Heavy on the Irony

John McCain Was The Keynote Speaker For A 2006 ACORN Conference On Immigration Reform

John McCain Was The Keynote Speaker For A 2006 ACORN Conference On Immigration Reform

It turns out that John McCain was the keynote speaker at a March 2006 conference sponsored by ACORN on Immigration Reform. Consider yourself zinged:

Bertha Lewis, Acorn’s chief organizer, said in a statement that came with the photo, “It has deeply saddened us to see Senator McCain abandon his historic support for ACORN and our efforts to support the goals of low-income Americans.”

”We are sure that the extremists he is trying to get into a froth will be even more excited to learn that John McCain stood shoulder to shoulder with ACORN, at an ACORN co-sponsored event, to promote immigration reform,” she said.

Video Below:

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See Also: John McCain’s own ACORN connection, Acorn pushes back, hugs McCain, ACORN And McCain, If You Don’t Have Something Useful To Say…, McCain telegraphing his punches, So What If Barack Obama Really Were A Muslim?, Hey, ACORNphobes, looky here!, Obama Says He Doesn’t Need Acorn’s Help, Dems and ACORN, Obama and Durbin Try Slick ACORN Amnesty Rider, ACORN’s 15 State Strategy for Voter Fraud, Outright Fraud v. Phantom Suppression, and The Big Barack Obama Fraud Scandal.

[tags]John McCain, ACORN, immigration reform, 2006 speech, shoulder to shoulder, picture, proof, John McCain spoke at ACORN, photos, miami, immigrants, miami florida, ACORN conference[/tags]

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America’s Corporate Board Room

See Also: Bush Nationalizes Biggest U.S. Banks, The Bailout and the Smell Test, Demonize the Nationalize, How to save banks and start trade wars, A $250 Billion Dollar Investment, All your banks are belong to us, Long Overdue Capital Injection, and What Was That About Kool-Aid?

[tags]america’s board room, corporate executives, state planners, comic, images, black and white, cartoon, corruption, CEO’s, american socialism, banks, federal bailout, predatory lending, predatory loaning, mortgages, bank investments[/tags]

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The Anti-Democratic Nature of US Capitalism Is Being Exposed

The Article: The Anti-democratic nature of US capitalism is being exposed by Noam Chomsky. Bretton Woods was the system of global financial management set up at the end of the second World War to ensure the interests of capital did not smother wider social concerns in post-war democracies. It was hated by the US neoliberals – the very people who created the banking crisis writes Noam Chomsky.

The Text: THE SIMULTANEOUS unfolding of the US presidential campaign and unraveling of the financial markets presents one of those occasions where the political and economic systems starkly reveal their nature.

Passion about the campaign may not be universally shared but almost everybody can feel the anxiety from the foreclosure of a million homes, and concerns about jobs, savings and healthcare at risk.

The initial Bush proposals to deal with the crisis so reeked of totalitarianism that they were quickly modified. Under intense lobbyist pressure, they were reshaped as “a clear win for the largest institutions in the system . . . a way of dumping assets without having to fail or close”, as described by James Rickards, who negotiated the federal bailout for the hedge fund Long Term Capital Management in 1998, reminding us that we are treading familiar turf. The immediate origins of the current meltdown lie in the collapse of the housing bubble supervised by Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, which sustained the struggling economy through the Bush years by debt-based consumer spending along with borrowing from abroad. But the roots are deeper. In part they lie in the triumph of financial liberalisation in the past 30 years – that is, freeing the markets as much as possible from government regulation.

These steps predictably increased the frequency and depth of severe reversals, which now threaten to bring about the worst crisis since the Great Depression.

Also predictably, the narrow sectors that reaped enormous profits from liberalisation are calling for massive state intervention to rescue collapsing financial institutions.

