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Do Americans Realize How The Crisis Breeds Global Chaos?
KREMS, Austria - Obsessed as we are about our own crumbling economy, it's hard for most Americans to see and appreciate the global nature of the crisis and how it is impacting, and will impact, others throughout the world. We don't recognize how many in other countries blame the fall of their own economies on a kind of "financial aids" born in the United States.
And even as protests spread with Britain just putting its own army on alert for fear of disruptions this summer by anarchists with bent on class war with slogans like "burn a banker," mass demonstrations show no sign of abating in France, Iceland, Ireland Greece and other EU countries. People here have politicized economic issues perhaps because of a more thorough and diverse media environment as well as an expectation that their governments have a duty to protect their people.
When I arrived in Vienna for a film forum and festival at the Danube University, I was surprised to see merchandise and remainders marked down to flea market prices at stalls in the usual pricey booths at an airport usually only known for pedaling luxury brands.
Some think the European Union and the Euro zone may not survive the tremors. European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said on Friday. "The European Union is facing an unprecedented situation due to the economic crisis and needs to work at different levels to restore credit flows." He said the bloc's economy is expected to contract by 2 percent this year.
General Motors wants a bailout from European governments, too, with 32,000 jobs at risk.
Eastern Europe is feeling the crunch even worse with its currencies reeling. Western Europe has so far declined to come to their requests for more bailouts from Hungary, for example, once a model for how the free market can replace Soviet bloc economics.
There are waves of protests underway in the East. Left publications report:
"thousands of demonstrators in Lithuania, Latvia and Bulgaria have attacked government buildings and called on their governments to resign as unemployment soars in Eastern Europe.
Experts predict a regional increase of 15 million to 18 million unemployed in the coming months, with no relief as jobs for immigrants disappear in Western Europe and the United States."
Writes Mike Whitney: "The global economy is decelerating at the fastest pace on record. 40 percent of global wealth has been wiped out. The banking system is insolvent, unemployment is soaring, tax revenues are falling, the markets are in shock, housing is crashing, deficits are soaring, and consumer confidence is at its lowest point in history."
When you look at some of the numbers, you can see the time bombs that are ticking away. According to Ed Bonawitz, many countries are in deep hock, "Ireland's external debt, at US$1.8 trillion, equals 900% of the country's US$200 billion GDP. The United Kingdom's external debt of US$10.5 trillion equals 456% of its US$2.3 trillion GDP. Switzerland's external debt of US$1.3 trillion equals 433% of its US$300 billion GDP." Now that the credit markets are locked tight, renegotiating the terms of these loans is virtually impossible.' U.S. Banks are said to have a loan ratio of around 26-to-1. And European Banks have one that is around 60-to-1.
F. Wiliam Engdahl writes: "The problems in Eastern Europe which are just now emerging with full force are, if you will, an indirect consequence of the libertine monetary policies of the Greenspan Fed from 2002 until 2006, the period where Wall Street's asset backed securitization Ponzi Scheme took off.
The riskiness of these eastern European loans is now coming to light as the global economic recession in both east and west Europe is forcing western banks to pull back, refusing to renew loans or ‘rollover' the credits, leaving thousands of borrowers with unpayable loan debts. The dimension of the eastern European emerging loan crisis pales anything yet realized...
According to my well-informed City of London sources, the new concerns over bank exposures to eastern Europe will define the next wave of the global financial crisis, one they believe could be even more devastating than the US sub-prime securitization collapse which triggered the entire crisis of confidence.
Because of globalization and the interwoven nature of the world economy, what is happening there will make things worse for us here,
Reuters reports: "A new report suggesting Eastern Europe's economic slump will drag Western banks further into the red fanned fears that emerging economies will deepen the recession in the West. No wonder international agencies are up in arms."
One issue that is just getting attention Europe is unregulated activity by Hedge Funds and controlling enormous amounts of money stashed in untaxed off shore accounts. European leaders have now agreed a tough stance on hedge funds, the highly speculative products that many blame for fuelling instability in financial markets. Another major issue involves Swiss Banks. US tax authorities demanded the names of 52,000 Americans banking in secret accounts to evade taxes.
Bloomberg reports: "In the past two weeks, Finance Minister Hans-Rudolf Merz said he's willing to collect taxes on offshore accounts for the U.S., and Justice Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf offered cooperation on some cases of tax evasion.
"That's de facto abolishing banking secrecy," said Regula Staempfli, a Swiss political scientist in Brussels.
