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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Is the 'Good Life' as America Knows It Over?

By Steve Fraser, Tomdispatch.com. Posted September 19, 2008.


The relationship between Washington and Wall Street has changed fundamentally, and as a result, the road ahead is dark and unknown.
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Introduction by Tom Engelhardt: Among the many media spectacles of the moment, the most unnerving is undoubtedly the crisis on Wall Street that has already essentially toppled Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Merrill Lynch, and -- probably not last and certainly not least -- the gigantic insurance company AIG, which has just been given $85 billion in taxpayer moneys to liquidate itself. Before we're done, that hoary old oxymoron of the Left, "late capitalism," may gain new life.

Elsewhere on the planet, it turns out, it was more obvious that the U.S. was in crisis. One small sign of the changing state of the globe's "sole superpower" is that, even before banking institutions started to tumble off walls like so many Humpty Dumpties, the International Monetary Fund, that dominatrix of global capital, was planning to pay Washington a working visit. This is the sort of thing you expect, with great trepidation, if you're Haiti, or Pakistan, or Malawi, or Argentina on the brink of financial meltdown -- but the United States? Nonetheless, according to NPR's David Kestenbaum, "The U.S. Treasury says America has now agreed to get a stability assessment from the IMF. The announcement didn't get much attention, but officials at the IMF expect to start examining U.S. finances in the next couple [of] months."

Welcome to the Third World, America. Now, hold your hats while the whirlwind blows and the stock market goes into heart-attack mode. Steve Fraser, an expert on Gilded Ages (and how they end), as well as the author of a superb new book on our financial "masters of the universe" from the eighteenth century to the present, Wall Street: America's Dream Palace, brought up the dreaded "D" word (for depression) this April at TomDispatch when, in the mainstream, pundits were still wondering whether we might possibly, actually, really be edging toward, or near, a recession. He wrote at the time: "The current breakdown of the financial system is portentous. It threatens a general economic implosion more serious than anyone has witnessed for many decades.

Depression, if that is what it turns out to be, together with the agonies of a misbegotten and lost war no one believes in any longer, could undermine whatever is left of the threadbare credibility of our Gilded Age elite." Now he's being quoted on the front page of the New York Times. How times (of every sort) have changed in just the space of a few months... Drawing on his knowledge of the history of Wall Street and Washington, now let him offer you now a little perspective for the months to come. -- Tom Engelhardt

What is Washington to do as the financial system collapses? Clearly, stark differences in approach as well as in public policy have already emerged. Bail-out Bear Stearns and pump up the brokerage and investment business with new lines of credit. Nationalize Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac on the backs of the taxpayer -- but let Lehman drown. Tell the financial community to save itself, after which Bank of America salutes and buys Merrill Lynch. Then, the Fed gets cold feet and decides it can't let an institution the size of the insurance giant AIG go under as well. Washington is left staring into the abyss. The old rules no longer apply.


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See more stories tagged with: economy, poverty, washington, wall street, financial crisis

Steve Fraser is working on a book about the two gilded ages. A TomDispatch regular and co-director of the American Empire Project series at Metropolitan Books, he is the author of, among other works, the recently published Wall Street: America's Dream Palace.


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View:
The Financial Crisis : Problem and Solution
Posted by: mmckinl on Sep 19, 2008 12:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's the Derivatives, Stupid! Why Fannie, Freddie, AIG had to be Bailed Out

by Ellen Brown

problem and solution

A little wonky but this is a real mess. And it lays out the solution to this mess: Taking back our right to produce our own money not borrow it from the privately owned Fed.

Why should we borrow our own money ?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Once Again. . .
Posted by: The Old Hippie on Sep 19, 2008 12:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
 
I've posted this before, but this article almost demands its reprise...

“Can’t Say We Weren’t Warned...”

(I'm currently in the process of updating some of the older links.
Please let me know if you find any broken links.  hippie@aye.net)
 

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» Disaster Capitalism ! Posted by: mmckinl
» RE: Once Again. . . Posted by: Von
» RE: Once Again. . . Posted by: The Old Hippie
Those Were The Days, My Friend
Posted by: Tom Degan on Sep 19, 2008 12:51 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When America sent George W. Bush to the White House in 2000, it effectively pointed the proverbial loaded pistol at its head. When it compounded that mistake four years later by reelecting him, it pulled the trigger.

