Friday, November 14, 2008

نشاطركم العزاء by عبدالرحمن الشهيب

اخوتي الطلبة والطالبات أشاطركم العزاء في بداية العام الدراسي الجديد، عام من أعوام « احفظ وانجح» أعزيكم ونظامنا التعليمي لا يبارح التلقين والتكرار يفهم الشطار! معلومات مكررة ومقررات ثقيلة ومستقبل وظيفي مجهول! أعزيكم في مبانيكم المستأجرة! وهل أصلحت المكيفات المكسرة والصنابير المعطلة وهل لديكم ماء بارد يكفيكم! وأعزيك يا من كان فصلك في المقلط! ربما كنت أوفر حظاً ممن كان فصله في المطبخ.! لن أسألكم ما هي سنة صنع كمبيوتراتكم ولن أسألكم عن مساحة ملاعب مدرستكم لأني أتيت هنا لتقديم مراسم العزاء فقط!مطلوب من وزارة التربية والتعليم أن تستفيد من الطفرة الاقتصادية التي تعيشها المملكة حالياً وتبني كامل مدارسها بمبان نموذجية وأن لا ترتكب غلطة وزارة المعارف في الثمانينات حينما لم تستفد من فوائض الميزانية حينها فانتهت مدارسنا في مبان مستأجرة كحيانة. أعزي أولياء الأمور على أقساط المدارس الأهلية التي تقص الظهر وهي لا تختلف عن المدارس الحكومية إلا في حمامات نظيفة، ومقدرة ولي الأمر على مقابلة مدرس ابنه!
أعزي معلمينا ومعلماتنا السعوديين في المدارس الأهلية وما يعانونه من رواتب زهيدة وأعباء ثقيلة وسوء تعامل، وأعزي معلمة رياض الأطفال السعودية التي ستسلمها مشرفة الروضة (غير السعودية) فصلا من جدران فقط لتقوم بتأثيثه بميزانية باهظة من جيبها وهي بعد لم تستلم راتبها الزهيد والروضة استلمت 18 ألف ريال رسوما سنوية عن الطفل الواحد وقبول مع حب الخشوم! ووزارة العمل تكاد تطبق مقولة « لو أن خادمةً عثرت في العراق!» ووزارة التربية والتعليم وعدت في وقت سابق بأنها ستلحق بكل مدرسة ابتدائية للبنات روضة أطفال لأهمية هذه المرحلة ولكنها وعود طارت مع وعود أخرى، والسعوديون عموماً لا يأبهون لمرحلة الروضة مع أنها هي المرحلة التي تتشكل فيها أذهان أطفالهم. أعزي اخواننا واخواتنا الطلبة والطالبات الذين لم تقبلهم الجامعات السعودية وأقول لمديري الجامعات في المملكة لكم في مصر الشقيقة عبرة، مصر ذات السبعين مليون مواطن والستة ملايين عاطل، مازالت تقبل كل الطلاب المصريين حتى أصحاب معدلات 59% و60%..... هذه المعدلات التي أحس أن ثانوياتنا لم يعد يتخرج منها أحد بهذه النسب. لم يتحججوا في مصر الشقيقة بأن المقاعد شحيحة! ولم يتحججوا بأن خريجي الكليات النظرية هم سبب البطالة! هل كانت خريجة الـ 99% بحاجة إلى فزعة جريدة (اليوم) لكي تقبلها كلية الطب في جامعة الملك فيصل؟لي أصدقاء عملوا في إدارة جامعات محلية يقولون ان جامعاتنا تستوعب أعداد طلبة أكبر ولكن تعنت مسئولي الجامعات السعودية يحول دون قبول أعداد أكبر.
وجود أبنائنا في الجامعات في هذه السن الحرجة من 18إلى 22 سنة ضروري جداً ويحميهم من مغبات الانحراف في الإدمان أو الإرهاب، القهر والظلم الناتج من التبطح في القهاوي والملاحق قد يؤدي إلى مزالق كثيرة. أن يستطيع الشاب أن يرفع رأسه أمام ملاقيف المجالس ويجاوبهم حينما يسألونه أين يدرس فيخبرهم باسم جامعته بكل اعتزاز فهذا يحمي شبابنا وبلادنا من المهالك. أقول لمديري الجامعات في المملكة اقبلوا الطلبة والطالبات بأي معدلات لأن مقابل حيطان المنزل عاقبته وخيمة ولا تصدقوا أن خريجي الكليات النظرية هم سبب البطالة فالبطالة طالت خريجي جامعة الملك فهد للبترول والمعادن، سبب البطالة في المملكة هي عدم تطبيق سياسات الحد الأدنى للأجور المعمول بها في أوروبا وأمريكا وبدونها لن يكون هناك قضاء على البطالة في المملكة، وأبناؤنا لن يعملوا سفرجية شاءت وزارة العمل أم أبت.
الجامعة للتعلم وليست للوظيفة فقط والأرزاق بيد الله، دعوا أبناءنا وبناتنا يدرسون علم نفس فعلى الأقل يعالجون المرضى النفسيين الذين يملأون المجالس والمقاهي ودعوهم يدرسون الأدب فما قيمة أمة بلا أدب ودعوهم يدرسون التاريخ فالتاريخ وحده هو الذي يخبرنا كيف تنهار الأمم، المهم لا تجعلوا أبناءنا وبناتنا ينهارون وحدهم بين الحيطان ينهشهم الفراغ والقهر والموت، ثم لا نستطيع أن نقدم لهم سوى العزاء!

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

What Went Wrong ?

Finally there is a 100% consensus between economists, experts, journalists, and government officials that restoring interbank lending will restore the stability of the financial system and will reignite economic growth. Too bad, the consensus has gotten again all wrong. This is a pure myth and nothing can be further from the truth.
The grim reality is very different and already forgotten. The reality is that most markets for the majority of financial instruments have collapsed completely and reviving interbank lending will not resurrect any of those markets. In other words, resolving the problem of interbank lending will not help the economy in any way. It is like an air balloon that has deflated and we desperately need to reflate it again with helium, but we are told that even ordinary cold air will lift it off the ground; since the balloon is stubbornly stuck on the ground, we are told we simply need more air!
I offer little new here, but a precious history of how the tentacles of the Credit Crisis are reaching more and more segments of the financial markets. No amount of interbank lending will recover meaningfully most segments from the firm grip of those tentacles.


The Causes of the Financial Crisis
I do not attempt to explain the fundamental causes of the current Credit Crisis. No doubt that in coming decades tomes will be written on the subject. Nevertheless, the basics are simple – America borrowed and spent for decades driving its savings rate to nil, while printing trillions of dollars in attempt to sustain the (unsustainable) global imbalances caused by its own profligacy and saddling the rest of the world with trillions of bad debt.

