The last straw

The wealth of nations and the American economic crisis


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The last straw
by KurushMM
01-Oct-2008
 

One wonders at times what constitutes the wealth of a nation. How can one consider a nation wealthy, or not so? Is gold the yardstick? Precious metals? In truth, the tangible measure of a country’s wealth nowadays is the hard currency reserves of that country, and that information is conveniently published in certain magazines and newspapers, for instance, The Economist. So let’s go over these figures (and mines’ are not the most recent):

The Wealth Of Nations

At the top of the list stands China with more than a trillion dollars worth of hard currencies. Next to china … (yes you guessed correctly) is Japan with more than 800 billion dollars. We see the South East Asian countries dominating the top ten. At about number 11 stands Russia. Now that is interesting! Russia has about 400 billion dollars equivalent of hard currency reserves. Here is a country which a mere decade ago was a basket case with its Ruble worth dime-a-dozen and defaulting on its debt. Last year, Russia, quietly and without much fanfare, paid off all of its Cold War debt completely-debt free and wealthy. Iran is not doing all that bad at all with about 70 billion dollars which it, not too long ago, withdrew from the Western bank lest the sanctions start biting off. So you may ask where is the US standing.? Somewhere in the middle of the list with , I am sorry to say, a puny 40 billion dollars. How the wealthiest country, not too long ago, in the world has fallen so badly on hard times! The picture is grim indeed for the US. China just last year surpassed the US as number one trading partner with both Japan and the EU. Even worse, with more than 10 trillion dollars in debt, the US is no longer a wealthy country. The debt is truly staggering.

The Mighty Debt

With the end of the Cold War, the US was burdened with 3 trillion dollars in debt. The unchecked military spending and Reagan’s objective of a 600 ship navy brought about this sad state to the US. In the past two decades the debt has more than tripled most of it caused by the profligacy of the Bush administration. The warning signs were there but no one cared to sound the alarm. The deficit spending was for the sacred cow of America, namely, the military-industrial. Two decades ago, in the feel-good post Gulf War era, no one took the 10 to 15 billion dollars a month in trade deficit all that seriously. The debt was owed to an ally, Japan, which then held about 250 billion dollars in American debt. Clinton balanced the budget and looked forward to budget surpluses. The skeptics were of course ignored. But the yearly deficit of 160 billion dollars not only did not go away but grew apace. Today , a monthly trade deficit of 50 to 60 billion dollars is the norm. Now to get a sense of this critical situation one might recall that this monthly trade deficit is equivalent to the yearly budget of one or two medium size countries. Both Japan and China hold several trillion dollars in US debt. Japan must be in a bad case of déjà vu -been there, done it. Many of the Japanese investments in the US two decades ago went bust and down the black hole of America’s wheeling-and-dealings. Mighty Japan

If WWII was exceedingly good for America, the Korean war was exceedingly good for Japan. The US military in Korea in the early 1950s was desperately in need of quick massive supplies. The war-ravaged Japan, with its proximity, received American investment to purvey to the US military in Korea. This was a shot in the arm for the needy Japan. As the cold war progressed, both Britain and the US shifted more of their internal investments to the military-industrial sector and hence neglected the consumer goods sector. One reason you do not own a British made car or TV may be ascribed to this economic prioritization, at the height of the cold war, which made sense at the time but was myopic at best, in the long run, for both America and Britain. The opportunity was god-sent to the eager Japanese, however.

