These Are the Times That Try Men’s Souls by William Cox

by William Cox
featured writer
Dandelion Salad
www.thevoters.org
October 10, 2008

” –That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, –That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government,… organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.” ~The Declaration of Independence

How many more lies must we listen to? How many more political scandals must we endure? How many more of our young people have to be grievously wounded or die in unnecessary and illegal wars, and how many more trillions of dollars in economic waste must we clean up before we are sickened enough to demand effective changes in our government?

Are we ready for a peaceful political “evolution” to safeguard our personal and economic freedoms in this country and to avoid committing war crimes against others?

In Washington’s Crossing, an excellent history of the near failure of the American Revolution in the winter of 1776, David Hackett Fischer concluded that neither Washington’s leadership nor the victories at Trenton and Princeton saved the revolution following his resounding defeat in New York City.

To the contrary, Washington’s victories resulted from the revival of spirit that arose among the ordinary people in the Delaware Valley as they began to read Thomas Paine’s American Crisis.

According to Fischer,

“This great revival grew from defeat, not from victory. The awakening was a response to a disaster. Doctor Benjamin Rush, who had a major role in the event, believed that this was the way a free public would always work, and the American republic in particular. He thought it was a national habit of the American people (maybe all free people) not to deal with a difficult problem until it was nearly impossible.”

Although we are calculating the cost in thousands of lives and billions of dollars, we cannot imagine the full extent of damage that will flow from our president’s having misled our nation into an illegal war with Iraq and our innocent troops into the commission of war crimes.

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Greg Palast on Vote Rigging and Suppression + Is 2008 already fixed?

Dandelion Salad

Democracy Now!
Oct 9, 2008

Greg Palast on Vote Rigging and Suppression Ahead of the 2008 Election

BBC investigative journalist Greg Palast travels to New Mexico, Michigan and Colorado to investigate how both Democrats and Republicans are accusing each other of trying to steal the election. Palast also discusses his new comic book Steal Back Your Vote, co-written with Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. [includes rush transcript]

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via Democracy Now! | Greg Palast on Vote Rigging and Suppression Ahead of the 2008 Election

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TrooperGate Official Report Finds Gov Palin Broke Alaska Law + Walt Monegan responds

Dandelion Salad

VOTERSTHINKdotORG

http://cspanjunkie.org/
October 10, 2008 MSNBC

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McCain Campaign Responds To TrooperGate Report

Rachel Maddow Show

Walt Monegan Fired Alaskan Official Responds To Troopergate

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Divide and Conquer by Bruce Gagnon (+ video)

McCain and The Evil Empire

Rachel Maddow: Palin’s Secessionist Connection + Palin’s radical right-wing mentors

Three Way Vice Presidential Debate: Palin, Biden, Gonzalez

McCain-Palin campaign’s attacks on Obama: a whiff of fascism

Is Obama a socialist?

Palin-Sarah

McCain-John

Obama-Barack

Divide and Conquer by Bruce Gagnon (+ video)

Updated: added another video, see below

Bruce

by Bruce Gagnon
featured writer
Dandelion Salad
Bruce’s blog post
space4peace.blogspot.com
Oct. 10, 2008

It all makes perfect sense. The economy is collapsing and the American people are angry and frustrated. So rather than have them condemn the system that is ultimately responsible the power structure has created the lion’s den where Democrat and Republican rip each others throat out and move toward civil war. That should keep the people busy while the corporate elite steal the nation blind.

Sarah Palin’s job in all of this is to throw the red meat into the crowd. And she is good at it and seems to have no conscience about doing so. She feels the power and loves it. The boys in charge have chosen well.

According to the Washington Post report from a McCain-Palin rally in Wisconsin, “There were shouts of ‘Nobama’ and ‘Socialist’ at the mention of the Democratic presidential nominee. There were boos, middle fingers turned up and thumbs turned down as a media caravan moved through the crowd Thursday for a midday town hall gathering featuring John McCain and Sarah Palin.”

Obama, a socialist? Not even close.

At one recent rally someone yelled “kill him” as Palin was pumping up the crowd. At a McCain event a supporter of his yelled “terrorist” when the Republican candidate asked “Who is Barack Obama?”

McCain voted for the bailout and is now using the issue to drive a wedge between the people. Instead of acknowledging both corporate parties complicity with Wall Street, the McCain-Palin team are playing innocent victim.

Again the Post reports, “The crowd showed equal disdain for the media, fueled by comments from Palin, who encouraged the Republican supporters to take the campaign’s message around the media. ‘I can’t pick a fight with those who buy ink by the barrel,’ she said. ‘It’s dangerous territory whenever I suggest the mainstream media isn’t asking all the questions.’ ”

Translation – the media is picking on me. Defend me against the socialists and the liberal media. The crowd loves it because she plays on their own sense of powerlessness. They feel a sense of duty and unity for their cause.

