-
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. Beginning with
dissenters and elements of the public considered
"dangerous."
-
- This may be coming
with the 3rd Infantry's 1st Brigade Combat Team back in the
US as of October 1. According to the Army Times, as "an
on-call federal response force for natural or manmade
emergencies and disasters, including terrorist attacks."
Augmented by USNORTHCOM.
-
- According to Wayne
Madsen's recent article titled "FEMA sources confirm coming
martial law," it gets worse. He cites "knowledgeable" FEMA
sources saying that "the Bush administration is putting the
final touches on a plan (to declare) martial law in the US
with various scenarios anticipated as triggers." Economic
collapse. Massive social unrest. Bank closures. Street
protests. Violence in response, and another stolen election.
-
- Early in the month,
a different October surprise arrived. Not the expected one.
Not yet at least. The Wall Street Journal put it this way:
"The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) capped the worst
week in its 112-year history with its most volatile day
ever, as hopes for a major international bank rescue plan
were overwhelmed at day's end by another wave of selling."
-
- The DJIA dropped
22% over the past eight trading sessions. Investors were
"shell-shocked." Many spent Friday "trying to protect
themselves from further declines. The past week's (October 6
- 10) 18% decline "and Friday's 1018.77 point swing from low
to high were the biggest since the Dow was created in 1896."
The VIX measure of market fear hit 69.95. By far its highest
level ever, and some investors think it may touch 100 in the
current climate. Until now, the Dow's worst week was in
1933. Trading volume also set a record at 11.16 billion
shares.
-
- "Market crash
shakes world" headlined the Financial Times (FT). Mass
trauma, fear and uncertainty sent tremors everywhere, and no
one knows if Friday ended it. Maybe just began it. First
markets crater. Then world economies, and finally the
inevitable human fallout. Affecting many tens of millions
everywhere. Innocent people paying dearly.
-
- Morning headlines
say it all. And they're getting grimmer. On October 10, the
Wall Street Journal said the "Market's 7-Day Rout Leaves US
Reeling. Stocks in a Slow-Motion Crash....After Year of
Declines, Investors Lose $8.4 Trillion of Wealth." Most
scary is what's ahead and how much more people can or will
tolerate.
-
- The Financial Times
was just as grim headlining "Global equities plunge....Japan
leads Asian market rout...Wall Street in biggest fall since
1987 crash." Once the nation's largest company, General
Motors may now face bankruptcy. Its October 10 stock fell to
its 1950 valuation and now has a market capitalization of
just $2.6 billion. Shockingly expressed in one headline
saying "Wheels falling off for General Motors." Add the
engine and chassis, too.
-
- Ford Motor's
outlook is little better. Its stock price is the lowest in
decades, and one analyst warned that "the accelerating
deterioration in industry fundamentals will be a serious
challenge to liquidity (for both companies and Chrysler)
during 2009." JD Power and Associates was even grimmer
saying that the global auto market may experience an
"outright collapse" in 2009. And we're only talking about
autos.
-
- Look at banks and
world finance. The source of today's crisis and reason
global economies are reeling. Economists like Nouriel
Roubini were once scoffed at. No longer. He warned for
months that "the risk of a total systemic meltdown is now as
high as ever since the credit crunch is gripping European
banks as well" and spreading globally. Affecting good ones
as well as bad. Trashing the baby with the bath water.
Erasing savings for tens of millions everywhere. And for
seniors who may not have time to recoup.
-
- The crisis didn't
emerge like Topsy. It's been simmering for years, and in
July 2006 historian Gabriel Kolko warned about it in an
article titled "Bankers Fear World Economic Meltdown." He
noted how:
-
- the "whole nature
of the global finance system has changed radically in ways
that have nothing whatsoever to do with 'virtuous' national
economic policies....The investment managers of private
equity funds and major banks have displaced national
banks....moving well beyond regulatory structures....Traders
have taken over from traditional bankers because buying and
selling shares, bonds, derivatives and the like now generate
the greater profits, and taking more and higher risks is now
the rule....They often bet with house money (and) low
interest rates....let them do things....that were once
deemed foolhardy."
-
- Compounded by the
irrational development of global finance, liberalization and
loose regulations. Playing fast and loose and betting on the
come. The potential gains are enormous and so are the risks
of a major financial crisis. A meltdown. Now we've got one
that global institutions are "utterly inadequate" to deal
with.
