I have long suggested that it is possible to reverse America’s debt woes through either cutting spending on wars and bailouts, or raising taxes on the super rich, or both. Some, like Congressman Ron Paul favour the cuts route. Today, Paul B. Farrell, one of my favourite columnists on the entire internet, presents a compelling argument for the taxation route:
SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (MarketWatch) — What a year. Rage in London, Egypt, Athens, Damascus. All real. Just a metaphor in the new “Planet of the Apes” film? No, much more. Warning: More rage is dead ahead. Across our planet a new generation is filled with rage. High unemployment. Raging inflation. Dreams lost. Hope gone. While the super -rich get richer and richer.
Listen to that hissing: The fuse is rapidly burning, warning us. Wake up before the rage explodes in your face. This firestorm is endangering America’s future. From forces outside, yes. But far more deadly, from deep within our collective psyche. We have lost our moral compass. We are self-destructing.
Crackpot warning? No. This warning comes from the elite International Monetary Fund. A recent IMF report looked at “the causes of the two major U.S. economic crises over the past 100 years, the Great Depression of 1929 and the Great Recession of 2007,” writes Rana Foroohar, an economics editor at Time magazine.
“There are two remarkable similarities in the eras that preceded these crises. Both saw a sharp increase in income inequality and household-debt-to-income ratios.” And in each case, “as the poor and middle-class were squeezed, they tried to cope by borrowing to maintain their standard of living.”
But the rich “got richer, by lending, and looked for more places to invest, bidding up securities that eventually exploded in everyone’s face. In both eras, financial deregulation and loose monetary policies played roles in creating the bubble. But inequality itself — and the political pressure not to reverse it, but to hide it — was a crucial factor in the meltdown. The shrinking middle isn’t a symptom of the downturn. It’s the source of it.” Today the consequences of the meltdown still haunt us — there’s more to come.
Get it? There’s enormous “political pressure not to reverse” inequality till it “explodes in our faces.” We deny the inequality between rich and the other 99%. The rich are addicts. More is never enough. They thrive on greed, blind to the needs of others. Worse, they have no commitment to America as a nation. From Forbes billionaires and signers of “no new taxes” pledges, to Mitch McConnell’s un-American willingness to sabotage the economy to deliver on his main promise to make Obama a one-term president.
Yes folks, the new “Rise of the Planet of the Apes” film delivers a powerful warning paralleling the IMF red flags. Here’s the scenario. What’s ahead for America as the inequality gap gets bigger, the job market stagnates, inflation rages, a double-dip recession nears. Hasan’s vision goes beyond metaphor. We see a psychological profile of America as an addict lost in an addiction. And like all addicts, we cannot see, nor stop, our self-destructive behavior:
“The Apes series has always been about self-inflicted wounds — the idea that man’s unquenchable hubris inevitably leads to catastrophic consequences both for himself and those around him, whether manifested through cruelty to animals or cruelty to himself.”
In the new film, our world is facing “the twin threats” of genetic engineering and a super-virus. But the central theme remains: “Man’s downfall comes as a result of his own actions.”
The original “Planet of the Apes” went deeper, speaking more to America’s fatally flawed mind: “Beware the beast Man, for he is the Devil’s pawn.” In this early scene, Dr. Cornelius, the anthropologist, an orangutan, is reading aloud from the ancient sacred scrolls of the Apes: “Alone among God’s primates, he kills for sport or lust or greed.” Yes, that reminds us of Goldman’s war to dominate the great Wall Street jungle.
He keeps reading from the scrolls: “Yea, he will murder his brother to possess his brother’s land. Let him not breed in great numbers, for he will make a desert of his home and yours. Shun him; drive him back into his jungle lair, for he is the harbinger of death.”
Yes, evolution is reversing. Here a prophecy comes true. The Apes knew our brains were saboteurs, destroying our rightful place at the top of the jungle’s food chain: “Man is a nuisance. He eats up his food supply in the forest, then migrates to our green belts and ravages our crops. The sooner he is exterminated, the better.”