The Trigger of the Financial Crisis
The trigger of the crisis can be attributed to the decreased confidence in the markets for mortgage-backed securities following the August 2007 collapse of two Bear Stearns' hedge funds that were heavily exposed to subprime mortgages. Resetting of teaser rates and adjustable-rate mortgages triggered an avalanche of defaults. Once default rates started rising, many institutional investors, both U.S. and global, began to realize that the MBS's and CDO's in their portfolios might not be worth what they initially thought. Investment banks, insurance companies, mutual funds, and hedge funds alike began recognizing losses related to their holdings of mortgage-backed securities. Confidence was shaken. Margin calls forced further liquidations of those mortgage-backed securities, but as few were standing ready to buy, prices dropped even further, invoking even more margin calls. It was a death-spiral. The resulting losses just went snowballing. As a result, the markets for those structured financial products froze up and liquidity suddenly dried up. The Credit Crisis reared its ugly head.

1. Subprime Mortgages
The first indicator signaling the Subprime Meltdown surfaced in February 2007 “when scores of mortgage originators went bust amid rising defaults and tightening lending standards” . In mid-June, a second significant sign of financial collapse became evident as two CDO-focused Bear Stearns hedge funds blew up. Those hedge funds were too big and distracted investors' attention from another smaller in proportions, but still significant bankruptcy - California based brokerage firm Brookstreet Securities. This was the early beginning of the crisis.
In the second week of July 2007, Moody's and Standard & Poor's announced downgrades on billions of bonds backed by subprime mortgages. Though the downgrades did not reveal the unsoundness of the bonds, it signaled the demise of the Ponzi mortgage investment market backed by inflated real estate.
In early August the looming Credit Crunch could already be felt. Several of Wall Street's biggest foreign customers announced enormous losses on their holdings of mortgage backed securities. Once the “teaser rates” began to reset, mortgage defaults spiked. Foreign investors realized that the bond collateral fell short of the bond principal, in banker-speak, the LTV exceeded 100%. Home equity vanished and mortgage payments shot up. Dwindling foreign lending was a sure sign of the impending crisis.
At the end of August many financial institutions began to sense the looming disaster. Calls for various government bailout schemes for homeowners were only meant to bail the lenders out. Amidst the unraveling of the subprime crisis, the Fed responded by aggressively cutting interest rates. However, tightening lending standards, widening credit spreads, and rising down payments exacerbated default rates and mounted further losses for the Leveraged Speculator Community, aka, hedge funds. A common sense of mistrust gripped the markets. Confidence evaporated, and so did liquidity. The subprime market was terminally ill – no amount of Fed cutting and liquidity injections could ever possibly revive it again! This market has been dead for more than year.
2. Jumbo Mortgages
With the meltdown of subprime mortgages, the tentacles of the Credit Crunch began to take firm hold of other sectors of the financial system. The next victim was the market for jumbo mortgages – mortgages of high denominations, technically above $417,000 at the time. Further tightening of lending standards and more realistic perceptions of the underlying risk of those mortgages basically froze the market for Jumbo MBS. The major force behind the inflating California and Florida real estate bubbles was inanimate. Now these markets were set for a spectacular bust; the government's attempt to resurrect the Jumbo market (by raising the limit to $730,000) miserably failed. This market has been comatose for well over a year and jumbo rates remain stubbornly high. No amount of liquidity or interbank lending will revive the Jumbo market any time soon!
3. Home Equity loans
With dying subprime and jumbo markets and tightening mortgage credit, something that for decades was believed impossible, suddenly became inevitable -- real estate prices began to fall. As a result, the tentacles of the credit crisis snatched another victim -- Home Equity Loans and Home Equity Lines of Credit (HELOCs). These loans, commonly referred to as “second mortgages”, allow homeowners to borrow against the value of their home equity to finance a range of expenditures, such as medical bills, home improvements, college tuitions, and well-deserved vacations. The market quickly degenerated with rapidly deteriorating LTV ratios and skyrocketing number of “underwater” mortgages. Consumers fell behind on those loans at the highest level in 15 years. No more refis for consumers who already extracted the last drop of equity. With real estate prices falling, there was equity no more, With equity gone, so were the home equity loans. We can safely say that home equity loans are now a thing of the past and no amount of government stimulus and interbank lending will revive this market for many years!
4. SIVs and Conduits
Structured investment vehicles (SIVs) played a crucial role in the historic expansion of credit. A brainchild of ingenious financial engineers, large investment banks created and sponsored these entities. They invested largely in ABSs and MBSs that were manufactured primarily by the same large investment banks. To finance these investments, they issued investment-grade commercial paper and structured notes to investors around the world. This scheme allowed large financial institutions to remove a major portion of their risk exposure off their balance sheets, while at the same time “consolidating” any profits that resulted from the SIV operations. To put it in simple terms, they kept the profits on the balance sheet, but kept the risk off the balance sheet. This was the ultimate game in finance – return without risk, converting junk into AAA, turning led into gold – this was the Magic of Wall Street, the Alchemy of Finance.
However, with SIVs and Conduits loaded up with subprime, it was only a matter of time before this alchemic dream would turn into an ugly nightmare. Rising defaults and falling real estate prices shook investors' confidence. A series of downgrades inflicted grave damages. Some very risk-averse investors reaped distressing losses. Many risk-averse pension funds and university endowments relied on the AAA ratings and treated the securities as higher-yielding alternatives to safe money-market instruments. Repricing of ABS and MBS resulted in major writedowns for those SIVs and magnified the losses of their leveraged investors. Yet another victim fell into the tentacles of the Credit Crisis. As Doug Noland has pointed out so well, “the collapse of structured investment vehicles has proven to be the ultimate failure of Wall Street Finance in its attempt on risk intermediation between highly risky mortgage-backed securities and perceived safe and liquid money market instruments”. Today, it is accepted that Alchemy doesn't work, and that SIVs were hoped to do just that -- convert led into gold. The reality is that no amount of interbank lending and liquidity injections will do that.
5. CDOs
Some of the most pervasive exposures of leveraged financial institutions have been related to CDOs backed by subprime debt. This was another creature of mad financial engineers that was destined to fall in the tentacles of the Credit Crisis. It was meant to pool dodgy debt that with proper slicing and dicing would magically turn into a AAA-asset; it turned led into gold.
The bulk of the colossal losses of large investment banks, brokerage firms, hedge funds, and other financial institutions have been related to write-downs of CDOs. Their demand stalled as some top-rated classes of mortgage-linked CDOs lost their entire value amid surging foreclosures. Series of CDO downgrades by credit rating agencies led to enormous losses for investors around the world. Top-rated CDO tranches were devalued in late October 2007 due to expectations of excessive future losses from jumbo mortgages, Alt-As and option ARMs. Following the collapse of the two Bear Stearns hedge funds that were heavily invested in subprime CDOs, the CDO market has suffered severe illiquidity and lack of confidence. In late January Merrill Lynch CEO John Thain asserted that “[The company is] not going to be in the CDO and structured-credit types of businesses”. Since then the market has been for all practical purposes dead. It is dead because the underlying assets (jumbo, Alt-A, option ARMs) were never creditworthy in first place. No amount of liquidity injections and interbank lending will make the underlying instruments more creditworthy than before, and therefore cannot resurrect this financial instrument.
6. Commercial Paper
The familiar notion of borrowing short and lending long has come into question since the Credit Crisis began. Thousands of financial institutions have previously met their demise as a result of a maturity gap. Most of the companies engaged in this business were issuing commercial paper backed by MBSs or CDOs. With the unfolding of the crisis, questions about the value of the underlying collateral became ever more pervasive and eroded confidence. As a result, the market for commercial paper (CP) has fallen into the tentacles of the Credit Crisis. The first to experience the difficulties were the investment banks, then the commercial banks, and later other financial institutions. The difficulties spread even to the best investment-grade industrial corporations. As of April 11, 2008 total outstanding commercial paper has contracted by 11.4%. This market is not dead, but on life support, as the Fed has directly intervened to monetize commercial paper. Indeed, this market desperately needs the life support by the Fed in order to stay alive. By monetizing CP, the Fed has become the Lender of Last Resort for major corporations.
7. Private-Label MBS
The market for private-label MBS, which has been central to the creation of easily-available cheap credit, has suffered from a severe liquidity seizure, falling into the tentacles of the Financial Crisis. By securitizing mortgage loans, Wall Street was able to provide endless amounts of credit to homebuyers and homeowners, which led to the inflation of a real estate bubble of extreme proportions. Escalating home prices, in turn, made it possible for mortgage lenders to extend even more credit to borrowers with questionable credit history, without having to worry about being repaid, On the way up, it was a well-oiled Ponzi scheme; on the way down – an unmitigated disaster. The scheme depended crucially on rising real estate prices; once the prices stagnated or began to fall, no amount of liquidity injections or interbank lending could potentially revive this market.
8. Leveraged Loans
The loan market for Private Equity and Leveraged Buyouts (LBOs) is not functioning. Those loans that finance Private Equity deals or LBOs are known as “leveraged loans”. The tentacle of the credit crisis has gripped this market too. As the real economy has suffered a serious slowdown and plunges into a recession, the rate of corporate bankruptcies has been soaring. As a result, in October 2007 some of the major banks, such as Bank of America, Citigroup and JP Morgan, had to write down $2.5 Billion in loans for LBOs. These losses prompted most of the big players to slash their LBO loans. Some estimates indicate that only the very best deal can possibly get any financing; the volume has fallen almost 10 times. With an economy in recession, no amount of liquidity injections and interbank lending can revive this market.
9. Alt-A Mortgages
The Alt-A mortgage sector has not escaped the tentacles of the credit crisis. In a manner quite similar to Subprime and Jumbo mortgages, this market has slowed to a trickle. However, with the nationalization of the GSEs, the government is attempting to revive this market by forcing the GSEs to purchase more of these mortgages. As the GSEs themselves are now “owned” and guaranteed by the Treasury, this is tantamount to the Treasury buying up Alt-A mortgages. Given that the Treasury itself is financed mostly through monetization of the Fed, the ultimate effect is that this market is supported, just like the commercial paper market, with the printing press. The economic interpretation is that of a classic government subsidy financed by an inflation tax – redistributive, inefficient, and replete with moral hazards that sets up the system for a spectacular blowup down the road.
10. Prime Mortgages
The next victim in the tentacles of the Credit Crisis became the prime mortgages. Already in deep trouble, the financial system damaged even its healthiest credit market instrument. Reacting to the defaults in subprime and Alt-A mortgages, investors were compelled to manage risk more carefully. Practically, all sorts of loans became inaccessible for any borrower. This dried the liquidity, further causing huge bankruptcies of the borrowers who cannot refinance their loans. The prime residential mortgage market has been revived with the spectacular “bankruptcy” and subsequent nationalization of the GSEs, backed directly by the Treasury and indirectly by the Fed.
11. Commercial Mortgages
The commercial mortgage market has been practically frozen for many months. As the debacle in subprime, jumbo, Alt-A, and prime mortgages has unfolded, investors turned their attention to commercial mortgages. Over time, it became clear that investing in commercial mortgages is fraught with risk. The first obvious risk was overvaluation. The second obvious risk was a decelerating economy. The evolution of the Credit Crisis introduced a well-forgotten type of risk – liquidity risk. Investors saddled with heavy losses from other mortgage instruments decided to withdraw and stay on the sidelines. This, coupled with shaken confidence was enough to choke this market. Risk premiums have skyrocketed as the perceived risks of commercial mortgages have realigned with reality. Recession has exposed the fundamental weaknesses of many projects. The private sector wants none of this market. The Credit Crisis has extended its tentacles to commercial mortgages. No amount of liquidity injections and interbank lending can revive this market; only a direct intervention by the Treasury can do the trick.
12. Auction-Rate Securities
An auction-rate security is technically a debt instrument, typically a municipal bond, with a long nominal maturity, for which the interest rate is regularly reset through an auction, usually on a weekly basis. One economic interpretation of this concept is that of a fund borrowing with low short-term interest rates and lending to long-term municipal bonds, passing on the low interest rate to the municipal borrower. The other economic interpretation is that illiquid municipal bonds are securitized and transformed into liquid securities that are regularly traded at auctions. As deleveraging tightened its vice grip on the credit market in February 2008, liquidity evaporated from the credit system and the auction-rate securities suddenly crashed out of the blue. It was another nail in the coffin of Wall Street Structured Finance and another victim in the tentacles of the Credit Crisis. This market has been dead for half a year and nothing short of extraordinary amount of liquidity coupled with government guarantees has the potential of reviving it.
13. Corporate Debt
The Credit Crisis has extended its tentacles to the corporate bond market. Credit spreads of investment-grade corporate bonds have been steadily rising and are much higher than even two months ago. Credit spreads for junk bonds have surged from 650 basis points at the end of September 2008 to 950 basis points at the beginning of November. Yes, credit is available to corporations, but the cost is becoming prohibitive. The tentacles have reached the corporate market and are beginning to strangulate it. Just like the market for auction-rate securities, this market desperately needs a torrent of liquidity to overcome the strangling tentacles. A Bloomberg story from October 31 tells the sorry tale of this market: “Corporate debt markets in the U.S. and Europe endured their worst month as the credit crisis spread beyond financial firms to industrial companies amid the prospect of a global recession. Corporate industrial bonds in October are set to post their steepest monthly loss on record, while the gaps between yields on those bonds and government debt soar by the most ever.”
14. Credit Default Swaps
The US monolines are on the verge of bankruptcy as more and more of the credit that they insure defaults. They initially encountered difficulties in the beginning of January 2008. Indices of corporate credit risk widened, showing that the tentacles of Credit Crisis have reached the corporate bond market. The price of credit protection soared.
The monolines staggered because some major insurers were downgraded as investors questioned their ability to perform. Investors' minds were suddenly preoccupied with another well-forgotten risk – counterparty risk. A vicious spiral gripped the monolines -- CDSs lost their attractiveness, resulting in less cash inflows for monolines, which in turn decreased their ability to provide adequate credit risk insurance, lowering in turn their ability to sell CDSs… And another victim fell prey into the tentacles of the Credit Crisis.
The CDS market has not collapsed completely. However, its imminent collapse will indirectly affect international finance. Inability to hedge with CDS will eventually destabilize the US financial system. Many corporate borrowers will be unable to borrow, which in turn will result in higher corporate defaults, and another vicious cycles will inevitably take hold of the financial system.
15. Letters of Credit
The tentacles of the Credit Crisis have recently taken another victim: Letters of Credit. A Bloomberg story from October 29 explains this ugly turn for the worse: the Credit Crisis spreads beyond the financial sector and into the real economy. Do you remember the good old days when Bernanke and Paulson assured us that the Credit Crisis is contained? Here is the Bloomberg story:
“Richard Burnett's lumber company had started loading wood onto ships heading for China. More was en route to the docks. It was all part of an order that would fill 100 40-foot cargo containers. Then Burnett got a call from his buyer at Shanghai VIVA Wood Products Co. The deal was dead. He told Burnett… he couldn't get a letter of credit to guarantee payment for at least six months. ‘It was like a spigot got cut off,' Burnett said… The inability of buyers in China and Vietnam to get letters of credit has cost his company as much as $4 million this year, a third of projected revenue, forcing him to lay off 15 of 35 employees, he said. Suppliers of oil, coal, grains and consumer products from Chicago to Mumbai are losing sales as the credit crisis spreads beyond financial institutions, and banks refuse financing or increase the fees for buyers.”
16. Credit Card Loans
In October 2008 another market has fallen into the tentacles of the Credit Crisis: the market for credit card loans. Credit card companies usually do not retain most of their credit card debt on their balance sheet; instead, they securitize it and sell it. The latest data from Dealogic indicates that the consumer-based securitization market has shrunk in October to $500 million from $50 billion previously. This means that the ability to securitize and sell consumer-based loans has fallen almost 100 times in one year. The implication is clear – credit card companies will be forced to cut consumers from credit card debt. This will bring the American consumer to his knees and means the end of the Consumer Economy. No wonder that in the last three months the media frequency of the word “Depression” has increased hundred-fold.

