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Memo To Our Media: How To Cover The Debt Crisis
Well over a year ago, I wrote an article for Harvard's journalism journal Nieman Reports complaining about deeply flawed media coverage of credit and debt issues in America." There is a credit divide in America that fuels our economic divide," I wrote, warning of a potential economic implosion because so many Americans are squeezed by a debt squeeze. I was not alone in projecting a crisis, although my focus was more on the failure of many media outlets to track the problem and ask deeper questions.
"Ours has become a nation in which the carrot of instant affluence is quickly menaced by the harsh stick of bill collectors, lawsuits, and foreclosures," I argued. "And yet, this bubble can burst, and has. The slickest of our bankers and the savviest of our marketers have been able to undo the law of gravity, that what goes up must come down."
One didn't have to be an expert to see the warning signs which have since led to a massive market meltdown, a collapse of the sub-prime mortgage market, bankruptcies by leading financial lenders, billions of dollars in losses by top banks and financial lenders, and predictions of even more pain to come with nearly two million Americas facing foreclosures.
When I started making a film on the subject, In Debt We Trust, a colleague warned me that the issue might be too obscure to rate media coverage. "No one likes to talk about money," said a producer friend. "This could be such a downer."
Now what are they saying?
It doesn't feel good to be right when so many people are being wronged. At the time I called on media outlets to take some steps to beef up their reporting. Most didn't, but it's never too late.
Here's what I proposed then, and repeat now:
• Report more regularly on these credit issues; billions of dollars are involved, not to mention millions of lives.
• Identify the key corporate institutions and contrast the compensation of their executives with the financial circumstances of their customers. Look into the process of "financialization" that is transferring more wealth from the bottom to the top of society.
• Shine a spotlight on how special interests and lobbyists for financialinstitutions contribute to members of Congress and other politicians, across party lines, to ensure their desired policies and lack of regulations.
• Expose political influence driven by campaign contributions. Some reporting about this took place during the bankruptcy debate, but there has been little follow-up.
• Examine the influence credit card companies have on media coverage through their extensive and expensive advertising.
• Take a hard look at the predatory practices in poor neighborhoods - and crimes committed against poor people, who are least able to defend themselves. Legal service lawyers tell me that they are overwhelmed by the scale of mortgage scams involving homes whose value have been artificially inflated.They are bracing for massive foreclosures,
• Focus attention on what consumers can do to fight back. Robert Manning, author of "Credit Card Nation," explains: "If ten percent of American credit cardholders withheld their monthly payments, it would bring the financial services industry to a standstill. At a larger issue, what we have to do is to get people involved at the state level, get their state attorney generals involved, aggressively filing class action lawsuits and then putting pressure on key legislators to say, 'This is unacceptable that they're not representing and balancing the issues of commerce with consumers. The balance is tilted dramatically against the average American.'"
• Report on initiatives like Americans For Debt Relief Now that are setting up community, church and grass roots house party screenings fot the film IN DEBT WE TRUST. (Stopthe squeeze.org)
We need to educate the public about the deeper forces at work and the need for structural changes, urgent reforms and regulations and new consumer protections. We need to stop restating problems and start exploring solutions. We need new regulation, investigations and debt relief even debt cancellation!
The globalization of our economy is about more than outsourcing of jobs. There is a deeper shift underway from a society based around production, with the factory as the symbol of American economic prowess, to a culture driven by consumption, with the mall as its new dominant icon.
Class struggle today is assuming a new form in the conflict between creditors and lenders that reaches into many Americans' homes, where each month bills are juggled and re-juggled with today's credit card bills paid by tomorrow's new card. Meanwhile, with interest compounding at usurious rates, indebtness grows and people sink even deeper into debts they cannot manage. No wonder we are becoming a nation of scammers with consumers using every trick they can think of against banks that then hide their own predatory practices in legalese.
In this conflict, financial institutions function as well-organized collection machines while individual borrowers are forced to react as individuals. Many are browbeaten with lectures about "personal responsibility" by corporations that only pay lip service to any form of social responsibility while paying their own executives obscenely high salaries.
Centuries ago, we had debtors prisons. Today, many of our own homes are similar kinds of prisons, where debtors struggle for survival with personal finance pressures.
Who is really responsible for this? Few of us seem to know.
