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The Financial Bailout: How It Scams Taxpayers, Subsidizes Wall Street, and Props Up Our Broken Financial System
The Greatest Swindle Ever Sold
On October 3rd, as the spreading economic meltdown threatened to topple financial behemoths like American International Group (AIG) and Bank of America and plunged global markets into freefall, the U.S. government responded with the largest bailout in American history. The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008, better known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), authorized the use of $700 billion to stabilize the nation's failing financial systems and restore the flow of credit in the economy.
The legislation's guidelines for crafting the rescue plan were clear: the TARP should protect home values and consumer savings, help citizens keep their homes, and create jobs. Above all, with the government poised to invest hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars in various financial institutions, the legislation urged the bailout's architects to maximize returns to the American people.
That $700 billion bailout has since grown into a more than $12 trillion commitment by the U.S. government and the Federal Reserve. About $1.1 trillion of that is taxpayer money -- the TARP money and an additional $400 billion rescue of mortgage companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The TARP now includes 12 separate programs, and recipients range from megabanks like Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase to automakers Chrysler and General Motors.
Seven months in, the bailout's impact is unclear. The Treasury Department has used the recent "stress test" results it applied to 19 of the nation's largest banks to suggest that the worst might be over; yet the International Monetary Fund as well as economists like New York University professor and economist Nouriel Roubini and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman predict greater losses in U.S. markets, rising unemployment, and generally tougher economic times ahead.
What cannot be disputed, however, is the financial bailout's biggest loser: the American taxpayer. The U.S. government, led by the Treasury Department, has done little, if anything, to maximize returns on its trillion-dollar, taxpayer-funded investment. So far, the bailout has favored rescued financial institutions by subsidizing their losses to the tune of $356 billion, shying away from much-needed management changes and -- with the exception of the automakers -- letting companies take taxpayer money without a coherent plan for how they might return to viability.
The bailout's perks have been no less favorable for private investors who are now picking over the economy's still-smoking rubble at the taxpayers' expense. The newer bailout programs rolled out by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner give private equity firms, hedge funds, and other private investors significant leverage to buy "toxic" or distressed assets, while leaving taxpayers stuck with the lion's share of the risk and potential losses.
Given the lack of transparency and accountability, don't expect taxpayers to be able to object too much. After all, remarkably little is known about how TARP recipients have used the government aid received. Nonetheless, recent government reports, Congressional testimony, and commentaries offer those patient enough to pore over hundreds of pages of material glimpses of just how Wall Street friendly the bailout actually is. Here, then, based on the most definitive data and analyses available, are six of the most blatant and alarming ways taxpayers have been scammed by the government's $1.1-trillion, publicly-funded bailout.
1. By overpaying for its TARP investments, the Treasury Department provided bailout recipients with generous subsidies at the taxpayer's expense.
When the Treasury Department ditched its initial plan to buy up "toxic" assets and instead invest directly in financial institutions, then-Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, Jr. assured Americans that they'd get a fair deal. "This is an investment, not an expenditure, and there is no reason to expect this program will cost taxpayers anything," he said in October 2008.
Yet the Congressional Oversight Panel (COP), a five-person group tasked with ensuring that the Treasury Department acts in the public's best interest, concluded in its monthly report for February that the department had significantly overpaid by tens of billions of dollars for its investments. For the 10 largest TARP investments made in 2008, totaling $184.2 billion, Treasury received on average only $66 worth of assets for every $100 invested. Based on that shortfall, the panel calculated that Treasury had received only $176 billion in assets for its $254 billion investment, leaving a $78 billion hole in taxpayer pockets.
Not all investors subsidized the struggling banks so heavily while investing in them. The COP report notes that private investors received much closer to fair market value in investments made at the time of the early TARP transactions. When, for instance, Berkshire Hathaway invested $5 billion in Goldman Sachs in September, the Omaha-based company received securities worth $110 for each $100 invested. And when Mitsubishi invested in Morgan Stanley that same month, it received securities worth $91 for every $100 invested.
As of May 15th, according to the Ethisphere TARP Index, which tracks the government's bailout investments, its various investments had depreciated in value by almost $147.7 billion. In other words, TARP's losses come out to almost $1,300 per American taxpaying household.
2. As the government has no real oversight over bailout funds, taxpayers remain in the dark about how their money has been used and if it has made any difference.
