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Published on Monday, October 27, 2008 by CommonDreams.org
Fixing the Crisis Is Not So Easy
Five Problems Block Government Success
Most Americans know the phrase, “if it ain’t broke don’t fix it.” In the good times, when the economy boomed and Wall Street prospered, it looked like nothing was broke. The free market, we were told, was working like magic insuring prosperity and progress.
But then it happened, out of sight and out of mind, an upward trajectory turned in the other direction. In what was for many an unbelievable chain of events, markets started melting down, banks began writing down portfolios clogged with asset-backed securities that had no assets behind them. Confidence shattered. Suddenly, believers in unregulated transactions realized something was very, very wrong.
Alan Greenspan was “shocked” and said he was wrong to support deregulation of financial markets. As headlines conjured up breadlines and recession, with “something worse” threatening, the government was pressed to act.
Over a year later, after eight interest rate cuts, with one more promised, and the injection of trillions into credit markets and banks worldwide, little has changed. Markets are volatile and trending down while banks are still not lending despite frequent projections of massive unemployment and stagflation.
At the same time, we live in a country that believes that whenever there are problems, there must be solutions. And in the case of the financial crisis, there is no shortage of proposals especially because the whole system—if not capitalism itself—seems at risk. (Even the NY Times ran an editorial on “Rescuing Capitalism.”) This is not a situation that inspires confidence in token reforms and minor adjustments. There seems to be a consensus that this crisis is systemic and structural even as the candidates reduce it all to tax policy.
That hasn’t stopped the government from dipping into its tool bag and throwing everything it has at the problem—bailouts on an unprecedented scale, including, now, of insurance companies and auto lenders. There have been pro-business rule changes, even partial nationalizations of banks, mortgage companies, and insurance combines.
Together, the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve Bank seem to be fighting on every front. They appear to be giving away money. Is it working?
“Scarcely a day goes by without some dramatic new initiative," writes The New Yorker’s financial columnist James Suriwieki, “even as market chaos makes each new idea soon seem like ancient history.”
Why is that? Surely the people in command are smart, savvy and know the system well. What are they missing? They now know it's broke (and many of them are broke too) but they can’t seem to fix it.
Here are five views on what they are getting wrong.
l. The System Needs to Collapse
That’s the view of a perennial bear investor Marc Fabor, who thinks the market was primed for a technical rally but is not keen on the long-term prospects for the US economy:
"The governments in this world have no other option but to print money. That will lead down the road to inflation,'' Faber said. "You don't need to be an economist graduated from Harvard to know we're already in a recession. They will just put white paint on a crumbling building."
"To rebuild economic health in the United States, you need a serious recession that will last several years,'' he said. "The patient that got drunk on credit growth needs to go into rehabilitation. To give him more alcohol, the way the Fed and the Treasury propose to do, is the wrong medicine.''
2. Consumers Are Not Spending
Bloomberg reports: "The big concern is that households, spooked by the turmoil in financial markets, will cut back rapidly and sharply, plunging companies into bankruptcy and deepening a recession that many economists say has already begun."
"If we did have a quick cut in spending, it could turn a pretty nasty recession into possibly the worst downturn we've seen in the postwar period,'' says Michael Feroli, a former Federal Reserve official now at JPMorgan Chase & Co.
3. Moral Hazard: They Are Bailing Out the Wrong People
There is something fundamentally wrong in rewarding the people who are responsible for the problem. William Buitner, a financial historian at the London School of Economics, worries that this will lead to more collapses in the future: “by boosting the incentives for future reckless lending to elephantesquely large financial enterprises."
"Unless not only the existing shareholders of the banks benefiting from these capital injections but also the holders of the banks’ unsecured debt (junior and senior) and all other creditors of the bank (with the possible exception of retail depositors up to some appropriate limit) are made to pay a painful penalty for investing in excessively risky if not outright dodgy ventures, we are laying the foundations of the next systemic crisis, even as we are struggling to escape from the current one.”
The bailout was sold deceptively. A New York Times investigation found it was intended to foster bank consolidation, not loans. Journalist Sam Smith wrote:
The FBI announced that it lacks the staff to fully investigate the pervasive crimes on Wall Street.
