Michael Hudson’s Major Lecture at the Global University in China on July 11th, 2022 – and posted with Dr Hudson’s permission
Why it lacks resilience, and What will take its place[1]
The greatest challenge facing societies has always been how to conduct trade and credit without letting merchants and creditors make money by exploiting their customers and debtors. All antiquity recognized that the drive to acquire money is addictive and indeed tends to be exploitative and hence socially injurious. The moral values of most societies opposed selfishness, above all in the form of avarice and wealth addiction, which the Greeks called philarguria – love of money, silver-mania. Individuals and families indulging in conspicuous consumption tended to be ostracized, because it was recognized that wealth often was obtained at the expense of others, especially the weak.
The Greek concept of hubris involved egotistic behavior causing injury to others. Avarice and greed were to be punished by the justice goddess Nemesis, who had many Near Eastern antecedents, such as Nanshe of Lagash in Sumer, protecting the weak against the powerful, the debtor against the creditor.
That protection is what rulers were expected to provide in serving the gods. That is why rulers were imbued with enough power to protect the population from being reduced to debt dependency and clientage. Chieftains, kings and temples were in charge of allocating credit and crop-land to enable smallholders to serve in the army and provide corvée labor. Rulers who behaved selfishly were liable to be unseated, or their subjects might run away, or support rebel leaders or foreign attackers promising to cancel debts and redistribute land more equitably.
The most basic function of Near Eastern kingship was to proclaim “economic order,” misharum and andurarum clean slate debt cancellations, echoed in Judaism’s Jubilee Year. There was no “democracy” in the sense of citizens electing their leaders and administrators, but “divine kingship” was obliged to achieve the implicit economic aim of democracy: “protecting the weak from the powerful.”
Royal power was backed by temples and ethical or religious systems. The major religions that emerged in the mid-first millennium BC, those of Buddha, Lao-Tzu and Zoroaster, held that personal drives should be subordinate to the promotion of overall welfare and mutual aid.
What did not seem likely 2500 years ago was that a warlord aristocracy would conquer the Western world. In creating what became the Roman Empire, an oligarchy took control of the land and, in due course, the political system. It abolished royal or civic authority, shifted the fiscal burden onto the lower classes, and ran the population and industry into debt.
This was done on a purely opportunistic basis. There was no attempt to defend this ideologically. There was no hint of an archaic Milton Friedman emerging to popularize a radical new moral order celebrating avarice by claiming that greed is what drives economies forward, not backward, convincing society to leave the distribution of land and money to “the market” controlled by private corporations and money-lenders instead of communalistic regulation by palace rulers and temples – or by extension, today’s socialism. Palaces, temples and civic governments were creditors. They were not forced to borrow to function, and so were not subjected to the policy demands of a private creditor class.
But running the population, industry and even governments into debt to an oligarchic elite is precisely what has occurred in the West, which is now trying to impose the modern variant of this debt-based economic regime – U.S.-centered neoliberal finance capitalism – on the entire world. That is what today’s New Cold War is all about.
By the traditional morality of early societies, the West – starting in classical Greece and Italy around the 8th century BC – was barbarian. The West was indeed on the periphery of the ancient world when Syrian and Phoenician traders brought the idea of interest-bearing debt from the Near East to societies that had no royal tradition of periodic debt cancellations. The absence of a strong palace power and temple administration enabled creditor oligarchies to emerge throughout the Mediterranean world.
Greece ended up being conquered first by oligarchic Sparta, then by Macedonia and finally by Rome. It is the latter’s avaricious pro-creditor legal system that has shaped subsequent Western civilization. Today, a financialized system of oligarchic control whose roots lead back to Rome is being supported and indeed imposed by U.S. New Cold War diplomacy, military force and economic sanctions on countries seeking to resist it.
Classical antiquity’s oligarchic takeover
In order to understand how Western Civilization developed in a way that contained the fatal seeds of its own economic polarization, decline and fall, it is necessary to recognize that when classical Greece and Rome appear in the historical record a Dark Age had disrupted economic life from the Near East to the eastern Mediterranean from 1200 to about 750 BC. Climate change apparently caused severe depopulation, ending Greece’s Linear B palace economies, and life reverted to the local level during this period.
Some families created mafia-like autocracies by monopolizing the land and tying labor to it by various forms of coercive clientage and debt. Above all was the problem of interest-bearing debt that the Near Eastern traders had brought to the Aegean and Mediterranean lands – without the corresponding check of royal debt cancellations.
Out of this situation Greek reformer-“tyrants” arose in the 7th and 6th centuries BC from Sparta to Corinth, Athens and Greek islands. The Cypselid dynasty in Corinth and similar new leaders in other cities are reported to have cancelled the debts that held clients in bondage on the land, redistributed this land to the citizenry, and undertaken public infrastructure spending to build up commerce, opening the way for civic development and the rudiments of democracy. Sparta enacted austere “Lycurgan” reforms against conspicuous consumption and luxury. The poetry of Archilochus on the island of Paros and Solon of Athens denounced the drive for personal wealth as addictive, leading to hubris injuring others – to be punished by the justice goddess Nemesis. The spirit was similar to Babylonian, Judaic and other moral religions.
Rome had a legendary seven kings (753-509 BC), who are said to have attracted immigrants and prevented an oligarchy from exploiting them. But wealthy families overthrew the last king. There was no religious leader to check their power, as the leading aristocratic families controlled the priesthood. There were no leaders who combined domestic economic reform with a religious school, and there was no Western tradition of debt cancellations such as Jesus would advocate in trying to restore the Jubilee Year to Judaic practice. There were many Stoic philosophers, and religious amphictyonic sites such as Delphi and Delos expressed a religion of personal morality to avoid hubris.
Rome’s aristocrats created an anti-democratic constitution and Senate, and laws that made debt bondage – and the consequent loss of land – irreversible. Although the “politically correct” ethic was to avoid engaging in commerce and moneylending, this ethic did not prevent an oligarchy from emerging to take over the land and reduce much of the population to bondage. By the 2nd century BC Rome conquered the entire Mediterranean region and Asia Minor, and the largest corporations were the publican tax collectors, who are reported to have looted Rome’s provinces.
There always have been ways for the wealthy to act sanctimoniously in harmony with altruistic ethics eschewing commercial greed while enriching themselves. Western antiquity’s wealthy were able to come to terms with such ethics by avoiding direct lending and trading themselves, assigning this “dirty work” to their slaves or freemen, and by spending the revenue from such activities on conspicuous philanthropy (which became an expected show in Rome’s election campaigns). And after Christianity became the Roman religion in the 4th century AD, money was able to buy absolution by suitably generous donations to the Church.
Rome’s legacy and the West’s financial imperialism
What distinguishes Western economies from earlier Near Eastern and most Asian societies is the absence of debt relief to restore economy-wide balance. Every Western nation has inherited from Rome the pro-creditor sanctity of debt principles that prioritize the claims of creditors and legitimize the permanent transfer to creditors of the property of defaulting debtors. From ancient Rome to Habsburg Spain, imperial Britain and the United States, Western oligarchies have appropriated the income and land of debtors, while shifting taxes off themselves onto labor and industry. This has caused domestic austerity and led oligarchies to seek prosperity through foreign conquest, to gain from foreigners what is not being produced by domestic economies driven into debt and subject to pro-creditor legal principles transferring land and other property to a rentier class.
Spain in the 16th century looted vast shiploads of silver and gold from the New World, but this wealth flowed through its hands, dissipated on war instead of being invested in domestic industry. Left with a steeply unequal and polarized economy deeply in debt, the Habsburgs lost their former possession, the Dutch Republic, which thrived as the less oligarchic society and one deriving more power as a creditor than as a debtor.
Britain followed a similar rise and fall. World War I left it with heavy arms debts owed to its own former colony, the United States. Imposing anti-labor austerity at home in seeking to pay these debts, Britain’s sterling area subsequently became a satellite of the U.S. dollar under the terms of American Lend-Lease in World War II and the 1946 British Loan. The neoliberal policies of Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair sharply increased the cost of living by privatizing and monopolizing public housing and infrastructure, wiping out Britain’s former industrial competitiveness by raising the cost of living and hence wage levels.
The United States has followed a similar trajectory of imperial overreaching at the cost of its domestic economy. Its overseas military spending from 1950 onwards forced the dollar off gold in 1971. That shift had the unanticipated benefit of ushering in a “dollar standard” that has enabled the U.S. economy and its military diplomacy to get a free ride from the rest of the world, by running up dollar debt to other nation’s central banks without any practical constraint.
The financial colonization of the post-Soviet Union in the 1990s by the “shock therapy” of privatization giveaways, followed by China’s admission to the World Trade Organization in 2001 – with the expectation that China would, like Yeltsin’s Russia, become a U.S. financial colony – led America’s economy to deindustrialize by shifting employment to Asia. Trying to force submission to U.S. control by inaugurating today’s New Cold War has led Russia, China and other countries to break away from the dollarized trade and investment system, leaving the United States and NATO Europe to suffer austerity and deepening wealth inequality as debt ratios are soaring for individuals, corporations and government bodies.
It was only a decade ago that Senator John McCain and President Barack Obama characterized Russia as merely a gas station with atom bombs. That could now just as well be said of the United States, basing its world economic power on control of the West’s oil trade, while its main export surpluses are agricultural crops and arms. The combination of financial debt leveraging and privatization has made America a high-cost economy, losing its former industrial leadership, much like Britain did. The United States is now attempting to live mainly off financial gains (interest, profits on foreign investment and central bank credit creation to inflate capital gains) instead of creating wealth through its own labor and industry. Its Western allies seek to do the same. They euphemize this U.S.-dominated system as “globalization,” but it is simply a financial form of colonialism – backed with the usual military threat of force and covert “regime change” to prevent countries from withdrawing from the system.
