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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-14-08 10:25 AM
Original message
Obama’s Chicago Boys by Naomi Klein
Barack Obama waited just three days after Hillary Clinton pulled out of the race to declare, on CNBC, “Look. I am a pro-growth, free-market guy. I love the market.”

Demonstrating that this is no mere spring fling, he has appointed 37-year-old Jason Furman to head his economic policy team. Furman is one of Wal-Mart’s most prominent defenders, anointing the company a “progressive success story.” On the campaign trail, Obama blasted Clinton for sitting on the Wal-Mart board and pledged, “I won’t shop there.” For Furman, however, it’s Wal-Mart’s critics who are the real threat: the “efforts to get Wal-Mart to raise its wages and benefits” are creating “collateral damage” that is “way too enormous and damaging to working people and the economy more broadly for me to sit by idly and sing ‘Kum-Ba-Ya’ in the interests of progressive harmony.” Obama’s love of markets and his desire for “change” are not inherently incompatible. “The market has gotten out of balance,” he says, and it most certainly has. Many trace this profound imbalance back to the ideas of Milton Friedman, who launched a counterrevolution against the New Deal from his perch at the University of Chicago economics department. And here there are more problems, because Obama–who taught law at the University of Chicago for a decade–is thoroughly embedded in the mind-set known as the Chicago School.

He chose as his chief economic adviser Austan Goolsbee, a University of Chicago economist on the left side of a spectrum that stops at the center-right. Goolsbee, unlike his more Friedmanite colleagues, sees inequality as a problem. His primary solution, however, is more education–a line you can also get from Alan Greenspan. In their hometown, Goolsbee has been eager to link Obama to the Chicago School. “If you look at his platform, at his advisers, at his temperament, the guy’s got a healthy respect for markets,” he told Chicago magazine. “It’s in the ethos of the , which is something different from saying he is laissez-faire.”

Another of Obama’s Chicago fans is 39-year-old billionaire Kenneth Griffin, CEO of the hedge fund Citadel Investment Group. Griffin, who gave the maximum allowable donation to Obama, is something of a poster boy for an unbalanced economy. He got married at Versailles and had the after-party at Marie Antoinette’s vacation spot (Cirque du Soleil performed)–and he is one of the staunchest opponents of closing the hedge-fund tax loophole. While Obama talks about toughening trade rules with China, Griffin has been bending the few barriers that do exist. Despite sanctions prohibiting the sale of police equipment to China, Citadel has been pouring money into controversial China-based security companies that are putting the local population under unprecedented levels of surveillance.

Now is the time to worry about Obama’s Chicago Boys and their commitment to fending off serious attempts at regulation. It was in the two and a half months between winning the 1992 election and being sworn into office that Bill Clinton did a U-turn on the economy. He had campaigned promising to revise NAFTA, adding labor and environmental provisions and to invest in social programs. But two weeks before his inauguration, he met with then-Goldman Sachs chief Robert Rubin, who convinced him of the urgency of embracing austerity and more liberalization. Rubin told PBS, “President Clinton actually made the decision before he stepped into the Oval Office, during the transition, on what was a dramatic change in economic policy.”

Furman, a leading disciple of Rubin, was chosen to head the Brookings Institution’s Hamilton Project, the think tank Rubin helped found to argue for reforming, rather than abandoning, the free-trade agenda. Add to that Goolsbee’s February meeting with Canadian consulate officials, who left with the distinct impression that they had been instructed not to take Obama’s anti-NAFTA campaigning seriously, and there is every reason for concern about a replay of 1993.

The irony is that there is absolutely no reason for this backsliding. The movement launched by Friedman, introduced by Ronald Reagan and entrenched under Clinton, faces a profound legitimacy crisis around the world. Nowhere is this more evident than at the University of Chicago itself. In mid-May, when university president Robert Zimmer announced the creation of a $200 million Milton Friedman Institute, an economic research center devoted to continuing and augmenting the Friedman legacy, a controversy erupted. More than 100 faculty members signed a letter of protest. “The effects of the neoliberal global order that has been put in place in recent decades, strongly buttressed by the Chicago School of Economics, have by no means been unequivocally positive,” the letter states. “Many would argue that they have been negative for much of the world’s population.”

