choff wrote:Who bell's the cat?
I presume you mean who takes charge and reforms the mess before it's too bloody late. In the case of the U.S., congress has the authority, but they're all bought and paid for by the banksters. Same thing in my country, and the bankster's will fight to the death in maintaining control of seigniorage, no matter how much their unrestrained greed causes them to take down everybody else with them.
We actually had public control of the banking system in Canada from 1938 to 1974, the gross national debt was flatlined at $100 Billion the whole time after WW2. Then we drank the Basil koolaid, switched to private borrowing to fund the debt and it swelled to $600 Billion. In total, the actual total combined shortfall in revenue, that is, the principal on that national debt from Canada's inception over 143 years in $200 Billion. We've made $2 Trillion in interest payments, still have a debt of approx. $500 Billion.
Isn't compound interest grand. Thing is, try finding out what the actual principal, that is, the actual combined total shortfall in revenue is, for the U.S., as a percentage of the national debt. They've probably buried the number so deep that down it's almost impossible to find. They never talk about it in government budget statements, they distract with talk about austerity or borrowing to stimulate growth.
Incidently, this demonstrates how much control the financial industry has over the mainstream media, the closest you will have heard to this debate was the trillion dollar coin story, alt media will cover it though.
The number they buried is called "the debt." It's not really very buried.
Thing is the Republican-Amurcn teatraitors who currently control the House of Representatives keep trying to keep Iraq out of it so they don't have to explain how they let Bush spend two trillion dollars on piddly little Iraq.
And you didn't say what to do.
I read the Economic Times, DeLong and Krugman, the Economic Policy Institute, and the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, along with Bonddad. They say what to do.
I did leave one thing out above: mortgage relief for overhanging mortgages. I think it's about time. I think we should strip their profits from the banksters (in this case not the Koch brothers, except as they're involved with the banksters which I don't think is much) and pass them out to the mortgage holders (the banksters) to pay off a very substantial portion of everyone's mortgage that is above the property value, if not all of it. Also I think a fund should be established to compensate the victims of foreclosures due to overhanging mortgages for the last six years. So the banksters lost half theirs, and the homeowners lost half theirs (property values compared to their buying price), and the overhangs go away and the banksters are more willing to lend to people without overhangs.
And see the nice thing is, this just takes some of the ill-gotten gains over here, and cancels some of the unfair debt over there with it, meanwhile providing restitution for the fraud. The public doesn't pay a nickel. The gummint doesn't pay a nickel. Even the banksters don't pay a nickel; they just admit they're never going to get paid a million bucks for a hundred thousand dollar house. They still have a hundred thousand dollar mortgage on it. That's fair. Both sides did something stupid; both sides pay; neither one pays so much it kills them.
You wanna have a revolution. Ain't gonna happen. This is the same argument they made during stagflation, which got both of us and Britain too. Keynes isn't wrong; just incomplete. If you apply the principles properly, you'll find that they still apply, and that (unlike the monetarists) neo-Keynesian economics has solutions to a zero-bounded credit crisis. Here's the paper that says so:
http://utip.gov.utexas.edu/papers/Colla ... ivered.pdf
You can't swap out your monetary system. If you can replace it at all it's slowly.
We need a directorate of science, and we need it to be voted on only by scientists. You don't get to vote on reality. Get over it. Elected officials that deny the findings of the Science Directorate are subject to immediate impeachment for incompetence.