This U.S. and NATO-based imperial system seeks to indebt weaker countries and force them to turn control over their policies to the International Monetary Fund and World Bank. Obeying the neoliberal anti-labor “advice” of these institutions leads to a debt crisis that forces the debtor country’s foreign-exchange rate to depreciate. The IMF then “rescues” them from insolvency on the “conditionality” that they sell off the public domain and shift taxes off the wealthy (especially foreign investors) onto labor.
Oligarchy and debt are the defining characteristics of Western economies. America’s foreign military spending and nearly constant wars have left its own Treasury deeply indebted to foreign governments and their central banks. The United States is thus following the same path by which Spain’s imperialism left the Habsburg dynasty in debt to European bankers, and Britain’s participation in two world wars in hope of maintaining its dominant world position left it in debt and ended its former industrial advantage. America’s rising foreign debt has been sustained by its “key currency” privilege of issuing its own dollar-debt under the “dollar standard” without other countries having any reasonable expectation of ever being paid – except in yet more “paper dollars.”
This monetary affluence has enabled Wall Street’s managerial elite to increase America’s rentier overhead by financialization and privatization, increasing the cost of living and doing business, much as occurred in Britain under the neoliberal policies of Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair. Industrial companies have responded by shifting their factories to low-wage economies to maximize profits. But as America deindustrializes with rising import dependency on Asia, U.S. diplomacy is pursuing a New Cold War that is driving the world’s most productive economies to decouple from the U.S. economic orbit.
Rising debt destroys economies when it is not being used to finance new capital investment in means of production. Most Western credit today is created to inflate stock, bond and real estate prices, not to restore industrial ability. As a result of this debt-without-production approach, the U.S. domestic economy has been overwhelmed by debt owed to its own financial oligarchy. Despite America’s economy’s free lunch in the form of the continued run-up of its official debt to foreign central banks – with no visible prospect of either its international or domestic debt being paid – its debt continues to expand and the economy has become even more debt-leveraged. America has polarized with extreme wealth concentrated at the top while most of the economy is driven deeply into debt.
The failure of oligarchic democracies to protect the indebted population at large
What has made the Western economies oligarchic is their failure to protect the citizenry from being driven into dependency on a creditor property-owning class. These economies have retained Rome’s creditor-based laws of debt, most notably the priority of creditor claims over the property of debtors. The creditor One Percent has become a politically powerful oligarchy despite nominal democratic political reforms expanding voting rights. Government regulatory agencies have been captured and taxing power has been made regressive, leaving economic control and planning in the hands of a rentier elite.
Rome never was a democracy. And in any case, Aristotle recognized democracies as evolving more or less naturally into oligarchies – which claim to be democratic for public-relations purposes while pretending that their increasingly top-heavy concentration of wealth is all for the best. Today’s trickle-down rhetoric depicts banks and financial managers as steering savings in the most efficient way to produce prosperity for the entire economy, not just for themselves.
President Biden and his State Department neoliberals accuse China and any other country seeking to maintain its economic independence and self-reliance of being “autocratic.” Their rhetorical sleight of hand juxtaposes democracy to autocracy. What they call “autocracy” is a government strong enough to prevent a Western-oriented financial oligarchy from indebting the population to itself – and then prying away its land and other property into its own hands and those of its American and other foreign backers.
The Orwellian Doublethink of calling oligarchies “democracies” is followed by defining a free market as one that is free for financial rent-seeking. U.S.-backed diplomacy has indebted countries, forcing them to sell control of their public infrastructure and turn their economy’s “commanding heights” into opportunities to extract monopoly rent.
This autocracy vs. democracy rhetoric is similar to the rhetoric that Greek and Roman oligarchies used when they accused democratic reformers of seeking “tyranny” (in Greece) or “kingship” (in Rome). It was the Greek “tyrants” who overthrow mafia-like autocracies in the 7th and 6th centuries BC, paving the way for the economic and proto-democratic takeoffs of Sparta, Corinth and Athens. And it was Rome’s kings who built up their city-state by offering self-support land tenure for citizens. That policy attracted immigrants from neighboring Italian city-states whose populations were being forced into debt bondage.
The problem is that Western democracies have not proved adept at preventing oligarchies from emerging and polarizing the distribution of income and wealth. Ever since Rome, oligarchic “democracies” have not protected their citizens from creditors seeking to appropriate land, its rental yield and the public domain for themselves.
If we ask just who today is enacting and enforcing policies that seek to check oligarchy in order to protect the livelihood of citizens, the answer is that this is done by socialist states. Only a strong state has the power to check a financial and rent-seeking oligarchy. The Chinese embassy in America demonsrated this in its reply to President Biden’s description of China as an autocracy:
Clinging to a Cold War mentality and the hegemon’s logic, the US pursues bloc politics, concocts the “democracy versus authoritarianism” narrative … and ramps up bilateral military alliances, in a clear attempt at countering China.
Guided by a people-centered philosophy, since the day when it was founded … the Party has been working tirelessly for the interest of the people, and has dedicated itself to realizing people’s aspirations for a better life. China has been advancing whole-process people’s democracy, promoting legal safeguard for human rights, and upholding social equity and justice. The Chinese people now enjoy fuller and more extensive and comprehensive democratic rights.[2]
Nearly all early non-Western societies had protections against the emergence of mercantile and rentier oligarchies. That is why it is so important to recognize that what has become Western civilization represents a break from the Near East, South and East Asia. Each of these regions had its own system of public administration to save its social balance from commercial and monetary wealth that threatened to destroy economic balance if left unchecked. But the West’s economic character was shaped by rentier oligarchies. Rome’s Republic enriched its oligarchy by stripping the wealth of the regions it conquered, leaving them impoverished. That remains the extractive strategy of subsequent European colonialism and, most recently, U.S.-centered neoliberal globalization. The aim always has been to “free” oligarchies from constraints on their self-seeking.
The great question is, “freedom” and “liberty” for whom? Classical political economy defined a free market as one free from unearned income, headed by land rent and other natural-resource rent, monopoly rent, financial interest and related creditor privileges. But by the end of the 19th century the rentier oligarchy sponsored a fiscal and ideological counter-revolution, re-defining a free market as one free for rentiers to extract economic rent – unearned income.
This rejection of the classical critique of rentier income has been accompanied by re-defining “democracy” to require having a “free market” of the anti-classical oligarchic rentier variety. Instead of the government being the economic regulator in the public interest, public regulation of credit and monopolies is dismantled. That lets companies charge whatever they want for the credit they supply and the products they sell. Privatizing the privilege of creating credit-money lets the financial sector take over the role of allocating property ownership.
The result has been to centralize economic planning in Wall Street, the City of London, the Paris Bourse and other imperial financial centers. That is what today’s New Cold War is all about: protecting this system of U.S.-centered neoliberal financial capitalism, by wrecking or isolating the alternative systems of China, Russia and their allies, while seeking to further financialize the former colonialist system sponsoring creditor power instead of protecting debtors, imposing debt-ridden austerity instead of growth, and making the loss of property through foreclosure or forced sale irreversible.
Is Western civilization a long detour from where antiquity seemed to be headed?
What is so important in Rome’s economic polarization that resulted from the dynamics of interest bearing debt in the rapacious hands of its creditor class is how radically its oligarchic pro-creditor legal system differed from the laws of earlier societies that checked creditors and the proliferation of debt. The rise of a creditor oligarchy that used its wealth to monopolize the land and take over the government and courts (not hesitating to use force and targeted political assassination against would-be reformers) had been prevented for thousands of years throughout the Near East and other Asian lands. But the Aegean and Mediterranean periphery lacked the economic checks and balances that had provided resilience elsewhere in the Near East. What has distinguished the West from the outset has been its lack of a government strong enough to check the emergence and domination of a creditor oligarchy.
All ancient economies operated on credit, running up crop debts during the agricultural year. Warfare, droughts or floods, disease and other disruptions often prevented the accrual of debts from being paid. But Near Eastern rulers cancelled debts under these conditions. That saved their citizen-soldiers and corvée-workers from losing their self-support land to creditors, who were recognized as being a potential rival power to the palace. By the mid-first millennium BC debt bondage had shrunk to only a marginal phenomenon in Babylonia, Persia and other Near Eastern realms. But Greece and Rome were in the midst of a half-millennium of popular revolts demanding debt cancellation and liberty from debt bondage and loss of self-support land.
It was only Roman kings and Greek tyrants who, for a while, were able to protect their subjects from debt bondage. But they ultimately lost to warlord creditor oligarchies. The lesson of history is thus that a strong government regulatory power is required to prevent oligarchies from emerging and using creditor claims and land grabbing to turn the citizenry into debtors, renters, clients and ultimately serfs.
The rise of creditor control over modern governments
Palaces and temples throughout the ancient world were creditors. Only in the West did a private creditor class emerge. A millennium after the fall of Rome, a new banking class obliged medieval kingdoms to run into debt. International banking families used their creditor power to gain control of public monopolies and natural resources, much as creditors had gained control of individual land in antiquity.
World War I saw the Western economies reach an unprecedented crisis as a result of Inter-Ally debts and German reparations. Trade broke down and the Western economies fell into depression. What pulled them out was World War II, and this time no reparations were imposed after the war ended. In place of war debts, England simply was obliged to open up its Sterling Area to U.S. exporters and refrain from reviving its industrial markets by devaluing sterling, under the terms of Lend-Lease and the 1946 British Loan as noted above.
The West emerged from World War II relatively free of private debt – and thoroughly under U.S. dominance. But since 1945 the volume of debt has expanded exponentially, reaching crisis proportions in 2008 as the junk-mortgage bubble, massive bank fraud and financial debt pyramiding exploded, overburdening the U.S. as well as the European and Global South economies.