There is also a darker dimension with reports that legitimate businesses are turning to the mafia and organized crime gangs for the billions they need to stay in business. Douglas Farah writes in the Counterrorism blog:
"There is strong anecdotal evidence that cartels from South America to Southeast Asia and Europe ...are stepping in to credit breach, building relations with businessmen desperate to stay in business, who would not normally look to the "informal" economy for a loan.
This will serve to extend the tentacles of these groups even further into the legal society and financial structure. As (one) article notes, "Stronger organized crime means a weaker state."
A story in the Washington Post "says a new report estimated that organized crime syndicates in Italy - including Naples's Camorra, Sicily's Cosa Nostra, Calabria's 'Ndrangheta - collect about 250 million euros, or $315 million, from retailers every day. That is about a billion dollars every three days, or about $122 billion a year siphoned out of a single economy. Is it any wonder Italy is a constant economic wreck?"
If trends continue, there is apt to be more opportunities for the criminal class and more of a fusion between so the supposedly legitimate business world and the supposedly illegitimate one.
Tony Soprano, are you paying attention?
Regulators are also monitoring missing money. Here's a headline from the Financial Times: "Lehman Brothers' US liquidators have asked Barclays to explain what happened to an estimated $3.3bn earmarked for bonuses and other liabilities that the UK bank received when it acquired part of the bankrupt Wall Street company last year?
Funny business like this seems to be part of the way this business is run.
Increasingly, banking bosses are sounding like mob underbosses. Here's a quote attributed to Jimmy Cayne, former chief of Bear Stearns about Tim Geithner who engineered the sale of his bank to JP Morgan at a sizable loss:
"The audacity of that p- in front of the American people announcing he was deciding whether or not a firm of this stature and this whatever was good enough to get a loan ... This guy thinks he's got a big d-. He's got nothing, except maybe a boyfriend ... Who the f- asked you? You're not an elected officer. You're a clerk. Believe me, you're a clerk. I want to open up on this f--r, that's all I can tell you."
This is getting nasty. It may be time to go to the mattresses. As economies crumble and the center doesn't hold, as poet W.H, Auden wrote, things fall apart.
- Posted in


28 Comments so far
Show All"as poet W.H, Auden wrote, things fall apart."
W.B. Yeats, actually.
You might be thankful that some Americans recognize that things fall apart.
Some people who have not had the leisure and privilege of a university liberal arts education nonetheless have an understanding of the world. But OK, Danny Schecter should have checked his source. Let's move on.
Joe
Yeats, yes, that was my first thought. Yet isn't it rather amazing that we should concern ourselves with such a triviality? Still, great depressions come and go, but Yeats is forever.
Timeless - as Chinua Acheebe picked up on in his book titled with the phrase
Other countries can blame us all they want, but no one forced any of them to buy our toxic crap. And, what - they think we got the corner on Ponzi? Such short memories...
"Societe Generale announced Thursday that it had been victim of €4.9 billion ($7.14 billion) fraud..." (Jan, 08).
Wonder how many more "Madoffs" they got over there...
"The global economy is decelerating at the fastest pace on record. 40 percent of global wealth has been wiped out. The banking system is insolvent, unemployment is soaring, tax revenues are falling, the markets are in shock, housing is crashing, deficits are soaring, and consumer confidence is at its lowest point in history."
And the Republicans say this is absolutely great! What a sick, perverted bunch of scum and traitors those MoFo's are!
"And the Republicans say this is absolutely great!"
Who exactly says this?
Answer to title question:
Absolutely not!!!.......but we are learning ever so painfully!!!!
But I could be wrong !
Well said....if suffering implied learning, WE the People would have dis-banned the Fed after the first depression. But, we can make a choice to learn or continue to suffer. So far, we have chosen the latter. You know that old saying about insanity...blah ...blah...blah.....
The color revolutions of SE Europe aren't turning out for the good? Oh, no. That's going to put a damper on all the Freedom House players connected to the WH....
Economic globalism is like a recipe where all of the ingredients are now being mixed together, poured into a pan, and readied for the fire. The call is no longer Eat the Rich, it is Eaten by the Rich. We are such losers.
Sioux Rose
Panic helped fuel the Great Depression as is also now the case. The same physical resources, products, and human talents were at play the day before the dominoes began to fall and the day after. What then accounts for this "loss" at such astronomical levels? Who is all this money owed to? If it's the same banks that loaned faulty mechanisms, then en masse, ALL citizens should cease and desist from paying anything into that machine. Maybe it's just the MACHINE that needs to "die."
