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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-09-09 04:46 PM
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Blaming the Victims: the Heroic American Consumers
Blaming the Victims: Heroic American Consumers

Ann Pettifor

Author, Debtonation - The Coming First World Debt Crisis
Posted February 9, 2009 |

Commentators like to beat up on ordinary Americans. They're accused of borrowing mindlessly, of greed and materialism. Yet high levels of debt and consumption were not the result of millions of individual decisions by consumers. They were the result of a deliberate economic 'regime change' in the 1970s -- that transformed the US economy, and cut American incomes as a share of GDP.

The Great Depression 2.0 is just beginning to unfold. Bankers are bailed out while making a grab for bonuses. Ordinary Americans by contrast, are already being bankrupted, made jobless, homeless and hungry -- in huge numbers. But until recently it was these Americans that were heroically driving the global economy forward.

They did this by borrowing and spending. But they were not 'naturally' inclined to borrow. They were driven to it. By stagnating incomes, and by the deliberate policies of government, regulators and bankers.

While wages and salaries shrank as a share of the economy -- to the lowest level since the government began recording data in 1947 -- banks showered Americans with credit cards. 'Easy money' was spread around like confetti. And government urged Americans to spend. George Bush famously said "Shopping is patriotic" in late September, 2001.

Then Bush-Cheney doubled the deficit, bankers gambled and Americans borrowed and shopped. Consumers maxed out on their credit cards and mortgages and worked harder and longer -- squeezed by the demand for higher productivity. By so doing, they played a gallant role in driving forward the engine of US economic growth.

They did more. They powered global economic growth. China owes a great deal to American consumers -- as does Europe.


Today these same consumers are punished mercilessly for their heroism.

Take the latest jobless numbers. A rise of nearly 600,000 in January. Electrifying. The highest in the US for 27 years -- and we're just at the beginning of Depression 2.0 -- courtesy of George Bush, the Federal Reserve and the reckless finance sector. There are now about 13 million Americans unemployed or under-employed. That's an awful lot of people. And a frightening level of individual and household stress, isolation and anger.

But it is worse than that. Not only have Americans lost jobs, income, health care and self-esteem -- they've lost their homes too. Last year there were 3,157,806 foreclosure filings -- an 81 percent increase from 2007 and a 225 percent increase from 2006. That's millions of Americans losing their family life, their comforts, their investments and their security. RealtyTrac projects another 2 million homes will be lost in this way over 2009.

And it gets even worse. By November, 2008, 31 million Americans needed government help for the most basic necessity of life -- food. This is an increase of 14% in just one year. And as the data is slow to catch up with layoffs, hundreds of thousands more will have joined the food stamps queue by now.

From 1945 to the 1970s Americans produced and manufactured food, goods and services -- in the post-war period called 'the golden age'.

They were dull but prosperous times. Sundays were Sundays. 24/7 was a distant reality. People had jobs. Companies made profits. Bank managers talked to their customers. And there were no financial crises -- at all -- between 1945 and the 1970s.

But this 'golden age' was to be overturned. The revolution was launched by a highly ideological group of economists -- mainly of the Chicago School.

Decision-makers in government and at the Fed, seduced by their economic theories -- decided that it would be better and more profitable if Americans stopped producing and making things. They argued that there was no harm in the United States relocating 4.5 million jobs abroad -- mainly to China -- between 2001 and 2009. US workers could switch to service jobs such as hairdressing, retail and real estate -- with long working hours.

The revolution was started by Chicago's first convert -- Richard Nixon in 1971. It was carried forward by the Reagan and Clinton administrations. Soon it became more profitable to grow money from money than to grow maize, textiles or steel.

Building up debts and deficits became acceptable. During the Bush-Cheney years the national debt doubled from $5.7 trillion to $10.7 trillion. 'Reagan proved ...deficits don't matter' said Dick Cheney in 2001.

Making money from money became the aim of economic policy. Chicago economists argued that private bankers could be trusted to create and distribute credit. That the US economy could safely be held aloft by a credit-fueled shopping spree. Shopping became the major economic activity.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ann-pettifor/blaming-the-victims---her_b_165234.html?view=print

Today the finance sector grabs more than 30% of domestic corporate profits -- double its share 25 years ago. And fully 75% of US GDP is down to personal consumption expenditures -- up from around 60% in the 1960s.

Today millions are jobless, homeless and hungry.
Their discontent threatens social upheaval and radical change. Another economic transformation will no doubt take root. But will the architects of America's financial collapse be identified and held to account for the suffering inflicted on millions of heroic and innocent American consumers? Or will it be the victims, once again, that will be blamed?


