http://freedominourtime.blogspot.com/2008/09/triumvirate-and-plunderbund.html


The Triumvirate and the Plunderbund
via Pro Libertate by William N. Grigg on 22/09/08














Ave, Triumvirate -- the MMVIII version, in any case. 


"The risks of doing nothing far outweigh the risks of whatever it takes to 
disarm Saddam Hussein." George W. Bush, February 10, 2003 (and several other 
occasions prior to the second Iraq war)

"The risk of doing nothing far outweighs the risk of the [$700 billion-plus 
mortgage bail-out] package." George W. Bush, September 20, 2008

A foolish consistency, we are told, is the hobgoblin of little minds, and -- 
this side of Sean Hannity, at least -- it's difficult to find anyone more 
consistently foolish, or more obviously small-minded, than George W. Bush. 

During the nearly eight years his presidency has blighted our country, the 
Bushling has been a roving epicenter of disaster. And he has greeted each 
crisis with an indecent, if throughly predictable, eagerness to expand his own 
power, and that of the embedded oligarchy that produced him. 

With the embarrassing enthusiasm of a dim-witted schoolchild, he strikes 
resolute poses and utters the same handful of banalities that translate into 
one perfectly consistent demand: Shut up and submit.

Undisguised Fascism

The one defining idea of George W. Bush's career -- and trust me, one idea is 
the storage capacity of his tiny yet uncluttered mind -- is this: As creatures 
of privilege, he and his cronies are permitted to do whatever they please. This 
is what made him so useful to the Power Elite that stands poised this week to 
impose a system of undisguised fascism on our country.

Necessity, warned Noah Webster, is the "old stale plea" of those who seek 
autocratic powers. For such people, deliberation is impermissible, and dissent 
unthinkable. "Necessity," we are now told, demands that Congress ratify, 
without delay or qualification, a measure dictated by Henry Paulson, the 
swindler heading the Treasury Department, that would elevate him to the status 
of economic dictator.

Relatively brief in length and austere in language, the bailout measure could 
be digested even further into one pithy statement: Congress hereby abdicates 
its constitutional power over appropriating and spending revenue to the 
Secretary of the Treasury, who has the power to spend any amount in any way he 
sees fit without being subject to oversight or accountability of any kind. 

The entire purpose of the $700 billion bailout bill is embodied in Section 8 of 
the text: "Decisions by the Secretary pursuant to the authority of this Act are 
non-reviewable and committed to agency discretion, and may not be reviewed by 
any court of law or any administrative agency."

Section 9 is likewise fraught with significance: "The authorites under this Act 
... shall terminate two years from the date of enactment of this Act." Mr. Bush 
and his clique, including Paulson, are required by law to vacate their offices 
next January 20. Yet this measure appears to assume that Paulson will remain at 
his post for at least the next two years, since it's difficult to imagine that 
he would be able to "resolve" the crisis in only four months. Would the 
incoming president be forbidden by law to remove Paulson?

The Irrelevant Election

One thing is all but certain. If this measure passes, it really won't matter 
who wins the presidential election, or any congressional election, since 
Congress will have consummated the craven promise it has made on several 
occasions by surrendering the power over the public purse to an economic Fuhrer 
who embodies the interests of the Wall Street plunderbund. 

All your wealth are belong to us! Someone set up us the mortgage bomb!

(Thanks to Anthony Gregory; click for detail.)


The Bush Regime (I hope that by now people would understand why that term must 
be used to describe the outfit ruling our nation) has made demands of this kind 
before, and Congress has acquiesced every time.

The post-9/11 "Authorization for Use of Military Force" was essentially an 
enabling act permitting the president and his handlers to wage unlimited 
foreign war and obliterate the Bill of Rights. A year later, Congress was 
panicked into ratifying the Regime's plan for war with Iraq (without issuing 
the constitutionally mandatory congressional declaration). In September 2006, 
Congress enacted the Military Commissions Act, which abolished the ancient 
habeas corpus guarantee and subverted the judicial system by creating a 
separate system to try accused terrorists. Just this spring the 
Democrat-controlled Congress acceded to the Bush Regime's demands for 
retroactive immunity to telecom companies that connived in its warrantless 
wiretapping program. 

They've been practicing: Black-clad Homeland Security troops (the term "police" 
is inadequate) surround peaceful demonstrators in preparation for a mass arrest 
during the Democratic National Convention in Denver. 

On each occasion, the Bush Regime has reiterated the "old, stale plea of 
necessity" while haranguing Congress and the public about the unthinkably 
horrible things that would ensue were the Regime denied any of the 
extraordinary powers it sought.

Our nation is now committed to open-ended foreign war, and burdened with a 
militarized homeland security state at home. Now the same disaster-drenched 
elite is demanding the power to seize all of our wealth -- such as it is -- and 
the power to redistribute it to their super-rich cronies in any way they 
please, without owing an accounting to anybody. 