Going Forward
No amount of interbank lending and liquidity injections will revive most of the markets for various financial instruments. No amount of monetary and fiscal policy can resurrect genuine productive lending in the economy. The tentacles of the Credit Crisis have spread to every sector of the financial markets. The “Real Estate Economy” is dead; the “Financial Economy” is dead; the “Consumer Economy” is dying; and the “Service Economy” is dying. Enter the Depression Economy! Or shall I say, “Enter the Zimbabwe Economy”!?

Major Achievements Of The American Empire

The failure of Bear Stearns
The failure of Lehman Brothers
The disguised failures of the Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley by converting to bank holding companies
Largest bank failures in US history (Washington Mutual, IndyMac)
Other banks merging and/or failing
The failure of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae and their subsequent nationalization
The failure of AIG (yes, it is a failure otherwise the Government would not have had to step in and become essentially an 80% owner of the company)
Record foreclosures on residential properties
Record losses among many US companies
Rapidly rising personal bankruptcy filings
US Government bail out funding of $700 Billion
Federal Reserve’s creation of numerous “lending facilities”
Record depletion of reserves among the US banks
Direct tax payer funds being injected into the banks balance sheets
$150 Billion Stimulus bill and more to come
Rapidly increasing layoffs
Rising number of retail stores filing chapter 11 and others going out of business
Numerous mortgage companies closed up operations
Collapse of the credit system
Drastic declines in US home prices
The collapse of the economic systems of Iceland
The increasingly likelihood of entire nations becoming insolvent (Hungary, Argentina, Ukraine, etc)
Numerous Federal Reserve emergency rate cuts. And now an effective funds rate of near zero
The near bankruptcy of the major auto manufacturers (General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler)

