We Are All Greeks Now
By Chris Hedges
July 14, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"Truthdig"
- The poor and the working class in the United States know what it
is to be Greek. They know underemployment and unemployment. They
know life without a pension. They know existence on a few dollars a
day. They know gas and electricity being turned off because of
unpaid bills. They know the crippling weight of debt. They know
being sick and unable to afford medical care. They know the state
seizing their meager assets, a process known in the United States as
“civil asset forfeiture,” which has permitted American police
agencies to confiscate more than $3 billion in cash and property.
They know the profound despair and abandonment that come when
schools, libraries, neighborhood health clinics, day care services,
roads, bridges, public buildings and assistance programs are
neglected or closed. They know the financial elites’ hijacking of
democratic institutions to impose widespread misery in the name of
austerity. They, like the Greeks, know what it is to be abandoned.
The Greeks and the U.S. working poor endure the
same deprivations because they are being assaulted by the same
system—corporate capitalism. There are no internal constraints on
corporate capitalism. And the few external constraints that existed
have been removed. Corporate capitalism, manipulating the world’s
most powerful financial institutions, including the
Eurogroup, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and
the Federal Reserve, does what it is designed to do: It turns
everything, including human beings and the natural world, into
commodities to be exploited until exhaustion or collapse. In the
extraction process, labor unions are broken, regulatory agencies are
gutted, laws are written by corporate lobbyists to legalize fraud
and empower global monopolies, and public utilities are privatized.
Secret trade agreements—which even elected officials who view the
documents are
not allowed to speak about—empower corporate oligarchs to amass
even greater power and accrue even greater profits at the expense of
workers. To swell its profits, corporate capitalism plunders,
represses and drives into bankruptcy individuals, cities, states and
governments. It ultimately demolishes the structures and markets
that make capitalism possible. But this is of little consolation for
those who endure its evil. By the time it slays itself it will have
left untold human misery in its wake.
The Greek government kneels before the bankers of
Europe begging for mercy because it knows that if it leaves the
eurozone, the international banking system will do to Greece
what it did to the socialist government of Salvador Allende in 1973
in Chile; it will, as Richard Nixon promised to do in Chile,
“make the economy scream.” The bankers will destroy Greece. If
this means the Greeks can no longer get medicine—Greece owes
European drug makers 1 billion euros—so be it. If this means food
shortages—Greece imports thousands of tons of food from Europe a
year—so be it. If this means oil and gas shortages—Greece imports 99
percent of its oil and gas—so be it. The bankers will carry out
economic warfare until the current Greek government is ousted and
corporate political puppets are back in control.
Human life is of no concern to corporate
capitalists. The suffering of the Greeks, like the suffering of
ordinary Americans, is very good for the profit margins of financial
institutions such as Goldman Sachs. It was, after all, Goldman
Sachs—which shoved subprime mortgages down the throats of families
it knew could never pay the loans back, sold the subprime mortgages
as investments to pension funds and then bet against them—that
orchestrated complex financial agreements with Greece, many of them
secret. These agreements doubled the debt Greece owes under
derivative deals and allowed the old Greek government to mask its
real debt to keep borrowing. And when Greece imploded, Goldman Sachs
headed out the door with suitcases full of cash.
The system of unfettered capitalism is designed to
callously extract money from the most vulnerable and funnel it
upward to the elites. This is seen in the mounting fines and fees
used to cover shortfalls in city and state budgets. Corporate
capitalism seeks to privatize all aspects of government service,
from education to intelligence gathering. The
U.S. Postal Service appears to be next. Parents already must pay
hundreds of dollars for their public-school children to take school
buses, go to music or art classes and participate in sports or other
activities. Fire departments, ambulance services, the national parks
system are all slated to become fodder for corporate profit. It is
the death of the civil society.
Criminal justice is primarily about revenue
streams for city and state governments in the United States rather
than about justice or rehabilitation.
The poor are arrested and fined for minor infractions in
Ferguson, Mo., and elsewhere; for not mowing their lawns; for
putting their feet on seats of New York City subway cars. If they
cannot pay the fines, as many cannot, they go to jail. In jail they
are often charged room and board. And if they can’t pay this new
bill they go to jail again. It is a game of circular and
never-ending extortion of the poor. Fines that are unpaid accrue
interest and generate warrants for arrest. Poor people often end up
owing thousands of dollars for parking or traffic violations.