While the Treasury Department can make TARP recipients report on just how they spend their government bailout funds, it has chosen not to do so. As a result, it's unclear whether institutions receiving such funds are using that money to increase lending -- which would, in turn, boost the economy -- or merely to fill in holes in their balance sheets.
Neil M. Barofsky, the special inspector general for TARP, summed the situation up this way in his office's April quarterly report to Congress: "The American people have a right to know how their tax dollars are being used, particularly as billions of dollars are going to institutions for which banking is certainly not part of the institution's core business and may be little more than a way to gain access to the low-cost capital provided under TARP."
This lack of transparency makes the bailout process highly susceptible to fraud and corruption. Barofsky's report stated that 20 separate criminal investigations were already underway involving corporate fraud, insider trading, and public corruption. He also told the Financial Times that his office was investigating whether banks manipulated their books to secure bailout funds. "I hope we don't find a single bank that's cooked its books to try to get money, but I don't think that's going to be the case."
Economist Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, suggested to TomDispatch in an interview that the opaque and complicated nature of the bailout may not be entirely unintentional, given the difficulties it raises for anyone wanting to follow the trail of taxpayer dollars from the government to the banks. "[Government officials] see this all as a Three Card Monte, moving everything around really quickly so the public won't understand that this really is an elaborate way to subsidize the banks," Baker says, adding that the public "won't realize we gave money away to some of the richest people."
3. The bailout's newer programs heavily favor the private sector, giving investors an opportunity to earn lucrative profits and leaving taxpayers with most of the risk.
Under Treasury Secretary Geithner, the Treasury Department has greatly expanded the financial bailout to troubling new programs like the Public-Private Investment Program (PPIP) and the Term Asset-Backed-Securities Loan Facility (TALF). The PPIP, for example, encourages private investors to buy "toxic" or risky assets on the books of struggling banks. Doing so, we're told, will get banks lending again because the burdensome assets won't weigh them down. Unfortunately, the incentives the Treasury Department is offering to get private investors to participate are so generous that the government -- and, by extension, American taxpayers -- are left with all the downside.
Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel-prize winning economist, described the PPIP program in a New York Times op-ed this way:
"Consider an asset that has a 50-50 chance of being worth either zero or $200 in a year's time. The average 'value' of the asset is $100. Ignoring interest, this is what the asset would sell for in a competitive market. It is what the asset is 'worth.' Under the plan by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, the government would provide about 92 percent of the money to buy the asset but would stand to receive only 50 percent of any gains, and would absorb almost all of the losses. Some partnership!"Assume that one of the public-private partnerships the Treasury has promised to create is willing to pay $150 for the asset. That's 50 percent more than its true value, and the bank is more than happy to sell. So the private partner puts up $12, and the government supplies the rest -- $12 in 'equity' plus $126 in the form of a guaranteed loan.
"If, in a year's time, it turns out that the true value of the asset is zero, the private partner loses the $12, and the government loses $138. If the true value is $200, the government and the private partner split the $74 that's left over after paying back the $126 loan. In that rosy scenario, the private partner more than triples his $12 investment. But the taxpayer, having risked $138, gains a mere $37."
Worse still, the PPIP can be easily manipulated for private gain. As economist Jeffrey Sachs has described it, a bank with worthless toxic assets on its books could actually set up its own public-private fund to bid on those assets. Since no true bidder would pay for a worthless asset, the bank's public-private fund would win the bid, essentially using government money for the purchase. All the public-private fund would then have to do is quietly declare bankruptcy and disappear, leaving the bank to make off with the government money it received. With the PPIP deals set to begin in the coming months, time will tell whether private investors actually take advantage of the program's flaws in this fashion.
The Treasury Department's TALF program offers equally enticing possibilities for potential bailout profiteers, providing investors with a chance to double, triple, or even quadruple their investments. And like the PPIP, if the deal goes bad, taxpayers absorb most of the losses. "It beats any financing that the private sector could ever come up with," a Wall Street trader commented in a recent Fortune magazine story. "I almost want to say it is irresponsible."
4. The government has no coherent plan for returning failing financial institutions to profitability and maximizing returns on taxpayers' investments.
Compare the treatment of the auto industry and the financial sector, and a troubling double standard emerges: As a condition for taking bailout aid, the government required Chrysler and General Motors to present detailed plans on how the companies would return to profitability. Yet the Treasury Department attached minimal conditions to the billions injected into the largest bailed-out financial institutions. Moreover, neither Geithner nor Lawrence Summers, one of President Barack Obama's top economic advisors, nor the president himself has articulated any substantive plan or vision for how the bailout will help these institutions recover and, hopefully, maximize taxpayers' investment returns.
