We Have No Other Choice
America is just going through the motions because we have no other choice--or so we believe.
by Charles
Smith
I have long thought that America Is Just Going Through the Motions--of caring about the deficit, of financial "reform," and
everything else:
Let's be honest, shall we? There never was any fire
for real reform of the financial sector. It was all rote, a foul, stupid
play-act, a passionless pantomime of "caring" and fake-"progressiveness"
displayed for propaganda purposes.
I now think we're just going through the motions because we have no other
choice than to "extend and pretend" the Status Quo. Choice is of course a matter of perception, a situation where
perception defines what is "possible" and what is
"impossible."
Interestingly enough, the "possible" is what we think we can
manage, while the "impossible" is what happens to us whether we
thought it possible or not.
Consider the Federal Reserve. Liberal media mainstay The
Atlantic published a fawning puff-piece lauding Ben Bernanke as the man who
"saved the economy": The Villain: The left hates him.
The right hates him even more. But Ben Bernanke saved the economy— and has
navigated masterfully through the most trying of times.
We all know what Ben "saved," and it wasn't the economy--it was
the fraud-based crony-capitalist financial sector. In
case you missed the primer that explains the fundamental frauds at the heart of
our economy:
Claiming that "saving the financial sector was necessary to save the economy" is akin to claiming that saving the massive tapeworm coiled inside the patient is necessary to save the patient: the logic is backward. The financial sector (tapeworm) is the cause of the economy's (the patient) weakness and collapse.
Ben is no genius nor is he a hero. He is simply doing what he has to
because he has no other choice. What would happen if Ben
didn't funnel hundreds of billions of dollars into the financial tapeworm? It
would die, and the "too big to fail" banks--for all intents and
purposes, the Fed's partners, and the generous funders of political toadies--would
cease to exist. Extremely wealthy and powerful people-- the top 1/100 of the
top 1%--would lose great wealth and the power it buys.
In a system that has become dependent on crony-capitalism and fraud for its
very survival, then that is obviously not even a choice.
How about the political class of toadies, sycophants, leeches and cowards
who passed a 2,300-page "reform" bill that nobody read, much less
actually understands? Senator Dodd recently
penned a bloviated defense of his "save the poor tapeworm"
legislation, the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act in The
Economist, claiming that it was "impossible" to
"reform" our "complex" financial system with a mere 37
pages of legislation, the length of the original Glass-Steagal Act that
separated commercial and investment banking: What If We're Beyond Mere Policy Tweaks? (February 6, 2012)
Consider the Glass-Steagall Act, at 37 pages in length, and the 2,319-page
monstrosity of the “Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act:" (Source)
Back in December, Nick Schulz helped put the size of the 2,074-page
healthcare bill into some historical context by comparing its length to some
previous bills that rank among the most consequential in U.S. history, like the
82-page Social Security Act of 1935 and the 74-page Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Now that Congress has passed the “Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act,” it might be a good time to compare the 2,319-page
financial reform bill (245 pages longer than the healthcare bill) to the
previous bills listed below (and see graph) that are considered among the most
consequential legislative acts for banking and finance.
1. Federal Reserve Act (1913) – 31 pages.
2. Glass-Steagall Act (1933) – 37 pages.
Actually, the entire fraudulent tapeworm could be killed with a single page
of legislation, or more correctly, a single five-point paragraph: To wit:
1. Commercial banks cannot conduct any investment banking, and investment
banks cannot conduct any commercial banking. Any financial institution that
accepts deposits or issues loans or financial instruments of any nature will be
regulated as a bank.
2. All assets of any nature must be listed at the close of business daily
marked to market, as in the futures and options markets. If there is no
regulated market for a class of financial instruments, the Treasury is
instructed to establish and regulate a market for that class of financial
instruments. Holding assets off-balance sheet is a criminal offense with a
minimim fine of $10 billion per asset. If the fine cannot be paid in full, the
FDIC is instructed to seize the bank and liquidate its assets in an orderly and
timely manner.
