Showing posts with label Naomi Klein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Naomi Klein. Show all posts

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Klein/Maddow on Bailout



Calling the bailout the "greatest heist in monetary history," Klein goes on to state that "the crisis on Wall Street created by deregulated capitalism is not actually being solved, it's being moved. A private sector crisis is being turned into a public sector crisis."

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The countdown to bank nationalization continues.

Obama and congress cannot have it all ways and they cannot please everyone. The evidence shows that they will please their financial and corporate masters first.

You and yours can get fucked.

Monday, November 10, 2008

The Foxes Guarding the Hen House II

The New Trough
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/24012700/the_new_trough/print

It didn't have to be this way. Five days before Paulson struck his deal with the banks, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown negotiated a similar bailout - only he extracted meaningful guarantees for taxpayers: voting rights at the banks, seats on their boards, 12 percent in annual dividend payments to the government, a suspension of dividend payments to shareholders, restrictions on executive bonuses, and a legal requirement that the banks lend money to homeowners and small businesses.

In sharp contrast, this is what U.S. taxpayers received: no controlling interest, no voting rights, no seats on the bank boards and just five percent in dividend payouts to the government, while shareholders continue to collect billions in dividends every quarter. What's more, golden parachutes and bonuses already promised by the banks will still be paid out to executives - all before taxpayers are paid back.

No wonder it took just one hour for Paulson to convince all nine CEOs to accept his offer - less than seven minutes per bank. Not even the firms' own lawyers could have drafted a sweeter deal.

...[skipped]...

sense and should be immediately scrapped - a move that would also handily get rid of most of the crony contractors. As for purchasing equity in banks, the next round of deals - and there will be more - has to start from the premise that the banks are bankrupt and will therefore accept whatever terms we choose to impose, including real regulatory oversight. The possibilities of what could be done if a chunk of the banking system were genuinely under public control - from a moratorium on home foreclosures to mandatory investment in green community redevelopment - are limitless.

Because here is what George Bush and Henry Paulson are hoping we won't figure out: When a society no longer has enough money to pay for its most pressing needs, there are worse things than discovering you own the banks.

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Comment:

I hate to repeat myself endlessly but all I can do is wonder why we are bailing these assholes out instead of filing charges against them. I think all we are doing is postponing the inevitable. I suppose that must seem like a worthy goal to some, but I'd rather just get the inevitable over with first and then get onto the good stuff. Kind of like saving dessert for last, if you know what I mean.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Naomi Klein on the Bailout...

Now is the Time to Resist Wall Street's Shock Doctrine
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/naomi-klein/now-is-the-time-to-resist_b_128433.html

The best summary of how the right plans to use the economic crisis to push through their policy wish list comes from Former Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich. On Sunday, Gingrich laid out 18 policy prescriptions for Congress to take in order to "return to a Reagan-Thatcher policy of economic growth through fundamental reforms." In the midst of this economic crisis, he is actually demanding the repeal of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which would lead to further deregulation of the financial industry. Gingrich is also calling for reforming the education system to allow "competition" (a.k.a. vouchers), strengthening border enforcement, cutting corporate taxes and his signature move: allowing offshore drilling.

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http://www.democracynow.org/2008/9/24/naomi_klein_now_is_the_time

Well, the thesis of my book, what I mean by the “shock doctrine,” is that it is in times of crisis, it is in times when people are panicked, when we’ve seen again and again the right push through radical pro-corporate policies, what they call “free market reforms,” precisely because it is in a crisis where the space for debate rapidly closes, and you can invoke this state of emergency to say we have no choice.

And I think we’re seeing a very dramatic example of this tactic right now with this really extortionist kind of tactics playing out in Washington. You know, “Sign this blank check, or we’re all going down, or Main Street is going down, or taxpayers—you know, the sky will fall in on them.”

I’m also arguing that this is only stage one of the shock doctrine. They’re getting this—they’re lobbying for this huge bailout, obviously, but this bailout is a kind of a time bomb, because it’s all these bad debts, and they are going to explode on the next administration. I mean, we know that the Bush administration has already left the next administration with huge debt and deficit problems. They’ve just exploded those, expanded them. And what that means is that whoever the next president is is going to be inheriting this economic crisis that is being exacerbated by this bailout.