The Congressional Oversight Panel highlighted the absence of such a comprehensive plan in its January report. Three months into the bailout, the Treasury Department "has not yet explained its strategy," the report stated. "Treasury has identified its goals and announced its programs, but it has not yet explained how the programs chosen constitute a coherent plan to achieve those goals."
Today, the department's endgame for the bailout still remains vague. Thomas Hoenig, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, wrote in the Financial Times in May that the government's response to the financial meltdown has been "ad hoc, resulting in inequitable outcomes among firms, creditors, and investors." Rather than perpetually prop up banks with endless taxpayer funds, Hoenig suggests that the government should allow banks to fail. Only then, he believes, can crippled financial institutions and systems be fixed. "Because we still have far to go in this crisis, there remains time to define a clear process for resolving large institutional failure. Without one, the consequences will involve a series of short-term events and far more uncertainty for the global economy in the long run."
The healthier and more profitable bailout recipients are once financial markets rebound, the more taxpayers will earn on their investments. Without a plan, however, banks may limp back to viability while taxpayers lose their investments or even absorb further losses.
5. The bailout's focus on Wall Street mega-banks ignores smaller banks serving millions of American taxpayers that face an equally uncertain future.
The government may not have a long-term strategy for its trillion-dollar bailout, but its guiding principle, however misguided, is clear: What's good for Wall Street will be best for the rest of the country.
On the day the mega-bank stress tests were officially released, another set of stress-test results came out to much less fanfare. In its quarterly report on the health of individual banks and the banking industry as a whole, Institutional Risk Analytics (IRA), a respected financial services organization, found that the stress levels among more than 7,500 FDIC-reporting banks nationwide had risen dramatically. For 1,575 of the banks, net incomes had turned negative due to decreased lending and less risk-taking.
The conclusion IRA drew was telling: "Our overall observation is that U.S. policy makers may very well have been distracted by focusing on 19 large stress test banks designed to save Wall Street and the world's central bank bondholders, this while a trend is emerging of a going concern viability crash taking shape under the radar." The report concluded with a question: "Has the time come to shift the policy focus away from the things that we love, namely big zombie banks, to tackle things that are truly hurting us?"
6. The bailout encourages the very behaviors that created the economic crisis in the first place instead of overhauling our broken financial system and helping the individuals most affected by the crisis.
As Joseph Stiglitz explained in the New York Times, one major cause of the economic crisis was bank overleveraging. "[U]sing relatively little capital of their own," he wrote, "[banks] borrowed heavily to buy extremely risky real estate assets. In the process, they used overly complex instruments like collateralized debt obligations." Financial institutions engaged in overleveraging in pursuit of the lucrative profits such deals promised -- even if those profits came with staggering levels of risk.
Sound familiar? It should, because in the PPIP and TALF bailout programs the Treasury Department has essentially replicated the very overleveraged, risky, complex system that got us into this mess in the first place: in other words, the government hopes to repair our financial system by using the flawed practices that caused this crisis.
Then there are the institutions deemed "too big to fail." These financial giants -- among them AIG, Citigroup, and Bank of America -- have been kept afloat by billions of dollars in bottomless bailout aid. Yet reinforcing the notion that any institution is "too big to fail" is dangerous to the economy. When a company like AIG grows so large that it becomes "too big to fail," the risk it carries is systemic, meaning failure could drag down the entire economy. The government should force "too big to fail" institutions to slim down to a safer, more modest size; instead, the Treasury Department continues to subsidize these financial giants, reinforcing their place in our economy.
Of even greater concern is the message the bailout sends to banks and lenders -- namely, that the risky investments that crippled the economy are fair game in the future. After all, if banks fail and teeter at the edge of collapse, the government promises to be there with a taxpayer-funded, potentially profitable safety net.
The handling of the bailout makes at least one thing clear, however: It's not your health that the government is focused on, it's theirs -- the very banks and lenders whose convoluted financial systems provided the underpinnings for staggering salaries and bonuses while bringing our economy to the brink of another Great Depression.
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68 Comments so far
Show AllThis article does a pretty decent job of detailing the government's sins in handling the credit crisis even though it doesn't tell us all that much that we didn't already know or at least suspect.
