Date: Sat, 13 Dec 1997 06:21:17 -0800 (PST)
From: James Shannon <jamesjs@unixg.ubc.ca>
To: mai-not@flora.org
Subject: Wall Street's Financial Terrorism (a column for CHRONICLES magazine) (fwd) Message-ID: <Pine.GSO.3.95q.971211004620.21884A-100000@interchg.ubc.ca> Sender: owner-mai-not-mail@flora.org Precedence: bulk

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 05 Dec 1997 03:47:21 -0700
From: Bob Djurdjevic <bobdj@djurdjevic.com>
Subject: Wall Street's Financial Terrorism (a column for CHRONICLES magazine)

Wall Street' financial terrorism: new weapons, same old imperialism

By Bob Djurdjevic, Chronicles, [5 December, 1997]

DUNSBOROUGH, Western Australia—Parallels between the British Empire and the New World Order Empire are striking. It's just that the British crown relied on brute force to achieve its objectives, while the NWO elite mostly use financial terrorism (except for occasional raw power demonstrations, such as in the Gulf War or in Bosnia). The Great Asian Banking Crisis has just accentuated both the similarities and the differences between the two empires.

The British Empire was built by colonizing other countries, seizing their natural resources, and shipping them to England to feed the British industrialists' factories. In the wake of the red coats invasions, local cultures were often trampled and replaced by a more progressive British way of life.

The Wall Street-dominated NWO Empire is being built by colonizing other countries with foreign loans or investments. When the fish is firmly on the hook, the NWO financial terrorists pull the plug, leaving the unsuspecting victim high and dry. And begging to be rescued. In comes the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Its bailout recipes—privatization, trade liberalization and other austerity reforms—amount to seizing the target countries' natural and other resources, and turning them over to the NWO elites—just as surely as the British Empire did by using cruder methods.

In the wake of the IMF invasions, local cultures are also under assault the world over, just as in Queen Victoria's time, being replaced by the more progressive Western (read materialistic) way of life.

Whether McDonald's, Coca-Cola, Nike or the Hollywood film studios really represent a progressive culture is a dubious notion even in the U.S., let alone in East Asia, Russia or elsewhere in the world. Just as is the perception that these multinational companies are American—presumably because of their headquarters' U.S. addresses. The truth of the matter is that these Princes of the 20th Century honor only one flag—the Almighty Dollar. As a result, the Main Street Americans are among the NWO's exploited victims, just as are their brethren in East Asia or Russia.

Such misconceptions aside, there is no question, that McDonald's, Coke, Nike or Hollywood represent the visible symbols of the NWO's neo-colonialism. They are the innocent-looking facades which mask the destructive work of Wall Street's financial terrorists which operate deep in the bowels of national economies.

The financial turmoil in East Asia is a case in point, Malaysia's Prime Minister, Dr. Mahathir Mohamad, said on November 24 at the APEC (Asia Pacific Economic Community) conference in Vancouver, Canada. Two decades of growth was wiped out in two weeks... Vibrant economies have been reduced to begging for aid from the IMF. Dr. Mahathir added that the free markets were a recipe for slavery.

True. But during the post-Cold War market globalization and expansion (1990-1996), the Asia/Pacific region attracted about $375 billion in foreign investments, according to UNCTAD, a United Nations agency. That's about 74 cents of every dollar the multinational companies had invested anywhere in the developing world ($505 billion). And it is almost a quarter of all foreign investments made in the world during the same period ($1.6 trillion—including the developed countries).

The rate of growth of the Asia/Pacific investments was also the highest in the world—29% compounded annually during the 1990s, almost double that for the world as a whole (16% compounded annually). And then the bubble burst in the fall of 1997, and the recriminations followed.

Power corrupts, Dr. Mahathir lamented in Vancouver. As much as government can become corrupt when invested with absolute power, markets can also become corrupt when equally absolutely powerful. We are seeing the effect of that absolute power today—the impoverishment and misery of millions of people and their eventual slavery.

