By Jimmie Moglia
November 22/23, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - Distance
of time or place can reconcile complacent minds to
wonderful narratives. Besides, the greatest part of
mankind has no other reason for their opinion than
they are in fashion.
The man involved in life is sometimes forced to
believe without verification, and obliged to choose
before he can examine. He is surprised by sudden
alterations of the state of things, and changes his
mind according to superficial appearances. He is led
by others, either because he is indolent, or because
he is timid; sometimes he is afraid to know what is
right, and sometimes he finds friends or enemies
deft and diligent in deceiving him.
For what we may see before our eyes, or reaches
our ears at any given moment, is inexplicable
without reference to all that has ever been. This
interlacing of all contributing threads which
necessity weaves into the production of one single
phenomenon is a stupefying yet inescapable reality.
Adding to the preceding tribute to obviousness,
we are generally delighted with soothing
explanations, captivating plots and triumphal
outcomes.
A case in point is/are/have been the celebrations
of the 30th anniversary of the fall of
the Berlin Wall. A historical event closely followed
by the end of Soviet Russia and by the beginning of
the end of history, under the soothing protection of
the neo-liberal, turbo-capitalistic American-Zionist
world empire.
In his related pronouncement, Pompeo, the US
secretary of state, linked the collapse of the
Berlin wall to America’s victories in the War of
Independence and in World War II.
That Pompeo has only a conjectural glimpse of his
own meaning, with an added signal talent for
ignorance and mendacity, does not diminish the
significance of his imaginative historical
connections. For they reflect the inner thoughts of
the current and eminently parasitic American elite.
Nevertheless, Pompeo’s founding mythology stinks,
and more sober minds may realize that the celebrated
anniversary was not the beginning of something new,
but the last gasp of a (Western) dying system –
killed by the disappearance of an enemy who
indirectly managed to contain that system’s folly.
It may be heretic to say that the Berlin Wall was
as much a Western as a Soviet symbol. And in the
current currents of the world it may not really
matter, considering that – if polls are true – 95%
of the tourists approaching the remnants of the wall
know nothing about it. While the rest knows history
through the improbable fiction of Hollywood, in
which bad communists built the wall to prevent
people from escaping into the arms of good
capitalists.
I can resist anything but temptation, including
the examination of both sides of a coin, especially
when most only look at one, and when looking at the
other borders with thought-crime.
Readers may remember that, in a masterpiece of
gullibility (for a statesman), Gorbachev agreed to
the re-unification of Germany, while believing the
Americans when they committed themselves – in
exchange – not to expand NATO towards the East. We
know how it went. Tanks, missiles, American bases
and soldiers are within yards of the Russian border.
Meanwhile, at the time and in a feat of consummate
servility, Gorbachev even appeared in a TV
advertisement, blessing the onslaught and the onrush
of the Pizza Hut franchise in the Moscow landscape.
In terms of similarly broken promises, and to
give a historical setting to the fall of the Berlin
wall, we should refer to the aftermath of WWII.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
The agreements of Yalta and Potsdam,
among the victors, envisioned a Germany
jointly administered by ALL the allies.
Instead, the Western Allies created West
Germany, and East Germany was born as a
consequence.
That imagination is strained, which attempts to
recreate the conditions of Germany (and Russia)
after the war, following the destruction of
everything and the death of millions of civilians
and soldiers.
The black and white pictures showing the total
erasure of magnificent, artistic and historic German
cities, – notably by US-UK bombs and bombers – only
marginally can convey the depth of the impact,
physical, historic and political. In the videos “The
Destruction of Dresden” of my series ‘Historical
Sketches’ [
https://youtu.be/_V8aV5l5f9k ], I attempted to
show the horror, so well described and documented by
David Irving in his book “The Destruction of
Dresden.” A city where, just before the end of the
war, and with the Russians at less than 80 km, the
Allies conducted three non-stop carpet bombing raids
resulting in the death of 135,000 civilians, almost
as many as at Hiroshima or Nagasaki.
Nor we should forget the diabolic US
finance-secretary Morgenthau, who convinced
Roosevelt and Churchill to sign on and underwrite
his “Morgenthau Plan.” Which literally included
“reducing Germany to the stone-age”, when not
sterilizing all Germans according to the book
“Germany Must Perish” written by Theodore Kaufman.
The plan was only scrapped at the last moment out of
fear that all Germany would rise and join the
Eastern block.
