SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold Price Monitor -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tom M who wrote (76140)9/12/2001 3:27:11 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Respond to of 116824
 
Hi Tom,
I have a friend that does a nice email newsletter. Here's an excerpt from today. Remember how Pat was bashed and trashed by the media when he ran for President? Instead we got Bill Clinton! Methinks rational thought is nearly extinct in the USA. I don't agree with all of his ideas, but he sure nails our foreign policy down with this article...

Is Cataclysmic Terrorism Ahead?
by Patrick J. Buchanan
January 12, 1999

America is the only nation on Earth to claim a right to
intervene militarily in every region of the world. But this foreign policy
is not America's tradition; it is an aberration. During our first 150 years,
we renounced interventionism and threatened war on any foreign power that
dared to intervene in our hemisphere. Can we, of all people, not understand
why foreigners bitterly resent our intrusions?...

On the day after Pearl Harbor, ex-President Herbert Hoover sat
down and wrote to friends: "You and I know that this continuous putting pins
in rattlesnakes finally got this country bitten."

Japan's sneak attack was one of the great acts of state terror,
but its motive was desperation. The United States had cut off Japan's oil
and sent Tokyo an ultimatum: Withdraw from Indochina and China, or we bring
you to your knees. Japan decided to seize the oil of the East Indies and
eliminate the one force that could stop her: the U.S. fleet.

Yet, after we crushed Japan, China fell to Mao and Indochina to
Ho Chi Minh and the Khmer Rouge. Had we never intervened in East Asia,
Japanese, not Americans, would likely have done the fighting and dying in
Korea and Vietnam to contain Asian communism.

What calls to mind the phrase "putting pins in rattlesnakes" is
an unsettling paper by the Cato Institute's Ivan Eland: "Does U.S.
Intervention Overseas Breed Terrorism? The Historical Record."

Eland's argument: Americans are the principal targets of
terrorists because of our constant meddling in foreign wars. If we do not
abandon our compulsive interventionism, we will one day be subjected to an
act of cataclysmic terror, with a weapon of mass destruction, perhaps
nuclear.

Already, we have come close. The World Trade Center bomb was
designed to bring down one of those 110-story towers and kill perhaps 50,000
Americans. Had the terrorists used poison gas, they might have killed more
than the 3,000 who died at Pearl Harbor. And Osama Bin Laden, the rich,
U.S.-hating Saudi terrorist reportedly has long been in the market for a
nuclear weapon.

Eland's empirical evidence linking U.S. military interventions
to retaliatory acts of terrorism is impressive. Consider:

U.S. Marines were sent into Lebanon to bolster a Christian
regime in 1983. Result: Islamic terrorists bombed our embassy and Marine
barracks, killing hundreds, and Ronald Reagan withdrew the Marines.

Before 1981, Libya's Col. Qaddafi had not targeted Americans.
But Reagan sent U.S. ships and planes across his "line of death" in the Gulf
of Sidra, shot down his jets and sank his patrol boats. Result: Qaddafi
blew up La Belle nightclub in Berlin, wounding dozens of GIs. Reagan
answered with air strikes. Qaddafi retaliated with eight acts of terrorism,
by Eland's count, the most horrific being the downing of Pan Am 103.

In 1992, George Bush intervened in Somalia. Bin Laden trained
the terrorists who lured U.S. Rangers into a trap, killed 18 and dragged the
body of one through Mogadishu. Bill Clinton pulled out.

Bin Laden calls Somalia his greatest victory and is believed to
have planned the 1998 bombings of our embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. What
motivates him? Hatred of America because of our huge military presence on
Islam's sacred soil of Saudi Arabia.

Robert Kennedy was murdered by a West Bank Palestinian. George
Bush was targeted for assassination by Iraqis. Filipino terrorists used to
attack Americans until we withdrew from Subic Bay and Clark Air Force Base.
Now, they don't.

The seizure of the U.S. embassy in Tehran and other acts of
state terror by the mullahs stem from U.S. military support of the shah
until 1979. Today, there is a near-identical U.S. presence in Egypt and
Saudi Arabia. Both regimes are despised by many of their own people, and
Americans have been targets of terrorist attacks in both.

America is the only nation on Earth to claim a right to
intervene militarily in every region of the world. But this foreign policy
is not America's tradition; it is an aberration. During our first 150 years,
we renounced interventionism and threatened war on any foreign power that
dared to intervene in our hemisphere. Can we, of all people, not understand
why foreigners bitterly resent our intrusions?

With the Cold War over, why invite terrorist attacks on our
citizens and country, ultimately with biological, chemical or nuclear
weapons? No nation threatens us. But with the proliferation of weapons of
mass destruction, America will inevitably be targeted. And the cataclysmic
terror weapon is more likely to come by Ryder truck or container ship than
by ICBM. And no SDI will stop it.

Madeleine Albright describes terrorism as "the biggest threat to
our country ... as we enter the 21st century." But battling terrorism must
go beyond discovering and disrupting it before it happens and deterring it
with retaliation. We need to remove the motivation for it by extricating the
United States from ethnic, religious and historical quarrels that are not
ours and which we cannot resolve with any finality.

[ buchanan.org ]



To: Tom M who wrote (76140)9/12/2001 3:29:43 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Respond to of 116824
 
Why not? Here's another great article.

IMF'S FOUR STEPS TO DAMNATION
London Observer
April 29, 2001

How crises, failures, and suffering finally drove a Presidential adviser to
the wrong side of the barricades
By Gregory Palast

It was like a scene out of Le Carré: the brilliant agent comes in from the
cold and, in hours of debriefing, empties his memory of horrors committed in
the name of an ideology gone rotten.

But this was a far bigger catch than some used-up Cold War spy. The former
apparatchik was Joseph Stiglitz, ex-chief economist of the World Bank. The
new world economic order was his theory come to life.

