FIRE
and the Reign: Subsidies Are the Fuel
by
Justine Nicholas
by Justine Nicholas
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The implosion
of this country’s financial system reveals that the United States
is, indeed, an economic plutocracy. We have also seen that the ruling
horde lives, essentially, in a different world from that which most
Americans – and other people – inhabit.
What we have
witnessed is, on one hand, are men who publicly extol the virtues
of the free market – that is, until the system they cared about
only to the extent that they could rig it came crashing down. Then,
their true colors came into view: Their behavior is ruled by what
Gary North has called "subsidy
madness." That is to say, when they made unwise decisions
or allowed their greed to get the better of them and the inevitable
results followed, they wanted – no, expected and demanded – to be
bailed out.
Really, they
are no different from all of those ne’er-do-wells who expect that,
if they blow their paychecks, they will be rescued by parents, spouses,
other "significant others," or the government. And the
only thing that distinguishes those investment bankers and their
political patrons – who include the Presidential and Vice Presidential
nominees of both major parties, Secretary of the Treasury Paulson,
Federal Reserve Bank Chairman Bernanke and every member of Congress,
save Ron Paul and possibly a handful of others – from "welfare
queens" are their expensive suits and the BMWs that they
don’t want to give up.
(Recently overheard:
What’s the difference between a pigeon and an investment banker?
Only one can still leave a deposit on a BMW.)
A definition
of "plutocracy"
implies the aloofness of that class of people from the hoi polloi.
This they have shown by their recent behavior and the bidding Paulson
and any number of politicians have been doing for them. The most
obvious current example of this is, of course, the bailout
plan they want to ram down taxpayers’ throats. (Section 2 alone
should give pause to anyone who cares about liberty.) It’s as if
their definition of "capitalism" is "the military-corporate
welfare system."
One of the
best possible outcomes of a situation in which we now find ourselves
is, aside from the opportunity to let market mechanisms purge the
greedy and imprudent, the opportunity to see who is included in
the plutocracy I’ve been describing. In normal (for them) times,
they are a "shadow" government, operating out of sight.
Even most elected officials, for all of their visibility, are part
of that cohort because nearly every one of them is doing the bidding
of one of Gary North’s subsidy addicts. And most of their decisions,
like the ones to print more money and loosen lending standards,
are not noticed, much less protested until people feel it in their
pocketbooks. And, as we are seeing, by then it’s too late.
Another outcome
for me is that I’m gaining some confidence in the so-called "little
people." Why? From conversations at the bus stop to commentary
in the blogosphere, it’s becoming more evident that many, if not
the majority, of Americans oppose the bailout plan. In fact, it
seems they don’t want any scheme of the sort – even here in New
York, which is already feeling the effects of bursting the FIRE
bubble.
Most people
may not understand the politics and economics, much less the thinking,
behind the bailout plan. But they can see when they’re about to
be dealt a bad hand, and they don’t want to be forced to play cards
designed to keep the owners of the game from losing. Even if they
can’t explain why, they
know that the plan will raise their taxes and possibly prevent
them from owning homes or sending their kids to college. They can
see the barrels of the revolver pointed at them while the ones who
made and cut the cards escape with the jackpot.
So, while it
may well be that nearly all of us are subsidy addicts, at least
to some degree, it seems that at least some of the so-called common
people understand that the subsidies the financial industry has
received, and will receive under the bailout plan, will make their
own lives more difficult. What remains to be seen is how they will
react if the companies that employ and insure them fall to the same
fate as Bear-Stearns, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mae, Lehman Brothers,
Merrill Lynch and Washington Mutual, but the government doesn’t
rescue them. How will they react if they lose their jobs, businesses,
homes and other assets as a result?
I find myself
thinking of a lyric from Bob Marley’s "Them
Belly Full:"
A hungry
man is a angry man;
A rain a-fall, but the dutty tough;
A pot a-yook, but you no 'nough;
A rain a-fall, but the dutty tough.
A pot a-cook, but you no 'nough;
A hungry mob is a angry mob
Either
way, it doesn’t look good: Neither plutocracies nor empires (which
are, more often than not, one in the same) ever end well. Even people
who don’t know the words "empire" and "plutocracy"
seem to understand that.
That’s more
than can be said for Paulson or nearly any member of Congress –
or for current Fed Chairman Bernanke or his predecessor, Alan Greenspan.
May their motivations be brought to light, and may they see the
light.
September
29, 2008
Justine
Nicholas [send her mail]
is recovering from the year she spent as an academic administrator.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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