure; more financial firms in crisis; and
a good many won't survive. He sees a weakening financial
system unable or unwilling "to provide credit (the lifeblood
of the economy for) loans, mortgages," and that means lower
home prices, contracting businesses, rising unemployment,
and a "downward vicious cycle. You have to be in fantasy
land to say that everything is fine (or even) that we have
turned the corner." He sees at least another 18 months of
pain. Maybe longer. Who can know or how much.
-
- For sure, real
economic stimulus is needed. Productive investment. Not the
phony "bailout" kind proposed. Aiding state and local
governments. Better unemployment insurance and more for
infrastructure. Providing a basis for long-term growth. Not
feeding markets and starving the hungry, as one writer put
it. Not believing markets on their own will fix things.
-
- Understanding that
government must intervene. Responsibly. Facilitate job
creation. End casino capitalism. Provide incentives for real
economic growth. Let foreclosed and threatened homeowners
stay in their homes. Work out an equitable way to do it. "We
learned a painful lesson in the 1930s and today: The
invisible hand often seems invisible because it's not
there." It led to the kind of predicament now confronting
the country. The solutions proposed will just compound it.
-
- Ones that Can Fix
It
-
- Good ones not
considered. From figures like Dean Baker of the Center for
Economic and Policy Research. Others as well with solid
advice to:
-
- -- make fraudsters
eat the bulk of their losses;
-
- -- use public funds
only "to sustain the orderly operation of the financial
system;"
-
- -- minimize
speculative finance; the root of the current problem;
-
- -- "minimize moral
hazard" - the Paulson (and Bernanke) "put" picking up where
Greenspan left off;
-
- -- let delinquent
homeowners stay in their homes and pay rent;
-
- -- curtail
executive compensation for companies getting government aid;
-
- -- make a key Fed
responsibility the prevention of asset bubbles; reinstitute
regulations to do it; Glass-Steagall for starters that
prohibited commercial and investment banks and insurance
companies from combining;
-
- -- impose a modest
financial transactions tax to curb excesses and raise
revenue;
-
- -- trade assets,
like credit default swaps, openly on exchanges to establish
fair value for them;
-
- -- impose strict
limits on leverage;
-
- -- keep Fannie and
Freddie public institutions; their status before being
privatized in 1968; and
-
- -- restructure the
Fed democratically; a far better solution is abolish it and
let government control its own money; use it responsibly for
all Americans, not just the privileged few.
-
- Other
recommendations recognize no quick or easy solutions to
problems this great. Economist James Galbraith says
borrowers need collateral. A new Home Owners Loan
Corporation to rewrite mortgages. Manage rental conversions,
and decide what degraded properties should be demolished.
Which ones to save and refurbish. Set it up in communities
under federal guidelines and do it quickly. Help state and
local governments strapped for cash. Reestablish federal
revenue sharing. A National Infrastructure Bank making
capital available for infrastructure. Put people to work
building it. Protect seniors and near-retirees from wealth
loss. Extra Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid revenue
will help. Get money in the hands of people who'll spend it.
-
- Address other
crucial issues like energy conservation, reconstruction and
renewable power. Infrastructure overall. Tuition help for
students. Another GI bill. Credit card and mortgage interest
rate caps. Rescind anti-consumist laws like the misnamed
2005 Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection
Act. A boon for credit card companies and other businesses.
Unfairly burdensome to the public.
-
- A whole range of
other projects and ideas to redirect the economy away from
speculative finance and militarism and toward high-return
public investment. Do it before it's too late. Recognize
that the present course is unsustainable. Imagine a
government working for everyone and not just the privileged
few. Imagine it not tolerating fraud and malfeasance.
-
- Instead, Congress
agreed to a "bailout" and passed a record $634 billion
omnibus spending bill (to run the government through March
6, 2009) to include a record Pentagon budget; $25 billion in
low- interest auto industry loans; maybe with no provision
for repayment; lifting a quarter-century ban on Atlantic and
Pacific off-shore drilling; billions more in earmarked pork;
and likely more coming later for the airlines and other
endangered companies. Taxpayers for Common Sense criticized
the bill at the same time it noted that government "bailout"
appropriations will reach about $1.2 trillion with the $700
billion Paulson scheme. Others put the total above $1.5
trillion, and many say it's only for starters.
-
- Paying
"hold-to-maturity" prices compounds the fraud. For
securitized assets worth a fraction of full value. Much of
it pennies on the dollar, if anything. Trillions of dollars
of toxic ones. All sorts of them. Newly invented ones.
