DISQUS

AMERICAblog: Arianna: Laissez-Faire Capitalism Should Be as Dead as Soviet Communism

  • Observer · 11 months ago
    Cannabis Hemp Prohibition ≠ Free Market Capitalism

    Cannabis Hemp Prohibition = Pseudo-Scarcity Fascism
  • Bush Bites · 11 months ago
    Wasn't there another cannabis measure on the California ballot this year?

    What happened with that?

    (Seriously, I haven't heard.....)
  • Observer · 11 months ago
    http://ballotpedia.org/wiki/index.php/Californi...)

    Required funding. Failed. Surprised?

    Obama to hippies & fags: "Fuck all y'all! Haha!"

    Michigan on the other hand...

    http://ballotpedia.org/wiki/index.php?title=Mic...)
  • Bush Bites · 11 months ago
    That's too bad.

    We're spending way too much time and money arresting and prosecuting small time drug users.

    (Meanwhile, violent criminals are put on the street because we don't have the prison space.)
  • Observer · 11 months ago
  • Steve_in_CNJ · 11 months ago
    "the Dr. Frankensteins of the right will surely try to revive the monster and send it marauding through our economy"

    "Bush and his team did a bang-up job executing a defective theory."

    damn, i wish i could write greek half as well as she writes english. no, i wish i could write english half as well.
  • mdw0526 · 11 months ago
    I totally agree! I'm an Arianna fan, but I'm not always terribly impressed with her writing. This piece, though, was, great.
  • Bush Bites · 11 months ago
    And let's demonize Grover Norquist and the Club for Growth while we're at it.

    That know-nothing, Supply Side Wingnut is a menace to our economy.
  • Bush Bites · 11 months ago
    The Republics destroyed the US economy.

    The Party of Herbert Hoover and George Bush.
  • John · 11 months ago
    Bush Bites....It was actually President Wilson who killed the economy for generations to come afterwards. The article is a little long, but after reading it, you'll understand why we are where we are at this point in time. Everything can be traced back to the creation of the Federal Reserve which to this very day still will not divulge where two trillion of our tax dollars have beens spent in the current bailout scheam.

    The reason all things financial are going from bad to worse can be found in our not too distant past. There is a great article at www.financialsense.com by Rob Kirby. Seek and ye shall find. The only remaining question is what are WE THE PEOPLE going to do about it? Continue to moan and groan on blogs?

    by Rob Kirby | December 22, 2008

    In the past, I’ve written papers where the following quotation was included at the end of the treatise as an “exclamation point”:

    “We shall have World Government, whether or not we like it. The only question is whether World Government will be achieved by conquest or consent.” – James Paul Warburg, whose family co-founded the Federal Reserve - while speaking before the United States Senate, February 17, 1950

    Today, I feel that I’ve finally got it “the right way around” with this important quote – where it should be – at the beginning of, and in fact the subject of, a treatise of its own.

    First, for the uninformed, in America the name “Warburg” is and always has been synonymous with Central Banking. The Warburg family name is inextricably linked to ‘old world banking’ in Europe as well as being one of the prime architects of the formulation and passage of the Federal Reserve Act in 1913;

    “Paul Warburg became known as a persuasive advocate of central banking in America, in 1907 publishing the pamphlets "Defects and Needs of Our Banking System" and "A Plan for A Modified Central Bank". His efforts were successful in 1913 with the founding of the Federal Reserve System. He was appointed a member of the first Federal Reserve Board by President Woodrow Wilson, serving until 1918.”

    Second, after careful analysis and consideration, it is very apparent that the dogmatic pursuit to inflict private, for profit, Central Banking upon the masses is consistent with [if not synonymous with] the clearly stated goal of Paul Warburg; that of World Government.

    A Deeper Look At Central Banking Through The Private U.S. Federal Reserve

    When we stop to consider that the Federal Reserve is no more “federal” than Federal Express and they have no “reserves” – owing to the fact that they create money ‘out of thin air’ – the name “Federal Reserve” itself is a misnomer and purposely given this moniker as a deceptive means; to make its creation more palatable to lawmakers since the framers of the U.S. Constitution [and the spirit of the document itself] were dead-set against the institution of Central Banking.