Yes Sarah Palin, the millionaire, who pretends to be just like Joe Six-Pack, is being picked on. Grab your gun and defend her…….

The fascists now running this country know they must get out in front of the public outrage and turn it away from them toward their own enemies who could potentially expose their corruption. Thus the left who are challenging corporate power and the “liberal media” become the target. This is what this election is really about.

I’ve always maintained that a country like the U.S., who has aided in the killing of people all over the world in order to build it’s military and economic empire, would some day have to turn their sights on us here at home. We are no longer needed to build cars and make clothes. That can be done more cheaply overseas. Unemployment is growing in the U.S. and there is nothing more dangerous than an educated unemployed worker. They become revolutionaries.

So the strategy must be to lower education standards and use emotion to turn the people against each other. McCain’s slogan “Country First” should actually read “Divide and Conquer”.

If you have doubts just see what our government has done to the Indians when their land was taken from them. Or see how the black liberation movement has been treated over the years. Or how the labor movement was beaten and killed during our history as they tried to organize workers.

We are all being brought onto the reservation now. American is being pitted against American.

We should each be careful how we get used in creating this new deadly internal conflict.

***

If McCain inspires this kind of behavior as a candidate, just imagine what he can do as prez!

MorrillMajority

McCain supporters tell their stories while waiting for the McCain/Palin rally in Bethlehem, PA, October 8, 2008.

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h/t: John McStain

***

McCain Forced To Defend Obama After Rhetoric Backfires!

VOTERSTHINKdotORG

http://cspanjunkie.org/
October 10, 2008 MSNBC Rachel Maddow Show

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U.S. Army prepares to invade U.S.

Is Posse Comitatus Dead? US Troops on US Streets

McCain and The Evil Empire

Rachel Maddow: Palin’s Secessionist Connection + Palin’s radical right-wing mentors

Three Way Vice Presidential Debate: Palin, Biden, Gonzalez

McCain-Palin campaign’s attacks on Obama: a whiff of fascism

Is Obama a socialist?

Libertarians and Socialists as Workers Must Unite by Lo

Palin-Sarah

McCain-John

Obama-Barack

Jim Rogers: They are unleashing an inflationary holocaust

Dandelion Salad

peacespeech

Jim Rogers on CNBC on 2008.10.10 said that action taken by governments and central bankers around the world would lead to rampant inflation around the world, rampant confusion in the currency market and bond markets would start to collapse.

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A Solution? By Paul Craig Roberts

Black Friday? By Mike Whitney

The Edge of the Abyss by Danny Schechter

How to Save the U.S. Economy by Richard C. Cook

The Biggest Bank Heist in History (Interview with Richard C. Cook)

Perpetual Growth Is Impossible – The Coming End of Usury as the Dominant Social Paradigm

The Fed Now Owns The World’s Largest Insurance Company – But Who Owns The Fed? by Dr. Ellen Brown

The Economy Sucks and or Collapse

A Solution? By Paul Craig Roberts

Dandelion Salad

By Paul Craig Roberts
10/10/08 “ICH’

Readers have been pressing for a solution to the financial crisis. But first it is necessary to understand the problem. Here is the problem as I see it. If my diagnosis is correct, the solution below might be appropriate.

Let’s begin with the fact that the financial crisis is more or less worldwide. The mechanism that spread the American-made financial crisis abroad was the massive US trade deficit. Every year the countries with which the US has trade deficits end up in the aggregate with hundreds of billions of dollars.

Countries don’t put these dollars in a mattress. They invest them. They buy up US companies, real estate, and toll roads. They also purchase US financial assets. They finance the US government budget deficit by purchasing Treasury bonds and bills. They help to finance the US mortgage market by purchasing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bonds. They buy financial instruments, such as mortgage-backed securities and other derivatives, from US investment banks, and that is how the US financial crisis was spread abroad. If the US current account was close to balance, the contagion would have lacked a mechanism by which to spread.

One reason the US trade deficit is so large is the practice of US corporations offshoring their production of goods and services for US markets. When these products are brought into the US to be sold, they count as imports.

Thus, economists were wrong to see the trade deficit as a non-problem and to regard offshoring as a plus for the US economy.

The fact that much of the financial world is polluted with US toxic financial instruments could affect the ability of the US Treasury to borrow the money to finance the bailout of the financial institutions. Foreign central banks might need their reserves to bail out their own financial systems. As the US savings rate is approximately zero, the only alternative to foreign borrowing is the printing of money.