The U.S. Federal Reserve Bank monetized $8 trillion to save the financial elite’s holdings of stocks, bonds and packaged real estate mortgages instead of rescuing the victims of junk mortgages and over-indebted foreign countries. The European Central Bank did much the same thing to save the wealthiest Europeans from losing the market value of their financial wealth.
But it was too late to save the U.S. and European economies. The long post-1945 debt buildup has run its course. The U.S. economy has been deindustrialized, its infrastructure is collapsing and its population is so deeply indebted that little disposable income is left to support living standards. Much as occurred with Rome’s Empire, the American response is to try to maintain the prosperity of its own financial elite by exploiting foreign countries. That is aim of today’s New Cold War diplomacy. It involves extracting economic tribute by pushing foreign economies further into dollarized debt, to be paid by imposing depression and austerity on themselves.
This subjugation is depicted by mainstream economists as a law of nature and hence as an inevitable form of equilibrium, in which each nation’s economy receives “what it is worth.” Today’s mainstream economic models are based on the unrealistic assumption that all debts can be paid, without polarizing income and wealth. All economic problems are assumed to be self-curing by “the magic of the marketplace,” without any need for civic authority to intervene. Government regulation is deemed inefficient and ineffective, and hence unnecessary. That leaves creditors, land-grabbers and privatizers with a free hand to deprive others of their freedom. This is depicted as the ultimate destiny of today’s globalization, and of history itself.
The end of history? Or just of the West’s financialization and privatization?
The neoliberal pretense is that privatizing the public domain and letting the financial sector take over economic and social planning in targeted countries will bring mutually beneficial prosperity. That is supposed to make foreign submission to the U.S.-centered world order voluntary. But the actual effect of neoliberal policy has been to polarize Global South economies and subject them to debt-ridden austerity.
American neoliberalism claims that America’s privatization, financialization and shift of economic planning from government to Wall Street and other financial centers is the result of a Darwinian victory achieving such perfection that it is “the end of history.” It is as if the rest of the world has no alternative but to accept U.S. control of the global (that is, neo-colonial) financial system, trade and social organization. And just to make sure, U.S. diplomacy seeks to back its financial and diplomatic control by military force.
The irony is that U.S. diplomacy itself has helped accelerate an international response to neoliberalism by forcing together governments strong enough to pick up the long trend of history that sees governments empowered to prevent corrosive oligarchic dynamics from derailing the progress of civilization.
The 21st century began with American neoliberals imagining that their debt-leveraged financialization and privatization would cap the long upsweep of human history as the legacy of classical Greece and Rome. The neoliberal view of ancient history echoes that of antiquity’s oligarchies, denigrating Rome’s kings and Greece’s reformer-tyrants as threatening too strong a public intervention when they aimed at keeping citizens free of debt bondage and securing self-support land tenure. What is viewed as the decisive takeoff point is the oligarchy’s “security of contracts” giving creditors the right to expropriate debtors. This indeed has remained a defining characteristic of Western legal systems for the past two thousand years.
A real end of history would mean that reform would stop in every country. That dream seemed close when U.S. neoliberals were given a free hand to reshape Russia and other post-Soviet states after the Soviet Union dissolved itself in 1991, starting with shock therapy privatizing natural resources and other public assets in the hands of Western-oriented kleptocrats registering public wealth in their own names – and cashing out by selling their takings to U.S. and other Western investors.
The end of the Soviet Union’s history was supposed to consolidate America’s End of History by showing how futile it would be for nations to try to create an alternative economic order based on public control of money and banking, public health, free education and other subsidies of basic needs, free from debt financing. China’s admission into the World Trade Organization in 2001 was viewed as confirming Margaret Thatcher’s claim that There Is No Alternative (TINA) to the new neoliberal order sponsored by U.S. diplomacy.
There is an economic alternative, of course. Looking over the sweep of ancient history, we can see that the main objective of ancient rulers from Babylonia to South Asia and East Asia was to prevent a mercantile and creditor oligarchy from reducing the population at large to clientage, debt bondage and serfdom. If the non-U.S. Eurasian world now follows this basic aim, it would be restoring the course of history to its pre-Western course. That would not be the end of history, but it would return to the non-Western world’s basic ideals of economic balance, justice and equity.
Today, China, India, Iran and other Eurasian economies have taken the first step as a precondition for a multipolar world, by rejecting America’s insistence that they join the U.S. trade and financial sanctions against Russia. These countries realize that if the United States could destroy Russia’s economy and replace its government with U.S.-oriented Yeltsin-like proxies, the remaining countries of Eurasia would be next in line.
The only possible way for history really to end would be for the American military to destroy every nation seeking an alternative to neoliberal privatization and financialization. U.S. diplomacy insists that history must not take any path that would not culminate in its own financial empire ruling through client oligarchies. American diplomats hope that their military threats and support of proxy armies will force other countries to submit to neoliberal demands – to avoid being bombed, or suffering “color revolutions,” political assassinations and army takeovers, Pinochet-style. But the only real way to bring history to an end is by atomic war to end human life on this planet.
The New Cold War is dividing the world into two contrasting economic systems
NATO’s proxy war in Ukraine against Russia is the catalyst fracturing the world into two opposing spheres with incompatible economic philosophies. China, the country growing most rapidly, treats money and credit as a public utility allocated by government instead of letting the monopoly privilege of credit creation be privatized by banks, leading to them displacing government as economic and social planner. That monetary independence, relying on its own domestic money creation instead of borrowing U.S. electronic dollars, and denominating foreign trade and investment in its own currency instead of in dollars, is seen as an existential threat to America’s control of the global economy.
U.S. neoliberal doctrine calls for history to end by “freeing” the wealthy classes from a government strong enough to prevent the polarization of wealth, and ultimate decline and fall. Imposing trade and financial sanctions against Russia, Iran, Venezuela and other countries that resist U.S. diplomacy, and ultimately military confrontation, is how America intends to “spread democracy” by NATO from Ukraine to the China Sea.
The West, in its U.S. neoliberal iteration, seems to be repeating the pattern of Rome’s decline and fall. Concentrating wealth in the hands of the One Percent has always been the trajectory of Western civilization. It is a result of classical antiquity having taken a wrong track when Greece and Rome allowed the inexorable growth of debt, leading to the expropriation of much of the citizenry and reducing it to bondage to a land-owning creditor oligarchy. That is the dynamic built into the DNA of what is called the West and its “security of contracts” without any government oversight in the public interest. By stripping away prosperity at home, this dynamic requires a constant reaching out to extract an economic affluence (literally a “flowing in”) at the expense of colonies or debtor countries.
The United States through its New Cold War is aiming at securing precisely such economic tribute from other countries. The coming conflict may last for perhaps twenty years and will determine what kind of political and economic system the world will have. At issue is more than just U.S. hegemony and its dollarized control of international finance and money creation. Politically at issue is the idea of “democracy” that has become a euphemism for an aggressive financial oligarchy seeking to impose itself globally by predatory financial, economic and political control backed by military force.
As I have sought to emphasize, oligarchic control of government has been the distinguishing feature of Western civilization ever since classical antiquity. And the key to this control has been opposition to strong government – that is, civil government strong enough to prevent a creditor oligarchy from emerging and monopolizing control of land and wealth, making itself into a hereditary aristocracy, a rentier class living off land rents, interest and monopoly privileges that reduce the population at large to austerity.
The unipolar U.S.-centered order hoping to “end history” reflected a basic economic and political dynamic that has been a characteristic of Western civilization ever since classical Greece and Rome set off along a different track from the Near Eastern matrix in the first millennium BC.
To save themselves from being swept into the whirlpool of economic destruction now engulfing the West, countries in the world’s rapidly growing Eurasian core are developing new economic institutions based on an alternative social and economic philosophy. With China being the largest and fastest growing economy in the region, its socialist policies are likely to be influential in shaping this emerging non-Western financial and trading system.
Instead of the West’s privatization of basic economic infrastructure to create private fortunes through monopoly rent extraction, China keeps this in public hands. Its great advantage over the West is that it treats money and credit as a public utility, to be allocated by government instead of letting private banks create credit, with debt mounting up without expanding production to raise living standards. China also is keeping health and education, transportation and communications in public hands, to be provided as basic human rights.
China’s socialist policy is in many ways a return to basic ideas of resilience that characterized most civilization before classical Greece and Rome. It has created a state strong enough to resist the emergence of a financial oligarchy gaining control of the land and rent-yielding assets. In contrast, today’s Western economies are repeating precisely that oligarchic drive that polarized and destroyed the economies of classical Greece and Rome, with the United States serving as the modern analogue for Rome.
- Paper presented on July 11, 2022 to The Ninth South-South Forum on Sustainability.THE COLLAPSE OF MODERN CIVILIZATION AND THE FUTURE OF HUMANITY. ↑
- Reality Check: Falsehoods in US Perceptions of China, June 19, 2022.http://us.china-embassy.gov.cn/eng/zmgx/zxxx/202206/t20220619_10706097.htm. ↑
Mike’s comments about the functionality of the banking system is right.
In the end the West will have to place all the bankers in custody and take charge of those institutions. Then conduct an audit of whats gone on and where the money is.
The ‘authorities’ work for the oligarchies (finance, military, energy, and “health” [pharma+insurance] and are complicit in their crimes. Nothing will change until the entire system is burned to the ground.
The very best that we can hope for is that citizens rise up and do this. Otherwise it will only be achieved with nuclear hellfire, and in that case there will be nothing left.
Revolution is the only solution!
Pray that it’s a (mostly) peaceful one.
Revolution is the easy part…..hang the Oligarchs, private bankers and Government puppets. The real question never discussed is, how do you select your leadership?