Structured finance and insurance. Asset-backed securities.
Repackaged into marketable pools. Sold to investors. It's
been done for decades but only recently so out of hand.
Greed and deregulation created an alphabet soup of
levered-up, high-risk securitized assets. Financial alchemy.
Largely outright fraud, including:
-
- -- collateralized
debt obligations (CDOs), including auto loans, credit and
corporate debt;
-
- -- collateralized
(asset-backed home) mortgage obligations (CMOs);
-
- -- commercial
mortgage-backed securities (CMBS);
-
- -- mortgage-backed
securities (MBS) and levered loans;
- -- structured
investment vehicles (SIVs);
- -- special purpose
vehicles (SPVs);
-
- -- pass-through
securities;
-
- -- credit and
interest rate default swaps;
-
- -- commercial paper
and more;
- -- repackaged
arcane stuff most people don't understand; even investors
who bought them; like eating a stew with no idea what's in
it; a recipe with no list of ingredients; learning too late
it's toxic and you're in trouble;
-
- Credit card
companies as well from growing amounts of unrepayable credit
card debt. The auto industry already assured of a low-
interest $25 billion loan (or maybe handout) for starters.
Airlines coming next. Select homebuilders and troubled
companies called too big to fail. If they're too big to
fail, says one observer, they're too big to exist.
-
- EESA will give the
treasury secretary near-carte blanche powers to conceal
fraud and help the fraudsters, including his former company,
Goldman Sachs, now in trouble. Pick and choose among others.
Which will survive, and what less favored ones will go on
the block at fire sale prices or disappear. Today there are
9000 banks in the country. In a decade, half or more of them
may be gone.
-
- Economist Michael
Hudson calls EESA "cash for trash" and a "giveaway," not a
bailout. A "transfer of wealth to insiders." A financial
coup d'etat. The "largest and most inequitable (kind) since
the (19th century) land giveaways to the railroad barons."
-
- In this case,
socializing losses to let fraudsters "sell out all their bad
bets." Junk of all sorts: a stew of securitized assets, bad
mortgages, car loans, credit card loans, student loans,
anything for insiders stuck with too much of them.
-
- A doomed scheme
that will raise the debt level instead of lowering it.
Enrich fraudsters with taxpayer funds. Stick the public with
toxic junk. Maybe buy time before more people and markets
catch on, but, in the end, cripple the economy and erode
industrial capitalism with it.
-
- Hudson is
justifiably angry given the amount of fraud and deceit. The
government-concocted scheme to whitewash it. Reward
criminals. Harm most others, and wreck the country at the
same time. He says a "kleptocratic class has taken over the
economy to replace industrial capitalism....'banksers' " for
FDR and earlier condemned by Jefferson with this stinging
comment:
-
- "I sincerely
believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our
liberties than standing armies. Already they have raised up
a money aristocracy that has set the government at defiance.
The issuing power should be taken from the banks and
restored to the people to whom it properly belongs."
-
- A half century
later Lincoln said:
-
- "I see in the near
future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes me
to tremble for the safety of my country....corporations
(including bankers) have been enthroned and an era of
corruption in high places will follow, and the money power
of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working
upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is
aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed."
-
- Lincoln refused to
pay bankers usurious rates to finance the Civil War and got
Congress to pass the 1862 Legal Tender Act. It empowered the
US Treasury to issue "greenbacks" that were interest- free
because government printed its own money. When Lincoln was
assassinated in 1865, the "Greenback Law" was rescinded. A
new national banking act was passed, and the government once
again had to pay interest to bankers.
-
- On June 4, 1963,
President Kennedy issued executive order (EO) 11110 giving
the president authority to issue currency. He ordered the
treasury to begin printing "United States (Treasury) Notes"
to replace "Federal Reserve Notes." He began a process to
let government control its own money and no longer private
bankers
- under the guise of
the Federal Reserve. Months later, Kennedy was assassinated.
Once Lyndon Johnson took office, he rescinded EO 11110 and
reestablished the current system. More on that below.
-
- The Two Greatest
Ever Financial Crimes - Today's Fraud and the 1913 Federal
Reserve Act's Privatization of Money Creation
-
- Most people think
the Federal Reserve is a government agency, subject to its
control. It's sometimes mistakenly called a quasi-
governmental decentralized central bank to disguise its real
identity and purpose. Its Eccles building headquarters
compounds the subterfuge. Below it's stripped away.