But let's give the hideous , half-witted little piece of shit the benefit of the doubt, shall we? The seeds of America's ultimate self destruction were planted on Election Day 1980 when they sent a senile, feeble-minded, dirty old dingbat named Ronald Reagan to the White House.

It is a point of pride with me that, young as I was, I never succumbed to Ronnie-mania.

On January 20, 1981 when the oaf of office took the oath of office and began dismantling the New Deal, there were still a few people alive who were grown adults when the stock market crashed in October of 1929. They remembered how hard times were. They are virtually all gone now. Most of the people who were mere toddlers then have died (Remember it was almost eighty years ago). It is laughably apparent that those of us who were born after Worls War Two didn't learn a damn thing about the history of their once-great nation. Had they done so, they would have known that evry time the "lutocracy" ( as the looney right wing used to be called) seized control of all thre branches of their governnment, they ran this country into the economic ditch. That's not merely my own opinion - that's an historic, undeniable fact - look it up.

Did you ever think your beloved country would ever sink this low? So help me Herbert Hoover, I never did.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
Crappy Days Are Here Again

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» RE: Those Were The Days, My Friend Posted by: beautifulady2003
» beautifulady.... Posted by: Tom Degan
» RE: beautifulady.... Posted by: racetraitor
» RE: beautifulady.... Posted by: beautifulady2003
» RE: beautifulady.... Posted by: racetraitor
» RE: beautifulady.... Posted by: racetraitor
» RE: beautifulady.... Posted by: Uriahz
» RE: beautifulady.... Posted by: racetraitor
» Those Were The Days, My Friend Posted by: John Orford
» no less than treachery Posted by: 2dogarage
» RE: Those Were The Days, My Friend Posted by: stopthemaddness2
» MyLeftFoot.... Posted by: Tom Degan
» Tom Posted by: bobtr900
» RE: Tom Posted by: Tom Degan
small is beautiful
Posted by: mtnprivy on Sep 19, 2008 1:08 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Go to youtube and check out " the most important video you'll ever see." there are parts one thru eight. Notice how this man quotes Jimmy Carter from the 70's? I wish the average american or world citizen could see and understand this concept. Perhaps this is not so different from what E F Shumacher was saying, or in a different way . . . Helen and Scott Nearing.
In the Church of the Brethren I often hear "live simply, so that others may simply live." I think that is one thing we all need to get into our heads.
Any theories and BS that stray away from these basic concepts are just smoke screens (ie pollution). They will only delay the correction that is coming from nature to us. We can't live like most of the world is now living, it is unsustainable! It must, it will be turned around.
It doesn't take complex economic theory to look at a Mcmansion and say "too much!", or to look at our cities, and say "too much" or to look at our highways and say "too much." Haven't we ever absorbed the idea of "enough is enough"?

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» RE: small is beautiful Posted by: stopthemaddness2
» RE: small is beautiful Posted by: bobtr900
» RE: small is beautiful Posted by: PopRox80
Historically, Its Either Socialism or Fascism
Posted by: lorenbliss on Sep 19, 2008 2:09 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Modern history proves that all such crises as the present economic collapse lead either to socialism or to fascist tyranny.

Since the fascists are already in power -- the Republican Party has been the unofficial vessel of U.S. fascism since its anti-Roosevelt alliance with Hitler and Mussolini during the 1930s -- the likelihood is that the United States will become the Fourth Reich: a ChristoNazi theocracy with non-Christians forced into the scapegoat role to which the Jews were reduced in Germany.

Moreover, any potential anti-fascist opposition has been effectively rendered brain-dead by the public schools and Big Business media that create and maintain the Moron Nation state of mindlessness.

Were there a sudden increase in the sales of such texts as The Communist Manifesto and das Kapital, there might actually be a reason for hope: more than any other factor, it was the huge U.S. Communist Party -- the third largest party in U.S. history and the nation's best organized party ever -- that empowered the reforms of the New Deal. But thanks to Moron Nation public schooling, the younger generations -- especially the people most likely to be the worst afflicted by the collapsing economy -- can hardly read at the Dick-and-Jane level, much less comprehend anything demanding more thoughtful consideration, including even the very basic acknowledgement of self-interest expressed in Manifesto.

