Deregulation of electric power transmission gave us an electric power transmission criminal organization named Enron. Areas like Dubai that exist only to launder money (no questions asked) made it possible for Enron’s criminal activity to continue undiscovered for a time.
It is amazing what can happen when you put Billions of dollars into a legitimate business and walk away without ever taking a look at what they are doing with it. I am talking about the deregulation of international financial markets resulting in organized crime becoming the major player in international financial markets.
In my view an unintended outcome of the deregulation theories of Conservative Republicans has, along with the break up of the Soviet Union, led to the unprecedented control of the world economy by international organized crime.
The implementation of Conservative Economic Theory did not work in the early Twentieth Century. Those “Robber Barons” were aptly named. And the USA needed a “New Deal” from Franklin Roosevelt to dig out from under the devastation caused by the Conservatives. It remains to be seen whether voters will understand that the present economic failure of the United States is due to putting Conservative theories into use. Or, will they will blame it on immigration, environmentalists or gay marriage.
We need some kind of “New Deal” to break the downward economic “flat spin” that our country and most of the world economy is in. We may need a world wide “New Deal” to get us out of the coming “Great (Twenty First Century) Depression. Can we do it or will we be stuck with a world of nations that have morphed into extensions of crime syndicates.
From Today’s New York Times in Opinion- Tom Friedman:
June 29, 2008
Op-Ed Columnist
Anxious in America
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
Just a few months ago, the consensus view was that Barack Obama would need to choose a hard-core national-security type as his vice presidential running mate to compensate for his lack of foreign policy experience and that John McCain would need a running mate who was young and sprightly to compensate for his age. Come August, though, I predict both men will be looking for a financial wizard as their running mates to help them steer America out of what could become a serious economic tailspin.
I do not believe nation-building in Iraq is going to be the issue come November — whether things get better there or worse. If they get better, we’ll ignore Iraq more; if they get worse, the next president will be under pressure to get out quicker. I think nation-building in America is going to be the issue.
It’s the state of America now that is the most gripping source of anxiety for Americans, not Al Qaeda or Iraq. Anyone who thinks they are going to win this election playing the Iraq or the terrorism card — one way or another — is, in my view, seriously deluded. Things have changed.
Up to now, the economic crisis we’ve been in has been largely a credit crisis in the capital markets, while consumer spending has kept reasonably steady, as have manufacturing and exports. But with banks still reluctant to lend even to healthy businesses, fuel and food prices soaring and home prices declining, this is starting to affect consumers, shrinking their wallets and crimping spending. Unemployment is already creeping up and manufacturing creeping down.
The straws in the wind are hard to ignore: If you visit any car dealership in America today you will see row after row of unsold S.U.V.’s. And if you own a gas guzzler already, good luck. On Thursday, The Palm Beach Post ran an article on your S.U.V. options: “Continue to spend upward of $100 for a fill-up. Sell or trade in the vehicle for a fraction of the original cost. Or hold out and park the truck in the driveway for occasional use in hopes the market will turn around.” Just be glad you don’t own a bus. Montgomery County, Md., where I live, just announced that more children were going to have to walk to school next year to save money on bus fuel.
On top of it all, our bank crisis is not over. Two weeks ago, Goldman Sachs analysts said that U.S. banks may need another $65 billion to cover more write-downs of bad mortgage-related instruments and potential new losses if consumer loans start to buckle. Since President Bush came to office, our national savings have gone from 6 percent of gross domestic product to 1 percent, and consumer debt has climbed from $8 trillion to $14 trillion.
My fellow Americans: We are a country in debt and in decline — not terminal, not irreversible, but in decline. Our political system seems incapable of producing long-range answers to big problems or big opportunities.
READ THE REST OF THE ARTICLE HERE:
http://www.nytimes.com/
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