Clear Full Forecast

Financial Chaos in Europe and the Smell of Napalm in the Morning

By Peter Ewart

Tuesday, May 11, 2010 03:44 AM

By Peter Ewart
 
What in God’s name should we make of it all? On Thursday, the New York Stock Exchange had its most severe plunge in history - nearly 1000 points, before it recovered minutes later. On Monday, it shot up 400 points, one of the biggest spikes in memory. All told, the variance was around 1400 points over the period of a couple of days. 
 
The context for this, of course, is the financial turmoil that has spread from Greece and is sweeping across Europe, threatening the very existence of the European Union and the Euro as a common currency. Last week alone, it is estimated that global stock markets lost $3.7 trillion of their value as a result of this crisis (1). According to the Canadian finance minister Jim Flaherty, not even the Canadian economy is immune from the financial contagion.
 
There is no doubt about it – the global financial sector is still in a period of extreme volatility and instability despite massive and unprecedented bailouts from the coffers of governments around the world a year ago. Now the European financial sector is to receive “the mother of all bailouts” amounting to an astounding $1 trillion more.
 
But there is a troubling feature of this situation - a “financial war”, so to speak – that is not getting the attention it should. As Anders Borg, Swedish Finance Minister has put it, one of the main contributing factors to the extreme volatility in the financial sector is that “wolf packs” of speculators are roaming around Europe looking to feast upon the economic carnage (2). These include bond and currency speculators, as well as hedge funds, banks and other financial institutions.
 
The situation has become so grave that German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said that “the [financial] speculators are our adversaries” and that financial markets have become “perfidious” (3). What she does not clarify, of course, is that German financial institutions, along with U.S.-based Goldman Sachs and others, have played a big role in precipitating the turmoil, including that which is currently unfolding in Greece.
 
The barbarity of all of this is no secret, giving rise to great tragedies in previous years as well as today in Europe. David Cohen, an economist with Action Economics, comments that “the bond market vigilantes are still hungry, they smell blood” (4). In his opinion, despite the massive bailout package, the situation could become like the 1997-1998 Asian crisis, where “countries were attacked one by one”
 
Edmund Conway, Economics Editor of The Telegraph newspapers and website, dismisses the idea that the $1 trillion bailout “will help clamp down on the ‘wolfpack’ of speculators baying around the wreckage of the euro area.” According to him, “if anything, it is rather likely to make billions for the speculators, who will make a killing on the big increases in [stock] prices today, and will make another killing when there is another dip” (5).
 
Thus these financial speculators seek out or - as has been suggested by various analysts - actually cause or precipitate financial and economic chaos. Like the Robert Duvall character in the movie “Apocalypse Now”, they “love the smell of napalm in the morning.”
 
Just who are these financial speculators? Well some are no doubt respected “pillars of the establishment” and “respected business leaders”. But, as Danny Schechter comments, “despite all the rules that govern the markets or regulations designed to assure transparency and accountability, crooks, swindlers, and even gangsters are commonplace” (6).
 
Whether “pillars of the establishment” or crooks or gangsters or just individuals who “love the smell of napalm”, they all have one thing in common though - when it comes to financial speculation, the flag they hoist is black as night and has the skull and cross bones emblazoned across it.
 
How can such individuals have so much power over the futures of millions of people and, indeed, of entire countries? One of the features of the last several decades in North America, Europe and elsewhere has been the tremendous growth in the financial sector relative to other sectors of the economy. Large parts of this financial sector have become parasitic and a danger to economic stability, as can be seen in the sub-prime mortgage crisis in the U.S., the debt crisis in Greece, and other examples.
 
Politically, financial institutions have become extremely powerful. As even some members of Congress have admitted, “the banks own the U.S. Congress” and have contributed massive amounts to the election campaigns of Barack Obama and other prominent political leaders, both Democrat and Republican (7).
 
What can people do in the face of this extremely volatile situation, whether they live in Europe, North America or elsewhere? 
 
One of the things we can do is to take the discussion out of the hands of the financiers, as well as the political pundits and politicians who are in their service. They are desperately trying to blame ordinary people for the financial chaos, claiming that is their high wages, pension funds and benefits that are the source of the problem – i.e. people are living “beyond their means”. Furthermore, they claim that banks, hedge funds and other financial institutions are absolutely vital for the economy and cannot be allowed to fail. Let the population fall, let the country be ruined, but whatever you do, keep propping up the financiers and moneybags.
 
Now it is true that financial services are a necessary part of a modern economy. Indeed, they are as necessary as utilities, such as water, gas, and electricity. So then, why couldn’t financial services actually be converted into a type of public utility and be owned, operated, and stringently regulated as such? 
 
