Sunday, May 31, 2009

Some “new” books in the collection

I’ve got a few post not ready for posting yet; on the rune stones at Fresta church north of Stockholm and on the adventures in Skarlunda outside of Sodertalje. These will be posted during the week to come as I will work in Lerum some miles east of Gothenburg.

This weekend I’ve been attending a wedding and gotten a few hours in Jonkoping where I picked up a few books, some more fun than others, what do you think of these cool titles;

Clergyman and others. 1790. The biographical and martyrological dictionary: containing the lives, sufferings, and deaths, of the most eminent martyrs and confessors of Christ… By a clergyman and others. Newcastle upon Tyne: printed by M. Angus

 

A few illustrations;

 

Cutter, Calvin, M. D. 1854. A treatise on anatomy, physiology, and hygiene: designed for the colleges, academies, and families. Published by Benjamin B. Mussey and Co. Boston, 466 sidor.

 

Waddilove (W.J.D.)1847. The Lamp in the Wilderness with Fragmenta Vetusta. An Examination of Symbols as applicable to History and explicable by Scripture. Hexham 1847

Among these I also got a few others, I’ll get back to them later. 

Magnus Reuterdahl

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Kekkaishi (Volume 3), by Yellow Tanabe

For those of you who have been following this blog on a weekly basis, sorry about the delay in posting. A new addition to the Maxon family has just recently been added. She’s a little young for books and manga, but we’ll get back to some reviews so that we’ll be prepared for when she is.

In the first two volumes of Kekkaishi, we learned about two teens from different families who are guardians by night. They keep creatures (ayakashi) away from their school to prevent them from becoming greater threats; as the beasts absorb the hidden power that’s buried there.

Story overview:

Yoshimori practices his kekkai barrier on a large bolder, but when practicing his “Joso” (positioning) of the kekkai, he struggles to get it where he wants. It seems his powers are enormous, but his control has yet to improve. Tokine on the other hand has the opposite problem: she has complete control but is limited on power. They both secretly envy the other’s abilities and use this as motivation to improve their skills.

They come across a Hiwatari (Ice Blower) ayakashi, and Yoshimori ends up positioning himself in front of Tokine to protect her. Together the two of them join forces (ignoring the family feud) to defeat the foe. We learn of an ability called “Nenshi” (Sense Thread,) which is a kekkai in the form of a string rather than a box. Their job is never done, and soon they face a new enemy for Yoshimori to practice the Nenshi on. Among the group is an old friend of Yoshimori’s magical ghost-like dog, Madarao.

We learn some past history with Madarao and how his/her (I’ll explain later) old friend Koya were both wild dogs living off the land until man came and destroyed it by war, thus forcing the two companions to starve to death. Now it has been five hundred or so years later, and Koya wants to kill humans for revenge. Yoshimori removes Madarao’s collar so that he/she can use full power to defeat Koya. It still turns out to be too hard a task; it takes Yoshimori and Madarao working together, doing the very thing Koya despises (working with humans) to defeat him. Yoshimori then has the difficult task of creating a new collar on the huge beast Madarao has become, and he has to do so before he/she gets totally out of control.

My thoughts:

I continue to enjoy this manga series. There’s a lot of heart in the story and the characters are wonderfully designed (and executed.) It’s interesting to know a little more history about Yoshimor’s helper, and how things work between them. We also get a few more clues into the history of the clans.

Things to consider:

OK, now don’t freak out on me parents. Remember that we use secular books to educate our children, not isolate them. I say this in reference to the his/her comment that I mentioned above in regards to the dog, Madarao. It’s unclear whether the dog is a girl or a boy, and it almost seems like he is a girl now but was a boy back before he first died. At the end of the book the author was asked about this by a fan, to which he replied, “It’s not that important [but] in my mind Madarao was always Gay . . .” Let’s talk about this below, but for now, I keep this the same rating as the other two: mainly for boys and good at around thirteen plus. No inappropriate sexual references or vulgar language, just lots of action violence.

Opportunities for discussion:

Talk to your kids about what it means to be “gay.” Tell them what your thoughts on this whole controversial issue are. Share with them what you believe and why. If you are interested in my opinion, then I suggest you tell them that God loves all his creation and that choosing to be “gay” is considered to be a sin just as much as stealing, telling a lie, or not loving God with all your heart. We all have sin issues to face, no matter what it is. I don’t believe it’s good to promote sin in a positive light, but I do not think we should teach our children to hate their fellow man either. Everyone needs to be shown love and compassion, as we are all fallen creatures. I could say more, but let’s stick to the basics; chose to educate how you best see fit, but do chose to educate, not isolate. Next, another great topic here is bias. When Koya wanted to kill all the humans, he was taking out his revenge for what people who are long dead and gone have done. We should never hate a particular group or race based on something one part of it/them has done. Ask your kids if they have ever done this and what the results where.

Past reviews in this series:

1) Kekkaishi (Volume 1)

2) Kekkaishi (Volume 2)

Friday, May 29, 2009

Book Review: Growing Pains of a Hapless Househusband by Sam Holden

Sam Holden has been a stay-at-home Dad to his 2 children Daisy and Peter since he was made reduntant from his Management Consultant job last year.

His wife Sally works among in the Intelligence Services, and Sam feels somewhat lonely at home with only his toddlers for company. Sam decides he needs to publicise his Holden Childcare programme and meets TV producer Dom.

Luckily for Sam, Dom thinks Sam might have a hit shot with his idea and so ‘WonderHubby’ is born. Sam tells his tales and woes in his humourous diary format, so follow along and find out what its like to be the star of WonderHubby, and family-life with the Holdens.

You would be forgiven for thinking that this is autobiographical because the name of the author and lead character in the book are indeed the same, but don’t be fooled. Sam Holden is the pen-name of a well-known author journalist (although we aren’t told exactly who), and this book, as well as the first, is based loosely of Sam’s experience of being a stay-at-home Dad to his children, but of course some is fictional and these 2 elements are combined to create an unusual style of writing and story. The book is written entirely in a diary format, with entries being quite random, sometimes every day and then others missed out which does make it seem more like a real diary I suppose. It’s obviously written in the first person by Sam, and consequently everything we see and hear is his own viewpoint, but luckily for the readers, he is a very good storyteller and the diary entries are really funny and easy to read.

Although the writing style is very easy to read, and I did find myself laughing out loud a few times, I did have quite a problem with this book this really only occured to me after I was around halfway through the book and just continued up until I turned the last page. The first book seemed natural and plodded along at a good pace, just entertaining the reader as we read along with Sam’s daily life. The problem with this follow up book for me is that I felt Holden was just trying too hard to be entertaining to his audience. I can’t lie and say I didn’t find it entertaining because I did, but it just seemed in parts a bit contrived and that he was adding things in purely to be sensational and give you a bit of shock factor out of the blue. One particular shock was actually a tad disgusting and I felt it a bit out of place in this novel to be honest and I feel it was this that actually lowered the tone of the novel which was so disappointing to me.

The characters were good, although the book mainly follows Sam and so it is he whom we really get to know the best out of the few people within the book. Those who have read his previous novel will know about the character, and he is the same in the second book, very funny, likeable and generally a strong lead character within the book. His wife Sally doesn’t appear very much in the book but when she does, we just seem to see her going to bed, having an argument with Sam or being a mum. She’s a working mum but I just couldn’t make myself like her simply because she wasn’t in the book enough for me to care about her. The other character we saw a lot of in the book was Dom, the man behind Sam’s new television show “WonderHubby”. I didn’t like this character at all, he seemed really slimy and over-the-top, and quite a horrible person actually! Some of the things that came out about him were not very nice, and I didn’t enjoy any of the parts with him in it, and Holden putting in a character like this really disappointed me because I just couldn’t stand him. There were smaller characters throughout too, none important enough to mention, but they didn’t really add too much to the story.

I was hoping for an enjoyable and funny read, much in the same vein of Holden’s first book but sadly I was left disappointed by what I read this time around. Although the elements were there in terms of story, story-teller and the ideas within the book for it to be a great story, but it really just fell flat for me throughout to be honest. The whole idea of the television show was slightly odd and seemed unrealistic, and I’m not sure how much the author can have drawn on his own experiences for something like that, making me doubt the other stuff in the book too. Holden is definitely a talented writer who has the knack for writing books based on life, families and relationships, but this one just is simply nowhere as good as the first. If you are at all tempted to try this author, I’d highly recommend you reading his first novel and not really bothering with this one!

Rating: 2/5

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Is your Government Legitimate?

Misleading Legitimacies (May 4, 2009)

 

Note: This essay on misleading legitimacies is a worldwide problem that is spreading chaos and instability.  Thus, this essay can sustain more than one chapter.  The first part will focus on the Arab and Islamic legitimacies in the Arab World.      

 

Absence of legitimacy in any society creates a sense of weightlessness in the emotions and orientations of citizens that may spread havoc.  The lack of credibility in authority, institution, and even an eminent personality in matter of moral standing can subject society to be doomed to the rule of the jungle: those perceived to be the strongest in military forces or in organizational stabilities feel legitimate as tyrants to exercise their violent tendencies and commit massacres and drive society into chaos.

 

            I like to start with two examples not directly related to the Arab World. We have the case of Indonesia in the 1960’s.  As Sukarno secured the Independence of Indonesia, the most populous of the Moslem world, Islam was oriented toward a secular State and was the most tolerant.  The colonial mines of raw materials were nationalized and Sukarno was a pillar of the non-aliened States and normal relations with the Soviet Union and China were progressing without any serious popular opposition. Sukarno was endowed with popular legitimacy because he satisfied the sense of dignity of his people. In fact, Sukarno had the foresight to combine the doctrines of nationalism, Islam, and communism under the acronym NASACOM but it did not gel well in the short time of his legitimate authority.   As the USA was bracing for a long protracted war in Vietnam, then the US Administration decided to secure the total adhesion of the neighboring States with Vietnam to its ideology; the same bipolar pronouncement “You are either with us or against us”.  Thus, Suharto was propelled by a military coup and from October 1965 to the summer of 1966 over 600,000 of the Indonesian intelligentsia was executed in universities, the administrations, in the Capital Jakarta, and even in remote villages.  By the end of this dictatorship that lasted over 20 years Islam re-emerged with a different sense of urgencies, more radical, and more zealot.

            Let us consider the case of legitimacy in Iran. Mossadegh PM tried in 1951 to have a deal with British Petroleum for half its profit on its exploitation of Iran’s oil  BP refused and Mossadegh nationalized this oil company by a vote in the parliament.  Britain encouraged the US Administration to lead a military coup that brought back the young Shah to power in 1953 for 25 years of tyranny, security harassments, lavish expenditures on personal aggrandizement, purchasing the largest military hardware in the region, and fighting off the powerful Mullahs.  The Shah succumbed to Khomeini when President Carter refused to support his “precarious” legitimacy.  Iran reverted to an extremist conservative Chiaa Islam.

            The concept of Arab nationalism is at least two century old and its resurgence was based on two critical factors.  First, as the Ottoman Empire waned in culture and civilization by the 18th century the cultured intelligencia in Syria and Lebanon immigrated to Egypt for an environment more suited to their literary creativity and publishing. The climate of openness to various civilizations in Egypt sent a choc wave to the Ottoman Empire that was reverting to Turk nationalism; the successive political turbulence in Turkey considered the nations outside the boundaries of Turkey as nominal dominions that were not worth the investment in time or money.  The parties and free minded people who proclaimed the need to revert to Arab culture and Arab language were persecuted and hanged.

            Second, Iran of the 18th century has consolidated the power base of its Empire on the Chiaa sect that attacked the Caliphate legitimacy of the Ottoman Sultan.  Many non-Sunni sects proselytized a return to conservative fundamentals of Islam (for example, the Wahhabit of Najd in the Arab Peninsula and the Yazd in Yemen) were censuring the dominant concept of Caliphate. This second chock wave in religious fundamentals of governing focused the attention of the Sunni Moslem toward Mecca and the Hashemi dynasty, supposedly descendent of the Prophet Muhammad.  During the First World War, the British colonial power exploited this spiritual revolt into convincing the Arab Moslems into revolting and fighting the Ottoman Empire with lavish promises that it had no intention of keeping.

            Consequently, the spirit of Arab nationalism started in earnest during the First World War when the colonial powers tried to ally the “Arab” Moslems against their co-religionist Moslems in Turkey. The colonial powers had no intentions of permitting the “Arabs” to instituting any sustainable State economically, politically, or strategically. King Faissal of Mecca was promised Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, and Jordan but the French mandate chased him out. The British mandate allocated Faissal the “throne” of Iraq but Faissal was overturned and died at the age of 50.

