(8 am. – promoted by ek hornbeck)
I’ve been reading alot today trying to understand the proposed bailout. And I have to admit that I still don’t know what to think about it all.
I don’t really give a shit if these individual companies fail or even if the stock market fails. But if we’re talking about a global economic collapse, that’s not something I think we can risk.
What I can say with confidence is that, once again, this country has waited until the peak of crisis to take action. We seem to not have the capacity to evaluate risk and take preventative action…no matter what the issue.
Perhaps the best analysis on all this that I found today is Bill Moyer’s interview last night with Kevin Phillips (link to the 20 minute video).
Phillips emphasizes that we need to understand the root causes of our current situation. At one point, he identifies the seven sharks in the water.
There are seven sharks in the tank with the economy.
And the first is financialization because we’re so dependent on this industry that’s sort of half lost its marbles. The second is that you have this huge buildup of debt, absolutely unprecedented anywhere in the world. The third is you’ve now got home prices collapsing. The fourth is you’ve got global commodity inflation building up.
The fifth is you’ve got flawed and deceptive government economics statistics. The sixth is that you’ve got what they call peak oil where the world is, to some extent, running out of oil. So it’s not just commodity inflation, it’s a shortage of oil. And then the last thing is the collapsing dollar. Now, whenever you get this sort of package in one decade, you got a big one.
So what is Phillip’s prognosis?
KEVIN PHILLIPS: I wish I could say that there’s a blueprint that would get us back on the right track. But my sense of histories previous goes to the one or two percent leading world economic power is you don’t get back on the right track.
BILL MOYERS: So what happens?
KEVIN PHILLIPS: You go through a painful adjustment process. The British were absolutely top dog in the world in 1914. Two world wars and 35 years later, they were having, after World War II, they were having food rationing, the pound sterling crashed, dukes were giving guided tours of their castles because they couldn’t afford to maintain them otherwise. Doesn’t take long. And I’m afraid the United States is coming right into that period which marks a couple of decades coming up that are going to be very difficult for America.
At the end, Moyers asked Phillips what he might hear from Obama that would be convincing. Here’s part of his answer.
We’ve let this Las Vegas version of what used to be ordinary banks in our ordinary hometowns go berserk. Our currency is having enormous problems. People are losing their homes. We’ve got to face up to what our problems are and talk about how this happened. Who did it? Why? Who made the money?
Well, I think if he were to start talking about I’d take him seriously. But I think half of Washington would have a problem in their stomach needing quick relief, let me put it that way. Cause you don’t rock that boat. You pretend that it’s a sound economy. And if it’s not sound, it’s nothing that the old Democratic elixir can’t fix, you know? Old New Deal in a bottle. We’ll have a couple of swigs and you’ll be happy again. I don’t expect him to level.
Are we as a country ready for those in charge to level with us? Paul Rosenberg has a good analysis of the Moyers interview at Open Left and here’s what he has to say about that.
Maybe that’s something that progressive can and should organize around-“Level with us. No more lies about where we stand.”
And here’s what Rosenberg says “leveling” might sound like.
My opponent has said a lot of things about me lately that aren’t true. But he’s said one thing that is. He’s said that I don’t have a solution. He’s right. I don’t. Nobody does. But what I do have is questions-deep questions, fearless questions. I am not afraid to ask those questions, because I know we can answer them, if we have the courage to ask them.
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no one has had the courage to level with the American people like that since President Jimmy Carter. Do you think we’re ready for it now?
The economy should be more than a game of craps.
would require the candidate not only to tell us he has no answers, but that he’s been part of the problem.
I can ‘hope.’ It would be a ‘change.’ I’ll be waiting a while, I think.
has a good short non-technical non-jargony explanatory post up…
Understanding the Massive Bailout Plan
…I am a pessimistic crumudgeon, you all know that, but I think maybe America won’t be ready to even talk about this for a generation, or half a generation — ten or 15 years. And during that time, some of those sharks will have taken bites, and thinking and screaming are hard to do at the same time.
I find two things particularly disturbing (heh). First, as a country the US can’t think it’s way out of a paper bag. We haven’t encouraged critical thinking as a skill or selfless character as a trait. Now that there are real problems — real challenges — there is nothing to make me believe that will change, and every reason to believe that will get worse.
Second, we seem to have finally committed all future tax revenue to the financial system. We are not the first country to have done this, and those who have gone before have not had an easy time of it. I don’t think the pattern is Britian in 1914, but maybe 1860; or Argentina after the financial collapse; or any other country where the powerful and poor have gotten a permanent divorce, and the powerful remain so by insuring that the country’s wealth flows outward to other rich people, the discussion is in terms of debt and credit ratings, and the poor are — utterly — an afterthought. I don’t think we’re going to get an easy analysis. It’s going to be damned interesting, to future historians in Svalabard anyway…
No
Paul Krugman, also…
No deal
Greenwald saturday:
That’s taxpayer money. Your money. Not the “government’s” money. Not money “printed” by the fed or magically created out of thin air.
Taxpayer money.
Your money.
and unfortunately, the Crooks are still the ones in charge of the Govt. Having worked in govt. I can tell you that I’m not at all confident in any statistics released by govt. (“Lies, damn lies & statistics” about sums it up, especially govt. statistics).
For the truth, we have to dig a bit deeper, and look to sources other than the propaganda released by the govt. or the BS being spewed by the same wall st. types that got us into this mess in the first place.
Blogs like: Calculated risk and the Bondad Blog are just two blog sources that offer some non-tainted analysis. And foreign news sources like Financial times often give a broader picture than the Wall St. affiliated reports from “news” sources here.