5. Good People Are Leaving in Disgust
Some of the best and the brightest are giving up, rejecting businesses based on flimflams and deceptive marketing. Two years ago, a very successful investor, Andrew Ladhe, started returning money to his investors. “Our entire banking system is a complete disaster,” he wrote. “In my opinion, nearly every major bank would be insolvent if they marked their assets to market.”
In October 2008 he closed his firm all together explaining:
“Recently, on the front page of Section C of the Wall Street Journal, a hedge fund manager who was also closing up shop (a $300 million fund), was quoted as saying, 'What I have learned about the hedge fund business is that I hate it.' I could not agree more with that statement. I was in this game for the money. The low hanging fruit, i.e. idiots whose parents paid for prep school, Yale, and then the Harvard MBA, was there for the taking. These people who were (often) truly not worthy of the education they received (or supposedly received) rose to the top of companies such as AIG, Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers and all levels of our government. All of this behavior supporting the Aristocracy only ended up making it easier for me to find people stupid enough to take the other side of my trades. God bless America.”
These are just five reasons why “the quick fixers” are unlikely to succeed. Notes Harpers, we a need more than tinkering. They call for a fundamental reconstruction at a time when we are also “menaced by dwindling energy supplies and accelerating climate change.”
Also, the Captain Ahabs in charge should admit defeat and step down as was suggested by this comment on a financial website:
But then it happened, out of sight and out of mind, an upward trajectory turned in the other direction. In what was for many an unbelievable chain of events, markets started melting down, banks began writing down portfolios clogged with asset-backed securities that had no assets behind them. Confidence shattered. Suddenly, believers in unregulated transactions realized something was very, very wrong.
Alan Greenspan was “shocked” and said he was wrong to support deregulation of financial markets. As headlines conjured up breadlines and recession, with “something worse” threatening, the government was pressed to act.
Over a year later, after eight interest rate cuts, with one more promised, and the injection of trillions into credit markets and banks worldwide, little has changed. Markets are volatile and trending down while banks are still not lending despite frequent projections of massive unemployment and stagflation.
At the same time, we live in a country that believes that whenever there are problems, there must be solutions. And in the case of the financial crisis, there is no shortage of proposals especially because the whole system—if not capitalism itself—seems at risk. (Even the NY Times ran an editorial on “Rescuing Capitalism.”) This is not a situation that inspires confidence in token reforms and minor adjustments. There seems to be a consensus that this crisis is systemic and structural even as the candidates reduce it all to tax policy.
That hasn’t stopped the government from dipping into its tool bag and throwing everything it has at the problem—bailouts on an unprecedented scale, including, now, of insurance companies and auto lenders. There have been pro-business rule changes, even partial nationalizations of banks, mortgage companies, and insurance combines.
Together, the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve Bank seem to be fighting on every front. They appear to be giving away money. Is it working?
“Scarcely a day goes by without some dramatic new initiative," writes The New Yorker’s financial columnist James Suriwieki, “even as market chaos makes each new idea soon seem like ancient history.”
Why is that? Surely the people in command are smart, savvy and know the system well. What are they missing? They now know it's broke (and many of them are broke too) but they can’t seem to fix it.
Here are five views on what they are getting wrong.
l. The System Needs to Collapse
That’s the view of a perennial bear investor Marc Fabor, who thinks the market was primed for a technical rally but is not keen on the long-term prospects for the US economy:
"The governments in this world have no other option but to print money. That will lead down the road to inflation,'' Faber said. "You don't need to be an economist graduated from Harvard to know we're already in a recession. They will just put white paint on a crumbling building."
"To rebuild economic health in the United States, you need a serious recession that will last several years,'' he said. "The patient that got drunk on credit growth needs to go into rehabilitation. To give him more alcohol, the way the Fed and the Treasury propose to do, is the wrong medicine.''
2. Consumers Are Not Spending
Bloomberg reports: "The big concern is that households, spooked by the turmoil in financial markets, will cut back rapidly and sharply, plunging companies into bankruptcy and deepening a recession that many economists say has already begun."
"If we did have a quick cut in spending, it could turn a pretty nasty recession into possibly the worst downturn we've seen in the postwar period,'' says Michael Feroli, a former Federal Reserve official now at JPMorgan Chase & Co.
