“Greece is being ‘hit’, there’s no doubt about it,” exclaims John Perkins, author of Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, noting that “[Indebted countries] become servants to what I call the corporatocracy … today we have a global empire, and it’s not an American empire. It’s not a national empire… It’s a corporate empire, and the big corporations rule.”
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-07-02/how-greece-has-fallen-victim-economic-hit-men
John Perkins, author of Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, discusses how Greece and other eurozone countries have become the new victims of “economic hit men.”
John Perkins is no stranger to making confessions. His well-known book, Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, revealed how international organizations such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank, while publicly professing to “save” suffering countries and economies, instead pull a bait-and-switch on their governments: promising startling growth, gleaming new infrastructure projects and a future of economic prosperity – all of which would occur if those countries borrow huge loans from those organizations. Far from achieving runaway economic growth and success, however, these countries instead fall victim to a crippling and unsustainable debt burden.
That’s where the “economic hit men” come in: seemingly ordinary men, with ordinary backgrounds, who travel to these countries and impose the harsh austerity policies prescribed by the IMF and World Bank as “solutions” to the economic hardship they are now experiencing. Men like Perkins were trained to squeeze every last drop of wealth and resources from these sputtering economies, and continue to do so to this day. In this interview, which aired on Dialogos Radio, Perkins talks about how Greece and the eurozone have become the new victims of such “economic hit men.”
Michael Nevradakis: In your book, you write about how you were, for many years, a so-called “economic hit man.” Who are these economic hit men, and what do they do?
John Perkins: Essentially, my job was to identify countries that had resources that our corporations want, and that could be things like oil – or it could be markets – it could be transportation systems. There’re so many different things. Once we identified these countries, we arranged huge loans to them, but the money would never actually go to the countries; instead it would go to our own corporations to build infrastructure projects in those countries, things like power plants and highways that benefitted a few wealthy people as well as our own corporations, but not the majority of people who couldn’t afford to buy into these things, and yet they were left holding a huge debt, very much like what Greece has today, a phenomenal debt.
“[Indebted countries] become servants to what I call the corporatocracy … today we have a global empire, and it’s not an American empire. It’s not a national empire … It’s a corporate empire, and the big corporations rule.”
And once [they were] bound by that debt, we would go back, usually in the form of the IMF – and in the case of Greece today, it’s the IMF and the EU [European Union] – and make tremendous demands on the country: increase taxes, cut back on spending, sell public sector utilities to private companies, things like power companies and water systems, transportation systems, privatize those, and basically become a slave to us, to the corporations, to the IMF, in your case to the EU, and basically, organizations like the World Bank, the IMF, the EU, are tools of the big corporations, what I call the “corporatocracy.”
And before turning specifically to the case of Greece, let’s talk a little bit more about the manner in which these economic hit men and these organizations like the IMF operate. You mentioned, of course, how they go in and they work to get these countries into massive debt, that money goes in and then goes straight back out. You also mentioned in your book these overly optimistic growth forecasts that are sold to the politicians of these countries but which really have no resemblance to reality.
Exactly, we’d show that if these investments were made in things like electric energy systems that the economy would grow at phenomenally high rates. The fact of the matter is, when you invest in these big infrastructure projects, you do see economic growth, however, most of that growth reflects the wealthy getting wealthier and wealthier; it doesn’t reflect the majority of the people, and we’re seeing that in the United States today.
“In the case of Greece, my reaction was that ‘Greece is being hit.’ There’s no question about it.”
For example, where we can show economic growth, growth in the GDP, but at the same time unemployment may be going up or staying level, and foreclosures on houses may be going up or staying stable. These numbers tend to reflect the very wealthy, since they have a huge percentage of the economy, statistically speaking. Nevertheless, we would show that when you invest in these infrastructure projects, your economy does grow, and yet, we would even show it growing much faster than it ever conceivably would, and that was only used to justify these horrendous, incredibly debilitating loans.
Is there a common theme with respect to the countries typically targeted? Are they, for instance, rich in resources or do they typically possess some other strategic importance to the powers that be?
Yes, all of those. Resources can take many different forms: One is the material resources like minerals or oil; another resource is strategic location; another resource is a big marketplace or cheap labor. So, different countries make different requirements. I think what we’re seeing in Europe today isn’t any different, and that includes Greece.
What happens once these countries that are targeted are indebted? How do these major powers, these economic hit men, these international organizations come back and get their “pound of flesh,” if you will, from the countries that are heavily in debt?
By insisting that the countries adopt policies that will sell their publicly owned utility companies, water and sewage systems, maybe schools, transportation systems, even jails, to the big corporations. Privatize, privatize. Allow us to build military bases on their soil. Many things can be done, but basically, they become servants to what I call the corporatocracy. You have to remember that today we have a global empire, and it’s not an American empire. It’s not a national empire. It doesn’t help the American people very much. It’s a corporate empire, and the big corporations rule. They control the politics of the United States, and to a large degree they control a great deal of the policies of countries like China, around the world.
John, looking specifically now at the case of Greece, of course you mentioned your belief that the country has become the victim of economic hit men and these international organizations . . . what was your reaction when you first heard about the crisis in Greece and the measures that were to be implemented in the country?
