4th October, 2010
Banks borrowing requirement set to double next year to £25 billion a month to plug funding gap.
Posted by seumasach on November 13, 2010
4th October, 2010
Banks borrowing requirement set to double next year to £25 billion a month to plug funding gap.
Posted in UK economy | Tagged: stop the bailout | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on November 13, 2010
Having isolated itself internationally, Britain now faces the reality of its own dreadful plight: as the economy implodes and the housing market collapses the accumulation of bad debts means another bailout for the beggar barons.
13th November, 2010
Responding to a report from the New Economics Foundation (NEF), Mr Osborne said he saw “no indication” of a need for new capital injections to support the British banking sector.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: stop the bailout | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on November 13, 2010
Alex Brummer
12th November, 2010
The bravado of the British banks takes some beating.
On the plane to China our top bankers, including Peter Sands of Standard Chartered and Sir Philip Hampton ofRoyal Bank of Scotland, grabbed some headlines by moaning to political correspondents – normally off their radar – about onerous taxes and regulation.
Posted in Financial crisis | Tagged: stop the bailout | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on November 12, 2010
Pepe Escobar
13th November, 2010
It certainly beats any dreary Group of 20 (G-20) communique. Everything one needs to know about the US Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing (QE), currency wars and the mudslinging tsunami that passes for the current global financial system can be found at this animated rap video by Taiwan-based Next Media Animation (see the video here)
Posted in Currency Wars | Tagged: End of empire | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on November 11, 2010
“The American working class has been destroyed. The American middle class is in its final stages of destruction. Soon the bottom rungs of the rich themselves will be destroyed.”
Paul Craig Roberts
10th November, 2010
If we cannot trust what the government tells us about weapons of mass destruction, terrorist events, and the reasons for its wars and bailouts, can we trust the government’s statement last Friday that the US economy gained 151,000 payroll jobs during October?
Posted in Financial crisis | Tagged: End of empire | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on November 11, 2010
William Pfaff
11th November, 2010
PARIS – Historically minded observers might have noted a resemblance between President Barack Obama and the First Lady’s journey in Asia to the royal passage, receiving the fealty of lesser potentates, that led to the Great Durbar in Delhi in 1911 (call it the G-1911?) at which Britain’s King George V and Queen Mary were crowned King-Emperor and Queen-Empress of India. The historically minded observer would also know that just 36 years later India was partitioned, and the British Empire was finished.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: End of empire, Obama agenda | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on November 11, 2010
9th November, 2010
China’s Dagong Global Credit Rating Co. reduced its credit rating for the U.S. to A+ from AA, citing a deteriorating intent and ability to repay debt obligations after the Federal Reserve announced more monetary easing.
Posted in Currency Wars | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on November 11, 2010
Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: EM radiation health hazard | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on November 11, 2010
Cailean Bochanan
11th November, 2010
A John Pilger article is always a major trend setter on the left and the trend in question this time is an extraordinary one: Pilger effectively declares that there is no capitalist crisis. In the old days the drastic measures taken by the government to cut public spending would have been opposed by the left on the grounds that they were necessary for capitalism but the sign for us of the need for completely different system. Now Pilger declares that Britain’s financial travails are “not remotely a crisis”. Some doubtful statistics and facile analogies are good enough to reassure him that “there is no economic rationale” for the cuts. This is all the more extraordinary in that chancellor Osbourne is himself telling us that Britain is “on the brink of bankruptcy”: are we really to believe that this is a lie concocted to justify an ideological attack on public spending? Anyway, we don’t have to take Osbourne’s word for it: there is overwhelming evidence that Britain is bankrupt. He isn’t exaggerating, he’s playing it down: massive amounts of debt are being concealed by dodgy accounting including the bizarre practice of counting the bank bailout funds as an asset- does the government really expect to see that lot again? And then there the small question of 4 trillion of hidden debts. Pilger claims Britain’s situation is no worse than in 1945 when Anglo-American power, having seen off Germany and Japan, largely at the expense of the Soviet Union, was consolidating its global leadership. For all his exposes on colonialism and the Iraq war, Pilger seems to have no sense that what we are looking at is essentially imperial demise: if Britain really was still, as David Cameron seems to think, in a position to dictate to countries like China how they should run their economies then the figures would not be so grim- we could could go on offloading our debt onto others and consuming at their expense. But capitalism, at least the Anglo-Saxon version, which has always been inseparable from the domination of other nations, really is finished: the left just don’t want to know. They therefore content themselves with traditional remedial measures, laudable in themselves, such as opposing cuts on social spending and calling for taxes on the wealthy. They are unable to grasp the truly revolutionary nature of the crisis, or its dangers: but this will soon become clear to them and to everyone else.
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »
Posted by smeddum on November 10, 2010
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: "War on Terror" | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on November 10, 2010
“The truth is that some countries with current account surpluses have been saving too much while others like mine with deficits have been saving too little.”
This is the kind of infantile stuff we get from a British prime minister.
The truth is that some countries which have destroyed their own industrial base are too dependent on the savings of other countries. I could hardly believe what I was reading when I saw this- it looks like a spoof. Cameron claimed to be batting for Britain but he’s batting for Anglo-America, for the obsolete empire in its showdown with the rest of the world at the G20.
David Cameron urges China to correct trade imbalance
10th November
UK Prime Minister David Cameron has stepped into the row over “currency wars” with a warning that China should act to correct its trade imbalance.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: ;, G20 | Leave a Comment »