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SEQUENCE:18787975
CREATED:20111116T005200Z
DESCRIPTION:In the fifth year of the global financial crisis, the average person is 
 still looking for a job or worried about losing one, and fears for what 
 little savings he or she might have. The big investors flee into real 
 assets, gold or Swiss francs, and increasingly shun government bonds – 
 only a few years ago the safe harbor in the financial crisis, now rated as 
 increasingly risky and falling in value. Entire states in Europe are 
 bankrupt or almost so. And for one reason: finance capital is less and less 
 willing to lend money to the states because it finds their already 
 accumulated debts too high in relation to their economic growth to make 
 further extensions of credit worth it, and above all, they aren't rated 
 safe enough. This is not decided by these countries having unexpected new 
 budget deficits, but only the weekly or even daily revised evaluations of 
 risk by financial investors. That's why countries like Italy, whose debt 
 ratio has not changed at all, have suddenly come to the attention of the 
 financial markets because of a new risk assessment. And when a state budget 
 nears credit unworthiness, it loses its ability to pay.\n\nThis reveals a 
 lot about the capitalist economy and its political managers:\n\n- All the 
 lives and jobs that the state organizes on its competitive teritory with 
 the help of credit for business growth must meet the profit calculation of 
 financially powerful credit lenders or else they are useless. A whole 
 society is subordinated to the calculations of the financial sector because 
 the government wants it this way. It is not only the political rule that 
 thrives on the credit power of finance capital, it is the main driving 
 force that finances all business growth.\n\n- With bailouts and trillions 
 in national debts, the states prevented the ultimate bankruptcy because of 
 an overaccumulation caused by the finance industry itself. Now the general 
 financial crisis has become a national debt crisis about which speculators 
 have become sceptical. The current mistrust that the financial industry 
 shows in its own state rescuers is not considered by anyone as tacky 
 ingratitude. “The states have lived beyond their means!” is the 
 political self-criticism which agrees in every point with the guilty 
 verdict of the financial markets. Anything that does not meet the 
 requirements of credit-granting investors is amiss and must be 
 corrected.\n\n- The states do not challenge the financial industry, but 
 clean up their own budgets. They economize harshly, primarily on the 
 citizens, their pensions and wages. This drastic impoverishment program 
 should do nothing less than win back the confidence of finance capital, 
 which consists of a remunerative use of its loaned money.\n\n- At the same 
 time, new credit packages for the rescue of credit-unworthy state budgets 
 in Europe are issued to save the euro. In doing so, the politicians want 
 the financial institutions to get “on board” with a debt write off by 
 all means, but by all means voluntarily. Their respect matters, for it is 
 their confidence that is fought for. Force, which would be completely out 
 of place against the banks, is therefore urgently needed against the 
 demonstrations and strikes by which the people oppose their 
 impoverishment.\n\nInstead of making accusations of policy inaction or 
 incompetent crisis management, or hoping for its success, one should for 
 once properly distinguish between friend and enemy. This talk and 
 discussion will provide further clarifications.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/11/15/18699608.php
SUMMARY:The imperialist nations fight for their credit and the impoverishment of their peoples
LOCATION:Location: Niebyl-Proctor Library, 6501 Telegraph Ave, Oakland, CA 
 94609-1113 Ph: (510) 595-7417
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/11/15/18699608.php
DTSTART:20111119T030000Z
DTEND:20111119T043000Z
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