Whatever Happened
to "We the People"?
By RALPH
NADER -
Counterpunch March 02, 2010
The
twin swelling heads of Empire and Oligarchy are driving our country
into an ever-deepening corporate state, wholly incompatible with
democracy and the rule of law.
Once again the New York Times offers its readers the
evidence. In its February 25, 2010 issue, two page-one stories
confirm this relentless deterioration at the expense of so many
innocent people.
The lead story illustrates that the type of massive
speculation—casino capitalism, Business Week once called
it—in complex derivatives is still going strong and exploiting the
weak and powerless who pay the ultimate bill.
Titled “Banks Bet Greece Defaults on Debt They Helped Hide,” the
article shocks even readers hardened to tales of greed and abuse of
power. Here are the opening paragraphs: “Bets by some of the same
banks that helped Greece shroud its mounting debts may actually now
be pushing the nation closer to the brink of financial ruin.”
“Echoing the kind of trades that nearly toppled the American
Insurance International Group /AIG/, the increasingly popular
insurance against the risk of a Greek default is making it harder
for Athens to raise the money it needs to pay its bills, according
to traders and money managers.”
“These contracts, known as credit-default swaps, effectively let
banks and hedge funds wager on the financial equivalent of a
four-alarm fire: a default by a company, or in the case of Greece,
an entire country. If Greece reneges on its debts, traders who own
these swaps stand to profit.”
“It’s like buying fire insurance on your neighbor’s house—you create
an
incentive to burn down the house,”
said Philip Gisdakis, head of credit strategy at UniCredit in
Munich.
These credit-default swaps increase the dreaded “systemic risk” that
proliferates until it lands on the backs of taxpayers, workers and
savers who pay the price. And if Greece goes, Spain or Portugal or
Italy may be next and globalization will eventually bring the
rapacious effects of mindless speculation to our shores.
Greece got into financial trouble for a variety of reasons, but it
was widely reported that Goldman Sachs and other big banks showed
them, for generous fees, how to hide the country’s true financial
condition. Avarice at work.
Note two points. These derivatives are contracts involving hundreds
of billions of dollars and are essentially unregulated. These
transactions are also essentially untaxed, unlike Europe’s value
added tax on manufacturing, wholesale and retail purchases. The
absence of government restraints produces unlimited predation.
As astute investors in the real economy have said, when money for
speculation replaces money for investment, the real economy suffers
and so do real people. Remember the Wall Street collapse of 2008 and
who is paying for the huge Washington bailout.
The other story shows that the Presidency has become a self-driven
Empire outside the law and unaccountable to its citizens. The Times
reports “how far the C.I.A. has extended its extraordinary secret
war beyond the mountainous tribal belt and deep into Pakistan’s
sprawling cities.” Working with Pakistan’s counterpart agency, the
C.I.A. has had some cover to do what it wants in carrying out
“dozens of raids throughout Pakistan over the past year,” according
to the Times.
“Secret War” has been a phrase applied numerous times throughout the
C.I.A’s history, even though the agency was initially created by
Congress right after World War II to gather intelligence, not engage
in lethal operations worldwide.
Unrestrained by either Congress or the federal courts, Presidents
say they can and do order their subordinates to go anywhere in the
world, penetrate into any country, if they alone say it is necessary
to seize and destroy for what they believe is the national security.
American citizens abroad are not excluded. Above the law and beyond
the law spells the kind of lawlessness that the framers of our
constitution abhorred in King George and limited in our country’s
separation of powers.
Because our founders would not tolerate the President being
prosecutor, judge, jury and executioner, they placed the
war-declaration and appropriations authorities in the Congress.
Both Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama believe they have
unbridled discretion to engage in almost any overt or covert acts.
That is a definition of Empire that flouts international law and
more than one treaty which the United States helped shape and sign.
Equipped with remote and deadly technologies like drones flying over
Pakistan and Afghanistan by operators in Nevada, many civilians have
been slain, including those in wedding parties and homes. Still, it
is taking 15,000 soldiers (U.S. and Afghan) with the most modern
armaments to deal with three hundred Taliban fighters in Marja who
with many other Afghans, for various motivations, want us out of
their country. Former Marine Combat Captain Matthew Hoh described
these reasons in his detailed
resignation letter last fall.
Mr. Obama’s national security advisor, Ret. General James Jones
estimated that there are about 100 Al Qaeda in Afghanistan with the
rest migrating to other countries. And one might add, those whose
migrate are increasing their numbers because they cast themselves as
fighting to expel the foreign invaders.
So many capable observers have made this point: occupation by our
military fuels insurgencies and creates the conditions for more
recruits and more mayhem. Even Bush’s military and national security
people have made this point.
The American people must realize that their reckless government and
corporate contractors are banking lots of revenge among the occupied
regions that may come back to haunt. We have much more to lose by
flouting international law than the suicidal terrorists reacting to
what they believe is the West’s state terrorism against their people
and the West’s historical backing of dictatorships which oppress
their own population.
American was not designed for Kings and their runaway military
pursuits. How tragic that we have now come to this entrenched
imperium so loathed by the founding fathers and so forewarned by
George Washington’s enduring farewell address.
Where are “We the People”?
Ralph
Nader is the author of
Only the Super-Rich Can Save Us!, a novel.