Financial deregulation was an important factor in the development of the crisis. The most reckless deregulation occurred in 1999, 2000, and 2004. See Roberts, The End of American Hegemony

Lax mortgage lending policies grew out of pressures placed on mortgage lenders during the 1990s by the US Department of Justice and federal regulatory agencies to race-norm their mortgage lending and to provide below-market loans to preferred minorities. Subprime mortgages became a potential systemic threat when issuers ceased to bear any risk by selling the mortgages, which were then amalgamated with other mortgages and became collateral for mortgage-backed securities.

Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan’s inexplicable low interest rate policy allowed the systemic threat to develop. Low interest rates push up housing prices by lowering monthly mortgage payments, thus increasing housing demand. Rising home prices created equity to justify 100 percent mortgages. Buyers leveraged themselves to the hilt and lacked the ability to make payments when they lost their jobs or when adjustable rates and interest escalator clauses pushed up monthly payments.

Wall Street analysts pushed financial institutions to increase their earnings, which they did by leveraging their assets and by insuring debt instruments instead of maintaining appropriate reserves. This spread the crisis from banks to insurance companies.

Finance chiefs around the world are dealing with the crisis by bailing out banks and by lowering interest rates. This suggests that the authorities see the problem as a solvency problem for the financial institutions and as a liquidity problem. US Treasury Secretary Paulson’s solution, for example, leaves unattended the continuing mortgage defaults and foreclosures. The fall in the US stock market predicts a serious recession, which means rising unemployment and more defaults and foreclosures.

In place of a liquidity problem, I see an over-abundance of debt instruments relative to wealth. A fractional reserve banking system based on fiat money appears to be capable of creating debt instruments faster than an economy can create real wealth. Add in credit card debt, stocks purchased on margin, and leveraged derivatives, and debt is pyramided relative to real assets.

Add in the mark-to-market rule, which forces troubled assets to be under-valued, thus threatening the solvency of institutions, and short-selling, which drives down the shares of troubled institutions, thereby depriving them of credit lines, and you have an outline of the many causes of the current crisis.

If the diagnosis is correct, the solution is multifaceted.

Instead of wasting $700 billion on a bailout of the guilty that does not address the problem, the money should be used to refinance the troubled mortgages, as was done during the Great Depression. If the mortgages were not defaulting, the income flows from the mortgage interest through to the holders of the mortgage-backed securities would be restored. Thus, the solvency problem faced by the holders of these securities would be at an end.

The financial markets must be carefully re-regulated, not over-regulated or wrongly regulated.

To shore up the credibility of the US Treasury’s own credit rating and the US dollar as world reserve currency, the US budget and trade deficits must be addressed. The US budget deficit can be eliminated by halting the Bush Regime’s gratuitous wars and by cutting the extravagant US military budget. The US spends more on military than the rest of the world combined. This is insane and unaffordable. A balanced budget is a signal to the world that the US government is serious and is taking measures to reduce its demand on the supply of world savings.

The trade deficit is more difficult to reduce as the US has stupidly permitted itself to become dependent not merely on imports of foreign energy, but also on imports of foreign manufactured goods including advanced technology products. Steps can be taken to bring home the offshored production of US goods for US markets. This would substantially reduce the trade deficit and, thus, restore credibility to the US dollar as world reserve currency. Follow-up measures would be required to insure that US imports do not greatly exceed exports.

The US will have to set aside the racial privileges that federal bureaucrats pulled out of the Civil Rights Act and restore sound lending practices. It the US government itself wishes to subsidize at taxpayer expense home purchases by non-qualified buyers, that is a political decision subject to electoral ratification. But the US government must cease to force private lenders to breech the standards of prudence.

The issuance of credit cards must be brought back to prudent standards, with checks on credit history, employment, and income. Balances that grow over time must be seen as
a problem against which reserves must be provided, instead of a source of rising interest income to the credit card companies.

Fractional reserve banking must be reined in by higher reserve requirements, rising over time perhaps to 100 percent. If banks were true financial intermediaries, they would not have money creating power, and the proliferation of debt relative to wealth would be reduced.

Does the US have the leadership to realize the problem and to deal with it?

Not if Bush, Cheney, Paulson, Bernanke, McCain and Obama are the best leadership that America can produce.

The Great Depression lasted a decade because the authorities were unable to comprehend that the Federal Reserve had allowed the supply of money to shrink. The shrunken money supply could not employ the same number of workers at the same wages, and it could not purchase the same amount of goods and service at the same prices. Thus, prices and employment fell.

The explanation of the Great Depression was not known until the 1960s when Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz published their Monetary History of the United States. Given the stupidity of our leadership and the stupidity of so many of our economists, we may learn what happened to us this year in 2038, three decades from now.