-
- Kolko warned then
that "the entire global financial structure (was) becoming
uncontrollable....financial liberalization produced a
monster....contradictions wrack the world's financial system
(that's) both crisis-prone (and) immoral. (We) may very well
be on the verge of serious crises." Now we've got one and in
dire straits.
-
- Because "a
kleptocratic class (took) over the economy," according to
economist Michael Hudson. A criminal element betting on high
returns through computerized gambling "and when bad bets are
made, bailouts are the (payoff) for campaign contributions."
For having friends in high places as well.
-
- Today's crisis
isn't an accident or from happenstance. It was planned,
according to economist and critic F. William Engdahl in his
recent article titled "Behind the Panic." To "shape the
future of global banking" through creative destruction.
Panic incited by a well-designed "long-term strategy." To
change the "face of European banking." Weaken it with toxic
junk. Asset Backed Securities. Force enough of it into
liquidation or cheap enough to buy at fire sale valuations.
The idea being to "create three colossal global financial
giants - Citigroup, JP Morgan Chase, and Goldman Sachs." Add
Bank of America and make it a foursome. Then use their
"muscle to ravage European banks." Even if they wreck the US
and world economies. Resuscitate them so they can "advance
their global agenda over the coming years." To dominate
world finance and increase US hegemony in the new century.
-
- That's the scheme,
and Engdahl calls it "a fight for the survival of the
American Century." Built on "the twin pillars of American
financial (and military) dominance," but the game is far
from over. "Battle lines are drawn." EU nations have their
own ideas. Stabilization and recovery plans as well that
differ from Washington's and look much sounder. It remains
to be seen where things are heading and whether competing
nations can work together and do it effectively. They
haven't much time.
-
- Washington's
Efforts to Shape the Last Century
-
- Engdahl recounted
some of them in his important book on war, geopolitics, oil
and finance: "A Century of War." He explained how Washington
designed "the greatest confidence game" ever. A "special
hegemony" to:
-
- -- print limitless
amounts of dollars;
-
- -- accumulate huge
trade deficits;
-
- -- "inflate (the)
currency beyond imagination;"
-
- -- have the
government pay bankers interest on its own money; and
-
- -- create an
unprecedented public and private debt to enrich the few at
the expense of the many.
-
- Up to now it
worked. Let America rule the world. Control its energy and
finance. Avoid serious challengers and crush potential ones.
-
- From the early
years of the last century, US muscle flexing took many
forms. From conflicts to geopolitics to controlling world
resources to financial warfare. JP Morgan and other Wall
Street notables were experts on the latter. Creating panics
for greater power. Like today's with similar aims.
-
- In 1969, Richard
Nixon had his own scheme with the country in recession.
Interest rates were cut. Dollars flowed abroad. The money
supply was expanded, and in May 1971 America recorded its
first monthly trade deficit. It triggered a panic US dollar
sell- off. Gold backed the currency then. Reserves were
one-quarter of official liabilities, and (on August 15)
Nixon unilaterally imposed a 90-day wage and price freeze. A
10% import surcharge. An 8% currency devaluation, and he
closed the gold window. Suspended dollar convertibility into
the metal and ended compliance with Bretton Woods' core
provision. He pulled the plug on world economies. Shook them
and on February 12, 1973 did again. With a further 10%
dollar devaluation that created the worst global instability
since the 1930s. What lay behind his actions?
-
- To buy time ahead
of a bold new monetary "paradigm shift." To revive a strong
dollar and US hegemony. By a "colossal assault" on world
industrial growth. Through an engineered oil embargo. A 400%
increase in oil prices. A flood of petrodollars to be
recycled into US investments and purchases. Big Oil and
major banks to profit hugely at the cost of economic crisis.
The worst since the 1930s. Causing bankruptcies,
unemployment and stagflation.
-
- Under Jimmy Carter
in 1979, Fed chairman Paul Volker advanced his own radical
monetary policy on the pretext of fighting high inflation.
It was another Washington scheme to preserve dollar
hegemony. Keep it the world's reserve currency, and do it by
crushing industrial growth to let political and financial
power prop up dollar strength.