Thus the slogans "hope" and "change" are ultimately of no more significance than the slogan "love" was during the 1960s.

Nevertheless I would be derelict if I failed to point out that economic collapse is but part of the three-pronged crisis descending upon us. The other prongs are terminal climate change (its horrors dutifully trivialized as “global warming”), and the technological and cultural collapse imposed by the emptying of our global fuel tank. The latter -- technological collapse -- has no human precedent: until now, humans were always able to survive even the worst disasters by employing the basic primate toolkit of fire-making, weapon-making, shelter-building and hunting-and-gathering skills. But those skills and the associated knowledge -- the legacy of at least a million years of evolution -- are no more. They were all abolished -- swept from our minds as if they never existed -- by our infinitely arrogant dependence on petroleum. Hence once the petroleum is gone, our species will be reduced to absolute helplessness. We will be castaways stranded in a jungle more predatory than we can possibly imagine, and in all probability, none of our descendents will survive.

Thus the two choices: socialism (and the approximately equal apportionment of ever-more-scarce resources and ever-worsening miseries), or fascism (and the reduction of most of us to a new Dark Age of degradation via the neo-manorial resurrection of slavery to maintain a tiny, omnipotent and unspeakably vicious neo-feudal ruling class in some semblance of the petroleum-age style to which it was accustomed). The latter -- the ruling-class effort to maintain itself in relative comfort through the apocalyptic years ahead -- has been and remains the core purpose of all U.S. politics from November 22, 1963 onward. But we will not see that -- nor any of the other dreadful truths about what is being done to us -- as long as we cling to the moronic notion Marx is "irrelevant."

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» Marx Class Posted by: pdxjoe
» RE: Marx Class??? Posted by: Last Chance
» link to the manifesto... Posted by: ellie
» RE: link to the manifesto... Posted by: Last Chance
» let the people govern themselves Posted by: Last Chance
» The Two Totalitarianisms Posted by: pdxjoe
» RE: The Two Totalitarianisms Posted by: Last Chance
» The History Posted by: pdxjoe
» RE: The History Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: The History Posted by: pdxjoe
» RE: The History Posted by: Last Chance
» B.S. Posted by: bizeeb
» RE: link to the manifesto... Posted by: stevehamlin
» Link To Literature Posted by: Last Chance
One (longer term fix) is to develop nano/biotech manufacturing
Posted by: nerd1024 on Sep 19, 2008 2:25 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This economic disaster we now find ourselves in can helped to be reversed eventually with the returning of manufacturing to north America by really pushing the new sciences of nanotech (for manufacturing/health, and biotech (for health). We have steadily lost all our manufacturing to china and soon India and other cheaper countries.

This current divisive war (and any future war with Iran?) will serve to break north America, we will lose R&D to new up-coming nations..the funny thing is, we are also now at a nexus of exponentially growing tech in computer power, and the ability to manipulate atoms to make things like smaller, faster computers, better tools to diagnose disease and fix disease and even eventually reverse aging by fixing and restoring aging cells in our bodies back to new form.

This has never been possible before in human history, and we are lucky to be present now at such a time when it looks like it will soon become true, and yet, we waste our resources in these wars of empire and the next speculative bubble to come by.

Nanomachines are starting to appear in research labs, biotech (stem cells, cellular manipulation, gene chips, bio-informatics, constructing artificial cells from scratch) is employing the science and tech of computers and nanotech to advance at exponential speeds with the soon to be results of our understanding of how all cells work (normal cells, stem cells etc), we will soon (10, 15, 25 years out) be able to control all disease process, cure cancer, reverse aging, boost our brain power with nanotech and use the internet to connected brains etc.

The thing is, north America now looks like the old English empire, out of gas after fighting wars and trying to keep itself as the latest high-tech nation of its day, but the endless wars and managing of empire caused its natural death...gee, notice something similar today?

The thing is, do you want to waste 100's of billions to 10's of trillions in this mess when scientists like aubre de gray of the Mprize say all we need is 100 million to 1 billion and 15 years to demonstrate how to reverse aging in humans (he was featured on 60 minutes show 2 years ago). Also check out kurzweilai and nanodot for advancing nano/biotech news too.