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leftstreet Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-09-09 04:50 PM
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1. K&R
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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-09-09 07:16 PM
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2. What's amazing about this article is that ALL our MSM blames US for what's gone wrong!
There's little mention of the Wall St. Bankers the Cables pushing shows called "Flip It" and the Culture of Wall Street Worship with "Make a Deal" Shows like Donald Trump trashing contestants in his Money Pursuit of WHICH PERSON CAN MAKE THE BIG BUCKS on WALL ST.?

What about all those shows making ordinary folks with ordinary incomes BELIEVE..that they TOO could be "THE DONALD?" :shrug:
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tom_paine Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-09-09 07:50 PM
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3. Not amazing at all. The Nazis blamed their own "lazy Germans" when they lost the war.
This is just standard behavior for Totalitarian State-Contolled Medias around the world and throughout history, not just the American Media, even in it's hug-a-bear celebrity blow-dried Corporate Friendly Fascism Mode.

Of course the GOP-Controlled Media ALL blames us. My God, you can't expect a State-Controlled Media to ask any questions that might undremine The Bushie State.

:silly:

Gotta blame the Jews. Nazi Press always blames the Jews.

Liberals, I mean. This time around, it's Liberals, not Jews.
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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-09-09 09:44 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. Always look to the victim...propagandize them...and after awhile
EVERYONE just goes along with the Meme. All of this was caused by ignorant people who couldn't read their mortgage agreements, all those folks who charged too much (when Bush told us to go shopping), all those folks who just thought they could just spend, spend, spend.

All the rest of us have to pay for their IGNORANCE! That's the Mantra...the Excuse...Blame the Victim for the Crime...Blame the Victim...:-(

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tom_paine Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-09-09 11:03 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. I just can't believe that this shit is all happening AGAIN. Same snake, different skin.
Edited on Mon Feb-09-09 11:12 PM by tom_paine
Dear God in heaven what did we do to deserve another 'bout of Nazi-Bushies snuffing out once again a powerful Republic with the same old "Liberal Stab in the Back" memes and no one has a clue EVEN NOW!

It works like a charm. And the M$M? Wow, did THAT not take long to turn what waas once the greatest press in the world and flip it into Soviet TV with celebrities and hot blow-dried anchor-babes.

I keep telling myself, Obama has only been in a couple weeks.

But the Bushiganda System of Goebbelsian Lies is STRONGER, I think. I guess it would have to be, since it's pretty much been getting away with every and any perfidy for decades now, and the M$M is now a complete appendage, in some ways even the NYT and the CBS, as they often fail to debunk obvious Bushie Lies, too.

That lunatic Bushigandized "Stimulus Debate" that just passed assures me that reality can still be made to melt like mozarella cheese in a Dali picture by the Bushies any time they want to. And that is the heart of the great Bushie (aka The Modern Republic Party) threat to our democratic-republic.

Now that they are back in Clinton Mode and have something to "push against", their power may be stronger than ever. I hope I am wrong about this, or that Obama can reverse it with sweet reason and postpartisanship.

Their Bushie Astroturf Programs, The Phony Lying Blast E-Mails, their everything. Goebbels v2.0, now with EXTRA Plausible Deniability. Because the Bushies and their propagandists have the liberty of being consciencless sociopaths, patricularly the propagandists and the shouters (like the Nazis, they accuse we "Jews"/Liberals of being what THEY ARE THEMSELVES).

Maybe Obama can beat that with sweet reason and "post-partisanship".

:mad: :grr: :argh:
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TheUnspeakable Donating Member (960 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Feb-10-09 08:16 AM
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6. K&R
I'm sooo sick of blaming the victims
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MadHound Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Feb-10-09 08:27 AM
Response to Original message
7. Sorry, but American consumers do share some of the blame for this mess
Nobody forced them to live beyond their means, nobody forced them into purchasing a house with nothing down and an ARM, nobody forced them to take on massive credit card dept just so they can keep up with the Jones, nobody forced them to cash out their home equity like it was an ATM. They did this all on their own.

Just one example, I had a neighbor who bought four acres and a house on a nothing down, ARM. He then went out an bought four ATV's and two new SUV's all on credit. After a couple of years of this shit, his ARM gets hiked, his credit cards are maxxed, he has no equity in the place, so he goes bankrupt, house and land are sold at auction. That's not the bank's fault, that's my neighbor's fault for thinking that he could keep racking up the debt and never have it come due. This scenario has been played out, with minor variations, millions of times over, and that certainly did help us get in this position we're in.

No, it's not all the consumer's fault, but they share part of the blame. I look at this crisis as where greed and stupidity collided, on the part of both the banks and other financial institutions and the American consumer.

The sad thing is that those of us who did the right thing, who weren't greedy or stupid, are going to have to pay the consequences anyway, and help clean up the mess our less than bright fellow citizens made. Frankly if it gets much deeper we might be going under too.
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