When Friedman died in 2006, such bold critiques of his legacy were largely absent. The adoring memorials spoke only of grand achievement, with one of the more prominent appreciations appearing in the New York Times–written by Austan Goolsbee. Yet now, just two years later, Friedman’s name is seen as a liability even at his own alma mater. So why has Obama chosen this moment, when all illusions of a consensus have dropped away, to go Chicago retro?

The news is not all bad. Furman claims he will be drawing on the expertise of two Keynesian economists: Jared Bernstein of the Economic Policy Institute and James Galbraith, son of Friedman’s nemesis John Kenneth Galbraith. Our “current economic crisis,” Obama recently said, did not come from nowhere. It is “the logical conclusion of a tired and misguided philosophy that has dominated Washington for far too long.”

True enough. But before Obama can purge Washington of the scourge of Friedmanism, he has some ideological housecleaning of his own to do.

Naomi Klein is the author of many books, including her most recent, The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism.Visit Naomi’s website at www.naomiklein.org, or to learn more about her new book, visit www.shockdoctrine.com .

http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/06/14/9623/

Before anybody starts complaining about me posting this...it was just a matter of time before NK wrote about the Chicago problem. which is why I switched from Obama to Hillary on the day of the election in Ohio. I switched to send a message to Obama camp that in Ohio.. EVERYBODY HATES THE TRADE AGREEMENTS! This is not bothering me because I'm 55 years old and have been sold out by every Democrat I have ever voted for. BUT being slick won't work this time. The FTA's will be the NUMBER UNO issue in Ohio, whether anybody likes it or not.
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Captain Hilts Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-14-08 10:28 AM
Response to Original message
1. People have projected onto him a degree of 'progressivism' that the facts do not support.
Our political process encourages candidates to take the exact tacks as Obama is taking. He - and we - might be better off for it, actually - just as FDR turned on US participation in the World Court in order to secure his nomination. Eleanor and some of his aides didn't speak to him for days - but it shows that he is, above all, a 'politician'.

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rurallib Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-14-08 10:32 AM
Response to Reply #1
3. But when we have a choice between Obama & McCain
what do we do?
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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-14-08 10:34 AM
Response to Reply #3
4. We vote for Obama of course. But we work to change things from the bottom up.
The thugs are hopeless on this issue. They worship free trade.
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Captain Hilts Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-14-08 10:42 AM
Response to Reply #3
7. Pull the lever for Obama with great enthusiasm. nt
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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-14-08 10:36 AM
Response to Reply #1
6. But we have to vote for him anyway. He's all we got. But he needs to think about this.
Seriously. The people are pissed and not going away.
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glowing Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-14-08 10:30 AM
Response to Original message
2. I don't think globalization is a bad thing, I think the trade agreements are..
Its not ok to take jobs to another country and exploit them like slaves or in slavery for cheap products for the more developed areas of the world. We also need to examine what kind of lifestyle we want to embark on in this century? The entire world cannot expect to make it if we are to bring everyone to a level of consumption that our country is currently "entitled" to. No matter what, John McCain will be 10x's worse with the economy than Obama.. he really doesn't have an economic stance other than to say he likes the direction we are taking now.
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iamjoy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-14-08 10:35 AM
Response to Reply #2
5. It's Just Annoying Isn't It
John Edwards took all this heat in the primary for his involvement with Fortress and other actions that people claimed didn't match his political stances. It seems like Obama supporters were eager to point out those apparent hypocrisies. Now they are discovering that Obama's crap does stink after all.

Don't get me wrong, I like Obama and after Edwards dropped out preferred him to Hillary, but I never got caught up in the Obama worship.
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glowing Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-14-08 10:44 AM
Response to Reply #5
8. He has a message of inclussion.. and if we work together and if we
work from the ground up (which is why the local and state elections are far more important than the Presidential election) we can accomplish something real. That message is something the younger generation has been itching for. We want to push forward and be creative and embark on a new direction... but we are still "waiting our turn" as our boomer parents say...
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Captain Hilts Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-14-08 10:51 AM
Response to Reply #2
9. That's a nuance that people don't want to hear about. nt
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fasttense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-14-08 11:11 AM
Response to Original message
10. We are going to have to keep a very close eye on Obama.
I must say that once Bill got into office, I kind of took my eye off his political behavior. I kind of thought well he is a Democrat, he can't be supporting the rich like it looks. Well, I've learned my lesson. We have to keep a close watch on Obama and all the Democratic leaders we vote in. We have to make sure they hear from us the minute they go down that Milton Friedman/Pinochet road.
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Phred42 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jun-14-08 12:01 PM
Response to Original message
11. Obama is NOT all that Progressive - Here's how he stacks up
Edited on Sat Jun-14-08 12:02 PM by Phred42
against Progressives and the Reich

Keep in mind that this is a Reverse scale. F-0 is the true Progressive rating on this chart.

http://www.kirkusobscura.com/index.php?view=article&catid=37%3Aamericonia-news-and-information&id=52%3Athe-red-and-green-parties-senate&option=com_content&Itemid=11

However - He's the best we can do this time around. We're stuck with him.