Also true. But too late for East Asia. And for Dr. Mahathir, whose country is supposed to host the next APEC conference. Because GREED and quest for POWER of the East Asian leaders has already enslaved them. Dr. Mahathir, et. al. should have thought about that BEFORE taking the NWO bait (money). Now that they are a penny short and a day late, remorse won't save them from the NWO/IMF brutal collection methods, anymore than pleading for mercy would work with Mafia debt enforcers. Witness the quick buckling under of Indonesia, Thailand and Korea, for example, and even of Japan. The once powerful and petulant Asian Tigers are all turning into obedient pets, wagging their tails fast and furiously to please the NWO masters.

But one man's loss is another man's gain, they say. The enormous flight of capital from East Asia, about $1.3 trillion between mid-August and late-November (the aggregate reduction in total capitalization of the 11 East Asian stock exchanges), has landed mostly on the U.S. and European shores. This positive cashflow (from the Euro-American perspective) has temporarily helped stabilize the Western stockmarkets after the Oct. 29 crash.

Also, Bill Clinton, that unabashed champion of the Wall Street elite's causes, was all smiles at the Vancouver summit. He reveled in the triumph which APEC's endorsement of the IMF represented. Clinton even confidently predicted that he would eventually overcome his recent setback when he and Newt Gingrich failed in their efforts to cajole, bribe or muscle the majority of the House into approving the fast track trade bill.

But the victory which Clinton delivered to his Wall Street and Big Business backers at the APEC summit was a loss for America's Main Street, including the small U.S. entrepreneurs—by far the most vibrant and productive element of the U.S. economy. They CREATED 21 million American jobs in the 1980s, while the FORTUNE 500 companies DOWNSIZED to the tune of three million people, according to a Sept. 20, 1996 Wall Street Journal report.

And now, these American Main Street eager-beavers are about to be hit again by our NWO-controlled government—to help fund the Wall Street elite's Asian bailouts. Lest we forget, the IMF is a Western GOVERNMENT-supported bank in which the U.S. taxpayer is by far the largest guarantor. So when Clinton, Gingrich, and other U.S. globalist politicians tell us that the IMF solution is the way to solve the current Asian banking crisis, they are talking about committing about 40 cents of every IMF bailout dollar out of the U.S. taxpayer's pockets. Just as they did in the Mexican bailout in early 1995.

Never mind that the NWO elite are in the process of firing at least two million additional Americans in the 1990s, according to that Wall Street Journal 1996 report. Thanks to their control of the U.S. media, they and their fair-haired boy—Bill Clinton—are still able to claim credit for the recent strength of the U.S. economy, while helping themselves to the pockets of the true American Main Street entrepreneurs.

Which is why the NWO pages, like Clinton and Gingrich, don't herald as much the fact that their IMF bailouts mean using PUBLIC funds to bail out PRIVATE interests in FOREIGN countries.

Nor do our (however unfairly) ELECTED politicians get to make the calls about things like using taxpayers' money for private rescue missions. The NWO's APPOINTED proxies in the Clinton cabinet do.

On Oct. 30, the U.S. Treasury Secretary and a former Wall Street tycoon, Robert Rubin, reportedly called the top Treasury and White House officials to tell them that he had agreed to contribute $3 billion of U.S. taxpayers' money to the IMF bailout of Indonesian banks.

Get this—the Treasury Secretary told the President what sort of a deal he had cut with his Wall Street banking pals! This kind of sums up who is really running this country and for whose benefit.

Which is why we should brace ourselves for these Wall Street and Washington hyenas helping themselves to the U.S. Treasury till a few more times for a few more tens of billions of dollars before the Great Asian Bailout is over.

For, the amount of money needed to resuscitate other Asian countries could amount to more than $100 billion, double the Mexican rescue of 1995, according to a Nov. 17 Business Week report. The potential price tag involves not only the $40 billion commitment to Indonesia, but an additional $23 billion to Thailand and the Philippines. Financial markets are now betting that Korea, where debt-choked companies have also triggered a banking crisis, and the government is running low on foreign reserves, will need as much as $40 billion to clean up its mess.