FAIR USE NOTICE: This blog may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues, etc. This constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

see

The End of American Hegemony

Black Friday? By Mike Whitney

The Edge of the Abyss by Danny Schechter

How to Save the U.S. Economy by Richard C. Cook

The Biggest Bank Heist in History (Interview with Richard C. Cook)

Perpetual Growth Is Impossible – The Coming End of Usury as the Dominant Social Paradigm

The Fed Now Owns The World’s Largest Insurance Company – But Who Owns The Fed? by Dr. Ellen Brown

The Economy Sucks and or Collapse

Mosaic News – 10/9/08: World News from the Middle East

Dandelion Salad

Warning

.

This video may contain images depicting the reality and horror of war/violence and should only be viewed by a mature audience.

linktv

Mosaic needs your help! Donate here: http://linktv.org/contribute

“Car Bomb Strikes Police Headquarters in Islamabad,” Al Jazeera TV, Qatar
“Missing American Journalists Turn Up in Syria,” Al Arabiya TV, UAE
“Turkey Pounds Kurdish Sites in N. Iraq,” Saudi TV, Saudi Arabia
“Hamas & Fateh Far from Reconcilliation,” Abu Dhabi TV, UAE
“Kuwaiti Investors Force Stock Market to Close,” Dubai TV, UAE
“Iran is Immune from Financial Crunch,” Al-Alam TV, Iran
“Somali pirate source: deal near on Ukraine ship,” Al Jazeera English, Qatar
“Mustafa Ibrahim Released from Guantanamo Prison,” Sudan TV, Sudan
“Israel shuts down for Yom Kippur,” IBA TV, Israel
Produced for Link TV by Jamal Dajani.

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The Economy Sucks and or Collapse

Black Friday? By Mike Whitney

Dandelion Salad

By Mike Whitney
10/10/08 “ICH”

Panic has spread to stock markets around the world. A massive sell-off, which began when Henry Paulson announced a $700 billion bailout for the banking system, has turned into a global stampede. Shares fell sharply across Europe and Asia for fifth straight day following a 679 drop on the Dow Jones.  Nearly $900 billion was wiped off the value of U.S. equities in just one trading day. The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index, the “fear index”, soared to a record 64.  Credit markets remain frozen. Libor,  London interbank offered rate, nudged up slightly on Thursday night, signaling even greater resistance to lending between the banks. Until there is relief in the credit markets, stocks will continue to slide. But trust has vanished. The 50 basis points rate cut that was coordinated with foreign central banks has had no effect. The market is being driven by fear and pessimism. Friday is shaping up to be a bloodbath on Wall Street.

White House press secretary, Dana Perino said yesterday that President Bush will address the country on Friday morning:

“He will assure the American people that they should be confident that economic officials are aggressively taking every action to stabilize our financial system. The Treasury Department is moving quickly to use new tools to improve liquidity, which is the root cause of this problem.”

Bush still believes that the problem is “liquidity” rather than “insolvency”. When liabilities vastly exceed assets, liquidity does not help. The bad banks need to be closed so the good ones can be strengthened with capital injections.

New York Times columnist Paul Krugman said, “Last month, when the U.S. Treasury Department allowed Lehman Brothers to fail, I wrote that Henry Paulson, the Treasury Secretary, was playing financial Russian roulette. Sure enough, there was a bullet in that chamber: Lehman’s failure caused the world financial crisis, already severe, to get much, much worse.”

Lehman’s credit default swaps, (the derivatives which Warren Buffett calls “financial weapons of mass destruction”) will be “unwound” on Friday. It could be a “non event” or it could trigger another sell off; it is impossible to know. If tens of billions of dollars are drained from already weakened balance sheets in counterparty deals that have turned sour, the market will react violently. Wall Street is on tenterhooks waiting for the news from Lehman.

There is general agreement among economists about what needs to be done to stabilize the financial system. The banks have to be recapitalized, deposits have to be guaranteed (beyond the $100,000 FDIC limit) and additional stimulus has to be provided to increase consumer demand. Otherwise the United States will face another Great Depression. Too much time has been wasted on Paulson’s failed  bailout for G-Sax and his friends on Wall Street. Buying the bad assets of underwater banks does not fix the problem. The banks need capital so they can resume lending and transmit credit to consumers and businesses.

Former head of the FDIC, William Isaac summed it up like this:

“I was opposed to the bailout bill, mostly because I don’t think it will work. The banks — taking $700 billion of bad loans out of the banks doesn’t help get banks lending again. It just solves some problems in some banks. And it doesn’t have any leverage to it. If the Treasury were to put that same $700 billion and used that to invest in bank capital, the banks can loan $10 for every dollar of capital, roughly, which means that the Treasury would be creating $7 trillion of new lending capacity in the banks. And that is vastly superior to buying $700 billion of problem loans. It just — it will really give some punch to the economy. It will get banks back into the lending business….. And to do that we need to get some capital back in there.”

