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From: Sid Shniad [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: October-17-08 9:18 PM
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Subject: The God That Failed


CounterPunch October 13, 2008

The 30-Year Lie of the Market Cult 

The God That Failed 

By Chris Floyd 

Perhaps the most striking fact revealed by the global financial crash -- or
rather, by the reaction to it -- is the staggering, astonishing, gargantuan
amount of money that the governments of the world have at their command. In
just a matter of days, we have seen literally trillions of dollars offered
to the financial services sector by national treasuries and central banks
across the globe. Britain alone has put $1 trillion at the disposal of the
bankers, traders, lenders and speculators; and this has been surpassed by
the total package of public money that Washington is shoveling into the
financial furnaces of Wall Street and the banks. These radical efforts are
being replicated on a slightly smaller scale in France, Germany, Italy,
Russia and many other countries.

The effectiveness of this unprecedented transfer of wealth from ordinary
citizens to the top tiers of the business world remains to be seen. It will
certainly insulate the very rich from the consequences of their own greed
and folly and fraud; but it is not at all clear how much these measures will
shield the vast majority of people from the catastrophe that has been
visited upon them by the elite. 

But putting aside for a moment the actual intent, details and results of the
global bailout offers, it is their very extent that shocks, and shows -- in
a stark, harsh, all-revealing light -- the brutal disdain with which the
national governments of the world's "leading democracies" have treated their
own citizens for decades.

Beginning with Margaret Thatcher's election in 1979, government after
government -- and party after party -- fell to the onslaught of an extremist
faith: the narrow, blinkered fundamentalism of the "Chicago School."
Epitomized by its patron saint, Milton Friedman, the rigid doctrine held
that an unregulated market would always "correct" itself, because its
workings are based on entirely rational and quantifiable principles. (See
John Cassidy in the NY Review of Books for more.) This was of course an
absurdly reductive and savagely ignorant view of history, money and human
nature; but because it flattered the rich and powerful, offering an
"intellectual" justification for rapacious greed and ever-widening economic
and social inequality, it was adopted as holy writ by the elite and
promulgated as public policy.

This radical cult -- a kind of Bolshevism from above -- took its strongest
hold in the United States and Britain, and was then imposed on many weaker
nations through the IMF-led "Washington Consensus" (more aptly named by
Naomi Klein as the "Shock Doctrine"), with devastating and deadly results.
(As in Yeltsin's Russia, for example, where life expectancy dropped
precipitously and millions of people died premature deaths from poverty,
illness, and despair.)

According to the cult, not only were markets to be freed from the
constraints placed on them after the world-shattering effects of the Great
Depression, but all public spending was to be slashed ruthlessly to the
bone. (Although exceptions were always made for the Pentagon war machine.)
After all, every dollar spent by a public entity on public services and
amenities was a dollar taken away from the private wheeler-dealers who could
more usefully employ it in increasing the wealth of the elite -- who would
then allow some of their vast profits to "trickle down" to the lower orders.

This was the cult that captured the governments of the United States and
Britain (among others), as well as the Republican and Democratic parties,
and the Conservative and Labour parties as well. And for almost thirty
years, its ruthless doctrines have been put into practice. Regulation and
oversight of financial markets were systematically stripped away or rendered
toothless. Essential public services were sold off, for chump change, to
corporate interests. Public spending on anything other than making war,
threatening war and profiting from war was pared back or eliminated. Such
public spending that did remain was forever under threat and derided, like
the remnants of some pagan faith surviving in isolated backwaters. 

Year after year, the ordinary citizens were told by their governments: we
have no money to spend on your needs, on your communities, on your
infrastructure, on your health, on your children, on your environment, on
your quality of life. We can't do those kinds of things any more. 

Of course, when talking amongst themselves, or with the believers in the
think tanks, boardrooms -- and editorial offices -- the cultists would speak
more plainly: we don't do those things anymore because we shouldn't do them,
we don't want to do them, they are wrong, they are evil, they are outside
the faith. But for the hoi polloi, the line was usually something like this:
Budgets are tight, we must balance them (for a "balanced budget" is a core
doctrine of the cult), we just can't afford all these luxuries.