Michael has done a masterful job detailing the primary contradiction in Western political economy, particularly when he points out how unregulated Roman oligarchies constructed their ideology of Government. It is said that the Romans taught the West the arts of government. That describes how the problem has been cemented into the Western mind. By adopting Roman Law the West has consistently followed the Roman formula of Government and power.
Michael’s perspective makes it very easy for me to understand the real role of one of history’s most tragic and heroic figures: Julius Caesar. I recommend the book “The Assassination of Julius Caesar” by Michael Parenti. Julius Caesar was the Roman who made the most heroic and spectacular attempt to rectify the very problem that Michael has outlined. This was the real reason the oligarchs assassinated him. They simply took recourse to their usual method of employing death squads to eliminate all serious opposition to oligarchic dictatorship. This tradition has never stopped and is in widespread practice still. It is still the secret formula of Western power.
Of course the oligarchs had to control the writing of history. So the real story of Julius Caesar is very distorted in the popular mind, as it must obscure the true motives of all the parties involved.
Regarding Ron’s question about how do you select revolutionary leadership. That is the vital question which can only find an answer within the development of socialist culture. It is an essentially socialist question, which requires the further evolution of socialism itself. Which necessarily brings into play the ongoing question of the relationship between socialist politics and spirituality.
It is worth adding that this problem of oligarchic tyranny, for want of a better phrase, is the price the West has had to pay for the glorification of its ideal of free individuality. Individuality free from regulation has been the West’s supreme and sacred ideal of freedom. However it has all along been little more than a egoistic fantasy. The price for this unregulated individuality however is now astronomically high, as Michael has outlined.
What is now clearly needed is a higher evolution of our understanding of freedom and individuality. An understanding that allows room for stable community as the seed ground of real individuality.
You can select them by DNA test and polygraph. DNA test is for exclusion of cabbalists (unrealistic doctrinaires) and polygraph for exclusion of corrupted agents of oligarchy. It must be a periodic task. Demopolization of strategic sectors is needed, appropriate tax system to let the middle class grow and go from consumption to production, return from globalization to regionalization.
During the last 200 years, over 1500 years India had the largest economy, China 300 years, combined Western Europe less than 100 years and USA less than 100 years. Since 2014 China has had largest GDP-PPP and true numbers of real economy its is now around twice the size of US real economy. According British scientific study India will likely pass US as second largest economy in early 2040’s. European Union, not just “Western Europe” has smaller economy than even US and likely smaller than India in late 2030’s.
The India you spoke about for the past 2,000 years, how was it defined on the global map? Did it include Afghanistan? Was it ruled by one man (or one administration, one kingdom, one dynasty), or was it ruled by 200+ to 300+ Sharmas, Patels, Reddys, Raos, etc. etc. ? I couldn’t find an old Indian nation in my history book. Did the 2, 3 hundreds Sharmas and Patels added all their GDPs together to form the combined Indian GDP? I’m curious what nation you were talking about that had the highest GPD for 1,500 years out of the past 2,000.
This is going off-topic. Please take to MFC – any further to trash. Mod.
The India and China you refer to was just different names of the Mongolian empire established by the Russians and the Ottoman Empire (Turks) in their conquest of the world, India and China in the medeival ages were just two different names for Russia a.k.a the Mongolian empire, India originates from Sanskrit which is a derivative of Old Russian and comes from the adverb ”Inde” which means far away land, China or ”Kina” is a corruption of the word Kitai which means Scythia, word China does not originate in the Chinese language but was first attested in Sanskrit which as mentionned above is just a derivative of Old Russian the name Kina probably came as a reference to Russia as land of the khans so in reality it was the Russians and their Turkic allies that had the largest economies this history was largely distorted by the West, Vatican and German historians.
I don’t think there is any possible measure of know who has the largest economy in each period.
The GDB is distorted even now, discuss GDB hundred of years ago is a exercise of futility
You have clearly been reading Fomenko. That is indeed another thing to point out!
“The End Of Western Civilization” implies that the West has been civilized in the past. I would argue that this civilization has only been a thin veneer. Beneath the surface there has always been barbarism, brutality, ignorance, delusion, stupidity and insanity.
Has there ever been a time of no war? Has there ever been a time of abundance?
All you have to do is look at the faces of the people you pass on the street to see that misery is universal.
The people in my town (relatively tiny by global standards) are all happy. Here in the Midwest USA we have a culture of honesty, thrift, reason and Christian morals; very friendly people. Diversity in the metro areas might be what you’re referring to but I don’t see any misery around here. its important to remember that the political class and ruling “elite” doesn’t represent the average American any less than the caricature of Putin pushed by the western media represents the average Russian.
Its certainly true that the western economies are bluffing, and big time. its hard to maintain the current debt load while being honest about the USAs current productive capabilities. a lot of people around here are looking forward to an economic “collapse”, however you want to describe it, a reversal of the flow of savings from out of small and relatively productive community to hubs of finance like NY, SF, Chicago etc.
Christian morals are what it is all about. Dr. Hudson is wise to focus on the moral problems implicit in debt itself—the moral concept of usury—unlike an earlier article, in which he seems to take issue with real estate debt, not for being the extraction of interest but for being similar to the extraction of rent. As he notes, classical economists take issue with the extraction of rent, but ancient moralists take issue with the extraction of interest instead.
What is so bad about rent? You need a hotel room for a few days or an apartment for a few years, so you rent one. What is objectionable about the arrangement? Morally, perhaps not much, but landlords have the annoying habit of raising rent over and over, so as to coerce you into the inconvenience of moving every few years.
I bought a house. Insurance companies would not sell me flood insurance because the house was not in a flood zone. Years later, FEMA rezoned the land so that the central air conditioning unit to the house was consequently in a flood zone. The bank demanded that I buy flood insurance, but Congress was at an impasse, and no flood insurance was available to buy. The bank was threatening to foreclose, despite being paid their interest on time. The main problem with debt is not the interest. It is the put option, by which a creditor, apropos of nothing, can suddenly and unexpectedly demand payment of the full debt.
Dr. Hudson says, “the West – starting in classical Greece and Italy around the 8th century BC – was barbarian.” The Greeks surely would disagree on this point. They invented the word, barbarian, to describe everyone else.
When barbarians attacked an ancient Roman landowner, who was current on his real estate taxes, only to burn his property to the ground, the Roman central government would immediately audit the landowner and demand to see all the receipts of taxes paid (even though the government knew the taxes were paid timely) simply in order to take advantage of the situation and confiscate the land. The modern taxing authorities of New Jersey are much the same. They demand receipts of taxes that they know have been paid.
The Internal Revenue Service is more reasonable than this. A business can go bankrupt in the United States, and the owner can walk away from the debt. (Don’t try this with a college loan.) Go bankrupt in one of the Gulf states—one of those Middle Eastern regimes that Dr. Hudson puts on a pedestal—and you will find yourself in debtor’s prison, until your relatives ransom you.
The point is that everything is more complex. It is not a simple matter of Europe being bad and Asia good. Social stratification arose in the Bronze Age and dissipated somewhat in the Iron Age. Famine and disease have been as effective, down through the years, at collapsing societies as an excess of debt. There are many factors. It is not all economics.
Dr. Hudson’s earlier article did a great job explaining Communism. Equity, debt and land are all capital, in a sense, while labor is not. If everything is either capital or labor, why not confiscate all the capital and let the government administer it all in behalf of the workers, in a Socialist utopia? This way workers can realize the full value of their wages and also realize the full value of any profit, interest and rent too? This is the essence of Communism, as Dr. Hudson’s earlier article brings to light. The error of Communism, of course, is in the immorality of the confiscation of all the capital.
A just society can have taxes, but they need to be reasonable and predictable. A sales tax gets at profit much the same way that a real estate tax gets at rent. These are reasonable taxes. Not every tax or fee is reasonable. An inventory tax causes supply chain disruptions. A garbage collection fee leads to littering.
If it is all capital or labor, why tax wages at all? Why have income taxes or payroll taxes at all? Is it not enough to have a sales tax and a real estate tax—and perhaps a tax on interest (if not the prohibition of interest)? The nature of capital is to concentrate wealth in the hands of fewer and fewer. The nature of labor is the opposite. In the modern West, the notion is that capital gains are sacrosanct and should almost never be taxed, while the income tax should be the fundamental source of the government’s revenue. Does this unbalanced taxation not concentrate wealth more and more—as we see happening?
Where do you find a pro-labor politician who opposes all taxes on wages, as a matter of principle? Where are these politicians to be found? Instead, the pro-labor politicians always advocate maximizing the taxes on income. Meanwhile, the pro-labor politicians exempt investment earnings from taxation, via any number of legitimate tax avoidance stratagems. Then they look up at the blue sky and wonder why the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. Why does this happen? It happens because the rich are intelligent enough to pursue policies that benefit the rich. The poor are too stupid to pursue policies that benefit the poor. The poor are, in fact, too stupid to govern a country, which is why democracy does not work.
French Revolutionaries have managed to convince everyone that it is all about life, liberty and property. They overlook that chastity is equally important to the propagation of a just society. More important, they and the American Revolutionaries have convinced everyone that liberty derives from democracy and rebellion, when it does not.
Liberty is Christian morality. Liberty is Christian neighborly love, which derives from Jewish Noachide law. Lethal force is justifiable in defense of life and chastity. Lesser force is justifiable in defense of property. The moral unjustifiability of force otherwise is the source of liberty. Liberty derives from this ancient Christian morality and not from democracy and rebellion.
