Next time will not be different
By Ellen Brown
Reports are that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is engaged in a massive, covert military buildup. An article in the Associated Press in February confirmed an open purchase order by DHS for 1.6 billion rounds of ammunition. According to an op-ed in Forbes, that’s enough to sustain an Iraq-sized war for over 20 years.
Reports are that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is engaged in a massive, covert military buildup. An article in the Associated Press in February confirmed an open purchase order by DHS for 1.6 billion rounds of ammunition. According to an op-ed in Forbes, that’s enough to sustain an Iraq-sized war for over 20 years.
DHS
has also acquired heavily armored tanks, which have been seen roaming the
streets. Evidently somebody in government is expecting some serious civil
unrest. The question is, why?
Recently
revealed statements by former UK prime minister Gordon Brown at the height of
the banking crisis in October 2008 could give some
insights into that question. An article on BBC News on September 21, 2013, drew from an
explosive autobiography called Power Trip by Brown's spin
doctor Damian McBride, who said the prime minister was worried that law and
order could collapse during the financial crisis.
McBride
quoted Brown as saying:
If the banks are shutting their doors, and the cash points aren't working, and people go to Tesco [a grocery chain] and their cards aren't being accepted, the whole thing will just explode.
If you can't buy food or petrol or medicine for your kids, people will just start breaking the windows and helping themselves.
And as soon as people see that on TV, that's the end, because everyone will think that's OK now, that's just what we all have to do. It'll be anarchy. That's what could happen tomorrow.
How to deal with that threat? Brown said, "We'd have to think: do we
have curfews, do we put the army on the streets, how do we get order
back?"
McBride wrote in his book, "It was extraordinary to see Gordon so
totally gripped by the danger of what he was about to do, but equally convinced
that decisive action had to be taken immediately." He compared the threat
to the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Fear of this threat was echoed in September 2008 by then US Treasury
secretary Hank Paulson, who reportedly warned that
the US government might have to resort to martial law if Wall Street were not
bailed out from the credit collapse.
In both countries, martial law was avoided when their legislatures
succumbed to pressure and bailed out the banks. But many pundits are saying
that another collapse is imminent; and this time, governments may not be so
willing to step up to the plate.
What triggered the 2008 crisis was
a run, not on the conventional banking system but in the "shadow"
banking system, a collection of non-bank financial intermediaries that
provide services similar to traditional commercial banks but are
unregulated. They include hedge funds, money market funds, credit investment
funds, exchange-traded funds, private equity funds, securities broker dealers,
securitization and finance companies. Investment banks and commercial
banks may also conduct much of their business in the shadows of this
unregulated system.
The shadow financial casino has only grown larger since 2008, and in the
next Lehman-style collapse, government bailouts may not be available. According
to President Barack Obama in his remarks on the Dodd-Frank Act on
July 15, 2010, "Because of this reform, ... there will be no more taxpayer
funded bailouts - period."
Governments in Europe are also shying away from further bailouts. The Financial
Stability Board (FSB) in Switzerland has therefore required the systemically
risky banks to devise "living wills" setting forth what they will do
in the event of insolvency. The template established by the FSB requires them
to "bail in" their creditors; and depositors, it turns out, are the
largest class of bank creditor. (For fuller discussion, see my earlier article here.)
When depositors cannot access their bank accounts to get money for food for
the kids, they could well start breaking store windows and helping themselves.
Worse, they might plot to overthrow the financier-controlled government.
Witness Greece, where increasing disillusionment with the ability of the
government to rescue the citizens from the worst depression since 1929 has
precipitated riots and
threats of violent overthrow.
Fear of that result could explain the massive, government-authorized spying
on American citizens, the domestic use of drones, and the elimination of due
process and of posse comitatus (the federal law prohibiting
the military from enforcing "law and order" on non-federal property).
Constitutional protections are being thrown out the window in favor of
protecting the elite class in power.
The looming debt ceiling crisis
The next crisis on the agenda appears to be the October 17 deadline for agreeing on a federal budget or risking default on the government’s loans.