            The Syrian Nation spirit spread in Syria, Lebanon, and Palestine. First, the Syrian could not conceive why the urban societies in Syria should succumb to nomadic sovereigns selected in Mecca; second, as the Arabic civilization has died 5 centuries ago, even before the advent of the Ottoman Empire, it was necessary to dust off the previous civilizations to Islam and re-invent a national culture and civilization that reflected the urban spirit of fertile Syria.  The Arabic formal language was fundamental to maintain, encourage, and solidify as the motherland language while maintaining the ethnic languages. 

In 1936, the Syria National Social Party was founded by a Christian Orthodox Antoun Saadeh from Mount Lebanon. This political and ideological party focused on regional unities by adding Iraq to the Syrian Nation and uniting Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and Palestine. The other nations would include the Arab Peninsula, the Nile nations, and then the northern Arab nations in Africa such as Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco.  Antoun Saadeh recognized that this region is Moslem by a large margin and wrote a well researched book “Islam (submission to One God): One message Christ and Muhammad” The mandated powers of France and Britain were highly worried of this wild fire being disseminated in the Middle East. Thus, the mandated powers did the utmost to discredit this new ideology by rekindling confessional emotions and sectarian communities and spreading false information on the affiliations of its founders. The founding leader Antoun Saadeh was to be executed without trial by a military court.

In 1945, the Baath political party was founded by Michel Aflak, another Christian Orthodox in Syria.  This new party excited the Arabic nomadic romantic spirit. By 1946 half a dozen States in the Arab World were recognized by the UN such as Lebanon, Syria, Egypt, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia of the Seoud dynasty. The Baath party took roots in Syria and Iraq and was ruled by Sunnis; this party was swept away when Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt came to power and galvanized the Arab populations into the feeling of a new identity and recapturing its dignity. The Baath Party was ready to include any new State recognizing Arabic as the State language into the Arab Nation. As one Arab State after another were recognized independent by the UN then Sunnis tried to galvanize the populations into uniting under a vast nation, from Morocco to Sudan to Yemen to Iraq, all in all 21 States reunited under the Arab League.  The Sunnis were enthusiastic for any Arab unity since they form the vast majority in this region; they ultimately contemplated to re-institute the Caliphate.

When the military coup of Gamal Abdel Nasser recaptured power in Egypt it dethroned the King.  Many Egyptians believed that “The Moslem Brotherhood” was behind this coup: the “Moslem Brotherhood” had legitimacy among the Egyptian population and had infiltrated the army. Then Gamal Abdel Nasser declared the nationalization of the Suez Canal in 1955 run by Britain and France.  It happened that in the same period the Soviet Union invaded Hungary to crush a revolt again communism.  The US Administration was in a serious predicament; if it allowed France and Britain to capture Egypt by a military alternative then what message it would be sending to the under developed States?  That the ideologies of capitalism and communism are the same enemies to the new recognized States. Eisenhower pressured France and Britain to withdraw and Gamal Abdel Nasser emerged politically the victor and the symbol of Arab regained pride and dignity.  The first move of the newly established “legitimate leader” was to crush his serious challenger to legitimacy, mainly the “Moslem Brotherhood” party.

Many political parties in the Arab World sensed the pulse of the emotional feeling of the masses; a few fought back this unpractical nation with the lame tool of rationality and others countered with the logic that nationality and religion were outmoded by the advent of communism.  In fact, every military coup that was supported by communists turned against the communists in no time.  Gamal Abdel Nasser set the tune and the tone; the Arab masses listened to their legitimate leader regardless of his set backs, pitfalls, critical errors, and his one party dictatorship ruling.  The legitimate leader could be forgiven for crushing liberties, freedom of opinions, and sending thousands in prison and hundreds dieing under torture.

In 1965, the Palestinian Resistance under the leadership of Fateh’s Yasser Arafat (Abu Ammar) started re-taking its destiny and responsibility for the forgotten Palestinian aspiration to a motherland.   Gamal Abdel Nasser understood that his legitimacy is being challenged for failing to deal with the Palestinians rights of return to their lands.  This feeling of challenge to legitimacy was one of the main implicit factors that pressured Gamal Abdel Nasser to ask the UN peacekeeping forces to vacate Sinai in 1967 and the follow up crushing military defeat by the tiny Zionist state of Israel.  (To be continued in Part 2).

 

Note 2: The theme was extracted from Amine Maalouf’s book “Le Dereglement du Monde”

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Hezbollah (God's Party) and Nasr Allah (God's Victory): Biographies

Hezbollah (God’s Party) and Nasr Allah (God’s Victory): Biographies (May 25, 2009)

Hassan Nasr Allah is currently the Secretary General of Hezbollah.  He was born in August 31, 1960 in the poorest section of East Beirut called Nabaa.  Hassan was the eldest among nine offspring and his father supported this vast family selling vegetable. Hassan refrained from playing soccer with the neighboring kids or joining them for a swim; he was deeply religious and admired greatly Imam Moussa Sadr who gave the Moslem Shiaa sect sense of their pride and potentials in the Lebanese fabrics.  The regions of the Shiaa in south Lebanon and in the Bekaa Valley were neglected by the central government since the independence in 1943.  The Imam of the Mosque where Hassan prayed in Nabaa was Muhammad Fadlallah who is presently the highest Imam of the Shiaa in Lebanon. 

At the age of 14 Hassan moved with his family to their home village Bazourieh in south Lebanon. He aided Sheikh Ali Shams el Deen opening a small library of religious manuscripts and Hassan started teaching religion in the village and then finished his high school in Tyr.  By the age of 15 Hassan joined the “AMAL” movement of Imam Moussa Sadr and was quickly appointed officer of the Bekaa district and then a member of the politburo.  Sheikh Muhammad Ghrawy facilitated to Nasr Allah higher religious learning in Najaf (Iraq).  Nasr Allah met in Najaf with Abbass Moussawy (later the first Secretary General of Hezbollah).  By 1978, and after two years spent in Najaf, Nasr Allah returned to Lebanon.  A couple of months later Imam Moussa Sadr disappeared after a visit to Libya in August 1978.

 

In 1979, Khomeini came to power in Iran and the Shah went to exile.  The geopolitical condition in the Middle East changed drastically. Iran was now against the USA interests in the region, supported the Palestinian cause, and was the first State to officially allow the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) to open and embassy in Tehran.  

Israel invaded Lebanon in June 1982; the operation was baptized “Peace in Galilee”.  Israel put siege to Beirut for two months and Yasser Arafat and 11,000 Palestinian fighters left to Tunisia.  The Lebanese President of the Republic Elias Sarkis invited Nabih Berri (leader of AMAL) to join Walid Jumblat (Druze leader) and Basheer Gemayel (leader of the Christian Lebanese Forces) to forming a national rescue team. Many AMAL cadres quit Nabih Berry such as Abbass Moussawy, Sobhi Tuffaily, Hussein Moussawy, Ibraheem Amin Sayyed, Naeem Qassem, and Nasr Allah.  They created Hezbollah and blew up the US Marines and French barracks in Beirut in 1983. Nasr Allah had said that Hezbollah was the consequence of Israel entering Beirut in 1982.

 Hezbollah postponed declaring its formation until 1985 after Israel assassinated one of Hezbollah’s leaders Sheikh Ragheb Harb. The Iranian leaders Ali Mohtashamy was then the spiritual father of the Party and Muhammad Akhtary the military father.

Hassan Nasr Allah learned from Ragheb Harb the famous dictum “The word is taking a stand and shaking hands is acknowledgement of assent” and thus Harb never shook hands with any Israeli army officers who were trying hard to win Ragheb over to supporting the Israeli occupation of south Lebanon. 

In 1987, Nasr Allah was appointed member of the highest legislative order in Hezbollah and chairman of the executive branch.  In 1989, Nasr Allah resumed his religious studies in Qom (Iran) and returned in a hurry to Lebanon when military skirmishes with the AMAL movement spread.  The AMAL party was executing the orders of the Syrian regime to entering the Palestinian camps and disarming the Palestinians of any heavy arsenal.  Hezbollah followed the policies of Iran to leave the Palestinian out of harm.  After many months of fighting both parties settled out their differences as Syria and Iran reached a compromise.

Israel assassinated Hezbollah leader Abbass Moussawy in 1992.  Nasr Allah was the closest aid to Moussawy, had extensive contacts with the base, and studied in Qom.  Hassan Nasr Allah replaced Moussawy as Secretary General; he was only 32 of age.  Nasr Allah said: “A movement that witnesses its leader falling martyr can never be defeated”. Hezbollah evolved into a qualitative phase in organization and political acumen.

 

Israel invaded Lebanon in July 1993 for 7 days under the code name “Settling Accounts and then re-invaded in 1996 under Shimon Peres (Nobel Peace prize winner!) and the operation of total destruction lasted for 17 days under the name “Grapes of Wrath” and shelled a UN compound in Qana where civilians had taken refuge and over 100 died and 300 were gravely injured.  Hadi, the eldest son of Nasr Allah, fell martyr during a resistance operation in September 1997; it was the night before Nasr Allah was to deliver a major speech and he insisted on speaking and said: “In Hezbollah we do not save our children for the future; we honor them when they fight in the front lines against our enemy Israel; we stand tall when they fall martyrs”

 

Israel had to retreat from all of Lebanon, with the exception of Shebaa Farms and the hills of Kfarshouba in May 24, 2000 without pre-conditions or negotiations.  The Arab recognized Hezbollah as the main resistance movement that vanquished Israel and acclaimed Nasr Allah as the Hero of liberation.  In the large town of Bent Jbeil Nasr Allah delivered the Victory Speech and offered the liberation in the name of all the Lebanese.  Nasr Allah said: “Israel has nuclear arsenals and owns the most lethal air force in the region.  Israel is still much weaker than the spider web” (It was a reference of a spider web on a cave that saved the Prophet Muhammad from being caught by the Kuraich persecutors while fleeing to Yathreb)

 

Israel bombarded the villages in south Lebanon in 2003 and then raided Beirut in 2005.  Israel re-invaded Lebanon in July 2006 for 33 days and failed to achieve any of its proclaimed objectives.  Nasr Allah was recognized as the most charismatic and powerful resistance leader in the Arab and Moslem World.  Nasr Allah played the catalyst for the Shiaa in Lebanon to participate in projecting the living messages in the symbolism of the Koran verses and thus be capable of assimilating and accepting changing social and environmental conditions.

 

According to the famous journalist Seymour Hirsh, Cheney, Eliot Abrahams, and Bandar Ben Sultan conspired to finance and whisk the members of Fatah El Islam into the refugee camp of Nahr Al Bared with the purpose of destabilizing Lebanon and starting civil war between the Moslem Shiaas and Sunnis and thus immersing Hezbollah into a potential civil war. It didn’t work because the Lebanese army was hurt in its pride after many soldiers were executed by severing their heads in the summer of 2007.  The army lost over 160 soldiers and many hundreds were severely injured but the Moslem extremism objectives were defeated after 6 months of engagement in the camp.  Deputy Bahiya Hariri (sister of late Rafic Hariri) acknowledged that she contributed substantially in financing extremist Palestinian groups in the refugee camps.

            The Israelis take very seriously Nasr Allah promises and threats.  The Lebanese Government of Seniora PM failed to understand that “A word is a commitment”.  Nasr Allah had said that Hezbollah will never turn its arms internally excepting when coerced to relinquish its arms; especially its secured communication lines, the most potent arm it had during the war in 2006.  In May 5, 2008 Seniora PM Government, with no Shiaa minister representatives in the cabinet, executed a plan to dismantle Hezbollah secure communication network.  Hassan Nasr Allah delivered a speech demanding the government to retract its decision.  By May 7 the AMAL militias confronted the security forces of the Moustakbal movement in Beirut and quickly closed down those arm caches intended to start civil disturbances. The AMAL forces were controlled by cadres of Hezbollah in order for the confrontation not to degenerate into sectarian infighting. For example, the rioters saved the huge pictures of late Rafic Hariri PM and removed the pictures of Saad Hariri and Seniora PM.  Israel admitted that its patient work of infiltrating Hezbollah for two years vanished within a couple of hours.

            Hezbollah has joined the Parliament since 1992 and has increased the number of its Deputies; it has cabinet ministers since the year 2000.   Lebanon is getting ready for Parliamentary election in June 7, 2009 and all the indications point to victory of the opposition headed by Hezbollah, AMAL, and the movement (Tayyar) of Change and Reforms of General Michel Aoun.  Over 20 Lebanese agents spying for Israel have been apprehended.   Nasr Allah is demanding that the traitors be hanged.

 

Note:  The biographical sections were extracted from the recent Arabic/Lebanese book “Shock and Steadfastness” (Sadmah wa Sumoud”) by Kareem Bakradouny.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Book Review: The Fidelity Files by Jessica Brody

Jennifer Hunter has a somewhat unusual job, one that she keeps hidden even from her family and friends. Jennifer works under the code name of “Ashlyn”, a Fidelity Inspector, and a pretty good one at that.