The Mighty Dollar

After WWII, the US emerged intact while the rest of the world lay in ruins, the most devastated being where the actual war took place, namely, Russia , Germany, Japan, and China. The truth is that the mainland US was never targeted by any of the belligerents. The US was not the primary target of either Japan or Germany. Britain whose colonial possessions in Asia were to be the spoils of war, and communist Russia which had been exporting Marxist revolution to the colonies and the West were the primary targets. Needles to say, the US positioned itself as the main arbiter of the world economic system. At Bretton Woods, N.H., the dollar backed by gold, was pegged at an exorbitantly high exchange rate. This was the spoils of war for America. The US ally, Britain, was the only country whose currency was more expensive than the mighty dollar. This was more an act of favor towards an obedient ally than anything else. The US was rewarding Britain for being a good lapdog. For both countries the high exchange rate meant huge purchasing power which functioned like a giant vacuum cleaner sucking up vital resources from around the world cheaply and hence the immense prosperity in post WWII years. To understand what this meant for the third world, the former colonies, the price of that indispensable commodity, oil, can be used as an example. After the fall of Mossadegh, the price of a barrel of oil was 65 cents. This cheap fuel guaranteed to every idustrial manger in the West that the cost of fuel would remain minimal, next to nothing. In the mid 1960s, the price of a barrel of oil dropped even further. A barrel of oil dropped to 55 cents. This literally fueled the prosperity in the West. This scheme which was cloaked as the Marshall plan, hides the fact that the transfer of wealth from the former colonies to the former colonizers continued unabated. In the 5 years after the termination of WWII, the Anglo-Iranian oil company netted a profit of 500 million dollars. Iranian government was paid 80 million dollars, the remainders, 420 million dollars, went to the British investors. The British government was making more money taxing the company than the Iranian government’s share. During these five years, Britain was in a sever austerity crisis due to a sever economic contraction. The revenue from the Iranian oil was a lifeline for Britain. So while America’s generosity, with its Marshal Plan is much trumpeted, the Iranian ‘Marshal Plan’ for post WWII Britain is never mentioned.

The Jinni Out Of The Bottle

The pivotal year for the dollar after the Bretton Woods was 1971. American economy was not able to absorb the cost of the Vietnam war any longer. Borrowing was not an option then as it is today. China under Mao was not going to bankroll America’s imperial ambitions. Nixon decoupled the dollar and America’s gold reserves. This demarche removed all fiscal restraints and the US government began printing dollars exorbitantly. The jinni was out of the bottle!

The Class War

The firing of the air traffic controllers by President Reagan was not simply a from of collective punishment for the strikers but an undeclared war against the unions in America. The capitalist ruling class in America is interested in dependency of workers upon the ruling capitalists. Assertions of bargaining powers by the unions and their members violate this golden rule of the capitalist economy which seeks workers’ dependency, not their autonomy. The class war was conducted on three dimensions. First and foremost, the destruction of collective bargaining powers of the workers. Second, the push for cheap labor. Third, the end of government as an advocate of and partner with the working class.

The Armies Of Peons

As the attack against the unions continued , the union membership dropped dramatically. Against their own interests, the American workers bought into the notion that the unions were harmful to the economy. The lessons learned from the struggles to bring about labor reform such as 40-hour work week, overtime pay, child labor, were forgotten or unlearnt. From the depth of Great Depression, the southern Dixiecrats succeeded in keeping the minimum wage exceedingly low. During the first administration of Roosevelt , the Dixiecrats killed bills intended to raise the minimum wage for the impoverished Americans.

As during the slavery era when the slaveholders were in close alliance with Northern tycoons and banks who financed and marketed slave labor products, again such unholy alliance was struck. Over the decades the minimum wage has been barely subsistence wage , and certainly not a living wage, thank to this alliance between the Northern finance and the hidebound Dixiecrats. To complement the erosion of the unions and the lowering of the wages, the government had to be gutted of any social safety net and welfare system. The model being used was that of the imperial British government in the nineteenth century. The British government was a government of colonial management, ruling over the colonies and their native peoples with an iron fist. Its business was to conduct colonial wars and to dictate terms to the defeated nations.

The sacred cow of this type of government is the military-industrial complex. It is often said that the Republicans are against big government and high taxes. This is of course a phraseology meant to hide the real intentions. The Republicans, and the ruling class in general, are determined to make sure that there is no competition vis-à-vis the funds allocated to the military-industrial complex. For that, all forms of social safety nets, and health care fundings must be eliminated. It is ironic that when Reagan lowered the taxes, the IRS simultaneously began systematic auditing of the Americans’ tax returns. There were so many horror stories, back then, of the excesses of the IRS in imposing hefty penalties and fees. As the taxes were purportedly lowered , the heavy hand of the US government made sure the military-industrial monster was well fed. This reversal of the rights and income of the American workers is one of the most astonishing success stories of the far right and their plutocratic masters. The latter’s’ dream of armies of peons,- prostrate, dependent, and with little or no rights at all- at the plutocracy’s beck and call has been finally realized.

