In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Posts Tagged ‘stop forclosure’

BAIL OUT THE PEOPLE, NOT WALL STREET BANKERS!

Posted by alfied on September 29, 2008

Tell President Bush, Candidates Obama and McCain, Members of Congress,
Treasury Secretary Paulson, Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke, and members of the media:
Bail Out Main Street NOT Wall Street!
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The Subprime Trump Card:Standing Up To The Banks

Posted by seumasach on June 27, 2008

 

Ellen Brown, June 26th, 2008(Web of Debt)

“If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all property until their children wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs.”

– Thomas Jefferson, Letter to Treasury Secretary Albert Gallatin (1802)

Jefferson had it right.  More than 1.5 million homeowners are expected to enter foreclosure this year, and about half of them are expected to have their homes repossessed.  If the dire consequences Jefferson warned of 200 years ago have been slow in coming, it is because they have been concealed by what Jerome a Paris calls the Anglo Disease – “the highly unequal economy whereby the rich and the financial sector . . . capture most of the income but hide it by providing cheap debt to the middle classes so that they can continue to spend.”  He calls “finance” the “cannibalistic” sector in today’s economy.  Writing in The European Tribune this month, he states:

“[O]ne of the more attractive features of the financial world, for its promoters, is its ability to concentrate huge fortunes in a small number of hands, and promote this as a good thing (these people are said to be creating wealth, rather than capturingit). . . . [O]f course, the reality is that such wealth concentration is created by squeezing the rest, as is obvious in the stagnation of incomes for most in the middle and lower rungs of society.  This is not so much wealth creation as wealth redistribution, from the many to the few.  But what has made this unequality . . . tolerable is that the financial world itself was able to provide a convenient smokescreen, in the form of cheap debt, provided in abundance to all.  The wealthy used it to grab real assets in funny money, and the rest were kindly allowed to keep on spending by tapping their future income rather than their insufficient current one; in a nutshell, the debt bubble hid the class warfare waged by the rich against everybody else.1

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