Tuesday, March 19, 2013

A Golden Curtain: Mr. Churchill's "Iron Curtain" Speech...


A Golden Curtain has descended across the West…?

 “I’d rather entrust the government of the United States to the first 400 people listed in the Boston telephone directory than to the faculty of Harvard University.”   – William F. Buckley

By J.M. Hamilton   (7-4-2011)

Per the NY Times obituary on Mr. Buckley, we the get the following:  “All great biblical stories begin with Genesis,” George Will wrote in National Review in 1980. “And before there was Ronald Reagan, there was Barry Goldwater, and before there was Barry Goldwater there was National Review, and before there was National Review there was Bill Buckley with a spark in his mind, and the spark in 1980 has become a conflagration.”

To which this blog responds, what hath Mr. Buckley wrought?

As the political architect of the Reagan Revolution, the father of the paleo-Tea Bag movement (i.e. political conservatism), and after more than a quarter century of free market ideology and deregulation, Mr. Buckley, presumably, might have some misgivings about the way things have turned out.   One thing is for sure, there were some positives about the man, and his political knowledge and debating skills were something to be feared.  In reading the above quote, one wonders if Mr. Buckley was more upbeat about the prospect of the first 400 people within the Boston phone directory running the affairs of the nation, or was he merely slamming the Harvard faculty?   My guess is a little of the both, because say what you will about the man, Mr. Buckley generally argued from a position of Christian altruism, the likes of which are rarely, if ever, heard in present Republican Party leadership.  I would like to believe Mr. Buckley, a well known Libertarian, was also a populist at heart, who genuinely believed that his brand of free market ideology would be a boon to all.

History has yet to write Mr. Buckley’s final epitaph; the political and economic wave he helped to unleash, more like a tsunami, is still very much with us – its troubled waters have yet to fully recede.  Still one can’t help but admire the man; and at the end the day, he was not a doctrinaire adherent to the political and economic ideology he helped mold and shape.   After all, any Republican who was not in favor of the Iraq war and who was not a fan of President Bush (W.) certainly deserves our acknowledgement, if not our respect; and any man who would sail into international waters to smoke a joint, so as to avoid breaking U.S. law certainly is, if nothing else, interesting.

Damn, I miss Firing Line.

But we move on, and deal with the wreckage of our present economy, and what a week it was.  Bloomberg released a story highlighting that the revolving door between the most nefarious bank known to mankind, Goldman Sachs, and Western Governments continues unabated.  Goldman not content to rule the known financial universe must also control the highest chambers of government and central banks.  Proving that we do, indeed, live under a bankocracy.  Mr. Forsyth of Barron’s Magazine wrote, if I may have license to paraphrase, that the banks of the E.U., particularly those in France and Germany, are being propped up on the shoulders of the poor of Greece and what remains of their middle class, come to think of it not unlike what has transpired in the U.S.  since 2008.  Austerity, a shrinking economy, and low employment prospects are what await Greece and the West, that is as long as our political elite remain slavishly devoted to propping up the banks.

And it doesn’t look like it’s going to get better any time soon.  Christian Lagarde will head up the IMF. And while it is wonderful that a woman will finally run the IMF, she most certainly will continue the policies that have indentured 99% of us to the banks, many of which are insolvent.  And Tim Geithner, it appears, will stay on at the Treasury for the “foreseeable future,” perhaps the worst news we received all week.

Charles Munger, the Vice Chairmen of Berkshire Hathaway (the bastion of all things Ayn Rand) had an epiphany of Tourettes, when he offered up the following gems, as reported in Bloomberg:

“The bubble in America was caused by some combination of megalomania, insanity and evil in, I would say, investment banking, mortgage banking.”

“Alan Greenspan is a smart man,” Munger said. “He just totally overdosed on Ayn Rand at a young age.”

“I would guess that Dick Fuld has not a single ounce of contrition wherever he sits today.”
Mr. Munger, the story goes on to report, is a fan of Elizabeth Warren.

My guess is the “Morning with Charlie” show will be permanently cancelled.  Mr. Munger is a reported Republican, and the Republican Leadership must be foaming at the mouth over these “revelations.”

Might have Mr. Buckley have also thought along the lines of Mr. Munger had he lived through our present financial crisis?  Quite possibly so.