3. Moral Hazard: They Are Bailing Out the Wrong People
There is something fundamentally wrong in rewarding the people who are responsible for the problem. William Buitner, a financial historian at the London School of Economics, worries that this will lead to more collapses in the future: “by boosting the incentives for future reckless lending to elephantesquely large financial enterprises."
"Unless not only the existing shareholders of the banks benefiting from these capital injections but also the holders of the banks’ unsecured debt (junior and senior) and all other creditors of the bank (with the possible exception of retail depositors up to some appropriate limit) are made to pay a painful penalty for investing in excessively risky if not outright dodgy ventures, we are laying the foundations of the next systemic crisis, even as we are struggling to escape from the current one.”
The bailout was sold deceptively. A New York Times investigation found it was intended to foster bank consolidation, not loans. Journalist Sam Smith wrote:
“Never in the history of the United States has so much public money been spent with so little accounting of where it is right now and where it's going next. Never has so much public money been spent by order of officials who helped to create the crisis the money is supposed to resolve. Never has so much public money been spent by officials for the benefit of so many former colleagues. Never has so much public money been spent with so little explanation by the media. And never has so much public money been spent with so little debate over possible alternatives."4. Financial Scammers and Criminals Are Going Unpunished
The FBI announced that it lacks the staff to fully investigate the pervasive crimes on Wall Street.
5. Good People Are Leaving in Disgust
Some of the best and the brightest are giving up, rejecting businesses based on flimflams and deceptive marketing. Two years ago, a very successful investor, Andrew Ladhe, started returning money to his investors. “Our entire banking system is a complete disaster,” he wrote. “In my opinion, nearly every major bank would be insolvent if they marked their assets to market.”
In October 2008 he closed his firm all together explaining:
“Recently, on the front page of Section C of the Wall Street Journal, a hedge fund manager who was also closing up shop (a $300 million fund), was quoted as saying, 'What I have learned about the hedge fund business is that I hate it.' I could not agree more with that statement. I was in this game for the money. The low hanging fruit, i.e. idiots whose parents paid for prep school, Yale, and then the Harvard MBA, was there for the taking. These people who were (often) truly not worthy of the education they received (or supposedly received) rose to the top of companies such as AIG, Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers and all levels of our government. All of this behavior supporting the Aristocracy only ended up making it easier for me to find people stupid enough to take the other side of my trades. God bless America.”
These are just five reasons why “the quick fixers” are unlikely to succeed. Notes Harpers, we a need more than tinkering. They call for a fundamental reconstruction at a time when we are also “menaced by dwindling energy supplies and accelerating climate change.”
Also, the Captain Ahabs in charge should admit defeat and step down as was suggested by this comment on a financial website:
Perhaps Bernanke and Greenspan should see if there is an opening for the captain of the Exxon Valdees, job requirements: asleep at the switch.Still to be answered: Can the system be saved from itself?
- Posted in
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36 Comments so far
Show AllPerhaps Bernanke and Greenspan should see if there is an opening for the captain of the Exxon Valdees, job requirements: asleep at the switch.
George Wanker Bush will be looking for a couple of mules to get his coke for him once he slinks out of the White House in the dead of night at the end of next January. Bernanke and Greenspan are perfect candidates since they are both Super Peddlers of this nation's favorite drugs - Greed and Stupidity.
DS is so anti-pro-America. All my conservative friends assure me that everything is fine, all fundamentals are strong, jobs are plentiful for the non-lazy, wars are being won left and right, and God's still in charge of team USA.
Now if we can just stop those damn socialist elitist media gays from marryin' each other...
rabble rabble rabble
I suppose the only silver lining, if there is any, is a uniting of the progressive left in a way that hasn't been seen since the 1960's. Now if the progressive left could learn a little from the way organizing was done in the 1930's.
We should invest in publishing houses that will be printing books about this for decades. It's the new bubble.
Nice.
But here is my answer to Danny's final query: I don't want to save it. I want to replace it.
And the rich fat cats are busily building arguments against Congress making any laws that might be used against the obvious wrongdoers in this financial disaster. One went something like this - "there's already too many laws that convict people who can't possibly know all the laws, and didn't think they were breaking any..." and "When everything was going great, no one complained or said any laws was being broken."
thanks Danny
&YYY&
The world banking and currency system is being manipulated as a scam.
