Perhaps it was linking the DVD, The
International Bankers Orchestration of Argentina’s 2001 Collapse, in my
last article, The Halloween
Economy: trick or treat, that brought me an email copy of Adrian Salbuchi’s
brilliant article, Go Get Your
Dollars Out Now! FAST! There was a sense of urgency to that statement, an
offer I found hard to refuse or at least to read.
B. McDonald described the “Collapse” DVD this way: “This
film documents the events that led to the economic collapse of Argentina in
2001 which wiped out the middle class and raised the level of poverty to 57.5%.
Central to the collapse was the implementation of neo-liberal policies which
enabled the swindle of billions of dollars by foreign banks and corporations.
Many of Argentina’s assets and resources were shamefully plundered. Its
financial system was even used for money laundering by Citibank, Credit Suisse,
and JP Morgan. The net result was massive wealth transfers and the
impoverishment of society which culminated in many deaths due to oppression and
malnutrition.”
Sound familiar, including some stateside banking brand
names? It is.
In his article, Salbuchi had this to add and then some, “As
Argentine citizens, we have a huge advantage over other peoples, including US
citizens, when it comes to understanding and coping with this kind of crisis. I
say this because in our own lifetimes we have suffered in Argentina all of what is now happening globally --
albeit on a much smaller scale in our case. We’ve seen this movie . . . We’ve
been there, and done that . . .
“We’ve been pushed and dragged through the entire hysterical
hocus-pocus of inflation, hyperinflation, systemic banking collapses, currency
changes, Debt Bond Swaps, Mega-Debt Bond Swaps, financial ‘armoring,’ banking
holidays, freezing of bank accounts, etc., etc . . . And we have also suffered
the end-results: bank bailouts paid for by taxpayers (or through inflation, or
through the confiscation of savings), disappearance of pension funds,
destruction of job posts and overall impoverishment of the population.
“So, take a clue from our thirty years’ experience in ‘financial
meltdowns’: GO GET YOUR DOLLARS OUT
FROM YOUR BANK NOW, AND DO IT FAST!” [Caps, the author’s].
Thus, in the eternal
words of Yogi Berra, “It’s déjà vu all over again,” or at least about to happen
here all over again. And Salbuchi gives us four basic flaws for this monetary
model, which he later explains in significantly greater detail. But the basic
flaws are easily applicable to the US.
“1. Programmed
Monetary Insufficiency - Artificially generated by an ‘independent’ central
bank, controlled by the local and global private banking institutions
superstructure . . .”
I would also add that the banks were aided and enabled by a
worldwide network of computers, which can add and subtract, amortize and
compound interest and flash the results, incredible sums, across visible and
invisible borders, from public institutions to private offices in seconds, with
the stroke of a key or two.
“2. Private banking based on Fractional Reserves - As
a system, this allows banks to create money out of thin air, charging interest
for it - often at usury rates -, and generating huge profits for ‘investors’
and creditors . . .”
These reserves can fluctuate incredibly, Salbuchi points
out, with say JP Morgan and Citigroup generating 8 to 10 dollars for every real
buck, to Goldman Sachs or Morgan Stanley generating about $30 to one buck, to
Merrill before its collapse generating more than $60 to one buck, to Bear
Stearns and Lehman Brothers generating more than $100 to one buck before they
collapsed. Those figures speak for themselves.
“3. Debt - This is the key concept that ‘fuels’
private and public economies replacing the far more economically sound concept
of reinvesting company profits and promoting a savings culture. Those who
benefit from the unnecessary creation of debt need to promote and
instigate among the public at large in all countries, ferociously
undisciplined consumerism and greed, which goes hand in hand with total
rejection of the very concept of saving and preparing for a rainy day.”
That is really not hard to see, from the subprime lending
criminality to the multi-billion dollar credit card collapses, Reserve Fund
failures, given the decades of rotating consumer debt, averaging some $12,000
per American family. “The saving for the rainy day” notion, which my parents,
survivors of the 1929 Great Depression, would constantly refer to got lost.