It seems to me the Disaster Capitalism recipe to "liberalize" markets after causing countries to implode with debts they can no longer pay is the crux of what's been set loose. Even the engineers of disaster capitalism probably did not expect the entire world financial pyramid to implode at once. This crisis is clearly THE time to redesign the basic structures and fiscal logistics of economies. Maybe money should be seen as chips... and based on the number of chips, a new form of currency should start up that does not demand that innocents pay for the fake-value-derivative-swaps of their local and national bankers.
If it's broken on a global scale, there is NO incentive to repair it piecemeal, nation by nation. It is time for OTHER to take its place. And this is the right time for world citizens/workers to gather together and demand that those who speculated pay the price, rather than pass the costs onto the ones who can afford it least. The prophecies for 2012, an end to HOW we have lived, are apparently on track. Devaluation of wages, of homes, of bank accounts... Americans may think they can sit this out on the sidelines until the commercial break when a channel change is possible; but other nations know they MUST act. Could be a wave will sweep around the world and begin to equalize the mechanics of government with respect to how its citizens (and their needs) are represented. And if all this is taking place now, I wish to inform my fellow CD readers, the final months of this year show a tremendous ESCALATION of these factors.
Good post, Rose. One of my favorite quotes from the Matrix fits aptly: "Buckle your seat belt Dorothy, 'cause Kansas is going bye, bye..."
With climate crisis 'cap and trade' - major corps are buying land reserves all over the world for carbon off-set - wonder where the money for these comes from? Seeing REDD yet?
The indigenous peoples are more often than not the originary inhabitants of the territories being bought in the off-set process.
OUTLAW CAP AND TRADE go for carbon rax!!!!
Whenever I see a "small" misquote in an article, it casts doubt on other "small" details in it. Good article, but it's a silly mistake. The author should correct it.
ON the QUESTION title of the article:
"DO AMERICANS REALIZE how the crisis breeds Global Chaos?"
an answer can be:
americans REALIZE it - or know or sense it -- and that it BEGAN in the USA as another culmination of "american society" ways.
and the further addition to that is what an american poet said many years ago:
"WE AMERICANS -- carefully cultivate an attitude of detached indifference to the suffering of others......EVEN IF WE are the Cause of it"......
after all: americans have "too many problems and concerns"......like credit cards, the monthly rent, that dream vacation, that bonus, that "american dream" house that's a problem coz of those bankers......----------
the heck with the rest of the world........that has to end up picking the pieces of AMERICA's MESS after all is said and done...........so long as "WEAMERICANS" can get back on track...........
Teddy, many of us are overwhelmed with the conduction of our daily affairs, especially those with incomes too low to find much leisure. When we do get time, our energy is zapped by the mundane necessities of conducting our lives, or we are forced to complete silly paperwork for the state (and often pay for the privilege). Perhaps the biggest challenge in America is finding time to sit down and read an article without too many distractions. It seems like our society values work over everything else, and though we work harder and harder, we keep falling behind (this is related to the top 10% controlling 70% of the wealth). Then we get sick, go bankrupt, and die, or retire into irrelevancy.
It is in the interest of Empire to keep us working, so we are too zapped to pay attention to anything but the propaganda of MSM. With all the layoffs, though, more people will begin to investigate, and start waking up to what society has done and has been doing to them for so long, of course, with their consent.
Heretofore, many of us have been too busy to turn our attention inward or away from the mundane, when we did previously it was to escape vicariously into some kind of entertainment or distraction, and most didn't care to really pay attention. And many still wont until their bellies go hungry. In one way or another, there will be a 'revolution,' but a violent revolution, whether local or global, will only bring more destruction without understanding; the inherent ignorance that precipitated it will still remain. That's why an inward revolution is needed, one that leads to transformation and dispels ignorance. Then and only then will the Phoenix rise.
The Mayan calendar predicts that something dramatic will happen in 2012 (Rose mentions it below). If so, looks like we're right on schedule.
>>The global economy is decelerating at the fastest pace on record. 40 percent of global wealth has been wiped out. The banking system is insolvent, unemployment is soaring, tax revenues are falling, the markets are in shock, housing is crashing, deficits are soaring, and consumer confidence is at its lowest point in history
This merely shows that Global wealth as created by Capitalism was merely PAPER wealth and really did not signify anything.
Nothing was really wiped out as that wealth never really existed except on paper and in Computer entries.
PAPER money and computer entries that signify non existant money, and the whole system of fractional banking create DEBT and not wealth.
It high time we measure true wealth , that being the health and well being of our citizens and our given countries natural resources which belong by rights to the people and not to Corporations.
Exactly my thinking. It's only paper with no real equity behind it, or if there is equity, it is WAY overinflated.
Ah..the endless joys of globalization!!