Jennifer basically receives a call from a suspicious wife, and then tests her husband to see if he has an intention to cheat. But this lifestyle is taking its toll on Jen, and her friends are concerned that she’s still single.

When she meets Jamie Richards after one of her trips, she begins to wonder about retiring and settling down, but there is one last surprising assignment Ashlyn has to complete.

For some reason, I am not immediately drawn to books written by American authors. I find their style to be very different from British and Irish authors, and I find a lot of “Americanisms” odd and when I don’t get them, it annoys me. However, this book was fantastic, it drew me in straight away with a fun first person narrative from a character that I straight away loved, and I forgot I was reading a book written by an American! I am quite ruthless and if I don’t like a book, I won’t carry on reading it so this must have been good to keep me going, especially considering the size of the book as well!

A lot of female fiction is about relationships, fidelity and all things related to those topics. However, this story is slightly different because it isn’t written from the side of the wronged wife or the mistress, but instead from someone who is intending to see if a man is going to cheat on his spouse. The whole idea does make me a bit uncomfortable but in the context of a fictional story, it works well and makes for very good reading indeed. Brody has really captured the essence of this story, not just making life sweet and easy for Jennifer, instead also choosing to focus on the not-so-nice side of the job too and this was very readable and intriguing.

Jennifer was a fabulous character, and a really brilliant narrator too, which really helps the books appeal for me. I think with a story like this one where the job of the main character is a bit questionable, you have to like them and luckily Brody has written Jessica in such a way that she’s a nice person who genuinely thinks she is doing a good thing for people. Jennifer’s relationships in the book were similar to those of the couples she is helping in the book, in that none of them are completely honest. However, this works well in the book because you want it to work out for Jen and her friends, and I just wanted to keep reading to see if they were ever going to find out anything!

The only other characters that pop up were her 3 best friends, and even then we don’t see very much of them. The story is very much focussed on Jessica and her life, and the fact we see so little of them is testament to how much she sees them herself. The book seems to try to reflect real life in that aspect, and Brody does this very well and in a very readable way. Although the book travels across America, and indeed other places too, there isn’t much description of them because of Jen’s job, all we hear about is her job and its a shame because it would have been nice to hear something about the places, but I guess this wasn’t the aim of the book in the first place!

If you are after a very entertaining read that will stay with you for a while after you have finished reading it, then look out for a copy of The Fidelity Files. It is a well-written and enjoyable story that sways away from the normal sort of storylines that many chick lit authors use again and again, and puts a spin on the whole “affairs” plot. The book moved at a really good pace, and with believable twists as well which is always good in a book like this. The author has written a follow up due out later this year that follows the characters and I am very much looking forward to that release because I loved the characters in this book, Brody did such a good job of making them likeable and I really can’t wait to see what happens next. A super book and highly recommended for chick-lit fans.

Rating: 5/5

Monday, May 25, 2009

Guest Post ~ Author Maya Slater

Gentle Readers:   Maya Slater has penned a guest post for us on her book The Private Diary of Mr Darcy  – and as I mention in my previous post, it is quite an entertaining read!  Thank you Ms. Slater for sharing your thoughts with us [and those of Mr. Darcy!]

 

 

 

 

INTRODUCING:  The Private Diary of Mr Darcy, the American edition to be published on June 15th by W.W.Norton.

 ‘What book would you most love to read, if only it had been written?’

I found myself answering, without hesitation, ‘Oh, Mr Darcy’s diary.’ Everyone round the table laughed, and the moment passed. But the idea stayed with me for months, till finally I had to give in to it, and start writing.

It’s not as though Mr Darcy was the kind of man to have kept an intimate diary of his own volition. He started it as a child when his mother gave him a moleskin notebook, gently suggesting he should make it his confidant. A few days later she was dead, and keeping a diary became a sacred duty to him.

The final volume of his diary, published under the title The Private Diary of Mr Darcy*, begins on the day that he first sets eyes on Elizabeth Bennet – although she makes no impression on him whatsoever. It concludes as they happily plan their wedding. In between, he unburdens himself of many secrets, and lives through the weeks and months when he is absent from Pride and Prejudice: that first winter when Mr Bingley has deserted Jane, the following summer when Elizabeth has turned him down, the anxious search for Lydia and Wickham.

 Of course the diary is private. Much of what it contains would shock his female acquaintance, describing as it does his life as a rich bachelor about town.   His gentlemen friends too would be astonished – at the uncertainties, weaknesses and powerful emotions confided by this politely reticent and formal young man. It is not surprising that he decides to abandon it when he marries: it would not do for his wife to discover it.

Throughout, it is Mr Darcy who has directed operations; I have merely followed where he led.

 MAYA SLATER 

*The British edition (Phoenix, 2007) was titled Mr Darcy’s Diary.

[ See also the Maya Slater interview on YouTube  and my previous post with additional links here ]

The opening question, by the way, is quite thought-provoking – anyone want to add their thoughts? -

What book would you most love to read, if only it had been written?

Friday, May 22, 2009

Piece of Cake - Swati Kaushal

Piece of Cake qualifies to be neither a great piece of literature nor a book that is thought provoking. But it makes it to our web pages simply because reading it was ‘fun’. Classic chick – lit ( don’t wince , such a category does exist ) , it follows the trials and tribulations of a 29 year old b-school graduate, Minal Sharma, in a cut throat multinational food corporation. Running parallel to the core story is her need to find the ‘man’ of her life, before her mom dumps the HT Matrimonial list of bachelors on her.

‘Yawn!What’s new?’ you ask. Well nothing really.Except that it is laugh out loud , fast paced and very well set in the Indian context without being preachy.

Its also very easy to relate. The characters are just caricatures of people around you- the spineless boss, the turncoat teammate , the generous chief , the hot neighbour , the chauvinist super successful fiance and my favourite – the slightly overbearing but amazingly caring mother.

As you keep up with Minal’s life at work and outside, you are constantly reminded of incidents in your personal life…and how you wished you had the ability to laugh at yourself as she does.

The USP of the book is its humor. Swati Kaushal writes fluidly and entertainingly in English and the punchlines are quite Americanized.

Verdict: Not something that would be recommended as a must read – but if you just want to unwind on a weekend – then this is it.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

The Miracle of Forgiveness

In As We Forgive: Stories of Reconciliation from Rwanda (Zondervan, 2009), Catherine Claire Larson tells two sides to the story of the 1990’s Rwandan genocide. On the one hand, she documents the horrific scenes of mass murder. On the other hand, she describes the moving accounts of forgiveness that have taken place between victims and their abusers.

Larson begins her book by laying out a chronology of events. Readers who are unfamiliar with the history of the genocide in Rwanda will find the historical context helpful for understanding the individual stories that follow.

In short, the seeds of the genocide were planted in the bitterness between the Hutu and the Tutsi regimes. In the mid-1990’s, Hutus began a systematic slaughter of Tutsis. Over 800,000 Rwandans were killed in 100 days. The most chilling fact about this genocide is that, in most cases, neighbors were killing neighbors. The Hutus were not roaming the countryside killing strangers with machetes. These were people slaughtering people they knew.

But As We Forgive does not concentrate primarily upon the atrocities that took place during the genocide. Instead, Larson focuses upon the incredible acts of forgiveness that have since followed. 

Within the past several years, more than 100,000 of the killers have been released back into society. One may wonder: How have the victims coped with these new societal developments? These are people who lost parents and siblings and children. They are people who even today bear the physical scars of violence or the emotional scars of rape. How have the Rwandans been able to co-exist with the very people who caused them such pain?

Christianity provides the answer. Larson tells the stories of several victims and perpetrators, and offers a few additional insights into the nature of Christian forgiveness.

As you read these powerful stories, you quickly come to realize that forgiveness does not come easy. The Rwandan victims do not minimize the sin by ignoring it or sweeping its consequences under the rug. 

Larson is unflinching in her portrayal of evil. The line of evil runs through both victim and killer. It is not as simple as “bad” versus “good.” One woman recounts how she was rescued by a man who kept her safe from the threat of death for a period of time, even as he occasionally raped her.

Larson believes that when we look at a murderer, we look at ourselves. The victims need to offer forgiveness, but even they need forgiveness from God.

The struggle to forgive is palpable at times. One woman cries out to God to forgive her for failing to forgive: 

“Oh, God, forgive me for dwelling so much on the past, for pushing others away and feeling lonely, when I didn’t have to feel that way. And most of all forgive me for not thinking of you, or what you have given me today. Help me, God; to start living and to start being truly thankful for the ways you are working in my life.” (84)

Moments later, Larson provides the key to the entire book: 

The more she had come to understand the significance of the Bible’s teachings on Jesus Christ’s death, the more forgiveness seemed possible. She learned how Christ had been executed in a horrible manner, more horrible than some of the things she had seen in the war. And she learned how he willingly died to pay the penalty for her wrongdoing and for anyone else who would give up their bad ways and look to him. If Christ could forgive her, if he could forgive the people who tortured him, then Joy knew she could forgive too. (86)

One might think As We Forgive would be a depressing book. It is not. It is deeply inspiring. The accounts of forgiveness help us move past the petty grievances we hold towards others.

There is also an inspiring account of a group of students who refused to divide into Hutus and Tutsis. “All of us are Rwandans here,” they declared, and paid for their boldness with their lives. 

My only quibble with this book is its quick dismissal of the idea of retributive justice in favor of a type of restorative justice. I am not sure that these two types of justice are incompatible. Of course, there is not enough room in this kind of book to develop some of these concepts, which makes me wonder why they were alluded to in the first place.

As We Forgive succeeds in telling a powerful story. We read of pastors and church leaders returning to Rwanda to encourage forgiveness, even as they suffer great personal cost for their decisions. We read of people sacrificing their own desires for the good of others. We read of people so engulfed in their own guilt and despair for the past sins that the offer of forgiveness becomes a liberating act of sheer grace.

These stories are Christianity-in-action. Highly recommended.

written by Trevin Wax  © 2009 Kingdom People blog

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

They Plotted Revenge Against America by Abe March



Title:  They Plotted Revenge Against America

Author:  Abe F. March

Paperback:  254 pages

Date Published:  February 3, 2009

Publisher:  All Things That Matter Press

ISBN:  9780982272220

“Pandemics happen,”  U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt had said.  There have been ten in the past 300 years, and “we’re overdue and under prepared” for the next one.  Would America be ready for a flu pandemic at least as deadly as the one in 1918 that killed roughly 50 million people worldwide, including 500,000 in the USA?  David and his scientists didn’t think so.  The scientists working with David were scientists for hire and worked underground.  Knowing the strong arm of the Mossad, they were trusted to keep any work they did secret and confided only to the originator.  They were now assigned to work on a deadly virus…. people had become more vulnerable today than in 1918 because many more now lived in cities that are dependent on food brought in for outside.  In a disaster such as an earthquake or hurricane, help can come from outside the region, but with a pandemic, there is no outside.

… Bird and fish virus were the ideal candidates for David and his scientists.  The initial target would be the northeastern part of the United States.  The forests and waterways would be used to begin the infestation of both fish and birds whose virus would be transmitted to millions of Americans.

-They Plotted Revenge Against America by Abe F. March, pages 30-31

They Plotted Revenge Against America by Abe F. March is glimpse into the minds and motivations of a group of would-be terrorists.  Christian, Jew and Muslim, they are bonded in their desire to punish Israel’s biggest supporter in the hope of removing the teeth of the Israeli bite.  The plan is simple:  Go to the US, blend in, observe fish and wildlife in the Northeast and poultry farming in the South, then release viruses that will transmute into a deadly flu, killing hundreds of thousands of Americans. 

However, it is much easier to maintain their hatred for the US and desire revenge for their families deaths while living in the Middle-East.  Once in America, the teams meet and get to know the people who live in the places they are planning to infect; they begin to have second thoughts and feel guilty, seeing their new friends as their potential victims and not enemies.  Things become even more complicated when one of them is detained and interrogated, another falls under the suspicion of a community member, and David, the leader, becomes romantically involved with Samantha, the team liaison.

While this book has moments that seem preachy/teachy about the evil, white-devil America and her meddling in Mid-eastern affairs, it is an intriguing read.  As I read this book, Obama-Netanyahu met and “agreed to disagree” about Israeli-Palestinian settlement and peace, and the Swine Flu scare had schools closing in random locations across the US, which added some tension to my reading.  I couldn’t help but look at H1N1 with a suspicious eye and think that that might be the work of terrorists… interesting how a deadly, potentially-pandemic-capable virus broke out in a popular vacation spot around the time of US Spring Break.