Like war is a racket, bankster is a game to benefit the worlds flim flam.
A racket to own the most, by squeezing every last drop of wealth from the masses.
If you are not in on the game, you do not belong to the upper middle classes.
The rest of the world - in most places - has been dealing with the other side of our system for over a century. Thats how we became 'a world power'. We have been living with the virtual Berlin wall of nationalism otherwise known as manifest destiny, which is now manifesting. It serves to reaffirm fundamental priniciples such as reciprocity. The image of a brittle shell that is crumbling keeps coming to mind.
What is emerging has no name yet, our propensity to name hasn't yet had the true aha! moment. Keep your eyes and mind open and be patient. A mark of that moment is that it is without anger or fear and brings a smile in thinking of generations to come and that of a person you may never meet also thinking of generations to come.
The world from outside our walls is still unfamiliar, diversified, unified in that diversity and fighting the same beast of a system. There are elements of structure that are very valuable and others that we need to form groundswell coalitions to change.
What unifies us? To me it is seeing the rest of the world and knowing that a lot of our answers are beyond all sorts of false borders we've been made to fear.
Has anyone decided what they are going to do after the collapse? Since we are in the initial stages we still have a little time to prepare.
Danny, There's a way out of this mess that even I can come up with:
To wit: 1)re-do the mortgages and 2)put money in people's pockets. This time around, put the money not in Wall Streeter's pockets, but in the pockets of Average Joe and Jills. You know, the Main Street crowd. This is because 70% of our economy is dependent on consumer spending and Joe and Jill are big spenders.
Where does this money come from? The government prints it up! Yup, the good ole USA turns on the printing press--we need to borrow and spend big time----aka "deficit spending." Money needs to be sent to State and local governments for infrastructure, hirings, etc, Federal green energy initiatives, etc. Remember "W" said people should shop when the war in Iraq kicked in . He was half right- spend, but give main streeters the money first.
Isn't printing money crazy? Sure but when you're the numero uno currency it don't much matter.
Wont that put us into debt city? Not really, current debt is at 4-5 % of GDP, When FDR finally sent unemployment packing in 1944 it was at a whopping 30%!
Didn't we do this before? Yes during the Great Depression--it worked then! What if we don't have an FDR and economist John Maynard Keynes working on the problem?
No problem, you got me!
Dr Wu, the last of the big-time thinkers
You are on the right track. Not enough people are talking about WAGES. If the average person had more wages, they could pay their mortgage. With our run-up in productivity, the proceeds have gone to mergers/acquisitions and inflation of the stock market instead of wages. Give people more wages and they'll buy more and create jobs. Give people more wages and they will save money again. Give people more wages and they may not mind paying some taxes to support Government services. The middle class has been losing ground for years and has been hanging on by borrowing and by having dual-income-earning families. Why is inflation in housing prices and stock prices good but inflation in wages so bad? If America has become so productive over the years then pay Americans more in wages!
The magic remedy is jobs! Without decent paying jobs, consumers have little money to spend once their credit lines expire. Trickle down economics claimed if we give more money to the rich, they would create more jobs; instead, they used the extra money they got to send them away. They wound up destroying the very 'markets' they claimed to worship! If people in the lower and middle classes don't get this by now, they probably never will. Obama's idea to create jobs rebuilding infrastructure and by developing alternative sources of energy is on the right track. That's a good start, but outsourcing mania must be halted as well. Perhaps companies with most of their workforce somewhere else should lose their American Corporation status, and all that goes along with it.
Excellent comment!
The Banking system is not the economy---check out this article that offers real solutions. As Buckminster Fuller said "Change never happens by attacking the existing reality. Instead, create a new model that makes the old one obsolete."
This article is about creating a new model.
http://www.opednews.com/maxwrite/comments_email.php?m=3928&r=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.opednews.com%2Farticles%2FThe-Banking-system-is-not-by-Ann-Kramer-081024-65.html
This was a great article. Thanks
Our standard of living has been built on the basis of Imperialism and exploiting labor for a good long while. It is about time we recognize this system has no merit as is broken.
As old goat notes we have not been the good goats in the bargain.
