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“There are signs the economy is improving.” — George W Bush, 8-30-08
NEW YORK: The storm is coming. All eyes on the Doppler radar, the graphic swirls, the reporters bravely standing on Levee watch in New Orleans. This time, the evacuations are underway as if to say the government is finally looking out for its citizens and evacuating the people in harm’s way. Will it work? We will see and then see it live while we wait for the next epic disasto-tainment.
As we brace for what’s been called the “mother of all storms,” the platitude-pushing wonderland of TV has shifted the political debate overnight from the prospects of a man with a “funny name” to a gun toting former small town beauty queen turned Governor who hates polar bears and shoots moose.
One catastrophe may be coming. The other may be already here, and a third, well, no one wants to talk about that. You can move populations away from hurricanes. You can adore or make fun of unusual politicians. But what do you do about a financial tsunami that everyone knows is structural but many would rather ignore, until they can’t?
In other countries politicians are sometimes forthcoming about the threat, as the blogger behind the site Naked Capitalism observes in reporting on the way the UK is alerting its public to the economic crisis they are confronting:
“Chancellor Alistair Darling warns slump could be the worst for 60 years…Admittedly, the UK economy is more overleveraged that the US’s, but why are their officials willing to be candid and ours not? Don’t try the US elections as an excuse, there’s not much more candor in the off season.”
Maybe its apathy suggests James Cook on another financial site, SeekingAlpha:
“The largest hurdle is getting the attention of the majority of Americans who are apathetic towards the entire political process. These are the 71 million voting age citizens who decided not to vote in the last presidential election. If they don’t care enough to vote in the presidential election, they certainly won’t care about future unfunded liabilities. I think the only thing that will get the attention of this group is a major recession that negatively impacts their quality of life. There are millions of Americans living lives of silent desperation. They are living on the edge and the debt contraction that is underway is pushing many over that edge. The anger that is building will hopefully eliminate the apathy.”
Is there apathy because people don’t care or because they just don’t know? Should we blame the people or recognize the powerlessness working and middle class people feel in the face of powerful economic goliaths? In fact, many do get it like the Midwesterner who complained at the Democratic Convention that he wanted a president who would put “Barney Smith Before Smith Barney.”
Mike Taibi reported on Bill Maher’s show that thanks to a campaign financing loophole, big industries spend millions lobbying at the political convention with big parties. Many of these events were off the record and closed to the press including one by the credit card companies, an industry served for many years by Delaware’s Joe Biden.
Many of us don’t know about these real power brokers because our media advertises them more than exposes them. Alas, the political parties tend to do their bidding, as well as Bloomberg News reported last week:
(Bloomberg) — The U.S. is facing the worst financial crisis since the Depression. You would never know that from the Democrats’ platform in Denver or its Republican counterpart, or from listening to Barack Obama or John McCain.
While both candidates have bemoaned the ravages of the subprime crisis, they have yet to spell out steps for tackling it, such as using taxpayer money to shore up banks and housing.
‘They fail to come to grips with the biggest danger that is going to hit the next president in his first few months in office: the crisis in the capital markets,’ said David Smick, a Washington-based consultant to hedge funds and author of “The World is Curved: Hidden Dangers to the Global Economy.”
Dislike Ralph Nader all you want but at least he is pointing out an avoidance that even wraps itself up in the fig leaf of economic populism. His take on the Democrats was not to my knowledge echoed by any of the commentators we saw on TV who were raving about the excitement at the Invesco stadium.
“You won’t hear a call for a national crackdown on the corporate crime, fraud, and abuse that, in just the last few years, have robbed trillions of dollars from workers, investors, pension holders, taxpayers and consumers. Among the reforms that won’t be suggested are resources to prosecute executive crooks and laws to democratize corporate governance so shareholders have real power. Democrats will not shout for a payback of ill-gotten gains, to rein in executive pay, ending corporate personhood, or to demand corporate sunshine laws.”
The Democrats and the pundits didn’t point out the parallels either between the depressing official protest area in Denver and its resemblance to the ones in Beijing. Unlike China where protesters were arrested, ours were just ignored.
