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From empire to democracy by Howard Zinn
This would never happen in Australia, first, because we have a surplus, and second, because we have excellent prudential regulation, with the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority - which, to paraphrase the About Us page, regulates and oversees banks, credit unions, building societies, all insurance companies, friendly societies, and most members of the superannuation industry, and is funded largely by the industries that it supervises. ...APRA also acts as the national statistical agency for the Australian financial sector and plays a role in preserving the integrity of Australia’s retirement incomes policy.
This current financial crisis is a major way-station on the way to the collapse of the American empire. The first important sign was 9/11, with the most heavily-armed nation in the world shown to be vulnerable to a handful of hijackers.
And now, another sign: both major parties rushing to get an agreement to spend $700bn of taxpayers' money to pour down the drain of huge financial institutions which are notable for two characteristics: incompetence and greed.
There is a much better solution to the current financial crisis. But it requires discarding what has been conventional "wisdom" for too long: that government intervention in the economy ("big government") must be avoided like the plague, because the "free market" will guide the economy towards growth and justice.
Let's face a historical truth: we have never had a "free market", we have always had government intervention in the economy, and indeed that intervention has been welcomed by the captains of finance and industry. They had no quarrel with "big government" when it served their needs.
It started way back, when the founding fathers met in Philadelphia in 1787 to draft the constitution. The first big bail-out was the decision of the new government to redeem for full value the almost worthless bonds held by speculators. And this role of big government, supporting the interests of the business classes, continued all through the nation's history
The rationale for taking $700bn from the taxpayers to subsidise huge financial institutions is that somehow that wealth will trickle down to the people who need it. This has never worked.
The alternative is simple and powerful. Take that huge sum of money and give it directly to the people who need it. Let the government declare a moratorium on foreclosures and give aid to homeowners to help them pay off their mortgages. Create a federal jobs programme to guarantee work to people who want and need jobs and for whom "the free market" has not come through.
We have a historic and successful precedent. Roosevelt's New Deal put millions of people to work, rebuilding the nation's infrastructure, and, defying the cries of "socialism", established social security. That can be carried further, with "health security" – free health care – for all.
All that will take more than $700bn. But the money is there. In the $600bn for the military budget, once we decide we will no longer be a war-making nation. And in the swollen bank accounts of the super-rich, by taxing vigorously both their income and their wealth.
When the cry goes up, whether from Republicans or Democrats, that this must not be done because it is "big government", the citizenry should just laugh. And then agitate and organise on behalf of what the Declaration of Independence promised: that it is the responsibility of government to ensure the equal right of all to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness".
Only such a bold approach can save the nation – not as an empire, but as a democracy.
October 2, 2008 at 05:03 pm by Maireid Sullivan, 82 views, 5 comments
Crowd Power
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Maireid Sullivan
Melbourne, Australia






Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (5)
at 20:04 on October 2nd, 2008
Maireid Sullivan, I like this story. It's great stuff!
Let's face a historical truth: we have never had a "free market", we have always had government intervention in the economy, and indeed that intervention has been welcomed by the captains of finance and industry.
Very true.
The alternative is simple and powerful. Take that huge sum of money and give it directly to the people who need it.
It's so simple it will never happen!
at 00:22 on October 3rd, 2008
Plus, Heritage, according to informed analysts, the banks knew long in advance that this would happen. In other words, they projected this would happen. People forget how serious the 1974 and 1991 land price led down turns were - there were just as many bank collapses that threatened the whole system, the same cries of woah from the bankers to have us save them from disaster.
at 00:50 on October 3rd, 2008
Of course the banks knew, they are the guilty parties.
at 01:39 on October 3rd, 2008
Maireid Sullivan, I like this story. It's good stuff.
Remember (if you will), that America was founded by Whigs who represented the business classes; and, who were nationalist and protectionist. The elite Republican class interests are more in alignment with the people who earned their money through free enterprise than for those whose far huger fortunes come with the name and title.
The question that should be asked -- "how did we get to where we are?" Simply, put the world's peoples are divided into three catagories: (a) those that spend billions yearly on losing weight; (b) those that eat to live; and, (c) those who don't know where their next meal is coming from! That our wealth (the West) is dependent on others less fortunate. From an economic standpoint the West has (and will) become more dependent on emerging markets. What they can't make, they will take! That wealth is, in and of itself, a magnet for exporting of commodities and products, but when all else fails, or is denied -- people (migration) will be the end product that swamps the West. That isn't exportation seeking to acquire wealth, but illegal inportation that will weigh heavily on expanding socialism that further obligates governments' budgets with socio-economic stagnation!
Suggested reading "The Wealth and Proverty of Nations" by David S. Landes.
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at 17:56 on October 3rd, 2008
Thank you for the excellent commentary and for the flag, BallyZCA.
While reading, I was reminded of one of my favourite pieces of info. trivia: The root meaning of the word 'bishop' is financial controller. ...and, it gets worse with, "Feel my lambs. Feed my sheep", ...the poor 'fattened' lamb isn't healthy eating anymore.