Warning: The rage is sweeping London, Damascus, Tripoli, the spreading Sahara desert. Is America next?
Yes, tax the super-rich. Tax them now, before the other 99% rise up, trigger a new American Revolution, another meltdown, a new Great Depression. Historically, revolutions build over long periods, bubbles growing to critical mass. Then, “something happens.” Suddenly. Unpredictably. A flashpoint triggers ignition. Nobody saw it coming in Egypt. A suicide in a remote village uploaded on a young Google executive’s Facebook page. Goes viral, raging out of control. Cannot be stopped. So think hard about these six warnings blowing a new mega-bubble that will soon explode in our collective faces:
1. Warning: High unemployment is a global ticking time bomb
An earlier special report in Time, “Poor vs. Rich: A New Global Conflict,” warns that a “conflict between two worlds — one rich, one poor — is developing, and the battlefield is the globe itself.”
Just 25 developed nations with 750 million citizens “consume most of the world’s resources … enjoy history’s highest standard of living.” But now they face 100 poor nations with 2 billion people, many living in poverty, all demanding “an ever larger share of that wealth.” A British leader calls this a “time bomb for the human race.”
2. Warning: Tax cuts for the rich increase youth unemployment
In a New York Times column, Matthew Klein, a 24-year-old Council on Foreign Relations researcher, saw the parallel between the 25% unemployment among Egypt’s young and the 21% for young Americans: “The young will bear the brunt of the pain” as governments rebalance budgets. “Taxes on workers will be raised, spending on education will be cut while mortgage subsidies and entitlements for the elderly are untouchable.” And more tax cuts for the rich.
3. Warning: Rich get richer on commodity inflation, poor get angrier
USAToday’s John Waggoner warned: “Soaring food prices send millions into poverty, hunger.” The “rise in food prices means a descent into extreme poverty and hunger, warns the World Bank.” One Pimco manager warns that commodity inflation exposes “the underlying inequalities and issues related to the standard of living that boil beneath the surface.”
4. Warning: The super-rich are blinded by their addiction to money
In “Free Lunch: How the Wealthiest American Enrich Themselves at Government Expense (And Stick You with the Bill),” David Cay Johnston warns that the rich are like addicts, and to “the addicted, money is like cocaine, too much is never enough.” Recent data: 300,000 Americans in “the top tenth of 1% of income had nearly as much income as all 150 million Americans who make up the economic lower half of our population.”
5. Warning: Politicians are corrupted by this super-rich addiction to greed
In “Washington’s Suicide Pact,” Newsweek’s Ezra Klein warns: “Congress is careening toward the worst of all worlds: massive job losses and an exploding deficit.” And the debt-ceiling drama just made things a lot worse. Millions of jobs were lost during Bush years, his wars, tax cuts for the rich. Yet, today the GOP is in total denial of that legacy, blinded by an obsession to destroy Obama’s presidency, no matter the consequences.
6. Warning: Soon the revolutionaries will rage, then dominate ‘Third World America’
Yes, we are ripe for a surprise revolution. In “Third World America” Arianna Huffington warns: “Washington rushed to the rescue of Wall Street but forgot about Main Street.” Now Bernanke’s promise of cheap money through 2013 is just one more “free lunch” to the richest 1%. Meanwhile, “one in five Americans unemployed or underemployed. One in nine families unable to make the minimum payment on their credit cards. One in eight mortgages in default or foreclosure. One in eight Americans on food stamps. Upward mobility has always been at the center of the American Dream … that promise has been broken… The American Dream is becoming a nightmare.”
Wake up folks. Super-rich addicts are destroying the American Dream for everyone. They’re destroying the American economy. They don’t care about you. Yes, they hear the ticking time bomb. They’re stockpiling cash. Don’t say you weren’t warned. The IMF sees a new collapse sweeping across the planet. Open your eyes. You’re not watching a film. This is not a metaphor. Plan now for the revolution, class warfare, market crash, economic collapse, plan for another depression.

“Listen to that hissing: The fuse is rapidly burning, warning us.” No way it’s J.K rowlings spawn Harry potter talking to us in Parseltongue.
