| Wall Street's Crooked Ensemble of Financial Instruments |
| Editorial | |||||||||||
| By Ben Tanosborn | |||||||||||
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It's our unregulated capitalism, stupid! Two weeks ago I received a copy of Assets, a quarterly publication by UCLA Anderson School of Management. To my amazement and disbelief, I read in it that we have yet to enter recession, the same one that we've been experiencing for almost a year. I felt like calling Fed-Ex to quickly return to this prestigious institution an MBA diploma awarded to me four decades ago, one signed by Ronald Reagan, then Governor of California. So you've been told that this is just another economic cycle you must endure, eh? Don't you believe it; not for a minute! Years of consumerism withdrawal and very serious economic rehabilitation await us thanks to past extreme greed and a predatory capitalism that reached its zenith during Bush-Son's occupancy of the White House. Perhaps the greatest sense of civic pride that Americans have always had is the belief in Lincoln's dictum stating in the final sentence of his Gettysburg Address: "—and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth." Except that ours is neither a government of the people, certainly not by the people and most definitely not for the people. At the federal level at least, our executive, legislative and judicial branches attest, for the most part, to the existing tyranny of an elite few. It's not more confidence that we need in our economy and its institutions. That comes effortlessly to a society where neighbor takes care of neighbor, and the well-being of any one individual becomes unquestionable duty for the rest of us. It is honesty, not pseudo-confidence, which needs to be promoted; mandated if need be, at gun point – where gun is truth. Without honesty in government and the mainstream media, which is our nation's malady these days, capitalism has transformed us into a predatory society. Our very own Ronald Reagan would be proud of us, for we have won one for Greed… and that for him would've been even better than winning one for the Gipper. Nobody wants a state of economic panic, not here in the US or anywhere else in the world; but neither do we want to continue living in deceit to the realities that we face today. The capitalism we have lived under for well over two decades both in America and in "let's-imitate-America" elsewhere, has had an infected wound in each tentacle of the economy, all of which have finally reached the gangrenous stage; so we either cut those tentacles off, and painfully grow new ones with determination and a strong effort, or bury capitalism once and for all and replace it with a system less prone to this greed-disease – one with regulatory safeguards to prevent four fifths of society from being ripped off by the other fifth. Let's put an end to that "caveat emptor" (let the buyer beware) which has been the adopted mantra for those who insist in economically screwing their neighbor, all under the mask of "rugged individualism" and an excuse in blaming the poor for lack of personal responsibility… when thievery is at the root. So as a post-mortem to another act by Congress of improvident malfeasance, almost a trillion dollar's worth… "for openers," a worthless rescue effort for non-affluent America, we want to postulate why it won't work… in getting the economies of this nation, as well as others infected by ours, to improve at all; much less to march on the right course:
Legislators in Congress, who voted to throw $700 billion of taxpayers' children's added debt into a bottomless well, whether because of well-meaning ignorance or, more likely, their servitude to those who purchase their jobs at Capitol Hill, deserve the scorn of the people and should not be reelected. Sadly for us, among them are two senators who aspire to become in four weeks commander-in-chief of both military and financial affairs. The Bush administration, the Fed and Wall Street, accompanied by the Bullish-on-America Choir of financially-challenged boys and girls at CNBC, have been laughing at Jane and Joe Citizen for years; now they rub it in calling us all, in mentis, stupid. Only thing left for Wall Street to do now is bundle our stupidity in new financial instrument paper, CSS (Credit Stupidity Swaps), thus creating trillions of dollars in fools' wealth. We still don't get it; don't really get it. The Dow Industrials just broke the 10,000 mark; and we'll see it break 9,000; 8,000; this, while predators continue rampant amongst us. (c) 2008 Ben Tanosborn
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1. 06-10-2008 13:01 The good people of the USA need to establish an alternate currency with an alternate monetary system . Guest 2. 11-10-2008 10:59 Dishonesty key to market collapse Excellent and expert analysis by Ben Tanosborn. Key quote for me: "It is honesty, not pseudo-confidence, which needs to be promoted; mandated if need be, at gun point – where gun is truth. Without honesty in government and the mainstream media, which is our nation's malady these days, capitalism has transformed us into a predatory society." Sensible risk management to minimize social harm successively involves (a) getting accurate data on the situation, (b) doing a scientific analysis (where scientific methodology involves the critical testing of potentially falsifiable hypotheses) and then (c) sensibly changing the system to minimize risk. It is the LYING of the Mainstream media and politicians of the Western Murdochracies that has fundamentally de-railed rational risk management and brought us to this pass of (a) Values Collapse e.g. 1,000 under-5 year old Occupied Iraqi and Occupied Afghanistan infants dying every day under US Alliance guns (simply Google UNICEF for confirmation), (b) Biosphere Collapse due to Climate Criminals (mass species extinctions, melting of the Arctic, top climate scientists tell us that atmospheric CO2 is ALREADY 40 parts per million ABOVE the safety limit; and (c) Market Collapse and Economic Collapse (for an analysis see: "Swan Lake" Painting. Fear, Greed, Lying & Values, Biosphere & Market Collapse). Registered Write Comment
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