Recession is a foregone conclusion as taxes and unemployment increase while spending is cut, one Korea analyst told the Sydney Morning Herald on Nov. 25.

In Korea, six of the top 30 corporations have filed for bankruptcy this year alone. If all of the bad loans were written off, the entire equity of Seoul's commercial banks would disappear. But not just of Korean banks. The Japanese banks are also on the hook to the Asian tigers for some $263 billion; the European banks for about $155 billion, while the American banks have lent them some $55 billion, Business Week estimated in a Nov. 17 cover story.

But it is in Japan and China—the biggest Asian markets—where the biggest troubles may be brewing.

Japan is in line for a truly world class banking crisis, a world authority on international finance predicted in an interview with the Australian Financial Times (AFT, Oct. 30). Dr. Morris Goldstein, the former deputy head of research for the International Monetary Fund, now with the Institute for International Economics in Washington DC, said that systemic risk is the highest in Japan.

He was spot on. Subsequent failures of Hokkaido Takushoku Bank, of the 100-year old Yamaichi Securities, of and of Tokuy Bank bore out the validity of Dr. Goldstein's forecast. In late November, Moody's also downgraded the credit ratings of Long Term Credit Bank of Japan, Nippon Credit Bank, Mitsui Trust, Yasuda Trust and Chuo Trust.

A Jardine Fleming report suggested that the non-performing loans held by all Japanese banks could account for almost 23% of Japan's gross domestic product—a level surpassing even Thailand's failures (13%). The notorious US savings and loan crisis was insignificant by comparison. The cost to the public sector of solving that crisis was only around 3% of the GDP. Jardine Fleming estimates that the ultimate cost to the Japanese government will be 11% of the GDP or about $500 billion. No question that would be a truly world class crisis.

And then there's China, that darling of the NWO globalist elite. During the 1990s, China attracted $158 billion of foreign investments, more than any other country in the world except for the U.S., according to UNCTAD, a United Nations agency Japan, by contrast, got only about $8 billion during the same period. During the 1990s, foreign capital spending in China had grown at a compound annual rate of 52%—more than three times faster than the average world increase of 16% per year.

And the pace of the business world's fascination with China had been accelerating. In 1996 alone, China received over $42 billion in foreign investments. That's about one-third of all investments made in the developing countries last year. And no wonder. The master bailer had helped set the bait for the victims of its future bailouts. In September 1996, the IMF predicted that Asia would lead the world in 1997 with an 8% GDP growth.

Now that a financial tsunami has hit Asia, and as analysts and economists scramble to lower their Asia forecasts, investors' enthusiasm is starting to ebb even in China. Foreign investments contracted by about 35% in the first 10 months of 1997.

In part, that's because China's top banks have about $90 billion in problem loans, according to Business Week's Nov. 17 report. Despite nearly two decades of economic reform, the Chinese state still owns about 30% of the economy, employs two-thirds of the urban work force, and accounts for more than 50% of industrial assets, according to an Oct. 19 report in London's Sunday Telegraph filed by its Beijing correspondent. There are more than 300,000 state enterprises in China, and at least half are in debt.

To an economist, these behemoths cry out for sweeping reform, the Telegraph concluded. Read—privatization, downsizing and layoffs, the IMF specialty.

The country is wallowing in excess manufacturing capacity, and real estate in Shanghai and Beijing has been over-built. A British visitor who has recently returned from a trip to China wrote to me on Nov. 6 that a member of the Shanghai Real Estate Board enthusiastically proclaimed: Shanghai property is hot. To which the Briton replied: No, Shanghai property is empty. The newly built malls and commercial buildings which she had visited were all eerily empty.

Why?

