USA 2021: Capitalism for the Powerless, Crony-Socialism for the Powerful
June 18, 2021
The only dynamic that's even faintly "capitalist" about America's Crony-Socialism is the
price of political corruption is still a "market."
The supposed "choice" between "capitalism" and "socialism" is a useful fabrication masking the
worst of all possible worlds we inhabit: Capitalism for the powerless and Crony-Socialism
for the powerful. Capitalism's primary dynamics are reserved solely for the powerless:
market price of money, capital's exploitive potential, free-for-all competition and
creative destruction.
The powerful, on the other hand, bask in the warm glow of socialism: The Federal Reserve
protects them from the market cost of money--financiers and the super-wealthy get their
money for virtually nothing from the Fed, in virtually unlimited quantities--and the Treasury,
Congress and the Executive branch protect them from any losses: their gains are private, but
their losses are transferred to the public. The Supreme Court ensures the super-rich maintain
this cozy crony-socialism by ensuring they can buy political power via lobbying and
campaign contributions--under the laughable excuse of free speech.
Cronies get the best political system money can buy and you--well, you get to carry a sign
on the street corner, just before you're hauled off to jail for disturbing the peace
(and you're banned by social media/search Big Tech, i.e. privatized totalitarianism,
for good measure).
The Federal Reserve is America's financial Politburo: cronies get a free pass, the
powerless get nothing. While the three billionaires who own more wealth than the bottom
165 million Americans can borrow unlimited sums for next to nothing thanks to the Fed
(i.e. Crony-Socialist Politburo), the 165 million Americans pay exorbitant interest on payday
loans, used car loans, student loans, credit cards and so on.
Capitalism (market sets price of money) for the powerless, Crony-Socialism (nearly free money)
for the powerful--thanks to America's Crony-Socialist Politburo, the Fed. Consider the
"free market" plight of America's working poor: earning low wages that are rapidly losing their
purchasing power makes them a credit risk, i.e. prone to defaulting, so lenders
(i.e. capital's exploitive potential) charge high interest rates on loans to the working poor.
Since they pay such high rates of interest and earn so little, they default on their debt at
higher rates--just what the lenders expected, and what the lenders created by charging
sky-high rates of interest: gee, you're having trouble paying 24% interest? Too bad you're poor.
You see the point: low wages, poverty and exorbitant rates of interest are mutually reinforcing:
a primary driver of defaults and poverty is paying sky-high rates of interest and all the
late fees, bounced check fees, etc. that go with 24% interest rates.
The Crony-Socialists have a much different deal with the Fed and its crony-bankers:
the super-wealthy arrange for the corporations they own shares in to borrow billions of dollars
to fund stock buybacks (which in a less exploitive era were illegal market manipulation).
The super-wealthy Crony-Socialist's personal wealth rises by $100 million thanks to the stock
buybacks, and then the super-wealthy Crony-Socialist borrows $10 million for next to nothing
against this newly conjured "wealth" (thanks, Fed!) to fund living large.
Crony-Socialist corporations pay no income tax thanks to loopholes and the Crony-Socialists
who own the shares report $1 in salary and zero income because they borrowed their living
expenses against their Fed-conjured wealth. Do you discern the difference between
capitalism for the powerless and crony-socialism for the super-wealthy?
If you can't yet discern the difference, then ask yourself: can you borrow $1 billion from
the Fed's cronies to buy back shares of your own company, and then borrow $10 million for
near-zero rates of interest against the newly conjured "wealth"? You can't? Well, why not?
If you answer "I don't have enough collateral," you missed the key point here:
thanks to America's Crony-Socialist Politburo (the Fed), the super-wealthy have no exposure to
the market price of money. The Fed manipulates the cost of money to near-zero, and then
funnels unlimited sums of this nearly-free money to corporations, financiers and the super-wealthy.
Collateral is unnecessary in Crony-Socialism; that's just a excuse given to the powerless.
Crony-Socialists borrow $1 billion for next to nothing, buy Treasuries with the free money,
put the Treasuries up as collateral (but wait, didn't they borrow the money? Never mind, it
doesn't matter), originate some financial instruments (CDOs, etc.), post those as collateral,
and then leverage up another bet on that fictitious collateral.
If the bets all go bad, the Crony-Socialist claims the whole fraud is now a systemic risk
and so the losses are transferred to the public / taxpayers to "save the financial system from
collapse." Isn't Crony-Socialism fantastic?
Just as the rich kid caught with smack gets a suspended sentence and probation while the
powerless kid gets a tenner in the War on Drugs Gulag, the super-wealthy Crony-Socialists
avoid all the consequences of their gambles and frauds. America's Crony-Socialist Politburo
(the Fed) takes care of its cronies and the powerless bear the brunt of predatory exploitation
that's passed off as "capitalism."
The only dynamic that's even faintly "capitalist" about America's Crony-Socialism is the
price of political corruption is still a "market": what's the current price of protecting
your monopoly or cartel from competition? It's moving up fast, so better get those bribes
(oops, I mean campaign contributions for the 2022 election) in now before the price of corrupting
"democracy" goes even higher.
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