Yes folks, the new “Rise of the Planet of the Apes” film delivers a powerful warning paralleling the IMF red flags.
No worries the NEO cons have family-happy camps built over the past Decade wich will faciltate the housing and food needs, including Railroad-tracks, Chimneys and it will be manned with government payed personell from the National Reserve and ofcourse the much apperciated FEMA staff with their awesome “non-toxic” trailers to house Kneegrows in New Orleans. (Loaf of bread and water
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Anyways everything is ready to rock ! It seems in your last topic the Anti-christ has spawned again.
The solution is not to collect more taxes, rather it is to use the tax money in an efficient way. Currently our taxes are used to pay interest on borrowed money and to pay for wasteful endeavors like the war on drugs and the war on terror and to pay for bloated pensions and salaries for publics employees (think prisons, law and order, police, fire, and lets not forget teachers) that mostly do nothing but collect a paycheck. On top of that our leaders give away our tax money to bankers that killed the economy. So Mr Buffet may get more bang for his buck if directly contributes to creating productive jobs instead of sending money into the black hole that is the gov.
I largely agree with you. Nonetheless there is a strong argument that seeing as there is such a massive deficit, and seeing as govt redistribution is mostly to the super-rich via the military industrial complex, that it is only fair that monies collected to balance the budget (especially given that slashing domestic spending right now would cause a kind of short term gdp collapse) come from those who have benefited most from the uncosted deficit spending.
Nonetheless, even while i recognise Paul Farrell has a legitimate argument, I have never heard anything as moronic as Warren Buffett. If he wants more of his money to help create jobs and infrastructure why doesn’t he just create the jobs himself? He has the money to. If I had Warren Buffett’s money the first thing I would do is risk a huge chunk of it on alternative energy infrastructure. That would create a lot of jobs.
You hate the “super-rich”, every last one of them, and bitterly complain that they don’t care about poor little you. Why should they? If someone hates you because of your race, religion, or social class, what do you care if he starves to death?
Here’s news for you: Free citizens of the USA, Switzerland, and Israel have no use for this class-warfare bullshit, and any Third World mob that tries to “redistribute” their hard-earned wealth will receive only hot lead.
I don’t hate anybody. I think of people as individuals, not as classes. What I do know is that a huge slice of billionaires (>60%) in the Western systems you mention are rich through corporatism, and through the misadventures of the military industrial complex, and on the shoulders of the infrastructure created by government and labour (100%).
The reality of modern government requires paying down a whole lot of debt. In America, a lot of that debt would not have been accrued if it had not been for the Bush Tax Cuts. So who should foot that bill? The middle classes, who have barely received a squeak? The poor who have only the skin on their backs? Or the billionaires who benefit most from corporatist funding, bailouts and contracts for bombs and weapons? And more importantly, taxing billionaires doesn’t leave them with less liberty. They can still invest, they can still create jobs, they can still travel, and they can still enjoy life. It’s not class warfare: it’s personal responsibility. You take the funding and reap the rewards, you foot the bill.
Again there are two ways of getting out of this mess: stop spending on war and bailouts, or raise taxes on those who have benefited from them. I don’t really care which, because they both achieve fundamentally the same thing. I will support a guy like Ron Paul who will do it the libertarian way, just as much as I will support a guy like Paul B. Farrell, who will do it in a less libertarian way.
I don’t give a damn about redistribution. All I want the government to do is maintain a level playing field, create infrastructure and uphold the rule of law. Billionaires need those same things as me. But only insiders, billionaires, corrupt politicians and bureaucrats benefit from corporatism.
Iim a libertarian, so i tend to think that the least government is the best government, but you just fucken OWNED that dave guy, Aziz.
I wrote the PLANET OF THE APES review that Mr. Farrell cites, and can I just say, I’ve been absolutely tickled at how far my words have reached by virtue of piggybacking off him. What’s somewhat ironic is that I wrote a HuffPo piece arguing very much for the same thing that Mr. Farrell is, but it’s the APES review that got me cited.