TOKYO MASTER BANNER

MINISTRY OF TOKYO
US-ANGLO CAPITALISMEU-NATO IMPERIALISM
Illegitimate Transfer of Inalienable European Rights via Convention(s) & Supranational Bodies
Establishment of Sovereignty-Usurping Supranational Body Dictatorships
Enduring Program of DEMOGRAPHICS WAR on Europeans
Enduring Program of PSYCHOLOGICAL WAR on Europeans
Enduring Program of European Displacement, Dismemberment, Dispossession, & Dissolution
No wars or conditions abroad (& no domestic or global economic pretexts) justify government policy facilitating the invasion of ancestral European homelands, the rape of European women, the destruction of European societies, & the genocide of Europeans.
U.S. RULING OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR TO SALVAGE HEGEMONY
[LINK | Article]

*U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR* | U.S. Empire's Casino Unsustainable | Destabilised U.S. Monetary & Financial System | U.S. Defaults Twice A Year | Causes for Global Financial Crisis of 2008 Remain | Financial Pyramids Composed of Derivatives & National Debt Are Growing | *U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR* | U.S. Empire's Casino Unsustainable | Destabilised U.S. Monetary & Financial System | U.S. Defaults Twice A Year | Causes for Global Financial Crisis of 2008 Remain | Financial Pyramids Composed of Derivatives & National Debt Are Growing | *U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR*

Who's preaching world democracy, democracy, democracy? —Who wants to make free people free?
[info from Craig Murray video appearance, follows]  US-Anglo Alliance DELIBERATELY STOKING ANTI-RUSSIAN FEELING & RAMPING UP TENSION BETWEEN EASTERN EUROPE & RUSSIA.  British military/government feeding media PROPAGANDA.  Media choosing to PUBLISH government PROPAGANDA.  US naval aggression against Russia:  Baltic Sea — US naval aggression against China:  South China Sea.  Continued NATO pressure on Russia:  US missile systems moving into Eastern Europe.     [info from John Pilger interview follows]  War Hawk:  Hillary Clinton — embodiment of seamless aggressive American imperialist post-WWII system.  USA in frenzy of preparation for a conflict.  Greatest US-led build-up of forces since WWII gathered in Eastern Europe and in Baltic states.  US expansion & military preparation HAS NOT BEEN REPORTED IN THE WEST.  Since US paid for & controlled US coup, UKRAINE has become an American preserve and CIA Theme Park, on Russia's borderland, through which Germans invaded in the 1940s, costing 27 million Russian lives.  Imagine equivalent occurring on US borders in Canada or Mexico.  US military preparations against RUSSIA and against CHINA have NOT been reported by MEDIA.  US has sent guided missile ships to diputed zone in South China Sea.  DANGER OF US PRE-EMPTIVE NUCLEAR STRIKES.  China is on HIGH NUCLEAR ALERT.  US spy plane intercepted by Chinese fighter jets.  Public is primed to accept so-called 'aggressive' moves by China, when these are in fact defensive moves:  US 400 major bases encircling China; Okinawa has 32 American military installations; Japan has 130 American military bases in all.  WARNING PENTAGON MILITARY THINKING DOMINATES WASHINGTON. ⟴  
Showing posts with label Wall Street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wall Street. Show all posts

May 05, 2016

Filthy Wall Street & London Banker Swindlers in Collusion with Arabs, Knee-Capping Targeted Economies





Filthy Wall Street & London Banker Swindlers in Collusion with Arabs, Knee-Capping Targeted Economies
SOURCE
http://www.mintpressnews.com/brics-attack-western-banks-governments-launch-full-spectrum-assault-russia-part/215761/

Eric Draitser


BRICS Under Attack: Western Banks, Governments Launch Full-Spectrum Assault On Russia (Part I)

Russia is the target of a multi-faceted, asymmetric campaign of destabilization that has employed economic, political, and psychological forms of warfare -- each of which has been specifically designed to inflict maximum damage on the Kremlin.


By Eric Draitser

@stopimperialism | April 20, 2016 



This article is part of a series on Western meddling to foment unrest and destabilize BRICS nations in an effort to ensure the continuation of Western economic and political control over the Global South. The first two parts, focusing on Brazil and South Africa, can be found here and here. Up next: Part II on the assault on Russia, which focuses on the political, psychological and military aspects that run in tandem with the economic war on Moscow.

NEW YORK — The U.S.-NATO Empire, with its centers of power in Washington, on Wall Street, and in the city of London, is on the offensive against the BRICS countries. This assault takes many forms, each tailored to its specific target.

The ongoing soft coup in Brazil has recently entered a new stage with the impeachment of President Dilma Rousseff of the left-wing Workers’ Party. Simultaneously, the destabilization of the ANC-led government in South Africa continues as political forces align to remove President Jacob Zuma. These two situations illustrate clearly the very potent forms of subversion via Western-funded political formations and movements being employed against Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, the bloc of emerging economies also known as BRICS. 

However, when it comes to a country as large as Russia, with its vast military capabilities, consolidated and wildly popular political leadership, and growing antagonism toward the West, the tools available to the Empire to undermine and destabilize are in some ways more limited.

