No solutions to the economic crisis in this presidential race.

(yeah. that’s it. unregulated markets… – promoted by pfiore8)

In a recent EENR entry I posted about Paul Krugman’s blog entry regarding the real reason regulators have failed to reign in the excesses of Wall Street.  Essentially, the failure was deliberate — an effort to systematically remove any and all regulation.  I guess causing one Great Depression wasn’t enough to wake up the laissez-faire assholes into realizing that the days of unrestricted greed should have remained dead and buried; they’ve been working like hell to create another while making their money, and they appear to have succeeded.

But I digress.  In today’s New York Times column, Professor Krugman expands upon this failure to reign in Wall Street by bringing the discussion to the presidential election.

I don’t expect much from John McCain, who has both admitted not knowing much about economics and denied having ever said that. Anyway, lately he’s been busy demonstrating that he doesn’t know much about the Middle East, either.

Yet the McCain campaign’s silence on the financial crisis has disappointed even my low expectations.

And when Mr. McCain’s economic advisers do speak up about the economy’s problems, they don’t inspire confidence. For example, last week one McCain economic adviser – Kevin Hassett, the co-author of “Dow 36,000” – insisted that everything would have been fine if state and local governments hadn’t tried to limit urban sprawl. Honest.

If only Professor Krugman knew just how much lower a McCain dictatorship would sink things.  But the Democratic prima donnas vying for their political party’s nomination don’t fare any better under Krugman’s scalpel.

On the Democratic side, it’s somewhat disappointing that Barack Obama, whose campaign has understandably made a point of contrasting his early opposition to the Iraq war with Hillary Clinton’s initial support, has tried to score a twofer by suggesting that the war, in addition to all its other costs, is responsible for our economic troubles.

The war is indeed a grotesque waste of resources, which will place huge long-run burdens on the American public. But it’s just wrong to blame the war for our current economic mess: in the short run, wartime spending actually stimulates the economy. Remember, the lowest unemployment rate America has experienced over the last half-century came at the height of the Vietnam War.

Hillary Clinton has not, as far as I can tell, made any comparably problematic economic claims. But she, like Mr. Obama, has been disappointingly quiet about the key issue: the need to reform our out-of-control financial system.

Professor Krugman points out how the country came out of the Great Depression with a strong social safety net, which, given the monumental backlash against laissez faire economics in the wake of the economic crisis, is no surprise.  The government bailed out the banks, but only so long as those banks accepted regulation.  This meant that the party was over for unrestricted greed.

But, as Krugman goes on to explain, all that reform slowly deteriorated over time, and now we’re right back where we were in 1929 — and we’re rapidly approaching 1930-level proportions as the current financial meltdown steadily approaches its peak.  In short, no thanks to the Bush regime’s continuation of deregulation of the financial markets (which began in earnest under Reagan and has continued unbroken), we’re monumentally screwed.  Krugman writes:

Now, the shadow banking system is facing the 21st-century equivalent of the wave of bank runs that swept America in the early 1930s. And the government is rushing in to help, with hundreds of billions from the Federal Reserve, and hundreds of billions more from government-sponsored institutions like Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks.

Given the risks to the economy if the financial system melts down, this rescue mission is justified. But you don’t have to be an economic radical, or even a vocal reformer like Representative Barney Frank, the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, to see that what’s happening now is the quid without the quo.

Last week Robert Rubin, the former Treasury secretary, declared that Mr. Frank is right about the need for expanded regulation. Mr. Rubin put it clearly: If Wall Street companies can count on being rescued like banks, then they need to be regulated like banks.

As the professor points out, Clinton and Obama have topped the other candidates from both major political parties for corporate campaign contributions (one example, in terms of corporate money from the health insurance and pharmaceutical industries, may be found here).

In short, Wall Street has not only destroyed the economy with happy assistance from the Bush-Cheney regime, it has ensured that no matter who becomes president (or dictator, if McCain manages to steal this one), nothing will be done to clean up Wall Street’s mess.

In closing, here’s an oldie but goody from the Edwards campaign shortly after one of the debates.

I love that one…

Four at Four

  1. The Los Angeles Times reports Terrorism money is still flowing. “The U.S.-led effort to choke off financing for Al Qaeda and other terrorist groups is foundering because setbacks at home and abroad have undermined the Bush administration’s highly touted counter-terrorism weapon… The most serious problems are fractures and mistrust within the coalition of nations that the United States admits it needs to target financiers of terrorism and to stanch the flow of funding from wealthy donors to extremist causes… Also, the most deadly terrorist attacks since Sept. 11, 2001, have cost so little — often less than $10,000 — that they are virtually impossible to detect by following a money trail.”

  2. The Washington Post reports Fallujah’s fragile security flows from Hussein-era tactics. Meet Col. Faisal Ismail al-Zobaie, Fallujah’s chief of police.

    The U.S. military showcases Fallujah as a model city where U.S. policies are finally paying off and is spending hundreds of millions of dollars in the region to promote the rule of law and a variety of nation-building efforts.

    But the security that has been achieved here is fragile, the result of harsh tactics recalling the rule of Saddam Hussein, who was overthrown five years ago. Even as they work alongside U.S. forces, Zobaie’s men admit they have beaten and tortured suspects to force confessions and exact revenge…

    “We never tortured anybody,” he said. “Sometimes we beat them during the first hours of capture.” …

    Once a member of Hussein’s elite Republican Guard, Zobaie is driven by allegiance neither to the United States nor to Iraq’s Shiite-run central government. He wants U.S. troops to leave Iraq. But for now, he needs the United States to bolster him with military muscle and funds. And the U.S. military today depends on men such as Zobaie to help bring about the order and security in Iraq that could eventually lead to the end of the American occupation.