Maybe becoming President will bring him left?
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yurbud Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-15-08 01:55 PM
Response to Original message
12. the correct response is to let Obama know neoliberalism will be a bigger albatross than Rev. Wright
Post on his website, send him letters and emails, and let him know that we will not tolerate a president who is only than republicans when graded on a curve, who gives us a few more bucks for social programs, but cuts our legs out from under us with trade and foreign policy.
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Straight Shooter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jun-15-08 03:07 PM
Response to Original message
13. I am not surprised. n/t
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brentspeak Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Original message
14. Naomi Klein: "Obama's Chicago Boys"
(It would be politically better for Obama to ditch the "Chicago boys" he's appointed as his economics advisors; getting rid of the neolibs around him would provide a greater contrast to McCain's proposed economics policies. More importantly, it's better for the nation.)
..............................................................................................

Obama's Chicago Boys

by Naomi Klein
June 16, 2008

Barack Obama waited just three days after Hillary Clinton pulled out of the race to declare, on CNBC, "Look. I am a pro-growth, free-market guy. I love the market."

Demonstrating that this is no mere spring fling, he has appointed 37-year-old Jason Furman to head his economic policy team. Furman is one of Wal-Mart's most prominent defenders, anointing the company a "progressive success story." On the campaign trail, Obama blasted Clinton for sitting on the Wal-Mart board and pledged, "I won't shop there." For Furman, however, it's Wal-Mart's critics who are the real threat: the "efforts to get Wal-Mart to raise its wages and benefits" are creating "collateral damage" that is "way too enormous and damaging to working people and the economy more broadly for me to sit by idly and sing 'Kum-Ba-Ya' in the interests of progressive harmony."

Obama's love of markets and his desire for "change" are not inherently incompatible. "The market has gotten out of balance," he says, and it most certainly has. Many trace this profound imbalance back to the ideas of Milton Friedman, who launched a counterrevolution against the New Deal from his perch at the University of Chicago economics department. And here there are more problems, because Obama — who taught law at the University of Chicago for a decade —is thoroughly embedded in the mind-set known as the Chicago School.

(snip)

Now is the time to worry about Obama's Chicago Boys and their commitment to fending off serious attempts at regulation. It was in the two and a half months between winning the 1992 election and being sworn into office that Bill Clinton did a U-turn on the economy. He had campaigned promising to revise NAFTA, adding labour and environmental provisions and to invest in social programs. But two weeks before his inauguration, he met with then-Goldman Sachs chief Robert Rubin, who convinced him of the urgency of embracing austerity and more liberalization. Rubin told PBS, "President Clinton actually made the decision before he stepped into the Oval Office, during the transition, on what was a dramatic change in economic policy..."


http://www.rabble.ca/columnists_full.shtml?x=72566


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Skink Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #14
15. Free markets scare Dems.....
It's a problem.
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brentspeak Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #15
16. What's the problem?
Edited on Mon Jun-16-08 11:16 PM by brentspeak
"Free" markets -- or the "fear" of "free" markets? Enjoy being crushed financially thanks to Milton Friedman's acolytes? Or are you one of those acolytes, doing the crushing?
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JCMach1 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #15
18. "Free Markets" as defined and controled by the Chicago School
have brought us to the brink we find ourselves now!

Klein is absolutely right to be highly suspicious of what the nominee brings to the economic table.
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sam sarrha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #15
19. no such thing ... the speculative oil/mortgag/food bubble is a result of the so called free market,
Edited on Mon Jun-16-08 11:29 PM by sam sarrha
it is a small group of Faso-Corporatist who rigged the rules by having a political crony slip the Enron loop hole in a bill, it is costing us our country, our freedom, our constitution.. our children's future.. it isn't free trade, its rigged for the rich to get richer on our last dollar


http://www.onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_3252.shtml
The price of crude oil today is not made according to any traditional relation of supply to demand. It’s controlled by an elaborate financial market system as well as by the four major Anglo-American oil companies. As much as 60 percent of today’s crude oil price is pure speculation driven by large trader banks and hedge funds. It has nothing to do with the convenient myths of Peak Oil. It has to do with control of oil and its price. How?