Indeed, in the context of Russia, the popular mobilization pretext does not apply, and so that weapon in the imperial arsenal is blunted considerably. But there are other, equally potent (and equally dangerous) methods to achieve the desired effect. 

Russia is the target of a multi-faceted, asymmetric campaign of destabilization that has employed economic, political, and psychological forms of warfare, each of which has been specifically designed to inflict maximum damage on the Kremlin. While the results of this multi-pronged assault have been mixed, and their ultimate effect being the subject of much debate, Moscow is, without a doubt, ground zero in a global assault against the BRICS nations.

Economic war: Hitting Russia where it’s vulnerable

While Russia is a world class power militarily, it is highly vulnerable economically. For that obvious reason, this area has been a primary focus of the destabilization thrust.

Russia has for decades been overly reliant, if not entirely dependent, on revenues from the energy sector to maintain its economic growth and fund its budget. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration and Russia’s Federal Customs Service, oil and gas sales accounted for 68 percent of Russia’s total export revenues in 2013. With more than two-thirds of total export revenues and roughly 50 percent of the federal budget, not to mention 25 percent of total GDP, coming from oil and gas revenue, Russia’s very economic survival has been as dependent on energy as almost any country in the world.

In light of this, it’s no surprise that the drop in oil prices over the 18-month period from April 2014 to January 2016, which saw prices dive from $105 per barrel to under $30 per barrel, has caused tremendous economic instability in Russia. Even many leading Russian officials have conceded that the negative impact to Russia’s economy is substantial, to say the least. 

At the World Economic Forum in January, former Russian Finance Minister Alexey Kudrin explained that not only has the drop in oil prices badly hurt the Russian economy, but the worst may be yet to come. Kudrin noted the potential for prices to drop even further, possibly even below $20 per barrel, and he warned that the impact to the economy will be significant.

Specifically, it’s not just the loss of revenue, but the negative effect on wages and the currency which have many economic analysts and political figures worried. 

According to the Russian Federal Statistics Service, real wages for Russian workers have dropped significantly since the end of 2014, with steep declines throughout 2015 continuing into early 2016. This has been felt by ordinary Russians, whose wages have stagnated while inflation causes prices to shoot upwards and who have had to endure belt-tightening in terms of personal consumption, and at the national level, where the Russian government has been facing a potentially large budget shortfall for 2016.

It must be noted, however, that recent months have seen an improvement in the relative performance of the ruble, but the long-term outlook from experts remains gloomy.

This has led many Russian analysts and policymakers to advocate yet again for a decreased dependence on energy revenues. They argue that the current climate could force economic restructuring away from the critical energy sector. Aside from Kudrin, Deputy Prime Minister Yuri Trutnev made the case for potential “structural economic reforms,” as did Vladimir Mau of the Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration. 

Writing earlier this year in Vedomosti, Russia’s leading business publication, Mau explained:

“The demand for oil as a commodity depends on technological progress…And it’s not obvious that oil as a fuel will be always in demand in times of economic growth. With the change of the technological model, it is not ruled out that oil will become just a stock commodity for the energy and chemical industry.”

This last point — how oil is used relative to the market — is the most salient; in other words, it’s the financialization of oil. But the analysis must go a step further and explore how the financialization is, in effect, a weaponization process as oil prices become increasingly the playthings of powerful financial institutions, particularly the major banks on Wall Street and in the city of London. And this is no mere conspiracy theory.

How Wall Street targeted Russia using oil

In July 2013, Sen. Sherrod Brown, chair of the Senate Banking Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Protection, opened a hearing to probe just how connected major Wall Street banks were to the holding of physical oil assets, and the attendant ability of these companies to manipulate oil prices. The findings of the hearing, considered damning by multiple analysts knowledgeable on the subject, prompted an investigation by the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, published as “Wall Street Bank Involvement with Physical Commodities.”

The report highlighted just one of the big banks, Morgan Stanley, noting:  

“One of Morgan Stanley’s primary physical oil activities was to store vast quantities of oil in facilities located within the United States and abroad. According to Morgan Stanley, in the New York-New Jersey-Connecticut area alone, by 2011, it had leases on oil storage facilities with a total capacity of 8.2 million barrels, increasing to 9.1 million barrels in 2012, and then decreasing to 7.7 million barrels in 2013. Morgan Stanley also had storage facilities in Europe and Asia.  According to the Federal Reserve, by 2012, Morgan Stanley held ‘operating leases on over 100 oil storage tank fields with 58 million barrels of storage capacity globally.’”

Pam and Russ Martens of the well-respected financial analysis site WallStreetOnParade.com succinctly noted in their analysis of this issue: “With financial derivatives and 58 million barrels of physical storage capacity, it might not be so hard to manipulate the oil market.”

Indeed, the sheer scope of Morgan Stanley’s market influence demonstrates the obvious fact that the major Wall Street banks, and their cousins in the city of London, are able to significantly affect global prices using multiple levers like supply and derivatives, among others.

The Senate report’s brazen honesty is likely the main reason the corporate media failed to cover it all.  As noted in the report:

“Due to their physical commodity activities, Goldman, JPMorgan, and Morgan Stanley incurred increased financial, operational, and catastrophic event risks, faced accusations of unfair trading advantages, conflicts of interest, and market manipulation, and intensified problems with being too big to manage or regulate, introducing new systemic risks into the U.S. financial system.”