While I don’t believe the author is anti-American, infact March served in the US Air Force from 1957-1961, They Plotted Revenge Against Americamight be viewed as excusing, even condoning, terrorism against the US by more Conservative, right-wing, politically impassioned people.  In much the same way as some Christians jumped on Harry Potter with both feet, proclaiming it “of the devil,” this book might not be received by those who are strong supporters of Israel and believe in US involvement in the Mid-East.

For the most part, I enjoyed reading They Plotted Revenge Against America by Abe F. March, and it will stick with me for a while.  I give it 3 1/2 out of 5 stars.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Cascade Effect

Cascade Effect

by James Armentrout

ISBN-13: 9781591294528 (Trade Paperback)

264 pages

Pub. Date: July 2002

Publisher: Publish America

James Armentrout’s Cascade Effect is a splendid narrative filled with suspense and intrigue. An imaginative work of deceit, betrayal, and full blown action across the cold, merciless surface of the moon. Lunar Police officer, Captain Paul Straker, was only doing is job when forces beyond his control changes his life in ways he could have never imagined. Framed for a crime he didn’t commit and forced to live as an outlaw, Paul, with the aid of a beautiful investigative reporter, fights to clear his name and stop a sinister plot to destroy Earth’s satellite network. In the grand tradition of Ben Bova, James Armentrout’s Cascade Effect portrays a future where man is still influenced by the darker side of his nature. If you’re a fan of the works of Ben Bova, the you’ll definitely want to read Cascade Effect.—Steven Fivecats, Editor

Monday, May 18, 2009

Dirt Music by Tim Winton

This is the first of this Australian novelist’s books I have read, another author from my ‘to read’ list. Tim Winton has written more than ten books for adults and children and was short listed for the 1995 Booker Prize with his novel The Riders. That year’s prize was one by Pat Barker for her superlative World War One drama The Ghost Road, beating both Winton and Salman Rushdie.

 Winton’s Dirt Music is a tale of love, loss and redemption set against the beautiful but harsh Western Australian landscape. Luther Fox is an abalone poacher retreating into his own world following the death of his whole family in a freak car accident. Georgie Jutland is the headstrong, former nurse trying to fit into the world of hard working, hard drinking fishermen in the tiny fictional town of White Point. The locals affectionately call themselves ‘White Pointers’ and Georgie spends a lot of her time avoiding the vicious bites they can inflict to a ‘blow-in’ at even the slightest provocation.

 The book is a widescreen evocation of life in a remote Australian town, where the line between survival and death is very narrow indeed. Winton draws a very convincing set of portraits of musicians, fishermen, survivors.

 To set the mood read this and listen to Western Australian band The Triffids album ‘Born Sandy Devotional’.

If you like this book you might like to try these authors here:

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Life is about choices

I just finished reading If I Stay by Gayle Forman and it made me cry and each word is worth every tear.  I don’t recall  reading a book like this with such a storyline that is so heartfelt and felt so real (well may be Tuesdays with Morrie).  And I believe it’s a book that should go on your must-read list no matter what your age but definitely make sure you have a box of tissues handy!

17-year-old Mia narrates the story of one crucial day in her life, when a perfect morning with her family turns to tragedy, leaving her on the edge of death. As she lies in a coma, she contemplates her relationship with her family, her boyfriend Adam and all the complexities of life, love, and loss. Clinging to life, and contemplating the devastation of everything she held dear, she must decide if she should die, or if she should stay. (Random)

Making decisions in life is really hard sometimes, we can get caught up in all the ‘what ifs’ of life.  From my experience, the decisions we make in life seem to get harder; you would think they get easier as we get older as we tuck more life experiences under our belts.  Some days I find myself agonising over a simple decision, but I have learnt to be able to make decisions based on today and not all the what if’s.  And some decisions require a lot of strength to make them, some of them you just don’t want to have to make so you just keep putting it off until you are forced to. Life is full of so many random decisions, some we don’t even notice that we make, like getting out of bed everyday to go to work.

If I Stay is incredibly thought provoking and the main character of Mia is just so likable; I tried to recall what I was like at that age and I don’t think I was as mature.  The story is such a touching and emotional exploration of love and relationships in all its forms and just so beautifully written, I couldn’t put it down and whipped through it in two days.

Gayle Forman has received rave reviews for this book; and already the rights have been snapped up by a Hollywood Studio.  She is an award-winning journalist who has written articles and books for both adults and teenagers. She lives in Brooklyn with her husband and daughter.

Available now: Random House $29.95, you won’t regret it but don’t forget the tissues.

Love,

Sassi

Your Pop Culture Gossip Girl

Saturday, May 16, 2009

The Graveyard Book - Rating 4

Title: The Graveyard Book

Author: Neil Gaiman

AR Quiz Number: 125535 EN

ATOS Book Level: 5.1

Interest Level: Middle Grades (MG 4-8)

AR Points: 10

Word Count: 67380

Topic – Subtopic: Life-Death; Mysteries-Supernatural

Series: None

Description:

For a wonderful description Click Here.

Librarian’s Review:

My review is for the audio version of The Graveyard Book and like Stardust it is narrated by the author. Neil Gaiman is a superb narrator who is has a very magical dreamlike way of weaving through the story. The story itself is very interesting in its themes of life and death, of a child raised by the inhabitants of a graveyard. The story is rich with detail and the characters are very unique. Visit the book’s website at www.thegraveyardbook.com for lots of information and cool downloads.

Friday, May 15, 2009

'The Pages' by Murray Bail

2008, 199 p.

To be honest, I’m not absolutely sure that I ‘got’ this book.  I am wary with Murray Bail- the first time I read ‘Eucalyptus’ I found it pleasant enough though underwhelming, but on a second reading wondered why I hadn’t picked up on the brilliance of its structure the first time.   Does ‘The Pages’ have another level as well?  But should you have to read a book twice in order to understand it?

In many ways ‘The Pages’  reads as if it is a complement to ‘Eucalyptus’.  Where in ‘Eucalyptus’ we had an antipodean Scheherazade weaving stories from the landscape, in ‘The Pages’ we have an antipodean Wittgenstein who travels the world and returns to immure himself in the solitude  of his  shearing shed to write his philosophy of the emotions.  In ‘Eucalyptus’ we have stories hanging like leaves, evoked by the names and appearances of eucalyptus trees ; in ‘The Pages’ we are left with sheets of paper, largely empty except for single, aphoristic thoughts.

The plot, such that it is, operates at two levels.  Erica, a competent, articulate academic philosopher, has been engaged to assess and edit for publication an archive of papers left by Wesley Anthill,  a peripatetic and largely self-taught philosopher who returned from travelling Europe to his family pastoral property, where he locked himself away to write a philosophy of the emotions.  Erica travels out to the outback homestead to examine the materials, accompanied by her psychoanalyst friend Sophie who is recovering from yet another failed relationship, this time with a married man.   While there, Erica sinks into the quiet rhythms of the pastoral lifestyle shared by Wesley’s brother Roger and sister Lindsay, who indulged  and supported their eccentric brother’s writing.  Erica comes to appreciate and love Roger’s  earthy, grounded ‘philosophy of the hand’ which is such a contrast to the laboured and hard-wrung philosophy that Wesley had grappled with, alone in his woolshed and now nothing more than sheaves of paper, expungable with the simple act of spilling a cup of coffee.

The second plot involves Wesley’s own gradual quest for knowledge, stepping tentatively from autodidactism into formal academia, then moving around Europe in the footsteps of other philosophers.  Although he fled Australia because he felt it unreceptive to philosophy, he returned there, after tragedy, to find and write his own, original philosophy.  An essentially solitary man, he seems ill-fitted to write a philsophy of the emotions.

The pacing of this book is unusual.  It unspools slowly, like a laconic country story, and when I was approaching the end of the book, I wondered how Bail was going to finish it in so few pages. It ends with a string of disconnected thoughts that just hang there.     It’s a big book: themes of philosophy, psychoanalysis, words, Europeanness, Australianness ; and yet not much happens in the book.  It’s complex but simple.

If this sounds ambivalent and contradictory, it’s probably because that’s how I found the book.  I’m not sure if it’s brilliant or banal- which is very much the way I felt about ‘Eucalyptus’.   Miles Franklin winner? Well, ‘Eucalyptus’ won the Miles Franklin a few years back- so obviously many people detected at first what I took two readings to find.  Perhaps ‘The Pages’ is like that also, but I tend to think that put up against novels with a stronger story, ‘The Pages’ will be seen as too elusive, too strange.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Hiroshi Watanabe - Findings

Photographs copyright of Hiroshi Watanabe courtesy of Photolucida

In Hiroshi Watanabe’s book Finding, published by Photolucida, the grand prize winner of the 2006 Critical Mass, I find that I am always looking at life through a veil. There always seems to be something between me and what I think the subject is.  Which may be overlooking one the underlying theme of this book; the many layers of reality that exists in our lives, many of which we are not fully conscisous of.

The potential subject of his photographs often appears to be just beyond my reach, whether that is on the other side of a window screen or curtain, or a glass window, or some netting. There is a hand slightly concealed within a sheer glove, birds resting on a porch sunscreen, industrial plants or bridge lurking in the mist, and birds behind semi-transparent cage doors. The subjects are obscured by a hard metal scrim,  a lacy transparent spider web, a wall of bubbles or a semi-transparent wall created of blooming tree limbs. Perhaps I think that the subject is finally revealed, such as the fish laying on a wooden top but then take note that it is enclosed within a transparent bag, almost within touch, but still just beyond my grasp.

Finally there is a wooden fence that entirely blocks our view,  an opaque barrier between us and what might be just beyond. The early visual subtitles giving way to a final hard statement of fact, we are limited in our perception of reality. We can not see through this fence, it is there and obscures everything beyond. We have a hint of what might be there, as we can only view the sky and clouds above it.

Frequently, Watanabe includes within his photographs shadows and silhouettes of either someone or something. The details are obscured, hinted at, and what we can see exists as a shadow, a metaphor for someone or something which is just beyond our reach and comprehension. Their presence is a shadow projected on a semi-translucent door, behind a hanging gauze, on fences or on a window.

There is his photograph of the missing person, a cut-out of an historical Japanese person, with an opening for a someones face to complete the picture. Anyone can stand behind and place their face in the opening, and for a moment can become this symbolic person in history. Are there not many people who wold like to step into an important role and play an significant part in life? Part total fantasy and with a hint of alter-ego that we wish were true? This photograph of the cut-out is also similar to his  shadows and silhouettes, as a representation of the real thing, a symbol that implies a prescence but lacking tangible substance.

I like the multitude of layers, that hint at complexity in even of the simplest of things. These thoughtful photographs are dreamlike, but not with a watery or soft appearance, fully evoking my imagination.

The hardcover book is in a size that is becoming consistent for Photolucida, 8 3/4 x 10 1/4″, and has a tipped in cover photograph on the black linen boards, 64 pages and nicely printed and bound in Hong Kong. The design and layout of the photographs is very classic with nice white margins that make the book a pleasure to read and complements the 57 duotone photographs very well.  The two nicely written afterwords are by Anthony Bannon and Kirsten Rian, with a summation of the photograph’s captions. The book, photographs and texts are copyright in 2007.

Due to the books publication date, it will not be on my list of best books for 2009, but it is a book that I enjoy and recommend and one of the better books that I have reviewed in 2009.

  

 

  

 

  

Best regards, Douglas Stockdale

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

The Rise and Fall of the International Gold Standard by Stephen Lendman

Dandelion Salad

by Stephen Lendman

Global Research

May 13, 2009

Reviewing Ellen Brown’s “Web of Debt:” Part III



order here

This is the third in a series of articles on Ellen Brown’s superb 2007 book titled “Web of Debt,” now updated in a December 2008 third edition. It tells “the shocking truth about our money system, (how it) trapped us in debt, and how we can break free.” This article focuses on global debt entrapment.

TO ORDER ELLEN BROWN’S BOOK

www.webofdebt.com and www.ellenbrown.com.

Global Debt Enslavement – From Gold Reserves to Petrodollars

“The gold standard (while it lasted) was a necessary step in giving bankers’ ‘fractional reserve’ legitimacy, but the ruse could not be sustained indefinitely” because exiting gold to defray foreign debts results in money backing it to be withdrawn from circulation. The result – contraction, recession, or depression, the very problem that forced FDR to drop the gold standard to prevent an even greater collapse. In 1971, Nixon did it permanently “when foreign creditors threatened to exhaust US gold reserves by cashing in their paper dollars for gold.”