3. No bank will be permitted to have assets or liabilities in excess of the
smallest gross domestic product (GDP) of the 50 states.
4. No private banks may create any money through debt. All loans must be
made out of existing deposits and equity. (via David V.)
5. No exceptions or exemptions are allowed to these statutes.
That would pretty much do it. Separate commercial from
investment banking, require all assets to be marked to market every day, and
limit banks from expanding to the point of being able to blackmail the nation,
i.e. "too big to fail."
Instead, by one count, Dodd-Frank requires regulators to create 243 rules,
conduct 67 studies, and issue 22 periodic reports. Does anyone seriously
believe this complexity will "fix" anything?
But the legislators had no other choice. If
they killed the TBTF banks, they would have killed their good friends and
generous donors, so that was never a possibility. Ditto with healthcare
"reform" and all the other phantom "reforms"--actually
changing the Status Quo would cause immense financial pain in the class of
wealthy people who fund the politicos and lobbyists, and trim money flows
elsewhere in the system.
"Having no other choice" is a social fractal. Why do families persist in taking on $100,000 student loans for
mostly mediocre educations with mostly mediocre "benefits" in the job
market? Because they feel they have no other choice.
Why do people persist in mortgaging their future and accepting the yoke of
debt-serfdom to own a house? Because they feel they have no other choice, and
owning a house has become integral to the "American dream."
Why do local state, county and city politicos continue playing absurd
budget games, shuffling funds, borrowing from their employees' pension plans to
make this year's pension plan contribution and similar threadbare tricks? You
guessed it: they have no other choice, lest someone somewhere feel some pain.
Why do our Federal "leaders" borrow $1.5 trillion each and every
year now, fully 10% of the nation's total output, knowing full well that this
level of borrowing will bankrupt the nation? (Don't forget to add in the
"supplemental" off-budget borrowing.) You know: they have no other
choice, lest someone somewhere feel some pain.
So instead they keep the accelerating vehicle pointed straight for the
cliff. There are only two end-states to this
level of borrowing: hyper-inflation or default. Any other "choice" is
mere fantasy.
As noted above, what's possible is what you perceive, and what's impossible
is what happens later whether you thought it possible or not. The Status Quo of a fraudulent financial system and a
borrow-trillions-every-year-til-Doomsday Central State will implode, regardless
of how many people think it "impossible."
If you take a star of sufficient heft such that it burns through its fuel
at a rapid clip, then it will implode in a supernova whether you thought it
possible or not.
"We have no other choice" is partly "deer in the
headlights," partly fear of consequence and partly intellectual laziness,
i.e. a continuing failure of imagination. Just
to take two examples of many: anyone who is convinced they "have no other
choice" but to enslave themselves with $100,000 in student loans should
read Debt-Free U: How I Paid for an Outstanding College Education Without
Loans, Scholarships, or Mooching off My Parents. Yes, it requires sacrifices and hard work, but it does outline a
debt-free choice.
The Status Quo depends on debt-serfs who feel they "have no other
choice" for its survival, but there are other ways of perceiving our
financial options, for example Early Retirement
Extreme: A philosophical and practical guide to financial independence.
OK, so these options may not be for everyone, but to deny they exist is
delusional.
Consider America's second favorite obsession (the first being achieving
"fame" by appearing on broadcast TV), losing weight.
Is it "convenient" to lose weight? no, it is generally
inconvenient and requires sacrifice, discipline and embracing
responsibility--all the attributes of life we avoid by perceiving no other
choice.
What's possible is what we perceive, and what's impossible is what happens
later whether we thought it possible or not. The
"impossible" systemic collapse will happen because we've left no
other option open. We will get "wake-up calls" along the way, but
these will be ignored because to change anything in the Status Quo will cause
pain to someone somewhere, i.e. it is inconvenient.
Could we choose another future other than collapse? At this point, the
answer is no, because we have no other choice.
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