EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- Corporate Win: Supreme Court Says Monsanto Has 'Control Over Product of Life'
- Cornel West: Obama 'Is a War Criminal'
- Patent Filing Claims Solar Energy ‘Breakthrough’
- Disaster Capitalism Strikes as Hedge Funds Circle Near-Bankrupt Municipalities Like Vultures
- Ignoring Bee Crisis, EPA Greenlights New 'Highly Toxic' Pesticide
Popular content
Today's Top News
Disaster Capitalism: State of Extortion
Once oil passed $140 a barrel, even the most rabidly right-wing media hosts had to prove their populist cred by devoting a portion of every show to bashing Big Oil. Some have gone so far as to invite me on for a friendly chat about an insidious new phenomenon: "disaster capitalism." It usually goes well--until it doesn't.
For instance, "independent conservative" radio host Jerry Doyle and I were having a perfectly amiable conversation about sleazy insurance companies and inept politicians when this happened: "I think I have a quick way to bring the prices down," Doyle announced. "We've invested $650 billion to liberate a nation of 25 million people. Shouldn't we just demand that they give us oil? There should be tankers after tankers backed up like a traffic jam getting into the Lincoln Tunnel, the Stinkin' Lincoln, at rush hour with thank-you notes from the Iraqi government.... Why don't we just take the oil? We've invested it liberating a country. I can have the problem solved of gas prices coming down in ten days, not ten years."There were a couple of problems with Doyle's plan, of course. The first was that he was describing the biggest stickup in world history. The second, that he was too late: "We" are already heisting Iraq's oil, or at least are on the cusp of doing so.
It's been ten months since the publication of my book The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, in which I argue that today's preferred method of reshaping the world in the interest of multinational corporations is to systematically exploit the state of fear and disorientation that accompanies moments of great shock and crisis. With the globe being rocked by multiple shocks, this seems like a good time to see how and where the strategy is being applied.
And the disaster capitalists have been busy--from private firefighters already on the scene in Northern California's wildfires, to land grabs in cyclone-hit Burma, to the housing bill making its way through Congress. The bill contains little in the way of affordable housing, shifts the burden of mortgage default to taxpayers and makes sure that the banks that made bad loans get some payouts. No wonder it is known in the hallways of Congress as "The Credit Suisse Plan," after one of the banks that generously proposed it.
Iraq Disaster: We Broke It, We (Just) Bought It
But these cases of disaster capitalism are amateurish compared with what is unfolding at Iraq's oil ministry. It started with no-bid service contracts announced for ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell, BP and Total (they have yet to be signed but are still on course). Paying multinationals for their technical expertise is not unusual. What is odd is that such contracts almost invariably go to oil service companies--not to the oil majors, whose work is exploring, producing and owning carbon wealth. As London-based oil expert Greg Muttitt points out, the contracts make sense only in the context of reports that the oil majors have insisted on the right of first refusal on subsequent contracts handed out to manage and produce Iraq's oil fields. In other words, other companies will be free to bid on those future contracts, but these companies will win.
One week after the no-bid service deals were announced, the world caught its first glimpse of the real prize. After years of back-room arm-twisting, Iraq is officially flinging open six of its major oil fields, accounting for around half of its known reserves, to foreign investors. According to Iraq's oil minister, the long-term contracts will be signed within a year. While ostensibly under control of the Iraq National Oil Company, foreign firms will keep 75 percent of the value of the contracts, leaving just 25 percent for their Iraqi partners.
That kind of ratio is unheard of in oil-rich Arab and Persian states, where achieving majority national control over oil was the defining victory of anticolonial struggles. According to Muttitt, the assumption until now was that foreign multinationals would be brought in to develop brand-new fields in Iraq--not to take over ones that are already in production and therefore require minimal technical support. "The policy was always to allocate these fields to the Iraq National Oil Company," he told me. This is a total reversal of that policy, giving INOC a mere 25 percent instead of the planned 100 percent.
So what makes such lousy deals possible in Iraq, which has already suffered so much? Ironically, it is Iraq's suffering--its never-ending crisis--that is the rationale for an arrangement that threatens to drain its treasury of its main source of revenue. The logic goes like this: Iraq's oil industry needs foreign expertise because years of punishing sanctions starved it of new technology and the invasion and continuing violence degraded it further. And Iraq urgently needs to start producing more oil. Why? Again because of the war. The country is shattered, and the billions handed out in no-bid contracts to Western firms have failed to rebuild the country. And that's where the new no-bid contracts come in: they will raise more money, but Iraq has become such a treacherous place that the oil majors must be induced to take the risk of investing. Thus the invasion of Iraq neatly creates the argument for its subsequent pillage.
Several of the architects of the Iraq War no longer even bother to deny that oil was a major motivator. On National Public Radio's To the Point, Fadhil Chalabi, one of the primary Iraqi advisers to the Bush Administration in the lead-up to the invasion, recently described the war as "a strategic move on the part of the United States of America and the UK to have a military presence in the Gulf in order to secure [oil] supplies in the future." Chalabi, who served as Iraq's oil under secretary and met with the oil majors before the invasion, described this as "a primary objective."