Furthermore, as all know who are not blinded by
Hollywood propaganda, the USSR bore the brunt, the
weight and the cost of victory. In fact, as per the
agreements at Yalta, the USSR army stopped its
advance at Berlin, though the Americans were still
far away. And even a cursory review of the salient
events of the war in 1944-1945 shows how much the
Western Allies struggled to reach the German soil.
Whereas in the continental US the only direct
victim of the war was a young man who tampered with
an unexploded bomb, which the Japanese floated
across the Pacific with air-balloons, and that
eventually landed in an Oregon forest. In contrast
and as we know, Russians and Germans died by the
tens of millions.
Following the installation of President Truman,
and in the midst of a suddenly arisen ‘red-scare’,
the Yalta and Postdam agreements went the way of all
flesh. While in the US, after the manufacturing
fever triggered by the war machine, the government
feared a recession mimicking that of the 1930s.
Hence the US invested heavily in the reconstruction
of Europe, and notably Germany.
But it was imperative to exclude the Russians. To
do so, a new currency was created and mostly printed
in America – the new Mark, replacing the current
Reichmark, used since the Weimar Republic and until
then in force throughout Germany in all its occupied
zones. This happened in 1948.
The new Mark, the new currency of West Germany
was assigned 4.7 times the value of the Reichmark.
Consequently salaries and retributions in the
Western occupied areas were at least 3-times higher
compared to those in the USSR sector.
The USSR could not duplicate the feat, even if
she had had a currency of universal reference as the
dollar.
As an aside and in this context, Churchill, who
wanted the war for fear of losing the British
empire, lost the empire and gifted to the US dollar
the strength that was formerly of the British pound.
And, as a mockery to the British people at large,
their food was rationed until 1954, well after
food-rations disappeared from other vanquished
continental countries. We could almost paraphrase
Churchill himself, …. “Such war, such victory!”
Back to post-war Germany. The introduction of the
new West German currency marks both the official
beginning of the Cold War and of the Germans’ exodus
from East to West – the latter branded as a
demonstration of a Communist ideological failure.
Whereas, until that moment, the flow is reported to
have been – somewhat embarrassingly – from West to
East.
The US’ decision, in 1948, to create two
currencies and by default two Germanies, eventually
led to the erection of the wall, 13 years later, in
1961.
The German people did not seek the original
division. Consequently, their desire for
re-unification, independently of politics and
currencies, was patriotic and beyond question.
Economically, however, the act of unification
coincided with a monetary and monumental sleigh of
hands – similar in concept, scope and consequences
to what happened in 1948. It involved – within
months of the fall of the wall – assigning to the
Eastern Reichmark the same value of the Western
Mark.
“Wonderful” was (is and would probably be) the
ecstatic reaction of any man of any street on
knowing that his income will instantly triple at the
stroke of midnight – as in an updated version of
Cinderella’s tale. Besides, German Chancellor Kohl
himself had dispelled any potential doubts, by
assuring that all would benefit and none would
suffer.
Fairy tales are irresistible, especially when
spun by authorities or experts. And the distillate
of the masses’ thought (assuming it exists) is often
thoughtlessness. Not, I think, because the masses
are stupid, but because, in the instance, they (the
East Germans) were made to believe, by relentless
Western psychological conditioning, that they were
desperate. And the man who languishes in the gloom
of misery cannot suspect fraud in him who wants to
help him so seemingly disinterestedly. Especially
when fancy propaganda peddles the opium of
unsubstantiated hopes.
Readers may remember the aphorism circulating in
Russia after the dissolution of the Soviet Union,
“All that the Russian government told us about
Russia was false, but all they said about America
was true.”
Which, incidentally, should remind us that the
excellence of aphorisms consists not so much in the
elucidation of some rare or abstruse concept, as in
the comprehension of some useful truths in a few
words. For we easily forget or frequently fall into
error of judgment or action not because the true
related principles are not known, but because, for a
time, they are not remembered. Therefore those may
be justly numbered among the benefactors of mankind,
who can contract the complex dynamics of history
into short sentences that may be easily impressed on
the memory, and taught, by frequent recollection, to
recur habitually to the mind.
Still, after waking up from the dream of tripling
his income, the East German citizen saw that the
cost of goods had equally risen 3 times. And, worse,
the goods that he until then produced with his labor
at competitive prices, had suddenly become
uncompetitive, hence unsalable.
Though the following is but a scant and
incomplete rendition of the related events, it may,
I hope, give an idea of their actual dynamics –
confirming once more that official chronicles are
often pure instruments of falsification and
opportunistic narrative.
When there were two Germanies, East Germany
exported her goods using an exchange rate set at 1
WM = 4.4 EM.