The next crisis on the agenda appears to be the October 17 deadline for agreeing on a federal budget or risking default on the government’s loans.
It may only be a coincidence, but two large-scale drills are scheduled to
take place the same day, the "Great ShakeOut Earthquake Drill"
and the "Quantum Dawn 2 Cyber Attack Bank Drill."
According to a Bloomberg news clip on the bank drill, the attacks being
prepared for are from hackers, state-sponsored espionage, and organized crime
(financial fraud).
One interviewee stated, "You might experience that your online banking
is down ... You might experience that you can’t log in." It sounds like a
dress rehearsal for the Great American Bail-in.
Ominous as all this is, it has a bright side. Bail-ins and martial law can
be seen as the last desperate thrashings of a dinosaur. The exploitative
financial scheme responsible for turning millions out of their jobs and their
homes has reached the end of the line. Crisis in the current scheme means
opportunity for those more sustainable solutions waiting in the wings.
Other countries faced with a collapse in their debt-based borrowed
currencies have survived and thrived by issuing their own. When the
dollar-pegged currency collapsed in Argentina in 2001, the national government
returned to issuing its own pesos; municipal governments paid with
"debt-canceling bonds" that circulated as currency; and neighborhoods
traded with community currencies.
After the German currency collapsed in the 1920s, the government turned the
economy around in the 1930s by issuing "MEFO" bills that circulated
as currency. When England ran out of gold in 1914, the government issued "Bradbury pounds"
similar to the Greenbacks issued by Abraham Lincoln during the US Civil War.
Today, our government could avoid the debt ceiling crisis by doing
something similar: it could simply mint some trillion dollar coins and deposit
them in an account. That alternative could be pursued by the administration
immediately, without going to congress or changing the law, as discussed in my
earlier article here.
It need not be inflationary, since congress could still spend only what it
passed in its budget.
If congress did expand its budget for infrastructure and job creation, that
would actually be good for the economy, sincehoarding cash and
paying down loans have significantly shrunk the circulating money supply.
Peer-to-peer trading and public banks
At the local level, we need to set up an alternative system that provides safety for depositors, funds small and medium-sized businesses, and serves the needs of the community.
Peer-to-peer trading and public banks
At the local level, we need to set up an alternative system that provides safety for depositors, funds small and medium-sized businesses, and serves the needs of the community.
Much progress has already been made on that front in the peer-to-peer
economy. In a September 27 article titled "Peer-to-Peer Economy Thrives as Activists Vacate the
System", Eric Blair reports that the Occupy Movement is
engaged in a peaceful revolution in which people are abandoning the established
system in favor of a "sharing economy". Trading occurs between
individuals, without taxes, regulations or licenses, and in some cases without
government-issued currency.
Peer-to-peer trading happens largely on the Internet, where customer
reviews rather than regulation keep sellers honest. It started with eBay and
Craigslist and has grown exponentially since. Bitcoin is a private currency
outside the prying eyes of regulators. Software is being devised that circumvents NSA spying.
Bank loans are being shunned in favor of crowdfunding. Local food co-ops are
also a form of opting out of the corporate-government system.
Peer-to-peer trading works for local exchange, but we also need a way to
protect our dollars, both public and private. We need dollars to pay at least
some of our bills, and businesses need them to acquire raw materials. We also
need a way to protect our public revenues, which are currently deposited and
invested in Wall Street banks that have heavy derivatives exposure.
To meet those needs, we can set up publicly owned banks on the model of the
Bank of North Dakota, at present the only state-owned depository bank in the
US. The BND is mandated by law to receive all the state’s deposits and to serve
the public interest. Ideally, every state would have one of these
"mini-Feds". Counties and cities could have them as well. For more
information, see PublicBankingInstitute.org.
Preparations for martial law have been reported for decades, and it hasn’t
happened yet. Hopefully, we can sidestep that danger by moving into a saner,
more sustainable system that makes military action against American citizens
unnecessary
No comments:
Post a Comment