Invading countries to seize their natural resources is illegal under the Geneva Conventions. That means that the huge task of rebuilding Iraq's infrastructure--including its oil infrastructure--is the financial responsibility of Iraq's invaders. They should be forced to pay reparations. (Recall that Saddam Hussein's regime paid $9 billion to Kuwait in reparations for its 1990 invasion.) Instead, Iraq is being forced to sell 75 percent of its national patrimony to pay the bills for its own illegal invasion and occupation.
Oil Price Shock: Give Us the Arctic or Never Drive Again
Iraq isn't the only country in the midst of an oil-related stickup. The Bush Administration is busily using a related crisis--the soaring price of fuel--to revive its dream of drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). And of drilling offshore. And in the rock-solid shale of the Green River Basin. "Congress must face a hard reality," said George W. Bush on June 18. "Unless members are willing to accept gas prices at today's painful levels--or even higher--our nation must produce more oil."
This is the President as Extortionist in Chief, with gas nozzle pointed to the head of his hostage--which happens to be the entire country. Give me ANWR, or everyone has to spend their summer vacations in the backyard. A final stickup from the cowboy President.
Despite the Drill Here. Drill Now. Pay Less bumper stickers, drilling in ANWR would have little discernible impact on actual global oil supplies, as its advocates well know. The argument that it could nonetheless bring down oil prices is based not on hard economics but on market psychoanalysis: drilling would "send a message" to the oil traders that more oil is on the way, which would cause them to start betting down the price.
Two points follow from this approach. First, trying to psych out hyperactive commodity traders is what passes for governing in the Bush era, even in the midst of a national emergency. Second, it will never work. If there is one thing we can predict from the oil market's recent behavior, it is that the price is going to keep going up regardless of what new supplies are announced.
Take the massive oil boom under way in Alberta's notorious tar sands. The tar sands (sometimes called the oil sands) have the same things going for them as Bush's proposed drill sites: they are nearby and perfectly secure, since the North American Free Trade Agreement contains a provision barring Canada from cutting off supply to the United States. And with little fanfare, oil from this largely untapped source has been pouring into the market, so much so that Canada is now the largest supplier of oil to the United States, surpassing Saudi Arabia. Between 2005 and 2007, Canada increased its exports to the States by almost 100 million barrels. Yet despite this significant increase in secure supplies, oil prices have been going up the entire time.
What is driving the ANWR push is not facts but pure shock doctrine strategy--the oil crisis has created the conditions in which it is possible to sell a previously unsellable (but highly profitable) policy.
Food Price Shock: Genetic Modification or Starvation
Intimately connected to the price of oil is the global food crisis. Not only do high gas prices drive up food costs but the boom in agrofuels has blurred the line between food and fuel, pushing food growers off their land and encouraging rampant speculation. Several Latin American countries have been pushing to re-examine the push for agrofuels and to have food recognized as a human right, not a mere commodity. United States Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte has other ideas. In the same speech touting the US commitment to emergency food aid, he called on countries to lower their "export restrictions and high tariffs" and eliminate "barriers to use of innovative plant and animal production technologies, including biotechnology." This was an admittedly more subtle stickup, but the message was clear: impoverished countries had better crack open their agricultural markets to American products and genetically modified seeds, or they could risk having their aid cut off.
Genetically modified crops have emerged as the cureall for the food crisis, at least according to the World Bank, the European Commission president (time to "bite the bullet") and Prime Minister of Britain Gordon Brown. And, of course, the agribusiness companies. "You cannot today feed the world without genetically modified organisms," Peter Brabeck, chairman of Nestlé, told the Financial Times recently. The problem with this argument, at least for now, is that there is no evidence that GMOs increase crop yields, and they often decrease them.
But even if there was a simple key to solving the global food crisis, would we really want it in the hands of the Nestlés and Monsantos? What would it cost us to use it? In recent months Monsanto, Syngenta and BASF have been frenetically buying up patents on so-called "climate ready" seeds--plants that can grow in earth parched from drought and salinated from flooding.
In other words, plants built to survive a future of climate chaos. We already know the lengths Monsanto will go to protect its intellectual property, spying on and suing farmers who dare to save their seeds from one year to the next. We have seen patented AIDS medications fail to treat millions in sub-Saharan Africa. Why would patented "climate ready" crops be any different?
Meanwhile, amid all the talk of exciting new genetic and drilling technologies, the Bush Administration announced a moratorium of up to two years on new solar energy projects on federal lands--due, apparently, to environmental concerns. This is the final frontier for disaster capitalism. Our leaders are failing to invest in technology that will actually prevent a future of climate chaos, choosing instead to work hand in hand with those plotting innovative schemes to profit from the mayhem.