    It would appear that the Constitution’s framers deep distrust of Central Banking was well founded too – since the stated goal of its chief advocates is to usurp both the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution itself, in pursuit of World Government.

    The means by which Central Banking exerts control over the populace is through their monopoly power in the issuance of irredeemable fiat currency [debt] for interest [usury].

    The history of irredeemable fiat currencies clearly illustrates that the compounding of accumulated debt always denigrates into bondage and ultimately to the conquest of complete debt-slavery.

    In a recent interview between two notable market commentators, Dr. Robert McHugh, a former banker, explains to Jay Taylor exactly how this insidious process is enacted on a naïve and unsuspecting populace;

    Taylor: I was greatly impressed by an insightful article I found back in 2005 on the Internet titled, "The Feds Are at It Again. What Do They Fear?" It was written by Dr. Robert McHugh, who was, just as I was, once a banker before he became a newsletter writer. Unlike your writer, who worked for well-established foreign multinational banks in New York, Robert actually founded a local community bank in Eastern Pennsylvania that ultimately became known as Main Street Bancorp. Talk about a "ground floor" opportunity; as one of the founders of the bank, Robert was one of 13 employees when it started. From zero deposits, the bank grew to $3 billion in deposits and had 500 employees when management chose to sell out in 2000 because they believed the economy looked like it was ready to head south.

    McHugh, after acknowledging that government manipulates metals markets, goes on to explain,

    McHUGH: Well, I'm a renegade banker. I have sat in at meetings where the Federal Reserve came in, sat down and "said stop lending, we think there is a recession coming." The very fact that we were told to stop lending caused a recession. That happened in 1990-1991. Word of that finally hit the mainstream media and one of the first acts Clinton did was that he grabbed the regulators by the throats and said, "why don't you let the bankers start lending again." The next time they came in, they told us to start lending.

    They have that kind of power. They decide when recessions and depressions happen. They decide when hyperinflation happens.

    They can do it through a lot of different tools. The hidden one is the regulatory agencies where they come in and intimidate bankers and tell them what to do. They have a lot of power. They can have the boards of directors of banks thrown in jail. They can have people fired. They use those powers behind the scenes, nobody knows about them. As a banker, I have seen the dark side of the Fed. I have watched them rate good loans as bad loans, and charge off loans when in fact, customers were fine, the loans were fine. We are in a bit of that environment again now. What happens is, the last thing these government agencies want to happen is that they get called on the carpet before Congress. So they become overzealous, overcautious at precisely the wrong times. There is a lot of action by the Fed that messes with the normal business free market cycles that would prevent excesses. A lot of the publicity in today's market is that there wasn't enough government intervention, there wasn't enough regulation and that is true too, they got too far in one extreme, but they create imbalances and create these problems by overacting as well.

    It seems that McHugh isn’t the only market commentator to espouse such an informed, but negative view of the Fed. In a recent treatise written by Walter Williams, Central Banks Are Villains, published in the Pittsburg Tribune-Review – Williams helped focus a spotlight on the true workings of the Fed:

    “The justifications for Federal Reserve Act of 1913 was to prevent bank failure and maintain price stability. Simple before-and-after analysis demonstrates that the Federal Reserve Bank has been a failure. In the century before the Federal Reserve Act, wholesale prices fell by 6 percent; in the century after they rose by 1,300 percent. Maximum bank failures in one year before 1913 were 496 and afterward, 4,400. During the 1930s, inept money-supply management by the Federal Reserve Bank was partially responsible for both the depth and duration of the Great Depression.

    That being the case, who is responsible for inflation? It's not you or I because if we privately increased the supply of money to finance profligate spending, we would be charged with counterfeiting and go to prison. The Federal Reserve Bank, our central bank, is the only entity legally permitted to increase the supply of money, to finance Congress' profligate spending. The Federal Reserve Bank is supposed to be independent but it typically accommodates the wishes of Congress and the White House.