And fewer appear to know what can be done about it. "They're never going to be repaid," says economic historian Michael Hudson who for many years worked at Chase Bank. "Adam Smith said that no government had ever repaid its debts and the same can be said of the private sector. The U.S. government does not intend to repay its trillion dollar debt to foreign central banks and, even if it did intend to, there's no way in which it could. Most of the corporations now are avoiding paying their pension fund debts and their health care debts."
Yes, these can be complicated issues that lead to tune-out, what TV producers call the 'Mego Effect" - "my eyes glaze over." Yet because so many people are involved, it is urgent that our media push these issues from the business pages to the front pages and humanize them so we can try to wrestle our lives back from the ravages of a relentless debt machine.
News Dissector Danny Schechter edits Mediachannel.org. He is also the writer, producer, and director of the new documentary In Debt We Trust. Visit Stop the Squeeze for what you can do. Comments to Dissector@mediachannel.org.
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14 Comments so far
Show AllUsury is a moral issue, as well as a politico-economic issue. The Judeo-Christian scriptures are dead-set against high interest rates and turning families out of their homes for a profit. Don't know about the Koran (maybe a devout Muslim out there can help us with that end?).
Given the scale of this burgeoning crisis, progressives would score tactically by offering an alternate 'moral issue' to the majority of Americans who are cash-strapped casualties of this class war, and devout people of faith.
We have an opportunity to steal megavotes from the GOP by changing the 'moral issues' subject to USURY/GREED, and having tons of scripture to attack the nasties with.
Peach McD in Durham NC
Well, I'm not a devout Muslin but I have read the Quran and I can say usury is forbidden.Ie:
[2:275] Those who charge usury are in the same position as those controlled by the devil's influence. This is because they claim that usury is the same as commerce. However, GOD permits commerce, and prohibits usury. Thus, whoever heeds this commandment from his Lord, and refrains from usury, he may keep his past earnings, and his judgment rests with GOD. As for those who persist in usury, they incur Hell, wherein they abide forever
Many states used to have usury laws that limited the maximum interest rates that could be charged, but there is just one more example of how politicians will sell their souls to lobbyists and corporate interests.
There used to be reasonable limits on finance charges and penalties like late fees as well... those too have gone by the wayside in the financial industry's never-ending quest to sodomize the powerless poor and Middle Class.
You can't even escape by bankruptcy any more, thanks to some fancy footwork by the paid-off politicians and the financial industry.
Virtually everything we are being told by the government about the state of the economy is a blatant lie, yet we can't get one single news outlet to tell the whole story... even CNN's Harvard-educated economist Lou Dobbs has not pointed out the REAL number of unemployed in this country and happily repeats the administration's phony 4.6% figure.
Here are some simple facts that can EASILY be checked online within minutes:
1. Simply comparing the Department of Labor's numbers of NEW JOBS created in the past two decades shows that millions of unemployed are going uncounted. Check the private sector, ages 16 and up, not seasonally adjusted and you will see that we have fallen behind over 12 million jobs since 2001 and that does not even count the illegal invaders!
2. Congress and the administration have committed over $30 TRILLION new expenditures from our future tax dollars just since 2001... Even the Comptroller of the GAO is raising the alarm and saying that there is absolutely NO WAY our economy can grow quickly enough to absorb that kind of commitment. David M. Walker says that our economy and security are in serious danger due to this irresponsible action. Those figures don't even include Iraq, Afghanistan and Hurricane Katrina!
America is being raped by the people we put in power. It's way beyond time that our Press and REAL Americans should wave the red flag!
All of the above entries I feel are true and throughout history, the world's major religions hold that usury is a sin. I'm not sure what the Jew's view is on ursury, but I would suppose it would also call the practice of usury a sin.
The one thing I really wanted to say was about something I saw a couple of weeks ago. I was getting online and the usual stuff was appearing on Yahoo's Home Page. One of the issues metioned was the following: Are Americans saving too much? I had to read it three times to make sure that Yahoo wasn't being sarcastic. How could anyone but a child ask such a question?
As Danny Schechter mentions, the media has a lot to do with the coverage of this major issue to millions of people. To ask, "Are Americans saving too much" is laughable even though the issue is not.