-
- It worked by
raising interest rates from 10% to 16% and then 20% in
weeks. The US and world economies plunged into deep
recessions, and the dollar began a strong five year ascent.
-
- In the 1980s under
Ronald Reagan, Mexican president Jose Lopez Portillo wanted
to use his oil revenue to modernize and industrialize the
country. To make it stronger and more independent. That
prospect was anathema to Washington and it reacted. With a
scheme to demand rigid repayment of Mexican debt at
exorbitant rates.
-
- In 1981, it began
with an orchestrated run on the peso. Stories were
circulated about an impending devaluation and capital
flight. Portillo instituted an austerity plan, and his
government cracked under pressure. The peso was devalued
30%. Mexican industry was devastated. Industrial production
cut. Bankruptcies followed. Millions of Mexicans suffered
grievously. The nation became effectively insolvent. It had
to accept IMF help. Took on large amounts of debt, and major
banks profited hugely by working with the government and IMF.
Socializing the debt. Spinning it off to tax payers and
privatizing gains through structural adjustment looting.
Similarly in other countries. Causing mounting debt.
Charging onerous interest rates, and earning greater profits
from
- hundreds of
billions of dollars in servicing costs.
-
- Reagan-era
deregulation caused the S & L crisis. A lesser version of
today's. By letting banks invest in speculative real estate.
Engage in massive fraud. And get the right wing Cato
Institute to say: "If Congress had set out in 1980 to create
an environment that would lure all the crooks and frauds in
the country into one industry, few would have been more
suitable than" this one. "It was easy (finding) disenchanged
S & L owners who were willing to sell out for a reasonable
price, and once one had an S & L charter, opportunities
abounded."
-
- It ended up
bankrupting hundreds of banks. Shrunk the industry from 4500
in 1979 to about 2200 in 1991 and hundreds more afterward.
It also cost taxpayers around $200 billion. Pocket change
compared to the trillions needed for the current crisis.
-
- In the 1980s, Japan
was the country that could say "no." At decade's end, it was
the world's economic and banking leader. Because reckless
speculation left American banks in deep crisis. Japan
operated more prudently. It prospered, and challenged
American dominance. Washington feared former communist
countries would adopt its model. This was anathema. It might
shut out US companies. Show Japan's way was superior so it
had to be stopped.
-
- The 1985 Plaza
accord was the scheme. To get Japan to exercise monetary and
fiscal measures to expand domestic demand and reduce the
country's external surplus. At the same time, the Bank of
Japan held interest rates at 2.5% from 1987 - 1989. To
stimulate US goods purchases. Instead cheap money went into
Japanese stocks and real estate. It created two colossal
bubbles. A lost decade followed, and the economy is still
recovering and under new duress from the current panic.
-
- The 1990s Asian
crisis was also manufactured. In summer 1997, it hit. For no
apparent reason beyond rumors that the Thai bhat was in
trouble, and Thailand had too few dollars to back it. "Asian
Contagion" was unleashed. Hot money came in earlier. Then
exited electronically. From Thailand, Indonesia, South
Korea, the Philippines, and other Asian Tiger countries.
Through a Washington- engineered scheme because these
nations' economic model bested America's and threatened it.
-
- Tiger countries
grew by protecting their markets and barring foreign
companies from owning land and national firms. They also
restricted Western and Japanese imports to grow their own
economies and homegrown industries. Again anathema so it had
to be stopped.
-
- The countries were
hammered. Forced to devalue their currencies and get IMF
help. With strings. Accepting debt bondage. Opening their
markets. Structural adjustments. Privatizations. Spending
cuts. Mass layoffs and constrained wages and benefits. The
whole toxic package in return for aid. The regional toll was
devastating. An estimated 24 million lost jobs. Its growing
middle class destroyed. A black hole of misery for around 20
million people. Forcing them to do anything to survive.
Crushing the Asian miracle to let Western brands replace
local ones. Bargain hunters get great deals at fire sale
prices. The New York Times called it "the world's biggest
going-out-of-business sale." The region now hammered again
from the current crisis. No secret where it was
manufactured. No telling how it will end up. No guessing
many millions feel pain and are fearful.