I’ve been following Greece for a long time. I was on Greek television. A Greek film company did a documentary called “Apology of an Economic Hit Man,” and I also spent a lot of time in Iceland and in Ireland. I was invited to Iceland to help encourage the people there to vote on a referendum not to repay their debts, and I did that and encouraged them not to, and they did vote no, and as a result, Iceland is doing quite well now economically compared to the rest of Europe. Ireland, on the other hand: I tried to do the same thing there, but the Irish people apparently voted against the referendum, though there’s been many reports that there was a lot of corruption.
“That’s part of the game: convince people that they’re wrong, that they’re inferior. The corporatocracy is incredibly good at that.”
In the case of Greece, my reaction was that “Greece is being hit.” There’s no question about it. Sure, Greece made mistakes, your leaders made some mistakes, but the people didn’t really make the mistakes, and now the people are being asked to pay for the mistakes made by their leaders, often in cahoots with the big banks. So, people make tremendous amounts of money off of these so-called “mistakes,” and now, the people who didn’t make the mistakes are being asked to pay the price. That’s consistent around the world: We’ve seen it in Latin America. We’ve seen it in Asia. We’ve seen it in so many places around the world.
This leads directly to the next question I had: From my observation, at least in Greece, the crisis has been accompanied by an increase in self-blame or self-loathing; there’s this sentiment in Greece that many people have that the country failed, that the people failed . . . there’s hardly even protest in Greece anymore, and of course there’s a huge “brain drain” – there’s a lot of people that are leaving the country. Does this all seem familiar to you when comparing to other countries in which you’ve had personal experience?
Sure, that’s part of the game: convince people that they’re wrong, that they’re inferior. The corporatocracy is incredibly good at that, whether it is back during the Vietnam War, convincing the world that the North Vietnamese were evil; today it’s the Muslims. It’s a policy of them versus us: We are good. We are right. We do everything right. You’re wrong. And in this case, all of this energy has been directed at the Greek people to say “you’re lazy; you didn’t do the right thing; you didn’t follow the right policies,” when in actuality, an awful lot of the blame needs to be laid on the financial community that encouraged Greece to go down this route. And I would say that we have something very similar going on in the United States, where people here are being led to believe that because their house is being foreclosed that they were stupid, that they bought the wrong houses; they overspent themselves.
“We know that austerity does not work in these situations.”
The fact of the matter is their bankers told them to do this, and around the world, we’ve come to trust bankers – or we used to. In the United States, we never believed that a banker would tell us to buy a $500,000 house if in fact we could really only afford a $300,000 house. We thought it was in the bank’s interest not to foreclose. But that changed a few years ago, and bankers told people who they knew could only afford a $300,000 house to buy a $500,000 house.
“Tighten your belt, in a few years that house will be worth a million dollars; you’ll make a lot of money” . . . in fact, the value of the house went down; the market dropped out; the banks foreclosed on these houses, repackaged them, and sold them again. Double whammy. The people were told, “you were stupid; you were greedy; why did you buy such an expensive house?” But in actuality, the bankers told them to do this, and we’ve grown up to believe that we can trust our bankers. Something very similar on a larger scale happened in so many countries around the world, including Greece.
In Greece, the traditional major political parties are, of course, overwhelmingly in favor of the harsh austerity measures that have been imposed, but also we see that the major business and media interests are also overwhelmingly in support. Does this surprise you in the slightest?
No, it doesn’t surprise me and yet it’s ridiculous because austerity does not work. We’ve proven that time and time again, and perhaps the greatest proof was the opposite, in the United States during the Great Depression, when President Roosevelt initiated all these policies to put people back to work, to pump money into the economy. That’s what works. We know that austerity does not work in these situations.
“What I didn’t realize during any of this period was how much corporatocracy does not want a united Europe.”
We also have to understand that, in the United States for example, over the past 40 years, the middle class has been on the decline on a real dollar basis, while the economy has been increasing. In fact, that’s pretty much happened around the world. Globally, the middle class has been in decline. Big business needs to recognize – it hasn’t yet, but it needs to recognize – that that serves nobody’s long-term interest, that the middle class is the market. And if the middle class continues to be in decline, whether it’s in Greece or the United States or globally, ultimately businesses will pay the price; they won’t have customers. Henry Ford once said: “I want to pay all my workers enough money so they can go out and buy Ford cars.” That’s a very good policy. That’s wise. This austerity program moves in the opposite direction and it’s a foolish policy.
In your book, which was written in 2004, you expressed hope that the euro would serve as a counterweight to American global hegemony, to the hegemony of the US dollar. Did you ever expect that we would see in the European Union what we are seeing today, with austerity that is not just in Greece but also in Spain, Portugal, Ireland, Italy, and also several other countries as well?
What I didn’t realize during any of this period was how much corporatocracy does not want a united Europe. We need to understand this. They may be happy enough with the euro, with one currency – they are happy to a certain degree by having it united enough that markets are open – but they do not want standardized rules and regulations. Let’s face it, big corporations, the corporatocracy, take advantage of the fact that some countries in Europe have much more lenient tax laws, some have much more lenient environmental and social laws, and they can pit them against each other.