Because the foreign investors had talked themselves into spending hundreds of billions of dollars against the grossly inflated Asian economic growth projections. And because the greedy local chieftains had talked themselves into believing that they can buy economic prosperity with borrowed money.

Well, now that the bubble has burst in Asia, both bankers and politicians are talking containment. Which is why Clinton agreed at the APEC summit in Vancouver to hold a global conference on the banking crisis.

Meanwhile, while the financial elite debate how best to protect themselves by using public funds, much more than jobs and real estate are at stake in China and its neighbors in East Asia. When factories falter so do cheap or free education, medical care, housing, and the broader sense of community that is part of urban life.

In Tianjin, for example, an industrial city an hour's drive from Beijing, some families have been plunged into poverty almost overnight after being laid off, the Telegraph reported. All this has led the London daily to conclude that China edges to the brink of a social breakdown as tens of millions of Chinese workers face unemployment or even starvation.

Ditto re. the tens of millions of workers in Korea, Japan, Thailand, Indonesia... They will bear brunt of The Great Asian Banking Crisis, not the NWO bankers and politicians who had caused it. Stories about such a human impact of NWO's financial terrorism have been woefully absent from the front pages of the world media.

Another thing which the recent Asia stories did not dwell on was that the big Japanese investors, including the ailing banks, owned $291 billion of U.S. Treasury bills as of July, or 8.5% of the total outstanding, according to a Wall Street Journal (WSJ) Oct. 29 report. That's up from 5.4% or $176 billion as of December 1994.

In other words, in today's intricately interwoven global financial system, it is virtually impossible that a failure of the Japanese banking system would not affect other countries, including the U.S. We've already seen how a stockmarket crisis which began in Hong Kong soon spread like a wildfire around the globe. Even if the fire seems to be temporarily under control now, thanks in part to the Asian crisis (flight of capital), we are evidently not out of the woods yet.

Maybe that's why the U.S. Treasury Secretary, Rubin, warned his Japanese counterpart in a private letter disclosed by the New York Times on Nov. 13 that the Japanese should not be tempted to export their way out of their troubles. Which is kind of like telling a drowning victim to keep gulping water instead of swimming.

That's because one effect of the industrial globalization has been a huge U.S. trade deficit, which stood at $192 billion in 1996. And if current trends continue, America's trade deficit with the rest of the world could expand to $250 billion to $300 billion by early 1999, according to David Hale, a trade economist with Zurich Insurance Group.

As of August, the U.S. trade deficit with China ($5.2 billion), for example, was even bigger than that with Japan ($4.5 billion), or that with the entire Western Europe and Canada—combined! ($3.6 billion). In 1997 to-date, our deficit with China is running 30% ahead of last year's pace.

So Rubin's remark seems to have been driven by a parochial U.S. industry's concern—losing market share to low priced imports from Japan or other Asian countries. Yet those are precisely the benefits to consumers which the NWO globalists have hailed during the recent debate on fast track trade legislation.

So free trade advocates, such as Rubin, a former Wall Street tycoon, evidently have no trouble talking out of both sides of their mouths. Moral corruption is another trademark (pun intended) of the Clinton administration.

But another important conclusion one can draw from Rubin's remark is that, if the Japanese are not allowed by the NWO Empire to export their way out of trouble, then they may have no choice but to dump their huge U.S. T-bills holdings and other U.S. securities so as to feed the Nippon banking beast. And if the Japanese pull out of the U.S., that would hardly be good news for the stockmarket, would it?

So if you are a Wall Street investor, stand by for a few more roller-coaster rides of the Dow. But if you are a Main Street entrepreneur or worker, brace yourself for a possibility of a global recession. If it (recession) spreads (from Korea) to Japan, then it goes all over the world, the Korea analyst referenced earlier also told the Sydney Morning Herald on Nov. 25.

What goes around, comes around—especially in globally integrated markets. The U.S. is no exception, just as the British Empire wasn't. The only question is if the social unrest caused by the gouging of the NWO elite may also become a global affair and the ultimate downfall of the NWO.