Privatizing Iraq's oil, ensuring global dominance for genetically modified crops, lowering the last of the trade barriers and opening the last of the wildlife refuges... Not so long ago, those goals were pursued through polite trade agreements, under the benign pseudonym "globalization." Now this discredited agenda is forced to ride on the backs of serial crises, selling itself as lifesaving medicine for a world in pain.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


79 Comments so far
Show AllDoesn't Ms. Klein understand that the best way to help the slaves (the little people, the workers, the non-elites in Iraq, the US, and around the world) is to further enrich and empower their masters?
I have never been a fan of Capitalism. What is one nation that mandates a person having the right to make as much money as one wants? Not even the USA OFFICIALLY declared that an American has the right to become a millionaire - or to make millions of dollars per year. How is it just that an actor or a professional soccer player can make more money than a teacher or a doctor? There are people who make millions of dollars per year just sitting behind a desk acting like a dictator, while pandemics and starvations happen throughout the world.
Capitalism, global market, "free trade" and de-reguation of the market is the reasons why that the people of the USA lose their jobs. Yet, most Americans believe that the aforementioned concepts are the best thing since sliced bread.
Sell your multinational stocks. Don't buy anything unless its local--and pay in cash. Turn-off the MSM TV and radio.
Vote for Ralph Nader, otherwise, nothing will change.
The real question is why our elected representatives not only allow this to happen, but indeed further these atrocious goals. The answer is that the US has become, in effect, a communist country:
1. Collectivation of agriculture through tax preferences for agribusiness that shut down family farms in favor of large tracts of corporate farms. You can also factor in the use of industrial, factory livestock farms in lieu of sustainable small-scale animal husbandry practices.
2. Collectivization of industry through business consolidation. We now have fewer choices of vendors, and are MUCH closer to central planning (a key facet of communism) than ever before. When was the last push to enforce anti-trust laws? What about the consolidation of media?
3. Our political system is a duopoly very similar to the monopoly of the communist party in Russia.
4. The "free press" is now gone, replaced by a corporate propaganda structure enabled with media consolidation. Thank you, Bill Clinton.
Kiss our country, as we know it, goodbye. Communism is here, and our leadership is working to impose fascism as well.
Finally, Americans are seeing the 'evils' of unregulated Capitalism, and the fact that most wars are started because of a resource a corporation wants, or a country they want to control. Many of us so-called 'radical liberals' have seen this all along. This is no surprise. A war for OIL is all it has ever been, laid out in front of the Americans that 'Critically Think' beyond the Media propaganda machine.
The reporters/commentators will never fully attack corporations as news is now owned by them. Americans have to wake up, including the Military personnel and see the reality of what they are fighting and dying for. OIL, control of food markets, puppet governments etc.
We need Socialism (social programs to help fellow citizens) in conjunction with capitalism as it would balance our country and make us a stronger nation.
How to fight the United Corporations of America now that they have de-regulated our laws, sent their money in hidden bank accounts overseas to NOT pay taxes here, and are now even moving their headquarters off shore like Haliburton will be a tough fight. We seem to already have lost our country to a Facism form of Government.
Again, this article is not news to us that had OUR EYES WIDE OPEN all along and turned off our TVs.
http://tvnewslies.org/Day_in_The_Life_Of_Joe_Middle1.pdf
A Day in the Life of Joe Middle-Class Republican
By John Gray – Published by TvNewsLies.org – July, 2004
Joe gets up at 6:00am to prepare his morning coffee. He fills his pot full of good clean drinking water because some liberal fought for minimum water quality standards. He takes his daily medication with his first swallow of coffee. His medications are safe to take because some liberal fought to insure their safety and work as advertised. All but $10.00 of his medications are paid for by his employer's medical plan because some liberal union workers fought the employers for paid medical insurance, so now Joe gets it too.
He prepares his morning breakfast, bacon and eggs this day. Joe's bacon is safe to eat because some liberal fought for laws to regulate the meat packing industry. Joe takes his morning shower reaching for his shampoo. His bottle is properly labeled with every ingredient and the amount of its contents because some liberal fought for his right to know what he was putting on his body and how much it contained. Joe dresses, walks outside and takes a deep breath. The air he breathes is clean because some tree
hugging liberal fought for laws to stop industries from polluting our air. He walks to the
subway station for his government subsidized ride to work. It saves him considerable
money in parking and transportation fees. You see, some liberal fought for affordable
public transportation, which gives everyone the opportunity to be a contributor.
Joe begins his work day. He has a good job with excellent pay, medical benefits,
retirement, paid holidays and vacation because some liberal union members fought and
died for these working standards. Joe's employer pays these standards because Joe's
employer doesn't want his employees to call the union. If Joe is hurt on the job or
becomes unemployed he'll get a worker compensation or unemployment check because some liberal didn't think he should loose his home because of his temporary
misfortune.
Its noon time, Joe needs to make a Bank Deposit so he can pay some bills. Joe's deposit is federally insured by the FSLIC because some liberal wanted to protect Joe's
money from unscrupulous bankers who ruined the banking system before the depression. Joe has to pay his Fannie Mae underwritten Mortgage and his below market federal student loan because some stupid liberal decided that Joe and the government would be better off if he was educated and earned more money over his life-time.