-
- No end to other
notable examples. Two especially stand out. The 1990s ones
affecting post-Soviet Russia and South Africa. In each case,
neoliberal "shock therapy" was devastating. It empowered an
oligarch class in Russia. Let them strip mine the nation's
wealth and offshore it to tax havens. Impoverished tens of
millions of people. Bankrupted 80% of farmers. Caused mass
unemployment. Created a permanent underclass. An annual
700,000 a year population decline and much more.
-
- South Africa fared
no better. Despite Nelson Mandela's pledge to support black
economic empowerment. As president he surrendered to
capital. The consequences were horrific. Far worse than
under apartheid. Double the unemployment rate and number of
people in desperate poverty. Millions of poor blacks without
homes. Another million evicted from farms. One-fourth of the
population with no running water or electricity. Around 60%
with inadequate sanitation. A 13 year life expectancy
decline since 1990. Appalling human wreckage much like what
happened in Russia and elsewhere. To empower capital at the
expense of people. Heading for America and in one week took
a quantum leap.
-
- Spreading
everywhere. On October 2, enough for The New York Times to
say that Latin American leaders have gone from "schadenfreude
to fear(ful)." Hugo Chavez skipped the UN General Assembly
opening to visit China and said Beijing is more relevant
than New York. Venezuela and Bolivia expelled their US
ambassadors, and Brazil's Lula da Silva railed against an
American regional naval presence and said his nation's
warships must be on alert in response. He's also furious at
Wall Street and Washington for the current crisis and said:
"We did what we were supposed to do to get our house in
order. They spent years telling us what to do and they
themselves didn't do it."
-
- Argentina's
Christina Fernandez de Kirchner was also bitter in stating:
"We are witnessing the First World, which at one point had
been painted as a mecca we should strive to reach, popping
like a bubble." And the Chicago Tribune quoted an
Inter-American Dialogue expert saying that "whatever
credibility the US had in the region, on economic
management, that's clearly gone."
-
- Forty world
specialists from 20 countries attended the International
Conference of Political Economy in Caracas, Venezuela from
October 8 - 11. To analyze and propose South-based,
alternative solutions to the financial crisis. Venezuela's
Minister for Planning and Development, Haiman El Troudi,
highlighted his country's relative strength. Its impressive
economic growth (at 6% in first half 2008), and recommended
that Venezuelans repatriate their US investments given the
current climate. To protect them from unsafe American banks.
-
- He and President
Chavez also criticized the IMF and called for it to
"dissolve....kill itself." They were harsh on the World Bank
as well. Chavez added that "We are decoupling from the wagon
of death." El Troudi said we are witnessing the end of
neoliberal hegemony. Others agreed that a new model is
needed. The old one clearly failed.
-
- The Current
Panic and Meltdown
-
- Credit today is
frozen. From a debt crisis, not a liquidity one. Markets are
reeling as a result. Crashing in free fall from severe
financial stress. From the largest ever leveraged asset and
credit bubbles. Multiple ones. Imploding. Starting with
housing. Causing widespread mortgage defaults and huge
financial institution losses. Multi-trillions more asset
dollars at risk. Compounded by banks reluctant to lend.
Fearing they won't be repaid. Prices are falling. Trust is
eroded. Losses mounting from destructive deleveraging.
Mortgages, stocks, bonds, commodities, credit, private
equity, hedge funds imploding more intensively than since
the Great Depression.
-
- Forcing troubled
companies to the wall. Each one exposing others. Some too
big to fail but they did. Getting investors to run for the
exits. Selling good assets to cover bad ones. Freezing up
money markets. Making short-term Treasuries the only safe
bet. Getting world governments scrambling for solutions.
Already in recession and getting worse. Fearing an
intensified financial crisis. A systemic collapse.Turning a
deepening recession into a global depression. A disaster
only urgent, well-designed, and coordinated actions may
prevent. But no assurance anything will work this late.
