I'm an historian, not an economist, so anything about
economics-macro, micro-whatever, has been as foreign to me for most of my adult
life as soil samples from Mars. But several years ago I had an epiphany that
shattered my then-left-liberal/progressive world. I awakened from decades of
delusion that I could adequately grasp world and national events without
understanding the essential nature of how money works in the capitalist economy
in which I live. I realized that until I acquired that understanding, all of
the other subjects I preferred to talk about-war, social justice, race, gender,
environment, energy depletion, civil liberties, globalization, and many more
were inextricably connected with the financial machinations of the imperial
beast within whose belly I reside.
Today, I do not claim for one moment to be an authority on
economic issues, but I have studied the works of some folks who are, such as Catherine Austin Fitts, Michael Panzner, Michael Hudson, John Crudele, Paul Grignon, and Hazel Henderson.
From them I have learned to more skillfully read the tea
leaves of the current economic upheaval that is brewing within the United
States and is now rippling into the global financial markets. Furthermore, I
have realized that my government and the economy of the United States is being
run as a criminal syndicate, and that the most useful way to understand the
subprime mortgage meltdown and its implications was to familiarize myself with
the economics of Tony Soprano, that infamous main character of the HBO TV
series "The Sopranos," Mr. King of New Jersey "waste
management" and proprietor of the Bada Bing.
On Friday morning I opened an email from a friend who sent
me an article by an old "leftie" I've admired since my college days,
historian Gabriel Kolko, entitled "The Predicted
Financial Storm Has Arrived." Writing about the subprime mortgage
crisis, Kolko noted that, "What the subprime market did was unleash a far
greater maelstrom involving banks in Germany, France, Asia, and throughout the
world, calling into question much of the world financial system as it has
developed over the past decade." After explaining the international ramifications
of the crisis, Kolko concludes:
We are at an end of an era, living through the worst
financial panic in many decades. Now begins global financial instability. It is
impossible to speculate how long today's turmoil will last-but there now exists
an uncertainty and lack of confidence that has been unparalleled since the
1930s-and this ignorance and fear is itself a crucial factor. The moment of
reckoning for bankers and bosses has arrived. What is very clear is that losses
are massive and the entire developed world is now experiencing the worst
economic crisis since 1945, one in which troubles in one nation compound those
in others.
But later that day, President Bush stepped up to the cameras
and declared that the U.S. government would provide assistance to borrowers in
the U.S. who had been hit by the subprime crisis. Knowing full well that
anything this government promises in the way of "relief" or
"assistance" is almost guaranteed to be as "helpful" and
"assisting" as that which it provided New Orleans in the throes of
Katrina, I wanted to put this so-called bailout under the microscope and
comprehend its actual substance.
You meanthis didn't "just happen?"
I started with Catherine Austin Fitts's statement on her
Solari site that "As we work to mitigate investment losses in the
mortgage market and the harm done to communities through the fraudulent
inducement of debt, we are well served to understand what has happened, who is
benefiting, and why." And what is fraudulent inducement? Nothing more or
less than inducing people who cannot pay their debts to borrow huge sums of
money. The subprime crisis has now revealed the myriad "creative"
methods used by lenders to make this happen. Tony Soprano would not only be
proud of them, but would promote them.
In a CNN Money article "Mortgage Meltdown: Here Come
The Judgments" from August 21, a California real estate attorney speaking
about the many lawsuits that are resulting from the mortgage meltdown, stated
that "Most claims will be against mortgage brokers for putting them into
loans where they shouldn't have been." A property law professor at the
University of California added that " . . . overly exuberant brokers and
loan officers told clients not to worry about concerns like their ARMs
(adjustable rate mortgage) resetting; they could always refinance and, anyway,
interest rates were bound to fall." The end result, of course, has been
millions of people with houses, which as one Florida real estate law attorney
stated, they can't refinance, they can't sell, and they can't afford. For many
of those borrowers, class action suits are the only way they can find some sort
of remedy for their nightmare.
I was now getting clearer on what fraudulent inducement
really means and the tragic ramifications for borrowers victimized by it. None
of this, obviously, "just happened." Or as Fitts asserts:
Recently, we have seen numerous press accounts of bank
and hedge fund losses from sub-prime mortgages. Remarkably, these reports imply
that the losses are the result of a market downturn or contracting credit
cycle. But there has been no mention of the extraordinary profits that were
generated or who reaped them. There is no mention of who is poised to make a
fortune on the bubble collapse. Even the most sophisticated commentators of our
day are describing this financial coup d'etat as the unintentional consequence
of "market forces."
