|
A Diary Of The
Onset Of The Greater Depression
By Carolyn Baker
| Vulture restructuring is a
purging cure for a malignant debt cancer. The reckoning of
systemic debt presents regulators with a choice of facing the
cancer frontally and honestly by excising the invasive
malignancy immediately or let it metastasize through the entire
financial system over the painful course of several quarters or
even years and decades by feeding it with more dilapidating
debt. Henry Liu, "The
Pathology Of Debt" |
Carolyn Baker Reviews
Danny Schechter's e-book
SQUEEZED (Click on link to Download)
11/29/07 "ICH"
-- -- For more years than I can count
I've heard Danny Schechter's name bandied about in progressive
circles, but for all his tireless activism, he did not fully
capture my attention until I saw his stunning documentary "In
Debt We Trust." By that time I had forsaken my myopic focus
on imperialism, the Iraq War, the Democratic Party, and of
course, Bush-bashing. It was becoming painfully and increasingly
clear to me that history was repeating itself, and being an
historian, I was well aware that it never does so in exactly the
same manner but often with enough mirroring of earlier eras that
it behooves human beings to sit up and pay attention.
About the same time that "In
Debt We Trust" appeared on my radar screen, Chalmers Johnson's
Nemesis was released, hammering home the inescapable
similarities between the fall of the Roman Empire and the demise
of the United States. Despite the divergence of focus between
Schechter's documentary and Johnson's Nemesis, both ultimately
reveal that the American empire is descending into catastrophic
financial collapse, already bankrupt, which will eventually
result in the abject impoverishment of all but a very few of its
privileged inhabitants.
After purchasing "In Debt We
Trust" I showed it regularly to a particularly endangered
species in the empire's economic war on its own citizens,
students. As a result, many "come to Jesus meetings" and "true
confession sessions" ensued in my classes as they unburdened
their souls regarding the gargantuan student loan debt with
which they would leave college and their accelerating awareness
that glamorous, cushy, lucrative jobs with which they might pay
off their debts would not exactly be falling at their feet.
Then came Danny's new e-book
Squeezed and his request that I review it. After reading
it, the above description "a diary of the onset of the Greater
Depression" came to mind. Let me explain.
I had recently read Doug Casey's
"What's
About To Hit Us Will Be Far Bigger Than The Great Depression"
in which he uses the term "The Greater Depression" to describe
the economic tsunami dead-ahead. Then after reading Squeezed,
I realized that Danny has given us an extraordinary diary
explaining exquisitely how we arrived on this path. "Great
Depression" and "diary" are words that automatically hook most
historians, and clearly, I'm no exception, particularly since I
have acquired some financial literacy in recent years and have
come to understand the quintessential role of economics in
world, national, and local events.
Early in the book the following
quote from the National Association For Business Economics
appears, and I find it absolutely stunning:
The combined threat of subprime loan
defaults and excessive indebtedness
has supplanted terrorism and the
Middle East as the biggest short-term
threat to the U.S. economy.
Some sleight of hand the ruling
elite have accomplished since 9/11, namely, that while Americans
were pondering the color of the government's daily terrorist
threat assessments, that government and its corporate cronies
was taking them to the cleaners, picking their pockets,
swindling, cheating, extorting, defrauding, hustling,
ripping-off, double-dealing, conning, hornswoggling,
hoodwinking, fudging, gouging, bamboozling, scamming, screwing,
shafting, and let's not forget bilking the American middle and
working classes. Hey, look over there-see the Italian spider
climbing up the wall-or Osama hiding under your bed? And while
you look, we'll steal you deaf, dumb, and blind!
Schechter succinctly informs the
reader early-on of the book's contents stating that:
•· *It
discusses how debt has restructured our economy and put
our people under a burden that many will never crawl out of. It
shows how access to credit has, for many, gone, in Steven
Green's phrase "from a luxury to a necessity to a noose." It
identifies the profiteers and calls for an investigation and the
prosecution of those behind this shrewdly engineered ponzi
scheme.
*It offers the critique of a media critic who has monitored
flawed and superficial reporting on the subject and who is
trying to challenge the news media to improve its coverage the
problem and it also monitors some of what it has done. It
discusses the making of my own new film intended to fill part of
void. The story of In Debt We Trust: America Before the Bubble
Bursts discusses its impact and the battle to get it seen.
