Showing posts with label commercialism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label commercialism. Show all posts

Monday, November 18, 2024

Ship of Fools

We're setting sail to the place on the map
from which no one has ever returned.
Drawn by the promise of the joker and the fool,
By the light of the crosses that burned.
Drawn by the promise of the women and the lace
and the gold and the cotton and pearls.
It's the place where they keep all the darkness you need.
You sail away from the light of the world on this trip.

You will pay tomorrow

Avarice and greed are gonna drive you over the endless sea.
They will leave you drifting in the shallows
or drowning in the oceans of history.
Traveling the world, you're in search of no good.
But I'm sure you'll build your Sodom like you knew you would.
Using all the good people for your galley slaves
as your little boat struggles through the warning waves.
But you don't pay...

You will pay tomorrow

Save me from tomorrow
I don't want to sail with this ship of fools

-- Karl Wallinger (World Party) 1986

Saturday, March 27, 2021

imbalanced resource / capital distribution

Three dynamics that define any human civilization are the distribution of resources, capital, and agency. Resources are straightforward — food, energy, shelter, etc.  Capital is financial (money), tangible (tools, ownership of land, etc.) and intangible (social / human capital). Capital productively invested produces income. Agency is control of one's life, having a say in community / public decisions, and having some control and power over one's circumstances.  When these three are distributed asymmetrically -- where the majority of the resources, capital, and power are distributed to an elite -- society and the economy are imbalanced and prone to stagnation and eventual discord.

Statistics are unequivocal: income-wealth inequality in the U.S. continues reaching new heights. This is reflected in asymmetric access to healthcare and other resources, asymmetric ownership of income-producing capital, and limited agency.  The bottom 90% of the U.S. economy has been decapitalized: debt has been substituted for capital. Capital only flows into the increasingly centralized top tier which owns and profits from the rising tide of debt that's been keeping the bottom 90% afloat for the past 20 years. Globalization and financialization have richly rewarded the top 5% and especially the top 0.1%. Everyone else has been been reduced to a powerless peasantry of debt-serfs.

America has no plan to reverse this destructive tide of neo-feudal pillage. Our leadership's "plan" is benign neglect: send a monthly stimulus of bread and circuses (the technocrat term is Universal Basic Income or UBI) to all the disempowered, decapitalized households so they can stay out of trouble and not hinder the New Nobility's pillaging of America and the planet.

As for agency: Martin Gilens of Princeton University and Benjamin Page of Northwestern University are authors of the study "Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens."  Professor Gilens gave this brief summary of their conclusions:

"Ordinary citizens have virtually no influence over what their government does in the United States. And economic elites and interest groups, especially those representing business, have a substantial degree of influence. Government policy-making over the last few decades reflects the preferences of those groups — of economic elites and of organized interests." (Foreign Affairs, Jan. 2021, Monopoly Versus Democracy)

That is as definitive as soaring income-wealth inequality. Both are inherently destabilizing.

Meanwhile, central bankers, monopolists and the politicos whose campaigns are funded by monopolists are all frantically trying to convince us their policies will heal the metastasizing tumor consuming America.  Borrowing a quarter of the nation's entire economic output every year to prop up an ineffective, corrupt status quo is merely kicking the can down the road while not addressing the root problems in our country.

If America cannot bear to discuss these realities (and structural solutions) openly, the social, economic, and political orders will unravel in a non-linear Cultural Revolution with a highly uncertain outcome.

-- Charles Hugh Smith (The Daily Reckoning) March 27, 2021

 

Saturday, December 7, 2019

bank regulation


The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System recently published their annual Supervision and Regulation Report which measures the financial condition of major U.S. banks, including loan growth and liquidity in the banking system.  Overall, 45% of U.S. banks with more than $100 billion in assets received a supervisory rating of “less than satisfactory.”  That’s not good. As we learned during the 2008 crisis, the stability of these large banks is essential to the health of our banking system.
Furthermore, this rating should not sit well with hardworking Americans who bailed out many banks during that last major crisis.  As bank lobbyists continuously push for more deregulation, it's prudent to remember what happened a decade ago with bank bailouts and a market crash.  We need more regulation, not less, if banks continue to receive less than a “C” grade on their report cards.

-- Nomi Prins, The Daily Reckoning (edited) (Dec. 7, 2019)

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Speculation Encouragement

Needless to say, if you bail out speculators, they will simply speculate more. And if you do it over and over and predictably so, you will extinguish the fear of risk and loss, which is the only thing which keeps the speculative impulses in check.

-- David Stockman (as quoted in The Daily Reckoning) Sept. 24, 2019 (slightly edited)

Friday, June 7, 2019

Central Bank Experimentation

The grand central bank experiment of the last 10 years has ended in utter and complete failure. The games of cheap money and constant intervention that have brought record global debt to the tune of $250 trillion and record wealth inequality are about to embark on a new round.  All under the banner to “extend the business cycle” at all costs. Never asking whether they should nor considering the consequences.  This is not capitalism, nor does this ongoing farce constitute free market price discovery. It’s politburo based central planning, desperately trying to keep the balls in the air.  

