The New Depression Officially Arrives!

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Perhaps some of our financial boffins can help me out here…have all of our repressions recessions since the great depression followed in the wake of a long stretch of Republican rule? As I understand it, it takes a while for the economy to react to whatever the latest voodoo mumbo-jumbo the ruling class Republicans have invented to get richer on the backs of the poor and middle class to kick in and really screw us ….after putting the sand in the Vaseline. Is that correct? It IS possible that I am a little, shall we say biased, when it comes to our fiends from across the aisle.

Many fine blogistians have commented on how the zeitgeist is feeling very 1929ish these days. And I think it is safe to say that we can blame the latest round of tax-cuts that even some RICH people say are grossly unfair, the de-regulation and wink, wink, nudge, nudge Robber Baron approach to corporate greed profits, revving up the war machine to give the MIC, and the loansharks we borrow from to pay the MIC, our collective credit card, and the general anti-bonhomie of “I got mine fuck you jack” atmosphere of any long period of Republican “government” looting the economy, for the current, disturbing rash of foreclosures, inflation, and general financial panic.

But now….amidst all the speculation and angst that goes with our economy being SO bloody strong six months ago (a purposely perpetrated illusion due solely to the prevarications, manipulations and masturbations of the Bushco pyramid scheme economic deception) to the current atmosphere of waiting for the other Manolo Blahnik to descend and crush the last remaining life from the middle class and spur the poor to long for the good old days when they were just REALLY poor and not incredibly, impossibly, soul crushingly poor, we have our first solid cultural evidence that the curtain of financial despair and desperation has descended.

Bonnie and Clyde are back

The bad news? Financial ruin, families suffering, (more) children starving….and the rich getting richer, and enjoying a lavish lifestyle while those children go to bed hungry.

The good news? New movies, books….and myths like Bonnie and Clyde and Tom Joad, born out of the kind of suffering, desperate creativity that has always been spurred when the rich decide to manipulate the economy to shit all over the poor and middle class.

Invisible hand my ass.

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This essay has been sponsored by 49 years of brewing anger at social injustice in the richest country in the world.

29 comments

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  1. I think it is safe to say that they are….

    • OPOL on January 25, 2008 at 18:19

    what’s a boffin?  ðŸ™‚

  2. They used to tell me I was building a dream, and so I followed the mob,

    When there was earth to plow were options to trade, or guns to bear loans to sell, I was always there right on the job.

    They used to tell me I was building a dream, with peace and glory ahead,

    Why should I be standing in line, just waiting for bread?

    Once I built a railroad hedge fund, I made it run, made it race against time.

    Once I built a railroad hedge fund; now it’s done. Brother, can you spare a dime?

    Once I built a tower liability structure, up to the sun, brick, and rivet, and lime tranche, and lien, and subprime;

    Once I built a tower liability structure, now it’s done. Brother, can you spare a dime?

    Once in khaki suits, gee we looked swell,

    Full of that Yankee Doodly Dum,

    Half a million boots went slogging through Hell,

    And I was the kid with the drum!

    Say, don’t you remember, they called me Al; it was Al all the time.

    Why don’t you remember, I’m your pal? Buddy, can you spare a dime?

    Once in khaki suits, gee we looked swell,

    Full of that Yankee Doodly Dum,

    Half a million boots went slogging through Hell,

    And I was the kid with the drum!

    Say, don’t you remember, they called me Al; it was Al all the time.

    Say, don’t you remember, I’m your pal? Buddy, can you spare a dime?

  3. if tax cuts worked to stimulate the economy, we wouldnt have a recession, now would we?

    im going to get all capitalistic and opportunistic on your asses, though….im startin’ me a pitchfork-sharpening business!!!!!!!!!!!  

    • Edger on January 25, 2008 at 19:17

    for 800 bucks? No too many I hope…

    I guess there is some truth to the old saying I just made up:

    When you sell your soul you usually get paid for it with something equally worthless”

  4. call it “continuous improvement”.  I think of it as Satan’s child learning generationally from “mistakes”.