But let’s be upfront, as consumer buying falls and the recession becomes more intractable, there are few real solutions coming out of either convention or the government even as the political race feels more and more like a sit-com.
One of the world’s leading financial publications, The Economist, hardly a radical rag, doesn’t mince words. They call this disaster a “nightmare:”
“Like a Hollywood monster that is impervious to bullets, the credit crisis refuses to lie down and die. The authorities have bombarded it with interest-rate reductions, tax cuts, special liquidity schemes and bank bail-outs, but still the creature lumbers forward, threatening new victims with every step. Global stockmarkets are suffering double-digit losses this year, and credit markets are once again gummed up.”
The economic crisis is slowly moving from category 4 to category 5 — call this Hurricane “Maestro” for interest rate slasher Alan Greenspan — but no evacuation plans are in effect, no relief is in sight. Prices are up along with foreclosures and credit card defaults, but the economy is staying down.
The Administration’s “plunge” protection unit is about as effective as its war on terror. And the plunder goes on and on with only a relative few recognizing that this storm is coming and that we need to fight back.
– Mediachannel’s News Dissector Danny Schechter has written Plunder: Investigating Our Economic Calamity (Cosimo Books—newsdissector.com/Plunder) as a follow up to his film In Debt We Trust. (InDebtWeTrust.org) Comments to Dissector@mediacannel.org
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We are facing hyper inflationary depression, meaning toilet-paper currency at a time when we import most finished goods, energy, and many food products.
This is radically different than the 1930’s, which was a deflationary depression; the dollar gained value thru price declines and 70% of the people still lived on family farms and so had some economic self-sufficiency.
It is also different from the inflationary 1970’s when the U.S. was still the number ONE industrial and manufacturing power in the world, it was entirely agriculturally independent, and the value of the dollar was by comparison quite high, and besides, only 3% of the national economy was involved in foreign trade, mostly oil imports from Mexico and Venezuela.
NO, the forthcoming crisis will be far, far worse than anything the U.S. or its people have experienced before.
Not many know that a major hurricane - Hurricane Erin - was in the Atlantic Ocean in September of 2001. In fact, Erin was closest to NYC, and at its largest size, on 9/11 itself. Interestingly, the National Hurricane Center projected Erin to be stronger than it projected Katrina to be four years later. Shouldn’t they have prepared the upper-east coast for this major storm? Weather reports at JFK Airport indicated rain! The day after 9/11, Erin made a sharp right-hand turn (over 90°) away from NYC and back out to the Atlantic. An astronaut in the International Space Station commented on the WTC smoke plume, but made no mention of the monstrous hurricane next to it. How come? Those interested in learning the secret between hurricanes and Tesla Coils should see Dr Judy Wood’s new paper “9/11 Weather Anomalies and Field Effects”. She presents evidence suggesting Erin was part of the mechanism used to turn the Twin Towers to dust. The paper is chock full of photos and analysis and is highly recommended.
http://drjudywood.com/articles/erin
Magnetometer data from alaska.edu shows the earth’s magnetic field shifted with every 9/11 “event”. This includes the plane-shaped holes appearing in the towers. The World Trade Center was destroyed with directed energy weapons. See this analysis by former Clemson University Professor of Mechanical Engineering Dr Judy Wood for info on the magnetometer data:
http://drjudywood.com/articles/erin/erin5.html
“The Democrats and the pundits didn’t point out the parallels either between the depressing official protest area in Denver and its resemblance to the ones in Beijing. Unlike China where protesters were arrested, ours were just ignored.”
Actually, there were protesters arrested in Denver, the last of which were released today.
http://www.coloradoindependent.com/5384/three-arrested-in-denver-for-alleged-cell-phone-violations/

By Danny Schechter
As millions of homes are foreclosed upon, as unemployment grows and inflation mounts, it is time to understand the origins of the crisis and the need to fight for economic justice.
Written by veteran media critic and Emmy winner Rory O'Connor, Shock Jocks features unsparing profiles of the ten worst conservative radio talkers in America, including Michael Savage, Bill O' Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, Don Imus and the rest.