The number one pritority for all Progressives must be the dismantling of the megacorporations - not just in the financial sector and not just in the US. Unchecked corporate power - which is what we're seeing - is the greatest current threat not only to individual freedoms but to the very survival of the human race.
The first corporations that need to be busted up are the media monsters that do their best to keep the general electorate in the dark. Had they reported honestly and forthrightly about this issue, Wall Street would be lined with bankers hanging from lampposts.
q
And we can start by stripping those corporations of the "personhood" they acquired via the 1886 Supreme Court decision "Santa Clara County vs. Southern Pacific Railroad".
This ruling of 'personhood' for corporations has allowed them to completely take over our government---all branches. We the people are of no importance at all. It's all money, as if you didn't already know that! Our elected officials want ABOVE ALL ELSE, to keep their jobs as our 'representatives'--except there is no represntating us involved. They want money, lots of money to pay for TV ads each election cycle so they can confuse and bamboozle the people into believing their chants of 'hope' and 'change' or even saying they will get us out of the endless wars and pass health care reform---these things are said before the election and we all know that campaign promises are nothing but hot air.
The corporations, as persons, are allowed to involve themselves in ALL PHASES OF OUR GOVERNMENT. Not only do they bribe our officials, they save those hard working legislators from the work of writing proposals for new laws---the corporations do that for them, how kind of them. So, that is where we are: Government of the corporations, by the corporations and for the corporations. And the primary purpose of life in the U.S. of A is to make a profit. Kill the earth while you're at it is ok, it's only 'colateral damage' and of no importance.
The people of this nation want the wars to end (bad!! cuts the profits of the military industrial complex), people want Single Payer Health Care (bad!! cuts the profits of the HMO's and big pharma), we want the right to organize unions through the Employee Free Choice Act (bad!!! Paying decent wages cuts profits of the corporations) People were against the bankster bail out but our 'representatives' voted to give some 10 to 16 TRILLION of our tax dollars to the banksters. That was needed to give them all big bonuses for trashing the economy. No mention was made of their fraudulent means of bilking the borrowers for decades.
We need to strip corporations of legal personhood so they no longer have the rights of the living people of this nation. The big difference is that these 'persons' never die. They'll kill you and the earth, but they keep on making those profits.
For our democracy to function we need to end the personhood of the corporations and finance political campaigns with government funds---and give time on the boob tube to ALL QUALIFIED CANDIDATES. Limiting us to choosing Dem or Repub is not much of a choice. I want to elect representatives who will be the spokespersons for the people of their district. Wouldn't that be nice? No change will come with out you getting active. Democracy is not a spectator sport.
Financial bailout = Socialism for the Rich.
This is the true U.S. capitalism: government policies that ensure corporation profits, ensure markets for corporation products and protection from massive corporate losses. It's corporate welfare or socialism for the rich.
phasor's description can be more succinctly summed up in one word...facism.
The US military industrial media complex has perfected fascism beyond the wildest dreams of some of the most successful fascists in history...Hitler, Franco...
All that's left now for us is the giftgas.
You can not HAVE Socialism for the rich. Those calling this "Socialism for the Rich" either do not understand what Socialism is or continue to try and make the word "Socialism" a dirty word.
This has nothing to do with Socialism in any respect.
I'd have to speculate what we have here, its probably a witches brew of socialism, fascism, communism, democracy, mixed well in a capitalism base.
Whatever you want to call it, its bad.
I suggest dispensing with the incessant political bickering which is a complete waste of time, money and energy, any belief in "leaders" along with any notion of "taking back our country" (it was never any different than it is now) and start the dismantling--when, where and however we can.
Monkey-wrench-it until they either decide to play fair--or run for their lives.
Personally, I don't expect them to do the latter.
Just my take.
socialism + fascism + communism + democracy = capitalism
Actually there are all in base the same. It's always about control, power and money. Actually money is power, isn't it? Look what communist china is now... economical booming country. All the foreign as well as American corporations run over there for cheap labor. As long there exist a monetary system, there will be the same struggle for control + money = power and power always corrupts.
More I read this kind of stuff it becomes clear and clear we need a change to something different and better. Maybe it is time to give the "The Venus Project (Zeitgeist Movement)" a serious consideration.
You're correct to a point.
There's no precise definition of socialism or fascism. And thus any statements using these terms cause consternation.