To burn a heretic at the stake—or otherwise for the Christian to persecute the Christian—has no legitimacy in ancient Christian morality. Intolerance and sectarianism are perversions of the faith, and they are anti-Christian in their nature. They are the institution of Pope Leo the Great who ascended the throne of St. Peter in 440 the head of one unified Christian Church and who descended to the grave in 461 the head of a denomination.
Tolerant Christianity propagates best with a Christian king. A Christian king is more likely than a democracy to respect property rights, and to respect liberty too—freedom of speech and freedom of opinion. Socrates gave his life to illustrate how democracy does not permit the freedom of speech that a democracy needs. A Christian king has a duty to respect freedom of speech and freedom of opinion. He has a duty also to favor labor over capital—by bringing to bear more intelligence than the typical pro-labor politician can muster—as well as a duty to favor the widow and the orphan and the disadvantaged in general. A just society can have democratic elements—especially at the local level—but it needs a Christian king at the helm, to preserve the faith, and it needs appointed aristocratic leaders too, who have more sense than the common man.
That was both a wonderfully reasoned and expressed post. Well done.
Capital gains tax is only reasonable if there is a realistic offset for currency devaluation over time.
If you just have a notional capital gain because that decrease in currency value is ignore, then you are being taxed on you loss of purchasing power – a double theft by the government.
Australia is notorious for this.
Eg.
Purchase a rental property in 2000 for $300k
Run it, maintain it, pay taxes on rental profit
Sell the property in 2020 for $450k …. after price inflation occurs due to currency deflation
Get taxed on $150k … but there was no real capital gain … just a currency distortion.
Over a longer time frame, the distortion is even worse and tax theft is even higher. This is a disincentive to landlords. Surprise, surprise, Australia now has an extreme rental shortage.
I personally exited being a landlord back in the 80’s, but my 2nd wife dragged me back into that in the 90’s . And the tax crunch during the divorce after a forced exit was bad news.
And the answer is?
“I’m alright, Jack.” Look it up if you can be bothered.
Re.: Western Civilisation
They once asked Mahatma Ghandi, what he thought of western civilisation. He thought for a while, then replied, that this would be a very good idea!
“Clearly, and in my view, most unfortunately, there are not many Americans who revel in spending a weekend immersing themselves in the history of the building of our nation. As a country, we have turned to sound bites and cartoons, memes, and synopses, all of which are easily adapted to, and reinforce, our prejudices and short attention spans.
I would argue that this reality is potentially deadly for our nation. Without understanding our history in depth, in all its messy, imperfect, but yet inspiring details, we have little hope of fulfilling the promise of perfecting our Union. In addition, studying Hamilton’s economic vision and work in depth is essential to our getting back on the track of economic progress at home and abroad, as I outline in my book Hamilton Versus Wall Street.
Hopefully my description here will help goad more people into delving further into the study of the Founding Era, where they will take seriously the ideals and struggles, as well as the flaws and mistakes, of those who established the United States. As we approach the 250th anniversary of our Declaration of Independence, in the midst of culture wars that threaten to tear us apart, I believe it is desperately urgent that we do so.”
https://americansystemnow.com/why-we-should-celebrate-hamilton-in-2022/#_ftn8
Yes indeed concerning Hamilton who set up the treasury under the old British form including the banking as he was a great admirer of that system.
In the book the Life of Washington, it goes on to say that when Hamilton set up the Treasury he stated “that at the center of the Treasury I shall place a group of wealthy individuals who will build the ships, business’s, create trade,etc and these were the bankers’. So you see, it was built into the system from the git go.
Much of the problems we enjoy today of course come from the Founding Fathers, devious as they were with the Constitution tucking all the power into the new so-called Federal Government leaving the states little to none except to pay the taxes.
Alexander Hamilton‘s policies were opposite in intent of British policies of Adam Smith. Hamilton‘s idea of credit was very much more like the “public utility” mentioned in the article as opposed to private enrichment schemes. There is a great deal of confusion, on who was on who’s team in the sense of national banks run by the government, versus central banks owned and run by an oligarchy, and this confusion was and still is deliberate. The chief difference is the intent- in the same sense as described above in the main article, where credit is viewed either as a public utility, or as an enrichment and control scheme set on generating debt, without investment in industry.
Remember, Alexander Hamilton was killed in a duel, by British traitor and banker Aaron Burr, who went on to run the Bank of Manhattan.
In defense of Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton
https://larouchepub.com/eiw/public/1987/eirv14n27-19870703/eirv14n27-19870703_022-in_defense_of_treasury_secretary-lar.pdf
The comments on the failure of the Western-Neocon debt based system is accurate. There is clearly also a gathering of opposition to this whereby China is obviously the strongest force, and with no EU for Russia there is nowhere else for them to go. What is not at all clear is why this is benevolent. At the moment we see a Chinese points system, and social repression ( Maoist) in country which had dying rooms for excessive numbers of children. The macro management of China is populist and inept. Russia did not have social awareness in 1917 and failed to defend against a jewish sponsored coup d’etat.. In the 1990’s the country was not sufficiently politically aware to stop oligarchs raping the country through bribing Yeltsin. Why is there such a clear portrayal of the land of milk and honey? Maybe Putin and Lavrov are OK, but there is no strength in depth.
Love. There is nothing else
“Oligarchic control” is just another euphemism for the dominance of organized crime.
The article above, and the related one referring to David Graeber, were typical of superficially correct analysis, followed by BS “solutions,” due to not engaging deeper analysis regarding how and why THERE IS ONLY ONE POLITICAL SYSTEM: “ORGANIZED CRIME.”
Since China has, during the previous decade, been creating more “money” out of nothing as debts than “The West” combined (i.e., during past ten years, China made more MAD (Money As Debt) out of nothing than the USA, UK, Europe and Japan combined, China is actually now worse than “The West” with respect to the basic enforcement of frauds.
While conditions automatically get worse faster,
various people who do good analysis collapse
back to some lesser, bullshit-based solutions.
Moreover, the article above refers to the devastating historical effect of climate change upon some past civilizations. Of course, in that respect, “The West” is much worse, because of having taken the threat of climate change, and transformed it into another tool to control, in ways which will drive the opposite to what should be done.
My favourite Website on those topics is Suspicious0berservers.
Their YouTube channel has dozens of excellent videos in relevant playlists.
In particular,
THE Earth Disaster Documentary
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihwoIlxHI3Q
After spending hundreds of hours to get up to speed on that topic, I am now convinced that the S0 position is the most correct one humanly possible to predict at the present time. As civilization get crazier, nature goes nuts, and both combine to be way worse than either alone.
So, I still predict that the total human population
in a hundred years shall be less than one billion.
The real situation is way worse than authors like Michael Hudson present. Therefore, nothing but bogus “solutions” follow from those superficial analyses. I particularly find it annoying when authors presume that other factions of Globalized Neolithic Civilization are somehow “good” merely because they are relatively less bad than “The West.”
Better solutions would only be possible based upon better understanding of civilizations as manifestations of general energy systems. However, doing so requires using unitary mechanisms, not false fundamental dichotomies. Namely, that there is has always only been, and always will only be, ONE POLITICAL SYSTEM, “ORGANIZED CRIME.”
At the present time, it is politically impossible to have any better public debates regarding THAT situation, due to every civilization ending up being dominated by its own best organized gangsters, including the biggest gangsters, the banksters, dominating all aspects of “Western Society,” with languages used to discuss politics that are all absurdly backwards, because those are all based on false fundamental dichotomies, rather than unitary mechanisms.
“The West” is suffering from the paradoxical effects from having become the biggest and best gangsters, who were thus able to dominate the world. Of course, increments of short-term success become excessive in the medium term, which necessarily leads to final failures.
The only genuine solutions require, be definition, better organized crime, which means better death controls to back up better debt controls. What is happening are that the runaway debt slavery systems have necessarily generated numbers which became debt insanities. Since the debt controls were always backed by the death controls, runaway debt insanities provoke runaway death insanities.
The basics were always that private property is based on claims backed by coercions, while the abstract form of that was money is measurement backed by murder. There are no genuine “solutions” which do not directly admit and address the issues related to the combined money/murder systems, as the expression of the combined human ecology/political economy.
“The West” got fantastically better at understanding some energy systems. However, “The West” very deliberately does not understand itself better as an energy system, because everything regarding the languages that it uses were built upon the history of being able to enforce frauds, despite that meant those frauds necessarily got about exponentially worse.
Genuine solutions would require enough people better understanding themselves. However, at the present time, it is hard to imagine more people being persuaded to misunderstand themselves any more than they already do. It is barely possible to exaggerate the collective insanities throughout Globalized Neolithic Civilization.
Within that context, I find superficial analyses of what is wrong with that Civilization, as regarding what is wrong with its relatively recently worst manifestations, like the USA and the Federal Reserve Board, followed by similarly superficial “solutions.”
Our collective problems are many orders of magnitude worse than most presentations allow for. I sympathize with people who do not want to see that, because it then enables them to continue to propose and promote silly, superficial solutions.
The essence of our political dilemma is that there must be some death control systems. However, when people disagree over those, then they fight. But, thus, the most deceitful and treacherous tend to prevail. Hence, the history of successful warfare became the basis for the existing political economy based on enforced frauds which achieve symbolic robberies.
Globalized Neolithic Civilization was built on agriculture and slavery. The domestication of animals and plants, superseded by the domestication of human beings. Certainly, “The West” pushed that the furthest, developing globalized electronic monkey money frauds, backed by the threats of force from apes with atomic weapons. However, none of the other countries have a different foundation.
“.. “The West” very deliberately does not understand itself better as an energy system, because everything regarding the languages that it uses were built upon the history of being able to enforce frauds, despite that meant those frauds necessarily got about exponentially worse…”
I have noticed this deliberate enforcing of frauds by preventing real knowledge when I did my degrees in Economics and Psychology in England. We never learned anything about co-operatives (it was all about privatizing everything – i.e. stealing from the poor to give to the rich) and during my 3 years of studying psychology – we mostly focused on schizophrenics and not even a word on psychopaths – who are, I think the biggest problem we have in the world – how convenient – is it perhaps they currently rule the modern day Mordor of 5-Eye countries at least?