John Kennedy was the last president to challenge Wall Street, contends Donald Gibson in one of his two books about him. In “Battling Wall Street: The Kennedy Presidency,” he said that Kennedy opposed “free trade,” believed industry should serve the nation, and that America should sustain its independence by developing cheap energy. That “pitted him against the oil/banking cartel,” intent on “raising oil prices to prohibitive levels in order to” entrap the world in a “web of debt.”

Evidence also suggests that “Kennedy crossed the bankers by seeking to revive a silver-backed currency,” independent of the Fed. In fact, on June 4, 1963, he issued Executive Order (EO) 11110 giving the president authority to issue currency. He then ordered the Treasury to print over $4 billion of “United States Notes” in place of Federal Reserve Notes. Some believe that he intended to replace them all when enough of the new currency was in circulation – to return money-creation power to the government where it belongs.

Five and a half months later, he was assassinated. In his second book on the president, “The Kennedy Assassination Cover-up,” Gibson contends that a private network of wealthy individuals did it – not the FBI, CIA, Mafia, LBJ, the oil cartel, or anti-Castro extremists. Whatever the truth, bankers regained their power in short order when Johnson rescinded Kennedy’s EO and fully restored their money-creation authority. They’ve had it ever since.

Bretton Woods – The Rise and Fall of the International Gold Standard

In mid-1944, the Bretton Woods monetary management system was established, about a year before WW II ended but when its outcome was clear. It created a postwar international monetary system of convertible currencies, fixed exchange rates, free trade, the US dollar as the world’s reserve currency linked to gold, and those of other nations fixed to the dollar. It also designed an institutional framework for market-based capital accumulation to ensure that newly liberated colonies would pursue capitalist economic development beneficial to the victorious powers, most of all America.

In August 1971, the system unraveled when Nixon closed the gold window – ending the last link between gold, the dollar, and sound money. Thereafter, currencies would float and compete with each other in a casino-like environment, easily manipulated by powerful insiders, hedge funds, giant international banks, or governments at times in their own self-interest.

According to F. William Engdahl: “Market forces now could determine the dollar (entirely without gold). And they did it with a vengeance.”

Bretton Woods was to ensure stability along with the IMF and World Bank’s original missions – to establish exchange rates for the former and provide credit to war-torn Third World countries for the latter. Both bodies are, in fact, hugely exploitative while David Rockefeller ostensibly convened Bretton Woods to ensure gold-backed currencies would “justify a massive expansion of US dollar debt around the world.”

The scheme worked until Vietnam war debt unraveled it. It might have continued (for a while at least) by raising the gold price. Instead it was kept at $35 an ounce forcing Nixon to close the gold window permanently, then take “the brakes off the printing presses” to generate as many dollars as there were willing takers. After that, Wall Street financiers “proceeded to build a worldwide financial empire based on a ‘fractional reserve’ banking system (using) bank-created paper dollars in place of the time-honored gold. Dollars became the reserve currency for a global net of debt to an international banking cartel.”

Skeptics said they planned it that way to pull off “the biggest act of bad faith in history.” True or not, gold failed as a global reserve currency because there isn’t enough of it to go around. Inevitably shortages result forcing something to change.

Flawed as it is, however, “floating” exchange rates are much worse, especially for developing nations at the mercy of giants, like America, able to devalue currencies by attacking them through short selling. Manipulative power is so great, it can extract painful concessions that are hugely profitable to bankers.

Earlier in the 1930s, floating exchange rates proved disastrous, yet most countries agreed to them post-1971. Ones that resist are very vulnerable and can be coerced as a condition of debt relief, much like what happened after oil quadrupled in price in 1974. Suspicions about it at the time were justified.

It was a Kissinger – Saudi royal family scheme to revive dollar dominance by recycling petrodollars into US investments and weapons in return for guaranteeing the kingdom’s safety – mainly from America had they turned us down. In a word, it was protection money like the underworld extracts on a smaller scale with oil now backing dollars instead of gold. Henceforth, countries need dollars to buy it and require exports for enough of them.

As for oil producers, Wall Street and London bankers profited from windfall petrodollar deposits – recyclable as developing nation loans to buy oil but at the same time to be entrapped in permanent debt bondage. Pre-1973, Third World debt “was manageable and contained….financed mainly through public agencies (for projects) promising solid economic success.” That changed when commercial banks took over. Their business isn’t development. It’s “loan brokering (or) loan sharking,” preferably with dictator/strongmen able to cut deals on their own.

Later the IMF got involved. At the behest of giant bankers, as “debt policemen” instituting rigorous structural adjustments, including slashed wages and social benefits as well as state asset sales on favorable terms to private investors.

At the same time, America got deeply indebted. It’s now the world’s largest by far and needs hundreds of billions annually to keep the dollar recycling game going – in the last 12 months alone, far more than that after the national debt doubled. Today, the nation is “hopelessly mired in debt to support the banking system of a private international cartel.” Ordinary people pay the price.

Germany Finances a War without Money

The 1919 Versailles Treaty imposed onerous post-WW I terms on Germany. In May 1921, it got a six-day ultimatum to accept them or have the industrial Ruhr Valley militarily occupied. Even worse, it lost its colonies, all their resources, and the population had to pay the cost of war, amounting to three times the value of all property in the country. At the same time, German mark speculation caused it to plummet causing hyperinflation that by 1923 was catastrophic.

In January, the mark dropped to 18,000 to the dollar. By July, it was 353,000, by August 4,620,000, and by November an astonishing 4,200,000,000,000 – effectively worthless from the greatest ever hyperinflation, ravaging the nation’s savings and making later calamitous events inevitable.

Loss of German assets compounded the problem. Britain took its colonies along with Alsace-Lorraine and Silesia with its rich mineral and agricultural resources. Lost was 75% of the country’s iron ore, 68% of zinc ore, 26% of coal as well as Alsatian textile industries and potash mines. In addition, Germany’s entire merchant fleets were taken, a portion of its transport and fishing fleet plus locomotives, railroad cars and trucks – all justified as legitimate war debts that were fixed at an impossible to pay 132 billion gold marks at 6% interest.

The 1923 Dawes Plan (named for US banker Charles Dawes) imposed fiscal control to continue the looting and assure reparations were paid. A huge debt pyramid resulted that collapsed after the 1929 crash along with radical political elements gaining prominence.

How to cope was the key question. Like the earlier American Greenbackers, Germany issued its own money after Hitler came to power. He had two choices, and like Lincoln, did it right. He freed the country from debt bondage and at the same time implemented vast infrastructure development – what Roosevelt as well did, but in his case by indebtedness to bankers.

Hitler issued $1 billion interest-free, “non-inflationary bills of exchange, called Labor Treasury Certificates.” He put millions back to work, paid them with the Certificates that were used for goods and services to create more jobs and revive prosperity. Within two years, Germany was “back on its feet….with a solid, stable currency, no debt, and no inflation, at a time” America and Western economies were still struggling.

Hitler, however, diverged from the Greenbackers by equating bankers with Jews and launching a reign of terror against them. Greenbackers knew the real enemy – private bankers imposing debt bondage with onerous terms.

Beyond that and his imperial aims, Hitler reinvigorated the Third Reich in a few years, became hugely popular, and achieved it even before undertaking large-scale military spending. It impressed Pastor Sheldon Emry to write:

“Germany issued debt-free and interest-free money from 1935 and on, accounting for its startling rise from the depression to a world power in 5 years. Germany financed its entire government and war operation from 1935 to 1945 without gold and without debt, and it took the whole Capitalist and Communist world” to bring him down and restore the power of bankers.

Had Germany created debt and interest-free money post-Versailles, it could have escaped its disastrous inflation, later ravages, and rise of a tyrant like Hitler. In the 1920s, the privately-owned Reichsbank, not the government, caused havoc by flooding the economy with money compounded by foreign investor speculators shorting the mark and betting on its decline – because the Reichsbank printed massive currency amounts to be loaned “at a profitable interest to the bank. When (it couldn’t keep up with demand), other private banks were allowed to create marks out of nothing and lend them at interest as well.”

According to Hitler’s Reichsbank president, Hjalmar Schacht, the government regulated the Bank, ended speculation by eliminating “easy access to loans of bank-created money,” and solved the previous decade’s hyperinflation problem as a result.

Reexamining the Inflation Humbug

Old theories die hard. It’s not money creation that causes inflation. It’s because merchants have to raise prices to cover costs, the result of “a radical (currency) devaluation” stemming usually from it being manipulated by its floating exchange rate.

Case in point – post-Soviet Russia’s ruble collapse. It had nothing to do with rampant money creation. As F. William Engdahl explained in his Century of War:

“In 1992, the IMF demanded a free float of the Russian ruble as part of its ‘market-oriented’ reform. The ruble float led within a year to (a 9900%) increase in consumer prices, and a collapse in real wages of 84 percent. For the first time since 1917, at least during peacetime, the majority of Russians were plunged into existential poverty.”

American-imposed “shock therapy” was the economic equivalent of military conquest, and most Russians have paid dearly to this day. With the IMF in charge, the nation and its former republics were weakened and made dependent “on Western capital and dollar inflows for their survival.” A tiny elite got “fabulously rich” while most Russians experienced deep poverty and despair.

In 1993 – 1994, it was even worse for Yugoslavia and Ukraine, by some estimates an even greater hyperinflation than in Weimar Germany. Again the textbook explanation was rubbish.

Yugoslavia collapsed because the IMF “prevented the government from obtaining the credit it needed from its own central bank.” Unable to create money and issue credit, social programs couldn’t be financed or the provinces kept in place as one country.

Yugoslavia’s problem was its success under a mixed free-market socialist model that threatened Western capitalism once the Soviet Union disbanded. It was feared that other former republics would emulate it, free from IMF shock therapy. As a result, the country had to be dismembered and its model destroyed, especially because of its strategic location – its “critical path” to potential Central Asian oil and gas.

In the 1980s, its imports exceeded exports, and it borrowed huge foreign sums for unprofitable factories. With too few dollars for repayment, IMF debt relief was requested under its usual terms. The result was 20% unemployment after 1100 companies went bankrupt. Worse still, inflation rose dramatically to over 150% in 1991. With still too little money to retain the provinces, “economic chaos followed causing each (one) to fight for its own survival” lasting a decade and causing tens of thousands of deaths and destruction.

Washington-imposed policies made it worse – a total embargo causing hyperinflation and 70% unemployment while blaming it on Milosevic. Ukraine met the same fate the result of IMF diktats. The currency collapsed, inflation soared, and state industries unable to get credit went bankrupt – as planned.

It’s an ugly scheme to let Western predators buy assets on the cheap. Once Europe’s breadbasket, Ukraine was reduced to begging the US for food aid, which then dumped its excess grain on the country, further exacerbating its self-sufficiency. Predatory capitalism is ruthless. This is how it works with bankers in the lead role.

Argentina is another example – “swallowed (by) the same debt monster” as the others. In the late 1980s, inflation rose 5000 percent, but money creation had nothing to do with it.

Post-WW II, the country was troubled by inflation, but it wasn’t critical until after Juan Peron’s 1974 death. Over the next eight years, it increased seven-fold to 206 percent – not by printing pesos but by radically devaluing the currency combined with a 175 percent rise in oil prices. One source said it was done intentionally to benefit exporters, speculators, and capitalists to prove free-market policies work best.

Nonetheless, high inflation and speculation became “hallmark(s) of Argentine financial life,” the result of disastrous government policies. Even worse was that Argentina was “targeted by international lenders for massive petrodollar loans.” When interest rates rocketed in the 1980s, repayment became impossible, and obtaining concessions came at the expense of IMF demands.

In the 1990s, they were implemented. The peso was pegged to the dollar. Currency devaluations ceased. The country lost its international competitiveness. The “money supply was fixed, limited and inflexible,” and as a result national bankruptcies occurred in 1995 and again in 2001, but government reaction wasn’t as expected. Argentina defied its creditors, defaulted on its debt, and began its road to recovery – with no foreign help or intervention. Post-2001, the economy grew by 8% for two successive years. Exports increased. The currency stabilized. Investors returned. The IMF was paid off, and unemployment eased.

Numerous other examples are similar. Professor Henry CK Liu calls foreign capital a “financial narcotic that would make the (19th century) Opium War(s) look like a minor scrimmage.” In the late 1990s, Asian Tiger economies got a taste.

America’s Economic War on Asia

Today’s Japan evolved out of its feudal past once a modern central government was formed. Its 20th century economic model “has been called ‘a state-guided market system.’ The (government) determines the priorities and commissions the work, then hires private enterprise to carry it out.”

America’s military-industrial complex resembles it, but differs in one major respect. Post-WW II, Japan developed its economy without war. America practically worships it to the detriment of everyone at home and abroad.

At the end of the 1980s, “Japan was regarded as the leading economic and banking power in the world,” and thus a challenge to US supremacy as the country that could say no. Its model was so successful that Asian “Tiger” economies copied it – in South Korea, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand, and elsewhere. Washington determined to undercut them as early as the 1985 James Baker-engineered Plaza accord and Baker-Miyazawa agreement.