Joe is home from work. He plans to visit his father this evening at his farm home in the
country. He gets in his car for the drive to dad's. His car is among the safest in the world
because some liberal fought for car safety standards. He arrives at his boyhood home. He was the third generation to live in the house financed by Farmers Home Administration because bankers didn't want to make rural loans. The house didn't have electricity until some big government liberal stuck his nose where it didn't belong and demanded rural electrification. He is happy to see his dad who is now retired. His dad lives on Social Security and his union pension because some liberal made sure he could take care of himself so Joe wouldn't have to.
After his visit with dad he gets back in his car for the ride home. He turns on a radio talk show. The host keeps saying that liberals are bad and conservatives are good. He doesn't tell Joe that his beloved Republicans have fought against every protection and benefit Joe enjoys throughout his day. Joe agrees, "We don't need those big government liberals ruining our lives. After all, I'm a self made man who believes everyone should take care of themselves, just like I have".
BUT OF COURSE ALL OF THIS IS BEING DISMANTLED.
-- kent shaw
The price of oil at the moment is squarely pegged to the collapse of the U.S. dollar (41% in the last year) ( That's right 41 PER CENT!) The price of oil would be pegged around $80 a barrel if the dollar hadn't collapsed under the massive pressure from the insane borrowing of the Bush administration and the desire of its creditors to move their capital into other currencies. The piece of human filth in the White House has not merely bankrupted the country, shredded the Constitution and committed high crimes on a quotidien basis, they're going to let the little, male hustler cock sucking punk get away with it. And his friends down there in the Oil Patch will always keep him stocked with a supply of toothsome young men which is all he wants anyway.
To Kent Shaw. You are so spot on. I hope your local newspaper published your message. Very good, can I forward your article to my repug friends (only 2)?. Thanks
So, Gus, the goal of communism was to establish corporate domination? Was that not in fact, historically the goal of fascism?
Doesn't anyone read history anymore or is it all just empty name-calling?
Why would Naomi Klein stoop so low as to go onto the Jerry Doyle program. He sounds like a jackass bully, and we have enough of them running the show.
sung425 July 3rd, 2008 1:08 pm:
To Kent Shaw. You are so spot on. I hope your local newspaper published your message. Very good, can I forward your article to my repug friends (only 2)?. Thanks
http://tvnewslies.org/Day_in_The_Life_Of_Joe_Middle1.pdf
A Day in the Life of Joe Middle-Class Republican
By John Gray – Published by TvNewsLies.org – July, 2004
That whole article was by John Gray, and the link takes you to the original. "BUT OF COURSE ALL OF THIS IS BEING DISMANTLED." is all I added. But yes, send the article far and wide -- attribute to John Gray.
Kent
Gus seesm to think that capitalism in hyperdrive is actually communism. Class Act understands it's really fascism, correctly. We aren't duplicating anything that went on back in the old USSR. This is American-style corporate capitalism, with undeniable fascist overtones. "Communism" has nothing to do with it.
I have a friend who told me yesterday that the emergency room removed a half inch splinter from under her son's fingernail.
Her COPAY was $500.00. We agreed that extortion was an apt description of that transaction.
Gus,
What a strange post. Are you a strange guy? Communism?
I do not mean to get off topic here, but since we are talking about capitalism, does it bother anyone else that the CDC and FDA cannot find the origins of the ecoli strain that is making people sick? Obviously the tomato industry has lost tens of millions of dollars. Is that not a national security concern (that the tomato industry lost so much money)?
Gus---you hit the nail on the button regarding "collectivization."
For years, I've been saying that we live in the capitalist version of "central planning."
They call it "supply side" ; what they actually mean is monopolized central planning----you will buy what WE want you to buy (the USA practically invented advertising & marketing) and we expect you to be happy and grateful for consuming 24/7.
JOKE:
What's the definition of communism?
Answer: man exploiting man
What's the definition of capitalism?
Answer: the other way around
So, as the manipulators continue to destroy the middle class, and another war is on the horizon, and our Constitutional rights have been diminished big time....why are we about to celebrate our independence from tyrannical rule? Is the rule of George W any better than the rule of George III?
Yankee Doodle Deadly:
http://tvnewslies.org/tvnl/index.php/editorial/reggies-commentary/20-regs-thoughts/2507-yankee-doodle-deadly-
If the present politico-economic trend continues, this will become the pledge of allegiance:
"I pledge allegiance to the United Corporate States of America, and to the market, for which it stands, one corporation, under God and the almighty dollar, with enslavement and insecurity for all." I guess the only word that would remain is God."
It would be wonderful to have true, sustainable, small-scale free enterprise; this may be one way of turning around this Titanic from tanking into the mother of all depressions. When the 1%centers at the top of the economic pyramid tell you they believe in "free markets," they actually mean free-for-all partying at the little guy's expense (he's not paying attention because he/she's too busy working 4 jobs to feed his children.