We have an excess of goods and a derth of markets able to pay for them. A start would be fair trade with living wages for everyone, checks on hot or speculative money like a Tobin tax, and perhaps a universal epiphany that might does not make right and class or success does not mean more stuff.
If fair trade were the rule rather than the exception money that does not know what to do with itself could be used to realize the potential of a worldwide universal bill of rights as opposed to scarier weapons of domination.
Glendon Wayne
how can we keep talking about jobs?
there are no jobs that do not directly involve the destruction of the planet
the industrial life of school\jobs\home ownership\retirement, complete with the right to purchase\discard any manufactured items you can afford along the way, is a life that must be relegated to the past
there is a point where planetary destruction will not only cease to be favorable or profitable, it will cease to be tolerable...permissable
activity does not trump survival
individual humans are responsible for learning to control themselves
humans, as a society, must do the same
the word sacrifice must become sacred
we must humbly rejoin the ranks of the animals
There are many answers to our current predicament; not just one.
Let's start with some basic macro-economics. First - cut all wasteful spending (e.g. excessive defense, wars, empire). Second - balance the budget. Third - do whatever can be afforded to create jobs.
Second, we have to restore power to the American people. To grant charters to for-profit corporations, without a demand that they serve the national interest ahead of their shareholders, is to introduce a cancer into the body politic. The pretense, thus far, is that we empower greed and then try to regulate it. How's that been working out? Corporations that do not serve we, the people, should be disbanded.
Third, we cannot allow the corruption of our government by big money. Who could deny that those with money receive preferential treatment? The result? The rich get richer; the poor get poorer; and the government responds more and more to the rich. Unacceptable.
Fourth, we, the people, bear a great responsibility for what has happened. We must put an end to our unsustainable materialism. We are bankrupting ourselves and the country and destroying the planet.
Fifth, we, the people, are guilty again. Too many of us are too ill-informed to support a democracy or any other kind of representative government.
Six, our mainstream media must be decentralized. Too much media power is far too concentrated in the hands of far too few. We cannot create a well informed electorate, even with the help of the internet, given the current media composition.
Seventh, and perhaps most disturbing, is that we, the people, must believe we can do whatever is needed to change our society. I fear that far too many of us have come to believe that we just need to vote for the right people and they'll fix it. To quote the always insightful Gomer Pyle, "surprise, surprise, surprise."
And finally, we must architect a system that recognizes certain necessities of life and provides for all people regardless of economic status. Health care should not be a commodity available only to those who can afford it. The wealthy should not be able to create more global warming merely because they can afford a big SUV and the high gas prices. Market rationing (i.e. by price) is not acceptable for certain aspects of society. It's a lesson we need to teach.
These changes, and undoubtedly many others, are what we need. It seems we will go through a long, painful transition before we are ready to act on them. Perhaps the next question to ask is not what changes we require but how to speed their arrival. Time and suffering will get us there; perhaps someone has a faster, less painful route.
Alan MacDonald
welshTerrier, all very good points and essential for insuring that a real democracy of the people, and not 'corporatist Empire', rules our country and lives.
Alan MacDonald
Excellent analysis by Barry Grey of WSWS:
"All of the claims that were made to justify the bank bailout have been exposed as lies. President Bush, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Paulson were joined by the Democratic congressional leadership and Barack Obama in warning that the bailout had to be passed, and passed immediately, despite massive popular opposition. Those who opposed the plan were denounced for jeopardizing the well being of the American people.
In a nationally televised speech delivered September 24, in advance of the congressional vote on the bailout plan, Bush said it would "help American consumers and businessmen get credit to meet their daily needs and create jobs." If the bailout was not passed, he warned, "More banks could fail, including some in your community. The stock market would drop even more, which would reduce the value of your retirement account.... More businesses would close their doors, and millions of Americans could lose their jobs ... ultimately, our country could experience a long and painful recession."
One month later, the bailout has been enacted, and all of the dire developments--banks and businesses disappearing, the stock market plunging, unemployment skyrocketing--which the American people were told it would prevent are unfolding with accelerating speed.
While Obama talks about the need for all Americans to "come together" in a spirit of "shared sacrifice"--meaning drastic cuts in Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security and other social programs--and the cost of the bailout is cited to justify fiscal austerity, the bankers proceed to ruthlessly prosecute their class interests."
