>From Common Dreams: "With or without the bipartisan deal, says Josh Bivens
of the Economic Policy Institute, the "larger crisis is the extraordinary
degree of spending-side austerity" which has been embraced in Washington
since 2009."

If Austerity enjoys this degree of support from all sides of the political
spectrum, why is it a crisis? A crisis for whom?

For over 2 centuries capitalism, in all its phases, has been a  continuing
(and growing) disaster for most of the global population. The famine in
India (mentioned in Capital)  brought about with cheap textiles from
Manchester, is only one of many such. Quite aside from the present Austerity
and Repression in the (former) "capitalist core,' one can mention the
continuing horror in Iraq and the terror being visited on the Honduran
people (with enthusiastic support from the Obama Administration).

The problem is not the Republicans, or even the vicious policies of the
Obama Administration, but capitalism. 

When I objected earlier in the year to Lou's absurdity re capitalist
"greed," he gave the weak reply that he wrote for a general audience -- but
_that_ is THE mistake; it is precisely when writing or speaking for a
general audience that it is essential to put the blame on capitalist
relations, not cover and in effect excuse those relations by hauling in
petty squawks about "greed" -- in fact greed was far worse, more
fundamental, in _pre-capitalist_ social orders than it is at present.

Neoliberalism (Austerity & Repression) has triumphed. There is no economic
crisis. There is no group whose immorality can be blamed. We face naked
capitalism. The crisis, if there ever was one, is over. 

Carrol


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