Well slap us all silly and call us grandma Millie.
to Kent Shaw: RIGHT ON!!! I am going to send your post to the few repubs I know (mostly my inlaws and my own degenerate family) and also to some progressive friends who will just enjoy it. Very good. It's damned well time someone stood up and applauded all the progress we liberals have made for the safety of people in this country, even as that safety is being dismantled under our very noses.
to Gus -- one strange and fascinating post. I did a double-take, then another, then I sat, and thought, and you know, you really made me think. But what we are seeing here in the United States is not a Marxist system, but a fascist one. The two have some broad criteria in common, but are in fact quite different in their power structures. The basic Marxist rule -- "from each according to his ability, to each according to his need" -- could not be further from the spirit that reigns in America. This system of ours could not care less about the needs of any individual. Fascism, on the other hand, is all about Big Business -- Big Agrobusiness, for instance (there are a handful of companies), or Big Oil -- and Big Money -- PRIVATELY OWNED, NOT COLLECTIVELY -- calls the shots, not the "elected" government. The politicians are bought and paid for, the Supreme Court is stacked with business-friendly judges (re: the Exxon Valdez decision that was just handed down), and the tiny wealthy class of oligarchs that controls the money are separated by a vast gulf from the poor of the country.
The middle class in America used to comprise 60 percent of the population (1975). It now comprises just 20 percent (2007). And the lost members have emphatically NOT joined the wealthy class. The U.S. is not a democracy anymore. Clinton drove the final spike through its heart, though Reagan and Bush I did their fair share to destroy it as well. Bush II has simply torn aside the veil and operated in full view of the people, such is his stupidity. On the other hand, now people can really see what's going on -- it's why 80 percent of people think the country is on the wrong track. The problem is, the reins of power are so firmly held by the wealthy that there really isn't anything we peasants can do about it. Electing Obama won't make a bit of difference. He's paid for too. You no doubt noticed that Kucinich wasn't allowed to even get close to the nomination -- nor Ron Paul. Both are men of integrity who could have posed a real danger to the System.
If it sounds hopeless, it's because I feel hopeless. Perhaps some other person out there has a plan or an idea that I can't think of???
its going to get worse before it gets better...
Fortunately, the future is in the hands of our young. They don't trust anybody.
....I hate reading Common Dreams. why? It's so fucking depressing. This article is a perfect example: more about Iraq getting fucked over (again) by Exxon Mobil(who just fucked over Alaskan fishermen btw), Bush, et al , and about the inevitability of GM foods. I can't do anything about either of these "shock doctrine" rip-offs.
The multi-nationals and Bush will get everything they want, regardless of how many articles appear on Common Dreams. We're fucked, and there's nothing we can do, except go buy more gas for our SUV :(
Bubble Bubble Toxic Trouble
bubble bubble toxic trouble
economic brew the news spinsters stew
& Freedmanomics sorcery just for you
vigilant villains of the right
gold diggers, soul pickers
grave diggers of the night
Exon spillers and Enron shillers
all dancing in the freedom cave
to the warrior knave pot add:
tongue of speculator
liver of a money changer
eye of eagle and stripe of flag
cigar from Rush
leather from Condolezza
flight suit from the compassionate commander
a charm a flag pin and a rose
readies the potion for the chosen
rise rose and risen
the bubbles are a given
Claudius:
Tomatoes...
Interesting article on CNN:
http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/americas/06/11/mexico.tomatoes.ap/index.html?eref=rss_latest
Also, this does create a glut of tomatoes on the Mexican market. The farmers there are being hurt by this. Hmm..and it is driving the prices down on their tomatoes in their country by putting too many tomatoes in their market. Plus, this is a delicate crop and spoils easily.
Is this another attack on the farmers of Mexico to drive them to cross the border and seek jobs here? Ruin a way for them to make a living in a country that struggles with poverty? Or are we trying to increase our GDP of tomatoes as Mexican imports have been hurting tomato growers here. Back in 1997, Floridian farmers accused Mexican farmers of dumping tomatoes in our market to drive prices down? Could be revenge?
Could be a test of our government on food tampering. They will go to any lengths to get what they want.
So many thoughts...but no real answers. Someone knows what is going on. Could be just people creating their on e-coli. Most households are not that clean nor are the areas we use to prepare our food. Afterall, our homes are not monitored for e-coli contamination. It is probably more common than we all want to admit. Could be our own doing.
Who knows..?
Thanks Naomi. For those who have yet to read her latest book... it's an eye opener that allows real perspective. Get to your library or pick up a copy... I bought one but only because the waiting list was over 350 at Seattle Pub Lib.
One of things that you didn't touch upon was the oil grab in Northern Iraq... The monkeypuppet's buddies backroomed a deal with the Kurds that has the other two factions totally pissed:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/03/world/middleeast/03kurdistan.html
Panel Questions State Dept. Role in Iraq Oil Deal
criticalthinktank: "…food fear, terrorist fear, fear..has alot of power in it."