This issue is one that we all must take up. For more on this and Danny Schechter, I highly recommend listening to Schechter's interview by Bob McChesney on his Media Matters show, which is one of my favorite podcasts. Go to http://www.will.uiuc.edu/am/mediamatters/ and find the March 25, 2007 show. Great stuff -- I've listened to it twice.
Who can save when everything is going up except our salaries? This is a justice issue and I am planning to check out the movie In Debt We Trust and share it with my independent Democratic club.
A big part of the problem is that, especially for young adults, many Americans take out big loans and credit cards and don't know the difference between a balance sheet and an interest rate. We're financially illiterate and we stay that way indefinitely.
Financial institutions take full advantage of it.
The government needs to make financial literacy a priority. No one would dig a hole for themselves and their family if they knew better. The government winks at big banks as they fool people to part with their money.
Let me add to Kate Annes suggested link that interested readers see Amy Goodman's interview of Danny Schecter at:
http://www.democracynow.org/index.pl?issue=20070404
Hybridoma--
Deut. 23:19-20 allowed usury when lending to "a stranger" and forbade usury when lending to a "brother/sister".
Put in national terms it would prohibit usury for the domestic economy and allow it for foriegn exchange.
How about we start a nationwide campaign to call on Congress to recind the bankrupsy law they passed last year? It would be a start!
"Robert Manning,
author of "Credit Card Nation," explains: "If ten percent of American credit cardholders withheld their monthly payments, it would bring the financial services industry to a standstill.
Meanwhile, with interest compounding at usurious rates, indebtness grows and people sink even deeper into debts they cannot manage."
Well, then, it appears that the greed of the financial services industry is going to be cause of their downfall. With all the good paying U.S. jobs being outsourced or insourced, sooner than later, at least ten percent will stop paying on their credit cards. Contrary to legal loan-sharking mentality, people will use whatever money they available to pay for food, rent, and the basic necessities of life.
"No wonder we are becoming a nation of scammers with consumers using every trick they can think of against banks that then hide their own predatory practices in legalese."
All the bankruptcy laws written to protect these loan-sharks won't mean squat when the day of reckoning arrives.
Thanks for the info Poet.
Gail--
Every credit card offer I receive I stick the note that usually says "Please read this if you are thinking of refusing this offer!"or words to that effect (which is usually blank on the reverse side)back in the prfepaid envelope and write "no thank you" and send it back to them.
It costs them first class postage for their pre-paid envelope and if you multiplied that by thousands or even millions it would also put a serious drain on the credit card marketing and promotion budget and force them to either pay a lot of wasted first class postage or start paring down the number of credit card solicitations they send to the gullible public.
Either way we start bleeding them with their own scalpel and it doesn't cost us anything but a few minutes of our time. Everybody all together let's do it!
Poet***
Very good strategy. What I was doing was stuffing absolutely everything, including the envelope the predatory offer arrived in, back into their prepaid envelope, marking each piece with the statement, in bold marker pen: Stop wasting forestry products, while sending me this landfill rubbish! If no prepaid envelope came with the offer, I waited until another showed up and simply doubled up on it.
A friend of mine told me that just one of these items foils the banks automation processing machines these things pass through.
Peace, Best Wishes and Hope
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tk1vEuhBuEU
If you want to kill Usury, you'll need to force the Federal Reserve to do away with 'Fractional Reserve Banking', the fulcrum of debt slavery. Whatever amounts the banks manage to rake into savings accounts, Fractional Reserve Banking requires they only keep 10% of that in reserve, while allowing them to let out the rest at interest. Since American savings accounts have been dwindling in size, the base against which fractional reserve lending was allowed has shifted also, to god knows what other areas. If you own the printer, the sky is the limit!
Peace, Best Wishes and Hope
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tk1vEuhBuEU
U.S. NATIONAL DEBT CLOCK
The Outstanding Public Debt as of 11 Apr 2007 at 10:42:29 AM GMT is:8,886,209,664,525.65
(most people have a hard time grasping this figure)
The estimated population of the United States is 301,403,602 so each U.S. citizen's share of this debt is $29,482.76. The National Debt has continued to increase an average of $1.96 billion per day since September 29, 2006! What kind of example does this set for society? If government mismanages money and doesn't teach money management as a core course in school, no wonder people have money issues! It appears like the US is in danger of becoming a third world nation because as aging population becomes greater than workers, who will be left to pay back this debt? Check out the website: http://www.brillig.com/debt_clock/