On midnight of Jun 30, 1990, each East German
mark became one West German mark, but all East
German goods simultaneously increased in price by
350%. No economy could survive this. Saying so was
even the president of the BundesBank in 1993, during
a public inquiry on the shady affairs surrounding
the maxi-privatization of East Germany’s previously
state-owned enterprises.
Within two years the Gross National Product of
the now unified East Germany had fallen by 45% – a
historical record for any country not involved in
war. Why?
Like all states, East Germany had an internal and
an export market. The majority of exports went to
West Germany, followed by the countries of the
Eastern block and others. He who writes here
remembers, in his first job, landing in the Iraq of
Saddam Hussein and the Baath party, during Baghdad’s
International Fair. Banners in Baghdad’s central
square proclaimed the strong friendship and economic
cooperation between Iraq and East Germany. And a
large impressive array of East German industrial
machinery and other products were prominently
featured at the fair.
After July 1, 1990 East Germany’s export markets
were lost in a matter of weeks, while West German
goods flooded East Germany displacing local products
suddenly become uncompetitive. As I have read, the
combined export volume of a now unified Germany was,
for several year after the unification, less than
when East and West Germany exported independently.
The effects on the East German population were
appalling and dramatic, though foreseeable.
Beginning with massive unemployment, especially
considering that, according to the previous East
German constitution, unemployment was actually
forbidden.
One expected consequence was the massive
migration from East to West that has continued to
this day. 4 million moved from East to West, 1.5
million moved from West to East, primarily to assume
positions of responsibility in government, education
and bureaucracy and/or to take ownership of homes
expropriated from the previous East German
government.
Many of the Germans moving to the West were
women. In East Germany they had a series of social
benefits that in today’s neo-liberal world
conditions and mood may almost appear as
science-fiction. To quote one, following the birth
of a child the mother could be exempt from work for
three years while still being paid.
Under the newly developed situation, the East
German birth rate dropped dramatically. The previous
birth rate was not high, either in East or West
Germany, less than the replacement rate, said to be
2.1 children per couple. Even so, prior to
unification, the East German birth rate was still
higher (1.7) than in West Germany. Within a few
years the birth rate in the East fell to 0.80 per
couple, while longevity fell by 7 years.
Another consequence was the depopulation of
cities. Many industrial cities lost from 20 to 30%
of inhabitants. Even today, after the mass migration
to the West, an East German has twice the chance of
being unemployed than a West German, and if he works
he earns 75% of his Western counterpart.
Why was such a seemingly logical turn of events
not anticipated? Being able to answer concisely and
accurately is beyond me and perhaps beyond many.
Maybe it was thought that the magic world of the
unregulated market would take care of everything.
Adam Smith comes to mind with his belief in the
invisible hand of the market.
There is a cause for every effect and when the
cause is embarrassing another can be easily
invented. In the instance, the proclaimed line was
that East German products were erroneously believed
to be better than they actually were. Consequently,
when East Germany was compelled to compete,
catastrophe was inevitable.
Here again I have a minor anecdotal recollection
that would seem to dispel that notion – other than
the already mentioned range, scope and appearance of
the East German products I had observed at the
Baghdad Fair. Besides, East Germany had been the
most industrialized and advanced nation in the
Eastern block.
As an International Marketing Manager (read
‘travelling salesman’) I attended twice the
International Leipzig Fair, both to demonstrate my
employer’s products (electronic instrumentation) and
to establish commercial ties within the framework of
what was possible before the unification.
It is common for fathers of young boys to develop
a sudden interest in toy-trains. Finding myself in
similar circumstances, I once visited a toy-train
shop in Leipzig and was impressed by the beauty, the
precision in details and finish, and the sturdiness
of the products on sale.
Another ignored or forgotten aspect of the
unification was the method used to expropriate and
privatize the East German and previously state-owned
companies (the overwhelming majority).
The thousands of industries to be privatized were
assigned or incorporated into a new temporary
collective organization, called Treuhandanstalt
(‘Trust Agency’). The assessed value of the whole
(30 years ago) was 600 billion West German marks.
By reading the accounts of the Treuhandanstalt
operations – that even led to the public inquiry
referred-to earlier on – the criteria of
privatization were often bizarre, arbitrary and
incomprehensible. Sometimes companies employing up
to 4000 workers were sold for 1 Mark with added
financial incentives for the private buyer to
‘restructure’ the company and maintain the
employment level.