-
- Here's what Nouriel
Roubini and others recommend. Mirror opposite of EESA that
will do more harm than good:
-
- -- additional rapid
rate cuts globally; at least to 1% in America; much lower in
the EU, Asia and elsewhere;
-
- -- guarantee all
deposits until stability is restored at least;
-
- -- partially
nationalize troubled banks; recapitalize them with public
funds; in some form that now seems the plan according to The
New York Times in its October 11 article headlined: "White
House Overhauling Rescue Plan;" capital to be injected into
banks by buying non-voting shares; what's known is Henry
Paulson's October 10 statement that "We can use the
taxpayer's money more effectively....if we develop a
standardized program to buy equity in financial
institutions;" it remains to be seen what, in fact, happens;
Paulson represents Wall Street; not the public, national or
world interests;
-
- -- he's not for
reestablishing responsible regulation to curb market
excesses; what economists like Roubini recommend;
-
- -- freeze all home
foreclosures; establish a 1930s type Home Owners' Loan
Corporation (HOLC) to refinance homes and prevent
foreclosures; let foreclosed homeowners retain their
properties and pay affordable rent;
- -- ease the debt
burden of distressed households; cap credit card and other
high consumer loan interest rates at much lower levels; put
cash in peoples' hands; lots of it; at least several hundred
billion dollars for starters; more if needed; as much as it
takes;
-
- -- provide solvent
financial institutions with as much liquidity as they need;
corporate sector companies as well, including small
businesses;
-
- -- save solvent
companies; liquidate troubled ones too far gone;
-
- -- fund massive
stimulus to revive the economy; for public works,
infrastructure, education, alternative energy, unemployment
benefits, job training, tax rebates to the needy, and state
and local governments strapped for cash; money for what's
needed most and that can do the most good;
-
- -- get stronger,
more solvent countries to help weaker, more indebted ones;
and
- -- move on these
policies fast; world governments have little time left to
save themselves; there's no assurance they can; and these
measure don't address our destructive military Keynsianism;
permanent war economy and need to redirect those funds for
constructive homeland needs; mirror opposite of a reported a
new Pentagon document requesting an additional $450 billion
over the next five years.
-
- Reeling from
One Policy Response to Another
-
- First came EESA.
The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act. To reward
fraudsters and not address the root of the crisis. Nor help
millions of troubled households. Homeowners in foreclosure.
Others threatened. The public traumatized by the most
calamitous economic events since the 1930s.
-
- Europeans formed
their own plans. Different from Washington's. On October 10,
G-7 finance ministers met to discuss policy. In early
evening, they presented an action plan. Long on promises.
Short on specifics. The New York Times reported that: "Many
investors had hoped the ministers would (propose) more
concrete steps" and quoted Peterson Institute of
International Economics deputy director, Adam Posen, saying:
"This fell short." But he wasn't giving up entirely or
saying what they have in mind or will later decide can't
work.
-
- They agreed to:
-
- -- act decisively
with all available tools to support financial institutions
and prevent their failure;
-
- -- unfreeze credit
and money markets; assure banks and other financial
institutions "have broad access to liquidity and funding;"
-
- -- ensure banks and
financial intermediaries "can raise (sufficient) capital
from public (and) private sources;" to rebuild confidence
and get them again lending to households and businesses;
-
- -- ensure national
deposit insurance protection is sound so people have
confidence in the safety of their deposits; and
-
- -- take appropriate
action "to restart the secondary markets for mortgages and
other securitized assets;" assure accurate valuations and
transparency according to "high quality accounting
standards."
-
- Besides the US
Treasury planning to "buy equity in financial institutions,"
AP reported on October 12 that the 15 euro-zone countries
will "temporarily guarantee future bank debt to encourage
lending....for an interim period and on appropriate terms"
for up to five years. Recapitalizing banks is part of the
plan. The hope is to unfreeze credit and get markets
operating normally again.
-
- According to The
New York Times on October 12, "each country will announce
concrete figures for the measures they expect to take
individually." Belgian finance minister Didier Reynders said
"There is no question of setting up a European fund." A
final proposal will be presented to the full 27-member EU
summit later in the week, and individual parliaments will
have to vote on it.
-
- Key to understand
about whatever emerges in final details or any that follow -
world governments will loot their treasuries to save
powerful capital interests. Despite bold pronouncements we
can expect more of ahead, practically nothing will be done
for many tens of millions of people globally in greatest
need. At best for them....crumbs.
-
- In the coming days
and weeks, we'll see statements become policies and how
world markets react. Given the immensity of the crisis, no
one's sure if anything can work. Nor is it reassuring to
hear George Bush say remain calm. We've got things under
control. On October 10, the Dow dropped 300 points while he
spoke.
