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Apr 6, 2009
America is devolving into a third-world
nation. And if we do not immediately
halt our elite’s rapacious looting of
the public treasury we will be left with
trillions in debts, which can never be
repaid, and widespread human misery
which we will be helpless to ameliorate.
Our anemic democracy will be replaced
with a robust national police state. The
elite will withdraw into heavily guarded
gated communities where they will have
access to security, goods and services
that cannot be afforded by the rest of
us. Tens of millions of people, brutally
controlled, will live in perpetual
poverty. This is the inevitable result
of unchecked corporate capitalism. The
stimulus and bailout plans are not about
saving us. They are about saving them.
We can resist, which means street
protests, disruptions of the system and
demonstrations, or become serfs.
We have been in a steady economic
decline for decades. The Canadian
political philosopher
John Ralston Saul
detailed this
decline in his 1992 book “Voltaire’s
Bastards: The Dictatorship of Reason in
the West.”
David Cay Johnston
exposed the mirage
and rot of American capitalism in “Free
Lunch: How the Wealthiest Americans
Enrich Themselves at Government Expense
(and Stick You With the Bill),” and
David C. Korten,
in “When Corporations Rule the World”
and “Agenda for a New Economy,” laid out
corporate malfeasance and abuse. But our
universities and mass media, entranced
by power and naively believing that
global capitalism was an unstoppable
force of nature, rarely asked the right
questions or gave a prominent voice to
those who did. Our elites hid their
incompetence and loss of control behind
an arrogant facade of specialized jargon
and obscure economic theories.
The lies employed to
camouflage the economic decline are
legion. President Ronald Reagan included
1.5 million U.S. Army, Navy, Air Force
and Marine service personnel with the
civilian work force to magically reduce
the nation’s unemployment rate by 2
percent. President Bill Clinton decided
that those who had given up looking for
work, or those who wanted full-time jobs
but could only find part-time
employment, were no longer to be counted
as unemployed. This trick disappeared
some 5 million unemployed from the
official unemployment rolls. If you work
more than 21 hours a week—most low-wage
workers at places like Wal-Mart average
28 hours a week—you are counted as
employed, although your real wages put
you below the poverty line. Our actual
unemployment rate, when you include
those who have stopped looking for work
and those who can only find part-time
jobs, is not 8.5 percent but 15 percent.
A sixth of the country is now
effectively unemployed. And we are
shedding jobs at a faster rate than in
the months after the 1929 crash.
The consumer price
index, used by the government to measure
inflation, is meaningless. To keep the
official inflation figures low the
government has been substituting basic
products it once measured to check for
inflation with ones that do not rise
very much in price. This sleight of hand
has kept the cost-of-living increases
tied to the CPI artificially low. The
New York Times’ consumer reporter, W.P.
Dunleavy, wrote that her groceries now
cost $587 a month, up from $400 a year
earlier. This is a 40 percent increase.
California economist John Williams, who
runs an organization called
Shadow Statistics,
contends that if Washington still used
the CPI measurements applied back in the
1970s, inflation would be 10 percent.
The corporate state,
and the political and intellectual class
that served the corporate state,
constructed a financial and political
system based on illusions. Corporations
engaged in pyramid lending that created
fictitious assets. These fictitious
assets became collateral for more bank
lending. The elite skimmed off hundreds
of millions in bonuses, commissions and
salaries from this fictitious wealth.
Politicians, who dutifully served
corporate interests rather than those of
citizens, were showered with campaign
contributions and given lucrative jobs
when they left office. Universities,
knowing it was not good business to
challenge corporatism, muted any voices
of conscience while they went begging
for corporate donations and grants.
Deceptive loans and credit card debt
fueled the binges of a consumer society
and hid falling wages and the loss of
manufacturing jobs.
The Obama
administration, rather than chart a new
course, is intent on re-inflating the
bubble. The trillions of dollars of
government funds being spent to sustain
these corrupt corporations could have
renovated our economy. We could have
saved tens of millions of Americans from
poverty. The government could have, as
consumer activist Ralph Nader has
pointed out, started 10 new banks with
$35 billion each and a 10-to-1 leverage
to open credit markets. Vast,
unimaginable sums are being placed into
these dirty corporate hands without
oversight. And they will use this money
as they always have—to enrich themselves
at our expense.