Such interventionism is a regular feature of state capitalism, though the scale today is unusual. A study by international economists Winfried Ruigrok and Rob van Tulder 15 years ago found that at least 20 companies in the Fortune 100 would not have survived if they had not been saved by their respective governments, and that many of the rest gained substantially by demanding that governments “socialise their losses,” as in today’s taxpayer-financed bailout. Such government intervention “has been the rule rather than the exception over the past two centuries”, they conclude.

In a functioning democratic society, a political campaign would address such fundamental issues, looking into root causes and cures, and proposing the means by which people suffering the consequences can take effective control.

The financial market “underprices risk” and is “systematically inefficient”, as economists John Eatwell and Lance Taylor wrote a decade ago, warning of the extreme dangers of financial liberalisation and reviewing the substantial costs already incurred – and proposing solutions, which have been ignored. One factor is failure to calculate the costs to those who do not participate in transactions. These “externalities” can be huge. Ignoring systemic risk leads to more risk-taking than would take place in an efficient economy, even by the narrowest measures.

The task of financial institutions is to take risks and, if well-managed, to ensure that potential losses to themselves will be covered. The emphasis is on “to themselves”. Under state capitalist rules, it is not their business to consider the cost to others – the “externalities” of decent survival – if their practices lead to financial crisis, as they regularly do.

Financial liberalisation has effects well beyond the economy. It has long been understood that it is a powerful weapon against democracy. Free capital movement creates what some have called a “virtual parliament” of investors and lenders, who closely monitor government programmes and “vote” against them if they are considered irrational: for the benefit of people, rather than concentrated private power.

Investors and lenders can “vote” by capital flight, attacks on currencies and other devices offered by financial liberalisation. That is one reason why the Bretton Woods system established by the United States and Britain after the second World War instituted capital controls and regulated currencies.*

The Great Depression and the war had aroused powerful radical democratic currents, ranging from the anti-fascist resistance to working class organisation. These pressures made it necessary to permit social democratic policies. The Bretton Woods system was designed in part to create a space for government action responding to public will – for some measure of democracy.

John Maynard Keynes, the British negotiator, considered the most important achievement of Bretton Woods to be the establishment of the right of governments to restrict capital movement.

In dramatic contrast, in the neoliberal phase after the breakdown of the Bretton Woods system in the 1970s, the US treasury now regards free capital mobility as a “fundamental right”, unlike such alleged “rights” as those guaranteed by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights: health, education, decent employment, security and other rights that the Reagan and Bush administrations have dismissed as “letters to Santa Claus”, “preposterous”, mere “myths”.

In earlier years, the public had not been much of a problem. The reasons are reviewed by Barry Eichengreen in his standard scholarly history of the international monetary system. He explains that in the 19th century, governments had not yet been “politicised by universal male suffrage and the rise of trade unionism and parliamentary labour parties”. Therefore, the severe costs imposed by the virtual parliament could be transferred to the general population.

But with the radicalisation of the general public during the Great Depression and the anti-fascist war, that luxury was no longer available to private power and wealth. Hence in the Bretton Woods system, “limits on capital mobility substituted for limits on democracy as a source of insulation from market pressures”.

The obvious corollary is that after the dismantling of the postwar system, democracy is restricted. It has therefore become necessary to control and marginalise the public in some fashion, processes particularly evident in the more business-run societies like the United States. The management of electoral extravaganzas by the public relations industry is one illustration.

“Politics is the shadow cast on society by big business,” concluded America’s leading 20th century social philosopher John Dewey, and will remain so as long as power resides in “business for private profit through private control of banking, land, industry, reinforced by command of the press, press agents and other means of publicity and propaganda”.

The United States effectively has a one-party system, the business party, with two factions, Republicans and Democrats. There are differences between them. In his study Unequal Democracy: The Political Economy of the New Gilded Age, Larry Bartels shows that during the past six decades “real incomes of middle-class families have grown twice as fast under Democrats as they have under Republicans, while the real incomes of working-poor families have grown six times as fast under Democrats as they have under Republicans”.