But now, as the emptiness and falsity of the Chicago cargo cult stands
nakedly revealed, even to some of its most faithful and fanatical adherents,
we can see that this 30-year mantra by our governments has been a deliberate
and outright lie. The money was there -- billions and billions and billions
of dollars of it, trillions of dollars of it. We can see it before our very
eyes today -- being whisked away from our public treasuries and showered
upon the banks and the brokerages. 

Let's say it again: The money was there all along. 

Money to build and generously equip thousands and thousands of new schools,
with well-paid, exquisitely trained teachers, small teacher-pupil ratios, a
full range of enriching and inspiring programs. 

Money to revitalize the nation's crumbling inner cities, making them safe
and vibrant places for businesses and families and communities to grow.

Money to provide decent, affordable and accessible health care to every
citizen, to provide dignity and comfort to the elderly, and protection and
humane treatment for the mentally ill. 

Money to provide affordable higher education to everyone who wanted it and
could qualify for it. Money to help establish and sustain local businesses
and family farms, centered in and on the local community, driven by the
needs and knowledge of the people in the area, and not by the dictates of
distant corporations. 

Money to strengthen crumbling infrastructure, to repair bridges, shore up
levies, maintain roads and electric grids and sewage systems.

Money for affordable, workable public transport systems, for the pursuit of
alternative sources of energy, for sustainable, sensible development, for
environmental restoration.

Money to support free inquiry in science, technology, health and other areas
-- research unfettered from the war machine and the drive for corporate
profit, and instead devoted to the betterment of human life. 

Money to support culture, learning, continuing education, libraries,
theater, music and the endless manifestations of the human quest to gain
more meaning, more understanding, more enlightenment, a deeper, spiritually
richer life. 

The money for all of this -- and much, much more -- was there, all along.
When they said we couldn't have these things, they were lying -- or else
allowing themselves to be profitably duped by the high priests of the market
cult. When they wanted a trillion dollars -- or three trillion dollars -- to
wage a war of aggression in Iraq, they found it. Now, when they want
trillions of dollars to save the speculators, fraudsters and profiteers of
greed in the global market, they suddenly have it. 

Who then can believe that these governments could not have found the money
for good schools, health care, and all the rest, that they could not have
enhanced the well-being and livelihood of millions of ordinary citizens, and
helped create a more just and equitable and stable world -- if they had
wanted to?

This is one of the main facts that ordinary citizens around the world should
take away from this crisis: the money to maintain, secure and improve the
lives of their families and communities was always there -- but their
governments, and their political parties, made a deliberate, unforced choice
not to use it for the common good. Instead, they subjugated the well-being
of the world to the dictates of an extremist cult. A cult of greed and
privilege, that preached iron discipline to the poor and the middle-class,
but released the rich and powerful from all restrictions, and all
responsibility for their actions.

This should be a constant -- and galvanizing -- thought in the minds of the
public in the months and years to come. Remember what you could have had,
and how it was denied you by the lies and delusions of a powerful elite and
their bought-off factotums in government. Remember the trillions of dollars
that suddenly appeared when the wheeler-dealers needed money to cover their
own greed and stupidity. 

Let these thoughts guide you as you weigh the promises and actions of
politicians and candidates, and as you assess the "expert analysis" on
economic and domestic policy offered by the corporate media and the
corporate-bankrolled think tanks and academics. 

And above all, let these thoughts be foremost in your mind when you hear --
as you certainly will hear, when (and if) the markets are finally stabilized
(at whatever gigantic cost in human suffering) -- the adherents of the
market cult emerge once more and call for "deregulation" and "untying the
hands of business" and all the other ritual incantations of their false and
savage fundamentalist faith.

For although the market cult has suffered a cataclysmic defeat in the last
few weeks, it is by no means dead. It has 30 years of entrenchment in power
to fall back on. And the leader of every major political party in the West
has spent their entire political career within the cult's confines. It has
been the atmosphere they breathed, it has been the sole ladder by which they
have climbed to prominence. They will be loath to abandon it, once the
immediate crisis is past; most will not be able to. 

So remember well the lessons of this new October crash: The money to make a
better life, to serve the common good, has always been there. But it has
been kept from you by deceit, by dogma, by greed, and by the ambition of
those who have sold their souls, and betrayed their brothers and sisters,
their fellow human creatures, for the sake of privilege and power.

Chris Floyd is an American journalist and frequent contributor to
CounterPunch. His blog, "Empire Burlesque," can be found at
www.chris-floyd.com.

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