Isaac added:

“The other major thing they really need to do… They really need to have the FDIC declare that there is a financial emergency. And when the FDIC does that, the FDIC should announce that during this period of crisis, all general creditors, all depositors, insured and uninsured, bondholders in our banking system, will be protected if a bank fails. And that, I think, will get the inter — the financial markets working again and get banks willing to loan to each other again.”

Nearly one third of all deposits  ($2.5 trillion) are not insured under present FDIC guidelines. If these deposits are not insured, as Isaac says, there will continue to be a slow run on the banks which is why the credit markets are paralyzed.

Much of this week’s volatility in the market is the result of program trading (many sell orders were automatically executed when the Dow hit 9,000) and massive deleveraging in the hedge funds, the secretive $1.7 trillion industry. As credit gets tighter, the funds are unable to roll over their short term debt and have been forced to dump their assets in an illiquid market at firesale prices. This explains the recent see-saw motion in the stock market; the huge 2 to 3 percent intraday swings (positive/negative) This has added to the fear of smaller investors who have left the market in droves for the safety of US Treasuries or cash. That’s why the dollar has strengthened even though the Federal Reserve is printing money at a furious pace. The inflationary effects will not be apparent until the destruction of credit abates.

The biggest danger we face in the short term, is a run on the financial system. Calm must be restored if we want to avoid another depression. Investors have already pulled a record $72 billion from stock and mutual funds, and put the money in US Treasurys and government-insured bank deposits. If the trend continues, the financial system will collapse. This is where leadership and credibility really matter. The Bush administration’s record on these issues is dismal. If the government overreacts and limits bank withdrawals or closes the stock market; the sense of desperation and panic will only grow. That increases the likelihood of rioting and violence, which is what took place in China just this week.

The falling stock market reflects the mood of the country as a whole. Confidence in the system is at an all-time low. The government has lost the moral authority to rule. People have lost faith in everything. Bush has created a tinder box which could explode in flames at any time. It is a dangerous situation.

BLACK FRIDAY: False alarm or Armageddon?

The econo-blogs were abuzz all night Thursday. The prevailing feeling is that Wall Street will suffer historic losses on Friday and that this will mark the end of America’s dominance as the lone superpower. As always, economist Nouriel Roubini provided a chilling analysis of the present financial malaise:

Nouriel Roubini:

“The US and advanced economies’ financial system is now headed towards a near-term systemic financial meltdown as day after day stock markets are in free fall, money markets have shut down while their spreads are skyrocketing, and credit spreads are surging through the roof. There is now the beginning of a generalized run on the banking system of these economies; a collapse of the shadow banking system… and now a roll-off of the short term liabilities of the corporate sectors that may lead to widespread bankruptcies of solvent but illiquid financial and non-financial firms.

At this point the risk of an imminent stock market crash – like the one-day collapse of 20% plus in US stock prices in 1987 – cannot be ruled out as the financial system is breaking down, panic and lack of confidence in any counterparty is sharply rising and the investors have totally lost faith in the ability of policy authorities to control this meltdown….

When… even the most radical policy actions don’t provide rallies or relief to market participants, you know that you are one step away from a market crack and a systemic financial sector and corporate sector collapse. A vicious circle of deleveraging, asset collapses, margin calls, cascading falls in asset prices well below falling fundamentals and panic is now underway.” (Nouriel Roubini’s Global EconoMonitor)

There’s a way forward but it will take a lot of digging out and a vision of the future that doesn’t center on Wall Street.

FAIR USE NOTICE: This blog may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues, etc. This constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

see

The Edge of the Abyss by Danny Schechter

How to Save the U.S. Economy by Richard C. Cook

The Biggest Bank Heist in History (Interview with Richard C. Cook)

Renewed Interest: Analyst Ties Monetary Reform To Social Credit Movement (2007; Richard C. Cook)

“To the Bunkers!”: Central banks slash rates in emergency “midnight” meeting By Mike Whitney

Perpetual Growth Is Impossible – The Coming End of Usury as the Dominant Social Paradigm

The Fed Now Owns The World’s Largest Insurance Company – But Who Owns The Fed? by Dr. Ellen Brown

The Economy Sucks and or Collapse

More than 300 workers arrested in immigration raid on South Carolina plant

Dandelion Salad

By Hiram Lee
http://www.wsws.org
10 October 2008

Federal agents stormed the Columbia Farms poultry plant in Greenville, South Carolina on Tuesday, arresting at least 330 immigrant workers. Roughly 450 agents were involved in the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raid that began during a 9 a.m. shift change. As authorities burst into the plant, terrified workers ran for the doors but found them blocked by agents. Herbert Oscar Rooker, a janitor at the plant, told reporters he “had to duck back into the bathroom to keep from getting trampled.”