But perhaps most jaw-dropping is this January 2014 statement by Norman Bay, director of the Office of Enforcement at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, who testified before the Committee on Banking and Financial Institutions and Consumer Protection Subcommittee. He plainly outlined how the big banks manipulate global oil markets:

“A fundamental point necessary to understanding many of our manipulation cases is that financial and physical energy markets are interrelated … a manipulator can use physical trades (or other energy transactions that affect physical prices) to move prices in a way that benefits his overall financial position. One useful way of looking at manipulation is that the physical transaction is a ‘tool’ that is used to ‘target’ a physical price.”

When one considers how much influence these large banks have on global prices, it’s almost self-evident that they would be able to use oil prices to execute a political and geopolitical agenda. With that in mind, it seems highly suspicious (to say the least) that the collapse of the oil price coincided directly with Russia’s move to annex Crimea and assert its dominance over its sphere of influence, thereby effectively stopping the eastward expansion of NATO in Ukraine.

It’s amusing then when one reads The New York Times reporting this month that “simple economics” explains the drop in oil prices. In fact, it’s clear that it’s just the opposite: The collapse of oil is the result of financial manipulation by Wall Street in the service of the broader agenda of the Empire.

Indeed, in late 2014 Russian President Vladimir Putin implied strongly that the oil plunge had less to do with economic factors than with political decisions. Putin openly theorized: “There’s lots of talk about what’s causing (the lowering of the oil price). Could it be the agreement between the U.S. and Saudi Arabia to punish Iran and affect the economies of Russia and Venezuela? It could.”

Of course, Putin was not alone in this assessment, as many international observers spread “conspiracy theories” about collusion between the U.S. and Saudi Arabia to deliberately depress oil prices by not cutting production despite all market indicators pointing to a needed decrease.

With U.S.-Russia relations having reached their nadir at precisely that moment, and with Venezuela and Iran also on the enemies list, it is no surprise that many analysts around the world concluded that Washington and Riyadh were conspiring on oil for political reasons.

Of course, the other major impact of the oil plunge on Russia has to do with the burgeoning energy-trade relationship between Russia and China. After the massive oil and gas deals announced between Russia and China in 2014 — deals worth hundreds of billions of dollars over the next three decades, it seems that Washington calculated that while it could not prevent the deals from moving forward, it could undermine them by fundamentally changing the calculus of the deals by tanking oil prices. In so doing, not only have the contracts been rendered less profitable for Russia, they are now subject to decreasing demand from China, which is experiencing its own economic slowdown.   

In short, Russia’s attempt to break free of its dependence on revenue from gas sales to Europe by shifting its focus eastward has left Moscow in a bind. Facing the prospect of significantly less revenue than it anticipated coming from the deals with Beijing, Russia has been forced to adjust its own estimates and outlook for the coming years.

Sanctions: The other economic weapon

The overall impact of Western sanctions against Russia is a hotly debated subject. Russian media tends to downplay the overall impact of the sanctions, while the Western media paints a picture of imminent collapse. Notably, Paul Krugman, the leading liberal doomsayer, prognosticated in The New York Times in 2014 that “Putin’s Bubble Bursts,” warning that Russia was headed for economic meltdown thanks to the courageous sanctions regime imposed by the fearless leader President Barack Obama. 

In reality, the sanctions had little immediate, direct impact on the Russian economy, but the indirect bruising might be significant, particularly over the medium- and long-term. Last year, the International Monetary Fund issued a report, noting:

“IMF estimates suggest that sanctions and counter sanctions might have initially reduced real GDP by 1 to 1½ percent. Prolonged sanctions may compound already declining productivity growth. The cumulative output loss could amount to 9 percent of GDP over the medium term. However, the report’s authors underline that these model-driven results are subject to significant uncertainty.”

But, looking beyond the raw numbers, one must realize that the policy prescriptions outlined by the IMF and leading economists internationally are perhaps the actual target for the West. 

The IMF recommended “reforming the pension system” (read: reduce pensions), reducing energy subsidies, reducing tax exemptions, and other measures, while also suggesting that education, health care, and public investment be safeguarded. However, the subtext of the recommendations is that austerity, which by its very definition starves public programs of much needed funding, is the way to go for Russia.

There are likely strategic planners in Washington who recognize that the political subversion model employed in Brazil and South Africa simply won’t work in Russia. If nothing else, the failed “White Revolution” protests of late 2011 led by Russian liberals and various pro-Western political forces, demonstrated unequivocally that the Russian state was prepared to prevent precisely this sort of outcome. 

And so it seems that those who play on what former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski famously called “The Grand Chessboard,” have made their moves in an attempt to corner Russia economically. Whether that strategy has been, or will be, effective likely depends on perspective. While it alone will not bring about the Western pipe dream of regime change in Russia, the Empire’s elites are banking on the collective assault on Russia and the BRICS broadly to do what political subversion alone could not.

About the author
Eric Draitser

Eric Draitser is a geopolitical analyst based in New York and the founder of StopImperialism.