First, the crucial role of the international oil exchanges in London and New York is crucial to the game. NYMEX in New York and the ICE Futures in London today control global benchmark oil prices which, in turn, set most of the freely traded oil cargo. They do so via oil futures contracts on two grades of crude oil: West Texas Intermediate and North Sea Brent.

A third rather new oil exchange, the Dubai Mercantile Exchange (DME), trading Dubai crude, is more or less a daughter of NYMEX, with NYMEX President James Newsome sitting on the board of DME and most key personnel British or American citizens.


http://www.star-telegram.com/ed_wallace/story/651928.html
t ready for the next shock to your system. In the past month we have added 11.9 million barrels of oil into our stock reserves, giving us 32.3 million more barrels of oil than we had on hand January 1. On May 5, we found out that for the second time in as many years, Iran was storing its excess crude oil on tankers in the Persian Gulf, because it had run out of storage space in the desert and was awaiting buyers for its heavy crude. That same day Saudi Arabia cut the discount price for its Arabian Heavy crude to $7.45, hoping to entice more buyers for immediate delivery. We didn’t hear that news, either.

While researching my third article for BusinessWeek online about the world’s oil situation in 2008, I asked for the most current report from Oil Movements. Because the oil industry is not transparent, Oil Movements tracks every tanker at sea, from both OPEC and non-OPEC oil countries, along with their cargoes’ final destinations. Anne O’Shea responded immediately to my request with their report dated May 8, 2008. Just so you will know, oil shipments are up from a year ago in almost every class, including Middle East oil in transit and Non-OPEC in Transit. The only class of oil shipment that has declined is covered on page 3 of that report. That chart is labeled, "4-Week Changes in Westbound Oil at Sea."

That’s right, shipments of oil headed west have shown serious declines during the month of April, down 800,000 barrels per day in the week before the publication of the report. Now, let me give you the first line from under the Westbound Oil shipments chart: "In the west, a big share of any stock building done this year has happened offshore, out of sight."

Could this be true? Oil Movements, the unimpeachable source for finding the real world situation on oil transits, is saying that oil is being hidden offshore, not declared in inventories? Yes, that is exactly what they are saying.

That same week our refineries cut their production runs back to 85 percent, down from 89 percent a year ago, to trim more gasoline out of our stock reserves, to increase their profits per gallon.


http://www.star-telegram.com/ed_wallace/story/659081.html
'

What you have on the financial side is a bunch of money being thrown at the energy futures market. It’s just pulling in more and more cash. That’s the side of the market where we have runaway demand, not on the physical side."

— Tim Evans, Senior Oil Analyst, IFR Energy Services

The Love of Money

Record high prices without record low oil inventories, analysts saying that so much money flows into oil commodities that it gives the impression of shortages, when in fact no shortage exists. That mirrors the situation in the commodities market for food, as Bloomberg pointed out in its April 28 article, "Wall Street Grain Hoarding Brings Farmers, Consumers Near Ruin": "Commodity investors control more U.S. crops than ever before, competing with governments and consumers for dwindling food supplies." That’s right; food, oil and gasoline have become an "asset class." No longer are you fighting a neighbor at the supermarket over the last box of Cheerios®; now you’re fighting the futures traders, who are actually determining what you will pay for that cereal.


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Beregond2 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #19
20. It is absurd to even talk about a "free market,"
when there has never been one.
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izquierdista Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #20
26. There probably are ones
But certainly not where everyone who defends them would like to see them. I've never seen the Northern Lights, but I have read about them and seen pictures. I'll believe that they exist and that people go to Scandinavia and Alaska to see them. But I'm not going to believe that every time I seen a green light at night that they are the Northern Lights; I've driven by the MGM Grand too many times to be taken in by that ruse.