Debt Denominated Economy

With the American government not providing funds for education, housing, and healthcare, or minimally so, a de facto dysfunctional government exposed during Katrina, the American workers, and increasingly the middle class, have been forced to turn to borrowing. The age-old virtue of save-and-spend-later and cash denominated economy shifted in astoundingly short time. The banks and their wealthy owners began to float their gains, gained partly by having denied millions of workers of living wages, in the form of loans of all type for housing, healthcare, education, and with the advent of the credit cards, for everyday expenses.

The current credit card debt for the American household is estimated at 17,000 dollars which, with accrued interests, will take a life time to pay back. Borrow and spend became the norm with billions of dollars in profits for the wealthiest in the US. The dependency of the American workers on the capitalist system has become complete. With Wall-Mart and corporate behemoths, destroying the small businesses along with the mom-and-pop stores, and the credit bureaus policing Americans’ financial records, more and more Americans have opted for bankruptcy courts. Over the past decade, on average , about a million and half Americans every year have filed for bankruptcy protection with the American dream but a pipe dream.

The Ruining Of The American Family

With the erosion of stable jobs and income in the borrow-and-spend economy, the ultimate price has been pernicious. About half of marriages in America end in divorce. Single parent household is the norm not the exception. Despondency, drug addiction, crimes of all type , and social isolation have been on steady rise. The military-industrial has found its complement, the prison-industrial complex. A shameful number of Americans, more than 2.3 millions and increasing, are in US prisons. The erosion in moral fabric is noteworthy as it is now acceptable to all of us to see so many of our fellow humans in the harsh gulags of the American prison-industrial complex.

The Capitalist Carousel

Every year the US government allocates 200 billion dollars to service America’s 10 trillion dollar debt. It is said that about 5% of the US population owns about 85% of all stocks and bonds. This 5% of the US population gets the lion share of this huge 200 billion dollars. It is not hard to imagine what this money could be spent for if the piper was not to be paid: new schools and more teachers, new highways and roads, new transportation technologies such as fast trains, new hospitals, caring for the sick and the elderly. Moreover, the US spends about half of the budget on its runaway military fundings. This huge amount finds its way into the military-industrial complex whose stocks are owned by the 5% aforementioned. This guarantees high stock prices for Lockheed, Grumman, Boeing, GE, etc. It also guarantees high dividends for these stocks. So the wealthiest 5% of the US population lends money to the Us government by purchasing US bonds , the American government turns around and spends half of the taxes and borrowed money in the military-industrial complex thereby guaranteeing increased wealth for this 5% in the forms of high dividends from stocks, interests from the bonds, and higher stock prices. Round and round! This capitalist carousel is truly a joy ride for the wealthiest in the US.

Iraq Connection

With more than 200 billion barrels of crude oil, given a modest 100 dollar a barrel price, Iraq’s oil wealth stands at a minimum 20 trillion dollars. With 10 trillion dollars in debt and an ailing economy, the US possession of the Iraqi oil wealth can solve America’s woes. Tom Brokaw‘s, NBC news anchor‘s, Freudian slip that ‘we now own Iraq’, at the outset of America’s occupation of Iraq, is a window to the neo-con mindset. The Manifest Destiny die-hards and their counterparts in America’s board rooms, (NBC is owned by GE), must have been driveling over the Iraqi oil wealth. With a puppet government in Baghdad, and the largest American embassy in the world, more like a crusader’s fortress than an embassy, a groveling Iraqi government may now place orders for American products, from GE generators and jet engines to Boeing’s jumbo jets.

The sinister scheme and driver for this brutal invasion might be the US Anti-Ballistic Missile system. The ABM is astronomically expensive and an economically strapped America in no position to afford such a cost-prohibitive system; but with Iraqi oil money lubricating America’s military-industrial complex, the sky is the limit. War Against The Minorities The Katrina debacle exposed not just a dysfunctional US government, more busy catering to the Military-Industrial complex than caring for the afflicted Americans, but also other ills of America. New Orleans demographics comprise a large cross-section of minorities. The question whether New Orleans was neglected because it is not a ‘white’ city is valid and intriguing. Furthermore, the sub-prime lending practices and adjustable rate mortgages were targeted at the Latino community in America and at cities with a large minority population such as Detroit. Puzzlingly, Natural hurricanes and man-made hurricanes seem to target the minorities in America.

