Posted on 12/14/2011 7:17:33 AM PST by blam
Markets Of Shame Before The Collapse: Crisis, Crisis, Everywhere
Politics / Credit Crisis 2011
Dec 14, 2011 - 03:03 AM
By: Danny Schechter
Earlier this week, Stephen Colbert announced dramatically that there were important developments underway in Europe that we should know about.
True to form, Colberts Repor didnt talk about the big problem. His story, ha ha ha, was about a butter shortage in Norway. Talk about going from the obscure to the ridiculous.
We all know that European countries have been wrestling with what to do about saving the Euro.
There have been warnings of an economic catastrophe if the Euro falls, and its plain that the already shaky American economy will take a big hit if it happens.
The drama in Europe seems to be beyond the ability of both comedy and financial programs to explain. Perhaps its more of a divine comedy in the Danteian sense, because we are all perched on the edge of circle of hell that many of us dont want to wrap our minds around.
While many news outlets prefer to recycle endless soundbites of Gingrich bashing Romney and vice versa, and as American diplomats seem to be cranking up a war against Iran as if that can save the economy the way World War 2 pulled us out of a depression, the world economy is tottering thanks to all the debt American firms sold Europeans who then managed it so stupidly and corruptly.
Now we have Timesman Paul Krugman, for years an economist holding up the liberal middle, finally admitting that nothing is working;
Its time to start calling the current situation what it is: a depression. True, its not a full replay of the Great Depression, but thats cold comfort. Unemployment in both America and Europe remains disastrously high. Leaders and institutions are increasingly discredited. And democratic values are under siege.
The Obama Administration, with an election to try to win, is in full panic mode with Tim Geithner hop-scotching all over Europe to try to push Angela Merkel to act, forthwith and with dispatch, to recognize the emergency and pump money at it.
Germanys conservative Chancellor who was disgusted when given an unwanted back rub by George Bush is resisting the unwanted snow job by Barack Obama who is jumping up and down to push her to play the game of bailout.
The Germans may or may not be right about wanting a longer term solution because they have historic fears of inflation and a return to the wheel barrows of money it took to buy bread after the last depression. They dont want a new Hitler to emerge either. They know their society better than Americans do.
The US keeps saying, wrong lesson, wrong lesson. Remember the thirties, not the twenties, and stop an economic collapse, before it occurs. This very emphasis shows that their fears of a collapse are well advanced.
Berlin, aware of how ineffectual Obamas recovery effort has proven in the US, is not taking his unwanted advice. Many Europeans see the US financial industry as the source of all evil, as, ironically, does Occupy Wall Street, and want to use the crisis to impose restraints on it.
They want strict new budget rules and more centalization, (ie German influence.)
Britains David Cameron pulled out of negotiations because he opposes a tax on financial transactions, a step that most reformers think is a very good idea.
So, welcome to the Thunderdome of finance. The stalwarts of the status quo dont want to budge, and only the self-interested define what national interests should be.
Fortunately for them, the German economy is strong and can, in effect, dictate to a divided Europe which lacks the wherewithal to challenge them. France has already buckled, as Sarkozy faces a new electoral challenge to his rule and looks as if he has aged in a month.
So now, its up to The Markets, an elusive instutution, driven, they say, by animal spirits or market psychology. Markets dont like change, especially when it constrains powerful companies but they like instability even less.
Germany is banking that they will ultimately see its not in their interest to bring the house down.
Dont think of markets as beyond manipulation. Moe Saceriby, once a VP at Standard and Poors told me for my film Plunder, I think we had a transition from what truly was a free- market system to something now that is out of control and probably what I would define as a predatory system, where we are not so much dealing anymore about the notion of fair prices, and the notion of markets that that work transparently. In fact frequently markets are manipulated for the end of maybe a few out there, a few investors, mega-investors. Even thats very difficult to tell.
The Treasury Department operates a shadowy Exchange Stabilization Fund. Reports the libertartian Daily Bell, Officially in charge of defending the dollar, the ESF is the government agency which controls the New York Fed, runs the CIA's black budget, and is the architect of the world's monetary system (IMF, World Bank, etc).
Add this to another shadowy entity in Treasury, The Working Group on Financial Markets, better known as the Plunge Protection Unit, that directly intervenes in markets.
It is, as I discuss in my book the Crime of Our Time, a secret branch of government has a sophisticated war room, using every state of the art technology to monitor markets worldwide. It has emergency powers. It doesnt keep minutes.
There is no freedom of information access to its deliberations. There are l47,000 entries in Google on this powerful body, but I could only access ten. The reports on it are sketchy, including one from the Washington Post:
These quiet meetings of the Working Group are the financial worlds equivalent of the war room. The officials gather regularly to discuss options and review crisis scenarios because they know that the governments reaction to a crumbling stock market would have a critical impact on investor confidence around the world.
New York Magazine hinted at a conspiracy, noting many suspect, its just a backroom market-rigging cabal for the Establishment. Or, you could think of it as the Wall Street Superfriends, equipped with X-ray vision to see deep into our financial malaise, and magic.
Is it magic or manipulation?
Remember this administration claims to worship an unregulated free market, and yet, here they are, freely big footing these very same markets.
No doubt there is some connection here to recent reports of Members of Congress tapping secret information to engage in Insider Trading.
Talk about corruption. Its pervasive. The less our compromised media investigates all these wheelers and dealers, the more we will not get at the truth and will soon experience the consequences. And they wont be pretty!
And still they ignore the elephant in the room. Lower taxes, less regulation allow the economy to grow and investors to make money without going to the lengths of manipulation. The rising tide that raises all ships. Until that happens it is dog-eat-dog, and the government tries to write anti-dog-eat-dog legislation...that only benefits the really connected dogs.
This is a most interesting article, it points out the manipulations and high placed interest groups which the media does not report on.
And although the article was published last Dec, all the same economic events are grinding on.
The Working Group on Financial Markets
The Working Group for Government Retirement and Pensions.
Free market poison.
Less than 60 days ago...not so long.
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