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Prognosis 2012:
Towards a New World Social Order
by Richard K. Moore
Source:
www.globalresearch.ca
Historical
background – the establishment of capitalist
supremacy
When the Industrial Revolution began in Britain,
in the late 1700s, there was lots of money to
be made by investing in factories and mills, by
opening up new markets, and by gaining control
of sources of raw materials. The folks who had
the most money to invest, however, were not so
much in Britain but more in Holland. Holland was
the leading Western power in the 1600s, and its
bankers were the leading capitalists. In pursuit
of profit, Dutch capital flowed to the British
stock market, and thus the Dutch funded the rise
of Britain, who subsequently eclipsed Holland
both economically and geopolitically.
In this way British industrialism came to be
dominated by wealthy investors, and capitalism
became the dominant economic system. This led
to a major social transformation. Britain had
been essentially an aristocratic society, dominated
by landholding families. As capitalism became
dominant economically, capitalists became dominant
politically. Tax structures and import-export
policies were gradually changed to favor investors
over landowners.
It was no longer economically viable to simply
maintain an estate in the countryside: one needed
to develop it, turn it to more productive use.
Victorian dramas are filled with stories of aristocratic
families who fall on hard times, and are forced
to sell off their properties. For dramatic purposes,
this decline is typically attributed to a failure
in some character, a weak eldest son perhaps.
But in fact the decline of aristocracy was part
of a larger social transformation brought on by
the rise of capitalism.
The business of the capitalist is the management
of capital, and this management is generally handled
through the mediation of banks and brokerage houses.
It should not be surprising that investment bankers
came to occupy the top of the hierarchy of capitalist
wealth and power. And in fact, there are a handful
of banking families, including the Rothschilds
and the Rockefellers, who have come to dominate
economic and political affairs in the Western
world.
Unlike aristocrats, capitalists are not tied
to a place, or to the maintenance of a place.
Capital is disloyal and mobile – it flows
to where the most growth can be found, as it flowed
from Holland to Britain, then from Britain to
the USA, and most recently from everywhere to
China. Just as a copper mine might be exploited
and then abandoned, so under capitalism a whole
nation can be exploited and then abandoned, as
we see in the rusting industrial areas of America
and Britain.
This detachment from place leads to a different
kind of geopolitics under capitalism, as compared
to aristocracy. A king goes to war when he sees
an advantage to his nation in doing so. Historians
can 'explain' the wars of pre-capitalist days,
in terms of the aggrandizement of monarchs and
nations.
A capitalist stirs up a war in order to make
profits, and in fact our elite banking families
have financed both sides of most military conflicts
since at least World War 1. Hence historians have
a hard time 'explaining' World War 1 in terms
of national motivations and objectives.
In pre-capitalist days warfare was like chess,
each side trying to win. Under capitalism warfare
is more like a casino, where the players battle
it out as long as they can get credit for more
chips, and the real winner always turns out to
be the house – the bankers who finance the
war and decide who will be the last man standing.
Not only are wars the most profitable of all capitalist
ventures, but by choosing the winners, and managing
the reconstruction, the elite banking families
are able, over time, to tune the geopolitical
configuration to suit their own interests.
Nations and populations are but pawns in their
games. Millions die in wars, infrastructures are
destroyed, and while the world mourns, the bankers
are counting their winnings and making plans for
their postwar reconstruction investments.
From their position of power, as the financiers
of governments, the banking elite have over time
perfected their methods of control. Staying always
behind the scenes, they pull the strings controlling
the media, the political parties, the intelligence
agencies, the stock markets, and the offices of
government. And perhaps their greatest lever of
power is their control over currencies. By means
of their central-bank scam, they engineer boom
and bust cycles, and they print money from nothing
and then loan it at interest to governments. The
power of the banking elites is both absolute and
subtle...
"Some of the biggest men in the United
States are afraid of something. They know there
is a power somewhere, so organised, so subtle,
so watchful, so interlocked, so complete, so
pervasive that they had better not speak above
their breath when they speak in condemnation
of it."
-- President Woodrow Wilson
The end of growth – capitalists
vs. capitalism
It was always inevitable, on a finite planet,
that there would be a limit to economic growth.