    You say it’s 1929ish, true but it’s also 1939ish ie Nazi Germany in Berlinish.  Now combine the two at the same time.

    Definitely, 30 pack on the way home.

  5. my head’s still too full of flu pud to know syntax from estate tax, but I’m gonna let some wags tell you the story…

    Knees knocked last week from sea to shining sea as the shape-shifting monster of economic reality cut a swathe of destruction through the markets and financial ranks. The exact nature of this giant beast still remained largely concealed in a fog of accounting gambits, policy blusters, and reporting dodges, but a few intrepid scouts who glimpsed the behemoth up close said it looked like Godzilla with Herbert Hoover’s face.

    George W. Bush, tried to appease the beast by offering each American adult the dollar equivalent of half a month’s mortgage payment — with the exhortation to drive forthwith to the nearest WalMart and blow it on salad shooters and plasma TV’s — but Hooverzilla just laughed at the offering and pounded the equity markets further into the dust of loss, while the “bank-like” guardians of wealth lay in the drainage ditches bleeding from their ears and eyes.

    My favorite moment was seeing Treasury Secretary Paulson and one of his fellow shaved-head deputies at a press conference rostrum frantically trying to calm the news media rabble like a couple of extraplanetary high priests from a Star Trek episode — the batteries having run down in their laser wands, and their incantations (“liquidity! liquidity!) veering into mystifying glossolalia.

    / snip

    The United States is so broke, its people at every level from the Federal Reserve on down don’t know whether to shit or go blind. The homeowners cringing in the media rooms of their 5000-square-foot personal family resorts don’t know how long they can stay put microwaving pepperoni hot pockets with the default clock ticking. The mortgage “servicers” don’t know how they will persuade interested parties like, say, the Illinois State Cafeteria Workers’ Pension Fund (holder of X-amount of mortgage-backed securities underwritten by, say, Merrill Lynch or Deutsche Bank) to foreclose on properties scattered everywhere from Key West to Bainbridge Island — or if there is actually any legal mechanism known to man that would make it possible to “work out” the sliced-and-diced collateral. The millions of maxed-out credit card holders and the issuers of their plastic are stuck together paddling a leaky tub in a sea of troubles every bit as wide, deep, and polluted as the one the mortgage junkies and their enablers are sinking in. The developers of malls, office parks, and power centers are weeping into their filing cabinets as the harsh daylight of insolvency stops the orgy of “consumption” and the retail tenants pack up their unsellable goodies for the liquidators, and the rent checks stop arriving in the mail, and the notes on this mall and that mall enter the eerie realm of “non-performance.” And, of course, there are the genius wonder boyz and Wall Street playerz whose algorithms and turpitudes underwrote the script of this horror show — for all I know they’ll end up laughing into sugary skull drinks on a beach in the Cayman Islands, or doing Chinese fire drills in federal prison …  James Kunstler 1/21/08

    Even the Bush Cabal has suffered unintended consequences through the practice of its economic policies, namely the enormous accrual of debt and the cost of servicing that debt under the current regime has forced the United States to become dependent on the money of China, Japan, Saudi Arabia and Russia, the principal purchasers of U.S. debt, for its continuing existence as a nation state. However, what we have seen more recently is the trickle-down effect of Bushonian economic policies, in that even corporate America is becoming increasingly dependent on foreign monies to stay in business.

    What’s important, however, is that not only has corporate America become dependent on de facto bailouts by foreign capital, but it is foreign capital from the same countries that the United States government is also dependent on.

     Al Martin 1/14/08 (subscription)

    China tries to stop global inflation but fails because the US, Japan and Europe all want global inflation. Time to discuss the Horns of Dilemma again and to use the analogy of water flow and dams. World stock markets are collapsing rapidly alongside real estate markets. This is classic and very much like the timeline for the Great Depression. Only in this case, the US is more like Germany or England back then. We are the debtor nation causing this collapse. But we have a lot of help from our ‘allies’, all of whom have trade surpluses with the US. And the US Congress just got a report about how China is buying a lot of our government debt. No mention of #1 buyer, Japan, of course.