“[Rafael Correa] … has to be aware that if you stand up too strongly against the system, if the economic hit men are not happy, if they don’t get their way, then the jackals will come in and assassinate you or overthrow you in a coup.”
What would it be like for big corporations if they didn’t have their tax havens in places like Malta or other places? I think we need to recognize that what the corporatocracy saw at first, the solid euro, a European union seemed like a very good thing, but as it moved forward, they could see that what was going to happen was that social and environmental laws and regulations were going to be standardized. They didn’t want that, so to a certain degree what’s been going on in Europe has been because the corporatocracy wants Europe to fail, at least on a certain level.
You wrote about the examples of Ecuador and other countries, which after the collapse of oil prices in the late ’80s found themselves with huge debts and this, of course, led to massive austerity measures . . . sounds all very similar to what we are now seeing in Greece. How did the people of Ecuador and other countries that found themselves in similar situations eventually resist?
Ecuador elected a pretty remarkable president, Rafael Correa, who has a PhD in economics from a United States university. He understands the system, and he understood that Ecuador took on these debts back when I was an economic hit man and the country was ruled by a military junta that was under the control of the CIA and the US. That junta took on these huge debts, put Ecuador in deep debt; the people didn’t agree to that. When Rafael Correa was democratically elected, he immediately said, “We’re not paying these debts; the people did not take on these debts; maybe the IMF should pay the debts and maybe the junta, which of course was long gone – moved to Miami or someplace – should pay the debts, maybe John Perkins and the other economic hit men should pay the debts, but the people shouldn’t.”
And since then, he’s been renegotiating and bringing the debts way down and saying, “We might be willing to pay some of them.” That was a very smart move; it reflected similar things that had been done at different times in places like Brazil and Argentina, and more recently, following that model, Iceland, with great success. I have to say that Correa has had some real setbacks since then . . . he, like so many presidents, has to be aware that if you stand up too strongly against the system, if the economic hit men are not happy, if they don’t get their way, then the jackals will come in and assassinate you or overthrow you in a coup. There was an attempted coup against him; there was a successful coup in a country not too far away from him, Honduras, because these presidents stood up.
We have to realize that these presidents are in very, very vulnerable positions, and ultimately we the people have to stand up, because leaders can only do a certain amount. Today, in many places, leaders are not just vulnerable; it doesn’t take a bullet to bring down a leader anymore. A scandal – a sex scandal, a drug scandal – can bring down a leader. We saw that happen to Bill Clinton, to Strauss-Kahn of the IMF; we’ve seen it happen a number of times. These leaders are very aware that they are in very vulnerable positions: If they stand up or go against the status quo too strongly, they’re going to be taken out, one way or another. They’re aware of that, and it behooves we the people to really stand up for our own rights.
You mentioned the recent example of Iceland . . . other than the referendum that was held, what other measures did the country adopt to get out of this spiral of austerity and to return to growth and to a much more positive outlook for the country?
It’s been investing money in programs that put people back to work and it’s also been putting on trial some of the bankers that caused the problems, which has been a big uplift in terms of morale for the people. So Iceland has launched some programs that say “No, we’re not going to go into austerity; we’re not going to pay back these loans; we’re going to put the money into putting people back to work,” and ultimately that’s what drives an economy, people working. If you’ve got high unemployment, like you do in Greece today, extremely high unemployment, the country’s always going to be in trouble. You’ve got to bring down that unemployment, you’ve got to hire people. It’s so important to put people back to work. Your unemployment is about 28 percent; it’s staggering, and disposable income has dropped 40 percent and it’s going to continue to drop if you have high unemployment. So, the important thing for an economy is to get the employment up and get disposable income back up, so that people will invest in their country and in goods and services.
In closing, what message would you like to share with the people of Greece, as they continue to experience and to live through the very harsh results of the austerity policies that have been implemented in the country for the past three years?
I want to draw upon Greece’s history. You’re a proud, strong country, a country of warriors. The mythology of the warrior to some degree comes out of Greece, and so does democracy! And to realize that the marketplace is a democracy today, and how we spend our money is casting our ballot. Most political democracies are corrupt, including that of the United States. Democracy is not really working on a governmental basis because the corporations are in charge. But it is working on a market basis. I would encourage the people of Greece to stand up: Don’t pay off those debts; have your own referendums; refuse to pay them off; go to the streets and strike.
And so, I would encourage the Greek people to continue to do this. Don’t accept this criticism that it’s your fault, you’re to blame, you’ve got to suffer austerity, austerity, austerity. That only works for the rich people; it does not work for the average person or the middle class. Build up that middle class; bring employment back; bring disposable income back to the average citizen of Greece. Fight for that; make it happen; stand up for your rights; respect your history as fighters and leaders in democracy, and show the world!
Spread this over the Internet.
Yes, the US is politically, totally, corrupt ‘democracy’.
From top to bottom, every election is about $$$. No matter who wins, person or party, the $$$ people win and control everything.