So, in the case of McCain, I think—if he’s the president, then I think we know what he’ll do, because we know he wants to privatize Social Security, which is something that Wall Street’s been wanting for a long time, another bubble. We know he has said in the next—in the first 100 days of his administration he’ll look at every program and either reform it or shut it down. This is really a recipe for economic shock therapy. So, while you have all of these trivial issues being discussed in the election season, I think what we could—what we’re really—you know, under the surface, they’re actually being quite clear. They’re going to take—if they take power, it will be in the midst of an economic emergency. They’ll invoke that emergency to push through very, very radical changes. So, you know, what I’ve been saying is, this is not four more years of Bush; it’s much, much worse in the case of another Republican administration.

But there’s huge problems for Democrats, as well, if they win this election, because, you know, we need to only think back to the situation in which Clinton took power, where he ran an election on an economic populist platform, promising to renegotiate NAFTA. Then there was an economic crisis. Clinton came under intense lobbying by people like Robert Rubin, who’s also advising Obama right now, and by the time he took office, he had embraced economic austerity.

So, people need to understand these tactics, need to put pressure on the candidates, the parties, and reject this tactic. And I’ve actually been really heartened, Amy, that people are onto these shock tactics and aren’t falling for it. And, you know, to the extent that we’re seeing a little bit of spine from the Democrats, it is only, as Chris Dodd said, because they are hearing it from their constituents. So people need to keep up this pressure right now.
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Henry Paulson is one of the key people, the top people, responsible for creating the crisis that he is now claiming he will solve,

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Comment:

What can I add? Don't believe the hype. There is an agenda behind these tactics. There are no accidents. This has been planned for months.

There is this ridiculous pretense that Republicans don't overspend and don't raise taxes. Well, that was never true - but it is especially not true of Republicans that have supported the Bush administration in fighting wars on two fronts while simultaneously borrowing money, thereby increasing the national debt while simultaneously cutting back on taxes for the very wealthy. What that means is that whoever wins the presidency has a huge economic mess to clean up and the enormity of that economic challenge will tend to make that president look quite bad - their first term is likely to be one long slog.

It will take a second FDR with a strong socially democratic agenda to fix the troubles we have created in the last few decades. Don't look for quick fixes, they aren't there to be had.

And for fuck's sake, never vote for a Republican ever again.

Vote your own interests.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

The Usury Crisis: Two Must See News Segments

Usury (noun) The practice of lending money and charging the borrower interest, especially at an exorbitant or illegally high rate.

Yes, we used to have laws against those kinds of practices. To understand the enormous political shifts taking place you really need to get back to a roots word like usury. It's really just another way of saying that someone was conned by a financial transaction the complexity of which was too much for them to fully grasp.

In truth, and I've said it before, the whole monetary system is a con of exactly that kind - a con that is too complex for most people to fully understand. This failure to understand the financial landscape also means that people are equally unable to meaningfully manage their own positions in relation to their surroundings. They just don't get it and our financial institutions don't want them to understand it too well anyway.

No one's going to bail you out of a financial crisis. Hell, they are trying to make a proper bankruptcy damned near impossible for an individual. But if you are a corporation or another kind of favored business, then no problem - you might not only get your bankruptcy but even a bail out that makes a bankruptcy unnecessary.

Welcome to the financial crisis of 2008!

Is your name Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae? Then we don't care how much you screwed up, we have taxpayer money for you. Do you find the cushion comfortable enough? We got taxpayer monies on tap! You keep risking it and we'll keep bailing you out...

This makes people in Japan, China, England and all over Europe very happy.

And Obama will not save you. He's too busy contemplating the "moral hazard" represented by the people that accepted the loans instead of scrutinizing the overweening greed on the part of the lenders that made the loans in the first place. Obama is willing to bail out the corporations but not you lowly individuals - nope, not gonna happen. You see, those corporations and financial institutions pay him to cover their asses but you aren't worth shit to Obama.

Bill Moyers Journal: Mortgage Mess, William Greider, Justice and the American Dream
http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/07182008/watch.html

Democracy Now: Naomi Klein Reexamines “The Shock Doctrine”
http://www.democracynow.org/2008/7/15/with_crises_in_fuel_food_housing