Probably the closest thing that comes to being a free market is the weekly farmer's market and swap meet that are held in many locales across the U.S. -- low barrier to entry for both buyers and sellers, easy exchange of price information, supply and demand can be readily assessed by both buyers and sellers, and transactions are cleared on the spot in cash. But oil, gasoline, processed food products, mortgage rates? I think those people have been staring at too many flashing green lights.
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Cleita Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #14
17. I agree with her and
this is why Obama was not my first nor second choice. But the people have spoken and I guess we are going to have to pull him over to more Keynesian economics than Goolsbee has to offer.
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Skink Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #17
22. There are no free markets.....MK..
Unbrideled capatalism, yeah baby!!!!
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pocoloco Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #14
21. Was there a Leo Strauss, Milton Friedman connection
at the U of Chicago???


just checking
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Skink Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #21
24. They both channeled Regan. Who knew.
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sam sarrha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #21
27.  here is some info..
Edited on Mon Jun-16-08 11:46 PM by sam sarrha
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sam sarrha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #21
29. the scary part of strauss was his clost philosophical ties with Friedrich Nietzsche, was bat shit
crazy from syphilis of the brain.. any folower of Nietzche was/is tainted with the same slimy braineating insanity..


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leo_Strauss
"snip...Strauss partially approached the ideas of Friedrich Nietzsche and Søren Kierkegaard through his understanding of Martin Heidegger, which he placed under the general rubric of "existentialism", a movement with a "flabby periphery" but a "hard center" in the thought of Heidegger.<6> He wrote that Nietzsche was the first philosopher to properly understand relativism, an idea grounded in a general acceptance of Hegelian historicism. Yet Heidegger, in Strauss's view, sanitized and politicized Nietzsche. Whereas Nietzsche believed "our own principles, including the belief in progress, will become as relative as all earlier principles had shown themselves to be" and "the only way out seems to be...that one voluntarily choose life-giving delusion instead of deadly truth, that one fabricate a myth".<7>, Heidegger himself believed that the tragic nihilism of Nietzsche was itself a "myth" formed by mankind, not guided "
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pocoloco Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 10:10 AM
Response to Reply #29
35. Thanks for the info Sam!
This was a question I really didn't want to ask!
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sam sarrha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #14
23. i knew he was toooo Fuck'n good to be true..!!!!! god damned Corporatist NeoCon, we are DOOMED
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MarjorieG Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #23
31. A little harsh.
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sam sarrha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 06:35 AM
Response to Reply #31
34. harsh.. here is a link>> he believes in free market.. oil should be $60 barrel, 150 is free market
Edited on Tue Jun-17-08 06:50 AM by sam sarrha
his echonomic people are Chicago boys.. no regulation of speculation, or Corportists.. we are doomed, they are eating us alive

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080630/klein
snip... "The market has gotten out of balance," he /obama/ says, and it most certainly has. Many trace this profound imbalance back to the ideas of Milton Friedman, who launched a counterrevolution against the New Deal from his perch at the University of Chicago economics department. And here there are more problems, because Obama--who taught law at the University of Chicago for a decade--is thoroughly embedded in the mind-set known as the Chicago School. ...snip"

snip"...Another of Obama's Chicago fans is 39-year-old billionaire Kenneth Griffin, CEO of the hedge fund Citadel Investment Group. Griffin, who gave the maximum allowable donation to Obama, is something of a poster boy for an unbalanced economy. He got married at Versailles and had the after-party at Marie Antoinette's vacation spot (Cirque du Soleil performed)--and he is one of the staunchest opponents of closing the hedge-fund tax loophole...snip"

http://www.onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_3252.shtml
May 5, 2008, 00:19
The price of crude oil today is not made according to any traditional relation of supply to demand. It’s controlled by an elaborate financial market system as well as by the four major Anglo-American oil companies. As much as 60 percent of today’s crude oil price is pure speculation driven by large trader banks and hedge funds. It has nothing to do with the convenient myths of Peak Oil. It has to do with control of oil and its price. How?


First, the crucial role of the international oil exchanges in London and New York is crucial to the game. NYMEX in New York and the ICE Futures in London today control global benchmark oil prices which, in turn, set most of the freely traded oil cargo. They do so via oil futures contracts on two grades of crude oil: West Texas Intermediate and North Sea Brent.