But how exactly did this work? And how exactly does the
"bailout" serve the interests of lenders, not borrowers?
My research has led me to conclude that the bailout will
unfold in the following manner:
The Federal Reserve is lending money, that is, digital entries
into accounts payable to hedge
funds based on worthless mortgages, meaning that the these funds can borrow
money cheaply in ways that will enable them to make huge profits. This is
essentially a backdoor subsidy from the Fed. At the same time, the Fed is most
likely pumping credit into the market to pull it up because while feigning calm
and cool, the Fed is terrified about the markets tanking. As Steven
Weisman wrote in the New York Times on August 31, "Despite the
assertion that affecting the markets is not the goal, one administration
official said concern about Wall Street's reaction did affect the timing of the
briefing. He said there was a fear that if the White House announced in the
morning that Mr. Bush would be making an announcement on housing, there could
be confusion as buyers and sellers of mortgage securities guessed what the
announcement would be." As a result of Bush's announcement, of course, the
markets spiked.
Or perhaps it wasn't just as a result of the bogus
"bailout." After all, John Crudele has been writing profusely about
the Wall St. Plunge Protection team, euphemistically referred to as the President's
Working Group On Financial Markets, which was established
on March 18, 1988 by Executive Order 12631. In a June 8, 2006 New York Post
article, Crudele
stated:
Back during a stock market crisis in 1989, a guy named
Robert Heller -- who had just left the Federal Reserve Board -- suggested that
the government rig the stock market in times of dire emergency. . . . Proposed
as an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, it's a seminal argument that says when
a crisis occurs on Wall Street "instead of flooding the entire economy
with liquidity, and thereby increasing the danger of inflation, the Fed could
support the stock market directly by buying market averages in the futures
market, thus stabilizing the market as a whole." Had Heller been any other
schmoe who writes op-ed pieces for The Journal this would have been long
forgotten. But he had served for three years as a governor at the Fed and this
proposal had the look of a trial balloon since stocks had just fallen sharply
on Oct. 13, 1989, and memories of the 1987 crash were still fresh. Over the
next few years people like me . . . suspected that Heller's plan was indeed in
effect. Whenever the stock market was in trouble someone seemed to ride to the
rescue. Often it was a Wall Street firm that seemed more courageous than
fiscally responsible. Often it appeared to be Goldman Sachs, which just happens
to be where Paulson and former Clinton Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin worked.
. . . For a while I thought something called the Currency Stabilization Fund --
which actually exists at the U.S. Treasury but is meant for currency stability
-- was the slush fund used for this venture. I was told by people who claimed
to know that this part of the theory wasn't so.
WWTSD?(What would Tony Soprano do?)
The Bush bailout means that the Federal Housing
Administration (FHA) will refinance mortgages in trouble, but this put
borrowers in debt yet again. In addition, it's important to understand that the
FHA has two funds: The General Fund and the Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund
which provides insurance for single family homes. Essentially, what the bailout
will do is create a huge pool of mortgages guaranteed by the FHA into a Ginny
Mae pool which will end up bailing out, not borrowers, but mortgage
brokers! Investors from hedge and other funds will buy these mortgages,
guaranteed by FHA, but they are in fact worthless, resulting in both borrowers
and investors being defrauded. For example, a mortgage banker may have 100
mortgages which are worthless, and he puts them into a pool and issues
securities tied to those pools and sells them to investors in Europe and Asia.
Former FHA Housing Commissioner Catherine Austin Fitts has written extensively
on the fraudulent behavior of FHA which put her at odds with the agency and
ultimately led to her departure. Apparently, the FHA leopard has not changed
its spots in the slightest.
Basically, what we have is a scenario comprised of three
players: the borrower, the middleman (mortgage lenders), and the investor. The
middleman is fraudulently inducing borrowers to borrow, and investors to
invest, but the bailout helps no one except the fraudsters.
Or as Michael Panzner, author of Financial Armageddon writes:
Even assuming that some troubled borrowers manage to hang
on, the truth is that enabling more of the same kind of bad behavior that got
people in trouble in the first place will only make matters worse.
The hair of the dog that bit them isn't a cure. It merely delays the moment of
reckoning.
In reality, guaranteeing loans for homeowners who can't afford the payments,
encouraging mortgage-holders to hang on until they've been bled dry, and giving
false hope to those who would be better off cutting their losses really only
benefits one group: The lenders.
Commenting on "the greedy global financiers," The
London Observer's Will
Hutton states: "Little people's taxes are underwriting the mistakes of
big people, who in the process have made riches beyond the dreams of avarice.
