Has the West Reached Its Limits?
by Richard C. Cook
http://globalresearch.ca/, September
14, 2008
"Train-wreck" doesn't even begin
to describe what is starting to happen to the U.S. today with
the financial crisis, an onrushing depression, and the failure
of George W. Bush's war policy as he is faced down by Iran and
the Russian bear.
But in an even broader sense, the West,
as a civilization, after a century of world war and the utter
failure of global finance capitalism, may have reached its limits.
Those with a vested interest in the status
quo dismiss any suggestion that something is wrong. This includes
Donald Luskin, author of an article in the Washington Post on
Sunday, September 14, titled: "A Nation of Exaggerators:
Quit Doling Out That Bad Economy Line."
Luskin writes, "The relentless drumbeat
of pessimism in the media and on the campaign trail" is "a
virus."
He continues: "Sure, there are trouble
spots in the economy, as the government takeover of mortgage giants
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and jitters about Wall Street firm
Lehman Brothers, amply demonstrate. And unemployment figures are
up a bit, too. None of this, however, is cause for depression
-- or exaggerated Depression comparisons."
Continue reading, and you find out who
Luskin is: a campaign adviser to John McCain.
We know that "where you stand depends
on where you sit"-and who pays you for advice. So is a catastrophic
meltdown coming?
If so, probably a majority of the people
in the world are thinking: "Serves them right." For
the last 500 years, the West has been striding across the globe,
armed to the teeth with firearms, warships, bombers, and-more
recently-depleted uranium, enforcing the "white man's burden"
by enslaving nations and peoples and confiscating everything of
value-ranging from art objects to gold to oil-that can be carried
away.
The financiers behind it all have also
used the diabolically clever practice of creating money "out
of thin air" to put the natives everywhere into debt, and,
when that has proven insufficient, of doing the same to their
own populations.
All this is rationalized by various brands
of racism, cultural superiority, social Darwinism, historical
determinism, "dominion of the Elect," "God's chosen
people," etc. Or, simply, "might makes right."
Some call it "The New World Order."
So today, we Americans, denizens of the
"land of the free and the home of the brave," victors
in two world wars, bearers of "democracy" to Afghanistan
and Iraq, allies of the brave Israelis who hold high the banner
of Judeo-Christian values among the ungrateful Palestinians-well,
we Americans owe our own bankers almost $70 trillion at most recent
count. With the government takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac, we owe holders of bad housing loans, including the governments
of China , Korea , and Japan , another few trillion.
The bluster of Kissinger, Brzezinski,
the Kristols, the Christian fundamentalists, and their paid-off
politicians and media millionaires notwithstanding, America -indeed,
the entire West-has been found out, perhaps even checkmated on
the world stage.
The Bush/Cheney wars in Afghanistan and
Iraq have blackened America 's name forever. Iran has called our
bluff. In Israel the gap between rich and poor is increasing as
much as in the U.S. According to an article by Ian S. Lustick,
the Palestinians have stood up to the Israelis to the point where
more Jews are emigrating from that country than are moving in,
and where those who remain are increasingly huddling around Tel
Aviv as a safe haven. (Ian S. Lustick, "Abandoning the Iron
Wall: ' Israel and the Middle Eastern Muck'," Middle East
Policy, Vo. XV, No. 3, Fall 2008.)
In the 1990s, the European bankers used
U.S. and NATO forces to dismember Yugoslavia so George Soros and
the Rothschilds could gobble up Balkan resources. But that strategy
is failing in the Caucasus, where the Russians fought back against
the genocidal attack by Dick Cheney's poodle, Mikheil Saakashvili,
the New York-trained attorney the CIA got elected as the president
of Georgia .
And now the people of Ukraine , the "Little
Russians," realizing what the West has in store for them,
are rushing back into the Slavic fold and may be only a year or
so away from reuniting with their "Great Russian" cousins
across the border.
What is telling is to watch the Western
financier press, chiefly the Washington Post and the New York
Times, fume about Russian prime minister Vladimir Putin and his
"authoritarian" manner. An example is the article by
Times correspondent Ellen Barry on Putin's September 11 press
conference in Moscow . She wrote, "In three-and-a-half hours,
in tones that were alternatively pugilistic and needy, Vladimir
V. Putin tried to explain himself."
I'm sorry, Ms. Barry. You and your editors
may think your writing is cute, but Vladimir Putin is the foremost
figure on the world stage today. He will remain so after George
W. Bush leaves the White House disgraced.
Putin is heir to an epochal movement of
patriots who began in the 1970s to take back Russia from within.
It started with a base of operations within the KGB and the Orthodox
Church, led to Gorbachev's glasnost in the 1980s, and culminated
in the Second Russian Revolution of 1991. At that point, the Western
financiers gleefully rushed in to support an assault from the
Russian "oligarchs" who were looting Russia of everything
it owned.
The oligarchs were the shock troops of
a financier assault that had already begun to overlap in the West
with the Russian Mafia. Cheered on by the Washington Post and
aided by academic advisors from places like Harvard, this international
syndicate nearly destroyed Russia during the 1990s. But when Putin
was appointed interim president by Boris Yelstin in 1999, and
after winning the presidential election of 2000 in his own right,
he began to fight back.
From the mid-1970s to today, thousands
of Russian gangsters, along with many hard-line Bolsheviks/Stalinists,
were allowed to emigrate. Many settled in the U.S. and are here
today, and many more settled in Israel . In fact, one reason the
price of condos in New York , Miami , Tel Aviv, and elsewhere
has inflated so much reportedly is the flood of cash from racketeering.
The crooks have allied themselves with
the Colombian drug cartels and have heavily infiltrated the world's
financial systems, even setting up their own banks for laundering
money and speculating in the commodities markets.
Today, Putin is cleaning out the remaining
gangster class. His efforts reached a milestone in January with
the arrest in Moscow of Semion Mogilevich, called "the world's
most dangerous man."
Putin has declared that the world will
not be governed in a "unipolar" manner; i.e. by the
U.S. military as the police force for the global financiers. This
does not mean Russia has to be our enemy. In fact the world would
be much better off, and much safer, if we joined with Russia as
allies in keeping the peace.
But to do that our system would have to
change, because finance capitalism is far too unstable to coexist
with other nations as equals. It must either grow or die, because
it always needs new victims to pay the interest on its usury practices
and to finance its speculative balloons. As a last resort, it
needs the kind of financial institution bailouts being engineered
by Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson, where the only remaining
stopgap is borrowing from public funds and adding to the national
debt.
Once economic growth stops, as has now
happened, and all the bubbles to restart it have blown up, as
has also happened, the end really is nigh. Especially if the host-the
U.S. -is bankrupt.
What is coming at us today isn't just
another downturn. If people like McCain adviser Donald Luskin
doubt it, maybe, instead of writing campaign propaganda, they
should ask the fired CEOs of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the stockholders
of Lehman Brothers, whose shares have dropped ninety percent in
less than a year, and the millions who are losing their homes.
Presidential candidates Barack Obama and
John McCain are calling for "change." Well, if I were
standing on a beach with a 100-foot tsunami roaring in my direction,
I would call for change too. Except I would not be standing around
arguing about the meaning of the words "lipstick on a pig."
Richard C. Cook is a former U.S. federal
government analyst, whose career included service with the U.S.
Civil Service Commission, the Food and Drug Administration, the
Carter White House, NASA, and the U.S. Treasury Department.
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