[…]

This violent expression of the US government’s official policy of anti-immigrant chauvinism, supported by both corporate-controlled political parties and the trade union bureaucracies, serves to keep the country’s large immigrant workforce in fear, rendering them all the more easily exploited. It also further demonizes immigrant workers, blaming their “illegal” theft of US jobs for many of the hardships faced by workers born in the US, obscuring in the process the real cause of social misery in the country—the capitalist system.

[…]

via More than 300 workers arrested in immigration raid on South Carolina plant

FAIR USE NOTICE: This blog may contain copyrighted material. Such material is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues, etc. This constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

Latin Pulse: Bolivia and the Current Crises

Dandelion Salad

linktv

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(Latin Pulse: 7, October, 2008)
More at http://www.linktv.org/latin…

As Americans and the world focus on the looming economic catastrophe, Bolivia is struggling to avert its own internal schism – one that could throw Latin America into a tailspin.
One out of three Bolivians want their department (province) to secede from the country. Why would anybody want to do this in one of the continent’s poorest countries? Who is behind this movement? And why were the U.S. ambassadors to Bolivia and Venezuela sent packing?
Español
Mientras Estados Unidos y el mundo se preocupan de una posible catástrofe económica, Bolivia esta tratando de evitar su propia catástrofe, la cual podría consumir a todo el continente Latinoamericano.
Uno de tres bolivianos quieren separarse de Bolivia y crear su propio país. ¿Por qué alguien querría hacer esto en el país más pobre de Sud América?
¿Quién está detrás de este movimiento? ¿Y por qué se ha expulsado a los embajadores de Estados Unidos en Bolivia y en Venezuela?
Panel
John M. Walsh, Senior Associate for the Andes and Drug Policy, Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA)
Walsh is senior associate for the division of WOLA related to strengthening the rule of law in the Andes to promote respect for human rights and to bolster democratic institutions in the region. From 1995-2003, Mr. Walsh served as director of research at Drug Strategies, a policy research group that builds support for more pragmatic and effective approaches to U.S. drug problems. He also worked from 1993-1995 on the “Rethinking Bretton Woods Project” at the Center of Concern – an effort to forge consensus on ideas for reform of the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and international trade arrangements. Mr. Walsh holds a master’s degree in public policy from Johns Hopkins University.
Luis Manuel Botello, Senior Program Director
Mr. Botello is responsible for the identification, implementation, and development of all ICFJ projects for Latin America and the Caribbean. He also conducts a variety of training programs and conferences. Botello previously served as morning newscast producer, host, and television reporter for Televisora Nacional in Panama, where he covered assignments in Colombia, the United States, and Europe. He is a member of the board of directors of the Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas at the University of Texas at Austin and the Latin American Journalism Center (CELAP) in Panama City. He received a Fulbright Scholarship in 1988 and a fellowship to Louisiana State University’s Manship School of Mass Communication in 1997. He holds a B.A. in journalism and a master’s in mass communications from Louisiana State University. He is a native Spanish-speaker, fluent in English, and proficient in Portuguese and is also available for interviews.
Julio Moreno, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Department of History, University of San Francisco
Professor Moreno is the co-director of the Center for Latino Studies in the Americas (CELASA) at the University of San Francisco. He is a professor in the Department of History who specializes in modern Mexican history as well as the social and cultural history of Latin America. Currently, he is on leave to work on a new book on Colombia’s history and politics.

The Edge of the Abyss by Danny Schechter

Dandelion Salad

by Danny Schechter
Global Research, October 9, 2008

The Edge of the Abyss: As Economic War Threatens It’s Time to Fight Back. Let’s Start With National Teach-ins

The other day as I was out promoting my book Plunder with a talk at a New York bookstore on the day the market dropped precipitously. It was a day that I led my blog with a quote from financial analyst fearing we are on the edge of the abyss.

I was introduced by Steve Fraser, a scholar, who wrote a major study on Wall Street and the American dream. As we chatted, I asked if he had expected the intensity of the crisis we are now experiencing.

“Yes,” he said, “I always knew this was possible, even likely but I am in a state of shock by the severity and seriousness of the crash. Honestly, I thought they would avoid it.”

We all want to believe everything will turn out ok. We all tend to believe that the folks in charge at Wall Street are too smart to let their own world go down, along with ours, and that they somehow will fix it because it is in their interest to do so. Most of us don’t have much of a sense of how systems and institutions and economic laws and cycles operate.

We expect rationality in a marketplace driven by panicky irrationality.