More articles by Eric Draitser [MintPress]



SOURCE
http://www.mintpressnews.com/brics-attack-western-banks-governments-launch-full-spectrum-assault-russia-part/215761/

-------/\/\/


Eric Draitser
"Eric Draitser is an independent geopolitical analyst based in New York City and the founder of StopImperialism.com. He is a regular contributor to RT, Counterpunch, New Eastern Outlook, Press TV, and many other news outlets. Visit StopImperialism.com for all his work."   [RTNews]

-------/\/\/

Enemies of the Free World:
  • Morgan Stanley
  • Goldman Sachs
  • JP Morgan
  • City of London
  • Wall Street
  • International Monetary Fund
  • The New York Times

-------/\/\/

COMMENT

Help save Russia & Brics countries from greedy Wall Street & city of London banks. 

Call for worldwide privatisation of their foreign assets ... that ought to throw a spanner in the works.

 *Not sure I'll remember much of this.


August 27, 2015

Parmenides' Fallacy

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------
 Parmenides' Fallacy

COPYRIGHT DISCLAIMER
Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research.
Parmenides
a Pre-Socratic Greek philosopher born in Italy; held the metaphysical view that being is the basic substance and ultimate reality of which all things are composed; said that motion and change are sensory illusions (5th century BC)
SOURCE | ABOVE
http://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/Parmenides
---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------
SOURCE | BELOW
Forbes
Margie Warrell
Contributor
Book:  Stop Playing Safe
http://www.forbes.com/sites/margiewarrell/2013/03/19/the-parmenides-fallacy-are-you-ignoring-the-cost-of-inaction/ 
EXTRACTS / SUMMARY
Bad situation
indecision = stuck with status quo
hoping things get better (but they get worse)
Human beings are neurologically wired to:
  • over-estimate the size of risks
  • under-estimate our ability to handle them
  • downplay the costs of inaction
"... by choosing not to make a change or take a chance ... you can wind up incurring steep costs, in ways you can’t possibly foresee from where you are right now"
[ REFERS TO ]
"Professor Philip Bobbit from the University of Texas has even given a name to the human tendency to assume the present situation will remain the same. He calls it ‘Parmenides Fallacy,’ after the misguided Greek philosopher who argued that the world was static and that all change was an illusion."
result:  "drives us to stick with the status quo – even one we dislike"
"Parmenides Fallacy serves as a reminder to not to kid ourselves; choosing to do nothing..."
SOURCE | ABOVE
Forbes
Margie Warrell
Contributor
Book:  Stop Playing Safe
http://www.forbes.com/sites/margiewarrell/2013/03/19/the-parmenides-fallacy-are-you-ignoring-the-cost-of-inaction/ 

Margie Warrell Error 404 - page not found
http://margiewarrell.com/stopplayinsafe Margie Warrell
"an international thought leader in human potential"

"professional background in Fortune 500 business, psychology, and coaching" "Her clients include NASA, British Telecom, Oracle, Body Shop, PWC and the Australian Federal Police."
"bestselling author, Forbes Columnist  ..."
" ... sought out by leading media outlets such as The Today Show, FOX News, CNBC and Al Jazeera, Psychology Today and Wall Street Journal. She is also a regular contributor on Australia’s ABC News Breakfast and Sunrise.
   ...  international media outlets from the Wall Street Journal to The Today Show. She is also regular commentator on Australia’s Sunrise and ABC News Breakfast."
http://margiewarrell.com/
---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------
SOURCE - BELOW Aakash

"I am a speck of dust in this universe, who is going to create a whole new universe someday."
http://logically-illogical.blogspot.com/2008/02/parmenides-fallacy.html
Parmenides' Fallacy

All our decisions are generally based upon the measurement of the future benefits that can be drawn by making that decision. How will it make us better of than what we presently are. This is the fundamental clause in the decision making of most of the managers while making any investment. But what is interesting to note is that the things in the normal circumstances will constantly deteriorate in their own. So, if we don't take any decision then we might be worse off in future than what we are now. So, if the investment is made then it might be that we would be worse off than now but better off than we would have been without it [ ... ]
SOURCE - ABOVE Aakash
"I am a speck of dust in this universe, who is going to create a whole new universe someday."
http://logically-illogical.blogspot.com/2008/02/parmenides-fallacy.html
---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------
SOURCE - BELOW Opinion, NYT Today's War Is Against Tomorrow's Iraq
By PHILIP BOBBITT
Philip Bobbitt, a law professor at the University of Texas Published: March 10, 2003 http://www.nytimes.com/2003/03/10/opinion/10BOBB.html
EXTRACTS ONLY
President Bush has again made his case for war against Iraq, and again his primary argument is the threat that Saddam Hussein poses to America. The president's critics are quick to point out that the Central Intelligence Agency and other experts feel that, for the moment, Saddam Hussein is unlikely to conduct terrorist attacks against America. However, they warn us, if an invasion threatens his regime, his agents or his extremist sympathizers might well attack us — possibly even using weapons of mass destruction.

So is it really a good idea to press ahead with regime change? Aren't we better off now than we would be if we invade Iraq and risk setting off a dreadful response?