Fascist and communist firing squads sometimes
charged the victim’s family for the bullets used in the execution.
In corporate capitalism, too, the abusers extract payment; often the
money goes to private corporations that carry out probation services
or prison and jail administration. The cost of being shot with a
stun gun ($26) or of probation services ($35 to $100 a month) or of
an electronic ankle bracelet ($11 a month) is vacuumed out of the
pockets of the poor. And all this is happening in what will one day
be seen as the good times. Wait until the financial house of cards
collapses again—what is happening in China is not a good sign—and
Wall Street runs for cover. Then America will become Greece on
steroids.
“We are a nation that has turned its welfare
system into a criminal system,” write Karen Dolan and Jodi L. Carr
in an Institute for Policy Studies report titled
“The Poor Get Prison.” “We criminalize life-sustaining
activities of people too poor to afford shelter. We incarcerate more
people than any other nation in the world. And we institute policies
that virtually bar them for life from participating in society once
they have done their time. We have allowed the resurgence of
debtors’ prisons. We’ve created a second-tier public education
system for poor children and black and Latino children that
disproportionally criminalizes their behavior and sets them early
onto the path of incarceration and lack of access to assistance and
opportunity.”
The corporate dismantling of civil society is
nearly complete in Greece. It is far advanced in the United States.
We, like the Greeks, are undergoing a political war waged by the
world’s oligarchs. No one elected them. They ignore public opinion.
And, as in Greece, if a government defies the international banking
community it is targeted for execution. The banks do not play by the
rules of democracy.
Our politicians are corporate employees. And if
you get dewy-eyed about the possibility of the U.S. having its first
woman president, remember that it was Hillary Clinton’s husband who
decimated manufacturing jobs with the 1994 North American Free Trade
Agreement and then went on to
destroy welfare with the Personal Responsibility and Work
Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, which halted federal cash
aid programs and imposed time-limited, restrictive state block
grants. Under President Bill Clinton, most welfare recipients—and 70
percent of those recipients were children—were dropped from the
rolls. The prison-industrial complex exploded in size as its private
corporations swallowed up surplus, unemployed labor, making $40,000
or more a year from each person held in a cage. The population of
federal and state prisons combined rose by 673,000 under Clinton.
He, along with Ronald Reagan, set the foundations for the
Greecification of the United States.
The destruction of Greece, like the destruction of
America, by the big banks and financial firms is not, as the bankers
claim, about
austerity or imposing rational expenditures or balanced budgets.
It is not about responsible or good government. It is a vicious form
of class warfare. It is profoundly anti-democratic. It is about
forming nations of impoverished, disempowered serfs and a rapacious
elite of all-powerful corporate oligarchs, backed by the most
sophisticated security and surveillance apparatus in human history
and a militarized police that shoots unarmed citizens with reckless
abandon. The laws and rules it imposes on the poor are, as Barbara
Ehrenreich has written, little more than
“organized sadism.”
Corporate profit is God. It does not matter who
suffers. In Greece 40 percent of children live in poverty, there is
a 25 percent unemployment rate and the unemployment figure for those
between the ages of 15 and 24 is nearly 50 percent. And it will only
get worse.
The economic and political ideology that convinced
us that organized human behavior should be determined by the
dictates of the global marketplace was a con game. We were the
suckers. The promised prosperity from trickle-down economics and the
free market instead concentrated wealth among a few and destroyed
the working and the middle classes along with all vestiges of
democracy. Corrupt governments, ignoring the common good and the
consent of the governed, abetted this pillage. The fossil fuel
industry was licensed to ravage the ecosystem, threatening the
viability of the human species, while being handed lavish government
subsidies. None of this makes sense.
The mandarins that maintain this system cannot
respond rationally in our time of crisis. They are trained only to
make the system of exploitation work. They are blinded by their
insatiable greed and neoliberal ideology, which posits that
controlling inflation, privatizing public assets and removing trade
barriers are the sole economic priorities. They are steering us over
a cliff.
We will not return to a rational economy or
restore democracy until these global speculators are stripped of
power. This will happen only if the streets of major cities in
Europe and the United States are convulsed with mass protests. The
tyranny of these financial elites knows no limits. They will impose
ever greater suffering and repression until we submit or revolt. I
prefer the latter. But we don’t have much time.
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