    Central banks are villains in most countries; ours is just not as bad as others. In 1946, Hungary's central bank gave it the world's highest inflation rate. Prices doubled every 16 hours creating an annual inflation rate of 13 quadrillion percent. Last October, Zimbabwe's central bank produced history's second-highest rate of inflation. Prices doubled every 25 hours, giving it an annual inflation rate of 80 billion percent. By comparison, Germany's inflation rate, which brought about the social disruption responsible for Hitler's rise to power, was a mere 30,000 percent that saw prices doubling every four days. You say, "Williams, that couldn't happen here." Except during the Revolutionary War and the War of 1861, our inflation has never exceeded 20 percent, but keep in mind that any hyperinflation was once 20 percent.”

    Is A Central Bank Necessary?

    “Knowing the dangers posed by central banks, we might ask whether our country needs the Federal Reserve Bank. Whenever I'm told that we need this or that government program, I always ask what we did before. It turns out that we did without a central bank from 1836, when President Andrew Jackson closed the Second Bank of the United States, to 1913 when the Federal Reserve Act was written. During that interval, we prospered and became one of the world's major economic powers…..”

    Enforcement and the Iron Triangle

    So how does one go about perpetuating such a flawed regime? The answer to this question becomes apparent when one gains an understanding of the relationship between Central Banking and the Military Industrial Complex [MIC]. Because all wars are fought with “borrowed money” or are debt financed – Central Banking and the MIC make perfect bed-fellows and exert enormous influence on public policy:

    To understand the insidious nature of this relationship, we need look no further than President Eisenhower’s Jan. 17, 1961 farewell address:

    …We face a hostile ideology -- global in scope, atheistic in character, ruthless in purpose, and insidious in method. Unhappily the danger is poses promises to be of indefinite duration. To meet it successfully, there is called for, not so much the emotional and transitory sacrifices of crisis, but rather those which enable us to carry forward steadily, surely, and without complaint the burdens of a prolonged and complex struggle -- with liberty the stake. Only thus shall we remain, despite every provocation, on our charted course toward permanent peace and human betterment…

    …Until the latest of our world conflicts, the United States had no armaments industry. American makers of plowshares could, with time and as required, make swords as well. But now we can no longer risk emergency improvisation of national defense; we have been compelled to create a permanent armaments industry of vast proportions. Added to this, three and a half million men and women are directly engaged in the defense establishment. We annually spend on military security more than the net income of all United States corporations….

    …In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist….

    The military-industrial complex has no greater champion than the parasitic institution of banking, and for painfully obvious reasons; the staggering amount of money spent on this edifice – more than the net income of ALL U.S. corporations - is exclusively BORROWED.

    Forever mortgaging our children’s futures further entrenches the blood-sucking dominance and control that finance exerts over the productive or real economy until finally, left unchecked, the parasite kills the host.
  • Steve_in_CNJ · 11 months ago
    OMG. link please.
  • evan_la · 11 months ago
  • Steve_in_CNJ · 11 months ago
    lol. i mean just the link. not the paste.
  • evan_la · 11 months ago
    Heh. Yeah that.
  • dan · 11 months ago
    what a bunch of crap, we clearly dont have a leissez faire system right now so how can you blame that as the problem. The problem is the FED, they caused the great depression to. They seem to ingore all the regulation that set these bubbles in motion.
  • Steve_in_CNJ · 11 months ago
    the Fed caused the financial sector ponzi schemes? the Glass-Stiegel act? the $10 trillion national debt? foreign oil dependency? crippling health care costs? wow. economics is much easier than i remembered.
  • dan · 11 months ago
    Well the fed hands out easy money, which allows the coniditions for reckless use and makes bubbles, they print money so the gov can spend whatever they want, and they raise health costs by inflation
  • Bush Bites · 11 months ago
    I agree that the fed (and Greenspan specifically) exacerbated the problem.