The Last straw

As the price of oil sky-rocketed, we were told, by the corporate media, repeatedly, that India and China and their fast-clip growths are the culprits. But Chinese and Indian growths were very much alive in the 1990s as well. The price of oil was indeed cheap in that era. The change began with the Bush administration and its double wars of occupation in Afghanistan and Iraq. The war machine is indeed thousands and thousands of gas-guzzling military vehicles needed to continue the war; specifically, the airlift which is the lifeline of the occupations. This massive airlift, unprecedented in history, sustained over seven years, comprises C-5, C-17, C-130 heavy cargo planes and the aerial tankers which fuel millions of military flights. A typical C-17 carries 40,000 gallons of fuel on board, enough to fuel the traffic of a medium size city during the rush hour traffic.

Moreover, this fuel is a very expensive aviation fuel. The refineries prefer to sell more aviation fuel than gasoline since there is more profit to be made. With the heavy demand this massive airlift has placed on aviation fuel over the past few years, the refineries have switched to this more expensive and profitable fuel at the expense of gasoline output used in transportation. These particular supply-and-demand dynamics have thus increased the cost of energy which in turn has affected the price of food. The Indian economist, Amartya Sen, who won the noble-prize, in his book ‘Poverty and Famines’, reminds us that famines are man made. Wars and famines go hand-in-hand together.

The End Game

Last year, the economic crisis could have been averted . Had the US government intervened to help the mortgage borrowers by putting cash into their hands and using its leverage to correct the predatory lending clauses, rather than the 700 billion dollars bailout handout to the very banks which contributed to this economic crisis, then the economic spiral could have been halted. But a dysfunctional government would not be capable of such a bold move. The patriarchal plutocratic American political system, worst than those in the Old Testament, spurns any such move. The people are just like little children, they must always be guided by the big old patriarch-government who knows better,- for the good of the people! Right!

A national economy which is based on millions of small businesses is always better than one buttressed by a few monolithic corporations, like a building which is supported by thousands of slender pillars as opposed to a few monolithic ones. In the latter, if one giant pillar cracks, the whole structure collapses, whereas in the former paradigm the failure of a few slender pillars cause no harm since there are so many more still left intact. A nation owes itself two things first and foremost, free healthcare and free education. A healthy and educated nation has a bright future. An America of a few giant corporations, with more than 40 million Americans without healthcare coverage and millions mired by hefty student loans or saddled with usurious credit card and mortgage loans, is ill prepared for the future.


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varjavand

KurushMM

by varjavand on

  Your article is really informative. However, I believe it lacks coherency; it is not clear specifically what is it that you are trying to prove or disprove. It is too long and contains so much information that is hard to digest for many who log into this site. I would like to make to a couple of points;

1.    it seems that you are mixing up Trade Deficit with Budget deficit, “The deficit spending was for the sacred cow of America, namely, the military-industrial. Two decades ago, in the feel-good post Gulf War era, no one took the 10 to 15 billion dollars a month in trade deficit all that seriously. The debt was owed to an ally, Japan, which then held about 250 billion dollars in American debt. Clinton balanced the budget and looked forward to budget surpluse”As you know, trade deficit and budget deficit are two different things with causes and different consequences for the economy

2.” the US spends about half of the budget on its runaway military fundings”. This statement is not correct. The total outlay of the US government for 2008 is nearly 3000 billions of which 606 billions are allocated to defense about 20%, I don’t know where the 50% comes from?  

 

Your portrayal of the US government as being totally dysfunctional and responsible for all the economic evils committed by greedy entrepreneurs and the reckless behavior of households who, knowingly or unknowingly, forced themselves into the current impasse is indeed unfair. Periodical ups and downs in US economy are the by-product of democracy and free enterprise system. Although appropriate government policy can alleviate them, we cannot eliminate them or blame government alone for their occurrences