My point is that the government cooperates with and may be subservient to corporations' objectives and strategies. More sinister is that the government takes money and resources from its citizenry and distributes it to corporations. The legal structure designed for corporations is the main legal vehicle used by the elite, the rich, the established order to exert power.
I suppose "American Fascism" would be closer.
odoco
I believe the gravest threat to all peoples seeking to secure their personal, political and economic liberty is the convergence of the multi-national forces and its control of the US treasury, the US military and its control of those in Congress, and the bought and paid for media and its control of the ever-deepening crisis of the lowered American intellect.. None of these death-to-democracy situations can be resolved by negotiation or compromise as they are all interlocking and will support one another with methods and forces unseen and unknown to open society. True structural change - and accountability - with no more immunity for lawbreakers - will be the only avenue to changing this fascist system. And, as I have said for so many years now, that change can only occur when we accept the obligation of truly educating our children to become responsible members of the world's society and not simply citizens of a nation that has not only lost its way, but has also found its way into the chaos, depravity and inhumanity.
Having seen Dick Durbin recently announce to the world in no uncertain terms that the US Government is owned by Wall Street, responsibility for CHANGE rests 100% with the US electorate.
Unless we witness public opinion shifting dramatically, and unprecedented anti-incumbent fever during the next election cycle, the fascist takeover of America from within will be complete.
Sioux Rose
ODOCO: Good post. All too tragically true.
"The world economy has avoided "utter catastrophe" and industrialised countries could register growth this year, Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman said on Monday.
Sure, after the bansters have raped and pillaged the world populace and American taxpayers have had some 14 trilllion dollars STOLEN from themselves and their descendants....
Long read...check this out...
http://www.israelshamir.net/Contributors/
Collateral_Damage_911.pdf
9/15 (08) [the date when Lehman was pushed into bankruptcy to start this economic shock and collapse] was the 'second shoe dropping' of the 9/11 twin "Shock Doctrines" against the last vestiges of the American democratic Republic.
9/11 was 'Shock Doctrine' applied in a 'kinetic' attack.
9/15 was 'Shock Doctrine' applied in an 'economic' attack.
The distinctly non-humorous irony is that even Hitler did not need two Reichstag fires to transmogrify the German Republic into the Nazi Empire.
But now it can be clearly seen that it require two separate, but coordinated 'shock doctrine' attacks (one kinetic, and one economic) to push the U.S. from its previous decades of veiled control by the global ruling-elite 'corporate financial Empire' that had been controlling our country behind the facade of its two-party 'Vichy' sham of democracy, into the overt control that we are now seeing with the Empire's overt looting of our country, and overt expansion of oil territory multiplicity of wars through-out the Middle East and South Central Asia.
Heck of a job, George and Barack!
Only a massive, coordinated, and solidarity based movement by the working-class of all effected countries can now arrest this march of EMPIRE.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
If the bailout was done in secret, and someone reported it they would be labeled a"conspiracy nut".
I understand O's strategy is to inflate the USA out of debt.
As long as most people are directly or indirectly doing business with those companies, those companies will have the power to ask for more bailouts even against the will of the people and the pols.
So take your own advice and divest your portfolio of MIC stock...
I am surprised you haven't been banned from CD for bragging about beating your wife...
Oooooooooh!!! Oooooooohh!!!
LOL!!!!!!!! LOL!!!!!
The recent bailouts, although unprecedented in scale, certainly aren't new to the functioning of state monopoly capitalism. The so-called "free market" is anything but "free". The state has been priming the pump for this free market for a long time now. One just has to look at the vast transfer of wealth from the ordinary taxpayers to the military-industrial complex. The American military is a tool used to expand and control global capitalism for the benefit of the capitalist class. It is the taxpaying working class that suffers the consequences of this expenditure by paying for this military terrorism whose purpose is to prevent any nations from trying to break free of global capitalism and pursue an alternative economic model.
The Savings and Loan bailout, is another case where the super rich were bailed out by the working class taxpayers. In fact, the list can go on and on, through such things as taxpayer subsidies "to attract" foreign investment within the USA through things like tax holidays for the establishment of foreign auto manufacturing in right to work states as witnessed in new Toyota plants or the continuous lowering of corporate taxes.
So, there has been a long history of working class taxpayers paying the rich to in turn increase exploitation against the very same working class. This has lead to the widening gap between the rich and the rest of us and a situation where a worker today earns less than a worker did in 1970 compounded with a debt that future workers will have to pay for.