    I don't agree that they're the cause of the problem.
  • Honking it · 11 months ago
    I'm glad you pointed this out already. Peter Schiff has a great analogy for this. The fed allowing easy money is like a school teacher handing out soda and pixie sticks to her class. When the class becomes hyper and starts wrecking the joint, whom do you blame? Do you blame the teacher (the fed), for giving out easy money (soda and pixie sticks)? Or do you blame the kids for doing what kids (wall street, homeowners, etc) do when given soda and pixie sticks?
  • Steve_in_CNJ · 11 months ago
    fun analogy to lighten up the awful reality of our situation. to say that wall street runs on greed is one of those dog bites man stories. the real story is the regulators and the central banks acting like it's kinda cute, instead of doing their job to protect the economy.
  • Same As It Ever Was · 11 months ago
    Should Be as Dead

    Bush/Cheney...
    Hitler/Lenin
  • Bush Bites · 11 months ago
    I like what she's saying, but she should call it "Trickle Down Economics."

    Americans don't know what the hell "laissez-faire capitalism" means.
  • LasloPratt · 11 months ago
    Weeelllll.....

    The last depression didn't kill it. So I don't have a lot of expectation that this depression will kill it either.
  • ndtovent · 11 months ago
    Thom Hartmann talks about this frequently on his show, and I agree with him -- I'm pro-capitalism, but regulated capitalism, as we had before Reaganomics. He is also very strongly pro-safety net, as I am -- Universal health care for all, which should be a right, not a privilege, and complete reregulation/deprivitization of our infrastructure - utilities, roads, bridges, public transportation, local landline phone service.
  • An_American_Karol · 11 months ago
    The closer we get to "pure' Capitalism, the worse the economy and overall health and welfare of the people.
    Most economies use a variation - Capitalism/socialism.
    Each new leader modifies the economy to swing more Capitalist or more Socialist.
    Under Reagan, the swing to a more Capitalist economy should have shown us why pure Capitalism will never work.
    Greed seems to never be factored into these economic models.
  • dula · 11 months ago
    Preventing Neocons from continuing their fascist ways will take more than a spineless Democratic Party. The majority of Democrats went along with the unbridled Capitalism that brought the world to its knees. Bill Clinton, anybody?
  • dula · 11 months ago
    It is interesting that the two most recognizable promoters of Trickle Down Economics, Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, ended up with brains that turned to mush. The only thing that has managed to "trickle down" is a steady stream of piss down Margaret Thatcher's leg.
  • Older_Wiser · 11 months ago
    Wow, Arianna said that? I always sort of thought of her as a modern day Ayn Rand, you know, Libertarian and all.
  • tbhull · 11 months ago
    It is all ridiculous now. Let's spend millions, if not billions, of taxpayer dollars creating regulatory bodies to detect and prosecute corruption. The when the wrongdoing entities and individuals are brought to justice and their practices come to an end (at least for a while) let''s spend billions, if not trillions, of taxpayer dollas bailing them out so they can eventually do it again. The only consistent factor is taxpayer dollars being spent. What a fucking joke!

    What is needed is starving DC of money so that its spenders can die.
  • Kewalo · 11 months ago
    Arianna is exactly right. But what I think she is missing is this. Both economic philosophies are based on fantasy thinking and disregards human nature.

    Both ideologies appear to be based on high minded ideals. But the communists didn't take into consideration that people are by nature competitive and very often selfish.

    The conservative ideology somehow missed that people can be very greedy. There is absolutely no way that the markets can just regulate themselves because there are people in those markets.

    The conservative ideology actually believes in the invisible hand of the "markets." They fantasize that is there are no regulations that somehow this invisible hand will always make the market right itself. One of the saddest things this year was watching Alan Greenspan while he admitted that he never believed that bankers would work against themselves the way they have. I'm astounded to say I think he actually believed in the BS that Ayn Rand wrote about the honor of the money makers. Anyone over 30 that believes in that crap needs an education.

    We now have the facts and figures that show that the RW economic theory is right out of fantasy-land and when we see one of those idiot spouting that BS, we need to speak up and put an end to it. It's almost destroyed the country and they don't get a do over.