Sunday, November 9, 2008

The Bankers Behind The Economic Collapse

Most Serious Economic Crisis in Modern History
The October 2008 financial meltdown is not the result of a cyclical economic phenomenon. It is the deliberate result of US government policy instrumented through the Treasury and the US Federal Reserve Board.
This is the most serious economic crisis in World history.
The "bailout" proposed by the US Treasury does not constitute a "solution" to the crisis. In fact quite the opposite: it is the cause of further collapse. It triggers an unprecedented concentration of wealth, which in turn contributes to widening economic and social inequalities both within and between nations.
The levels of indebtedness have skyrocketed. Industrial corporations are driven into bankruptcy, taken over by the global financial institutions. Credit, namely the supply of loanable funds, which constitutes the lifeline of production and investment, is controlled by a handful of financial conglomerates.
With the "bailout", the public debt has spiraled. America is the most indebted country on earth. Prior to the "bailout", the US public debt was of the order of 10 trillion dollars. This US dollar denominated debt is composed of outstanding treasury bills and government bonds held by individuals, foreign governments, corporations and financial institutions.
"The Bailout": The US Administration is Financing its Own IndebtednessIronically, the Wall Street banks --which are the recipients of the bailout money-- are also the brokers and underwriters of the US public debt. Although the banks hold only a portion of the public debt, they transact and trade in US dollar denominated public debt instruments Worldwide.
In a bitter twist, the banks are the recipients of a 700+ billion dollar handout and at the same time they act as creditors of the US government. We are dealing with an absurd circular relationship: To finance the bailout, Washington must borrow from the banks, which are the recipients of the bailout.
The US administration is financing its own indebtedness. Federal, State and municipal governments are increasingly in a straightjacket, under the tight control of the global financial conglomerates. Increasingly, the creditors call the shots on government reform.
The bailout is conducive to the consolidation and a centralization of banking power, which in turn backlashes on real economic activity, leading to a string of bankruptcies and mass unemployment.
Will an Obama Administration Reverse the Tide?
The financial crisis is the outcome of a deregulated financial architecture.
Obama has stated unequivocally his resolve to address the policy failures of the Bush administration and "democratize" the US financial system. President-Elect Barack Obama says that he is committed to reversing the tide:
"Let us remember that if this financial crisis taught us anything, it’s that we cannot have a thriving Wall Street while Main Street suffers. In this country, we rise or fall as one nation, as one people." (President-elect Barack Obama, November 4, 2008, emphasis added)
The Democrats casually blame the Bush administration for the October financial meltdown.
Obama says that he will be introducing an entirely different policy agenda which responds to the interests of Main Street:
"Tomorrow, you can turn the page on policies that put the greed and irresponsibility of Wall Street before the hard work and sacrifice of men and women all across Main Street. Tomorrow you can choose policies that invest in our middle class and create new jobs and grow this economy so that everybody has a chance to succeed, from the CEO to the secretary and the janitor, from the factory owner to the men and women who work on the factory floor.( Barack Obama, election campaign, November 3, 2008, emphasis added)
Is Obama committed to "taming Wall Street" and "disarming financial markets"?
Ironically, it was under the Clinton administration that these policies of "greed and irresponsibility" were adopted.
The 1999 Financial Services Modernization Act (FSMA) was conducive to the the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933. A pillar of President Roosevelt’s "New Deal", the Glass-Steagall Act was put in place in response to the climate of corruption, financial manipulation and "insider trading" which resulted in more than 5,000 bank failures in the years following the 1929 Wall Street crash.
Under the 1999 Financial Services Modernization Act, effective control over the entire US financial services industry (including insurance companies, pension funds, securities companies, etc.) had been transferred to a handful of financial conglomerates and their associated hedge funds.
The Engineers of Financial Disaster
Who are the architects of this debacle?
In a bitter irony, the engineers of financial disaster are now being considered by President-Elect Barack Obama's Transition Team for the position Treasury Secretary:
Lawrence Summers played a key role in lobbying Congress for the repeal of the Glass Steagall Act. His timely appointment by President Clinton in 1999 as Treasury Secretary spearheaded the adoption of the Financial Services Modernization Act in November 1999. Upon completing his mandate at the helm of the US Treasury, he became president of Harvard University (2001- 2006).
Paul Volker was chairman of the Federal Reserve Board in the l980s during the Reagan era. He played a central role in implementing the first stage of financial deregulation, which was conducive to mass bankruptcies, mergers and acquisitions, leading up to the 1987 financial crisis.
Timothy Geithner is CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which is the most powerful private financial institution in America. He was also a former Clinton administration Treasury official. He has worked for Kissinger Associates and has also held a senior position at the IMF. The FRBNY plays a behind the scenes role in shaping financial policy. Geithner acts on behalf of powerful financiers, who are behind the FRBNY. He is also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)
Jon Corzine is currently governor of New Jersey, former CEO of Goldman Sachs.
At the time of writing, Obama's favorite is Larry Summers, front-runner for the position of Treasury Secretary.
Harvard University Economics Professor Lawrence Summers served as Chief Economist for the World Bank (1991–1993). He contributed to shaping the macro-economic reforms imposed on numerous indebted developing countries. The social and economic impact of these reforms under the IMF-World Bank sponsored structural adjustment program (SAP) were devastating, resulting in mass poverty.
Larry Summer's stint at the World Bank coincided with the collapse of the Soviet Union and the imposition of the IMF-World Bank's deadly " economic medicine" on Eastern Europe, the former Soviet republics and the Balkans.
In 1993, Summers moved to the US Treasury. He initially held the position of Undersecretary of the Treasury for international affairs and later Deputy Secretary. In liaison with his former colleagues at the IMF and the World Bank, he played a key role in crafting the economic "shock treatment" reform packages imposed at the height of the 1997 Asian crisis on South Korea, Thailand and Indonesia.
The bailout agreements negotiated with these three countries were coordinated through Summers office at the Treasury in liaison with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and the Washington based Bretton Woods institutions. Summers worked closely with IMF Deputy Managing Director Stanley Fischer, who was later appointed Governor of the Central Bank of Israel.
Larry Summers became Treasury Secretary in July 1999. He is a protégé of David Rockefeller. He was among the main architects of the infamous Financial Services Modernization Act, which provided legitimacy to inside trading and outright financial manipulation.
Summers is currently a Consultant to Goldman Sachs and managing director of a Hedge fund, the D.E. Shaw Group, As former Treasury Secretary and his contacts on Wall Street, Summers had valuable inside information on the movement of financial markets. Under the helm of Larry Summers and as a direct result of the financial meltdown, the D. E. Shaw Group made record profits. At the end of October 2008, at the height of the financial meltdown, the Shaw Group announced $7 billion in revenue, a 22 percent increase over the previous year, "with nearly three times more cash on hand than a year ago" .
Putting a Hedge Fund manager (with links to the Wall Street financial establishment) in charge of the Treasury is tantamount to putting the fox in charge of the chicken coop.
The Washington Consensus
Summers, Geithner, Corzine, Volker, Fischer, Phil Gramm, Bernanke, Hank Paulson, Rubin, not to mention Alan Greenspan, al al. are buddies, they play golf together; they have links to the Council on Foreign Relations and the Bilderberg; they act concurrently in accordance with the interests of Wall Street; they meet behind closed doors; they are on the same wave length; they are Democrats and Republicans.
While they may disagree on some issues, they are firmly committed to the Washington-Wall Street Consensus. They are utterly ruthless in their management of economic and financial processes. Their actions are profit driven. Outside of their narrow interest in the "efficiency" of "markets", they have little concern for "living human beings". How are people's lives affected by the deadly gamut of macro-economic and financial reforms, which is spearheading entire sectors of economic activity into bankruptcy.
The economic reasoning underlying neoliberal economic discourse is often cynical and contemptuous. In this regard, Lawrence Summers' economic discourse stands out. He is known among environmentalists for having proposed the dumping of toxic waste in Third World countries, because people in poor countries have shorter lives and the costs of labor are abysmally low, which essentially means that the market value of people in the Third World is much lower. According to summers, this makes it far more "cost effective" to export toxic materials to impoverished countries. A controversial 1991 World Bank memo signed by of Chief Economist Larry Summers reads as follows (excerpts, emphasis added):
DATE: December 12, 1991 TO: Distribution FR: Lawrence H. Summers Subject: GEP
"'Dirty' Industries: Just between you and me, shouldn't the World Bank be encouraging MORE migration of the dirty industries to the Less Developed Countries? I can think of three reasons:
1) The measurements of the costs of health impairing pollution depends on the foregone earnings from increased morbidity and mortality.... From this point of view a given amount of health impairing pollution should be done in the country with the lowest cost, which will be the country with the lowest wages. I think the economic logic behind dumping a load of toxic waste in the lowest wage country is impeccable and we should face up to that.
