*Search
*Finds any story linked on Margot B World News
|
|
|
|
-
| |
-
Dollar - Devaluation...
Or Doomed?
By
Douglas Herman
6-21-5
-
-
-
"The
U.S. economy
is a confidence
trick based
on everybody
else's perception
that the
United States
is centrally
important
for the
world's
security
and that
its economy
is centrally
important
for the
world economy.
--Gwynne
Dyer
-
-
-
Anybody
besides
me watch,
"Oil Storm"
a couple
weeks ago?
A fictional-futuristic
documentary,
the program's
noble purpose
may have
frightened
more than
a few motorists
in America,
comfortably
ensconced
in their
gas-guzzling
SUV's. Especially
after seeing
the price
of gasoline
rise suddenly,
during the
program,
due to various,
semi-believable
scenarios
and unpredictable
factors.
Gas rose
to an eye-popping
$8.29 a
gallon ($8.39
for premium).
Never mentioned,
however,
were the
huge, trade
imbalances
or monthly
deficits
we currently
absorb for
the sake
of imported
oil. Or
the huge
costs we
pay to "safeguard"
that continuous
supply.
-
-
Still,
I gave the
program
an A+ for
effort,
although
I channel
surfed away
from time
to time
due to my
AADD.
-
-
The
producers
tried to
show the
human side
to any disruption
in the supply
of foreign
oil, people
dying or
going bankrupt
or losing
their homes
and jobs.
"Oil Storm"
dared to
show what
I call the
Day
After Tomorrow
syndrome:
where bad
things happen
to shortsighted
people.
For example,
that China,
flush with
Yankee dollars,
would--predictably--outbid
us (with
out own
money) one
day for
imported
oil.
-
-
I
would have
preferred
the program
use other
examples
of powerful,
film imagry.
For example,
show
an endless
line of
shiny SUVs,
with absurdly
low prices
painted
on their
windshields,
parked at
a used car
lot. After
the first
OPEC oil
embargo,
I recall,
gas guzzling
muscle cars
went cheaply
while high
mileage
cars were
much in
demand.
Although
prices for
some of
these collectable,
muscle cars
has rebounded
into the
ridiculous
realm, that
probably
won't happen
with the
current
crop of
land yachts.
-
-
Likewise,
in the program,
Bush named
some guy
named Roden
as his Energy
Czar. Roden
looked just
like Wolfowitz
and the
sternest
measure
Roden could
devise was
a return
to the 50
MPH speed
limit! As
if most
Americans,
the brightest
and most
ingenious
inventors
who have
ever walked
the planet,
wouldn't
have devised
a whole
fleet of
alternate
energy vehicles
after gasoline
approached
five, six
or seven
dollars
a gallon.
Indeed,
that guy
who created
his own
cryogenic
car,
getting
120 MPG,
would not
only have
been swamped
with orders
but hired
by General
Motors as
CEO.
-
-
But
the idea
that America
could buy
or bribe
or legislate
her way
out of trouble
with the
rest of
the world,
troubled
me. The
US dollar
just ain't
that strong.
The program
rated a
D in Econ
for that
rosy scenario.
-
-
Unless
you're older
than seventy,
most Americans
don't know
that after
England
"won" the
war with
Nazi Germany
in 1945,
the English
pound was
devalued
from the
equivalent
of $4.00
in worth
comparable
to the US
dollar (prewar)
to less
than 3/4
that previous
value just
a few years
later. Then
again in
1967, the
pound dropped
from $2.80
to $2.40.
And during
the 'Eighties,
the English
pound dropped
again,
to about
half that
value. Thus
the English
empire had
spent itself
out, just
as we appear
to be spending
ourselves
out.
-
-
Is
the devaluation
of the US
dollar very
far away--the
first of
many devaluations?
In a Wall
Street Journal
column entitled,
"Another
Bubble Set
To Blow
Up?"
investment
guru, Paul
Farrell,
wrote: "Lately
I'm seeing
telltale
signs everywhere
that despite
all the
bullish
talk, a
bubble's
about to
burst. Something
will pull
the trigger---real
estate,
hedge funds,
deficits,
something."