These are natural questions, but they are neither logical nor helpful. They are a prime example in our public discourse of what might be called "Parmenides' Fallacy" — named after the Greek philosopher who held that all change was illusion. This fallacy occurs when one tries to assess a future state of affairs by measuring it against the present, as opposed to comparing it to other possible futures. Let me give a famous example of Parmenides' Fallacy in operation.
[...]

So, as we look to the future, we must stop debating whether invading Iraq will result in our being worse down the line than we are right now. We do not have the option of holding time still — which exposes the biggest flaw in the "Why Rush to War?" argument. The urgency lies in the fact that every day Saddam Hussein stays in power he grows richer, the global terrorist network to which he has access plans further atrocities and (international inspections notwithstanding) the chance of his acquiring nuclear, chemical and biological weapons grows. To avoid Parmenides' Fallacy, the question we must ask is: Will we be better off in the future if we invade Iraq or if we do not invade?

[ ... ] We should also consider the future of the Iraqi civilians. Yes, they would suffer the horrors of war in the near term, which for a time would be even worse than life under the sanctions now. But if an American-led intervention succeeded, the country's oil revenues could once again enrich its people, as well as its schools, hospitals and financial institutions. The Iraqis would be much better off after an invasion than they would be living indefinitely chained to Saddam Hussein. For us, though we live in relative tranquillity at present, we will at least be far less badly off in the future if we act now. Parmenides' Fallacy must not paralyze our imaginations, or our will.

SOURCE - ABOVE Opinion, NYT Today's War Is Against Tomorrow's Iraq
By PHILIP BOBBITT
Philip Bobbitt, a law professor at the University of Texas Published: March 10, 2003 http://www.nytimes.com/2003/03/10/opinion/10BOBB.html
---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------
SOURCE - BELOW https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Bobbitt
EXTRACTS |  SUMMARY
Philip Bobbitt
b. Texas, USA
distinguished pedigree
author, academic, lawyer, and public servant
lectured in the United Kingdom
best known for work on military strategy & constitutional law and theory
Attended:
  • Princeton University
  • Yale Law School
  • Oxford University
  • graduated with an A.B. in philosophy | Princeton University in 1971
  • president of the Ivy Club and Chairman of the Nassau Lit.
  • 1975 J.D. from Yale Law School, where he was Article Editor of the Yale Law Journal and taught at Yale College
  • at Yale that he met Charles L. Black (1915–2001), who became a mentor to Bobbitt
  • received his M.A & Ph.D. (Modern History) | University of Oxford in 1983
J.D. =  three-year law degree, Doctor Jurisprudence
"... word jurisprudence derives from the Latin term juris prudentia, which means "the study, knowledge, or science of law." In the United States jurisprudence commonly means the philosophy of law." [Cornell Uni - example]
Charles Black (professor) American scholar of constitutional law  role in the historic Brown v. Board of Education
*landmark USA 1954 case*
US Supreme Court declared establishment of "separate public schools for black and white students to be unconstitutional." Impeachment: A Handbook 
analysis of the law of impeachment during the Watergate scandal.
served in the Army Air Corps as a teacher an associate at Davis, Polk, Wardwell, Sunderland & Kiendl  (now Davis, Polk & Wardwell)
professor of law at the Columbia University Law School
"... He had the moral courage to go against his race, his class, his social circle."
"Black also co-authored The Law of Admiralty with Grant Gilmore ..
... constitutional legal scholar ... "The Law of Admiralty" is one of the most influential law books ever written in a practical area of law. Admiralty is the law of the sea, of shipping and shipping contracts, and is a functional, practical area of international law, in which uniformity of the application of law in ports throughout the world is important, and as a result it has evolved somewhat differently from other areas of federal law. "Gilmore and Black," ... so influential that it is one of the few treatises that federal admiralty and international courts cite almost as though ... a primary source of law ...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Black_%28professor%29
---------------------- ꕤ  ---------------------- 
Consitutional Law - Philip Bobbit

"... believes that the Constitution's durability rests, in part, in the flexible manner in which it can be and has been interpreted since its creation.
... Bobbitt asserts that all branches of government have a duty to assess the constitutionality of their actions. 'Constitutional Fate' is a commonly used text in courses on constitutional law throughout the US."
Government Service - Philip Bobbit
extensively in government, for both Democratic and Republican administrations 1970s, he was Associate Counsel to President Carter 
Senior director for Critical Infrastructure & senior director for Strategic Planning - Bill Clinton's presidency
worked with Lloyd Cutler on the charter of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
Lloyd Cutler Intelligence Commission served as White House Counsel during the Democratic administrations of Presidents Carter and Clinton
Feb 2004 Lloyd Cutler 
appointed to Iraq Intelligence Commission (IIC) IIC
= independent panel tasked with investigating US intelligence surrounding the 2003 invasion of Iraq
and the allegations that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction
Counselor for International Law at State Dept during George H. W. Bush administration
served at National Security Council as director for Intelligence Programs National Security Council (NSC)
principal forum re national security & foreign policy US President, National Security Advisors, + Cabinet officials
{ = part of Executive Office of President of USA}
Founded by Harry S Truman 1947 - by NATIONAL SECURITY ACT
b/c "felt that the diplomacy of State Dept was no longer adequate to contain the USSR"
- - -
Intent
coordination & agreement among:
  • Navy
  • Marine Corps
  • Army
  • Air Force
  • Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) 
{also created in the National Security Act, 1947
  • & other instruments of national security policy
Function:
ASSIST ON NATIONAL SECURITY
& FOREIGN POLICY
The Shield of Achilles - Philip Bobbit

" ... 900-page work that explicates a theory, verging on philosophy, of historical change in the modern era, and a history of the development of modern constitutional and international law."
"...  patterns in the (mainly modern European) history of strategic innovations, major wars, peace conferences, international diplomacy, and constitutional standards for states.
Bobbitt also suggests possible future scenarios and policies appropriate to them."