He was in Washington for the big confab of the World Bank and International
Monetary Fund. But instead of chairing meetings of ministers and central
bankers, he was outside the police cordons. The World Bank fired Stiglitz
two years ago. He was not allowed a quiet retirement: he was excommunicated
purely for expressing mild dissent from globalisation World Bank-style.

Here in Washington we conducted exclusive interviews with Stiglitz, for The
Observer and Newsnight, about the inside workings of the IMF, the World
Bank, and the bank's 51% owner, the US Treasury.

And here, from sources unnamable (not Stiglitz), we obtained a cache of
documents marked, 'confidential' and 'restricted'.

Stiglitz helped translate one, a 'country assistance strategy'. There's an
assistance strategy for every poorer nation, designed, says the World Bank,
after careful in-country investigation.

But according to insider Stiglitz, the Bank's 'investigation' involves
little more than close inspection of five-star hotels. It concludes with a
meeting with a begging finance minister, who is handed a 'restructuring
agreement' pre-drafted for 'voluntary' signature.

Each nation's economy is analysed, says Stiglitz, then the Bank hands every
minister the same four-step programme.

Step One is privatisation. Stiglitz said that rather than objecting to the
sell-offs of state industries, some politicians - using the World Bank's
demands to silence local critics - happily flogged their electricity and
water companies. 'You could see their eyes widen' at the possibility of
commissions for shaving a few billion off the sale price.

And the US government knew it, charges Stiglitz, at least in the case of the
biggest privatisation of all, the 1995 Russian sell-off. 'The US Treasury
view was: "This was great, as we wanted Yeltsin re-elected. We DON'T CARE if
it's a corrupt election." '

Stiglitz cannot simply be dismissed as a conspiracy nutter. The man was
inside the game - a member of Bill Clinton's cabinet, chairman of the
President's council of economic advisers.

Most sick-making for Stiglitz is that the US-backed oligarchs stripped
Russia's industrial assets, with the effect that national output was cut
nearly in half.

After privatisation, Step Two is capital market liberalisation. In theory
this allows investment capital to flow in and out. Unfortunately, as in
Indonesia and Brazil, the money often simply flows out.

Stiglitz calls this the 'hot money' cycle. Cash comes in for speculation in
real estate and currency, then flees at the first whiff of trouble. A
nation's reserves can drain in days.

And when that happens, to seduce speculators into returning a nation's own
capital funds, the IMF demands these nations raise interest rates to 30%,
50% and 80%.

'The result was predictable,' said Stiglitz. Higher interest rates demolish
property values, savage industrial production and drain national treasuries.

At this point, according to Stiglitz, the IMF drags the gasping nation to
Step Three: market-based pricing - a fancy term for raising prices on food,
water and cooking gas. This leads, predictably, to Step-Three-and-a-Half:
what Stiglitz calls 'the IMF riot'.

The IMF riot is painfully predictable. When a nation is, 'down and out, [the
IMF] squeezes the last drop of blood out of them. They turn up the heat
until, finally, the whole cauldron blows up,' -- as when the IMF eliminated
food and fuel subsidies for the poor in Indonesia in 1998. Indonesia
exploded into riots.

There are other examples -- the Bolivian riots over water prices last year
and, this February, the riots in Ecuador over the rise in cooking gas prices
imposed by the World Bank. You'd almost believe the riot was expected.

And it is. What Stiglitz did not know is that Newsnight obtained several
documents from inside the World Bank. In one, last year's Interim Country
Assistance Strategy for Ecuador, the Bank several times suggests -- with
cold accuracy -- that the plans could be expected to spark 'social unrest'.

That's not surprising. The secret report notes that the plan to make the US
dollar Ecuador's currency has pushed 51% of the population below the poverty
line.

The IMF riots (and by riots I mean peaceful demonstrations dispersed by
bullets, tanks and tear gas) cause new flights of capital and government
bankruptcies This economic arson has its bright side -- for foreigners, who
can then pick off remaining assets at fire sale prices.

A pattern emerges. There are lots of losers but the clear winners seem to be
the western banks and US Treasury.

Now we arrive at Step Four: free trade. This is free trade by the rules of
the World Trade Organisation and the World Bank, which Stiglitz likens to
the Opium Wars. 'That too was about "opening markets",' he said. As in the
nineteenth century, Europeans and Americans today are kicking down barriers
to sales in Asia, Latin American and Africa while barricading our own
markets against the Third World 's agriculture.

In the Opium Wars, the West used military blockades. Today, the World Bank
can order a financial blockade, which is just as effective and sometimes
just as deadly.

Stiglitz has two concerns about the IMF/World Bank plans. First, he says,
because the plans are devised in secrecy and driven by an absolutist
ideology, never open for discourse or dissent, they 'undermine democracy'.
Second, they don't work. Under the guiding hand of IMF structural
'assistance' Africa's income dropped by 23%.

Did any nation avoid this fate? Yes, said Stiglitz, Botswana. Their trick?
'They told the IMF to go packing.' Stiglitz proposes radical land reform: an
attack on the 50% crop rents charged by the propertied oligarchies
worldwide.

Why didn't the World Bank and IMF follow his advice?

'If you challenge [land ownership], that would be a change in the power of
the elites. That's not high on their agenda.'

Ultimately, what drove him to put his job on the line was the failure of the
banks and US Treasury to change course when confronted with the crises,
failures, and suffering perpetrated by their four-step monetarist mambo.

'It's a little like the Middle Ages,' says the economist, 'When the patient
died they would say well, we stopped the bloodletting too soon, he still had
a little blood in him.'

Maybe it's time to remove the bloodsuckers.

gregory.palast@observer.co.uk

[ guardian.co.uk ]