And everything gets worse. More crime, more corruption, more drugs, more criminalization, more government tyranny, more ignorance, more waste, more tragic lives, more broken families.
Is Tsipras a modern day Leonidas and man enough to replay the Battle of Thermopylae? Somehow he doesn’t inspire the feeling and will probably cut and ran, leaving the Greeks defenseless to be set upon by the Troika and its rabid hounds.
To hell with Leonidas and to hell with Sparta. Perhaps we could hope for a modern day Pericles.
PLG, a modern Pericles, standing in the way of the Atlanticist Reich would simply be murdered. You don’t attempt to reason with a rabid dog, or educate it by good example.
It is up to the voters of Greece to act intelligently and patriotically.
A storm will hit them if they vote No. It is time to weather the storm like Iceland did.
Otherwise, they will see all the resources they own individually and as a nation sold cheap and stolen.
They will have nothing if they vote Yes.
Need any more be said?
John Perkins sums the facts up – nicely.
Tsipras & Syriza are unwilling to confront the “corporatocracy.” That is clear.
However, Judas Goats often line the stew pots when the struggle begins. The Greek people deserve international support against the terror of the imperialist Bankers (and their NATO army).
If their elected government is overthrown, as was the Greek government during the Colonels (CIA/MI-5) coup, of 1967, as was the elected government of Yanukovich in the Ukraine, as was the elected Spanish Republic government of 1936, and as was the elected Kennedy government of the USA of November 22, 1963, as was the elected Arbenz government of Guatemala in 1954, then these governments (representing the voiced wishes of their people), deserve support from us all.
Yes, even unelected governments that are victimized by imperialist powers and imperialist Bankers, deserve our support.
Tsipras and his Syriza coalition partners are caught in the pincers of an imperialism they did not design. The Greek people will decide in the course of their resistance just who, and with what form of government they will continue their resistance.
The Greek government does not want to resist (and who does?); resistance is often quite painful. But is there another choice?
*I do not want to end this missive on a negative note. The resistance registered by the Greek people, who voted for and elected a Syriza that made beautiful promises, the resistance of the people of Novorossiya who also voted for freedom, the resistance of the Crimean/Russian people, the Syrians, the Palestinians (who refuse to disappear), the Hezbolla, the Yemeni Houthi, are filling the pages of modern history, and are effectively impeding the imperialist New World Order. This is all good!
The Greeks are good. They will defend their Democracy. It’s all good!
For the Democratic Republics!
IMAGINE
If the referendum comes about, it will be interesting to see which way the voting goes, whether the majority of Greeks vote for never ending serfdom or a chance for the future.
Syriza campaigned on ending austerity and staying in the EU, (easy to see now that these are contradictory terms) winning just under half the seats but on 38% of the votes. In the referendum they will need over 50%.
Syriza alas talked a good game. When push came to shove Syriza punted the ball to the public instead of doing what they were elected to do: make the hard choice. Now there is going to be a phoney referendum with one outcome.
Thats the point – they were not elected to make the hard choice. They were elected to drive a hard bargain with the troika.
As they have not been able to get the deal they were elected on, they have put it back to the voters before going further.
Its worth reading through some of the news reports from election time in Greece. They intended getting a deal that allowed Greece’s economy to improve then repay the loans.
Excellent interview, thanks John Perkins. One thing I take out of this is the understanding that the corporatocracy doesn’t want Europe to succeed. It seems very important to me that we also understand it doesn’t want US to succeed either – and that we take Perkins’ point that this is not a national empire, but a global corporate empire.
The struggle can still be best described in traditional class-war terms, this is all it ever has been. The effort of the very rich to plunder the assets of the poor is the only place wealth accumulation comes from. And setting one group of people against another means the thieves continue to win.
When we despise a nation, it means we have been successfully gamed by the thieves who want us to hate another group of humans. Even as I cheer each time that Russia scores a point against the “empire” and hastens the day of its death, I still have to remember clearly that the people of the US are just as much victims as the people of western Ukraine, or Greece, or Palestine – or for that matter, Israel and Saudi Arabia.
Grieved,
My take is a little different…
It’s not that the corporatists “don’t want” Europe or USA to succeed. They have no grudges or personal stake in the matter. The calculus of power simply doesn’t account for who or what gets sacrificed on the way to (in this case, corporate) hegemony. The battle is against national sovereignty wherever it’s found simply because it is an impediment to achieving the goal. Sacrificing the West’s sovereignty is a strategic necessity rather than a malicious or even ideological imperative. Later, social and civil society can get sacrificed if necessary.
They were well on their way in the early ’90s. What caught them napping is that while they busied themselves with destroying sovereignty in the West and the ME, sovereign-ist factions in two great nations rose to power. Putin’s rise in the late ’90s was initially thought to be temporary, then reversible, and is now a decided threat. The great turning point came as the sovereign faction gained the upper hand in Beijing and XJP’s take over in 2012. Fidel Castro called him “… one of the strongest and most capable revolutionary leaders I have met in my life”, but the corporatists already knew that and had their minions pivot East in anticipation. XJP’s immediate, unexpected turn to Russia as China’s primary ally forced their hand. They delayed the pivot Eastward and turned all available forces on breaking the alliance at what they perceived its weakest point – Russia and its near-abroad.