2) The costs of pollution are likely to be non-linear as the initial increments of pollution probably have very low cost. I've always though that under-populated countries in Africa are vastly UNDER-polluted, their air quality is probably vastly inefficiently low compared to Los Angeles or Mexico City. Only the lamentable facts that so much pollution is generated by non-tradable industries (transport, electrical generation) and that the unit transport costs of solid waste are so high prevent world welfare enhancing trade in air pollution and waste.
3) The demand for a clean environment for aesthetic and health reasons is likely to have very high income elasticity. [the demand increases when income levels increase]. The concern over an agent that causes a one in a million change in the odds of prostrate cancer is obviously going to be much higher in a country where people survive to get prostrate cancer than in a country where under 5 mortality is is 200 per thousand.... "
Summers stance on the export of pollution to developing countries had a marked impact on US environmental policy:
In 1994, "virtually every country in the world broke with Mr. Summers' Harvard-trained "economic logic" ruminations about dumping rich countries' poisons on their poorer neighbors, and agreed to ban the export of hazardous wastes from OECD to non-OECD [developing] countries under the Basel Convention. Five years later, the United States is one of the few countries that has yet to ratify the Basel Convention or the Basel Convention's Ban Amendment on the export of hazardous wastes from OECD to non-OECD countries. (Jim Valette, Larry Summers' War Against the Earth,Counterpunch, undated)
The 1997 Asian Crisis: Dress Rehearsal for Things to Come
In the course of 1997, currency speculation instrumented by major financial institutions directed against Thailand, Indonesia and South Korea was conducive to the collapse of national currencies and the transfer of billions of dollars of central bank reserves into private financial hands. Several observers pointed to the deliberate manipulation of equity and currency markets by investment banks and brokerage firms.
While the Asian bailout agreements were formally negotiated with the IMF, the major Wall Street commercial banks (including Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup and J. P. Morgan) as well as the "big five" merchant banks (Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers, Morgan Stanley and Salomon Smith Barney) were "consulted" on the clauses to be included in the Asian bail-out agreements.
The US Treasury in liaison with Wall Street and the Bretton Woods institutions played a central role in negotiating the bailout agreements. Both Larry Summers and Timothy Geithner, were actively involved on behalf of the US Treasury in the 1997 bailout of South Korea:
[In 1997] "Messrs. Summers and Geithner worked to persuade Mr. Rubin to support financial aid to South Korea. Mr. Rubin was wary of such a move, worrying that providing money to a country in dire straits might be a losing proposition..." (WSJ, November 8, 2008)
What happened in Korea under advice from Deputy Treasury Secretary Summers et al, had nothing to do with "financial aid".
The country was literally ransacked. Undersecretary of the Treasury David Lipton was sent to Seoul in early December 1997. Secret negotiations were initiated. Washington had demanded the firing of the Korean Finance Minister and the unconditional acceptance of the IMF "bailout".
A new finance minister, who happened to be former IMF and World Bank official, was appointed and immediately rushed off to Washington for "consultations" with his former IMF colleague Deputy Managing Director Stanley Fischer.
"The Korean Legislature had met in emergency sessions on December 23. The final decision concerning the 57 billion dollar deal took place the following day, on Christmas Eve December 24th, after office hours in New York. Wall Street’s top financiers, from Chase Manhattan, Bank America, Citicorp and J. P. Morgan had been called in for a meeting at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Also at the Christmas Eve venue, were representatives of the big five New York merchant banks including Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers, Morgan Stanley and Salomon Smith Barney. And at midnight on Christmas Eve, upon receiving the green light from the banks, the IMF was allowed to rush 10 billion dollars to Seoul to meet the avalanche of maturing short-term debts.
The coffers of Korea’s central Bank had been ransacked. Creditors and speculators were anxiously awaiting to collect the loot. The same institutions which had earlier speculated against the Korean won were cashing in on the IMF bailout money. It was a scam. (See Michel Chossudovsky, The Recolonization of Korea, subsequently published as a chapter in The Globalization of Poverty and the New World Order, Global Research, Montreal, 2003.)
"Strong economic medicine" is the prescription of the Washington Consensus. "Short term pain for long term gain" was the motto at the World Bank during Lawrence Summers term of as World Bank Chief Economist.
What we dealing with is an entire " old boys network" of officials and advisers at the Treasury, the Federal Reserve, the IMF, World Bank, the Washington Think Tanks, who are in permanent liaison with leading financiers on Wall Street.
Whoever is chosen by Obama's Transition team will belong to the Washington Consensus.
The 1999 Financial Services Modernization Act
What happened in October 1999 is crucial.
In the wake of lengthy negotiations behind closed doors, in the Wall Street boardrooms, in which Larry Summers played a central role, the regulatory restraints on Wall Street’s powerful banking conglomerates were revoked "with a stroke of the pen".
Larry Summers worked closely with Senator Phil Gramm (1985-2002),chairman of the Senate Banking committee, who was the legislative architect of the the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Financial Services Modernization Act, signed into law on November 12, 1999 . As Texas Senator, Phil Gramm was closely associated with Enron.
In December 2000 at the very end of the Clinton mandate, Gramm introduced a second piece of legislation, the so-called Gramm-Lugar Commodity Futures Modernization Act, which paved the way for the speculative onslaught in primary commodities including oil and food staples.
"The act, he declared, would ensure that neither the sec nor the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (cftc) got into the business of regulating newfangled financial products called swaps—and would thus "protect financial institutions from overregulation" and "position our financial services industries to be world leaders into the new century." (See David Corn, Foreclosure Phil, Mother Jones, July August 2008)
Phil Gramm was McCain's first choice for Secretary of the Treasury.
Under the FSMA new rules – ratified by the US Senate in October 1999 and approved by President Clinton – commercial banks, brokerage firms, hedge funds, institutional investors, pension funds and insurance companies could freely invest in each others businesses as well as fully integrate their financial operations.
A "global financial supermarket" had been created, setting the stage for a massive concentration of financial power. One of the key figures behind this project was Secretary of the Treasury Larry Summers, in liaison with David Rockefeller. Summers described the FSMA as "the legislative foundation of the financial system of the 21th century". That legislative foundation is among the main causes of the 2008 financial meltdown.
Financial Disarmament
There can be no meaningful solution to the crisis, unless there is a major reform in the financial architecture, implying inter alia the freezing of speculative trade and the "disarming of financial markets". The project of disarming financial markets was first proposed by John Maynard Keynes in the 1940s as a means to the establishment of a multipolar international monetary system. (See J.M. Keynes, Activities 1940-1944, Shaping the Post-War World: The Clearing Union, The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes, Royal Economic Society, Macmillan and Cambridge University Press, Vol. XXV, London 1980, p. 57).
Main Street versus Wall Street
Where are Obama's "Main Street appointees"? Namely individuals who respond to the interest of people across America. There are no labor or community leaders on Obama's list for key positions.
The President-elect is appointing the architects of financial deregulation.
Meaningful financial reform cannot be adopted by officials appointed by Wall Street and who act on behalf of Wall Street.
Those who set the financial system ablaze in 1999, have been called back to turn out the fire.
The proposed "solution" to the crisis under the "bailout" is the cause of further economic collapse.
There are no policy solutions on the horizon.
The banking conglomerates call the shots. They decide on the composition of the Obama Cabinet. They also decide on the agenda of the Washington Financial Summit (November 15, 2008) which is slated to lay the groundwork for the establishment of a new "global financial architecture".
The Wall Street blueprint has already been discussed behind closed doors: the hidden agenda is to establish a unipolar international monetary system, dominated by US financial power, which in turn would be protected and secured by US military superiority.
Neoliberal with a "Human Face"
There is no indication that Obama will break his ties to his Wall Street sponsors, who largely funded his election campaign.
Goldman Sachs, J. P. Morgan Chase, Citigroup, Bill Gates' Microsoft are among his main campaign contributors.
Warren Buffett, among the the world's richest individuals, not only supported Barak Obama's election campaign, he is a member of his transition team, which plays a key role deciding the composition of Obama's cabinet.
Unless there is a major upheaval in the system of political appointments to key positions, an alternative Obama economic agenda geared towards poverty alleviation and employment creation is highly unlikely.
What we are witnessing is continuity.
Obama provides a " human face" to the status quo. This human face serves to mislead Americans on the nature of the economic and political process.
The neoliberal economic reforms remain intact.
The substance of these reforms including the "bailout" of America's largest financial institutions ultimately destroys the real economy, while spearheading entire areas of manufacturing and the services economy into bankruptcy.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Slaves