"The Shield of Achilles generated much interest in the diplomatic and political community. 
Public officials who follow Bobbitt's works include:

the former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Tony Blair ...

the former Prime Minister of Australia, John Howard, who referred to Bobbit's book in a 2004 address to the Australian Strategic Policy Institute."

Terror and Consent (2008)
"... the Wars for the Twenty-first Century, which
applied many of the ideas of The Shield of Achilles to the problems of wars on terror."

" ... Senator John McCain praised the book as "the best book I’ve ever read on terrorism ..." 

"... Henry Kissinger called Bobbitt, "perhaps the most important political philosopher today." 

Tony Blair wrote of Terror and Consent: 

"It may be written by an academic but it is actually required reading for political leaders." 
David Cameron, the leader of the Tory party in the UK 
put it on a list of summer reading for his parliamentary colleagues in 2008

---------------------- ꕤ  ---------------------- 
In Terror & Consent, Bobbitt argued that the only justification for warfare in the 21st century was to protect human rights
---------------------- ꕤ  ----------------------
The Garments of Court and Palace 
" ... 2013, Bobbitt published a study of Niccolo Machiavelli entitled The Garments of Court and Palace: Machiavelli and the World That He Made. "
"...  argues that only by understanding The Prince as one half of a constitutional treatise on the State (the other being Machiavelli's Discourses) can we reconcile the many otherwise contradictory elements of his work."

[emphasises] " ... what he describes as Machiavelli’s reification [reification =error of treating something which is not concrete -eg an idea - as a concrete thing] of the state as an entity with its own reality that is not to be identified with the personal power of the prince.

"... especially worth emphasizing in view of the fact that the term state is so often used ... as little more than a synonym for government."

"... Bobbitt has already stressed in The Shield of Achilles how much is lost if we refuse to conceptualize the state as a distinct apparatus of power, and he now points to Machiavelli as the originator of this line of thought." "... 2004 Prospect Magazine named him One of Britain's Top 100 Public Intellectuals

... writes essays, typically on foreign policy, published in The New York Times, and The Guardian."
SOURCE - ABOVE https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Bobbitt
---------------------- ꕤ  ----------------------
ASIDE
Davis, Polk & Wardwell founded in 1849 multiple name changes international law firm HQ NYC described as:  "Tiffany's of law firms" Revenue:  $975 million (2013) John W. Davis former US Solicitor General1924 Democratic presidential nominee US Supreme Court Brown v. Board of Education represented South Carolina  |  in defence of racial segregation Davis developed close ties between the firm and:
  • J.P. Morgan companies
  • Guaranty Trust Company
  • Associated Press
  • International Paper
firm represented numerous clients in the financial crisis of 2007-2008 lead counsel to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York {U.S. Treasury’s $250 billion bank capital purchase program} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Davis_Polk_%26_Wardwell
---------------------- ꕤ  ----------------------


February 15, 2015

Four Horsement - Documentary - Notes Part 2

FOUR HORSEMEN DOCUMENTARY


NOTES, part 2 - From:  44:22 - 1:38:53
...........................................................................
...........................................................................
Democrats & Republicans beholden to corporate interests.
Until this changes, we will never have a government for the public.

See:  Top 100 Campaign Contributors
[below is Politico's list, selected randomly.  However, this list did not appear in documentary.]
Blue billionaires on top
POLITICO’s list of Top 100 donors
...........................................................................
Terrorism

see - political language / Orwell ... solidity to wind
Political language... is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.
George Orwell
Military intervention in:
> Iraq
> Afghanistan
> Pakistan

justified as 'moral obligation'

But who are the beneficiaries?

1.  Arms & Military Equipment Sales

However, military intervention results in radicalisation.
eg. Drone attacks (as opposed to surgical commando operations) seen as attacks on a sovereign Pakistan.

2.  Rebuilding of Infrastructure / Aid (ie loans)

Beneficiaries of huge loans = own corporations

Infrastructure built does not benefit the majority (benefits the elite); but majority/poor are left with a huge debt.

Money goes to Western consultants and companies.

Aid is a hindrance instead of a help.
 ...........................................................................

Is foreign policy based on altruism or in the benefit of corporations / money interests?

US evangelicalisation of democracy is riddled with contradictions: 
>democracy at the end of a gun
>US opposing democratic regimes that aren't democratic in the way US wants them to be

Promotion of free market capitalism riddled with contradictions:

Countries on the cusp of change, structurally changing, not too free or transparent (opaque), is how the US companies make their money.