While Putin deftly parried their opening salvos, XJP went on a hyper-vigourous soft power campaign around the world. These developments have left the Hegemonists’ strategy in disarray. They are now forced to double down, meaning that the sacrifices required of Western civilization are now even greater loss of sovereignty, and if necessary of social and civil society. We’ll see if that works out for them.
“Kill your enemies, and if necessary your friends” or, “Sonny, it’s just business, it’s not personal.”
Well said, both of you. I also took from this interview that the leader of a country that is being ‘hit’ – and Putin has been such a leader – has to be very careful, the example being the president of Ecuador. Therefore I would take the disparagements of Tsipras’ tactics with an enormous grain of salt. I’m sure he got good advice from Putin on this matter. In Greece the oligarchy is so entrenched that Tsipras must go to Twitter to make his arguments because the media are owned by the oligarchy. What he most needs is the overwhelming support of the people. He is getting it from European people, and that is encouraging.
Thank you, Saker, for an important post. We are all Greeks now.
Very well said: ” we are ALL Greeks , now”
I don’t really draw the distinction you do between ideology and strategy. An ideology is a view of how the world works on a social/economic/political level. A sort of “social physics” ruleset. Well, plus some ethical ideas about what one’s objectives should be.
Strategy is going to be different depending on ideology; it follows to a fair degree from what you believe about how economies and politics function. You can look at the strategies the economic hit men use and deduce things about how they think things work. It’s not a lot like how they tell us to think things work.
One interesting thing about the way the economic institutions owned (formally or informally) by the rich behave is that while they profess ideologies involving free, efficient markets and free trade, much of what they do makes clear they don’t believe in that at all, either as a description of the world or as a goal to aim for. So for instance, lobbies for the wealthy will tell you that it doesn’t matter how much you tax corporations, since they will efficiently pass the costs on to the consumer and everything will end up just the same. But they will say that even as they strenuously lobby for the lower taxes on corporations that they claim are irrelevant. And they will tell you that all restraints on markets are terrible even as they bend every sinew to establishing long term international monopolies on vast numbers of products (such as ever longer and stronger patent and copyright rules built into international “free trade” treaties).
Hmm… not sure I get your point.
It’s a fairly limited one. I’m not generally disagreeing with your take about what’s going on, it’s just that when you said “Sacrificing the West’s sovereignty is a strategic necessity rather than a malicious or even ideological imperative” it hit me in one of my hobbyhorses, as it were.
One of the problems with political discussion today is the idea that “ideology” is taboo, that an “ideology” is something that only irrational non-pragmatic people have, which pushes you to irrational non-pragmatic actions and opinions. In fact I think this idea is part of a general push that has been made to keep people apathetic, apolitical, unthreatening to those in power, to keep dangerous ideas away from us. The thing is, if a person believes they are “not ideological”, what they really are is by default using the dominant, mainstream ideology. But since they think it isn’t an ideology, they can’t see it. Unable to see it, they can’t question its assumptions–there’s nothing to question as far as they can tell. And anyone attempting to think differently isn’t debatable, they’re just obviously wrong and it’s mysterious how they could have these obviously wrong ideas; they must have been infected by an “ideology”, one of those strange things that sensible people stay away from.
And you see not just typical apathetic people who don’t care about politics thinking this way, you see engaged people, people upset at the status quo, thinking this way. They’ll be like “Well, I think things should be run like X, Y and Z–but I’m not ideological.” And it hobbles them. There they are totally upset at what’s happening in the world, but they aren’t capable of letting go of their faith in many of the bedrock institutions that are creating the stuff they’re upset about–because they don’t even notice that faith, they think that stuff is simply the way things are, the stuff of reality as opposed to “ideology”.
Take our economic hit man here, John Perkins: He sees what’s going on, he knows as an insider what gets done to enrich corporations, what state resources are mustered, what violence both financial and the old fashioned kind meet any attempts at resistance. He knows it happens worldwide, he knows it’s been going on for a long time, he knows it’s embedded deep in all the corridors of power. But he still thinks that this is an aberration, a sort of optional extra caused by a few bad men or something, and if we could just get those few guys to stop and go back to New Deal policies except this time around the world, the markets would be hunky dory. Why? Because he’s not ideological, he’s a pragmatist who became convinced of a pragmatic problem because he was involved deep, up close and personal. But it still never occurred to him to question the bedrock of mainstream worldviews about how society is and should be structured–that would be ideological. To put it a different way, he holds the (invisible) ideology of the establishment and this seriously hampers his attempt to fight the establishment. Any strategy he comes up with is likely to be ineffective or even self-defeating.
Getting back to your line that I quoted, it just seems to me that the implication there is that doing things for strategic reasons is fundamentally different from doing things for ideological reasons. But in fact, any political actor is doing things for ideological reasons; their strategy is based on their ideology.
OK, I get it now. I did use it in your sense of (the Hegemon’s) “embedded” ideology. Perhaps “paradigm” is a better word.