يا شعبي حبيبي يا روحي يا بيبي يا حاطك في جيبي يا ابن الحلال يا شعبي يا شاطر يا جابر خواطر يا ساكن مقابر وصابر وعال يا واكل سمومك يا بايع هدومك يا حامل همومك وشايل جبال يا شعبي اللي نايم وسارح وهايم وفي الفقر عايم وحاله ده حال أحبك محشش مفرفش مطنش ودايخ مدروخ وآخر انسطال أحبك مكبر دماغك مخدر ممشي أمورك كده باتّكال وأحب اللي ينصب وأحب اللي يكدب وأحب اللي ينهب ويسرق تلال وأحب اللي شايف وعارف وخايف وبالع لسانه وكاتم ما قال وأحب اللي قافل عيونه المغفل وأحب البهايم وأحب البغال وأحب اللي راضي وأحب اللي فاضي وأحب اللي عايز يربي العيال وأحب اللي يائس وأحب اللي بائس وأحب اللي محبط وشايف محال وأحبك تسافر وتبعد تهاجر وتبعت فلوسك دولار أو ريال وأحبك تطبل تهلل تهبل عشان مطش كورة وفيلم ومقال وأحبك تأيد تعضض تمجد توافق تنافق وتلحس نعال تحضر نشادر تجمع كوادر تلمع تقمع تظبط مجال لكن لو تفكر تخطط تقرر تشغلي مخك وتفتح جدال وتبدأ تشاكل وتعمل مشاكل وتنكش مسائل وتسأل سؤال وعايز تنور وعايز تطور وتعمللي روحك مفرد رجال ساعتها حجيبك لا يمكن أسيبك وراح تبقى عبرة وتصبح مثال حبهدل جنابك وأذل اللي جابك وحيكون عذابك ده فوق الاحتمال وأمرمط سعادتك وأهزأ سيادتك وأخلي كرامتك في حالة هزال وتلبس قضية وتصبح رزية وباقي حياتك تعيش في انعزال حتقبل حَحبك، حترفض حَلِبّك، حتطلع حتنزل حجيبلك جمااااال