*
It advocates a debt relief movement in America and argues that
such a movement would have tremendous resonance across the
spectrum of political life. It urges citizens to get involved
and politicians to respond.
On each topic, Squeezed
superbly elucidates the key issues and documents the twists and
turns of the odyssey that has resulted in the early stages of
the Greater Depression which we have now entered.
Near the end of the book appears
a Q & A section with Schechter and Gregory Paschal Zachary of
Alternet from a 2006 interview entitled "Young
Borrowers Face A Life Of Debt". The portion of the dialog I
found most illuminating was the interviewer's question:
Paschal Zachary: You suggest at times that there is a
conspiracy to trap as many Americans as possible into crushing
debt, simply in order for banks to boost profits. Is it really
that bad?
Schechter: The card companies are a cartel. They collaborate
as much as they compete. They use the same techniques. There are
people who see techniques, and the companies who use them, as
evil. I don't personally like those terms. But I think the card
companies are insensitive. They are chasing revenue and they
don't care how they get it. They go over the top.
While I agree with Danny's answer, what really intrigues me is
the interviewer's question, again echoing that dreaded word that
sends progressives screaming into the night as if their hair is
on fire: conspiracy. You see, in progressive circles we can say
anything about anything as long as we don't imply that anything
was a conspiracy. It all just sort of happened because stuff
just happens, and it's "irrational" and a bit wacky to imply
otherwise.
Earlier in the book, Schechter offers a blistering paragraph
that probably did set Zachary's hair on fire if he's read the
e-book and if he really is as terrified of "conspiracy theory"
as he sounds:
Driving this
change is a growing concentration of power in the
financial and banking sector. That, in turn, unleashed a process
called FINANCIALIZATION with the economy dominated by a
vast CREDIT AND LOAN COMPLEX every bit as insidious as the
Military Industrial Complex. This Complex is shadowy and
omnipresent, active in funding our politicians and lobbying for
laws
that benefit their businesses. At the same time, it is invisible
to most
of us. It operates through a fog of shadowy lobbyists,
interconnected
institutions and highly legalized (and hence poorly understood)
rules, laws and procedures underpinning the market system and
the
high-speed computers that move money and buy/sell orders
around the world in seconds.(xxii)
A powerful explanation indeed,
but not quite specific enough in my opinion.
Within the past few days, former
Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD),
Catherine Austin Fitts, also formerly an investment banker on
Wall St. with Dillon Read, has posted on her blog a section
entitled "Who's Who In The
Housing And Mortgage Bubble" in which she catalogs the major
players in the housing bubble/mortgage crisis in terms of
banking giants, government agencies, credit rating agencies, the
nation's top four auditors, and various industry associations.
Given the dearth of this kind of clarity regarding the mortgage
mess, Fitts's posting is priceless.
Schechter devotes one section of
the book to mis-information and bogus reporting on the part of
mainstream media's coverage of the current economic meltdown. In
it he correctly exposes the fallacies behind rosy economic
forecasts but does not address another chimera, that is, the
ostensible "losses" being suffered by Goldman Sachs, Citibank,
AIG, and others. I documented the transparency of these
so-called losses in my September article "Bush's
Bogus Bailout", and Fitts has superbly documented them on
her Solari website and on
her blog. In addition,
she has researched more thoroughly than anyone I know, in all of
her writings and particularly at her
Aristocracy Of Stock Profits
website, the prodigious criminality of the American political
and corporate capitalist systems.
The question that few have asked
is: Who are the losers? When we see CEO's like
Charles Prince leaving Citgroup with a $42 million severance
package and $53 million in stock options, can we respond with
anything but bemused scorn at the simplistic reportage
that financial institutions involved in the mortgage crisis are
"losing" anything? And when Citigroup is bolstered with a $7.5
billion infusion of cash from an Abu Dhabi investor in what has
become the "great
American fire sale" conducted by the same corporate pimps
who created the housing bubble, can we feel anything but rage at
their criminality, enabled by their media accomplices? Even more
egregious than media complicity is that of politicians who
wallow in the spoils of the debt industry.