A third rather new oil exchange, the Dubai Mercantile Exchange (DME), trading Dubai crude, is more or less a daughter of NYMEX, with NYMEX President James Newsome sitting on the board of DME and most key personnel British or American citizens.
l.com/artman/publish/article_3252.shtml

http://www.star-telegram.com/ed_wallace/story/651928.html
snip"...Fiddling While We Burn
There it is in plain sight for everyone to see, exactly what I’ve been reporting for the past few years: Many individuals who are investing in oil and natural gas futures are going out in the media and trying to convince the American public that either we are out of oil or there is a serious supply shortage of crude against worldwide demand. The question is: Does it surprise you to discover that the US Senate investigated the rigging of the oil market by speculators in the summer of 2006 – and concluded that there was no supply and demand problem with oil? Did you know that their conclusion was that speculators were responsible for a 70 percent overcharge in the price of oil in the months leading up to the summer of 2006? ..."snip

snip"...Professor Michael Greenberger of the University of Maryland, a former board member of the Commodities Futures Trading Commission, testified in front of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce on December 14 of last year. Under discussion that day was the manipulation of the energy markets and prices, but Professor Greenberger added these comments: "Three, four months from now, you’re going to have a hearing on the subprime meltdown, and you’re going to find that the very same legislation deregulated something called collateralized debt obligations, CDOs." That legislation, friends, directly ties the mortgage meltdown to the high price of energy today..."snip

http://www.star-telegram.com/ed_wallace/story/659081.html
snip"...No Conscience in Congress?

All you hear daily is that the world has a severe shortage of oil, or you can buy only 200 pounds of rice at one time, or we will have a gasoline crisis this summer, etc. But it takes only a minute to find hundreds of quotes from highly respected oil and economic analysts, (not to mention CEOs of the major oil companies), that completely dismiss the claim of oil, gas or food shortages that have been headlining the news.

Even more troubling is that within months of the CFMA’s going into effect, we knew it had enabled easy manipulation of any energy market, but nothing was done to fix it. Nor was anything done when the Senate held its hearings on this matter in 2006, or in the House hearings last December.

Today we call this situation the "Enron Loophole," but that’s untrue. It’s not a loophole: it was a new law passed in 2000 – and far more individuals than Ken Lay have used that law to line their pockets with hundreds of billions of American consumers’ hard-earned dollars. That’s not my opinion, that’s direct testimony by numerous experts before both the House and Senate.

Professor Greenberger warned about our "New American Economy" far better than I could:

"Should we have an economy that’s based on whether people make good or bad bets? Or should we have an economy where people build companies, create manufacturing, do inventions, advance the American society and make it more productive? We are rewarding people for sitting at their computers and punching in bets. That’s not the way our economy is going to be built, and India and China, with their focus on science and industry and building real businesses, are going to eat our lunch, unless the American public wakes up and puts an end to an economy that praises and makes heroes out of speculators...."
snip
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Bob Dobbs Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #14
25. The real definition of "free" markets
is that giant, unregulated capital is free to migrate to the lowest wage labor markets worldwide, driving down labor wages worldwide, in a race to the bottom for 98% of us. This, in turn, further consolidates capital into larger quantities held by fewer and fewer hands.

So, the elite are "free" to screw us to the maximum while being completely unregulated.

That is busholini's brand of "freedom" and what "free" markets are all about.
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Fovea Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #25
28. We have a winner!
Spot on.
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MarjorieG Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #14
30. Obama is critical of the 90's deregulation excess, but correction takes a deft touch.
Married to a business journalist (who always rallies about corporate greed) for almost 40 years I've heard a lot about Friedman and Paul Samuelson, his opposite and sparring partner.

We can't ignore markets and we can't ignore the newer technologies. The older manufacturing won't come back, and much too labor intensive to compete globally. Small and mid-sized business, incentives to encourage entrepreneurship have always been key.

Let's all relax a little with labels. What I've learned about Obama makes me very hopeful about his judgment, about his tendency to seek all opinions. Weigh all the options. Considering what we face in deficits, opposition and polarization, I trust him to get pragmatic results without the games we had in the 90's. Compromise, yes, but with a stronger push to progressive goals.
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bjobotts Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #14
32. This is exactly what I feared would happen. Can't we get this message out
It is being ignored because no lib wants to criticize Obama right now for fear of McCain using it to his advantage but these Chicago Boy mentalities are so dangerous to our economy and to our democracy.

Has Obama even read the "Shock Doctrine"?
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rodeodance Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jun-17-08 05:10 AM
Response to Reply #32
33. Seems O. has not read the "Shock Doctrine".
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