Sunday, November 2, 2008

A Must Read

أيا أيها الحر على من تعيبا............................وحالنا اليوم يلزمه الطبيبا لقد زاد الهوان عن الحدود..........................وأصبح الشرف وحيدا غريبا وأضحى البشر في ضياع.........................جياعا ينادون مكارم من يجيبا والملايين بين مشرد وتائه................................بحلم العودة بعيدا قريبا والجلاد على الأعناق قائم أبدا...................مقيما مستحلا للبلاد ومستطيبا فوالله سابقنا الأمم تهاويا..........................فسادا واستبدادا وتملقا عجيبا ووالله مارأت الأنام يوما.....................الضحية تنصب الجلاد الها وحبيبا فهنيئا لنا هكذا عار.......................................وطوبى لنا بهكذا مصيبة نحن أبناء شآم صرنا.................................مطية الكلام غائبا ومستغيبا وأضحى النفاق دما يسري.......................في العروق والأنفاس مستطيبا ماذا سنقول لتلك الهياكل...................من الجوعى واليتامى ظلما وتعذيبا أن انتظروا اليوم وغدا...............................وبعد غد زمنا طويلا رحيبا والحال هو الحال أيها الرجال......................فلاعتب على الظالم ولارقيبا وبينما نتأرجح شجبا واستنكارا.................يترنح الضعيف عويلا ونحيبا كفانا تملقا لجوقة اللئام ..................................وكفا البلاد سلبا ونهيبا وكفى الجيش الأبي مهازلا.....................ضعفا وخوفا شحاحيطا وقباقيبا وكفى الأعناق ضربا بالصرامي...............وكفى الأجساد السوط والقضيبا وكفا البلاد سلبا ونهبا..........................وتكبيبل أحرارها أغلالا وكلاليبا وكفا اليتامى طول انتظار...........................وكفى الحقائق تقلبا وتقليبا وكفانا وجوما بتعاقب الأيام...........................وكفاك وطني شاحبا كئيبا وكفانا الله شر اللئام ..........................وشر كل منافق مأجورا مستجيبا وكفانا وعودا بنصر قريب..................فلن تجدي الغربان صدحا عندليبا النصربزنود ومضرجات أياد...................واسترجاع الحق شامخا مهيبا فلن تجدي المستبد أبدا........................الا القوة اصلاحا وحزما وتأديبا كما لن ينفع مع الذئاب............................نفاق الثعالب تشذيبا وتهذيبا ولن يجدي الجوقة تمرغا..............بأحضان موسكو وواشنطن وتل أبيبا السن بالسن والبادئ أظلم .........................فكفانا كلاما ظلما وترغيبا لأن للبلاد أحرارا كبارا..........................لايأبهون تابعا ولاعبدا ربيبا أهل حكمة لايرهبون الفتن...................ولا حكم الطوائف مذهبا وتذهيبا شآم بلاد الكل لامكان فيها....................لمن يمعن بالعباد تفريقا وتغييبا فهبوا ياحماة الديار لمجدكم.........................وأرجعوا وطنا غاليا سليبا فلن ينفع مع الظالم أبدا.........................الحوار والدوار تزلفا وترغيبا لأن للثعالب فنونا ومخالبا........................تنهك الضعاف مكرا وألاعيبا ولن يزيد الصبر البلاد.....................الا الهوان مستشريا هدما وتخريبا فأبشروا أهل الشآم بحرية...................حمراء مدادها اخاء شبابا وشيبا لأن للبلاد رب يحميها................................مغيثا للضعيف قويا مجيبا آن أوان الحرية ياشآم...........................وآن أوان العدل حقا وتصويبا ولن ينفع المترنح السقوط ................ولن تنفع المواجع الأنين والتأليبا انما هي تذكرة عل وعسى...........................لكل ذي نخوة حكيما لبيبا فلاتمعنوا في الوطن نسيانا......................وفي الأمجاد شطبا وتشطيبا كفانا دسا للأعناق بالرمال....................وكفانا اختباءا خندقا وسراديبا وكفانا وقوفا على الأطلال...................ورسائل الشوق تباكيا ومكاتيبا يامن تركتم البلاد شبابا........................وعانقتم المنفى هرما ومشيبا أما آن رجوعكم أيها الرجال............لتعانقوا الشيبان والغلمان والشبيبا وتمسحوا غبار السنين والضياع.................وتعيدوا الذئاب الى الزريبة بلادنا وان جارت علينا عزيزة................فهل ينفع المحب المتيم تحبيبا وسترجع البسمة للشفاه يوما.....................بدموع نصر تغمر الأهاديبا وستعلو الأهازيج والزغاريد....................فرحا بعودة الحق خيرا وطيبا