It’s been like putting a fox in charge of a hen house.
Especially if the ‘fox’ comes from a ‘culture’ structured like a psychopath support group masqueraded as a religion (as is the case currently with Bidet’s cabin of JUSA etc). Klaus Scwab, Bill Gates, most senior people in our me(r)dia as well as CEOs of all Big Pharma all come from this club.
“The emotional bankruptcy of psychopathy means that the psychopaths is forever deprived of an authentic emotional intelligence, a capacity for understanding how people work that is an irreplaceable guide for living in the human world. A person without conscience, even a smart one, tends to be a shortsighted and surprisingly naive individual who eventually expires of boredom, financial ruin, or a bullet. ” (from The Sociopath Next Door by Marta Stout).
So I Think you are right about the criminals, but there is an extra sinister dimension to them – which is being a bunch of psychopaths literally, which is amplified if they are also from the above mentioned Psychopath Support Group – which makes them into a psychopath squared.
Yes, tomo.
“Psychopath Support Group – which makes them into a psychopath squared.”
I say they follow their principle of maliciousness maximization.
Astute commentary – I concur with much of it.
Several years ago I endeavored to comprehend why so many in the West were so economically burdened that they had difficulty securing the bare essentials (shelter, food, etc.) of life without spending enormous amounts of their time “earning” wages (didn’t matter much if they were low or middle income wage earners because society dictated that if you made more, you had to acquire more “stuff” so people at most levels of income either lived on the edge of insolvency via debt or simply too little income even without debt).
This “endeavor to comprehend” took me on a multi-year journey through all aspects of our Western ‘system’ – finance, education, political structure, military, history, religions, science… The deeper I delved, the more occasions I had to turn pale and hold my head in my hands.
At the ‘conclusion’ of this initial research, I found a couple of potential solutions – 1) a system similar to what Mr. Hudson alludes to whereby a centralized governing system remained in place but it was only financially viable (if, at that time you wished to pay off sovereign debt) with a tiny budget for military expenditures and a high (50%) income tax rate. Given the current morals (essentially lack of morals) based society and an economic system founded in greed and selfishness, I realized that this alternative centralized governance system was a pipe dream. In other words, shifting from the social economic structure we currently had to a ‘better’ centralized system was not feasible without a dramatic change in ideology which I surmised was a non-starter for those sitting in the power thrones.
The second potential solution, which involves a bottom up, decentralized approach is viable and likely where we are all headed. Unfortunately, this can only come about after the current ‘centralized’ models destroy themselves. And, during that process of destruction, people, those who survive, will not only learn of the fallacies of prior models but will also look for new ways of approaching ‘life’ as humans and as integral and interdependent members of the biosphere.
I reference “those who will survive” because, as things get ‘sorted’, over time, only those that set aside selfishness and embrace a combination of self-sufficiency along with community cooperation, will remain standing. It is my view that no-one will survive, regardless of the ‘thoroughness of their preps’ without assistance in some manner and degree from others.
A very simple example would be standing watch on a property – not even two people are enough to do this effectively as they still need to dedicate time to working their land and sleep.
I’ll end on an encouraging note. Quite a few people are discovering (re-discovering) aspects of the cosmic science – what I mean by this is the physics of science that is a constant in the universe. This science is relative for energy generation, food production, health regeneration and maintenance, and spiritual connectedness. It’s all there for us; we just need to choose to seek it out and encompass it in the way we live going forward. We’ll get there. I keep this in mind as the tumultuous times unfold.
Blessings,
Puzzler
Blessing back to you, Puzzler.
I agree with your assessment of the essential “preparations” for disasters being other people.
“The deeper I delved, the more occasions I had to turn pale and hold my head in my hands.”
For me, I always say that the most consistent result of my researches are that
“The more one learns, the worse it gets.”
For those who face darkness with courage and continue the journey, light will eventually shine.
A bear hug to you Blair T. Longley.
The word that Hudson spends lots of other words avoiding is fascism. It’s a bit like how imperial public media (on which Hudson has advocated spending more currency units) conspicuously avoids uttering the word torture when describing conduct of government officials.
Hudson demonstrates the dead end that leftist academic economics has run into. They won’t (can’t?) concretely call out anything meaningful or insightful about the Democratic Party and associated ruling class interests on the ‘left’ end of the uniparty system. It’s always broad generalities or references to finance or Milton Friedman or somebody.
But we are now well past half a century of MMT (fiat currencies issued by nation states) ruling the world. The issue of our time is not government that is too small or weak. The issue is how massive and unmanageable the merger of government and corporate power has become. There simply is no precedent in history for the ongoing centralization of power.
And like a good academic economist, Hudson keeps hedging his bets. Is he talking about things that have already happened, or that might happen sometime in the future? Is he claiming the US is the central actor, or a more global structure of international finance, IMF, BIS, World Bank, etc.? Is he pontificating, or claiming factual representation (for example, foreign trade from Asia actually is a small part of the US economy, and moving industry happened decades ago). But I guess Hudson wouldn’t sound so relevant to a Chinese audience rehashing 1990s conversations about NAFTA and WTO and so forth? And I suppose mentioning the interconnectedness between Beijing and DC is a taboo too far as well? What, exactly, is Hudson’s position on the CNY/USD peg? Should China’s currency appreciate against the US currency or depreciate? That is a basic question for anybody claiming that China has monetary independence from the US.
The issue, at root, isn’t debt or lack of public financing. The US spends enormous quantities of ‘money’ on education and healthcare and so forth (more, actually, than the financial sector). The issue is who gets the money.
And maybe one of the strategies for that is less powerful major governments rather than even bigger ones.
Yes, its taboo to mention that China and the US are mortally dependent on each other. Also not mentioned is who these new nobility who can fix all the world’s problems are going to be, probably that bunch with those small caps from that Middle Eastern country. One would expect that if a return to divine nobility is promoted then the identity of this nobility would be revealed as well.
But nevertheless this is an excellent article and the comments are superb.
A very long dissertation…
the short form is: Empires come and go….
The lesson that should be learned, but does not is: Treat others like you want to be treated.
SIMPLE !!!!
Usury. The problem is usury. There’s a reason that Christianity and Islam ban usury and consider it a serious sin. Islamic bonds are a real thing. And the Catholic Church has always been technically anti-usury, but has no longer been able to enforce any of its prohibitions since the Reformation.
“… The problem is usury. …”
With usura hath no man a house of good stone
each block cut smooth and well fitting
that design might cover their face,
with usura
hath no man a painted paradise on his church wall…
Ezra Pound, Canto XLV
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mEADZ2PJ6iY
I wonder why there is no discussion of Islamic banking and finance in this treatment. Sharia-compliant financial principals, if not real-world practice, militate against any kind of interest charging in investment transactions. Also, as I recall it, there is more mutual acceptance of risk and of an involvement of the parties in working toward the success of the enterprise, and debt forgiveness is a significant element of the idealized economic structure. Some discussion here: https://www.jubileeusa.org/islamic_perspectives_on_poverty_debt
Casual search indicates that maybe the diseases of Western Warlord Capitalism have been picked up by the extant Islamic finance structures, so as with so many elements of spiritual practices that ought to be sacrosanct in healthy communities, the subtle twisting by “high finance” jesuits has crafted excuses and work-arounds to preserve the “brand” while totally perverting the message.
Looks like the froth of derivatives and leveraging would not be countenanced under Islamic principles, which nominally apply to a fifth of the world’s population: https://corporatefinanceinstitute.com/resources/knowledge/finance/islamic-finance/
But there appears to be a healthy and well-developed interest in and awareness of the horrors of debt peonage and wisdom and utility of Jubilee-style debt forgiveness. https://www.jubileeusa.org/faith/islamic-resources/islam-and-jubilee.html
Maybe something could be made of this material?
That’s a splendid and insightful essay by Mr. Hudson. And who can doubt its truth?
Hudson’s article is a very stimulating read, and the focus on usury is timely and correct, IMO. However, l disagree that the problem can be pinned so completely on the political system.
John Adams, one of the founding fathers of the US said it well:
“Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”
No governmental system can insure human rights and fairness if the people lose their moral bearings. So many people see the evils of the current uber capitalism at this time and react by pushing for various forms of communism. But not much knowledge of history is needed, if one is honest, to see that communist systems also end in corruption and abuse. The Soviet Union was famous for its corruption as is the CCP. Brazil is not openly communist, but the corruption there is breathtaking.
One can argue that bad systems breed poor ethics, and this is partially true, but neither does choice of political system alone correct poor ethics. The central problem is as old as human kind: we need a system to protect people from other people, but we are always left with the question of who controls the system. The ultimate problem lies in the human heart rather than in the choice of system.
The Empire has no option but to use nuclear weapons if it wants to have any chance of maintaining its hegemony.
The conflict will not last twenty years as stated in the article.
It will be over in less than two years. It will be over during this cycle of US presidential election.
Cela suppose, donc, Une différence radicale des Républicains ! On peut rêver.
This supposes, therefore, A radical difference of the Republicans! We can dream.
Economics should be like the ten commandments, short and sweet. For the dumb to follow blindly and the smart to follow because they have figured out why the commandments are there and they follow them because it makes sense. Anyway praxeology should lie at the root of all valid economic commandments and I haven’t seen that in practice anywhere yet, except maybe in some underground supply chains.