But are the Democrats really any better?   This week we learn in the NY Times that Democrats and the Obama administration were about to sell out the American worker once again, with proposed passage of several Bush era free trade agreements; that is as long as Republicans were going to aid and abet this catastrophe by expanding the welfare state for all the displaced American workers, who would lose their jobs as a result of the wage, tax, and regulatory arbitrage that is “free trade.”  Of course, as this blog has written there is absolutely nothing free about “free trade.”  A friendly note to the Democratic Party:  America needs jobs, not an expansion of the deficit and more welfare programs, so that your party can appease the chamber of commerce, multi-national manufacturing and banking interests.

Do you ever get the feeling that we live in a one party state?  With both parties pandering to Wall Street, both parties propping up the banks, at the expense of us all…. If you think about it, we really aren’t that dissimilar to the Greeks who felt betrayed by their own elected officials this week, or the upset German populace, who will now have to bailout E.U. periphery nations, not to mention their own banks, again and again and again….

Of course the banks, always several steps ahead, are international in scope, hire the best and brightest, make them rich, and turn them out to run our “democracies,” perhaps to circle back again for more tax payer funded loot.  Meanwhile the G20 and the IMF (and I might add Basel), as written about by Barry Eichengreen in voxeu.org, just can’t seem to get it together long enough to thwart the interests of the Wall Street cartel, always dissolving into petty recriminations, disputes,  and bickering, not unlike a bad marriage counseling session, as Mr. Eichengreen observes

On March 5th 1946, Winston Churchill gave a famous speech in Fulton, Missouri.  At the time the speech was dismissed as more war mongering from the often bellicose and belligerent Mr. Churchill; but Mr. Churchill turned out to be quite right because an Iron Curtain was indeed descending across the continent of Europe, and much of the world, that would form the basis of the cold war for the next forty years or more.  Behind the curtain was the unfathomable, but we now know, as Mr. Buckley may have observed, it was one vast gulag archipelago, complete with slave labor, backward and underperforming economies, and absolutely miserable human right conditions.  Most importantly, personal, economic, religious and political freedom were crushed under the boot heals of communist masters.  It took the likes of Messrs. Churchill, Reagan, Buckley and Truman, with a whole lot of help and sacrifice from the West, to bring down the Soviet empire (in of all places a small country at the cross roads of the world, Afghanistan).

Today, if Mr. Churchill were alive might he warn of a Golden Curtain descending across the Western democracies?    This curtain is made of gold for our elected officials, and the insiders and banking interests protected from within.  Outside the curtain, the middle class is crumbling, unemployment and inflation are rising, and U.S. and European economies are in shambles.   And the liberty we take for granted is under threat from within.  In Greece, and coming soon to a country near you, order and peace are at a premium, as are jobs.  Crony capitalism, like some defunct Soviet era economy, is often how business gets done; likewise Monopolies, or put another way socialism by private proxy, prey upon the population with taxation without representation.  And seemingly no elected official or appointee has the political will to, consistently, say or do what is right.  Where is FDR, a traitor to his class, when you need him?   Where is Teddy Roosevelt the trust buster?   Where is Harry Truman?

Political economist will tell you that black markets are dangerous things because they offer unregulated and unsafe products, and make obscene profits, which can in turn be used to subvert democratic governments, institutions, and elected officials.  But Mexican drug cartels cannot hold a candle to the banking interests who traffic in the ultimate narcotic, money!  It is banking and shadow banking, armed with a Citizens United supreme court decision and the unlimited flow of money, that has woven the golden curtain that separates us from the our elected leaders, and perverts our democratic institutions.

P.S.
On this Fourth of July weekend, a few lines from Mr. Jefferson, who had quite a disdain for monarchs, like the Kings who rule us all on Wall Street:

“He has plundered our seas, ravaged our Coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people.”- Declaration of Independence
“A Prince whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a Tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people.” – Declaration of Independence

“He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws; giving his Assent to their Acts of pretended Legislation:   For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent (In the modern day this would be monopolistic profits and usurious interest rates).” - Declaration of Independence

“And I sincerely believe, with you, that banking establishments are more dangerous than standing armies; and that the principle of spending money to be paid by posterity, under the name of funding, is but swindling futurity on a large scale.”- Jefferson’s letter to the political philosopher, John Taylor.

Copyright JM Hamilton Publishing 2013

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