“You are going to see
the biggest waste, fraud and abuse in
American history,” Nader warned when I
asked about the bailouts. “Not only is
it wrongly directed, not only does it
deal with the perpetrators instead of
the people who were victimized, but they
don’t have a delivery system of any
honesty and efficiency. The Justice
Department is overwhelmed. It doesn’t
have a tenth of the prosecutors, the
investigators, the auditors, the
attorneys needed to deal with the
previous corporate crime wave before the
bailout started last September. It is
especially unable to deal with the
rapacious ravaging of this new money by
these corporate recipients. You can see
it already. The corporations haven’t
lent it. They have used some of it for
acquisitions or to preserve their
bonuses or their dividends. As long as
they know they are not going to jail,
and they don’t see many newspaper
reports about their colleagues going to
jail, they don’t care. It is total
impunity. If they quit, they quit with a
golden parachute. Even [General Motors
CEO Rick] Wagoner is taking away $21
million.”
There are a
handful of former executives who have
conceded that the bailouts are a waste.
American International Group Inc.‘s
former chairman,
Maurice R.
Greenberg,
told the House Oversight and Government
Reform Committee on Thursday that the
effort to prop up the firm with $170
billion has “failed.” He said the
company should be restructured. AIG, he
said, would have been better off filing
for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection
instead of seeking government help.
“These are signs of
hyper decay,” Nader said from his office
in Washington. “You spend this kind of
money and do not know if it will work.”
“Bankrupt corporate
capitalism is on its way to bankrupting
the socialism that is trying to save
it,” Nader added. “That is the end
stage. If they no longer have socialism
to save them then we are into feudalism.
We are into private police, gated
communities and serfs with a 21st
century nomenclature.”
We will not be able to
raise another 3 or 4 trillion dollars,
especially with our commitments now
totaling some $12 trillion, to fix the
mess. It was only a couple of months ago
that our expenditures totaled $9
trillion. And it was not long ago that
such profligate government spending was
unthinkable. There was an $800 billion
limit placed on the Federal Reserve a
year ago. The economic stimulus and the
bailouts will not bring back our casino
capitalism. And as the meltdown shows no
signs of abating, and the bailouts show
no sign of working, the recklessness and
desperation of our capitalist overlords
have increased. The cost, to the working
and middle class, is becoming
unsustainable. The Fed reported in March
that households lost $5.1 trillion, or 9
percent, of their wealth in the last
three months of 2008, the most ever in a
single quarter in the 57-year history of
record keeping by the central bank. For
the full year, household wealth dropped
$11.1 trillion, or about 18 percent.
These figures did not record the decline
of investments in the stock market,
which has probably erased trillions more
in the country’s collective net worth.
The bullet to our
head, inevitable if we do not radically
alter course, will be sudden. We have
been borrowing at the rate of more than
$2 billion a day over the last 10 years,
and at some point it has to stop. The
moment China, the oil-rich states and
other international investors stop
buying treasury bonds the dollar will
become junk. Inflation will rocket
upward. We will become
Weimar Germany.
A furious and sustained backlash by a
betrayed and angry populace, one
unprepared intellectually and
psychologically for collapse, will sweep
aside the Democrats and most of the
Republicans. A cabal of proto-fascist
misfits, from Christian demagogues to
simpletons like Sarah Palin to loudmouth
talk show hosts, who we naively dismiss
as buffoons, will find a following with
promises of revenge and moral renewal.
The elites, the ones with their Harvard
Business School degrees and expensive
vocabularies, will retreat into their
sheltered enclaves of privilege and
comfort. We will be left bereft and
abandoned outside the gates.
AP photo / Susan Walsh
Treasury Secretary
Timothy Geithner is overseeing the use
of billions of taxpayer dollars to
protect Wall Street financiers from
their bad investments.
Original source:
www.truthdig.com/report/item/20090406_resist_or_become_serfs
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