Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The site is a sister to Atlantic Free Press and Brick Ogden an American Expatriate in Amsterdam has been a key supporter of this project.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
by Chris Floyd It is not exactly news that the Western world's fetishized "free market" is actually a mixed economy, combining cradle-to-the-grave socialism for the rich with ball-breaking, bomb's-away capitalism for everyone else.
This truism was on naked display once again this week as the central banks of the United States, Britain, Switzerland, Canada and the Eurozone announced plans to provide almost $100 billion in taxpayer money to save their banking brethren from the consequences of their own greed and stupidity.
The bailout is, indirectly, a response to the mortgage crisis
that has seen whole neighborhoods across America depopulated and
abandoned as dodgy loans come home to roost. For years, the bankers
shilled the "American Dream" of home ownership to people who couldn't
really afford it, via a plethora of gussied-up con jobs which were then
repackaged as various complex "financial instruments" and sold on down
the line to other rubes.
The financial elite made untold billions from
shuffling this worthless paper around, touting it to pension funds,
state investment funds, schools, small-scale investors, etc. It was a
house of cards standing on a one-legged table, and it finally fell, as
anyone except a highly educated, well-remunerated investment banker
could have foreseen.
Now many of the world's most august
financial houses are having to write off tens of billions of dollars in
bad debt, with mountains more still lurking out there in the shadows.
As a result, they have suddenly and inevitably turned on each
other.
Strapped for cash as they cover their losses and mistrustful
of how much bad paper their compadres might be holding they have been
choking off the inter-bank loans that lubricate the credit system. And
so the Money Lords of the West have made an unprecedented collective
intervention, proffering the $100 billion boodle to induce banks to
start lending to one another again "a move designed to prevent the
worsening credit crunch [from] derailing the world economy," as the
Guardian reports.
And indeed, the action has been widely touted
as a bold, altruistic measure to save the common folk from the ravages
of recession. But read a little further in the fine print, and you will
find, as the New York Times notes, that "the move was intended to deal
with specific problems in the interbank lending market and would not
allay the biggest problems in the credit markets related to the
weakening American housing market, where prices are falling and
defaults and foreclosures are rising."
Now, if you or I had made
a stupid investment, been reckless and greedy with our money, gambled
it away in Vegas or even just hit a patch of bad luck (ill health,
unemployment, etc.) and ended up in the red, that would just be our
tough luck. It's a free market, right? You have to take responsibility
for your actions; the Invisible Hand sorts everything out in the long
run and gives people their just desserts. But if Big Money craps out
playing craps with crap "instruments" they've concocted to squeeze a
few more coins out of a few more suckers, they must be swaddled and
coddled to cushion the blow.
And it is highly unlikely that
this injection for the credit crunch will be the last ladling of public
money for the gilded poltroons whose blind, rapacious greed has put
multitudes at risk. (Indeed, the UK government has just pledged up to
£40 billion in public money to bail out the upper-class crap-shooters
at Northern Rock bank, after steep losses from the sub-prime orgy led
to an honest-to-God, Depression-era run on the bank by customers trying
to save their money from the crap-shooters' folly.) While there will
certainly be consequences dire consequences from the growing bad
debt crisis, they will not be borne by those responsible for the mess.
(And
yes, I know the money on offer from the Central Banks are "loans," not
cash guarantees like the Northern Rock deal; but when was the last time
your friends ponied up $100 billion when you were a bit short for the
rent? And where are the government-backed loans for, say, families
whose finances have been devoured by catastrophic illness, or a
PTSD-afflicted vet thrown out on the street by Pentagon "experts" who
find that his suicidal, night-sweating dreams of Baghdad alleys are a
"pre-existing condition"?)
The socialist solidarity shown by the
politburo of high finance in the face of the credit crisis was
announced on the same day that George W. Bush vetoed legislation that
would have extended medical insurance coverage for the children of
working families and on the same day that House Democrats announced
their abject surrender to the much-despised popinjay in the White
House, giving up their transparently bogus bid for more domestic
spending while giving Bush billions more for the never-ending war crime
in Iraq. (Glenn Greenwald has a good round-up on the latter story. For
more background, see this recent post. )
Billions for
billionaires, billions for carnage, chaos and death and zilch for the
health of the nation's children all in one day. A clearer snapshot of
the actual values of our society could hardly be imagined.
Unless
of course we add this piece of "news analysis" from the New York Times:
a story about how poor little CIA agents are being "whipsawed" by all
this folderol about Bush's torture regime. They were just doing their
job, damn it, and they had "legal cover" for everything they did! Now
they are suffering from all kinds of wiggly anxieties over their
"professional reputation." It's just not fair! (And these image woes
are the full extent of their worries, by the way; as the story makes
clear, they will never face any criminal charges for carrying out their
Master's brutal commands.)
Now the picture is complete:
socialism for the rich, bare-knuckle capitalism for the poor and weak,
unlimited money for illegal war and government officials evoking the
Führer-prinzip, defending torture, and echoing precisely the Nazis in
the dock at Nuremberg: "We were only following orders." Behind all the
preening, self-righteous rhetoric about America's greatness that pours
forth in a relentless stream from every direction of the political
compass, this is the reality; this is what we are.