That is, their ideology doesn’t demand an impoverished West. It’s simply that the people’s impoverishment is immaterial to achieving the strategic objective.
Small point on my side as well.
The referendum question is loaded to give the apperance of free will, but with a foregone conclution. It is not a simple straight up yes or no. It is a convoluded confusing multilayer that will yeald only one outcome: austerity.
“And to realize that the marketplace is a democracy today, and how we spend our money is casting our ballot. Most political democracies are corrupt, including that of the United States. Democracy is not really working on a governmental basis because the corporations are in charge. But it is working on a market basis.”
Here John Perkins sounds about just as delusional and plain goofy as good ol’ Tsipras with his cant about sweet, angelic “European values”. Corporations are unthinkable without the capitalist market. More specifically, how the hell does John Perkins construe the Banksters’ stranglehold without a global lending market boosted by deliberate starvation of tax revenues — courtesy of neoliberal governments and all the cursed tax havens — along with unrestrained consumer credits to all and sundry?
Sorry John: You, if anyone, should indeed understand that it is the beloved capitalist market which is ultimately destroying the charade of bourgeois democracy. Private property of the means of production is utter despotism or, as you called it, a corporatocracy.
Agreed, I was following along going “Yes!” and then at that point for me he suddenly went off the rails. The fact is that capitalism was built on this kind of thing from the very beginning. What Perkins calls “economic hit men”, Karl Marx used to call “Primitive Accumulation”, and it’s been going on since before Adam Smith, with things like the enclosure of the common lands in England to give the big boys more land and to give the new factory owners a supply of landless starving people with no choice but to work for them.
Greece: from the perspective of an astrologer
http://darkstarastrology.com/greek-crisis-referendum/
Interesting Ternam 13…but it didn’t say anything that we aren’t saying here…
My understanding is that there is no vote for leaving the EU (zone?) the referendum is not about leaving the zone…
If it was it would be better…just a straight yes or no….but its subterfuge.
I don’t believe in astrology and I don’t gamble but I think that odds probabilities are more accurate then stars so here you are
http://www.oddschecker.com/politics/european-politics/will-greece-exit-the-eurozone-in-2015
http://sportsbeta.ladbrokes.com/Greek-Bailout-Referendum/Greek-Bailout-Referendum/Politics-N-1z0jdiwZ1z0jdipZ1z141ng/
John Perkins is a political darling of the Western controlled opposition.
He talks about the “corporatacy” in order to divert attention from the fact that it’s the Capitalist system in general and, yes, the American Empire in particular that are the problem.
Corporations are nothing more than the logical outgrowth of a system that is based upon the pursuit of profit, capital acculumation, and the holiest of holies, private property.
But the controlled opposition and their heroes like John Perkins don’t want to confront their capitalist system itself, nor do they want to face that it’s the American Em[pire (of which they are part of) that enforces this system.
Hell, even US General Smedley Butler admitted the nature of the system nearly a century ago, yet people still don’t get it (or pretend to not get it).
A decorated American military general, Butler proclaimed that he was nothing more than a “high class muscle-man for Big Business, for Wall Street and for the Bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism.”
The US military is a gangsta for capitalism.
And America is the mafia don of capitalism.
War is a Racket
http://coat.ncf.ca/our_magazine/links/53/butler.html
“Hell, even US General Smedley Butler admitted the nature of the system nearly a century ago, yet people still don’t get it (or pretend to not get it).”
And what about before Butler and the American Empire? Who were the “gangsters for capitalism” then? Wasn’t the British Empire doing the same thing for the same people sometimes even with America as the target?
“Have designs already been formed to sever the Union? This great and glorious Republic would soon be broken into a multitude of petty States, without commerce, without credit… loaded with taxes to pay armies… trampled upon by the nations of Europe.”
~ President Andrew Jackson, 1837; 26 years before the American Civil War
Britain is still an original gangster, the Soviet Union used to be a gangster, Israel is a born gangster, most Islamic terrorist groups are gangsters… What about this sounds uniquely American?
What Perkins means by this not being an American Empire reflects what Napoleon Bonaparte said: “Money has no motherland.” The Banking Empire is the mafia don.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5hfEBupAeo4
Looks like the truth hits a little too close to home for the America-lovers here.
American apologists are always desperate to deflect blame away from their precious Ameican Empire.
Whenever America commits crimes against humanity, American apologists will pathetically try to proclaim that “other nations have done the same”–as if this is some kind of excuse or alibi.
You evidence this mentality perfectly.
What they don’t want to admit is that America has far surpassed the British Empire (or any other nation) in its crimes.
First and foremost because America has been able to GET AWAY WITH ITS CRIMES since 1776 by masquerading behind the greatest of lies: Freedom and Democracy.
Indeed, in this sense, Americans are truly the Exceptional Nation and People, as they always boast.
America is exceptional in terms of not only its mass murdering oppression and exploitation but especially its ability to conceal these crimes under the banner of Championing Freedom.
As William Blum has stated, Americans seeks to “free the world” … to death, that is.