    /snip

    China is doing the opposite of what the US is doing right now. China has increased bank reserves so they are now much higher than the US, Europe and Japan have today. This is very significant. It changes the flow of the red ink. In other words, China has tried to drain the ocean-sized lake for they figured out [I have to take a laugh here for they heard me rant about all this during the Reagan years] the first sign of an impending dam collapse is the sudden rise in the price of necessities like energy and food.

    The US, being run by criminals and traitors, won’t do what China is doing because the dam operators have unilaterally announced, they don’t think the waves of red ink spilling over the top of the dam means anything at all. Indeed, the value of manufactured goods isn’t rising so why worry about it? They don’t want to gage the inflation of things people must have to stay alive as important, only the things we want when we are flush are counted.   Elaine Supkis

    Just for a sampling.  In other words, the past 50 years of putatively fighting communism have resolved with huge public debt for same “fight,” millions dead worldwide (including Viet Nam), and the current sick excuse for leadership having turned to the very “enemies” (e.g. communist China who, BTW, are still bullish on communism) we “fought” for huge loans to pay off said commie-fighting debts.  Got that?  Talk about traitors.

    Yeah.  We’ve sold the US mortgage industry to the “commies.”  Meaning that 50 years was for nothing.  Guess the US owes one huge apology to the whole world for slaughtering millions for nothing, eh?

  6. Not to worry — Bush got us a “fix” when he visited King Abdullah.

    Bush’s recent trip to the Middle East (Jan. 8th – Jan. 16th), supposedly an effort to promote peace in Palestine, hype talk to leaders of various Middle East countries about the danger of Iran, etc., also had to do with a trip to visit his ole’ buddy in Saudi Arabia, King Abdullah. We know that Bush effectuated a sale of $123 million worth of “smart bombs,” pending approval of Congress, within 30 days. (A very questionable sale at that, in view of Saudi Arabia’s presence in Iraq, aiding the Sunnis down the line. In fact, the Saudi Arabians represent the greatest number of foreigners in Iraq.)

    But, as always, we never get the full truth about anything. Want to know why oil will sell for $100 a barrel? Want to understand why we’ve been screwed again? Want to know why Bush left King Abdullah carrying back many, many baubles of diamond and gold gifts?

    Looks like the sub-prime mortgage market implosion has cost banks over $100 billion in losses.

    We owe about $3 trillion to the Saudis, the Chinese, the Japanese and others, with a total federal debt of more than $5 trillion.

    So Bush decided to ask his good ole’ buddy, King Abdullah, for some moolah to help out the US Treasury, Citibank, Merrill-Lynch, the top owner being King Abdullah’s nephew, Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, and other financially hit institutions.

    . . . . Bush needs the Saudis to charge us big bucks for oil. The Saudis can’t lend the US Treasury and Citibank hundreds of billions of US dollars unless they first get these US dollars from the US. The high price of oil is, in effect, a tax levied by Bush but collected by the oil industry and the Gulf kingdoms to fund our multi-trillion dollar governmental and private debt-load. . . .

    . . . . Yesterday, King Abdullah’s nephew, Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, already the top individual owner of Citibank, joined the Kuwait government’s Investment Authority and others to mainline a $12.5 billion injection of capital into the New York bank. Also this week, the Abu Dhabi government and the Saudi Olayan Group are taking a $6.6 billion chunk of Merrill-Lynch. It’s no mere coincidence that Bush is in Abdullah’s tent when the money-changers made the deal just outside it.

    source

    The price for all this “help” is not CHEAP.  

    . . . . ,the Gulf princes demand their pound of flesh, exacting a 7% payment from Citibank and 9% from Merrill. That hefty interest bill then pushes adjustable rate mortgages into the stratosphere and pushes manufacturing into China by making borrowing and energy costs impossible to overcome. Forget the cost of health care: General Motors’ interest burden quintupled in just two years.