Wall Street speculators (made billions 'riding the short' / massive short on housing market), but this does nothing to benefit the economy vs free market scenario:

eg. benefit scenario =
  • invention of, say, vehicle that is fuelled on grass clippings
  • inventor makes money
  • but society also benefits because of this needed invention
 ...........................................................................
 
London, St Paul's Cathedral backdrop:

Goldman Sachs Chairman & mouthpiece, Lord Griffiths, a devoted Christian, defended extortion and bonuses:
"I am not a person of despair, I am a person of hope, and I think that we have to tolerate the inequality as a way of achieving greater prosperity and opportunity for all."
[not in documentary]
out of interest, note also: 
Public Must Learn to 'Tolerate Inequality' of Bonuses - The Guardian

Above is a self-serving argument.

Financiers will twist the worlds of classical economists.  Adam Smith (philosopher, pioneer of political economy) mentioned.

Will rely on arguments:
1.  Trickle down economics
2.  Horse & sparrow

but by the time the money trickles down to the bottom of society, the money loses purchasing power.

The political process is badly flawed (see lobbying), and requires restructure to give more voice to ordinary people and less influence to interest groups and lobby groups.

Documentary tried to convey (I think) that terrorists see themselves as 'freedom fighters' and that they are motivated from positions of eg. loss of the farm or fishing waters (as result of Western corporate projects).

Therefore, could this also be called 'terrorism':
> Corporations
> Speculators
> Policy makers
...........................................................................
Noam Chomsky was also interviewed.

If I understand correctly, Latin Americans refer to US intervention in Chile as the 'First 9/11':

Chile - 11 Sept 1973
  • Allende Coup
  • Augusto Pinochet dictatorship installed (1973-1990)
  • economists installed (driving worst conditions in history)
  • Suppression of dissidents:  1,000s of political dissenters imprisoned & murdered

Chomsky tried to convey that what was done in 9-11 was bad, but it could have been worse.  The Chile example was given:  as in, government could have been taken down, dictator could have been installed, economy could have been screwed by economists installed etc, but it wasn't.

Chomsky:
principle of ideology = never look at own crimes
Instead:  exalt in crimes of others & our own nobility in opposing them.
...........................................................................
[not in documentary]
out of interest, note also: 

Covert United States foreign regime
change actions
1949  Syrian coup d'état
1953  Iranian coup d'état
1954  Guatemalan coup d'état
1959  Tibetan uprising
1961  Cuba, Bay of Pigs Invasion
1963  South Vietnamese coup
1964  Brazilian coup d'état
1973  Chilean coup d'état
1976  Argentine coup d'état
1979–89 Afghanistan, Operation Cyclone
1980  Turkish coup d'état
1981–87 Nicaragua, Contras
List source: Wikipedia
 ...........................................................................
  • West will export injustice through finance.
  • Root causes of terrorism will not be solved by increasing inequality.
  • If government is serious about combating terrorism, must start with real structural reform on domestic front.
  • "As long as banking empires chase infrastructure and debt deals in pursuit of profit, the West will continue to export injustice through finance, millions more will be displaced, terrorism will thrive, and neocolonialism will continue to end more and more lives around the world."
...........................................................................
Resources

World is being filled with more and more things:
>more people (population growing at rapid rate, eg trippling in lifetime of speaker).
>more and more man-made objects.
The world is full of man-made capital.

But the more we grow the more poverty we create.

Royal Dutch Shell view of the future (ending year 2075):

1.  Blueprint view.  Bloody.
2.  Scramble view.  Substantially more bloody struggle for depleted resources.

  • Oil supplies are dwindling.  Deep sea drilling for oil is taking place because most easily accessible oil has been found and consumed.
  • Metal resources - new major discoveries are increasingly rare.
  • 40% of worlds agricultural land is seriously degraded, causing volatile yields.

Exhaustion of world's resources coming our way.

Billions of Earth's population require farming lands; fossil fuels; water.

Options (a) sharing resources or (b) combat/struggle/scramble.

Shell's bettering on option (b) vs sharing.

Antidote is moving from globalisation to localisation, promoting fellowship, responsibility, purpose (ie production vs consumption driven economies).

In the growth economy, consumption is a way of life.

Growth economy associated with:
* military
* production of what is not needed
Documentary is saying that individual achievement without incorporating the needs of the vulnerable is a myth.  Human affection is missing.  Humans are propelled by affections.  Purpose of life is outside of oneself.

[Not certain if I have understood this correctly.  This caring/sharing bit of the documentary was lost on me.]
...........................................................................
Progress

Systemic problem is being ignored.  Clearing out a few bad apples will not cleans systemic flaws in the heart of the Western economic system.


Four Horsemen


1.     

Rapacious financial system


2.

Escalating organised violence
3.

Abject poverty for billions

4.

Exhaustion of Earth’s resources


The Four Horsemen gallop unchallenged because the cognitive map (shaped by schools, universities and the media) does not encourage us to question norms.  Instead, there is apathy and people take the depressive point of view that nothing can be done and that it's a dog-eat-dog world.

We can, however, reach a more equitable society.