Schechter cites David Sirota's
October, 2007
blogpost (48):
Donations plentiful to candidates in midst of possible predatory
lending regulation ... Payday lenders have given nearly $64,000
to
the 2008 candidates for president, with a vast majority of that
going to Democrats, many of whom have accused the industry of
unfair lending practices ... Democratic presidential candidates
Hillary Clinton, a U.S. senator from New York, and New Mexico
Gov. Bill Richardson each has received more than $22,000 from
payday lending sources, more than any other candidates during
the campaign.
As Squeezed notes,
these Democrats and many more also caved in on the 2005
bankruptcy bill written by and for the credit card industry.
Pam Martens in her fabulous
November 28 article "Crony-Capitalists
Fiddle While Main Street Burns" states that "The saga of how
the top minds in Washington and on Wall Street have dealt with
the deepening financial crisis in the U.S. would make a great
Hollywood screenplay, except for this: It's absurdly
unbelievable." Comparing the "sinking" of Citigroup to the
doomed Titanic, Martens opens the article with a largely unknown
fact, namely that:
The largest bank in the United States (by assets), Citigroup, is
discovered to have stashed away over $80 Billion of Byzantine
securities off its balance sheet in secretive Cayman Islands
vehicles with an impenetrable curtain around them. Citigroup
calls this black hole a Structured Investment Vehicle or SIV.
Wall Street insiders call it a "sieve" that is linked to the
breakdown in trading of debt instruments around the globe and
the erosion of wealth in assets as diverse as stock prices to
home values. Additionally, tens of billions of dollars in short
term commercial paper backed by these and similar Alice in
Wonderland assets are sitting in Mom and Pop money market funds
at the largest financial institutions in America, with a AAA
rating from our renown credit rating agencies.
While over time, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, and other subprime
players have managed to maintain sterling personas in the eyes
of outsiders, those who dig deeply such as Fitts, Martens, and
Schechter have discovered a very different reality behind the
smoke and mirrors. The magnitude of that horror movie reveals
itself almost daily in ever-new disclosures regarding the
venality at the core of the housing bubble disaster.
Indeed, there are victims of
massive corporate
fraudulent
inducement, but they are not members of upper-level
management of Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan Chase, or
Lehman Brothers. They are millions of former homeowners soaking
in financial bloodbaths of foreclosure and bankruptcy, as well
as the hoards of employees that have been and will be laid off
as a result of the carefully-crafted housing bubble train wreck.
As if all of this were not egregious enough, Bethany McLean,
Fortune Magazine Editor and co-producer of "Enron:
The Smartest Guys In The Room"
comments on the a pending lawsuit by what's left of Enron
against Citibank which claims that Citi helped the now defunct
firm manufacture financial statements. Well, we all know what
happened to the pensions and retirement funds of former Enron
employees.
Worse yet, as Squeezed
points out, "The dollar may be in a free fall. Hold on to your
hats and your homes." Freefall? Yes indeed, said Gerald Celente,
Director of Trends Research Institute in a
story reported on November 19 by United Press International
which stated that a financial crisis will likely send the U.S.
dollar into a free fall of as much as 90 percent and gold
soaring to $2,000 an ounce. Celente, forecasting a "Panic of
2008" asserted that "We are going to see economic times the
likes of which no living person has seen."
Sunday Telegraph
reporter Liam Halligan stated in "Dollar's
Fall Is Now A Bigger Political Issue Than An Economic One"
that "The importance of ‘dollar divestment' cannot be
overstated. At the very least it means the greenback has much
further to fall -- plunging the US into recession. But it begs a
bigger, more alarming, question: How will Washington react to
the end of the US hegemony?"
Astutely, Schechter picks up on
the "Shock
Doctrine" nature of the crisis as perceived by Naomi Klein
through the lens of "disaster capitalism" and concludes:
One analyst in the New York Times called it "shock therapy,"
the
very term writer Naomi Klein explores in her new book on
"disaster"
capitalism showing the link between the shock therapy once
doled out in mental hospitals, shock and awe bombing, shock
interrogation
techniques whose aim is to "disorient" prisoners and
shock strategies used in economic policy that has devastated
so
many countries in which it was tried.
Now it has come home to the US - the country that has been
exporting it overseas.