Industrialization has enabled us to rush headlong
toward that limit over the past two centuries.
Production has become ever more efficient, markets
have become ever more global, and finally we have
reached the point where the paradigm of perpetual
growth can no longer be maintained.
Indeed, that point was actually reached by about
1970. Since then capital has not so much sought
growth through increased production, but rather
by extracting greater returns from relatively
flat production levels. Hence globalization, which
moved production to low-waged areas, providing
greater profit margins. Hence privatization, which
transfers revenue streams to investors that formerly
went to national treasuries. Hence derivative
and currency markets, which create the electronic
illusion of economic growth, without actually
producing anything in the real world.
If one studies the collapse of civilizations,
one learns that failure-to-adapt is fatal. Continuing
on the path of pursuing growth would be such a
failure to adapt. And if one reads the financial
pages these days, one finds that it is full of
doomsayers. We read that the Eurozone is doomed,
and Greece is just the first casualty. We read
that stimulus packages are not working, unemployment
is increasing, the dollar is in deep trouble,
growth continues to stagnate, business real estate
will be the next bubble to burst, etc. It is easy
to get the impression that capitalism is failing
to adapt, and that our societies are in danger
of collapsing into chaos.
Such an impression would be partly right and
partly wrong. In order to understand the real
situation we need to make a clear distinction
between the capitalist elite and capitalism itself.
Capitalism is an economic system driven by growth;
the capitalist elite are the folks who have managed
to gain control of the Western world while capitalism
has operated over the past two centuries. The
capitalist system is past its sell-by date, the
banking elite are well aware of that fact –
and they are adapting.
Capitalism is a vehicle that helped bring the
bankers to absolute power, but they have no more
loyalty to that system than they have to place,
or to anything or anyone else. As mentioned earlier,
they think on a global scale, with nations and
populations as pawns. They define what money is
and they issue it, just like the banker in a game
of Monopoly. They can also make up a new game
with a new kind of money. They have long outgrown
any need to rely on any particular economic system
in order to maintain their power. Capitalism was
handy in an era of rapid growth. For an era of
non-growth, a different game is being prepared.
Thus, capitalism has not been allowed to die
a natural death. First it was put on a life-support
system, as mentioned above, with globalization,
privatization, derivative markets, etc. Then it
was injected with a euthanasia death-drug, in
the form of toxic derivatives. And when the planned
collapse occurred, rather than industrial capitalism
being bailed out, the elite bankers were bailed
out. It's not that the banks were too big to fail,
rather the bankers were too politically powerful
to fail. They made governments an offer they couldn't
refuse.
The outcome of the trillion-dollar bailouts was
easily predictable, although you wouldn't know
that from reading the financial pages. National
budgets were already stretched, and they certainly
did not have reserves available to service the
bailouts. Thus the bailouts amounted to nothing
more than the taking on of immense new debts by
governments. In order to fulfill the bailout commitments,
the money would need to be borrowed from the same
financial institutions that were being bailed
out.
With the bailouts, Western governments delivered
their nations in hock to the bankers. The governments
are now in perpetual debt bondage to the bankers.
Rather than the banks going into receivership,
governments are now in receivership. Obama's cabinet
and advisors are nearly all from Wall Street;
they are in the White House so they can keep close
watch over their new acquisition, the once sovereign
USA. Perhaps they will soon be presiding over
its liquidation.
The bankers are now in control of national budgets.
They say what can be funded and what can't. When
it comes to financing their wars and weapons production,
no limits are set. When it comes to public services,
then we are told deficits must be held in check.
The situation was expressed very well by Brian
Cowan, Ireland's government chief. In the very
same week that Ireland pledged 200 billion Euro
to bailout the banks, he was being asked why he
was cutting a few million Euro off of critical
service budgets. He replied, "I'm sorry,
but the funds just aren't there". Of course
they're not there! The treasury was given away.
The cupboard is bare.
As we might expect, the highest priority for
budgets is servicing the debt to the banks. Just
as most of the third world is in debt slavery
to the IMF, so the whole West is now in debt slavery
to its own central banks. Greece is the harbinger
of what is to happen everywhere.
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