-
- In an October 13
Barron's interview, noted money manager Jeremy Grantham (now
age 70) was asked if he thought we'd learn anything from the
current crisis. His response: "an enormous amount in a very
short time, quite a bit in the medium-term, and absolutely
nothing in the long-term."
-
- He's been bearish
since last year but added that "the fundamentals are turning
out worse than" he expected. "The terrible thing - after all
this pain - is that the US equity market is not even cheap."
It was so high in 2000 that it hasn't come down to trend,
but it's getting close. However, "the really bad news is
that great bubbles in history always overcorrect." He
believes S & P 500 fair value is around 1025 compared to its
899.22 October 10 close. But "typically bubbles overcorrect
by quite a bit, possibly by 20%. This is very discouraging,"
so he's not rushing to buy but he fears he'll act too soon.
He predicts a market low in 2010.
-
- Where he sees
things going from here was also posed. He's highly respected
as an expert, and yet he emphasized "how little (he)
understand(s about) all of the intricate workings of the
global financial system. (He) hopes that someone else gets
it, because (he) doesn't. And (he) has no idea, really, how
this will work out....(It's) so intricate that all (he) can
conclude, by instinct (and from history), is that it will be
longer, harder and more complicated than we expect." Quite
an assessment from a man called "the philosopher king of
Wall Street."
-
- The Human
Cost of Manufactured Crisis
-
- Ordinary people are
hit hardest. Millions will suffer grievously for years as a
result of this totally avoidable crisis. Fraudsters who
caused it are rewarded. Innocent homeowners, households, and
workers are punished. Mercilessly. The result:
-
- -- trillions of
dollars lost; likely trillions more ahead;
-
- -- millions of lost
homes, homeowners behind in their payments, or threatened
with foreclosure in the worst housing crisis since the Great
Depression; ultimately may exceed it given current estimates
of up to 10 million foreclosures before stability and
recovery;
-
- -- likely well over
a million 2008 personal bankruptcies and much higher numbers
in 2009 compared to 800,000 in 2007 and 573,000 in 2006;
figures below the 2000 - 2005 1.5 million average before
passage of the 2005 Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer
Protection Act; according to Samuel Gerdano, American
Bankruptcy Institute director, consumer over-indebtedness
"made worse by the home mortgage crisis" is the problem; it
won't likely recede in the near or intermediate-term;
-
- -- rising
unemployment; not the spurious 6.1%; including discouraged
workers and people working part-time who want (but can't
find) full-time jobs, economist John Williams puts the real
figure above 12% and rising;
-
- -- consumer
over-indebtedness; maxed out on credit but needing more of
it to survive; and charged usurious rates to get it;
-
- -- declining wages
and benefits in the face of soaring expenses; making it all
the harder to cope;
- -- food banks and
homeless shelters facing increasing demands but forced to
turn away people for lack of resources; and
- -- things overall
are worsening; to the edge of the abyss according to some;
even the most optimistic fear what's coming; who can know;
no one dares be complacent.
-
- Whatever final
policies emerge. In whatever form they take. Unless they
address the human dimension, they'll do nothing for people
in most need. Growing millions. Desperate and in trouble.
Their issue is economic and ethical. The G-7 statement
addressed neither. It dealt only with saving Wall Street.
Industrial capitalism. A better idea is let them die and
replace them with a new order. A workable one. Respecting
people, not capital.
-
- 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 and listen to The
Global Research News Hour on
www.RepublicBroadcasting.org Mondays from 11AM -
1PM US Central time for cutting edge discussions with
distinguished guests. All programs are archived for easy
listening.
|
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 talented Mr. Greenspan
salon.com > News Jan. 10, 2000
The Federal Reserve chairman has resisted
slowing the economy while waiting for his reappointment,
but will he put the brakes on now?
By Ian Williams
....For example, reportedly he is a staunch atheist,
but that did not stop him taking an oath on the Talmud
(held by his aged mum) to become chairman
of Nixon's Council of Economic Advisors,
while his prophetess Ayn Rand beamed away in the front row.
Apart from his quasi-cultist past, the main problem
with Greenspan is that he has too much power based on
his alleged powers of economic prediction....
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....
Grand Theft America
By Stephen Lendman
9-29-8
.....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....
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