Full article:
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/oct2008/pers-o27.shtml
Yes, the 'bailout' is being 'gamed' by the ruling-elite 'corporate financial Empire' that controls our country behind the facade of their two-party, 'Vichy' sham of faux-democracy.
Danny Schechter could have 'cut to the chase' and simply said that any "government success is being blocked" because the government is not really our government, but just a false-front for the 'corporatist Empire' that created this crisis to begin with.
One final point; there is no mention of the 'method' that the corporate financial Empire employed to create this whole scam ----- 'gaming' the well known 'market failure' of 'negative externality cost dumping'. The negative externality costs being dumped were hundreds of billions of dollars of 'debt bombs', while the stealthy and complex new bombers dropping those debt bombs were sorties of CDOs, SIVs, CDSs, and the supersonic B2 derivative bomber.
I have read that the net worth of the wealthiest 400 families in the U.S. is around 1.3 trillion dollars. The financial mess that currently plagues our country can largely be laid at the feet of many of these families. Perhaps the most just way to address the financial problems that are currently ruining our country would be to seize a sizeable portion of the wealth of each of these families, at least the ones who can be linked to the current financial crisis, and apply the assets seized to resolving the financial problems we face. This seems like a much more reasonable approach than the stealing of tax dollars from hard working Americans who have seen their net earnings decrease over the past 30 years even as they produce more goods of higher quality than in the past. Let the people who did the partying pay for the party, not the servants who waited on the partiers.
Alan MacDonald
Here's another excellent analysis of the situation by Michael Hudson in CounterPunch (which is fully consistent with Barry Grey's from WSWS):
"Instead of pursuing a Keynesian type of deficit spending in a manner that will increase employment (government spending on goods and services, infrastructure spending and transfer payments), the Treasury and Federal Reserve are providing money to the banks to buy each other up, consolidating the U.S. financial system into a European-type system with only a few major banks. The financial system is to become monopolized and trustified, reversing two centuries of economic policy aimed at preventing financial dominance of the economy.
None of the money being given to the banks really will trickle down, of course. Instead, the largest upward transfer of property in over seventy years will occur. The policy of giving money to the wealthiest sectors – these days the financial sector – turns the trickle-down economy into a euphemism for the concentration of wealth. The pretense is that America’s economy needs the financial and property overhead in order for the “real” economy to “take off” again. But a stronger financial sector selling yet more debt to the economy at large threatens to deter recovery, not to speak of a new takeoff."
Full article:
http://www.counterpunch.org/hudson10272008.html
Main Street is drain street as far as the banks and hedgies are concerned.
Like so many of you, I disagree with DS that the system should be saved. It's a festering boil that needs to be lanced and drained so that the healthy part that provides necessities can carry on and we can take care of each other.
http://www.opednews.com/articles/Why-Save-Capitalism-by-wagelaborer-080920-685.html
BAILOUT FALLACY
It is remarkable that the most dangerous aspect of our current financial crisis is never mentioned. Unless our adverse trade deficits are mitigated, our fiscal problems can only worsen despite costly (and questionable) bailouts and tax reductions, which will add to our trade imbalance since most of the tax returns would be spent on foreign made goods and oil.
Until we develop our own renewable energy sources, with meaningful conservation measures, our economy and environment will only worsen. Reputable scientists & engineers agree that the potential for alternative energy is there, and can be developed with concerted efforts--once we detooth the energy cartel, which under this administration, has been able to block or delay coservation and energy reforms using fabricated science, warrantless delays, etc.
Morever, the funding for renewable energy would be spent here--hence enriching our economy while lessening out environmental impact--rather than funding the terrorists.
surya
We have by now come to know more than adequately about the reasons for the problem. We now desperately need solutions. Request enlightened innovative/out of the book solutions from Common Dreams.
My suggestion for part of the bailout is set up a new bunch of banks with the 700 billion for capitol and restrict their lending at very low rates to good risks. Regulate these banks tightly. Refinance mortgages where people have good income and more than 20 % equity at 3% 30 years no cash outs etc.