Disinformation of the neo-classical school of economics is advanced by academia and the media.

Education can be a form of mind control.  Banks often fund universities, educational foundations and think tanks.  Ivy league universities only teach neo-classical economics.

Learn also about:
1.  Classical economics.
2.  System of money.

The money system requires reform as we cannot function on the fiat money system, or it will spell the end of industrial civilisation.

The fiat money system is governed by man-made law which is abused.

Contrast:  gold standard @ growth of about 1.75% per annum, which is in approximate balance with supply/demand and average population growth, and is beyond the control of politicians.

Fiat = chronic debt build-up.  Debt = form of slavery.

Refer to German debt cancellations of 1947 to clean the slate, which would involve wiping debt & wiping savings.

Taxation reform required.  Taxation based on consumption, not income.

Classical economists - tax reform on resources / consumption.

Wage labour (seen as 'temporary) is no different to slavery.

Inequity in wages:  those at top 500-1,000 times more than those at bottom.  Commonality of interest is lost in this vast class difference.

Hubert Spencer (classical liberal political theorist):  'survival of the fittest' does not apply; monopolists have too much because the system is rigged.

Reforms:
1.  independent money system
2.  taxation reform - resources/consumption.
3.  employee ownership of means of production
Boundaries can be withdrawn:  eg in the past, selling any chemical as pharmaceuticals, child labour, slavery.
Same thing will be true of active money management.

Breakdown seen in Depression and again at beginning of 21st Century, occurred because in the name of growth much was taken out of the system by those that contribute very little.  Multi-national corporates and banks will always want to grow without having to compensate the people who actually do the work to produce the surplus.

In the past, every time too much was taken by those who contributed little, people rose up to halt the violent practice.

Central banks unregulated cheap money, pumped up land values, which created an unsustainable 'asset bubble', in a world that once again operates a rigged tax system that enriches entrenched privilege.

Neo-classical economics have ruined life for the bottom billions, tempted everyone into inter-generational conflict and created massive suffering that has no limits.

There is a formless Wall Street enemy pervading every element of economic and democratic process:

The following have trashed the economy:
> central banking
> rigged capitalism
> land speculation
> income taxation
> neo-classical economics
and have corporatised democracy, stunted progress, perverted the course of human destiny, and compromised the future of this planet.

Status quo can be challenged.

Essence of American democracy is the repeated confrontation / showdown:


If this Four Horsemen scenario not addressed, the next implosion will be on a scale unimagined.

COMMENT


I really enjoyed this documentary, but I'm not certain I've understood it all.  

The 'caring and sharing' section is where I got lost.  Also, I'm not that clear on how a different taxation system makes a difference, but I know nothing about economic theory so it's not surprising I don't quite get that bit.

I've provided links of look-ups within the notes about the documentary, for ease of reference (for my own benefit). 

Found this interesting, while doing my look ups:
[Look-Ups, not in documentary]
Marshall Plan (refused by Soviet Union & its allies, to avoid US control over economies)
Noam Chomsky wrote that the amount of American dollars given to France and the Netherlands equaled the funds these countries used to finance their military actions against their colonial subjects in East Asia, in French Indochina and the Netherlands East Indies respectively. The Marshall Plan was said to have "set the stage for large amounts of private U.S. investment in Europe, establishing the basis for modern transnational corporations". [Wikipedia]

Germany's debt restructuring (London Debt Agreement 1953) mentioned here:

Germany's post-war economic miracle
Only 16pc of polled Germans currently think Greece should be the recipient of some form of debt cancellation from the eurozone. The irony of Berlin's obstinancy on debt relief may well be lost on some.

Following the end of WWII, the London Debt Agreement of 1953 saw the abolition of all of Germany's external debt. The total forgiveness amounted to around 280pc of GDP from 1947-53, according to historian Albrecht Ritschl.

The cancellation, along with an extension of its repayment schedule, allowed Germany to return to the financial markets, and become part of the IMF and World Bank.

The London agreement also helped set in motion the country's incredible export performance as Germany was required to service its debt through money earned from foreign trade.

In the words of historian Ursula Rombeck-Jaschinski, Germany's "economic miracle would have been impossible without the debt agreement."


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/11383374/The-biggest-debt-write-offs-in-the-history-of-the-world.html

From what I've read elsewhere, it looks like Germany was being screwed by those giving Germany a 'helping hand', so the debt restructure can't have been much of a miracle:
The Marshall-Plan Hoax
Marshall Plan vs. Robbery, Murder and Destruction?
An Eternal Mockery of the German People!

http://www.wintersonnenwende.com/scriptorium/english/archives/articles/marshallhoax.html

This is just a quick skim of the Chilean coup, the Marshall Plan (and the Marshall-Plan Hoax) etc.  An initial look and skim that will need to be followed up by some more reading.

Need to also keep looking for Teddy Roosevelt the 'trust buster'.

In the meantime, I've come upon this really cool summary of a book:

American Oligarchy,
J.P. Morgan,
Bankers' Coup Creates Federal Reserve,
Morgan's Fed Finances World War I

excerpted from the book

Gods of Money

Wall Street and the Death of the American Century

by F. William Engdahl



SUMMARY - PART 2 - HERE.