Freeing the World to Death
http://wariscrime.com/new/freeing-the-world-to-death/
The United States is not a republic, nor is it a democracy.
Hell, even your Controlled Opposition hero, John Perkins, has written about the existence of, yes, the AMERICAN EMPIRE.
Self-Described Economic Hit Man John Perkins:
“We Have Created the World’s First Truly Global Empire”
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article11964.htm
The Secret History of the American Empire
http://www.amazon.com/The-Secret-History-American-Empire/dp/0452289572
You have to wonder why John Perkins, a “former” NSA operative, is now seemingly changing his tune to minimize the crimes of this very same American Empire that he was criticizing a few years ago?!
And you are still avoiding the real of issue of Capitalism itself–not just the bankers, money, or whatever Limited Hangout that you are peddling.
Capitalism in general and Americanism in particular are a clear and present threat to the continued existence of the human race.
That is what these America-lovers simply refuse to admit.
“… America has been able to GET AWAY WITH ITS CRIMES since 1776 by masquerading behind the greatest of lies: Freedom and Democracy.”
I suppose that when the US was invaded by Britain for standing up to the Banking Empire, not once, but twice, when the US was intentionally divided and almost invaded a third time, when all four of the US’s assassinated presidents died standing up to the Banking Empire: None of this was due to “Freedom and Democracy”?
“… liberty, not alone to the people of this country, but hope to the world for all future time. It was that which gave promise that in due time, the weights should be lifted from the shoulders of all men, and that all should have an equal chance.”
~ President Abraham Lincoln, 1861; 1st assassinated president
“Whoever controls the volume of money in any country is absolute master of all industry and commerce… And when you realize that the entire system is very easily controlled, one way or another, by a few powerful men at the top, you will not have to be told how periods of inflation and depression originate.”
~ President James Garfield, 1881; 2nd assassinated president
“Our financial system needs some revision; our money is all good now, but its value must not further be threatened. It should all be put upon an enduring basis, not subject to easy attack, nor its stability to doubt or dispute. Our currency should continue under the supervision of the Government. The several forms of our paper money offer, in my judgment, a constant embarrassment to the Government and a safe balance in the Treasury.”
~ President William McKinley, 1896; 3rd assassinated president
The US did not truly become a gangster for the Banking Empire until 1913 with the Federal Reserve, a similar time frame to what General Butler describes, yet according to your faulty logic, this must mean the US was always a gangster?
“What they don’t want to admit is that America has far surpassed the British Empire (or any other nation) in its crimes.”
That’s debatable. With tens of millions of deaths, many being its own citizens, and toppling two major anti-bankster regimes, the Soviet Union is arguably the gangster with the worst rap sheet.
“You have to wonder why John Perkins, a ‘former’ NSA operative, is now seemingly changing his tune to minimize the crimes of this very same American Empire that he was criticizing a few years ago?!”
With Russia and probably China going anti-bankster, this leaves the US as the Banking Empire’s toughest gangster. Without looking any deeper than that, one might get the impression that the root of the problem is the American Empire, yet that’s a superficial assessment.
“And you are still avoiding the real of issue of Capitalism itself…”
Of course I did: Political generalizations and buzzwords are a joke. Define “capitalism.”
And collectivism works?
Depends on the collectivism. Top-down socialism works poorly, just as top-down capitalism works poorly. The problem with market capitalism is that ever-increasing inequality, barring shocks from outside the system, is built in. The whole point of capital is to make and reinvest profits in an ever-increasing cycle. So them as has, accumulate more. It’s not a pathology, it’s what’s supposed to happen. So capitalism, despite the freedom of the markets, has no choice but to become more and more top-down in terms of the relations between people.
Soviet “collectivism” was also top-down and centralized, and that sucked. It actually was surprisingly successful considering how it was built. But socialism doesn’t have to be built that way; inequality is not baked into the concept the way it is with capitalism. There are plenty of worker-owned, worker managed companies even today, producing efficiently with no bosses. And the internet is making it more and more workable to make decisions without having someone in charge making all the decisions for you.
This is a great interview. The zionazi banksters and their media tools are operating in overdrive trying to promote a “yes” vote on the referendum, claiming all sorts of rubbish about it. One is seeing the full spectrum of the zionazi disinfo machine at work trying to make sure the bankster protection racket continues.
Here’s hoping it doesn’t work. It seems to me that stuff doesn’t work as well when it has to go over the top, you know? Propaganda is at its best when it’s sort of part of the background, just the air you breathe, the assumptions you don’t notice so you don’t question them. When there’s a bunch of clowns foaming at the mouth screaming about how awful it is that you might be about to think for yourself, you start to wonder.
“Greece’s top administrative court ruled late Friday the referendum could go ahead after rejecting a challenge by two citizens who argued its question was confusing and unconstitutional.”
http://www.expatica.com/de/news/country-news/Defiant-PM-rejects-Grexit-fears-as-he-rallies-No-vote_478250.html
BTW, it seems that most of proponents of “yes” vote are doctors, uni professors and uni educated professionals. Are they all Zionists?
Paid shills.