I disagree with you there, my friend. Fear is a no thing. It is simply an energy - just like every other emotion - joy, frustration, compassion, anger, love, pity, forgiveness, doubt, kindness. The power lies in a single individual (or group of individuals) REACTION to the energy called fear.
Fear, like all of the emotions listed above (and any others you want to add), comes and goes - just like love or happiness or joy. Happiness is sometimes intense, sometimes low level, sometimes absent. Even the most intense, heart-bursting, smile-breaking happiness goes away. Same with fear. The most intense mind-numbing fear also goes away. NOTHING is permanent.
It is the reaction to fear (or happiness, etc.) and the consequences of that reaction that creates power. If the the reaction to fleeting happiness that arises from a pay increase is to go out and spend it on a bigger car or bigger house or more stuff - that reaction has its own, very powerful, consequences. If the reaction to fleeting fear that arises from hearing the word 'terrorist' is to kill a person so that you can feel the fleeting emotions of happiness and safety for just one more fleeting moment - that reaction also has its own very powerful consequences.
If more people could see fear for what it is - a fleeting burst of energy that burns intensely but goes away - and wouldn't react to it in ways that simply make the energy burn more intensely, the whole universe would be much more in balance.
criticalthinktank,
Thanks for correcting me. First, my spelling of tomatos should be tomatoes as you point out. Second, despite my sarcasm, I do feel for the small, non-corporate farmers. You are addressing my concern, which I appreciate. I understand that there are worries about the economy, price of oil, etc. But, it seems to me that food safety should be right up there. Virtually every other month, some meat packing company has to recall its product because of tainted meat. Truthfully, I almost feel like Upton Sinclair, although I do not profess to have his level of intelligence. That is why I buy much of my food from the local farmer's market. The people are honest about their products, safe, and nice. You raise some very good questions. I too am curious what is happening and I totally agree with you that someone knows what is going on.
TruOrange: Fear has played a big part of getting Bush and the neo-cons what they want. You have to agree with me on that.
Ever see the movie V for Vendetta? Lots of parallels to our government in that movie and they knock Bush in it..! ha!
Anyways, another 'food for thought', McCain is in Mexico today with Jeb Bush...I read: "The Republican presidential hopeful was meeting later with Mexican President Felipe Calderon, where immigration and trade were to top his agenda." So McCain, last week, was in Canada discussing trade, now he is Mexico discussing trade. He supports NAFTA not to mention he already acts like 'HE IS PRESIDENT' addressing these issues..
Could be the voter machines are already set up to give him the Presidency. Remember..BUSH STOLE THE ELECTION...2 Times with fixed voting machines.
This tomato scare is connected to McCain's visit somehow...Canada and Mexico are the biggest exporters of tomatoes to America..Interesting as the web thickens...what fly will get caught?
What they fail to mention about GMOs (or food in general) is how the people in poor nations are going to afford food.
They're not starving because they don't have food. They're not starving because they don't have access. They're starving because food costs more than they can afford.
Until you remove this equation, you are always going to have starvation. GMOs or not.
Orwell had it right on both counts -
We have the government of his book "Animal Farm",
And the endless war and prying "Big Brother" security of "1984"!
Gus just looks at it a little differently, as oppression and control are the same no matter who or how they do it.
This morning I watched a CSPAN program in which a representative from a leading oil research company spent considerable energy convincing viewers that US did not invade Iraq because of OIL. Up to the point when I had to get out of the house to head to work, very few views had challenged her about the false conventional view that both Iraq wars were not about oil grab. The TV guest and most of the viewers danced around the crux of the matter.
There are still many people in the US who still refuse to face the hard cold facts that the only reason we are in Iraq is because we rapaciously coveted their property and that we decided to steal it from them because we could do it and get away with it. The rest of the world came to that conclusion (Iraq war is about oil) from day one and shortly thereafter. Ask any grade 5 kid in Buenos Aires, Tokyo, Maputo, Karachi, Stockholm ….as to why US invaded Iraq and the kid will tell you without batting an eye lid that it was because of OIL. Most of those who are still in denial in US have bought into this propaganda that we cannot indulge in that kind of criminality and immorality yet history is full of evidence to the contrary!
Neocons are essentially trotsky-ites. Instead of openly forcing consolidation through the power of the state, they are simply destroying any regulation to capitalism because they know it will result in the natural consolidation of power.
As a reformed free market fundamentalist... AND a reformed avid socalist I say we need a combination of both. The government should provide education, electricity, media, health care, and a temporary saftey net for people to get back on their feet after taking the risks necessary for innovation. The government should also have a responsibilty to help maintain a clean house and promote programs that help the people meet these goals. Consumer products and unneccessary services should not be regulated and should be open to the public.