The result of course is that capitalism suffers a continuing crisis of overproduction where it is unable to sell its commodities to the very same working class that are the prime consumers of this commodity production. Capital has been forced to invest in the financial sector to elevate its rate of return that is lacking within the real economy - industrial production. The resultant bubbles each inevitably burst, pushing capitalism into deeper and deeper crises, which the working class is expected to pick up the tab for.
The only solution left to the working class to get off this treadmill of crisis stacked on crisis, is to do away with capitalism and build a socialist alternative. It is no longer a question of "better regulation" of a failed model, but rather a question of moving on up to a new model that once and for all ends a class based society.
Sioux Rose
STRUGGLE: Excellent post. I would only add that it seems what Enron got away with became the BLUEPRINT then used by the banking/Wall St/real estate sector. Once one huge mega-corporation got away with making megabucks from NOTHING (as if trade itself = an entity or product), this other sector decided to dance to the same drummer.
Had anyone given a damn about not only the public but the viability of the US treasury, moves to REGULATE would have been instrumented to offset this type of greedfest ruining a sector of the economy and taking the American people for a ride into "rip off land." Instead, without any moves to block such operations, the banking sector got the free pass it wanted through the relaxing of Glass-Steagall.
Savings & Loan Debacle to Enron-Arthur Anderson Debacle, to Wall st./bank bailout Debacle. (And the most egregious of all, a made-for-profit war based on fixed pretexts.) Who's next? Until the laws are put back in place to CURB global corporate capitalism without conscience, then as LUCKY LEFTY might say, we're all food for master. Gives a whole new meaning to "what's for dinner, Mom?"
This is an excellent post RichM, kudos to you!! :)
It makes me think that we need a separation of money and government. Because when we separated religion from government, that is in essence what we were doing. The money power went from the churches to the corporations and the corporations infiltrated right back into the government. If we think there is a separation of corporation and religion, we have another thing coming.
Yes, Leea, it is an excellent post by RichM --- and also very good follow-up by you.
The founding fathers apparently were more attuned to the need for separation of church and state because the history of Empire having been a church-centric reality before the transition to the 17th century ascendancy of Empire in a nation-state-centric world. [Paul Kennedy, "Rise and Fall of the Great Powers"]
Our founding fathers would have had to be very prescient indeed to have foreseen that the era of Empire incumbent in nation-state empires would be succeeded by the 20th/21st century model of Empire in a corporate-centric globalized world.
However, the founders of America were well aware of the indivisibly combined nature of the British Empire's political AND economic spheres of tyranny, from their direct oppression by both the crown and the royally chartered East India Corporations --- and thus made similar (but less remembered) efforts to protect their newly democratic nation-state (and their citizens) from corporate abuses of power.
Early in America's history joint financed corporations could only be chartered to exist for limited time and purpose, and the purpose had to be in "the public interest" --- a term which Al Gore notes in his 2007 fabulous book, "The Assault on Reason", is "held in such contempt by the radical right faction (Empire) that they do not even accept that such a concept as 'the public interest' exists".
However, the ascension of corporate power in 19th century America quickly allowed Empire in corporate form --- through deceit, bribery, and distortion of Supreme Court ruling --- to begin infecting the body politic (as well as social, cultural and other spheres of human life) as the cancer of Empire has now metastasized to all organs in our former democratic country,on its seemingly unstoppable, but also unsustainable, dead-spiral.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Thank you Alan. Your post helps put how we became so corrupted into further focus and I think describing our governing problems as a disease like cancer very apt and true to it's condition and the threat it poses to our life as a democracy. I cannot help but ponder the strength of character and wisdom held within our ancestors that understood the perils of mixing profiteers with government. We now have what I would call a 'governmart'. Most will probably stay deaf, dumb, and blind to the threat this poses to us until it hits them right on the head.
Leea, thanks.
I like your creative and catchy term "governmart", but the established term for this through the ages is EMPIRE ---- and there are some factors, pointed out by George Lakoff in "The Political Mind" [highly recommended] that support the progressive language and thought metaphors that I personally think are advantaged by keeping the focus of language, consciousness, and sub-conscious resolution of 'contested concepts' targeted on the seminal issue of 'democracy' (and all that that word automatically means to Americans) vs. Empire (with the opposite 'frames' of thought).