In other words, stop bailing out the banks and financiers. Let them fall. In their place, set up public non-profit banking institutions, similar to credit unions, and ban the hedge funds, currency manipulators, and other speculators as pirates who constitute a threat to human society.
 
Jesus Christ cleared the moneylenders from the temple. Given the financial chaos of the last several years, maybe it’s high time to follow his example.
 
Peter Ewart is a writer, columnist and community activist based in Prince George, BC. He can be reached at: peter.ewart@shaw.ca
 
References
 
(1) Nazareth, Rita. Bloomberg.com. May 10, 2010.
(2) Neuger, James. Bloomberg.com. May 10, 2010.
(3) Today Online. May 10, 2010.
(4) Cohen, David. CBC.ca. May 10, 2010.
(5) Conway, Edmund. TelegraphUK. May 10, 2010.
(6) Schechter, Danny. Information Clearing House. May 9, 2010.
(7) Grim, Ryan. Huffington Post. March 29, 2009.
 
 

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Here's a very interesitng youtube link from the Head of the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) David Walker who says that the U.S. economy is unsustainable.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D6Q14HOBThM&feature=PlayList&p=F94F119706378362&playnext_from=PL&index=34&playnext=3

IMO the Rothschilds financial empire (which includes the central banks like the City of London, and the US Federal Reserve, Goldman Sacks ect ect) is at the heart of current global troubles. They crashed the market in mere minutes because the American Congress was talking about reining them in to the light of day.... 1000 point plunge was a message that they hold us all hostage to their financial manipulations, and that if we try to regulate them, or open up the central banks to transparency, then they will sink the markets. Its a catch-22.

I say call their bluff... bring the financial sector and the computer programmed manipulation of markets down if need be, and replace it in the intern with credit unions and a real currency that has a solid foundation on tangible economics.

Make no mistake we are weeks away IMO from the EU devaluing their currency to hit the financial banksters (print the money and then devalue the currency to pay for the printed money)... the US will follow and where will that leave Canada? The whole world is beyond the ability to pay. The savers will be taxed for the cost of the economic bailout in the devaluation of saved capital. Banksters are laughing at us and calling the bluff to any real government action to rein them in.

Why buy more time... so that the banksters can cement their political hold on society and make it impossible for anyone to ever hold them to account. That is the current economic policy.

In recent years we surpassed 50% of the calculation of GDP coming from the financial sector. Essentially speculation has replaced the production economy in the measure of the health of an economy. Problem is financial speculation is a drain on the wealth of society and using it as a measure of GDP serves only to hide the gutting of our real economy that has been taking place under the guise of these false metrics of measuring our economic health. Essentially we have been left blind of what the real agenda is and what is really going on in our economies... its the financial monopoly capitalists running our corpocracy today with their wholly owned media, politicians, and legal system.

I don't have faith in any of our political parties or politicians to address the real underlining problems.

IMO our only hope is to rein in Israel (the mossad political operations under the ideological zionism) and remove the legal safe haven for the financial terrorists of our time. If this doesn't happen they will game theory us into complete slavery to their agenda... if that hasn't already happened. We have no hope though if Obama's recent Supreme Court appointment is any indication.

The system will crash... its time now to think about how you will protect your family when it does. It could take decades to fix our economy once it implodes... and that is assuming we have ousted the people that brought us the crash in the first place, which by all indications will be next to impossible with the illiterate public that is spoon feed propaganda on a daily basis... heck we have a financial implosion on the horizon, an ecological disaster in the gulf of Mexico, and all the media can talk about is a patsy bombers in Times Square that justifies a new policy to revoke the rights of citizenship for those deemed to be enemies of the state.

Time Will Tell
In the first place, you need to look for the CAUSE of why the financial sector and speculation have both grown to the extent they have. Without knowing that no lasting CURE can be implemented.

The CAUSE is a disconnect between 'money' itself and 'prices expressed in money'.

Until these two things are restored to a proper, permanent, ongoing nexus with one another NO other changes (such as having "non-profit credit unions" ~ which is an impossibility, in any case), has a hope in Hell of making any real difference.

In the early 1920's there was a financial crisis in Austria strikingly similar to the one in Greece today. One that supposedly 'threatened' all of Europe, and the World, unless those spendiferous Austrians could be brought to heel. They subsequently were, with consequences that reached far into the future.

Austria had become one of the most prosperous countries in Europe immediately after World War One. Despite the loss of all the lands of south-central Europe that were part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire pre-war. The reason:- after the war the Austrian government initiated a form of 'price' subsidies that allowed Austrians to more fully purchase their own 'production', (or imported goods exchanged for that 'production' through its export), from the 'incomes' they earned.