The pretense is gone, it’s all about keeping the illusion alive that the Fed knows what it’s doing, that it’s always there to save markets from any trouble.  But since they are not elected by the people and face zero consequences for failure, they don’t have to consider the collateral damage they inflict.  Everything every central banker has uttered last year was completely wrong. Every projection they made over the last 10 years has been wrong.  Why place confidence in people who are staring at the ruins of the policies they unleashed on the world and are about to unleash again?  We’re all staring at a colossal policy failure with no accountability.  Brace yourselves as no one, absolutely no one, can know how this will turn out.

-- Sven Henrich (Northman Trader) June 7, 2019 (edited)


Thursday, May 23, 2019

Too Big to Fail (Again)

In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, the bank bailouts did not save the economy as their architects advertised. Rather, they bolstered the biggest U.S. banks from an insolvency crisis of their own creation. Those banks were, and remain, too big to fail. Their CEOs are too connected to jail.

The leaders of the major banks oversaw multi-trillion dollar enterprises that committed fraud, lost other people’s money, harassed public service members, and fired thousands of low-level employees. Worst of all, they have put the entire financial system and markets at the edge of ruin again.

Big banks know they have political and Federal Reserve support. Low or negative rates provide banks access to cheap capital if they need it, which encourages greater recklessness than if they had to “pay” more for it. They have taken this as a license to gamble large. By rescuing and supporting the big banks’ dangerous behavior, such recklessness has been not only condoned but encouraged.

The argument big banks make about their mega derivatives positions is that they are “hedged.” In other words, though the total (or “notional”) figure is large, most of the long and short positions net out against each other. The problem with that assessment is that the big banks take long and short positions against each other. They have set themselves up again in domino fashion.

We are heading for another financial crisis at some point. No one can say when for certain, but probably sooner than later. There’s a lot more money supporting the system artificially that the central banks have conjured than we had going into the last crisis. If that subsidy was to go away or be reduced, the money would come draining out of the same financial system that it’s been inflating.

-- Nomi Prins (Daily Reckoning) May 23, 2019 (edited)

Monday, November 10, 2014

endless war profiteering

"[T]he insidious increase in power, and the influence over foreign policy that the military has, is very dangerous.  And maybe in the long run it's even more dangerous than a coup.  Because what happens is, the power shifts gradually, and gradually, and incrementally, over to the war-making side, to where you wake up one morning and all you're doing is making war.  And you have so many people, from Lockheed Martin to the Congress of the United States, to the Armed Forces, to you name it, who are making so much money off that war-making, that you can't stop it.  That's not a coup, but it is something worse in my view.  It is ultimately the destruction of our Republic."  
-- Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson (U.S Army, retired) 2012 interview

Friday, July 29, 2011

Amerimacka

The land of the free, built on slavery
Our consciousness in captivity
The promised land is the liar's den
Culture of greed has got to end
-- Garza / Hilton (Thievery Corp.) 2005

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

fight club

"You are not your job. You're not how much money you have in the bank. You're not the car you drive. You're not the contents of your wallet."

"The things you own end up owning you.... It's only after we've lost everything that we're free to do anything.... Only after disaster can we be resurrected."

-- Tyler Durden (Chuck Palahniuk / Jim Uhls / David Fincher)

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

take it from the man

it's just like i said -- they're fucking with your head
you ain't safe in your bed or even when you're dead
they're out to school you, so they can rule you
they try to fool you or just get to you

and i seen it coming down, so i headed out of town
because i'm quick like that

i seen them on tv -- they even look like me
they said they'd set me free, but that can never be
but i know it's coming down, so i'm headed out of town
because i'm quick like that, always bounce right back

stupid magazines to sell you useless things
silly as it seems, they even steal your dreams
and i know it's coming down, so i'm headed out of town
cause i'm quick like that, never coming back

man i know it's coming down, so i'm heading far from town
cause i'm smart like that; i'm not coming back

-- anton newcombe (brian jonestown massacre) 1996

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

american kitsch

"If I'm in a very light mood, I find everything in America so kitsch. If I'm in a bad mood, I find it terribly repressive and heavy."
-- David Bowie (1973)

Thursday, July 3, 2008

American way of life

"[I]t should be the goal of policy makers to protect the American way of life. The American way of life is a blessed one. "
-- Ari Fleischer, White House Press Secretary (May 7, 2001)

Friday, June 20, 2008

airwaves

they seem near, but they are far away.
they knew last year what you'd want today.
they're controlling everything you do.
all your dreams, all your ambitions
are sent to you in their transmissions.
airwaves -- everything you know is in the air

they will always find you where you are.
if it's peaceful, they can start a war.
they're translating everything you feel.
they will make your troubles fade away.
when you're sad, they'll make you feel so gay.
airwaves -- everything you know is in the air.


-- Action Plus (1996)