“Royal power was backed by temples and ethical or religious systems. The major religions that emerged in the mid-first millennium BC, those of Buddha, Lao-Tzu and Zoroaster, held that personal drives should be subordinate to the promotion of overall welfare and mutual aid. What did not seem likely 2500 years ago was that a warlord aristocracy would conquer the Western world.”
No doubt a complete coincidence that Catholic Christianity also arose shortly after and was happy to propagate the new system for royal favor. Thank goodness those heathen religions were put to the sword and their evil teachings burned.
That’s whats so great about communism: Everyone is equal {all poor}. The state decides who gets what, and it’s usually those with state connections. Regardless of the political system, those at the top reap the benefits at the expense of those who have no connections to the state {hog trough}. It is no different in Russia, India, name your country of choice. In the USA, everyone in the US CON-gress is a millionaire, even those that present themselves to be socialist. The middle classes of western nations are being reduced a little more every day, ground between the millstones of higher taxes and inflation, just like Lenin said too. Communism is stronger today than it has ever been, it just changed it’s name, faces and color {from red to green}.
All wealth is created by the labor force.
The banks are just parasites, who are authorized to create money ex nihilo as debt to plunder the industrialists.
The Industrial capitalists do at least produce goods that are useful to the general population, but over the past thirty years or so competition has been reduced by means of mergers and acquisitions funded by the banks, enabling quasi monopolies and reductions in the number of people employed. Also profits have been used to buy back corporate shares to boost stock prices enabling CEOs and CFOs to cash in on their stock option awards, instead of being plowed back into research and development and employee pay raises to keep pace with the ever increasing cost of living. Also why is it that capital gains by the rich are taxed at a lower rate than earned income ? The answer is the bribes paid to political parties, euphemistically described as campaign contributions. So called democracy has been usurped
The wealth of the US is primarily based upon its agricultural output, the oil and minerals under its soil, its nuclear, hydro and fossil fuel driven electricity production, its interstate highway system with its bridges and tunnels, its railways, its school and university educational system and its industrial output.
Bank accounts and money are not wealth, they are merely claims on wealth, that the rich 1% have sequestered at the expense of the labor force, who do all the necessary work to keep the economy running in a positive direction. The private banks who create the nation’s money supply out of thin air as interest bearing debt are an unnecessary parasitical burden, who manipulate the economy to their advantage. They are parasites. Until the right of money creation is returned to the US Treasury i.e. We the People, they will be no real growth in the US economy, that is going downhill compared with China, who create their domestic currency free of debt.
Good to contrast with
“Events like this happen once a century”: Sergey Glazyev on the breakdown of epochs and changing ways of life
http://thesaker.is/events-like-this-happen-once-a-century-sergey-glazyev-on-the-breakdown-of-epochs-and-changing-ways-of-life/
There is a physical economics approach quite different to the present monetarist narrative.
Oligarchies cannot deal with physical economic change, cannot manage and with reptilian instinct seek the swamp. Not cooincidentally Venice, 1000 years after Rome’s collapse was a swamp, when threatened moved to Amsterdam, a swamp, then the City of London – THE swamp.
American poet Edgar Poe gets it :
https://poestories.com/read/cityinthesea
The City in the Sea
by Edgar Allan Poe (published 1831)
Lo! Death has reared himself a throne
In a strange city lying alone
Far down within the dim West,
Where the good and the bad and the worst and the best
Have gone to their eternal rest.
There shrines and palaces and towers
(Time-eaten towers that tremble not!)
Resemble nothing that is ours.
….
To use the KISS principle :
I owe you $100 – that’s my problem.
I owe you $1 billion – hey, that’s your problem, bud!
And debtor nations may well repudiate, or pay in Rublegas. Who’s problem is that?
Excellent as usual from our professor.
Where I differ is Where I differ, is that West’s overlords having realized that the RIC (Russia Iran China) have overtaken it in all fields, is no longer aiming for global control, rather for Two Worlds and now we’re living the drawing of borders.
This explains the seemingly “stupid” sanctions that harm West more than Russia, and raising tensions with Iran and China whilst in a proxy war with Russia.
As professor Hudson had mentioned in an earlier article “you are with us or against us”. So currently as the iron curtain falls, the West is trying to include in its realm as many Global South countries (with resources) as it can.
Spot on. And to entertain the thought a bit further, is it even two worlds? Or perhaps more simply just different parts of the same loosely connected system?
It continues to fascinate me that people who otherwise reject imperial propaganda think it would be a defeat for the ruling class to get through the past quarter century richer than ever and with a strong ‘enemy’ in the ‘East’ to conjure up whenever a particular domestic population gets too uppity.
Booms and busts are engineered by the banks using low interest rates and easy credit to stimulate the boom, and then by raising interest rates to cause the bust.
“If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs.”
– Thomas Jefferson
What did Jefferson think of Alexander Hamilton’s First National Bank?
@bonbon
Are you serious ?
https://www.federalreservehistory.org/essays/first-bank-of-the-us
Thanks for this eloquent, succinct synthesis. Because of its inevitable brevity, shortcuts obviously had to be made.
“This U.S. and NATO-based imperial system seeks to indebt weaker countries and force them to turn control over their policies to the International Monetary Fund and World Bank. Obeying the neoliberal anti-labor “advice” of these institutions leads to a debt crisis that forces the debtor country’s foreign-exchange rate to depreciate. The IMF then “rescues” them from insolvency on the “conditionality” that they sell off the public domain and shift taxes off the wealthy (especially foreign investors) onto labor.”
Indeed. The mechanism was pioneered at the expense of Latin American nations, and even before the IMF and World Bank had been created. Santo Domingo, Haiti, Nicaragua, Cuba and to a certain extent, Colombia and Venezuela were the first victims. (See Alfons Goldschmidt, Die dritte Eroberung Amerikas, Berlin: Rowohlt, 1929)
The list of ruthlessly exploited nations by the US was followed after 1945 by Argentina, Brazil, Chile and other nations with attractive resources. Actually, the US was inspired by the example of the English, who early in the 19th century had begun to suck the Platine region dry (see the works by Raul Scalabrini Ortiz)
After the Fall of the Berlin Wall, imperial policies practiced in Latin America were applied to European continental nations. Thereafter, the system began to show ever more cracks.
For enhanced clarity and insight, I heartily anyone suggest to consult the seminal works on “Dependency Theory:” work by Johan Galtung, Raul Prebisch, Fernando Enrique Cardoso, etc.
“But running the population, industry and even governments into debt to an oligarchic elite is precisely what has occurred in the West, which is now trying to impose the modern variant of this debt-based economic regime – U.S.-centered neoliberal finance capitalism – on the entire world.”
Lot’s to think about Michael, as usual. The truly insidious aspect is that our debt payments to the oligarch finances our own demise. They cannot profit in a truly competitive, monopoly free, society without a bought and paid for government clearing their path for crime.
Not a scholar but isn’t this the working definition of Fascism?
I strongly disagree with many of his points, most especially his statist vision of prosperity.
The author is Michael Hudson, is President of The Institute for the Study of Long-Term Economic Trends (ISLET), a Wall Street Financial Analyst, Distinguished Research Professor of Economics at the University of Missouri, Kansas City. And like many economists he’s clearly Keynsian in outlook.
He’s also wrong; governments were not there to promote “equity” of economic outcome and never were. They were, in fact, almost always run by the wealthy and for the wealthy and the peasant did very poorly. Does anybody really think ancient China was in any way a government by and for the People? The peasants were nearly slaves to the wealthy, and especially to the Emperor, who often simply conscripted them to work for him.
I also don’t know anyone who took that idiotic book “The End of History” seriously.
He’s also wrong about Spain; their problems stemmed from bringing too much gold and silver back home and depressing the value of those precious metals. It had nothing to do with inequities or conquest but with a lack of understanding of the difference between wealth and money – the same problem we have today.
I know; this guy was speaking to the Chinese and wanted to butter then up, but I disagree with much of his poor assessment of Western Civilization. Much as Paley said of Gibbons “how do you refute a sneer?” In many ways this essay was a sneer. That said I do agree with some of it, especially about modern thinking on money and the New World Order aspect of this.
He is correct about the rising fiscal polarity in the West, and how it has become THE international program.
Hudson (this was adapted from a speech he gave in China) calls Chinese socialism a “return to basic ideas of resilience that characterized most civilization before classical Greece and Rome.” You know the kind that gave them grinding poverty and despotism nearly equal with the Communist.
Oh, and he also claims Margaret Thatcher destroyed Britain! I kid you not! He apparently doesn’t know how bad it was in Britain after decades of rule by Labour. And how it was Thatcher who largely brought the country back from the brink.
He’s also a bit confused on the historical timelines. And he fails to grasp the fact that the West is where the ideas of democracy came from – as well as other things such as pluralism and civil rights.
And he praises the Jubilee year in Israel and other debt forgiveness, but fails to understand that this means lenders only give out six year loans, thus credit is stifled for big ticket items (like homes.) Without long-term mortgages and the like it is impossible to buy such items for the working class. Hardly anybody owned their own homes in the “good old days” before mortgages. And why should there be debt forgiveness? The lenders put their own money out and now should simply eat it? That is guaranteed to stifle lending. He is an economist; he should know that.
I’m sorry, but 2500 years of Western Civilization is not an aberration. We advanced civilization and brought astounding prosperity for everyone. The current anger at our financial system is not based on any sort of oppression of the poor or whatnot, but rather is a result of overwhelming prosperity; people have the time to indulge covetousness and envy. You don’t have this in truly poor places. The current anti-Americanism is primarily a function of rich people looking for a grievance to occupy their time and make them feel as if they are being abused. We’ve created a culture that reveres being oppressed.
So what you think us debt slaves are too prosperous and they need a further beating so they wont revolt, being too busy with day to day survival.