Actual Consumer demand, in Austria, was thereby more fully made EFFECTIVE demand. And business and employment boomed as a result. The Austrian standard of living, for ALL Austrians, increased substantially. And the country itself, as a whole, prospered.

In spite of what was said abroad, the Austrians DIDN'T "live beyond their means" at that time any more than the Greeks of today have lived beyond theirs.

For the simple reason that 'physically' no one CAN "live beyond their means" ~ you CAN NOT "CONSUME" TODAY WHAT HASN'T FIRST BEEN "PRODUCED" AND IN EXISTENCE TODAY. That's a 'physical' impossibility.

But if something HAS BEEN , or easily COULD BE produced, simply by more fully utilising existing under-used productive capacity ~ something people genuinely need and/or desire ~ and the ONLY thing that prevents its CONSUMPTION, and further production, is a lack of 'money' sufficient to fully recover the financial costs of that production, then it seems most sensible to look at "WHY" this should be.

For surely the problem is NOT with the "Productive" part of the equation ~ like anyone needs to "do more", or "work harder", or become "more productive", as is so often put to us by various think-tanks like the Fraser Institute, or the Conference Board of Canada, and such like.

It's with the MONEY side, and its having and maintaining that proper nexus mentioned above. Something that is not in anyways difficult to do. (And most certainly does NOT involve further 'taxation' of anyone.)
Eagleone, you are right on the button bud! The problem is the sheeple. You just have to look at what our own provincial government has gotten away with to prove my point. Too many followers who actually believe government works for them. It will be horrible to look at when chit goes down. All the sheeple looking like deer caught in a vehicles headlights. I bet not one will be able to feed themselves for more than a week without going shopping. If infrastructure broke down today, two of us could eat for probably a year in my world. How many have prepared? I dare guess, not to many. Another crash is coming; it is not a matter of IF but WHEN. Food prices will rise. Gas will rise. More taxes WILL happen. My advice to anyone who cares is, get prepared.
Well said IMO!
And we all need to cover our financial butts right now.
I am not impressed with the way this is shaping up, and started moving investments and money(what little there is left!) into a safer areas.
In times like these,gold and oil always come through in the long term.
Gold is popping right now,and oil will be on the run by mid-summer,if not before.
We should have all learned something in the last fiancial melt down.
CYA!
How long have people predicting the end of everything as we know it? Thousands of years. I can't predict the future, but it doesn't stop others from trying.
Remember Y2K? That was a good one.
Part of the problem is due to a complete misconception on the part of the public that there is such a thing as 'money' apart from the realities of Production and Consumption.

There is, of course, but only in a form that's about as useful to you as last night's movie ticket after you've seen the show.

And this is true no matter whether 'money' is made out of some commodity, like gold or silver, or a pack of cigarettes, or a chocolate bar, or anything else. It is NOT 'wealth', though it could be made out of things which may well be 'wealth' as a commodity that fills some other need in its own right.

Rather it is a CLAIM on 'wealth'. Just like that movie ticket is a claim on a specific form of 'wealth' ~ a seat in the theatre to see the show. The number of people who can get in to see the show depends on the number of seats in the theatre. And if the box office regularly turns people away when the total number of seats are only half taken, SIMPLY BECAUSE IT SAYS IT'S RUN OUT OF TICKETS, then obviously there's something wrong with the 'ticket system'. Not that the theatre has too many seats, and should tear half of them out to match the number of 'tickets' it has.

Yet that latter is exactly what we do with 'money' today. It's SUPPOSED to be an accurate numerical REFLECTION of FACTS. Not the DETERMINANT of them, by continually trying to change the FACTS to fit the 'FIGURES'.
You can't fix a debt problem with more debt!
And I thought Dale Gribble only existed in the cartoon world.

Zionism? I smell an anti-Semite in here.
I am prepared to a certain degree,but what can you do when things are basically out of your control.My solution would be to throw the gangs and the people controlling the financial system who are causing all the problems,into a large stadium,give them weapons and the last one standing lives.This way we all win and the world is a better place.I don't believe everything as we know it is coming to an end,and really all you can do is live for today and try to enjoy it,as who knows what tommorow will bring.
Its only financial, so not the end of the world. Its simply a wealth transfer, and the power that comes with it that's in progress. A period of adjustment....

Wealth transferred from the working man to the financial banksters. They're making gambling bets on the solvency of their manipulated markets, a market that is soaked in their own drive by debt creations, and using public money to make their bets (derivatives) that are also backstopped by the taxes of the common working man (a completely unregulated market with unlimited liabilities... this even more than a year after it caused the housing crisis)... the plan it seems is to bankrupt everything around them, and in the process shaking the wealth out of the working man/women.