On a recent Democracy Now show, Klein explained:
"The history of the contemporary free market was written in
shocks.... Some of the most infamous human rights violations
of
the past thirty-five years, which have tended to be viewed
as
sadistic acts carried out by anti-democratic regimes, were
in fact
either committed with the deliberate intent of terrorizing
the pub-
lic or actively harnessed to prepare the ground for the
introduction
of radical free-market reforms."
The only difference here is that, so far, there have been no
serious
reforms proposed and the market is anything but free. With
its
interest cut, the Fed bails out and rewards the very
institutions that
were profiting on ill gain profits from predatory lending.
(70)
And
now for the part that is really American-you know-all of the "So
what do we do about it?" questions. Danny would answer:
The first step is raising
awareness. People don't usually talk about this problem. It's a
point of embarrassment to be overwhelmed by debt. When you give
people permission to talk about this, they pour out. We also
need grassroots political action to promote responsible lending.
We have to roll back the bankruptcy law changes. We have to fund
counseling and advice. We need to make financial literacy part
of our educational system.
Fundamentally, I agree with him, but as he already knows, I no
longer believe in any intact political system that could make
any of this happen. When I talk about debt, I almost always
speak of it in relation to the Greater Depression we have
entered and take these realities much further by illustrating
how they are an integral part of the collapse not only of the
American empire, but of civilization itself.
For
years I have been referring to the Terminal Triangle: Peak Oil,
climate change, and global economic meltdown, the latter
explained in Danny's book in terms of the international
ramifications of the Greater Depression. And of course, there
are
"other horsemen" of the apocalypse, as enumerated by Sally
Erickson in her recent blog, so I find it impossible to discuss
the mortgage crisis without connecting it with the additional
impending global catastrophes that spell the end of the world as
we have known it. Just as we have entered the Greater
Depression, we are engulfed by collapsing
institutions-especially the American political system, which are
in an abject state of dissolution and therefore incapable of
affecting change at requisite levels, for all the reasons Danny
has so thoroughly documented in his book.
As
for an educational system that will teach financial literacy
instead of testing students five hours a day, four days a
week-well, there's just too much dumbing down to be done. After
all, who prints those tests and the textbooks students can
barely read even when they're seniors in high school? Go to the
head of the class if you answered: "Subsidiaries of all the
scumbag corporations you just mentioned above."
When
I talk about collapse, my second paragraph usually goes
something like, "Get out of debt, get out of debt, get out of
debt-unless you plan to be an unincarcerated (or incarcerated)
wage slave of corporate capitalism for the rest of your life."
I
could not agree more with Danny's directive to talk about debt,
become financially literate as individuals, avoid and liberate
ourselves from debt, and watch and share with others "In Debt We
Trust." But I must add that all evidence points to the
frightening reality not only of an economic depression
dead-ahead, but an even more frightening scenario: a world in
which it will be very difficult to obtain food, drinkable water,
or healthcare-thanks again to the Terminal Triangle.
As I
scour the blogosphere, I find almost no progressive voices
discussing the dire economic realities of this moment. After
all, it's much easier to bash Bush, obsess about clueless,
corporately-owned candidates, or blog about green products,
green shopping, green living, and all manner of green-wash.
Meanwhile, I continue to ask: What have you done to prepare for
a post-petroleum world? As the Terminal Triangle becomes
ever-more cataclysmic, how will you acquire food, drinkable
water, and healthcare for yourself and your loved ones?
Feeling "squeezed" now? You ain't seen nothin' yet.
Carolyn Baker, is an adjunct
professor of history, a former psychotherapist, an author, and a
student of mythology and ritual. Visit her website
http://carolynbaker.net/site/component/option,com_frontpage/Itemid,1/
Click on "comments" below to read or post comments
Comment Guidelines
Be succinct, constructive and
relevant to the story.
We encourage engaging, diverse
and meaningful commentary. Do not include
personal information such as names, addresses,
phone numbers and emails. Comments falling
outside our guidelines – those including
personal attacks and profanity – are not
permitted.
See our complete
Comment Policy
and
use this link to notify us if you have concerns
about a comment.
We’ll promptly review and remove any
inappropriate postings.
Send Page To a Friend
In accordance
with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
is distributed without profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving the
included information for research and educational
purposes. Information Clearing House has no
affiliation whatsoever with the originator of
this article nor is Information ClearingHouse
endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
|