    “I have realized that Americans love the strong guy,” Zobaie said…

    What Zobaie wants is for the U.S. military to hand over full control of Fallujah. He believes Iraq’s current leaders are not strong enough. Asked whether democracy could ever bloom here, he replied: “No democracy in Iraq. Ever.

    “When the Americans leave the city,” he said, “I’ll be tougher with the people.”

  3. Two news items from Pakistan. First, the Washington Post reports that a Bhutto aide was named Pakistan’s new prime minister. Yousaf Raza Gillani was elected prime minister today and “immediately ordered the release from house arrest of judges detained last year by President Pervez Musharraf.” Gillani’s challenge to Musharref came hours afer his overwhelming election. “Hundreds of jubilant Pakistanis then converged on the Islamabad home of the detained former chief justice, Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, as police began removing barricades and barbed wire fences… ‘I and my colleagues were unconstitutionally confined under house arrest,’ Chaudhry told the crowd”.

    Also, the Los Angeles Times reports that Poems are “fighting words” in Pakistan. “Pakistan may be home to Islamic terrorists. It boasts a nuclear arsenal and an omnipotent military. But it is also a place where lyrical expression still holds great power to inform, inspire and even mobilize the masses, as it has in recent months, to the government’s dismay. That power derives from the fact that poetry is woven into the fabric of everyday life here in a way seldom found in the West.”

  4. Lastly, a bit from Frank Rich’s op-ed on Sunday in The New York Times, “The Republican Resurrection“.

    For Republicans, the prospect of marathon Democratic trench warfare is an Easter miracle. Saddled with the legacy of both Iraq and a cratering economy, the G.O.P. can only rejoice at its opponents’ talent for self-destruction. The Republicans can also count on the help of a political press that, whatever its supposed tilt toward Mr. Obama, remains most benevolent toward John McCain.

    This was strikingly apparent last week, when Mr. McCain’s calamitous behavior was relegated to sideshow status by many, if not most, news media. At a time of serious peril for America, the G.O.P.’s presumptive presidential nominee revealed himself to be alarmingly out of touch on both of the most pressing issues roiling the country…

    But as violence flares up again in Iraq and the American economy skids, the issues consuming the Democrats are Mr. Wright and Geraldine Ferraro, race and gender, unsanctioned primaries and unaccountable superdelegates. Unless Mr. Obama and Mrs. Clinton find a way to come together for the good of their country as well as their party, no speech by either of them may prevent Mr. McCain from making his second unlikely resurrection in a single political year.

General Smedley Butler: War vs Class War

4000. Noble and courageous has to be a bit of a given, for volunteers.

1,191,216 Iraqi’s. Sitting at home with their families watching TV five years ago, when onto the telly comes the news. The Americans are coming to invade your country and kill your people. You have no idea why.

Neither do the American soldiers who are coming to kill you.

But Smedley Darlington Butler does.

                              Photobucket

Oh! Excuse me, that should read…

Smedley Darlington Butler (July 30, 1881 – June 21, 1940), nicknamed “The Fighting Quaker” and “Old Gimlet Eye,” was a Major General in the U.S. Marine Corps and, at the time of his death, the most decorated Marine in U.S. history.

Of course this was not a completely original thought by Old Gimlet Eye. But here is the question of the day.

If war is a racket……who is running the racket?

And why does it keep working time and time again?

As it turns out, Smed’s greatest fight wasn’t on foreign soil. It was here at home against the very folks who run the racket. America’s Ruling class. Now, the concept of Class Warfare has been sort of taboo’d here in the Land Of The Formerly Free. And guess who has taboo’d it? The Ruling Class of course! They say it causes unnecessary division and strife and pits us against each other.

They say this from their luxurious bunkers in their highly guarded compounds that they have constructed to protect them from the lower classes. From the lower classes that they fairly correctly predict….wouldn’t much care for them and theirs if they knew the stories that the Ruling Class makes sure that the newspapers and television stations they own don’t broadcast. Stories about how The Ruling class have always considered themselves above the rest of us, the allegedly equal members of this democracy. Stories about how for generations they have made literally obscene fortunes off of war.

Off of trading the lives of soldiers and civilians for hard cash in their bottomlessly greedy pockets.

Stories of how they trade the health of Americans for cash. Of how they manipulate the economy into unhealthy states for the average American so that they can make even more money. Stories about record oil profits while gas, the lifeblood of the artificially manipulated economy, that they have artificially manipulated to NEED gas to run, reaches record high prices that YOU are FORCED to pay. Stories of trading the Environment…and now the Planet, for cash.

The list goes on and on. It is The Ruling Class and their generational influence/control on the economy, the puritanical culture….and the politics of America that have brought us to where we are today…a nation on the brink of fascism ………..again.





These are the Masters of War, these are the FOE. This is who has killed 4000 Americans and a million Iraqis. These are th folks who don’t want a “Class War.”

These are who we are opposing, in our own unique, nonviolent, kind of War. A war to put them out of business, since their business IS War. Ours is a ‘war’ to make their kind of War…..Not, an acceptable option

One for Buhdy!