Here is a must-see video: 137 pages of foreclosure notices in the Detroit Free Press BEFORE the bailout and resulting layoffs from the big three auto makers:

In 1989, while I was serving as Assistant Secretary of Housing, my staff noted that there was one town in which 70% of all the mortgages in the town were in default and owned by FHA, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae.

I suggested that the town or county create a trust or corporate structure and swap stock in the entity for the mortgages. Such an idea was not possible then. It is now. Today, many of the defaulted mortgages are owned by private financial institutions. However, they are dependent on federal bailouts. So, it would be federal financing that would be financing the debt-equity swaps.

The Solari ReportIn later proposals, I suggested that the federal government provide waivers to allow for significant reengineering of federal spending, contracts and regulations within the area where doing so would improve return on investment to taxpayers. Indeed, take those two steps along with grassroots efforts for community gardens, local food coops, community currencies, and various transition town and financial permaculture options and you could really start to create vitality on the ground. And that is before integrating suppressed energy and health care technology which could be incredible.

Somehow, we have to see through the big lies. First is that the economy is in trouble. The economy is not in trouble. Our spirit and the culture is in trouble. We can’t build a strong economy by marketing drugs and the war on drugs into our communities. We can’t build a strong economy by making it impossible for teachers to teach. We can’t build a strong economy by permitting trillions of financial fraud and theft from the government. We can’t build a strong economy by taxing people so we can subsidize large corporations who make products that people don’t want and don’t need. If we make money by doing things that help people to fail, then our economy will fail. This is, however, a political problem. It is not first and foremost an economic problem.

Hence, giving lawless institutions more money to help the economy get moving will not work. It will simply rape more out of the real economy. It is monetary and financial racketeering. The message is “crime pays.” More bonuses for speculators, less money for engineers, scientists and teachers. The message is one designed to destroy the morale of honest, hardworking people throughout the economy.

Another big lie is that we need the banks to lend. We don’t need more debt. We need the stolen money returned. We need existing laws enforced. We need lawfulness. We need income. We need equity. We also need to be able to invest our equity where we want. Millions of Americans lose millions every day gambling on the lottery or going to casinos. At the same time, unless we are millionaires, it is nearly impossible to buy stock in our local businesses. Federal regulation says that it is “too risky” to invest in ourselves and our neighbors.

A really big lie is that we need consumption to keep the economy going. Indeed, if we start to circulate equity locally and through our networks, we can create a financial system in which we generate savings and financial capital gains from reducing consumption and building alignment between our financial ecosystems and our natural ecosystems. Indeed, the healthier the local environment or the better the local education and cultural life, the more it would cause stock values to rise.

I appreciate that this is not an attractive idea for the people who profit from selling $1 trillion plus of weapons and military services, but perhaps they would change if we collectively could find a way to tell them, “no.”

America’s economy is suffering from economic warfare and an organized crime tax designed to destroy it. The strength of the economy and of the American people despite this onslaught speaks volumes about the extraordinary wealth potential of America, our people and our democratic spirit.

Extraordinary wealth is possible. What is required is a change in spirit, in culture and in politics. To paraphrase Utah Phillips, “our economy is not dying, it is being killed. And the people killing it have names and addresses.”

Forget bailouts. Let’s stop doing those things that are destroying our real economy and let’s stop financing and supporting the people who are doing it.

9 Comments

  1. Dear Catherine: Well said…yet I am reminded that it may take a collective gestalt to move the masses..Much like your prior aweful experience with the federal government, “they” too ( the enforcement policies and it’s beaurocracy?? ) opposed my livelihood, and unlike your experience, I was federally incarcerated ( I’m not certain which could be judged worse ); and so, in my mind the government is not held in very high esteem…and in reality not for some time dating back to the 1960’s. I am reminded of Stephen and Ina May Gaskin’s ( Tennessee ) FARM and the caravan he organized to tour around the country. He proposed a simple message-Love One Another-Get back to the Land. These are perilous times; and the powers that be must be aware that they are treading on many people’s lives who have a boiling point…I am reminded of the frog in the slowly simmering boiling pot of water…With each week another bailout proposal is announced, and implimented; and yet the “folks”, as Bill O’Reilly likes to “them”, are not outwardly alarmed-nor are they rebellious–I suppose most Americans are easily manipulated..that’s my opinion.. they must be… otherwise how could they permit a $7.8 trillion outpouring into the financial system and not for a minute seem alarmed ( that’s 50% of our annual national GDP )–Have we been that muted as a society?? Were the founders so much more attuned so as to raise up and rebel??? And for a Tea Tax???–true they were not the majority by a long shot–But their cause was just and the British whose step child we were, were defeated ( with the aid of Hessians and the French )…It’s Black Friday-you know-shopping day–What I recall is that retailers from year to year depend on this weekend to fill their balance sheets with nearly 50% of their yearly business–WOW!! One weekend!!! Members of my family still maintain a family owned hardware/janitorial supplies business in NYC…they face severe times. Yet their love of oppulence will be their downfall—In general not many people are prepared for another Great Depression…not many live on the farm anymore, have mechanical skills nor the minimal talents it takes to gear down to a relatively hand to mouth economy…The psychology to persevere has been washed away from our collective memories and much pain is in front of those who are unable to prepare. This era will bring about an enormous retrenching in the common man a renewal of ethics and values of decencey or we will all perish..I look forward to your future kind words and solutions for those who have ears. warm regards, Richard Gordon CP

  2. My impression: There are already formed groups that could run with financial permaculture if they GET IT…gain the vision…it’s aligned with their missions. I recommend a 3-4 paragraph starter that we can incorporate into our communication in our communities to these types of groups.

    The section above about seeing through the big lies is key.

    Thanks for you vision, and action,

    Brad

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