We have long since ceased to be a republic in anything other than the most 
wistful, aspirational sense. The system coalescing around us is built on a de 
facto Triumvirate: The Fed Chairman controls the currency, the Treasury 
Secretary supervises wealth redistribution, and the president -- whoever it is 
-- presides over foreign wars and internal security.

Regarding the latter, an ominous portent presents itself: On October 1, for the 
first time in our history, the military will assign an active-duty unit -- the 
3rd Infantry Division's 1st Brigade Combat Team -- as a an "on-call federal 
response force" for homeland security. No good will come of this, and we'll be 
seeing much more of it as the crisis matures. In the emerging order, each 
Triumvir would exercise plenary power within his realm. And the three of them 
would operate not on behalf of the public weal, but for the benefit of the 
Robber Class.

















What can we do? 

First, there is a small chance that the bailout bill, aka the Mother of All 
Swindles, can be derailed by a focused outpouring of public opposition. 

There, now -- doesn't it feel better to enjoy a good, hearty laugh, even one 
flavored with frustrated bitterness?

I thought so. 

In all seriousness, we have to make an effort to compel our "representatives" 
to oppose the bailout, not only because it would reduce the middle class to 
abject penury and peonage but because the only way genuine recovery can occur 
is if the current system is permitted to collapse immediately. 

We confront a choice of catastrophes. The real tragedy is that the choice 
really isn't ours. But we still have time to fortify our positions. As someone 
who has dealt with a miniature version of this crisis in the form of a 
catastrophic family illness coupled with sudden, unexpected unemployment, I 
offer the following advice as the product of experience.

1) A gathering of the clans. Home, as Robert Frost put it, is the place where, 
"if you have to go there, they have to take you in." The moral obligation to 
help family is irreducible and non-negotiable. And families are little 
self-contained nations, even though that proposition emphatically doesn't work 
in reverse. 

If you can, get close to your family right now and begin immediately to pool 
your resources, and, if possible, to help each other with your liabilities. 
This is particularly true if you have parents or grandparents who (like my 
mother and father) have a garden and a huge reserve of stored and home-canned 
food, and perhaps their own well. Be prepared to give as much as you get, 
pitching in to do whatever is needed to sustain the extended family as one 
discrete community.

2) Build a cushion. How dependent are you on "just-in-time" provisions at the 
local grocery store? The local gas station or convenience store? Can you reduce 
that dependency in order to survive for, say, two weeks? Or even a month?

Last Spring, our family bought a large quantity of wheat and beans, as well as 
a small store of dehydrated victuals. It was expensive then. It's more 
expensive now. But laying in a modest store of emergency food is no longer 
merely a good idea; it's imperative.

3) De-couple from the dollar. I'm not an investment analyst or adviser. I'm not 
going to tell you what investment vehicles you should choose or abandon. I 
would simply point out that the dollar was already heading irreversibly in one 
direction, and that the bailout would dramatically accelerate its decline. 

We're assured that bank deposits under 100K are insured by the FDIC. But that 
agency is as bankrupt as the banks it insures.

>From that fact flow some logical conclusions about the rational course of 
>action regarding our bank deposits. It will be helpful to have cash on hand, 
>even though its value declines every day.

And it's a good idea to have physical possession of some commodity money. The 
prices for gold and silver, which guttered before the financial meltdown, are 
heading skyward once again. They're still a bargain (silver in particular) for 
those seeking a safe haven. "Junk" silver (pre-1964 coinage and '65-'70 Kennedy 
40% silver half-dollars) is important as both a haven and as negotiable 
currency in the likely event of a currency crash. 

Just a typical rural Sheriff's department in Amerika, MMVIII.

4) Gather intelligence on the occupation force. In the event of localized or 
general breakdowns in public order, the police will not protect us.

That is not their mission, and it never has been. Armed self-defense is a task 
we cannot delegate, and we shouldn't want to. 

When riots ulcerated Los Angeles in 1992, the only property owners in the 
affected areas who avoided catastrophic loss were the Korean-American 
shopkeepers who mounted armed patrols to repel the looters. Our rulers 
apparently learned from that experience. Witness the fact that in post-Katrina 
New Orleans and similar recent disasters, an immediate priority for the forces 
of official "order" was to disarm the law-abiding and let the looters have free 
rein. 

What do we know about our local police and Sheriff's departments? What are 
their procedures for dealing with disasters, riots, and other emergencies? How 
many personnel do they employ? Do they have SWAT or tactical teams? Are they 
manned by dutiful statist automata, or are at least a few men in the mold of 
Ramon Perez and other officers of conscience who would scruple to carry out 
manifestly corrupt and unconstitutional orders?

One way to find out is to attend a citizen police academy or similar program 
offered by your local affiliate of the Homeland Security State. Programs of 
this kind exist nation-wide, and each offers an opportunity for suitably 
attentive and discreet individuals to scout out the intentions and capabilities 
of those who would be called on to occupy and regiment our neighborhoods in the 
event of a fully-realized social collapse.

Much of the foregoing is grim advice. But remember that those who prepare for 
the worst are never disappointed.



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