Sometimes companies were sold to fraudsters,
shysters and criminals, who simply ransacked the
ransack-able, sold it and went their own way. The
numbers tell the tale.. Workers originally employed
by the companies incorporated into the
Treuhandanstalt were 4-million. At the end of the
privatizing operation the number of the still
employed were 100,000. And the Treuhandanstalt spent
a further 256 billion marks in financial incentives
to buyers.
Among the less known benefits of the
re-unification were, for example, the lack of
recognition of education titles and qualifications
acquired in the former East Germany. This led to the
massive replacement of Eastern with Western
academics. A similar development occurred in the
army, bureaucracy and justice.
Many who lost their job or despaired of regaining
their earlier social status committed suicide, and
in the aftermath of the unification, in the former
East Germany, the average life expectancy fell by 7
years.
Given the above, the jubilations spawned by the
fall-of-the-wall anniversary, are reminiscent of the
recurrent comical character in literature, who
severs the tree-branch on which is sitting.
For in1989 turbo-capitalism overflowed the
metaphorical banks that contained it, and gave free
reign to what the Latin poet Virgil called the
“accursed hunger for gold” (Auri Sacra Fames)
of the dominant class. Unleashing on the world the
limitless, borderless, nationless merchants of the
capitalistic Apocalypse, with its inevitable tail of
blood, rapine and endless wars. Leading to the
somber conclusion that worse than a world divided
into two blocks was what came next – a globally
imposed value-system that seized, with fictitious
claims, the prerogatives of unavoidability and
therefore excellence. Suggesting the image of a
world converted into a Plato’s cave of gigantic
proportions, which to its dwellers appears as the
only possible reality, for they cannot imagine the
existence of another world outside.
All the while, turbo-capitalism prospers under a
continual series of hypocrisies, concealing bad
qualities under fair appearances. And when it thinks
itself out of reach of censure or retaliation it
breaks out of all restraints, like winds imprisoned
in their caverns.
Assuming but not given that the reader has read
so far, I wish to dispel the idea that by describing
the mostly unspoken story of the German
re-unification, I am a Marxist or crypto-communist.
For objective truth needs no labels. Especially when
persistent lying reinforces the evil that the lie
was supposed to hide. The result is a globalized
world where a global Ministry of Truth is the
monopolistic distributor of fake news, directly,
indirectly, through image manipulation and even
suggestions.
Instances are plentiful but one is particularly
representative of the whole. Among the introductory
images of RT’s program Cross-Talk, viewers see the
statue of Saddam Hussein being roped and crushed to
the ground in Baghdad. When this occurred, American
corporate media’s message was that masses of Iraqis
celebrated their new American-brought freedom by
venting their anger against the statue of the evil
dictator.
But an undoctored video of the event shows that,
employed in taking down the statue, were about 20
workers, protected, all around the perimeter, by a
ring of American soldiers.
I hope the reader will forgive one final
auto-biographical recollection. I travelled in East
and West Germany, East and West Berlin and Russia
when I was young. With the necessary changes due to
temper, history, character and circumstances, I saw
the surroundings in a mood similar to that of the
poet William Wordsworth, when he travelled to Paris
at the onset of the French Revolution,
“Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive,
But to be young was very heaven!—Oh! times,
In which the meagre, stale, forbidding ways
Of custom, law, and statute, took at once
The attraction of a country in romance!”
Way beyond ideology, East Berlin, East Germany,
Eastern Europe, Russia herself had “the attraction
of a country in romance.” East Berlin’s Alexander
Platz seemed to me an enormous and yet harmonious
modern architectural wonder. With a gigantic
stone-king – the TV tower – hovering over the
symmetrical buildings around the square. In turn,
the buildings framed the clear, clean, wide and huge
middle, as in a silent apology of grandeur, openness
and elegance.
I did not see Alexander Platz as an emblem of
Communism or of any ideology, only perhaps the
symbol of a determination by the German people to
resist the evil of their traditional and historical
enemies.
I returned to Berlin last June. In the Alexander
Platz, the TV tower is now hemmed-in into a corner.
Replacing and filling the former elegant and
awe-inspiring vastness of the square are sundry
un-coordinated structures, whose seeming only common
purpose and reason for existence is profit. To me
they replaced the creative previous originality of
the square with the uninspiring conformism of
insignificance.
So what? – may ask a neo-liberal-minded objector.
Nothing of course, but profit, or its metaphorical
representative, gold, will make black white, foul
fair, wrong right, base noble, old young and coward
valiant. A truth that, in my view, equally applies
to the official tale of the fall of the Berlin wall.
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