Varjavand


default

a few notes

by Proud Canadian!! (not verified) on

Thanks for this very informative article.
There are a few things that I would like to share with all readers. They conclude my very little experience about the current world crisis:
• In the year 2003, and during the first days of the invasion of Iraq, I was attending a meeting in Texas when a happy American idiot was bragging about invading the country of Iraq. He had managed to list all the false benefits of such an invasion. His thoughts of the Muslims and Arabs as “pegs of the world” that should do the world a favor and vanish. I listened to the end of his speech and replied calmly about his notes and reasons of what would go wrong there. I felt scared of being the only black sheep amongst all proud Texans that surrounded me while listening. I replied him that he will see what is going to happen to his lying leaders about the facts that they laid down. I managed to explain to him that the nature of those people down in the Middle East is not as tamed and welcoming as his leaders had managed to persuade him. I left they guy with his mouth wide open!
• In the year 2002 and while America was trying to form a leach-like alliance from all those who wanted to win a piece of the cake of Iraq, Canada refused to join them because the United Nation was not in favor of this war and therefore, the Canadian government deemed this war as illegal! At this time, I was working in one of the biggest Northern American companies dealing in goods across the American – Canadian borders. At this time, we have lost too many contracts in the United States because of our position from the war on Iraq. I could not believe how Americans betrayed their old and long friendship with Canadians. The Americans did not really need our military support but they definitely were trying to get a spiritual aid to encourage the rest of the world to do it. You are either with us or against us was the slogan of their administration. I never thought that Canada would lose its business with America for such a moral based decision!
• From that day on, I stopped buying American products. That was not easy given that we are the young brother of the Americans. Their giant retailers and ownership of our resources made it really difficult. I shall never forget that day when I was feeling ill standing in a pharmacy and staring at the medication shelves looking for a Canadian made drug. The store assistant came up to me offering help. I told her that I was looking for a non-American medication. She opened her eyes wide open when I told her why! I think she thought that I’m an idiot!
• My friends have long laughed at me because of my attitude when we went out and wanting to sit at a coffee shop. No American products allowed in my life unless I have to!
• I have asked myself several times whether I do hate America or not. My answer was always: NO. America is one of the most beautiful countries that I want to see and live in. The average American citizen is a decent person and one of the most civilized when it comes to comparison with other nations. The problem lays in their administrations one after another. There is no way that their administrations would change their attitude unless the average American citizen pays more attention to their government than his entertainment and private life schedule!
• When George W. Bush won the second term of his presidency, I could not believe that Americans would fall for that man again. My fundamental friend looked at me and smiled. He said that now Bin Laden can rest assured that America had fallen in his trap!
• There is a documentary that I think that every concerned person should watch. It’s 3 parts that are all better than the other. The third part will explain in details everything that is going on in America concerning the economy and how those behind-the-scene people are controlling the governments like puppets!
Here is the link where you can buy it or download it: www.zeitgeistmovie.com


Jaleho

Great article KurushMM

by Jaleho on

An excellent article, in particular the nice review of the systematic assault on the unions, thanks a lot.

I just think that the absence of any allusion to the effect of petro-dollar, and the ensuing cracks in it makes parts of the article unclear, and leaves some questions in the mind of the readers unanswered. I cut some relevant parts of the article to show what I mean:

1. "At the top of the list stands China with more than a trillion dollars worth of hard currencies. Next to china … (yes you guessed correctly) is Japan with more than 800 billion dollars."

2. "Even worse, with more than 10 trillion dollars in debt, the US is no longer a wealthy country. The debt is truly staggering."

1 and 2 above combined begs this question: "why is then that China and Japan buy such a humongous amount of US debt if the US economy is so shaky ?

3. "At Bretton Woods, N.H., the dollar backed by gold, was pegged at an exorbitantly high exchange rate. This was the spoils of war for America."

That is, the US coming out of the WWII as the undeniable victor, granted dollar its gold equivalence.

4."The pivotal year for the dollar after the Bretton Woods was 1971. American economy was not able to absorb the cost of the Vietnam war any longer. Borrowing was not an option then as it is today. China under Mao was not going to bankroll America’s imperial ambitions. Nixon decoupled the dollar and America’s gold reserves. This demarche removed all fiscal restraints and the US government began printing dollars exorbitantly. The jinni was out of the bottle!"

This actually is a reflection of the fact that the wasteful Vietnam war resulted in a demotion of dollar. US had no choice and the loss in Vietnam war broke the gold-dollar equivalence.

But what happened next which explains the 1 and 2 above is that US enforced the petro-dollar equivalence. That is, although dollar did not have the intrinsic value backed by gold, so far as the black gold was traded in dollar denomination, all the world had to keep a dollar reserve to buy oil. If you want energy, you have to have dollar. US has used its military and political prowess around the world and its neo-colonial relation with the oil producing countries to enforce this petro-dollar equivalence. I would also look at the following part of the article in this light, although the author does not mean this relation at all, since he does not address the petro-dollar concept:

5. "The sacred cow of this type of government is the military-industrial complex."