Best,
Alan MacDonald
This is an excellent post. It is very insightful and informing. Thank you.
Well put, RichM, and others.
I was hoping to "retire" this year but my IRAs have lost so much that I cannot; and I'm expecting further inflation. Luckily my metabolism is slowing down so I don't eat as much. And I'm so angry that I'm numb.
-30-
Sioux Rose
OLE MAN: Rich paints a grim picture, and it may be that there is "no exit" given the present paradigm. Thus my advice to you is to FIND joy. You know the symbol for Yin and Yang? The dark circle exists within the light aspect, and vice versa? I state this because in the darkest of times one can find some areas of light and it is these that nourish our spirits. Our generation may not win this fight (I am speaking of anyone over 45) but we may in fact lay the seeds that the next generations pick up to make of what's left of this world a wonderful place to inhabit.
I am grateful for small things like two Gardenia plants offering their flowers. Many religions believe that fresh flowers can truly lift our spirits because these beings change the atmosphere. Take a walk in a park or by the seashore. If you live near mountains, take a hike and watch the birds. Find something that NOURISHES your soul! It will help. If you live near an art museum, spend time with the images. I try to go to NYC once a year as standing before Van Gogh's paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art for me is a bona fide pilgrimage. To be that close to the strokes that rendered our world the vibrating magical sphere that it is! Grace happens. Open yourself to its embrace.
Ive gardened my fingers to the bone this year. I always wonder how it is that the greedy 1% who are behind this mess (along with their partners in govt) cant enjoy the simple sublime moments in life that keep me (and you) going.
ONE PERCENT of the people in this country own THIRTY-FOUR PERCENT of the WEALTH.
TEN PERCENT of the people in this country own SEVENTY-ONE PERCENT of the WEALTH.
TEN PERCENT of the people in this county receive FORTY-TWO PERCENT of the INCOME.
The government represents ten percent of the people. The only way this will change is that at some point possibly 1% will own 50%, 5% will own 90% and 10% will receive 75%. Power will become more and more concentrated.
Only one conclusion is possible It is time to get rid of the government. And, the sooner the better. Voting won't work. That has been proven. So. We need alternatives to voting. Any suggestions?
Both the right and left need to join in resisting government abuse, they have many more of the same interests than differrences. Mass Civil Disobedience.
EKATON, good points.
However, unfortunately, the government of the U.S. actually only represents less than 1% of 'we the people', not the "ten percent of the people" that you suggest.
GINI figures prove this beyond doubt.
More later.
Alan MacDonald
Sioux Rose
WANKED: In my view they suffer from "Excessive Greed Disorder." Sometimes I think you can tell the inner value of a person by what they can do without as opposed to the contrasting need to fill a vacuum by attaching so much STUFF to their identity. How many men with no personalities, nor decent looks try to get money so they can wear expensive suits, drive around in a flashy car, and woo women with the accoutrements of apparent wealth? We should never under-estimate the value of the mating dance as it's written into our genes. (I'm sure similar dynamics work within the gay community.)
The richest person is the one who needs little to feel good about the gift of life. Jesus was such a one. He never taught followers how to store it up on this plane, rather he demonstrated the power of direct manifestation. I have truly seen this power operate in my own life at times when I was below the poverty line. One feels closer to Grace when their immediate needs are met sometimes in very unexpected ways. When you have a bank account or a steady job the sense of Grace providing is replaced by the almighty dollar or one's boss.
Nice post Sioux Rose, I sense a big change happening in your life.
We're DEAD!!!!!!
Are we supposed to jump for joy that Andy Kroll understands the in's and out's of the criminals crimes and what the American victims can look forward to? It seems we have little value to this governmart, their actions strongly indicate we are expendable unless we can be used for their toxic profit.
Are we going to hope CEObama will change things?
When corporations become "to big to fail", they buyout the government.
Sioux Rose
CHUK: Good one!
The inconvienant truth of the us economy
http://www.iousathemovie.com/
Thank you for the link.
It is just blatant fraud and outright theft. I don't know what else to call it. $12 trillion in national debt. Another $12 trillion in guarantees to the big banks. $24 trillion dollars. 150 million taxpayers. Your share is $2.4 MILLION DOLLARS. This is, of course, laughable. So. What do they have planned for us? I wonder if they'll take VISA?