IMO owning metals will be good, maybe food related revenue, essential staples... the tangible things that have real value through real inelastic steady revenue. I like the idea of silver as a good hedge too. Rome and Athens were both built on silver currency and not gold... plus silver has real world uses as well as an inelastic supply.

Bonds will be essentially worthless if the currency is devalued 50% overnight. That's a tax on half of your savings to bailout the debt economy. Stocks will be no better if interest rates are eating up any hope they had of profits. Globalization will devour the rest of our industry left out in the open.

Its a fact that the currency being fronted to the globalization banksters today is as unlimited as the unregulated derivatives markets... and at the rate they are printing money now today it dwarfs anything the real economy can do to keep up. Bailout mania is underway and all those fiat dollars are made up from funny accounting that has no relation to real wealth, but everything to do with transferring wealth... its the biggest financial crime in human history underway at this time and nobody is doing anything to stop it.

At the end of the day the people that relied on the honesty and stability of a market that had the integrity (transparency, accountability, fiduciary duty) they could invest their life savings into... are going to be the people taxed the most for the 'solution' to the crisis coming to a head in the near future. The socialized risk takers will have to be covered somehow and that cost will be in the devaluation of the currency in a way that directly punishes the have-capital for the benefit of the have-debt transfer of wealth. Either that or in my opinion the government will have to tax everyone to death and cancel all social programs (CPP, EI ect ect) to try and maintain the debt obligations that are being created today backstopping banksters.

The thing that makes me so mad is the greed of it all, and the way innocent people will be irreparably harmed because they had faith in their governments and the people their governments hired to protect their financial investments (for most people their lives savings) from fraud withing the system itself. Greed taking advantage of people naivety and trust in a system that when truly open and transparent and honest is a huge benefit to everyone. We need a financial system to prosper... so to see it so blantently abused for personal greed of those entrusted withing the financial sector and endorsed by our leading politicians and privately run central banks... its just infuriated to watch it all happening.

The media IMO has the most to blame and that has been the biggest unreported break down of it all.

AIMHO
Mr Stern,

As for the Mossad lead zionism project for the banksters (financial, political, and military)... I think people should do their homework before they make such huge insults to the people that died in the holocaust by equating the need to identify true criminals (Israeli NWO zionists) with the advocating of the heinous crimes associated with the holocaust. It may be the perfect political cover to operate from a zionist perspective, but it does no justice at all to the real victims of antisemitism to use that term so loosely to label others... simply due to lack of any other real argument that can stand up to the light of day.

The real anti-semites are the ones that use the term in conjunction to the holocaust as a cover for inquiry into crimes that are completely unrelated... and therefor the slur only serves to deminsh the true horror of what is implied by using the association with the holocaust to smite something political that is in no way related to the holocaust.

To debate the merits of political ideology, or to identify political maleficence operating at a genus to a political ideology in no way should ever be slured in the way you have above. Its tribalism at its worst and has no place in civil society. The bizarre thing is that zionists are more than happy to take credit for their agenda, and yet they will label others antisemitic for simply pointing out the paradox and asking relevant questions.

The thing about zionism is it can't stand up to scrutiny, so they always want to shut down the debate through slurs, rather than defend the ideology and movement with open transparency and honest evaluation like any other ideology is examined in a democracy. Its why they have a strangle hold on the so call mainstream media, and use this advantage in shutting down all inquiry into their agenda (financial, or military) or anything related.

In the end the role of zionsim and its advocates does more to create antisemitism than the inquiring mind ever could. Many Jewish people want nothing to do with the agenda of zionism, and for them to be associated with it by default every-time the antismetism card is used to shut up any mention of zionism... this creates a victim where none existed (collateral damage for the banksters)... for cheep self fulfilling political theater for those using the term.

I hope you think about what that term really means Mr Stern, and use it more appropriately in the future, so that it means something. There is nothing wrong with being a Canadian and criticizing Israel for a role its leadership plays in this world when their role adversely effects others.
Well said. I will read more about this.

New World Order? I smell religious zealot.

Now put that stamp on my wrist.
I'm not sure I can. Religion should stay out of politics and vice versa IMO. Those that use religion to advance financial and political interests are the problem, so if one can separate the two the world would be a better place.
If only we all could take Gandhi's wisdom to our circumstance:
"Live simply, so that others may simply live."

I'm afraid it is greed vs. need...

We need a national dream... no... a planetary dream beyond "He who has the most toys and dies wins".

Our grandparents told us about the joy of receiving an orange on Christmas morning. I cannot help but wonder if our grandchildren will one day tell a similar tale...

Peace is job #1...