The current mortgage holder would get the cash infusion they could use to rework all the questionable mortgages on their balance sheet or buy assets from banks with bad loans. Allow no foreclosures without a serious attempt to work with the current debtor. Review any foreclosure in bankruptcy court giving judges wide latitude to reset terms to avoid eviction.
As payments are made new safe loans at low rates could be made and stock in the new banks could be slowly sold until they are private companies. All businesses determined too big to fail should be broken up to induce competition and prevent new crashes.
Two major steps to fixing things: get rid of the private, for-profit corporation called the Federal Reserve; get rid of debt based fiat currency.
No more "solutions" which are simply, "We'll stop robbing you so quickly now, until you get used to your new poverty. We are, however, keeping the corrupt, Constitutionally illegal system so we can rape you financially later, again."
Aloha, salud, lechiem,
- Tobias
http://www.youtube.com/user/tobiasaurusrex
WHile it is scary.... this system DOES need to "fail".. you sometimes need to "violently" shake upper top to allow new growth to come through. That is why Naturally started forest fires are allowed to clear out forests... it is healthy. Scary... but healthy. For far too long these institutions and people have controlled our financial paradigm... Trickle down economics.. among others. It is TIME a new paradigm is allowed to arise from the ashes. DOesn't neccessarily mean "socialism".. but definately something better and more just and equal. Ayn Rand was wrong.. always .
"Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity" Horace Mann First President of Antioch College.
I agree as most people do. Let the system burn. I know it will be bad, but it's going to fail anyway. Might as well avoid prolonging it. It's sad but people won't learn until it's too late. People haven't learned anything sense the GD.
Why are we so afraid of mild "socialism". People think it's communism. Not only do most people misunderstand communism completely, but either way social liberal or social democratic society IS a free-market society. It's just a lot safer and a lot fairer. Look at all the top rated countries in the world.
Norway
Switzerland
Sweden
Iceleand
Canada
Denmark
Germany
They are all green and prosperous, and they all have a diverse mixture of social and libertarian (even labor) parties in their government. These people are politically involved and understand what is good for them. They don't limit themselves two a fraud two-party system that favors profit over commonwealth.
It's because we're trained to think it's evil. The elite don't work. The elite don't farm, don't work assembly lines in the auto industry, don't cook, don't roast coffee, don't pick coffee beans, they don't do anything in society, except drain the money from those who do provide something for society. Socialism mildly counters that, taxes the wealthy, and provides food aid and medical assistance to the needy. The elites hate giving up any of their unearned lucre, but they'll pay media pundits to slander avenues for a decent and fair society.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JPpXvK_iYKY
Aloha, salud, lechiem,
- Tobias
http://www.youtube.com/user/tobiasaurusrex
Even after the God of Greed has fallen off of its pedestal and smashed on the ground, it is amazing how there are still so many individuals and think-tanks worshipping the broken pieces.
You can still hear them singing the hymn, "Too Many Regulations...Government is to Blame."
We should NOT bail out capitalism nor revive it --
However, we should not either permit damage and harm to the workers of the
world because of this economic corruption which has been permitted to take foothold and been unaaccountable -- it is simple theft, as was the Savings
& Loan theft and embezzlements.
No -- what we must do is buy up capitalism and regulate it out of existence
and move on to green jobs and economic democracy.
We have this OTHER choice --- we do not have to choose rescuing capitalism
nor punishing workers -- either is a mistake.
AND, let's restore our own jobs in America -- tariffs --
Let's raise a corporation to produce electric cars -- we can
subsidize both ends of this . . . manufacture and purchase.
Get all the gas guzzlers off of our roads ---
AND, nationalize the oil industry --
"According to all myth, the female - not the male -- gives life"
Why are so many of CommonDreams' recent articles looking like gatekeeper public announcements, which basically say, "Yes you're getting your lives destroyed, but it has to be that way. I feel for you, but the system really is trying to be more subtle about enacting a global, feudal society."
(Please, Ms. Newhouser, stop rolling.)
Aloha, salud, lechiem,
- Tobias
http://www.youtube.com/user/tobiasaurusrex
Anyone have any feedback or support for this site, please let me know. Who knows what the hell to believe any longer? Scroll down to the "new report starts here".
http://www.worldreports.org/news/178_the_corrupt_octopus_has_been_severely_wounded