Their jobs depend on the Yes vote
Eventually the NO won it and he (The Prime Minister showed the world that he in the SERVICE of the Zionists.
OMG look at this headline
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-07-03/greek-banks-considering-30-haircut-deposits-over-%E2%82%AC8000-ft-reports
That sounds like the same thing that happened in Cyprus…a bail-in…oh no oh no oh no.
As a greek, All I can say is the greeks are phonies. They are europeans first and greeks second. They will vote yes to appease their Euromasters.
I have argued with whomever greek would listen- to not support joining the Euro years before they ever did join it! The whole concept is based on ideology not sound economic policy.
Alternative economic plans based on the iceland experience, or plans put forth by economists like martin Armstrong of Armstrongeconomics, or simply studying what small nations like Singapore is doing right is never mentioned. Reforms like ridding red tape on new business start ups is never discussed. Their entire existence revolves around the EU and being in lock step with the western hegemony.
Very true — thank you, buzz.
It appears that KKE and the Golden Dawn make up the exception that proves the rule. Tsipras’s real assignment is to keep the rotting edifice of the EU together at all costs and, most importantly, keep Greece out of BRICS and inside NATO alongside its historical arch-enemy Turkey. And, as both you and I allege, there is substantial popular support for this Social Democratic line of appeasement with Western imperialism. The big problem for Syriza and its gullible electorate is that the neoliberal rot has taken such a toll on “the glorious West” by now that the only thing Greece — and indeed all of Southern Europe — can be looking forward to is a never-ending torrent of hapless refugees, rampant unemployment, and bankster looting. Deluded folks, to say the very least. If it weren’t for the absence of Russophobia, it would be similar to the Banderastani hellhole.
What he says about corporations not wanting the standardization of the EU doesn’t ring true at all. It seems more like the EU’s banker beholden bureaucracy is both corrupt and unaccountable and functions first and foremost as a monetary monopoly that the bankers knew full well would be their tool. How could he miss that? I smell disinfo. “Corporations” he says. Banks control corporations, don’t they? The EU project is a banker project, proven both by the absurd cart-before-the-horse idea (at best) of forging a sociopolitical union through monetary monopoly, and by the completely predictable economic events that followed the adoption of the euro in the member nations. The transparent fraud that brought Greece itself into the Union was a banker heist pure and simple and could only have happened if the whole bloody “experiment” was controlled by criminals from the get go. The governments that pushed the whole turd through prove themselves to be nothing but a bunch of banker step-and-fetchit criminals and fools. No, the whole thing was a fraud ab initio and to those with half a brain the events of the past 15 years have been nothing but a predictable farce and a tragedy. But for those slow on the uptake at least the situation in the Ukraine and in Greece reveal finally who is really pulling the strings in Europe, and it obviously isn’t “corporations”.
Oxi to the poxies.
Greek Solidarity Protests Spring up Across Europe
Malta is NOT a tax haven – neither are any of the major corporations registered here…..
Interesting to see his writing in action, I really recommend his book.
Quite funny, but the book was recommended to me by my son, who few years back was taking “International Management … course” in order to get involved with NGO’s in order to help people in the third world countries.
Needless to say, he changed his mind after he read this book, but not before he finished his course. So sad.
At Anonymous:
Collectivism does indeed work.
For the global oligarchy.
Because that’s exactly how the transnational corporations are organised, particularly the energy sector.
They just call it the ‘free market.’
http://www.sott.net/article/298658-Big-news-from-Greece-if-true
Fort Apache last edition: “Referendum in Greece” in Spanish ( MUST WATCH ).
http://www.hispantv.com/showepisode/episode/Fort-Apache—Referendum-en-Grecia-/714
Manolo Monereo:
“It is a matter of political courage, of dignity ..”
“Almost, you have to ask permission to speak ill of Germany. What I ask ..”
“The established relations center-periphery express domination, power and control ..”
“To call the” imposition “” negotiation “is a terrible thing….it is the negotiating way of Don Corleone …”
“They are creating the objective conditions for an authoritarian-fascist bias in Southern Europe …”
Daniel Cohn-Bendit (in “zapping Apache”, halfway through the debate):
“Now we want to do business at the expense of Greeks ….. They (ECB) lend us at 1% and we lend the Greeks at 3, 5 or 7% …”
This is starting to feel like when I heard the preliminary results for the Crimea Referendum =D
Official Greferendum Results Show “No” Landslide: Singular Logic Projects “Oxi” Victory
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-07-05/first-official-results-show-599-voted-no-95-votes-counted-real-time-updates
Eurogroup In Shock: Finance Ministers “Would Not Know What To Discuss” After Greferendum Stunner
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-07-05/eurogroup-shock-finance-ministers-would-not-know-what-discuss-after-greferendum-stun
Greece referendum ( LAST MINUTE ).
Counted 47%: -38.90% YES
-61.10% NO
Some analysts point to the youth vote as key to eventual victory of NO.
The latest polls show that 80% of young people are supporters of NO.
It is clear that new generations of southern Europe will not accept slavery imposed from the North without question.
Behind every great fortune is a great crime – Honoré de Balzac