The thing your progressives don't realize is that its our PRIVATE CENTRAL BANK (commonly referred to the federal reserve) that destroys this country. The shareholders... yes the bank has shareholders but no one will tell us who they are... take all of the revenue from the federal income tax. That means none, NONE of your income tax goes towards government services, public projects, salaries, or even towards a bomb to kill brown foreigners. You all NEED to start talking with the Libertarians and unite around just this one issue... because even though you have different philosophies, both groups are informed and would actually be able to see their programs put into affect without a cartel of bankers leaching money out of our pockets while purposfully devaluing it by keeps interest rates so low.
PLEASE INVESTIGATE THE FEDERAL RESERVE!!! THIS ISSUE COULD BE THE BEGINING OF A THIRD PARTY, CONSISTING OF THOSE FROM THE PHILISOPHICAL RIGHT AND LEFT, THAT COULD DISMANTLE THE REPUB-DEM BULLCRAP!
Native Americans have always known it, and so did even the Early Modern Irish and English people displaced by the profit motive. Capitalism destroys community. Period.
criticalthinktank July 3rd, 2008 3:53 pm: "TruOrange: Fear has played a big part of getting Bush and the neo-cons what they want. You have to agree with me on that."
Agreed to a point. I again say that it is not fear in and of itself that has consolidated the neo-con power. It is the fact that people living inside and outside the US have REACTED to the fear-inspiring messages that the controlling elite have repeated over and over and over again. Individual people (thus making groups of people) have REACTED to the fear energy, not by just watching it pass away - as it always will - but by running away from it and giving up all personal power and individual responsibility to anyone who will help them feel just a moment of security - which is an energy as fleeting as fear.
The reaction of giving up more and more personal power has only allowed organizations (read here banks, corporations, military, governments, the media, etc.) with harmful intentions and a good line - i.e.'Trust us, we will make you feel secure and not afraid' to put out (a) more fear-inspiring messages and (b) messages about the appropriate way to react (usually the most inappropriate way) which in turn generate more messages and more inappropriate reactions.
The neo-cons have concentrated their power not because of fear, but because of the reactions to fear. Sadly, it's only at the point where so much power has been concentrated that individuals begin to ask themselves, 'What were we so afraid of in the first place? How could we let this happen?"
We're not yet at that point. Slowly, more and more are asking these questions. But is it enough to make a big enough change quickly enough to save our mother earth? Too soon to tell.
A must-read for all of you: The Political Mind: Why You Can't Understand 21st-Century American Politics with an 18th-Century Brain. George Lakoff.
Lakoff lays out a program by which Liberals/Progressives can reclaim the moral high ground from the radical conservatives and establish government as it was intended by our "liberal" forefathers: a life-affirming institution created to protect and empower the people, based on the principles of empathy, responsibility and courage.
He explains "how we let this happen" and what we can do about it.
Spread the word.
Naomi Klein does most certainly have it figured out, and I don't care what radio show she appears on.
Extortionist-in-Chief is so damn descriptive. :-)
Ahurumazda (lovely name, ancient Persian the Zoarostrian faith) - I also despise Capitalism, because it never ceases to impoverish the weakest in society. To put all of this into context, a Premiership soccer player in the UK, can now earn £140,000 a week, whereas a National Health Doctor is earning around £100,000 per year. We have 70% of our workforce earning less than £20,000 per year.
I find the whole situation disgusting, and want to move far away from all of this evil.
Naomi Klein speaks the truth and yes, it is terrifying and depressing. But I'm tired of reading here that there's nothing to be done.
Work to expand democracy by acting in solidarity with every hungry person in the world. Let that solidarity guide your choice of actions. Right action will result.
On July 10, the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, Hank Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will testify before Congress to lobby for expanded powers of the Fed.
They will recommend changing the banking charter to include all financial institutions, thus effectively transferring, control over "national banks, federal savings associations, and federal [and state] credit union charters, and be available to all corporate forms, including stock, mutual and ownership structures."
In addition.
http://www.gata.org/node/6399/print
"Officials with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) have informed Bernanke about a plan that would have been unheard-of in the past: a general examination of the US financial system. The IMF's board of directors has ruled that a so-called Financial Sector Assessment Program (FSAP) is to be carried out in the United States. It is nothing less than an X-ray of the entire US financial system.
As part of the assessment, the Fed, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the major investment banks, mortgage banks, and hedge funds will be asked to hand over confidential documents to the IMF team. They will be required to answer the questions they are asked during interviews. Their databases will be subjected to so-called stress tests -- worst-case scenarios designed to simulate the broader effects of failures of other major financial institutions or a continuing decline of the dollar.
Under its bylaws, the IMF is charged with the supervision of the international monetary system. Roughly two-thirds of IMF members -- but never the United States -- have already endured this painful procedure.
For seven years, US President George W. Bush refused to allow the IMF to conduct its assessment. Even now, he has only given the IMF board his consent under one important condition. The review can begin in Bush's last year in office, but it may not be completed until he has left the White House."
First of all, Congress has never been permitted to do a complete audit on the Fed. Second, as a result of the toxic waste the Fed took onto it's books to bail out it's shareholders financial institutions (not banks), the Fed is technically insolvent.