Perhaps
Farrell
recently
read Mike
Ruppert's
Book: Crossing
the Rubicon.
The underlying
premise
of that
book being
Peak Oil
created
a need for
a false
flag terrorist
event to
promote
whole-hearted
military
incursions
into the
Persian
Gulf.
-
-
A
South Florida
reader of
the WSJ,
a fellow
named Bruce
Carey, queried
columnist
David Wessel:
"Concerning
the national
debt: to
which countries
do we owe
money and
how much?...What
security,
if any,
is given
to each
of the countires.
How much
interest
does the
US government
pay?"
-
-
Wessel
replied
that Japan
held 552
billion
in US government
bonds, China
189 billion,
Taiwan 65
billion,
United Kingdom
45 billion,
South Korea
43 and Germany
42 billion.
"In all,
foreigners
held about
$1.9 trillion
in US government
debt," observed
Wessel.
But he also
noted, "US
businesses,
governments
and banks
had borrowed
a whopping
$8.36 trillion
from foreigners."
Call me
a naive
old hippie,
but that
seems like
a whole
lot of bread.
-
-
Not
mentioned
in "Oil
Storm" posts
were the
deeper,
darker reasons
for America's
involvement
in Iraq
and Afghanistan.
This
was the
war to save
the US dollar,
as Gavin
Putland
phrased
it.
In short,
the US dollar
was doomed
without
a few bold
strokes.
Bush and
his band
of oiligarchs
chose, for
whatever
sinister
reasons--personal
greed, lust
for power,
thinly-disgiused
alliance
with Israel,
or pragmatic,
national
security
interests--to
put aside
any moral
reason and
simply use
military
power to
grab the
oil fields
and thus
ensure the
US dollar
is the currency
of choice,
now and
forever
(or for
as long
as the Neocons
wield power).
-
-
"If
a second
currency
were allowed
into the
oil market,
it would
soon become
a general-purpose
trading
and reserve
currency,
especially
if it were
legal tender
in an economy
comparable
in size
to the USA,"
wrote Putland.
"The Euro
Zone already
has a bigger
share of
world trade
than the
USA...If
the euro
becomes
a global
currency
to rival
the dollar,
central
banks and
other traders
will sell
down their
dollar reserves,
causing
the value
of the dollar
to plummet."
-
-
Free
markets--as
we are always
told in
school--are
one indicator
of a true
democracy.
One would
then expect
American
bankers
and business
leaders,
who essentially
wield all
the power
in the USA
and have
for two
centuries,
to embrace
the competition.
Curiously,
the most
outspoken
critic of
the monopolistic
system of
US
petro dollars,
was Saddam
Hussein.
-
-
"In
October
2000, Iraq
persuaded
the United
Nations
to allow
Iraqi oil
to be sold
for euros
instead
of dollars,
with effect
from November
6," wrote
Putland.
With this
impudent
act, Hussein
ensured
his hasty
removal.
"Iraq then
converted
its entire
$10 billion
"oil for
food" reserve
fund from
dollars
to euros.
These events
went unreported
in the US
media."
-
-
Imagine
if Hussein
had succeeded--and
convinced
other troublesome
OPEC nations
to adopt
the euro
conversion
plan? If
that had
happened,
the US dollar
would have
crashed
years ago,
predictably
plunged
in value,
probably
in the months
just before
September
11, 2001.
-
-
For
now, the
US dollar
is propped
up by massive
amounts
of borrowing--and
by costly
military
actions
against
any rogue
nation foolish
enough to
decry the
dollar.
Like, formerly
sovereign
nation,
Iraq. But
for those
who profess
a belief
in family
values--ironically
many Bush
supporters--the
massive
amount of
debt accrued
will remain
for their
kids to
pay.
-
-
-
Douglas
Herman writes
regularly
for Rense
and is the
author of
the recent
novel, Guns
of Dallas,
available
online or
autographed
copies may
be purchased
directly
from the
author at
douglasherman7@yahoo.com
-
|
-
|
|
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
GO BACK HOME
|
|
|