A night earlier, on CNN, a poll reported that 6 out of ten Americans expect things will get worse and turn into a depression. I am not sure most know what a depression means but that expectation shows diminishing confidence in the public at large. Of course, CNN’s financial analyst, an editor of Fortune was soon waxing more optimistically about the need to solve the problem, not go after wrong doers.

Financial writer Mike Whitney disagrees:

“The United States is headed into another Great Depression and has probably dragged the rest of the world along with it. The global financial system will look very different by the time we reach the other end of the tunnel.”

Somehow the lessons of history were forgotten as we watched a Congressional committee grill a banker about the greed that led to his downfall. As I stared at the screen, watching his shifty, uncomfortable dazed look, and at the feigned condemnations by our elected representatives who hadn’t been paying attention when they should have, I realized that we were watching a rerun without knowing it.

I thought of the great Harvard-based economist John Kenneth Galbraith who I knew in his last years and had wanted to make a film about. He had written about this moment before we started living it, only it was in 1929, as London’s Telegraph reminded us by quoting his words.

“As the ghosts of numerous tyrants, from Julius Caesar to Benito Mussolini will testify, people are very hard on those who, having had power, lose it or are destroyed. Then anger at past arrogance is joined with contempt for present weakness.

“The victim or his corpse is made to suffer all available indignities. Such was the fate of the bankers. They were fair game for Congressional committees, courts, the press and comedians.”

These are the observations of economist J K Galbraith in The Great Crash, 1929. First published in 1954, his analysis of the greed and self-delusion that led to the unraveling of America’s stock market and the subsequent Depression is undimmed by time.”

Now it’s our turn, in our time, to watch as ‘undimmed’ as possible.

He added: “Cause and effect run from the economy to the stock market, never the reverse. In 1929, the economy was headed for trouble,” wrote Galbraith.

As now, too few understood this. Many who foresaw disaster kept quiet. There was a conspiracy of silence. “The foolish thus [had] the field to themselves.”

Look at our “real economy.” Inequality has deepened over decades. Wages have not risen. Unemployment is growing. A social safety net has been largely shredded. Free market ideologues have dominated the discourse.

As the economy seems to be collapsing with central banks pumping in still more billions, as the markets gyrates, as investors in Hong Kong rally outside a bank demanding their government act because Americans had defrauded them, there is an overall sense of fatalism, if not futility. Anger is building. We can see a conspiracy of silence about the causes, maybe even about the conspiracy, or at least, the cabal behind the calamity.

There will be some kind of a rebound. No one knows when or how much damage will done before it occurs. There still seems to denial in many quarters as if this is something happening to others. The Presidential candidates were perfunctory about it, acknowledging the problem but then reverting to message points and symbolic superficial steps. The media records the crisis but offers little by way of proposals.

We seem to be confronting a trifecta of failure: a financial failure, a political failure and a media failure all reinforcing each other. It’s the perfect storm.

What to do as an economic war against most Americans is unleashed? We need to fight back. We need an economic justice movement because the Democratic Party is vacillating. One way to start might be the way the movement against the Vietnam War started—with a national teach-in movement on campuses and communities to educate the change-oriented community to put this issue and some real solutions on the agenda.

Who will fund it? Who will join me? If not now, when?

News Dissector Danny Schechter’s latest book is Plunder: Investigating Our Economic Calamity (Cosimo Books—at online book stores) and the director of the film In Debt We Trust (indebt wetrust.com) Comments to dissector@mediachannel.org

© Copyright Danny Schechter, Global Research, 2008

The url address of this article is: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=10496

see

How to Save the U.S. Economy by Richard C. Cook

The Biggest Bank Heist in History (Interview with Richard C. Cook)

Renewed Interest: Analyst Ties Monetary Reform To Social Credit Movement (2007; Richard C. Cook)

“To the Bunkers!”: Central banks slash rates in emergency “midnight” meeting By Mike Whitney

Does the Bailout Bill Mark the End of America as We Know It? by Richard C. Cook

Perpetual Growth Is Impossible – The Coming End of Usury as the Dominant Social Paradigm

The Fed Now Owns The World’s Largest Insurance Company – But Who Owns The Fed? by Dr. Ellen Brown

The Economy Sucks and or Collapse

How to Save the U.S. Economy by Richard C. Cook

What you can do to get this going: Email This Write To Congress ~ Lo

Digg It

On current

by Richard C. Cook
featured writer
Dandelion Salad
richardccook.com
October 10, 2008

The crashing stock market has given its verdict. The financial rescue plan currently being implemented by the U.S. Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve System will fail to revitalize the producing economy, even with continued interest rate cuts. This is because the banking system is essentially a supply-side, trickle-down mechanism with a currency based on a pyramid of bank lending and debt. All the current plans being suggested by economists and others to save the financial system by varying degrees of tinkering are useless. Similarly useless is the pumping in of credit or liquidity by Treasury or the Federal Reserve because it is no more than new debt to roll over old debt.