We have turned into a nation of greedy lawyer/speculators, wasted 100's of trillions on cold wars, hot wars, speculation bubbles, turned the internet into a mess, and now all that new shiny nano/biotech that will grow cars, houses, repair our older bodies (baby boomers alert!) are probably going to be created in china soon!! (what did Regan say "greed is good"), um, perhaps we should re think that concept a bit?

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» I used to think like that Posted by: Iconoclast421
Bring back the Nixon years!
Posted by: NoMcCainPalin on Sep 19, 2008 2:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm old enough to recall Tricky Dick and Watergate with crystal clear clarity. Back then, I thought, Washigton couldn't get any worse than this.

I was wrong. Right know I will take the Nixon years and be happier than a clam on coccaine.

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» Funny you should mention it.... Posted by: Tom Degan
» The proper link Posted by: Tom Degan
» RE: Bring back the Nixon years! Posted by: Cybershaman
Ahh, The American Good life
Posted by: Mexitli on Sep 19, 2008 4:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hmm. Here's to your GOOD LIFE

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» We got room Posted by: Mexitli
It has been going on for 28 years now.
Posted by: maxpayne on Sep 19, 2008 4:38 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Uh, Peak Wall $treet ?

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Is the 'Good Life' as America Knows it Over?...
Posted by: Bearzerker on Sep 19, 2008 4:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
for some it maybe over in under 40 days... maybe!

for others... its payback time and its gonna get ugly!
and deservedly so!

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Joke
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Sep 19, 2008 5:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Picture the US economy as a hot air balloon. Over the last 8 years it has been shot full of holes (accidentally, wink wink) by Dick Cheney. And now the propane tank is empty and the balloon is falling fast. The government solution? Hand all the passengers a can of beans and tell them to start eating.

Should have listened to Ron Paul!

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» RE: Joke Posted by: Cybershaman
» RE: Joke Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE: Joke Posted by: Iconoclast421
» RE: Joke Posted by: nochicagoboys
» RE: Actually... Posted by: Cybershaman
I apologize for asking this on another article but
Posted by: helenahanbasquet on Sep 19, 2008 5:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
if things continue to go downhill in the next few weeks, can this be declared a "national emergency" under the Patriot Act?

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» Good question Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: BTW Posted by: Cybershaman
» Yes Posted by: Iconoclast421
» RE: Yes Posted by: ellie
» RE: Yes Posted by: nochicagoboys
» Agreed Posted by: LMNOP
Enlightening
Posted by: GreyFoxThree on Sep 19, 2008 6:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Very enlightening article indeed. No doubt about it there are some dark roads to come. Will be interesting to see how it all plays out over time. All I know is the sooner we get Dictator Bush out of office the better off we will be. Pray Dictator Bushes little "mini-me" McBush doesnt win in November. God help us all if McBush wins.

JIff
Ultimate Anonymity

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Obama Believes It's Over
Posted by: dockboy on Sep 19, 2008 6:38 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"We can't drive our SUVs and eat as much as we want and keep our homes on 72 degrees at all times ... and then just expect that other countries are going to say OK," Obama said.

Obama's the kind of prez we need.

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» More than that, Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: Obama Believes It's Over HUH? Posted by: left_libertarian
This writer makes an important point!
Posted by: using on Sep 19, 2008 6:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The government must figure out how to deploy its power to shift the flow of investment capital out of the mine-fields of speculative paper transactions and back into productive channels that will help meet the material needs of American society. Real value must be created in place of chimeras." THis is a very important point, not to be overlooked!
In addition, we must make sure that there are grave penalties (watching and judging in the court of public opinion did not protect us from future harm). To do this, we need transparency -- accountability. This is the way to use our fronet seat...by watching and supporting and screaming and organizing and persistantly insisting and don't forget -- we all need to grow. Remember Roosevelt came directly to the people for support..Obama is trying to distinguish for us the truth of our needs from the lies that cover our messes. First step to a stronger, healthier society: Vote Obama

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Transparency
Posted by: ClassAct on Sep 19, 2008 7:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What the national government needs to do to regulate FIRE industries is to restore laws that governed business in the 19th century, for instance: limit lengths of charters, limit capital businesses can raise and the purposes to which it can be put, prohibit corporations from owning other companies. To enforce this, the states must demand (and the courts must support the demand) that every company doing business in a state must have a charter in that state; a single charter in Delaware is no longer acceptable except in Delaware. Any reform that does not at a minimum include these measures is simply adding further mechanisms to our Rube Goldberg-ian economic system, reducing its efficiency (as feeble as that is), and dubbing it the business buzzword of the decade “transparency.”