Somehow post-WW II prosperity from the spoils of victory and production of
armaments, aided and abetted by modern advertising, blew all those cautions
away. It gave birth to “conspicuous consumption” as well as “planned
obsolescence,” so one could be in a perpetual state of purchase and seeming
self-renewal and self-improvement.
“4. Privatize Profits/Socialize Losses - As a
channeling and transference scheme for the various stages of the recurrent
‘cycles,’ so that when they reach the inexorable stage where collapse
is unavoidable, there is always a way of making the population at large pay the
bill. . . .”
Again, we’ve had a more than painful example of “socializing
the losses” with the latest $700 billion bailout, primarily for banks, with the
reason nominally being “toxic” subprime loans, given originally with the
blessing of investment banks to mortgage companies and lending banks. Then
collateralized into mortgage pools and bundled into debt securities, generating
additional revenues.
Or course, the profits, the fees, charges, compounded
interest for buyers not bewaring were privatized and went to the financial
institutions. Yet the tab is being socialized, i.e., picked up by the American
taxpayer, and/or any nation or individuals holding American dollars, given
their devaluation, along with the threat of a total ice age freeze-up of
capital if not fed by the endless warmth of more cash.
The 4 pillars of the
Extreme Capitalist Model
Salbuchi’ describes his full 4 pillars Model as follows: “In
short the key factors described above in the long-term all
function together in a coordinated, consistent and synchronized manner,
which means that, even if in the short-and-medium-terms there are spates of
high profits where money is sloshed around big time, in the long-term the whole
system just doesn’t add up.
“That’s when you have periodic meltdowns like today’s. Usually,
they are explained away by well-paid economic gurus writing brainy explanations
in The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times or New York Times, who tell us that
this is all just part of ‘the economic cycle.’ For the most part, they can
isolate sections of those downturns and localize them, so that they only affect
a couple of emerging markets . . . Like Argentina in 2001, or Brazil in 1999,
or Mexico in 1997.”
Well Salbuchi is brainy enough himself, as much as any of
the major media pundits. The difference is he’s telling you the truth quite
simply. And giving you his bottom line equally as simply. Get your money out of
the bank. Of course, I’m not trying to start a run here, simply reporting what
the “voice of experience” has said with great erudition. In his summary, he
gives you a virtuoso review from beginning to end of our present “terminal
crisis of the global financial system.” He finds it, as I do, “very
enlightening and revealing.” He also conceives of . . .
Three plans which
could develop from the disaster
Salbuchi provides a Plan A, which addresses a relatively low
intensity crisis through basically financial measures. A Plan B, which
addresses a medium intensity crisis through financial and monetary measures. And a Plan C, which addresses a high
intensity crisis through geopolitical and military measures, which includes the
possibility of an all-out world war. This may not be for the feint of economic
heart, but it certainly is food for healthy thought when considering the
unbridled outcome of our government’s present policies.
In my humble
opinion, this 10-page piece deserves your close attention and a highlighter
pen. Salbuchi’s last and shortest section is a definition of the Argentine
Second Republic Movement. Yet, let me close this commentary with Salbuchi’s
opening paragraph, which echoes my own thoughts on the subject . . .
“The events of the last two weeks, perhaps months [author itals],
have clearly revealed that the global financial, monetary and banking system
imposed on the world by the power structures promoting ‘globalization’ is
fundamentally flawed, unviable and immoral in its effects upon the most all of
Mankind. After allowing a small cabal of shady characters to illegitimately
accumulate vast amounts of wealth and power over markets, corporations,
industries, media, armed forces and entire nations, like the World Trade Center
towers on 9/11, this entire System is now in free-fall, collapsing into itself
in one massive implosion.” Amen. And let us all aim, if not hope, for its
demise.
Jerry Mazza is a freelance writer living in New
York City. Reach him at gvmaz@verizon.net. Read his new book, “State Of Shock: Poems from 9/11 on” at www.jerrymazza.com, Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com.