He got Toyko to exercise monetary and fiscal measures to expand domestic demand and reduce Japan’s trade surplus. At the same time, the Bank of Japan cut interest rates to 2.5% in 1987 and held that level until May, 1989. The idea was for lower rates to stimulate US goods purchases, but instead, cheap money went into Japanese stocks and real estate fueling two colossal bubbles.

The yen was also affected. Within months, it shot up 40% against the dollar, and overnight Japan became the world’s largest banking center. At its twin bubble peaks, Tokyo real estate (in dollars) exceeded all of America’s and its stock market represented 42% of world valuations – but not for long.

In 1990, Japan proposed financing former Soviet republics on its model and drew strong US opposition for two reasons. It might exclude US companies, and it would rely on the successful model that fueled Japanese and Asian Tiger growth. It had to be stopped and was.

Pressure was applied with threats of drastic US troop cuts that might endanger Japan’s security. The scheme was drop your economic plans or defend yourself. At the same time, the country’s twin bubbles imploded, and within months its Nikkei index lost $5 trillion in value, the result of predatory Wall Street short selling intervention. It left Japan severely hurt and no longer a challenge to America.

Confronting Asia’s Tiger economies came next. In a Century of War, F. William Engdahl explained:

These economies “were a major embarrassment to the IMF and free-market model. Their very success in blending private enterprise with a strong state economic role” threatened IMF exploitation. “So long as the Tigers appeared to succeed with a model based on a strong state role, the former communist states and others could argue against taking the extreme IMF course. In east Asia during the 1980s, economic growth rates of 7 – 8 per cent per year, rising social security, universal education and a high worker productivity (free from debt) were all backed by state guidance and planning under market-based rules.”

In 1993, Washington demanded changes – deregulate, open financial markets, and allow free foreign capital flows. Easing followed along with trouble. From 1994 – 1997, hot money flooded in and created speculative real  estate, stock, and other asset bubbles ripe for imploding.

Hedge fund predators like George Soros took full advantage, attacking the weakest regional economy and its currency – Thailand and its baht. The aim: forced devaluation, and it worked. Thailand floated its currency and needed first-time ever IMF help.

Next came the Philippines, Indonesia, and South Korea with much the same result and fallout. Prosperous Asian Tigers were forced into IMF debt bondage as their populations sank into economic chaos and mass poverty, the result of a liquidity crisis severe enough to plunge the region into depression. Within months, over $100 billion shifted to private hands, and within a year $600 billion in stock market valuations were lost.

East Asia was effectively looted. Real earnings plummeted. Unemployment soared with the International Labor Organization estimating around 24 million lost jobs along with the region’s remarkable miracle – its prosperous middle class. People literally were thrown overboard – small farmers and business owners, unions, and millions of ordinary people made human wreckage, the result of Wall Street-designed predation, the same scheme wrecking havoc today on a global scale.

China Awakens and Prospers

Under Deng Xiaoping, China changed from a centrally-planned economy to its own market-based model under government-owned banks able to issue credit for domestic development. Until the global economic crisis emerged, it grew impressively at double-digit rates.

Key is its banking system, its government-issued currency, and a system of state-owned banks. Henry CK Liu distinguishes between “national” and “central” banks – the former serves the national and public interest; the latter, private international finance at the expense of the nation and people.

In 1995, China’s Central Bank Law gave the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) central bank status, but more in name than form in that it still follows government policies by directing money for internal development, not bank profits. In addition, China is debt free and thus unemcumbered by IMF mandates and predatory banking cartel interests. It also protected its currency by refusing to let it float (beyond a minor adjustment) and be vulnerable to speculative predators.

The proof is in the results. China’s independent monetary policy works, much like colonial America, government under Lincoln, and Nazi Germany under Hitler. They printed their own money, debt free, and prospered – impossible under today’s American model of indebtedness to predatory bankers.

Even worse are New World Order and WTO rules for a global government run by powerful international bankers and corporations – “oppressing the public through military means and restricting individual freedoms.” Financial terrorism as well by shifting wealth hugely to the top at the expense of beneficial social change to be abandoned.

A follow-up article focuses on America captured in a “web of debt.”

Stephen Lendman is a Research Associate of the Centre of Research on Globalization. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.

Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The Global Research News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Monday – Friday at 10AM US Central time for cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on world and national issues. All programs are archived for easy listening.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=13461

© Copyright Stephen Lendman, Global Research, 2009

The url address of this article is: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=13559

see

America’s “Money Machine” – Reviewing Ellen Brown’s “Web of Debt” Part II by Stephen Lendman

“Web of Debt”: The Inner Workings of the Monetary System by Stephen Lendman

The Economy Sucks and or Collapse 2

Brown-Ellen

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Haunted by Chuck Palahniuk

Title:  Haunted

Author:  Chuck Palahniuk

Paperback:  412 pages

Date Published:  2006

Publisher:  Vintage

ISBN:  9780099497172

Looking back, it was Mr. Whittier’s stand that we’re always right.

“It’s not a matter of right and wrong,” Mr. Whittier would say.

Really, there is no wrong.  Not in our own minds.  Our own Reality.

…In your own mind, you are always right.  Every action you take – what you do or say or how you choose to appear – is automatically right the moment you act.

…We’re all condemned to be right.  About everything we can consider.

In this shifting, liquid world where everyone is right and any idea is right the moment you act on it, Mr. Whitier would say, the only sure thing is what you promise.

“Three months, you promised,” Mr. Whittier says through the steam of his coffe.

It’s then something happens, but not much.

In that next look, you feel your asshole get tight.  Your fingers fly to cover your mouth.

Miss America is holding a knife in one hand.  With her other hand, she grips the knot of Mr. Whittier’s necktie, pulling his face up toward her own.  Mr. Whittier’s coffee, dropped, spilled steaming-hot on the floor.  His hands hang, shaking, swirling the dusty air at ech side.

Saint Gut-Free’s silver bag of instant crepe Suzette drops, spilled out on the cornflower-blue carpet, the sticky red cherries and reconstituted whipped cream.

And the cat runs over for a taste.

Her eyes almost touching Mr. Whittier’s, Miss America says, “So I’m right if I kill you?”

-Haunted by Chuck Palahniuk, pages 60-61

Hauntedby Chuck Palahniuk is the stories and poems within a bigger story that is the shadow of the truth.  It is the camera behind the camera behind the camera, as is often said in the book.  It’s the story of a collection of strangers who have all answered an ad about a writer’s retreat, but find it’s a lot more than they bargained for.  Mr. Whittier, the operator of the “retreat” tells them that they’ve promised to write and, for the  next three months, he intends to hold them to that promise.  However, there is an unfortunate hiccup in the plan when Whittier dies from a busted gut after eating the equivalent of 10 freeze-dried turkey dinners.  Now the strangers are on their own, locked in an abandoned hotel/theater, each with their own guilt and story to haunt them.

From a psychological/sociological point of view, this book is fascinating.  It’s  a bit like Lord of the Fliesin that it is the witness of the de-evolution of society.  How depraved can people get?  How little humanity will be left at the end of the three month period?  When food runs out (because they’ve all sabotaged the supplies) what will they eat?  That they are all there as writers and artists, what will they do with this time they are given?

It is a dark look into the human soul.  The Missing Link states that it is how we treat the animals around us that shows our humanity… the cat disappears shortly after he says this.  Director Denial makes a statement again and again that people turn each other into objects, then turn objects into people.  Points are made that humans have  a low threshhold of tolerance to boredom, that we seek out a villain to blame all our troubles on, and that we thrive on chaos, drama and disaster.  There’s no joy like the joy found in another’s suffering.  That all this drama and difficulty is to prepare us for our final act, our own death.

While these are the concepts that drew me to this book, I found the book itself a bit on the boring side.  I kept falling asleep… though, that may have been because I couldn’t nibble while reading due to the nauseatingly disgusting content.  Haunted has more canabalism in it that the Donner Party was ever accused of.  The graphic descriptions of the toilets backing up, the cooking of a baby, and decomposition were enough to make me gag. 

This is only my second Palahniuk book, Rant being my first, and I’m aware he can be a bit disgusting and warped.  One review I read said that Hauntedwas for the true Palahniuk fans.  I’ve got a few more of his books on Mt. TBR, but I think I’m going to wait for a while before reading another by him… let my stomach settle.  It’s definitely NOT for the faint of heart.

Even though it was gut-churningly gross, the intellectual appeal was enough to keep me reading on.  I give Hauntedby Chuck Palahniuk 3 1/2 out of 5 stars.

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One of my favorite parts of my Border’s newsletters is the shortlist.  When Palahniuk’s book Snuff came out, the following video was his shortlist offering.  I think it was this vid that made me want to read more Palahniuk (as well as pick up Clown Girl)

Monday, May 11, 2009

Mathias Thulmann: Witch Hunter Omnibus (Novel) Review by Sam Spiteri

‘One writer who stands out with this professional level tale-weaving is Arizona’s C.L. Werner.’ – Amazon.com

Summary:

In the grim medieval fantasy of Warhammer, the Templars of Sigmar are feared above all others. These near tyrannical agents are tasked with hunting out evil throughout the Empire, using whatever means they find necessary in order to destroy those foolish or ignorant enough to ally with the Dark Powers.

Long-time Black Library author C.L. Werner exploits the subject to the fullest and provides us with a solid read of a Witch Hunter’s career through the eyes of Mathias Thulmann, counted amongst the most zealous and persevering Sigmarite Templars.

The Witch Hunter’s omnibus comes in a whopping 761 pages and opens up with an Author’s Note and continues providing the reader with 3 short stories and 3 full blown novels which are all inter-linked and arranged in chronological order.

Mathias Thulmann and his shady mercenary companion Streng are sent to investigate murders in a remote community, where they uncover the bizarre killings of a brutal serial killer whose identity will eventually lead to a difficult journey to uncover the dark grimoire ‘Das Buch Die Unholden’.

Quite a few plot strings are tied together from one story to the next as all the protagonists and antagonists seem to be on the prowl for this evil spellbook in one way or another, thereby establishing the story’s main theme. Due to this, all the stories link to one another flawlessly, which creates a completely seamless omnibus.

Character Development:

Thulmann starts out as your typical fantasy action hero, cold two-dimensional individual, smiting evil wherever he goes and always ready with a smart catchphrase. Throughout the book our protagonist starts sharing his thoughts with the reader which breathes life to the character as we learn about his thoughts and moral values and his doubts regarding the methods used by other Templars of Sigmar. He also sheds light upon dark events in his past and his family, shows that even the unlikeliest of protagonists could grow into a well written and more vivid character as the reader sympathizes more with Thulmann as the story progresses.

Streng, the mercenary sidekick doesn’t develop further than being a dirty drinker, hits on women, enjoys torture and has his own special view of “honour”. He’s mostly in it for the gold crowns and little else.  But you can bet your money that this is the point of the character as he fits brilliantly into the Warhammer Fantasy’s dark world view. That being said, I found it ironic that one of the minor antagonists, whose name I won’t divulge to avoid spoilers, is more fleshed-out than Streng throughout the series of stories.

The Bottom Line:

Part Dark Fantasy Action and part Detective Story, the Mathias Thulmann series provides enjoyable fantasy action with moderate intelligence. Special mention must go to the character Ehrhardt, a Black Guard of Morr, who assists Mathias Thulmann in retributing the enemies of the Empire with a large Zweihander sword. Fans of Final Fantasy’s Sephiroth or Devil May Cry’s Vergil should feel right at home with his two-handed sword strokes and bad ass moments.

Score: 7/10

For Fans Of: Eisenhorn/Ravenor, Anne Rice, Monster Slayers and Buffy if she had male genitals.

Sunday, May 10, 2009

America's "Money Machine" - Reviewing Ellen Brown's "Web of Debt" Part II by Stephen Lendman

Dandelion Salad

by Stephen Lendman

Global Research, May 9, 2009

order here

This is the second of several articles on Ellen Brown’s remarkable book titled “Web of Debt….the shocking truth about our money system, (how it) trapped us in debt, and how we can break free.” It’s a multi-part snapshot. Reading the entire book is strongly recommended – easily obtainable through Amazon or Brown’s www.webofdebt.com site.

Bankers Capture the Money Machine – Fighting for the Family Farm

In the 1890s, “keeping the family homestead was a key political issue” given that foreclosures and evictions “were occurring in record numbers,” much like today. The “Bankers Manifesto of 1892″ spelled it out – a willful plan “to disenfranchise farmers and laborers of their homes and property,” again like today except that now our very freedom and futures are at stake as sinister forces aim to steal them by turning America into Guatemala and lock it down by police state repression.