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Manic panic not me
Posted by: solrev on Sep 19, 2008 7:05 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
“We've only just begun to live, White lace and promises A kiss for luck and we're on our way. And yes, We've just begun.
Before the rising sun we fly, So many roads to choose We start our walking and learn to run. And yes, We've just begun.
Sharing horizons that are new to us, Watching the signs along the way, Talking it over just the two of us, Working together day to day Together.
And when the evening comes we smile, So much of life ahead We'll find a place where there's room to grow, And yes, We've just begun.”

Everybody is an expert on what went wrong, but we do not seem to have any experts that can bail us out with bailouts. There is something going on what it is, is just not clear. I think you all are missing something that is very important, and that is, that which is sneaking into our national vocabulary. Even the supply sidewinders are saying it; “we are socializing the risk”. If you want to institute a government that will secure the entitlements of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, then large sectors of the economy have to be socialized. You are going to love the revolution of 2012, so do not panic, it's only money.

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» RE: Manic panic not me Posted by: Von
ba
Posted by: mnstra on Sep 19, 2008 7:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Any time you look at systems rather than individuals people are going to get away with murder.It is clear that the fat cat criminals need to be arrested now and all their assess ts confiscated!!! If we apply the rules of agency then we can point the finger at the CEO and managers within the elite and send them to jail. Remember Enron. People were wiped out. Then,
If we look at the damage to the American economy from Katrina, Gustave and Ike they do not compare
in dollar amounts to the destruction brought about by those entities we just bailed out,
This is a catastrophic melt down as severe as the flooding of New Orleans. It was caused by the most abject greed in history perpetrated by the fat pigs on Wall Street.

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The Good Life Has Been Over For Decades
Posted by: FoonTheElder on Sep 19, 2008 7:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The good life has been over for decades, it just took a long time to finally reach the end of the rope.

The good life started to unravel when wages stagnated 35 years ago and both spouses had to work to make ends meet. Family income may have been rising, but that was only because there were an extra 2000 hours of work time per year.

Then when even two jobs didn't work, the credit bubble allowed people to think that they were keeping up, even though they were digging themselves in a hole. After all, our President said times were great and home prices only go up!

Now its the end of the road. No alternatives, decreasing wages, heavy debt, prices going up on gas and food and no sign of change. We're at the end of the long road of the failed Reagan Revolution. The fortunate few made multi-millions and everyone else gets to pay the bill.

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» So true, so true Posted by: badkitty
American Nightmare - Thanks Dubua and McCain - Bush the worst President to ever enter the oval offic
Posted by: stopthemaddness2 on Sep 19, 2008 7:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, it's over folks. Erosion of the American Dream is now a full blown nightmare. We are headed for a full blown Depression if the Repuks get the ticket in November. Bush, as usual, has sat on his ASS, and let this situation get as bad as can be. And now we have to pay for it, Another trillion dollar bill at our expense. And the Fed's are screwing us all.

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On Community Organizers and Prisoners of War
Posted by: GrantBurkeVT on Sep 19, 2008 7:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://www.marco.org/300

Everybody please read this article and understand why the corporate media and the political elites from pollsters to talkshow radio hosts go out of their way to ignore the truth about community organizing and its relationship to the lower/middle/working class.

AND PASS IT ON !!

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DEMOCRACY IS AS DEAD AS THE AMERICAN DREAM
Posted by: stopthemaddness2 on Sep 19, 2008 8:15 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Socialism. One World Order, as so ordered by the FEDS. It was clear, watching Bush on the airways today giving another carefully worded 3rd grade speech written for him by the Feds, which flanked him on either side. What was a great nation, what we remembered, the freedoms we enjoyed, the pursuit of life, liberty and happiness...those days are gone. We are headed for a Depression. And out of this Depression, will come the total control of the American public to such a toxic levels, we shall only b