    As the great economist Paddy Chayefsky wrote in the film The Network:

    “The Arabs have taken billions of dollars out of this country, and now they must put it back. … It is ebb and flow, tidal gravity…. There are no nations, there are no peoples. There is only one vast and immense, interwoven, multi-national dominion of petro-dollars. … There is no America. There is no ‘democracy.’ The world is a business, one vast and ecumenical holding company, for whom all men will work.”

    Keeping the “cycle” alive and well.

    The FlowIn 2005, the US consumer paid Arab and OPEC nations a quarter trillion dollars ($252 billion) for oil – and the USA received back 100% of it – and then some ($311 billion) via Gulf nations’ investment in US Treasury bills and purchases of US businesses and property. Bush’s trip to Abdullah’s tent is all about this vast business of keeping this petro-dollar treadmill spinning.

    The Bush Administration, rather than tax Americans to cover our deficits or make the banks suffer the consequences of their predatory lending practices, is allowing the Saudis to charge us big time at the pump with the understanding they will lend it all back to us – so the party never has to stop. . . .

    So Bush walks out of King Abdullah’s tent with all kinds of baubles, diamond and gold, after having shoved the “hose” up our arses.  Muther focker!!!!!

  7. For you and others who seek to read about finance but get snarled up in WallStreetese, the ever-readable James Kunstler is a find.  I can’t resist quoting from another column here, his forecast for 2008:

    For the tiny fraction of people who actually pay attention to real events — those, for instance, who know the difference between Narnia and Kandahar — the final hours of 2007 leading into the fog-shrouded abyss of 2008 must induce great racking shudders of nausea. Has there ever been a society so exquisitely rigged for implosion? The whole listing, creaking, reeking edifice stands like one of those obsolete Las Vegas pleasure palaces awaiting a mere pulse of electrons to ignite a thousand explosive charges perfectly placed to blow away the structural supports.

    The inertia holding everything together that I described in last year’s forecast finally melted away at mid-summer and events began spooling out of control. Specifically, the massive tonnage of debt-backed securities circulating through the financial sector stood revealed for the mostly worthless bales of paper they truly are, and the investment community was left suspended in mid-air, grinning unconvincingly, like Wile E. Coyote thirteen yards beyond the edge of the mesa, with a sputtering grenade in each hand and an anvil tied to his ankles.

    /snip

    One thing the public doesn’t get about the housing debacle is that it is not just the low point in a regular cycle — it is the end of the suburban phase of US history. We won’t be building anymore of it, and those employed in its development will have to find something else to do. Now, unfortunately the whole point of the housing bubble was not really to put X-million people in so many vinyl and chipboard boxes, but rather to ramp up a suburban sprawl-building industry as a replacement for America’s dwindling manufacturing economy. This stratagem ran into the implacable force of Peak Oil, which not only puts the schnitz on America’s whole Happy Motoring / suburban nexus, but implies a pervasive trend for contraction in everything from the daily distances we can travel to the the very core idea of regular economic growth per se — at least in the way we have understood it through the age of industrial capital.  James Kunstler “Forecast for 2008”

  8. have always been extractive with regard to the commons at all levels…..

    they have also been unremitting in the complete comodification of life…….

    no more free goods…..

    everything is an economic good…..

    everything used to be a free good…..

    no more commons…..

    most of the earth was a difusely organized commons……

    in the recent past the capital class has favored the repugs due to their meme of worshiping material appetite….

    however in the nineties the dems joined them, maybe earlier…..

    and now there is very little difference and they trade the blame for their mutual recessions and economic rapes…

    generally there has been congressional complicity in the boom bust cycle of capital formation and its impact on the poor and marginalized….

    no matter who is in office they clearly are the bought handservants of the process of capital formation and its current set of inheritors…..

    it is the new world order….

    and its name is post technological fuedalism…..

    aka wage slavery…..

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