ولكن السعودي لا بواكي له

بكى العالم ارتفاع أسعار البترول فبكينا معه وقدمنا نفطنا قربانا على مذبح المسئولية الدولية. وأتت الأزمة المالية فافتخرنا بحزمنا وحنكتنا فأبناء الوطن لا منازل لهم فتباع ولا قروض يخشى من عدم سدادها فقد حُجرت رواتبهم وارتُهنت عليها بعد أن فنت في سوق القمار السعودية. وبكت أمريكا شعبها وبنوكها فأبكت العالم معها فقدموا أموالهم وإعلامهم قربانا لإنقاذ بنوك أمريكا ومدخرات أبنائها، ولكن السعودي لا بواكي له.
بلادنا ديار الإسلام، ومعقل لا إله إلا الله فصدق بلا منازع قول الشاعر قــم للوطـــنْ.. وانثــر دماك لـه ثمـن *** واخلع فديتـــك كل أســـباب الوهــــنفــإذا قُتلــتَ فلســت أنــــــت بميــــت *** فانعـم بعيــش لا يبيــد مــع الــزمـــن
أوطن بلا موطن؟ وطني وطن يتبارى شيوخه وشبابه في تقديم نفوسهم رخيصة دون ذرة تراب من أرضه وهم لا يملكون شبرا منه. وطني قد أرهقت أبناءه ديون تلاشت في مقامرات الأسهم 'النقية'. وطني قد قُدم فيه الأجنبي بغير حق لتحقيق غايات ذاتية لقوم لم يحملوا ولن يحملوا قط إلا هم أنفسهم وهم تحقيق أهدافهم الوضيعة. وطني قد وُظف أبناءه بأجور تُعد جريمة استعباد عند الغرب الرأسمالي! فمن يبكي أبناء وطني؟ بكت أمريكا أبنائها الذين فقدوا منازلهم وأبكت العالم أجمعه معها حرصا على أن لا يفقد أبنائها مدخراتهم أوأعمالهم، ولكن السعودي لا بواكي له. وقفت أمريكا حازمة لم تلن ولم تتهاون أمام أطروحات استعباد أبنائها بأجور زهيدة كالتي نفرضها نحن لأبنائنا والتي عند التأمل لوجدنا أن العبد الرقيق في السابق كان أفضل حالا من حيث توفير إطعامه وإسكانه وعلاجه، فهل الآلفان والثلاثة من الريالات قادرة على الإطعام والإسكان و العلاج. في وطني نحن طرفان في الرأسمالية والاشتراكية نأخذ الأسوأ منهما، فاقتبسنا من دول الشيوعية التكتيم والتشكيك وانعدام الثقة وإعطاء المسئول مرتبة الربوبية فلا يُسأل عما يفعل وهم يسألون. واقتبسنا من فكر الرأسمالية الطبقية البغيضة وسحق الطبقة الوسطى. تشدق المتشدقون واشغلوا أبناء وطني في تنظير هذه الأزمة المالية العالمية بالأساطير والتدليس والتلبيس فأين هم عن إقطاعي الأراضي كيف ملكوها وبكم باعوها ولم لا تُأخذ زكاتها وقد أُخذت الزكاة من غُنيمات عجوز بدوية. أين نحن من الرأسمالية؟ نحن لنا فيها الصدر دون العالمين أو القبر. يا من أدعى الإحسان فأقرض الناس فوق جهدهم وطاقتهم بابتداع حيلة ظنا منه أنه يحتال بها على الله هلا ابتدعت حيلة وبحثت عن قول من هنا أو هناك فأرجعت للناس أموالهم التي أحرقتها سوق القمار بمباركة أهل الحيل الذين كان أكبر همهم أن يؤخذ تصديقهم لتنقية الأسهم وتصفيتها لتكون أسهم قمار خالصة لا شائبة فيها. بعد أن عمل على جلب الآلف المليارات لوطنه وبعد أن أسكن الفقير والضعيف، بكى قرينسبان أبناء وطنه يوم الجمعة الماضي وتحمل جزءا من المسئولية عن الأزمة الحالية وأما أبناء وطني فلا بواكي لهم. أين من غذى سوق القمار السعودية وناصر وروج لها ووعد وأخلف من المسئولين والإعلاميين على حد سواء؟ ألا يتقدم أحدهم منهم فيبكينا كما بكى قرينسبان أبناء وطنه ويعترف بشيء من المسئولية فيقترح خطة إنقاذ لنا قد تأخرت طويلا. هناك في معقل الرأسمالية لا توجد حواجز النفاق والتملق التي أعمت أبصار مسئولينا وأصمت أسماعهم فأحست الدولة بآلام أبنائها وسمعت أنينهم فبكت وأبكت العالم معها فتحملت كثير من ديون بنوكها وديون أبنائها على حد سواء فهل بُكي السعودي فتتحمل الدولة ولو إعادة التمويل لديونهم التي تحملوها بفوائد مركبة عالية (يعتبرها الغرب الرأسمالي جريمة ويعاقب عليها كجريمة الربا) فضلا على أنه يسعى في تخليص أبناءنا منها فتدخل لإعادة تمويلها بأسعار فوائد مخفضة! ولكن السعودي لا بواكي له. من أبنائنا من يهدم الوطن بتقريب الأجنبي وإبعاد الوطني. التاكسي رزق شريف لمن لا رزق له وملجأ للعاطل والمطرود من عمله إلى حين. باعد الله الجشع والطمع، في وطني تُطبق الرأسمالية في أقصى صورها فتحتكر قلة قليلة هذه الصناعة فتستولي على رزق الآلف من بُسطائنا ومساكيننا. في وطني مسئولون قد برعوا في التملق البغيض والنفاق الرخيص قد بعثهم الله بعد سبات طويل لعقود من الزمن في دهاليز كهوف النسيان فآثروا حثالة زرق العيون شقر الشعور على ابن الوطن خيانة للأمانة ولأبناء الوطن وجهلا منهم وحسدا. في روسيا ودول الاتحاد السوفيتي سابقا وأوربا الشرقية لا يستطيع القضاء إجبار المالك على الخروج من منزله ولا يسجنه إذا عجز عن سداد الدين ولا يُمكن البنك من الاستيلاء على المنزل المرهون! ويعيب الغرب الرأسمالي ضعف قوانين الرهن عند هذه الدول الاشتراكية (سابقا) وينصحهم بالحزم في تحصيل الديون ببيع البيوت. أين الغرب عن المتشدقين منا من الذين فاضت حكمتهم، فنادوا بالاعتبار من الأزمة المالية العالمية فاقترحوا زيادة الضمانات والتشديد على أبناء وطني في نظام الرهون! فماذا بعد الاستيلاء على راتب الأب وراتب الأم وعلى المنزل والأرض ثم السجن بعد ذلك؟ أساطين الرأسمالية تقف حيارى لا تحسن نطقا ولا تعبيرا. تذكرني هذه الأزمة بقصة تروى عن قوم غزو جيرانهم وعاد فريق منهم إلى ديارهم وتلقاهم البسطاء والعجائز والقُصر من قومهم يسألونهم الخبر حدثوهم بأساطير البطولات والملاحم. فسألتهم عجوز منهم كم قتلت منهم فأجابوها خمسة بتعظيم الصوت وتضخيمه فسألتهم العجوز مرة أخرى وكم قتلوا منكم فأجابوها خميسمية فقط بتصغير الرقم وتخفيض الصوت، فكبر القوم وهللوا واحتفلوا بالنصر المؤزر. خليلي ألا تبكياني ألتمس خليلا إذا أنزفت دمعا بكى ليا