In These New Times

“In these new times, in spite of the dangers, the most brutal force, the most fearful night, we are engaged in the fight to survive.” No Novo Tempo-Ivan Lins, Vitor Martins

Archive for October, 2010

Keep right on to the end of the road!

Posted by seumasach on October 20, 2010

No change as imperium launches policy of economic aggression

The answer to the question of where the bank bailout funds went has been made clear by the imposition of capital controls by those countries which find their economies threatened by hot money flows out of London and Wall Street. The empire is going down in a volcanic eruption of worthless paper, or, rather, electronic money.

Cailean Bochanan

20th October, 2010

As the schoolboy coalition presses ahead with its plans to gut what’s left of Britain the real news is on the international front: a whole load of countries including  Brazil, Thailand and South Korea are beginning to impose restrictions on capital flows, a direct challenge to our right to flood the world with near worthless pounds. This is the kind of impertinence which would once have been met with the dispatch of a gunboat and a short while ago was met with the complete destruction of an entire nation. So what will our response be this time?

The essence of imperial power, or, indeed, the exercise of mob power in general depends on a precise calibration of the actual balance of forces: you don’t make threats if you can’t act on them, and you don’t launch provocations if you can’t handle the consequences. We, along with our American allies,  have launched a provocation, through our policy of quantitative easing( currency debasement) and low interest rates, which has been characterised as an economic world war: are we in a position to deal with the consequences or is our policy an indication of a complete exhaustion of the intelligence, judgement, even the sanity of our elites?

I would suggest, very much the latter. If we think we have the military might to browbeat the world into allowing us a permanent free ride on the back of our devalued currency, then we have failed to learn the lessons of our recent military misadventures. If we think that we can somehow trick the rest of the world into doing our will we only deceive ourselves. They know our game now, it is quite transparent and there are no benefits for them in going along with it: the dollar/pound reserve currency racket is finished and nations everywhere are taking steps to protect themselves. They are entering into bilateral agreements to trade without dollars, they are using exchange controls and they are curbing the speculators. In other words, the Washington Consensus, globalisation Anglo-American style, premised on the free movement of capital, is over.

Unfortunately we are unable to see the writing on the wall. The imperial elite, throughout their history, have been nothing if not audacious. The mentality of such an elite is itself a form of madness: they go where others fear to tread. their lies , their deceptions, their entire modus operandi defies the imagination of normal beings. Their fall must therefore be as dramatic as their rise. Some of us had hoped for a moment of realisation, of a self-awareness which might have spared us from the full playing out of our lunacy. It is not to be: we are to keep right on to the end of the road. It’s not even hubris, it’s more like a kind of pathetic doggedness. Our strategy now is like a scorched earth policy rebounding against ourselves: our homes , our communities, our industry, our institutions are to be put to the torch. Our only hope is that, in extremis, the folly of our thinking, the vacuity of our ideologies, the hollowness of our culture becomes the focus of our attention: that it becomes a bonfire of the vanities.

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Korea preparing more steps against capital inflows sparked by `low’ rates

Posted by seumasach on October 20, 2010

Bloomberg

19th October, 2010

South Korea is preparing further measures to counter capital inflows triggered by low interest rates overseas as emerging market nations intensify the fight to restrain their currencies.

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Capital controls, currency wars and the new global financial architecture

Posted by seumasach on October 20, 2010

Ilene Grabel

Triple Crisis

19th October, 2010

For those of us advocating change in the global financial architecture, the last few months have been fairly exhilarating.  Let’s recap…

Capital controls, as I’ve written previously, have become the ‘new normal’ in the developing world.  It’s hard to keep up with developments in countries that have introduced or tightened existing controls since I last wrote about them here (see below). IMF staff now write about capital controls with a taken-for-granted attitude (see even the institution’s October 2010Global Financial Stability Report, which contains the by now customary bland language on the role and efficacy of capital controls, e.g. p. 28).

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China’s move may push capital controls in Asia

Posted by seumasach on October 20, 2010

China’s tight control of its currency allows it to raise interest rates without drawing a wave of hot money into local assets. For Asian countries already struggling to cope with the inflow of overseas funds seeking higher returns than the developed world offers, any response to China’s move might take the form of capital controls rather than rate increases, HSBC’s Mr. Neumann said.

The flood of quantitively eased dollars overseas is the issue of the moment and needs a rapid response if emerging economies are not to be  laid waste by this scorched earth policy. China already has the controls in place, the rest must follow its example.

Asia News

20th October, 2010

China’s surprise interest-rate increase is unlikely to elicit copycat moves elsewhere in Asia, but it could accelerate capital controls in the more export-dependent Asian economies, analysts say.

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Obama’s military appointments have corrupt past

Posted by seumasach on October 20, 2010

Robert Parry, Andrew Hughes, Allan Nairn, Roxana Tiron

Voltairenet

20th October, 2010

The Defense officials appointed by Barack Obama are the authors of the worst crimes and embezzlements carried out under previous administrations. In terms of change, only the rhetoric is new; the practices remain the same. What is most startling is the lack of interest elicited by the closure of the investigation into the missing 3.4 trillion dollars and the upgrading of those responsible for the most monumental swindle in history.

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And the winner is … Muqtada

Posted by seumasach on October 19, 2010

Pepe Escobar

Asia Times

20th October, 2010

Iraqi Premier Nuri al-Maliki hit Tehran this Monday. He was duly received by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and talked extensively to President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, still beaming after his rock-star tour of Lebanon last week.

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Why the U.S. has launched a new financial world war – and how the the rest of the world will fight back

Posted by seumasach on October 19, 2010

Michael Hudson

Counterpunch

11th October, 2010

What is to stop U.S. banks and their customers from creating $1 trillion, $10 trillion or even $50 trillion on their computer keyboards to buy up all the bonds and stocks in the world, along with all the land and other assets for sale in the hope of making capital gains and pocketing the arbitrage spreads by debt leveraging at less than 1 per cent interest cost? This is the game that is being played today.

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The challenge of non-ionising radiation: a proposal for legislation

Posted by seumasach on October 19, 2010

Karen A. Massey (1979)

Magdahavis.com

Click on above link to view study

Posted in Studies and statements showing mobile phone health risk | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Proposal for legislation: non-ionising radiation (1979)

Posted by seumasach on October 19, 2010

Magda Havis

10th October, 2010

October 10, 2010.  Pick of the Week #14 is based on a thoroughly researched and carefully crafted document (The Challenge of Non-Ionizing Radiation:  A Proposal for Legislation) written by Karen A. Massey (Project Attorney for Natural Resources Defense Council) and published in the Duke Law Journal (Volume 1979, No. 1, 86 pp).  This paper will be of interest to policy analysts, lawyers, member of Congress, and all the agencies that currently have pieces of the electromagnetic puzzle in the United States and elsewhere.

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Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Professor Olle Johansson- Wake up to dangers of electrosmog!

Posted by seumasach on October 19, 2010

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Global TV-Is wi-fi in schools safe?

Posted by seumasach on October 19, 2010

Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: | 1 Comment »

 
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