The panic of 1893 caused an earlier depression – severe enough to establish a precedent of street protests, the result of the first ever march on Washington. Businessman/populist Jacob Coxey led his “Coxey’s Army (of around 500) from Massilon, Ohio (beginning March 25, Easter Sunday) to the nation’s capital to demand jobs and a return to debt and interest-free Greenbacks. Local police intervened. The marchers were disbanded. Coxey was arrested. He spent 20 days in jail for disturbing the peace and violating a local ordinance against walking on the grass. However, he was never charged, then released, and is now remembered for his heroics.

He began a tradition later sparking suffragist marches; unemployed WW I veterans for their “Bonus Bill” money; numerous anti-war and earlier civil rights protests; in 2004, one million in the nation’s capital for women’s rights, and the previous day thousands protesting IMF-World Bank policies.

The late 19th century Populist movement was the last serious challenge to private bankers’ monopoly power over the nation’s money. Journalist William Hope Harvey wrote a popular book titled “Coin’s Financial School” that explained the problem in simple English – that restricting silver coinage was a conspiracy to enrich “London-controlled Eastern financiers at the expense of farmers and debtors.” He called England “a money power that can dictate the money of the world, and thereby create world misery.”

He referred to the “Crime of 73″ that limited free silver coinage and replaced it with British gold. It forced America to pay England $200 million annually in gold in interest on its bonds and inspired William Jennings Bryan’s “Cross of Gold” speech. He nearly became president, but lost in a close (big-monied financed) race to William McKinley, but he, too, paid a price. He was later assassinated, likely for his protectionism, very much disadvantaging British bankers. With him gone, the Morgans and Rockefellers dominated US banking, and arranged for friendly leaders to run the country, Teddy Roosevelt included, a man with more bark than bite.

“The trusts and cartels remained the puppeteers with real power, pulling the strings of puppet politicians” who were bought and paid for like today.

The Secret Government

Various presidents suggested the worst of what’s now clear. By signing the Federal Reserve Act, Woodrow Wilson was a tool of big money. Yet he belatedly expressed regret, said “I have unwittingly ruined my country,” and called America “one of the worst ruled….most completely controlled governments in the civilized world (run by) a small group of dominant men.”

Franklin Roosevelt was as clear in saying “The real truth (is that) a financial element in the large centers has owned the government since the days of Andrew Jackson.” Other officials said the same thing, and so did Matthew Josephson (in his 1934 book) calling bankers and business titans “Robber Barons” – men who “lived for market conquest, and plotted takeovers like military strategy.”

They sought monopolies for market dominance and trusts – concentrated wealth in a few hands to be manipulated for maximum profits and power. During the Gilded Age, trusts became strong enough to plant “their own agents in the federal commissions, (use) government regulation (for) greater control….protect themselves from competition,” and keep prices high.

Four names (among others) stand out – Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, Henry Ford, and JP Morgan running finance with the power of a potentate. “He didn’t build, he bought. He took over other people’s businesses, and he hated competition” so he eliminated it. Together with Rockefeller, they dominated business and finance through interlocking directorates, the same way as today throughout industry, commerce and finance.

For his part, Morgan was so dominant, financial writer John Moody called him “the greatest financial power in the history of the world” even before the establishment of the Federal Reserve. Morgan died months before its creation, but his influence made it possible.

His long arm favored the fortunate – with enough funding to monopolize their industries. “But where did (he and other bankers get their money)?” Congressman Wright Patman explained that they created it “out of an empty hat.” They held the ultimate credit card, limitless accounting-entries to buy out competitors, corner raw materials markets, control politicians, and after the birth of public relations, popular opinion the way distinguished author/psychogist and activist Alex Carey explained in his seminal book titled “Taking the Risk out of Democracy:”

“The 20th century has been characterized by three developments of great political importance: The growth of democracy, the growth of corporate power, and the growth of propaganda as a means of protecting corporate power against democracy.” It came into its own during WW I, then grew, became dominant, and remains near-omnipotent today, even with fissures appearing with enough promise to challenge it.

The Jekyll Island Affair – Establishing the Federal Reserve

In 1910, seven financial titans met secretly on this privately-owned island off the coast of Georgia and created the Federal Reserve:

– established three years later on December 23, in the middle of the night, by an act of Congress;

– its most outrageous action ever that few legislators, if any, even read or would have understood if they did because the text was so intentionally vague;

– it enfranchised powerful bankers to hold the nation hostage in permanent debt bondage by giving them the right to create money, in violation of Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution that states Congress alone has the power “To coin (create) money (and) regulate the value thereof….”

Woodrow Wilson made it possible, “Morgan’s man in the White House” with an administration staffed with his cronies. This act was so publicly harmful it had to be shepherded through a carefully arranged Conference Committee, scheduled for between 1:30 – 4:30AM three days before Christmas when many lawmakers had left town and many others were asleep. It was then enacted the next day – one that will live in infamy for the damage it caused.

“The bill was so obscurely worded that no one really understood its provisions.” The nation’s money would be printed by the US Bureau of Engraving and Printing, then issued as a government obligation (or debt) to the private Federal Reserve with interest.

Nominally, Congress and the president appoint Fed governors, but they operate secretly with no government oversight or control. As a privately owned banking cartel, they’re a power unto themselves. The chairman sits at its helm, but he’s a mere tool of the bankers who control him.

The 1913 Federal Reserve Act “was a major coup” for them. The Fed exists to serve them, not the government or public interest. Therein lies its problem and why it must be abolished.

For over a century, powerful international bankers wanted a private central bank giving them “the exclusive right to ‘monetize’ the government’s debt (that is, print their own money and exchange it for government securities or IOUs.)” The entire Act was written in obscure Fedspeak so no one but its creators knew its purpose.

“In plain English, the Federal Reserve Act authorized a private central bank to create money out of nothing, lend it to the government at interest, and control the national money supply, expanding or contracting it at will.” Nothing has been the same since.

Who Owns the Federal Reserve?

Contrary to common belief, it’s a private banking cartel owned by its member banks in each of its 12 Fed districts. “The amount of Federal Reserve stock” each one holds “is proportional to its size.” The New York Fed is most dominant (like a mother bank) owning 53% of the System’s shares because the nation’s largest commercial banks are located there, on Wall Street, of course, with names like JP Morgan Chase, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan Stanley prominent and familiar. Bank of America was founded in California and remains concentrated heavily in Western and Southwestern states, yet operates globally like the others.

The largest banks are financial superpowers with interests in commercial and investment banking, insurance, real estate, home mortgages, credit cards, and virtually all things financial – nationally and globally.

Financial commentator Hans Schicht refers to Wall Street’s “master spider” controlling a powerful inner circle of men, headed by him. Their business is done secretly behind closed doors by what he calls “spider webbing.” It exercises “tight personal management and control, with a minimum of insiders and front-men who themselves have only partial knowledge of the game. They also have “leverage” over mergers, takeovers, chain store holdings where one company holds shares of others, conditions annexed to loans, and so forth.

Further, they make concentrated wealth “invisible. The master spider studiously avoids close scrutiny by maintaining anonymity, taking a back seat, and appearing to be a philanthropist.”

Post-WW II, the center of power shifted from the House of Rothschild to Wall Street with David Rockefeller Sr. (John D’s grandson) becoming “master spider,” a sort of boss of bosses, much like the underworld but much more deadly and powerful.

All the more so because “the Robber Barons (used) their monopoly over money to buy up the major media, educational institutions,” and other means of communications. They got all this but Morgan wanted more – to “secure the banks’ loans to the government with a reliable source of taxes, (gotten directly from) the incomes of the people. There was just one snag.” The Supreme Court “consistently” declared federal income taxes unconstitutional. So how were they instituted and why are they willingly paid?

The Federal Income Tax

The Constitution omits any mention of a federal income tax because the Founders “considered the taxation of private income, the ultimate source of productivity, to be economic folly.” They also decided that the States and federal government shouldn’t impose the same tax at the same time. Congress was to have responsibility “for collecting national taxes from the States’ ” tax revenues.

Direct taxes were to be apportioned according to each State’s population. “Income taxes were considered unapportioned direct taxes in violation of this provision of the Constitution.”

Except in times of war, no federal income tax existed until the 16th Amendment was ratified on February 13, 1913 empowering Congress to levy one – unapportioned among the states. Even without one, the economy grew impressively for nearly a century and a half, adequately funded by customs and excise taxes.

For a brief period, Congress enacted an income tax in 1894 when the nation was at peace. On April 8, 1895, in Pollock v. Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company, the Supreme Court held that unapportioned income taxes were unconstitutional. “That ruling has never been overturned.” To get around it, Wall Street packaged the 16th Amendment with the Federal Reserve Act, both in 1913. It applied only to annual incomes over $4000, well above the average level at the time.

The original tax code was simple enough to be covered in 14 pages. It’s now a 17,000 page monster, filled with obscure provisions professionals struggle to understand or even know about. It also has “whole pages devoted to private interests,” including loopholes exempting powerful corporations from paying rightfully owed taxes.

Before WW II, income taxes affected few people. However, from 1939 – 1944, Congress passed various ones, including to fund the war effort, and began letting workers (voluntarily) pay them in installments. Thereafter, “withholding” became mandatory.

“Today the federal income tax has acquired the standing of a legitimate tax enforceable by law, despite longstanding (Supreme Court rulings) strictly limiting its constitutional scope.” Numerous other taxes were also added, including on capital gains, real estate, corporate income, FICA, sales, luxury, and IRS interest and penalties. With all hidden ones included (dozens in all), up to 40% of an average worker’s income goes for taxes.

Enough for some tax protesters to challenge the 16th Amendment’s legitimacy on grounds that it was improperly ratified. However, US courts rejected the argument and now it’s “beyond review” – even though no tax would be needed if the federal government printed its own money interest-free instead of taking ours to defray banker-imposed charges.

After signing the Federal Reserve Act, Woodrow Wilson called himself “a most unhappy man. I have unwittingly ruined my country.” Yet he knew precisely what he did. He was a lawyer, a Ph. D, a historian and political scientist, and former Princeton University president before entering politics.

Reaping the Whirlwind – The Great Depression

In theory, the Federal Reserve was established to stabilize the economy, smooth out the business cycle, manage a healthy, sustainable growth rate, and maintain stable prices. It failed dismally on all counts – most noticeably in the 1930s after a depression followed the crash. The Fed wasn’t the solution. It was the problem.

As in recent years, it kept interest rates low and money plentiful – not money, in fact, but “credit” or “debt,” the same problem creating havoc today. In the 1920s, production rose faster than wages, but (again like today) people could borrow on credit. Then as stocks soared in “value,” Wall Street promoted buying them on margin (namely, leverage on credit) on the premise that higher prices could repay loans. It turned “investing” into a “speculative pyramid scheme” based on money that didn’t exist.

The Fed caused the whole scheme with easy and plentiful money (credit). It assured the inevitable crash, and late in the game Fed officials saw it coming. New York Fed governor, Benjamin Strong, warned wealthy industrialists, politicians, and high foreign officials to sell stocks, then began reducing the money supply and raising bank-loan rates to correct the bubble “naturally.” It caused a huge liquidity squeeze. Stock purchases declined. Prices fell. Margins were called causing the crash over three days – so-called Black Thursday (on October 24), Monday and Tuesday.

The subsequent fallout was disastrous. From 1929 – 1933, “the money stock fell by a third, and a third of the nation’s banks closed their doors….It was dramatic evidence of the dangers of delegating the power to control the money supply to a single autocratic head of an autonomous agency.”

It resulted in a “vicious cyclone of debt….dragging all in its path into hunger, poverty and despair” – the very process repeating today, including insiders being tipped off, selling high, profiting from the collapse at fire sale prices, and letting the public pay for the dirty scheme they had in mind in the first place. Then, like today -  shifting huge wealth amounts from “the Great American Middle Class to Big Money.”

Instead of shutting the Fed and prosecuting its conspirators, Congress enacted the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), “ostensibly to prevent” another collapse. It insured deposits up to $5000 at the time and rescued some banks, but not all. It was for “rich and powerful” ones, the equivalent of prominent names today and considered then like now, “too big to fail” run by officials too important to offend.

Milton Friedman blamed the Great Depression on the contraction of the money supply, but others disagreed. Chairman Louis McFadden of the House Banking and Currency Committee said it “was not accidental. It was a carefully contrived occurrence….The international bankers sought to bring about a condition of despair here so that they might emerge as rulers of us all.”

The “Bankers Manifesto of 1934″ suggested the same thing, and some observers today believe it’s again playing out, this time on a global scale for much greater stakes for both winners and losers.