The cause of the financial failure is that the producing and consumer economy is “maxed out” and is unable to repay existing loans much less new ones. This is because purchasing power in the U.S. has collapsed.

Purchasing power has collapsed not only because we have outsourced our industry abroad and allowed our infrastructure to crumble, but also because of structural defects identified decades ago by C.H. Douglas and John Maynard Keynes. These defects occur due to the need for retained earnings (i.e. savings) to overcome the Law of Diminishing Returns. This leads to insufficient aggregate demand; i.e., the gap between prices and purchasing power that is endemic in an industrial economy.

The problem is not the collapse of the stock market which simply reflects the deflation of the bubble economy. The problem is the oncoming recession/depression caused by the absence of an economic engine to generate new producing power.

Keynesian plans for top-down creation of jobs by government deficit spending has never worked and has always ended in an attempt by the government to inflate its way out of debt. Everything being suggested by the Obama/McCain campaigns is based on the failed Keynesian formula.

An entirely new paradigm is needed. This can be provided through dividend-based economics like the Alaska Permanent Fund, the 2008 tax rebate stimulus, and the basic income guarantee (negative income tax) discussed during the 1960s and 1970s.

Following is the “Cook Plan”:

  1. Non-taxable vouchers should be issued at the rate of $1,000 per month per adult and $500 per month per child which may be used for food, housing, fuel, communications media, utilities, and educational services provided at outlets within the U.S. Distribution of vouchers may be delegated to state and local governments.
  2. Vouchers will be deposited by service providers and vendors only in a new network of local chartered savings banks—one for each county in the U.S. Deposits will be made to the bank in the county of the local point-of-sale.
  3. Banks will lend locally at zero-percent interest using voucher deposits as capitalization. The banks may create loans at a 1:10 reserve ratio with borrowers paying administrative fees only. Borrowers must provide a 20% down payment as collateral or purchase default insurance at 2% of the loan principal.
  4. Lending will be made only to business entities, including family or commercial farms, operating from an established location within the county.

This system will create a grassroots “bottom-up” economic infrastructure to parallel the “top-down” Federal Reserve System which is collapsing. Transfers between local savings banks and the banks of the Federal Reserve System will be denominated in U.S. dollars with vouchers redeemed within the banking system.

The system could be implemented within a matter of weeks through seed-money provided by the federal government. It could be replicated by any other nation.

It is requested that readers give this plan the widest possible distribution.

Copyright 2008 by Richard C. Cook

Richard C. Cook is a former U.S. federal government analyst, whose career included service with the U.S. Civil Service Commission, the Food and Drug Administration, the Carter White House, NASA, and the U.S. Treasury Department. His articles on economics, politics, and space policy have appeared in numerous websites and print magazines. His book on monetary reform, entitled We Hold These Truths: The Hope of Monetary Reform, will soon be published. He is the author of Challenger Revealed: An Insider’s Account of How the Reagan Administration Caused the Greatest Tragedy of the Space Age, called by one reviewer, “the most important spaceflight book of the last twenty years. His website is www.richardccook.com. Comments or requests to be added to his mailing list or to purchase his special report on the 2008 election may be sent to EconomicSanity@gmail.com.

see

The Biggest Bank Heist in History (Interview with Richard C. Cook)

Renewed Interest: Analyst Ties Monetary Reform To Social Credit Movement (2007; Richard C. Cook)

Does the Bailout Bill Mark the End of America as We Know It? by Richard C. Cook

Perpetual Growth Is Impossible – The Coming End of Usury as the Dominant Social Paradigm

The Fed Now Owns The World’s Largest Insurance Company – But Who Owns The Fed? by Dr. Ellen Brown

The Economy Sucks and or Collapse

Cook-Richard C.

***

China snaps diplomatic, military contacts with US

Dandelion Salad

http://www.ptinews.com
Beijing, Oct 7 (PTI)

Enraged by the USD 6.5 billion American arms sales package to Taiwan, China today cancelled its planned military and diplomatic contacts with the United States, accusing the Bush administration of “poisoning” the atmosphere which led to the latest stand-off.

“The US side’s act has seriously blocked bilateral exchanges and contacts in various fields, including high-level visits between the two armed forces. The US side should take full responsibility for the current situation of damaged military-to-military ties,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said in a statement.

Condemning the planned sale of weapons to Taiwan, an island which China claims is a rebel province, Qin said the American side should take full responsibility for the damage of ties between the two countries and their respective armed forces.

[…]

via China snaps diplomatic, military contacts with US

h/t: Global Research