Why not simply say you follow von Hayek’s Road to Serfdom.
Prof. von Hayek of the London School of Economics, his Tweedle Dum being Lord Maynard Keynes of the LSE, would like you to think some families have one, the LSE has Two!
Thatcher’s INA was a von Hayek stink-tank, the very same that invited the Chicago Boys Pinochet from Chile for tea-and-scones.
MMT is from Prof. Abba Lerner, NYC, who blurted out in 1971 that “if Germany had accepted Schacht’s Austerity, Hitler would not have been necessary” .
It was not Schacht’s Austerity, it was austerity imposed on Germany by the international bankers at the Treaty of Versailles of 1919 at the end of WW1.
When Hitler came to power in 1933 Schacht advised him how to create money debt free, just by printing it to pay the German workforce, putting them to work building autobahns and Volkswagens,
The bankers were outraged and ordered Neville Chamberlain, the British Prime Minister to declare war in Germany in 1939 and all that ensued.
All wars are bankers wars.
I agree wholeheartedly in everything the Mr Hudson says for it happens to be the Truth. You know truth? The one thing long lost in the west, who live on false promises and bogus motivational propaganda as to how great you are.
The reality is that the west has always stolen from the rest of the world to reach the past heights that you had. Yes HAD. Lest you forget; you took gunpowder from China, put it into the barrel of a gun then stole and enslaved the world.
The bankers that financed it are the very same bankers that financed all the European wars for greed. The same bankers that control the world today and the same people that control media and pretty much everything. Democracy? What an effi.g joke. That Mr Hudson does not mention racism or name bankers is child’s play for people abroad. They know who your daddy is.
Every wealthy empire had periods of creativity and progress towards civilisation. The Chinese like many others did it on their own.
After WW2, USA took all of Europe’s scientists, including Jews and Nazis, and because of a few homegrown achieved a certain amount. That pales in comparison to many previous empires.
Now all those people are dead, you rely on Chinese and Indians, but even they are leaving from the gun infested, racist chaotic place . It was the native Indians whose land you took, who taught you how to store grain and survive or else you would have perished. You then killed them off.
China’s empires were based on the same principles of the kings in Europe that Mr Hudson pointed out. The Chinese system Mr Hudson refers to is the new that replaced the old, so stop stretching facts to suit prejudice narrative. I can’t recall anything in the article mentioning Jews in debt forgiveness. I see Christ mentioned who was reputedly killed for sounding them out.
China is not in debt as some claim, and China does not need USA or white Europe as some of you hope and claim. What China and the rest of the world needs is for you/us to leave them alone, and keep your Zion led white racist supremacy to yourselves.
I wish Mr Hudson’s article is read all through Africa, Asia, south and central America and he is soon invited to Russia. It is that good!
This is the most amazing analysis of civilization that I have ever read. Mr Hudson is a unique person, amazing (to me) that he was born American.
The Times of London newspaper, opinion-editorial commentary, 1865
“If that mischievous financial policy, which had its origin in the North American Republic i.e. honest Constitutionally authorized debt-free money should become indurated down to a fixture, then that government will furnish its own money without cost. It will pay off its debts and be without a debt to the International Bankers. It will have all the money necessary to carry on its commerce. It will become prosperous beyond precedent in the history of the civilized governments of the world. The brains and wealth of all countries will go to North America. That government must be destroyed or it will destroy every monarchy on the globe!”
This was published just after the US Civil War, when Abraham Lincoln printed up debt free greenbacks instead of borrowing money from private banks, and this is the real reason why he was assassinated using the lone gunman strategy.
Well witten, Mr. Hudson, though instead of going back to imperial Rome ( by the way, I’m Italian… ), I’d rather would go back to Oliver Cromwell, whom during the 30 years war in Europe allowed the jews ( those expelled from Spain in 1492 ) who were in the Netherlands by then, to move into England. So this ended up with the foundation of the Bank Of England in 1694. After that, the British Empire ( where the sun never used to set, and also the looting ) spread around the world central banks based upon the Banking Seignorage – or can appropriately say usury -. All wars since 1694, produced enormous profits for the usurers, that now through the BIC ( bank of international settlements, in Basel, CH ), control most of the world’s central banks ( by the way all private…), except just a few, which ones ? Till 2000, Afghanistan, Iraq, Sudan, Libya, Cuba, North Korea, Iran, Syria. Today ? Cuba, North Korea, Iran and Syria, while Russia and China are gradually trying to free themselves from this yoke… Yes, sanctions, from whom ?
Oh, I missed this: ” Ubi Ius Belli, Ibi Ius Usurae”
—————–
Google-translate from mod:
Where the right of war, there is a right of interest
Good article! My impression is that many countries in the global south would like and will shift to the “BRICS” group, want to get loss from the “helps” of the US and IMF. At the end what will be left? Well I guess the US, Canada, Japan and Europe eating each other. Japan is already finished next is Europe (Germany) then probably Canada and Australia. Trudeau is BTW kind of dictator right?
China was famous for its landlord class, which taxed the peasants at 50%. Chaing Kai shek unsuccessfully attempted to lower it to 30%, and he did on Taiwan. It was general MacArthur who put in the Japanese constitution one person is limited to owning 10 acres.
Years ago I proposed that a jubilee via a constitutional amendment was the only genuine solution. I wonder what Dr. Hudson thinks of it:
https://strikelawyer.wordpress.com/2011/01/15/amending-the-constitution-the-jubilee-amendment/
The real reason for the western attempts at preventing any genuine organic Islamic movement to thrive is Islams rejection of usury and monopoly of the trading space, and means of exchange. The sharia ensures expropiation of wealth (land, resources etc.) through such means
The Caliphate supported by the mosques and guilds ensured a powerful counter balance to emergence of oligarchic rule and their usurpation of public wealth.
The space where the Caliph ensured the implementation of this non monopoly, non usurious trade with resultant prevention of the rise of an exploitive class of Oligarchs was called the Dawla or Emirate.
The role of the military was to protect the boundaries of this space and ensure a relatively smooth inclusion of other (exploited) spaces wishing to join it.
Correction
The sharia PREVENTS expropriation of wealth (land, resources etc.) through such means.
“Security of contracts” is enforced by a country, the US, that is not “agreement capable” herself. This is a typical mafioso behavior.
“History records that the money changers have used every form of abuse, intrigue, deceit, and violent means possible to maintain their control over governments by controlling money and its issuance.”
James Madison
One question is what are the plans of finnancial oligarchy for the next decade? Despite the hoccuspoccus of so many neo liberal agendas including war on Russia and Climate change, it looks as they are creating inflation to drive public debth to their vaults with huge interest rates gains. The Brasilian model of economics created the most profitable Banks in the world, public debth payment is more than 60% of state budget, no public investment and abundant bribing of legislative powers Maybe it is a hint on what they will doing next in a west global sphere. Of course finnancing wars is part of the business.
Despite warnings, Woodrow Wilson signed the 1913 Federal Reserve Act. A few years later he wrote: “I am a most unhappy man. I have unwittingly ruined my country. A great industrial nation is controlled by its system of credit. Our system of credit is concentrated. The growth of the nation, therefore, and all our activities are in the hands of a few men. We have come to be one of the worst ruled, one of the most completely controlled and dominated Governments in the civilized world no longer a Government by free opinion, no longer a Government by conviction and the vote of the majority, but a Government by the opinion and duress of a small group of dominant men.”
Woodrow Wilson
Lets cut to the chase; in the East, power controls money. In the West, money controls power.
The article is well articulated as far as it goes, but unfortunately it presents an overly simplistic world-view that fails to take many important factors into consideration. These omissions are so grave it almost entirely misses the point of what’s actually going on in the world.
For one thing, Western civilization is “Judeo-Christian”, which means its moral and legal system is underpinned by two religions: Judaism for the rulers, and Christianity for the ruled. The author applauds Judaism for practicing debt forgiveness, while failing to mention that this is *only* to be practiced between Jews, and that Judaism allows and even encourages Jews to exploit non-Jews through predatory usury.
The author also fails to note that many centuries of Jewish usury has resulted in a situation where practically the entire rentier class in the West is Jewish, so that the “Western problem” he speaks of is actually more correctly described as the problem of how Jews interact with non-Jews in an antisocial way. Christianity teaches just the kind of moral outlook the author asks for, but Judaism actually teaches the exact opposite!
According to Judaism, Jews have a higher form of soul, emanated from God, whereas non-Jews are akin to soulless animals, and were only created by God to serve Jews. This Jewish racial-supremacy-made-into-religion is the binding force that binds the Western rentier class together, and provides the much needed moral justification to make the rentier class feel good about their exploitation of others.
After thus having successfully avoided to pin the tail on the donkey, the author then goes on to paint the rising East as some form of antidote to the evils of “the West”. This is simply whitewashing, since China’s rise was also fueled by debt expansion. Even more so than the debt expansion in the West, in fact.
Common people have been reduced to serfs in the West by the (almost entirely Jewish) rentier class. That much is true. But people in China aren’t exactly better off, with the cost of owning a home exploding to the point where masses of young Chinese people simply give up and check out from even trying to make a life for themselves. Giving up and doing nothing is a social movement among young Chinese, because their situation is hopeless. Why bother working hard, when even the most fundamental rewards like a decent home are forever out of reach anyway?
Not to mention that the COVID police can smash in your door at any time on the flimsiest of pretexts, and proceed to destroy everything you own, with no compensation given. When you are this much of a serf, utterly powerless against the whims of the rulers, how can the Chinese be said to be better off?
My final point of contention, is that the author also whitewashes human history at large. He presents the era of kings and ruthless despots as some form of benevolent rule that benefited the people.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
The entire article can be summed up as “West bad, East good”. This level of analysis is pathetic.