The purpose of the audit is to expose this insolvency and justify a world currency as the reserve currency to replace the USD. This means the US will no longer be able to service it's debt.
The US will then become just another debt ridden 3rd world country who will end up like Zimbabwe if they oppose the global elite demands to hand over it's assets to pay off the debt.
Once the US is finished as a superpower and our military and finacial assets seized by the UN to pay off our debt, the world can be globalized.
Obama voted to follow the Bush lead in not holding the telephone companies responsible for tapping into our conversations.
Obma voted for more money for Iraq.
Obama has now changed his mind and is all in favor of Nafta,
the curse that has destroyed the working classes.
Since Obama has chosen his new friends, "Corporate America",
All the working classes, Black and White should for their own
survival endorse and draft Ralph Nader to let the Democrat
Dummies know that we will no longer be taken for granted.
Why give Obama and the Clintons another four years of meddling
into our lives and making us slaves of the New World Order.
Now is the time to strike.
I would imagine that Naomi prefers we elect Barack over John McCain (since the latter is substantially aligned with what she calls the current Extortionist in Chief), but she didn't mention it here. So I will (as always).
MiMiCcS,
Thanks for your post on the IMF endeavor. I doubt there is going to be a "world" currency (for lack of agreement on its backers) and I'm rock-solid sure the UN is not going to seize America's military assets. But you are right to bring this up, because a third-party audit of the U.S. Fed is going to highlight the obvious truth to the world that we ARE NOT too big to finanacially fail. And that will be a costly (to us citizens) epiphany.
Ah, the free market.
Shall we free markets from the laws of man? (Regulations)
Is it ok to murder to produce quarterly profits to raise the company's stock price?
Is it ok to use bribery to produce quarterly profits to raise the company's stock price?
Is it ok to use slaves to produce quarterly profits to raise the company's stock price?
WIKI: Martin Luther King Jr. forty years ago.
"Toward the end of his life, King more frequently expressed his opposition to the war and his desire to see a redistribution of resources to correct racial and economic injustice.[81] Though his public language was guarded, so as to avoid being linked to communism by his political enemies, in private he sometimes spoke of his support for democratic socialism. In one speech, he stated that "something is wrong with capitalism" and claimed, "There must be a better distribution of wealth, and maybe America must move toward a democratic socialism."[82]"
Wake up people, Crazy dudes are shaping society to be like a car with themselves being the driver. Ever since our birth all the information that were fed to us is that the car is the only means of travel, all we are taught are how to produce parts for the car, how to hop on it and get as close as we can to the driver's seat. Now the car is heading toward a cliff at ever increasing speeds with the driver drunk beyond redemption. Lets realize the danger in all this, beat the drunk driver into a pulp on the steering wheel, and hope off the car and realize we can actually walk and enjoy the scenes more!!
My 2 cents worth on the confusion regarding "communism" and "capitalism".
The word "communism" has power – it generates fear and hatred, inspires lifelong commitment, and arouses intense debate. Americans have strong opinions about communism and most consider themselves anti-communist.
This anti-communism is puzzling. By definition communism is an economic system that benefits the vast majority. Webster's New Universal Unabridged Dictionary defines communism as an economic theory or system of the ownership of all means of production (and distribution) by the community or society, with all members of the community or society sharing in the work and the products.
Capitalism, on the other hand, is an economic system that benefits the few at the expense of the many. Webster's New Universal Unabridged Dictionary defines capitalism as the economic system in which all or most of the means of production and distribution, as land, factories, railroads, etc. are privately owned and operated for profit, originally under fully competitive conditions: it has been generally characterized by a tendency toward concentration of wealth, and in its later phase, by the growth of great corporations, increased governmental control, etc.
I haven't read NK's book yet even though its been out a while. I certainly intend to though.
Capitalism may not be perfect but I find it to be a preferable system of finance to the alternatives. It would be much better if some folks didn't abuse the hell out of it though.
To Rich M.
Don't fly off the handle.
The reference to "Trotsky-ites" being like Neo-cons is apt, as, like Trotskyists, Neo-cons see themselves (arguably)as a vanguard.
The rest of the comparison may be on weaker ground.
And the quip about Libertarianism. The term means different things depending on who you are talking to, what period you are talking about and where.
For example, in France,to be a libertarian means you are an anarchist. Another example would be that Noam Chomsky considers himself to be a libertarian socialist.
Do some research before you spout.
Naomi Klein's excellent article and book ("Disaster Capitalism") remind me of Woody Allen's joke about the guy who pores his heart out to the taxi driver about human suffering, the great void, and the apparent meaninglessness of life, to which the cab driver replies:
"Yeah...well...it's like anything else...."
Naomi totally rocks. We must find the will/energy/persuasion to force a mixed economy, where we stop socializing risk for the greedy corporatists, and instead nationalize needs, like energy and health care, and maybe transportation and telecommunications!! Please consider this seriously! And, please read and spread The Shock Doctrine. it is the double truth!