-
- The Federal Reserve
is a private for-profit banking cartel. Owned and run by
major banks and Wall Street in each of its 12 Districts. It
was created and operates in violation of Article 1, Section
8 of the Constitution that states that Congress alone shall
have the power to create money and regulate its value. In
1935, the Supreme Court ruled that Congress cannot
constitutionally delegate this power to another authority,
but, in fact it did.
-
- On December 22,
1913, between 1:30 - 4:30 AM, the Federal Reserve Act was
shepherded through a special Congressional Conference
Committee. Then voted on and passed the next day. Two days
before Christmas with many members gone and most others with
no time to read or consider this momentous document.
-
- By enacting this
law, Congress and President Woodrow Wilson defrauded the
public. Wilson later said (when it was too late to matter)
he made a mistake and "unwittingly ruined my country." This
from a man who was an intellect. Trained in the law. A PhD
in political science and president of Princeton University
in his earlier years.
-
- The Federal Reserve
Act gives private bankers the most important of all powers.
The one most of all that governments should never
relinquish. The authority to print money. Control its
supply. Its price through the Fed Funds rate and how it
influences the whole yield curve. Loan it out for profit,
and charge government interest on its own money. It's later
returned minus operating expenses and a guaranteed 6%
profit. Taxpayers foot the bill. An early and continuing
example of wealth transfer from the public to powerful
bankers. Illegally sanctioned by Congress and the president.
-
- The Fed literally
creates money out of nothing. Expands or contracts its
supply as it wishes - with no government oversight or
control. Gold once backed it until Nixon closed the gold
window in August 1971. Suspended dollar convertibility into
the metal, and ended compliance with the Bretton Woods core
provision. The US dollar became fiat currency. Mere paper.
Backed by nothing except the faith of the issuing authority.
-
- Given today's
crisis, that faith is fast eroding and is to blame for
dollar weakness. Mostly because of profligate policies by
private bankers running the country's monetary policy for
their own gain. The grandest of grand thefts along with
today's all-consuming fraud. Backed by the full faith and
credit of the government, and up to now at least, with most
people none the wiser.
-
- A Growing Public
Response to the Crisis
-
- For how long is the
question given growing public anger and people expressing it
publicly. It has administration officials worried enough to
order what Michel Chossudovsky wrote in his September 26
article titled "Pre-election Militarization of the North
American Homeland."
-
- He cites an Army
Times article saying that the 3rd Infantry's 1st Brigade
Combat Team is coming home (in October) from Iraq as
(according to the Times) "an on-call federal response force
for natural or manmade emergencies and disasters, including
terrorist attacks." Perhaps with a manufactured incident as
pretext. To defend the homeland against ourselves. Be
deployed against dissent. Erupting public anger. On city
streets like in Denver and St. Paul. Displaying civil
disobedience. Defiance against fraud, deceit, illegal
foreign wars, and nearly eight intolerable years under
George Bush and a complicit Congress. Capped by the current
financial crisis touching everyone while government rewards
crime and hangs its victims out to dry.
-
- Chossudovsky is
blunt about the possibilities. The 3rd Infantry's 1st
Brigade is for combat. It's not the National Guard or local
police. It's trained for war. "Equipped to kill people" with
potent weapons, and a last hurrah scheme may be planned to
divert public attention from the financial crisis. A
"terrorist" attack with "chemical, biological" or other
dangerous weapons. A possible pretext for martial law at a
time the administration and Congress are vulnerable. When
people are angry about Washington protecting the privileged.
Partnering with them in crime. Defrauding the public and
stifling dissent. Moving one step closer to tyranny and away
from silly notions about democracy. Proving crime indeed
does pay and awfully well on Wall Street. "It's the economy,
stupid." Theirs, not ours.
-
- 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 at
www.sjlendman.blogspot.com
-
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Zionism,
Militarism, And
The Decline Of US Power
Book Review By Stephen Lendman
10-16-8
....James Petras is Binghamton University Professor Emeritus
of Sociology. His credentials and achievements are long
and impressive as a noted academic figure on the left.
A well-respected Latin American expert, and a longtime
chronicler of the region's popular struggles.
He's also a prolific author of hundreds of articles
and dozens of books, including his latest titled
"Zionism, Militarism, and the Decline of US Power"
and subject of this review.....
The
October Surprise -
Global Panic
By Stephen Lendman
10-13-8
.....Since 9/11, the notion of an October surprise
has been around. The idea going something like this.
Another real or manufactured terror attack.
The dominant media stokes fear.
The public is again traumatized.
The Bush administration pledges all effective measures
to protect national security. Formerly seizes total power.
Suspends the Constitution and declares martial law.
Mass detentions follow.....
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....
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