Roosevelt, Keynes and the New Deal

Roosevelt addressed the collapse straightaway, starting impressively in his first 100 days with the passage of 15 landmark acts, covering:

– emergency banking;

– Glass-Steagall and the FDIC;

– empowering the Reconstruction Finance Corporation that was toothless under Hoover;

– the Securities Act of 1933, then the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934;

– the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation to refinance homes and prevent foreclosures; and

– an alphabet soup of development agencies in charge of constructing national infrastructure and producing jobs for the unemployed.

In all, it was a whirlwind of achievement in a few short months unlike anything before or since – so much in such a short time. This writer’s late April article said:

Despite its flaws and failures, FDR’s New Deal was remarkable in what it accomplished. It helped people, put millions back to work, reinvigorated the national spirit, built or renovated 700,000 miles of roads, 7800 bridges, 45,000 schools, 2500 hospitals, 13,000 parks and playgrounds, 1000 airfields, and various other infrastructure, including much of Chicago’s lakefront where this writer lives. It cut unemployment from 25% in May 1933 to 11% in 1937, then it spiked before early war production revived economic growth and headed it lower.

Challenging Classical Economic Theory – Keynesianism

Post-WW II, it dominated economic policy, the idea being that deficit spending could propel nations to prosperity unlike the classical economic belief that money supply increases weren’t needed. Its theory was that when the supply contracts, so do prices and wages naturally leaving everything in balance like before.

It didn’t work at a time people wanted jobs, but there were few around. Factories could produce, but there was little demand, and resources were available but unused – for the lack of enough pump priming to reinvigorate a collapsed economy.

Enough, but not too much because as long as bankers print money, added liquidity means more debt and a greater amount to service. In addition, doing it crowds out social services, sacrifices industrial growth, and increases inflation hugely over time. The 5 cent ice cream cone and candy bars this writer remembers as a boy today cost around $2.50. If government printed its own money, they might still be a nickel or pretty close.

Congressman Wright Patman suggested it in 1933 by asking: “Why is it necessary to have Government ownership and operation of banks? The Constitution of the United States says that Congress shall coin money and regulate its value,” not hand it over to predatory private bankers.

Instead of returning money-creation power to the government, Roosevelt let “moneychangers” keep it under an overhauled Federal Reserve – a still powerful private banker-controlled “citadel, run from the top down (by) a small cartel of appointed banking representatives (operating) behind a curtain of secrecy,” more powerful than government itself. Had Roosevelt acted like Jackson and Lincoln, it would have been his greatest achievement.

Even so, in his first few months in office, he got enacted tough reformist legislation, very much impacting bankers. He also “took aim at the trusts and monopolies that had returned in force” in the anything-goes 1920s. By 1929, consolidation left around 200 companies “in control of over half of all American industry.”

FDR reversed the trend with new legislation, reviving earlier trust-busting efforts. He also imposed banking regulations as cited above – enough to get him to call financiers “unanimous in their hatred of me, and I welcome their hatred.” Lucky for him he survived. Big money plays for keeps, wins more often than it loses, and generally on what matters most.

Wright Patman Exposes the Money Machine

A Texas Democrat, he served in Congress from 1929 – 1976 where from 1963 – 1975 he headed the House Banking and Currency Committee until his death. Unlike his counterparts today in the House and Senate, he was called an “economic Populist,” one way being for how he exposed Fedspeak to reveal the scheme behind it.

In an August 5, 1964 Committee document titled “A Primer on Money,” he concluded:

“The Federal Reserve is a total moneymaking machine. It can issue money or checks. And it never has a problem of making its checks good because it can obtain the $5 and $10 bills necessary to cover (them) simply by asking the Treasury Department’s Bureau of Engraving to print them.”

Although the Fed now returns most interest on its government bonds to the Treasury, of far greater importance is the windfall its member banks get. “The bonds that have been acquired essentially for free become the basis of the Fed’s ‘reserves” – the phantom money that is advanced many times over by commercial banks in the form of loans.”

Virtually all money in circulation comes from the Fed and its member banks, expanded by a factor of about 10 (through fractional reserve lending) for every federal debt dollar monitized. It all “consists of loans on which the banks have been paid interest.” This interest, not what the Fed gets, “is the real windfall to the banks.

The limitless money-creation machine is kept hidden “in obscure Fedspeak,” even undecipherable to people who think they understand the process. In The Creature from Jekyll Island, Ed Griffin states that:

“modern money is a grand illusion conjured by the magicians of finance and politics. (The Fed’s function) is to turn debt into money. It’s just that simple….if one remembers that the process is not intended to be logical but to confuse and deceive.” It has to be. Would the public ever put up with it if they realized they’d be had – that their tax money was being used to enrich bankers, and Washington made it possible.

“Magical(ly) multiplying reserves is called fractional reserve banking” that seems more like a con or “shell game.” Each dollar deposited “magically” becomes about 10 in the form of loans or computer-generated funds. As explained below, “reserves” are being phased out so the 10 – 1 multiple is actually higher but the principle is the same.

So if $1 million deposited becomes $10 million, and $900,000 can be loaned out (the other $100,000 required for reserves), “money created out of thin air (at 5% interest) is doubled in about two years.”

The Fed claims it returns 95% of its profits to the Treasury. In fact, it’s only the interest on federal securities held as reserves. Far more important is the windfall afforded banks, the Fed’s owners, that “use the securities as the ‘reserves’ that get multiplied many times over in the form of loans” that generate huge profits for them.

Wright Patman wanted to abolish the Open Market Committee and nationalize the Fed, thus giving Congress control of it as a “truly federal agency” issuing interest-free money.

The Fed is now heading for a zero percent reserve requirement meaning they’ll be “no limit to the number of times deposits can be relent.” There’s effectively no limit now as if banks exhaust their reserves, they can borrow freely from the Fed – today at zero percent interest.

Inside the Fed’s Playbook

“Banks don’t have to have the money they lend before they make loans, because the Fed will ‘provide’ the necessary reserves by making them available at the federal funds rate” – today amounting to limitless free money at zero percent interest to be loaned out at higher rates for profit. The “slight of hand” is that the Fed “creates reserves out of thin air.”

Loans then become deposits that banks can freely re-lend many times over – the more deposits, the greater the amount of lending. It’s a process of multiplying the money supply and charging interest for doing it, a very profitable business when working well in a healthy economy.

So, the process works as follows:

– banks “lend money (they) don’t have;”

– loans become deposits on their books;

– when borrowers spend their money, banks raise their reserves back to the required 10% (or less) “by borrowing from the Fed or other sources;” and

– the Fed never runs out of reserves because its “open market operations” create more of them; it simply manufactures whatever amounts it wishes out of thin air, and the public is none the wiser or that they’re being taxed to pay for this shell game.

Reserves don’t comprise safe money to pay claimants. They’re accounting entries at Federal Reserve banks letting commercial banks “make many times those sums in loans.” In plain English, “reserve accounts are a smoke and mirrors accounting trick concealing the fact that banks create the money they lend out of thin air, borrowing any ‘reserves’ they need from the Fed, which also creates the money out of thin air.” What a business, especially given how secretive it is under the protection and auspices of the federal government that sanctions the con.

There’s more as well. Besides what they loan out, banks “create their own investment money” to use for their own purposes. Traditionally, commercial banks invested conservatively, but not investment banks. They raise money for their clients through stock issuances and sales. But more important is their “proprietary trading” that involves using their own money to buy or sell stocks, bonds, currencies, commodities, or any other financial instrument or derivative thereof no matter how risky.

Since investment and commercial banks may be one in the same, limitless sums are available through magical money creation and open-ended Fed borrowing, then leveraged multiple times through more borrowing. The game worked “magically” until it no longer did the old way, so alternatives are used.

Bear Raids and Short Sales

The 1929 “Crash” happened on three “Black” days but “continued for nearly four years, stoked by speculators who made huge profits not only on the market’s” ascent but during its plunge to 11% of its peak value.

Called a “bear raid,” it targets vulnerable stocks for “take-down” quick profits or corporate takeovers at fire sale prices. When done on a large scale, short selling can impact markets greatly on the downside just like heavy “program buying” can rocket it up. The whole business amounts to blatant manipulation for quick profits.

Short sellers actually do it with borrowed (not owned) stock, then sell it into the market. If it declines (it may also rise, of course), it’s re-bought at the lower price, returned to the seller, with short-sellers pocketing the difference as profit. It’s not investing. It’s gambling with someone else’s stock, without permission to borrow it, and as a result harms its owner by driving down the price when it works.

“Short selling is sometimes justified as being necessary to keep a brake on (over-exuberance) that might otherwise drive popular stocks into dangerous ‘bubbles.’

(However,) Any alleged advantages to a company from the liquidity afforded by short selling (and supposedly keeping markets honest) are offset by the serious harm (this causes) companies targeted for take-down(s) in bear raids.” When done with enough force, it can destroy companies if that’s the intent.

“Short selling is the modern version of the counterfeiting (that brought) down the Continental in the 1770s.” Currencies, bonds, and commodities can be shorted just like stocks – to manipulate them for profit.

Worse still, and illegal, is so-called naked short-selling without first borrowing the security shorted, assuring it can be borrowed, or arranging to borrow it as required by law – the reason being that it’s an even easier way to manipulate stock prices so SEC regulations ban it.

Even so, the idea that markets move randomly is rubbish. So is believing that companies or nations don’t target competitors for destruction by attacking their worth through short selling or other manipulative ways.

Hedge funds and Derivatives

“Hedge funds are private funds that pool the assets of wealthy investors with the aim of making ‘absolute returns’ – making a profit whether (markets go) up or down” on whatever financial assets they invest in. Leverage is used for maximum profitability, the more of it the greater gain or loss. In futures trading, it’s called the margin – placing “many more bets than if they had paid the full price.”

Originally, hedge funds were to “hedge (investment) bets….against currency or interest rate fluctuations (but) they quickly became instruments for manipulation and control.” At their peak, they controlled over half of daily equity market trading because of their numbers, size, amount of capital, and frequency of their buying or selling.

Derivatives are one of their key tools – essentially making “side bets that some underlying investment will go up or down” to insure against the risk. “All derivatives are variations on futures trading (and like it) is inherently speculation or gambling.” Familiar examples include puts and calls – on whether assets will go down or up.

“Over 90% of the derivatives held by banks….are ‘over-the-counter’ (ones) specially tailored to financial institutions (with) exotic and complex features, not traded on standard exchanges.” They’re unregulated, hard to trace, and “very hard to understand,” quite often impossible. In a 1998 interview, banking columnist John Hoefle called them “the last gasp of a financial bubble.” More recently Warren Buffett said they were “financial weapons of mass destruction” even though he owns a sizable amount of them and incurred considerable losses as a result.

Derivatives aren’t assets. They’re “just bets” on how assets will perform using very little real money. Most is borrowed to make private unreported, unregulated bets that have soared to a “notional value” of around $370 trillion, according to the Bank for International Settlements as of 2006. Notional value is “the number of units of an asset underlying the contract, multiplied by the spot price of the asset.” In other words, “fanciful, dubious or imaginary” assets.

The amount gets so large because when unregulated “gamblers can bet any amount of money they want,” and when markets work well for them, the sky’s the limit. In mid-2006, the Office of the Controller of the Currency reported that around 97% of US bank-held derivatives were owned by five major US banks, including JP Morgan Chase and Citigroup. In November 2005, Bloomberg reported that the credit derivatives market was “vulnerable to a crisis if one (of their major bank holders) fails to pay on contracts that insure creditors from companies defaulting….” John Hoefle warned we were “on the verge of the biggest financial blowout in centuries, bigger than the Great Depression….”

Since banks can create money out of thin air, how can they go bankrupt? Because under accounting rules, commercial banks have to balance their books so their assets equal liabilities. “They can create all the money they can find borrowers for, but” if loans default, banks must record a loss.

Just imagine – if the government created money and not banks, economic stability would follow, crises could be avoided or greatly lessened, inflation would be minimal or non-existant, prosperous growth would be long-term, and bank loans would be far less risky than today assuring steady profits but in smaller amounts.

A follow-up article will discuss global debt entrapment.

Stephen Lendman is a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.

Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The Global Research News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Monday – Friday at 10AM US Central time for cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on world and national issues. All programs are archived for easy listening.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=13461

© Copyright Stephen Lendman, Global Research, 2009

The url address of this article is: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=13548

see

“Web of Debt”: The Inner Workings of the Monetary System by Stephen Lendman

Geithner’s ‘Dirty Little Secret’: The Entire Global Financial System is at Risk by F. William Engdahl

Bill Moyers Journal: Dick Durbin + Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot

The Report from Iron Mountain Revisited by Richard C. Cook

What To Do With The Skeleton of Unfettered Capitalism?

Brown-Ellen

The Economy Sucks and or Collapse 2