Globalisation, it is now clear, is run in the interests of a global financial
class which has Western governments in its thrall."
Calling the mortgage meltdown exactly what it is, theft,
Hutton continues:
The last few days have seen some recovery in the
financial markets and some hopes for a return to normality, but what does
normal mean? The system that has delivered hundreds of billions of dollars of
written-off loans with a global impact can hardly carry on as if nothing has
happened. The banks at the epicentre of the crisis should go bust and heads
should roll. The hedge funds which bought the debt, traded it and sold it on to
banks globally should also be allowed to go bust and be subjected to much
closer surveillance and regulation. . . .
Instead, most central banks and governments across the West are straining every
muscle to limit the fall-out, assure banks and hedge funds that there is
limitless public money on tap and that governments' first aim is to get back to
'normal'. The explanation is obvious. The Western financial system is too
important to be allowed to implode; credit is any economic system's life-blood
and if the supply lines get gummed up because of a collapse of confidence and
severely punctured balance sheets, everybody suffers. Quite right, but at least
we can be careful in future about the terms on which supportive cash and
potential bail-outs are made, as well as drawing larger conclusions about the
nature of the implicit contract between finance and society.
The last thing borrowers need is more debt! Instead of a refinancing
arrangement, the borrower needs a higher income and lower expenses which will
allow him/her to pay down debt and improve his/her skills.
In the current George W. Bush-Tony Soprano scheme, every
time a corporate player commits fraud, he gets to keep the profits, and
borrowers have to pay an inflation tax as a result. Eventually, this results in
the fraudsters owning more and more of the nation and world economy until they
own it all. Money is simply printed out of thin air to bail out the fraudsters,
which causes all of our expenses to rise because we don't have the rigged
income to hedge those costs as the fraudsters do.
The realownership society
One of the key fraudsters for more than a decade has been
Goldman Sachs, which not only fraudulently induced a plethora of borrowers and
investors, but promoted the outsourcing of millions of jobs during the Clinton
administration so that lucrative jobs that could have employed borrowers and
enabled them to pay off their mortgages were moved offshore. Goldman Sachs has
given us two secretaries Of the Treasury in the past 15 years: Robert Rubin
(Clinton Administration) and Henry Paulson (Bush II)
It appears that the primary fraudsters are New York Federal
Reserve member banks such as J.P. Morgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Citibank, and
AIG (American International Group) which also allegedly has been deeply
connected with drug trafficking and money laundering. These are also the
same players involved in the housing bubble of the 1980s and other scandals,
such as Enron, WorldCom, and the shady Harvard Endowment Fund.
In his August 7 blog, Charles Hugh Smith asks "Is the USA a Giant
Enron?" noting that our financial system is based on cooked books,
lies and deceptions such as: bogus inflation numbers; unemployment statistics
manipulated downward; a GDP back-adjusted every quarter; balances sheets of
corporations, pension funds, and government agencies massively understating
liabilities and egregiously overstating assets and future earnings; and
visible, laughable lies from the mouths of top officials, all spoken with a
straight face.
Economist Peter Schiff
forecasts that:
"Issued by government agencies, interpreted by
spokespersons for the Government and the financial community . . . the information
we get has been manipulated to mould a public understanding favourable to the
agenda of the powers that be." (Schiff's prediction of economic doom has
everything to do with the US mortgage and housing meltdown, a prophecy he made
in the book before the latest market turmoil.)
"The collapse of consumer spending, associated with higher mortgage
payments and vanishing home equity, will plunge the economy into severe
recession, further exacerbating the collapse in real estate prices, worsening
the recession and continuing the vicious cycle."
We have only begun to see the
reverberations of the mortgage meltdown. They will be as sweeping and
mind-boggling as global warming or an earthquake measuring 10 on the Richter
scale. Tony Soprano economics aren't necessarily noisy, but they are gargantuan
in their reach and ramifications. Global economic meltdown, initiated by the
ruling elite of the United States with full knowledge of omnipresent, pervasive
global resource depletion-or as some have called it "Peak Everything,"
will obliterate the American middle class and result in the ownership of the
planet by a voracious ruling elite.
Tony's predecessor said it best decades before Tony was even
a twinkle in his father's eye: "Capitalism is the legitimate racket of the
ruling class." --Al Capone
Carolyn
Baker, Ph.D. is author of a forthcoming book, �COMING OUT FROM CHRISTIAN
FUNDAMENTALISM: Affirming Life, Love and The Sacred.�
Her recent book is �U.S.
History Uncensored: What Your High School Textbook Didn't Tell You.� Her website is www.carolynbaker.org where she may be
contacted.