The US military hegemony would in turn guarantee its financial hegemony in part thanks to forcing other countries to keep a dollar reserve to buy their energy needs. This military and financial supremacy of the US has gone hand in hand, and one could not have existed without the other! Inversely, any crack in the US military supremacy would result in a crack in its financial system. That is, the same way that WWII promoted the dollar-gold status and Vietnam war broke it, the Iraq war failure initiated the breakdown in US financial system by cracking the petro-dollar. Thus I believe the author's following quote is just half the truth, the more important part of it was the above mentioned military hegemony.

6."With more than 200 billion barrels of crude oil, given a modest 100 dollar a barrel price, Iraq’s oil wealth stands at a minimum 20 trillion dollars. With 10 trillion dollars in debt and an ailing economy, the US possession of the Iraqi oil wealth can solve America’s woes."

Finally, the following:


7. "As the price of oil sky-rocketed, we were told, by the corporate media, repeatedly, that India and China and their fast-clip growths are the culprits. But Chinese and Indian growths were very much alive in the 1990s as well. The price of oil was indeed cheap in that era. The change began with the Bush administration and its double wars of occupation in Afghanistan and Iraq. The war machine is indeed thousands and thousands of gas-guzzling military vehicles needed to continue the war; specifically, the airlift which is the lifeline of the occupations."

as the author's explanation of the rise in the oil price is missing that main reason. That is, the crack in petro-dollar following the US military breakdown in Iraq started to devalue dollar, just like the Vietnam war had done earlier. The dollar started its downward spiral when the governments of Russia and China started to lighten up their dollar reserves and Iran announced that it will trade oil in Euro and Yen. Yet, for the rest of the world still dollar means oil, but a lot more of the green back means the same amount of oil!

I tried to delineate this less argued reasons about the recent financial crisis in my recent blog:

//iranian.com/main/blog/jaleho/near-trill...


Food for Thought

A solution - article by Richard Cook

by Food for Thought on

extract from article: 

Here I would like to turn to a proposal by a man I have met and respect. His name is Darrell Castle, and he is the 2008 candidate for vice-president of the Constitution Party. Castle has spent the last year traveling around the country meeting people on Main Street and listening to what they have to say.

This is what Castle proposes in the Constitution Party's latest newsletter:

“The Federal Reserve Banks should be seized by Congress under Article 1 Section 8 of the Constitution. The FED banks could survive as clearinghouse banks, but the Federal Reserve that has robbed the American people for 100 years would cease to exist. The debt owed by the American people to the FED banks would be discharged in bankruptcy. Congress would take monetary policy from the FED and would simply stand in place of the FED through a monetary board. The FED credit computers would be transferred to Congress who would issue new credit (money), because under our present system 97% of all money originates as credit. This new credit would keep the system going and prevent collapse. It could all be done without interest and without debt. The backs of the international banking cartel would be broken forever, and the American people through their elected representatives would control monetary policy; i.e. money in circulation, interest rates, and credit availability.”

Pearlstein, Bush, Paulson, Pelosi, et.al., along with Obama and McCain, should also read the U.S. Constitution. Then they would see that the problem stems from the fact that in 1913 Congress privatized our money supply by turning it over to the private banks that own the Federal Reserve System. This is also why we have lived under the mass delusion that a healthy financial sector leads to a healthy producing economy.

Actually it’s the other way around. The financial sector should support the producing economy, not bleed it dry through interest, fees, commissions, and the destruction that arises from financial profit-seeking.

There is also the fact that while the producing economy has been hammered by job outsourcing and bled white by financial parasitism, it is still a powerful machine that can produce the goods and services people need. We are a strong, capable nation. And we are blessed with the resources we require for a decent standard of living, though not necessarily at a rate of consumption that forever outpaces the rest of the world. But what is wrong with that? The underlying strength of the producing economy was on display this morning, when the Dow-Jones defied the doomsayers by coming back strongly the day after the bailout was defeated.

We now need to do what Darrell Castle of the Constitution Party recommends: Use the power of the money supply to rebuild the producing economy that we have given away and rebuild it from the bottom up: from Main Street.

Unfortunately the fat cats and their political and media apologists “just don’t get it.” But the American people and the members of congress who voted the right way yesterday do.

full article:

//www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=10395