Differences can be detected in the current election as well. Voters should consider them, but without illusions about the political parties, and with the recognition that consistently over the centuries, progressive legislation and social welfare have been won by popular struggles, not gifts from above.

Those struggles follow a cycle of success and setback. They must be waged every day, not just once every four years, always with the goal of creating a genuinely responsive democratic society, from the voting booth to the workplace.

Notes on the Bretton Woods System:

The Bretton Woods system of global financial management was created by 730 delegates from all 44 Allied second World War nations who attended a UN-hosted Monetary and Financial Conference at the Mount Washington Hotel in Bretton Woods in New Hampshire in 1944.

Bretton Woods, which collapsed in 1971, was the system of rules, institutions, and procedures that regulated the international monetary system, under which were set up the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) (now one of five institutions in the World Bank Group) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which came into effect in 1945.

The chief feature of Bretton Woods was an obligation for each country to adopt a monetary policy that maintained the exchange rate of its currency within a fixed value.

The system collapsed when the US suspended convertibility from dollars to gold. This created the unique situation whereby the US dollar became the “reserve currency” for the other countries within Bretton Woods.

See Also: The Birth of the Global Dictatorship, Chomsky on Financial Crisis, Noam Chomsky Interview, Quotable, ‘The United States Has Essentially a One-Party System’, Noam Chomsky: “If I were in a swing state, I’d vote for Obama”, Fear An Economic Collapse…Or So Says $95 Million In Television Advertising, The New New Paulson Plan: You’ve got to fight, fight, fight! for that pooling equilibrium, No Repeat Of The 1930s Here!, What’s the Opposite of Leadership?, Bush, Paulson Set To Unveil Details Of Bank Nationalization Scheme, and Banking and Brokerage Got its Wish.

[tags]noam chomsky, noam chomsky on the bailout, federal government bailout, financial bailout, banks, us capitalism, american capitalism, anti-democratic, corrupt, elitism, corruption, predatory banks, anti-democracy, bretton woods system[/tags]

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This Has Lost Its Meaning

Did you mean what you said
when you said what you said
when I heard you speak?

Could I say it any clearer?

When I smile at you, can you feel it?
When I think about you, can you hear it?

When I question you, curse your name, and fall
crying myself to sleep again, are you there with me
Lying in bed with me, holding me close as if
we were already lovers again?

When will I return?

I looked into the mirror again and saw myself
again bags under hollow brown eyes
God, you look so vacant
Where did your insides go and
how long has it been?

This dream can’t last forever baby, it just can’t
She took herself too seriously man, look what it got her
God, I’m so confused
Why can’t she come down already, come down to
my level, right? Down where the shabby self-hatred lives

Rise up Christian brothers before
this right hand pulls you down

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For All You Clinton Hill Bitches

Just visited Rustik in BK tonight, and couldn’t have been said better:

“2) I’ve been into Rustik two times and on both occasions I’ve had a feeling that I’d imagine would be similar to walking into a random person’s home unannounced. Meaning both times I’ve gone in there the bartender and owner(s) are hanging out at the bar with their friends laughing and carrying on with music blasting (all things I don’t mind) and when I step in the door everyone looks at me like “who the fuck is this? oh GREAT a customer, fun’s over” and the music gets turned down and everyone goes quiet and awkward looks are exchanged etc. etc. What the hell is that? Maybe I’m not familiar with the proper customer service techniques to apply when opening a bar/restaurant but if I had to take a guess I’d say alienating first time customers isn’t going to win you return visits. Either be a loud music bar with a kinetic feel or a quiet music bar with a relaxing feel. Don’t change the tone of your bar based on what YOU think the person who just walked in is like! That’s the same uncomfortable flip floppy shit that lost Kerry the last election and look how good that turned out. Do you want 4 more years of George Bush, Rustik Tavern? I think not.”

[tags]rustik, rustiq, clinton hill, brooklyn, dekalb avenue, kent avenue, bed-stuy, pratt[/tags]

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