"The only means of strengthening one's intellect is to make up one's mind about nothing, to let the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts." - John Keats
"jclientelle March 9th, 2009 11:11 pm
Some people who have not had the leisure and privilege of a university liberal arts education nonetheless have an understanding of the world. But OK, Danny Schecter should have checked his source. Let's move on."
WHAT source? He doesn't refer to one source; he refers to a number of source[s], such as:
*) an article at Forbes.com and for the quote of what "European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said on Friday";
*) Mike Whitney saying "40 percent of global wealth has been wiped out", the "banking system is insolvent, unemployment is soaring, ...";
*) Ed Bonawitz saying that "many countries are in deep hock";
*) F. Wiliam Engdahl saying that the "problems in Eastern Europe which are just now emerging with full force are, if you will, an indirect consequence of the libertine monetary policies of the Greenspan Fed from 2002 until 2006";
*) Danny Schechter's "well-informed City of London sources" saying that "the new concerns over bank exposures to eastern Europe will define the next wave of the global financial crisis";
*) Reuters reporting that a "new report suggesting Eastern Europe's economic slump will drag Western banks further into the red fanned fears that emerging economies will deepen the recession in the West"; and,
*) possibly more sources.
SO what 'source' are you talking about, jclientelle? And what, precisely, is it that you disagree with or find to be false, in Danny Schechter's article?
The following article illustrates another way of getting very rich after having become very rich, so getting all the richer, very much illegally, but "somewhat" legally (unethically, but legally), from international drug-trafficking and big casino business; and plenty of that profit goes to funding ... various other activities, which could of course include lending to small businesses and individuals while possibly charging usurous interest, like the Hells Angels or some chapters anyway have been caught doing. (The HA was caught threatening some peoples' lives in the Montreal area over the past year or so, because these persons had borrowed money, but while the HA was charging around 300% interest and damn wanted that money paid up, or else to terminate the lives of the debtors, so these persons notified law enforcement. I guess they're the ones who notified law enforcement anyway; but if it wasn't these debtors, then someone else provided the notification. Must've been the debtors, I believe.)
"Taliban Truce and the Coming Storm in South Asia",
by Tom Burghardt, Mar 7 2009
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=12594
Politicians and the rich are "friends" with all sorts of people, though probably few that are very honest, etcetera, or, iow, simply [honourable] of character.
An aside note: Btw, this above article on "the Coming Storm ..." is a piece perhaps everyone should carefully read for this above-stated reason, but also about the "Storm", what's presently "brewing" or "in the works". From my impression of what the article overall says, we should make a point of reading it in order to be informed of what it describes, the various movements and related topics or issues and questions, whatever; to be aware of what it says as time progresses, or rather as events happen in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Tom Burghardt doesn't pretend to be able to be absolutely certain of what's going to happen, only providing information he's gathered and which, if true, is [important]; and it's [mind-blowing] "stuff" he presents in this above piece.
Oh lord, please don't let me be misunderstood. I am not disagreeing with Danny Schecter. I love his articles.
I was responding to the poster who equated not knowing Yeats and Auden with low intelligence in the average American. I am sad that English language poetry is not well known. However I feel there can be a class bias as intellectuals use their own particular experiences and exposures as handy measures of intelligence.
I have noticed that average people from countries with ancient histories and some cultural and ethnic continuity seem to know their national poetry. It is used as lyrics in popular songs, learned in schools. I think knowing poetry deepens the life experience and should be taught in schools. But we are a newer country and far less typified by one single cultural heritage. We are hell-bent on teaching about quantifications and control.
I am sure there are some janitors who know things that are not available to professors. The poster might be surprised at the discussions that take place in say hospital basements among workers who wear their names on ovals sewn onto their coveralls. They may know history, poetry, songs and stories of other times and places that are just as rich as the canon taught in universities. They may have astute observations, humor and grace. Or not. But you cannot classify them simply because they do or do not know Yeats and Auden, who are from Ireland and England, by the way.
Here is a pithy quote translated into English by a primarily Chinese speaking woman I once worked with. "Everybody knows something. Everybody doesn't know something."
Joe
"In the past two weeks, Finance Minister Hans-Rudolf Merz said he's willing to collect taxes on offshore accounts for the U.S., and Justice Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf offered cooperation on some cases of tax evasion."
Notice the terminology: "Willing to collect taxes on offshore accounts". This does not indicate that ANY names/owners of these accounts will be revealed.
Also: "Cooperation on some cases of tax evasion". What criteria will be used to determine "some cases"?
"US tax authorities demanded the names of 52,000 Americans banking in secret accounts to evade taxes."
The U.S. has no "jurisdiction" over Swiss banks and their banking laws!