Article summarizes and quotes good sources: Roubini, Baker, Stiglitz and even Krugman who has recently began to question the neo-liberal/laissez faire model.
From what I have gathered, according to Michael Hudson and some of the others quoted above, if one includes the "liquidity injections" by the Fed (not requiring Congress approval) and other measures that have flown under the radar, the taxpayer is on the hook for much more than one trillion, but rather 5-7 trillion.
As Glenn Ford and others have mentioned what is going to happen after the economy is "reflated"? What is going to happen to the value of the dollar in the coming years? It seems to me we might be headed for some serious inflation. The solutions offered thus far seem to be short-term band-aids rather than any serious attempt at structural reform. We are being ripped off now, and we will pay higher prices due to inflation later. It is truly a lose/lose situation.
"It seems to me we might be headed for some serious inflation."
I stopped into a local unit of a convenience store / gas station yesterday to grab a quick cup of coffee. I noticed some snacks on a rack. They were all kinds of prepared meat snacks in aluminum foil bags. Most contained between three and four ounces of contents. And the average price? A little below SIX DOLLARS. SIX DOLLARS for 3.5 ounces of beef jerky. Now thats some inflation!!
the subprime mortgages were an absolutely sound investment, because the investors knew that when the borrowers failed,they would be able to force the taxpayers to buy the paper.
The subprime mortgages were an absolutely sound investment, because the investors knew that when the borrowers failed, the investors would be able to force the taxpayers to buy the paper.
presently the only choices we have to quote our dear departed brother george carlin are
paper or plastic cash or credit how appropriate in regards to this story.france is our
model on how to fix government. protest protest protest. their government fears
its citizens ours nothing! the post about the m i c controlling us is so true.
rich m what 2 parties are they? anyone ever look up the word politician in an old websters?
very unflattering. and as usual sioux rose your right on it. and yes we need to push on
the pull in this country.
Sioux Rose
Tell the Truth: Thank you.
Since the inflation is about as inevitable as waiting on the beach as the water suddenly draws back with the boomerang about to press forward, one recipe for survival is to SCALE back. Just canceling cable TV saves about $500 a year, and that $ could be applied to a camping trip or the purchase of a great bicycle. I got mine at a yard sale for $25 and it's in good shape.
When I lived in the college town of Gainesville, Florida, since I don't like bars or cigarette smoke, my social activity consisted of having my espresso each day at a cool little coffee shop. I considered it my office. Nonetheless spending at minimum $2 a day = $70 a month or $840 a year. When I found an espresso machine for $11 at a yard sale in 2003 (I still use it!) I joked that with the savings I bought my ticket to Singapore a few years ago. I have never had an electric bill more than $60 because in summer the thermostat is set at 79-80 and in winter, at 65. Most of use too much. Also, I find that not eating meat saves a lot of $ on the grocery bill. I do eat fish once a week.
"It's not your health that the government is focused on, it's theirs -- the very banks and lenders..."
Really, truly shocking to learn that The Place is focused on the health of those whom Frankly Own The Place. Never coulda imagined such a thing...
Yup, this is what the Three Stooges (Limbaugh, Hannity & O'Reilly) call "socialism".
Nobody told you to invest in a bank. I've been with credit unions all my life and no problems whatsoever. Smaller banks will be given more attention only when more people switch to them. And what about people who work for big banks or people who invest their stocks in them? We have a greed disease in this country folks. It doesn't take money to convince people to switch to small banks and credit unions. And if there are more small banks and credit unions, at least help those employees transition to them from the big banks and give them the chance to make the small banks and credit unions succeed. And if you're investing stock in those big banks, sell them out and put your money to better use. No pain, no gain.
Here is how our elected officials are bought of.
Jesse Jackson's son is Jesse Jackson jr a congressman in Ill.
Jr has learned how to use political donations. A large amount of his campaign money went to his wife as an adviser.
His wife has been appointed to the Export-Import Banking Comm.
For this she gets paid again. What were her qualifications to get on that commission?
Sen Chris Dodd's wife, Jackie Clegg was appointed to this same
Export-import Banking commission. She also has her own
company that has as a client AIG..and a couple more Banks,
but no other clients.She is also on the board of directors of some five large banking institutions.
Is the Export-Import Banking Commission a road to Payoffs?
What are the qualifications to get on that Commission?
Far to many of our Senators and Representatives have wifes and husbands in conflict of interest situations that would not
exist if the officials were common people like the rest of us.