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The End of the World as we know it!
by quin Friday, Jul 24 2009, 10:49pm
international / social/political / opinion/analysis

How do YOU feel?

At the most critical period of our very short history, instead of recovery, WE ARE CHARGING FULL SPEED TO OUR COLLECTIVE DESTRUCTION; it seems this (insane) pursuit is the best we can manage in the current circumstances – how utterly tragic!

WE need not have taken this course but the Cheney's, Obama's and all the other puppet ‘leaders,’ installed by Corporate/Bankster ruling minorities, have DECIDED FOR US; so WE, in ALL OUR COLLECTIVE 'WISDOM' AND limitless COMPLACENCY, allowed ourselves to be herded BY SELF-CONFESSED CRIMINALS, PSYCHOPATHS and ROGUES, baa’aa – give me a break!

NONE of us can effect change alone or in small groups BUT EFFECT CHANGE WE MUST – COLLECTIVELY -- if we intend to survive.

I was ‘floored’ by a recent comment relating to the content on this site, staggered in fact! A relatively young person read a random set of posts and stated it was all “too depressing,” WHAT! Since when is attempting to salvage our lives and live in PEACE, in a tenable world, DEPRESSING? What is really depressing is surrendering our God given sovereignty to a bunch of sociopaths and avaricious mass murderers – we have seen their ‘solutions’ over the past DECADE and for those in TOTAL denial, it’s WAR, civilian holocausts and more WAR -- that REALITY is in OUR FACES! Never mind runaway climate change and the arctic permafrost melting like an ice-cube on a hot plate -- releasing millions of tonnes of methane and carbon dioxide into the atmosphere all the while -- better to watch Fox ‘news’ or follow the exploits of Paris ‘vacuum-head’ Hilton, you numb, mindless fuck’s!

‘D-E-P-R-E-S-S-I-N-G,’ for Christ’s sake! How have they managed to lobotomise an entire generation of our ONCE VISIONARY and VITAL youth?

It seems this particular clown’s attitude reflects a generation; ‘we can’t do anything about it [WRONG] so let’s follow the PRESCRIPTION handed to us by ‘Cheney’s’ marketers -- hedonism, narcissism and self-centredness;’ which happen to be the three most destructive forces of social cohesion! So, whatever you do, stay depressed and alienated AND SELFISH, for Cheney’s sake!

Alone in a crowd is all you will ever achieve – tragic beyond description! But you always have a chance for a minute of fame or to die fighting in Corporatist WARS! A breakfast cereal future brought to you by Cheney and CFR geriatrics! These people are NOT 'POWERFUL;' they are sick NOTHINGS! Their most notable characteristics are age and PSYCHOPATHOLOGY! Yet YOU/WE allow these sicko’s, via conservative religions, mass media, etc, to rule and GUIDE us!

So when our ‘glorious future’ unfolds – at speed – you can die medicated and masturbating with a mirror or picture of Paris Hilton in your other hand!

That future has been created for YOU, NOT ME or MINE. If we must die we'll die fighting the filth that has brought us to this nightmare existence or we will live in Peace as ONE – think about it and perhaps unplug yourselves from Big Pharma and the mass media.

OUR options are either more AMERICAN WARS AND CERTAIN DESTRUCTION or mutual aid and co-operation in solving the many PROBLEMS THAT CONFRONT US ALL!

WE are ONE.

WE ARE ALL COMPLICIT one way or another; WE still have a choice, though time is fast running out!

[“DEPRESSING,” my arse!]

As for the ‘beautiful losers,’ continue on YOUR narcissistic, nihilistic, entropic, course and seek not to drag others down into the hole dug specifically for YOU!







The man speaks the Truth, do not be put off by his candour.




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down for the count
by lilith Monday, Jul 27 2009, 11:08pm

Puppet ‘leaders’ give us what we 'ask for' because we’re desperately self-serving, short-sighted, instant-gratification-seeking and materialistic, unless we’re out of the loop, marginalised or 'above' it!

The hard take is the decline of the global economy and, much more critically, the ENVIRONMENT; those realities are worse than 'depressing’ -- like inducive of wrist-slashing despair -- but a person who’s been trained not to feel (by family, society, technology-as-nanny, the media) can’t easily import/export an expressive range to their [postage stamp] vocabulary nor do anything that doesn’t come via the path of least resistance.

Living in peace isn’t a realistic goal. Humans torture and/or kill animals for sport. They like fucking around with guns. They like making lots of noise and leaving their garbage everywhere (even shooting it into space, for fuck’s sake). They like creating destructive garbage by over-packaging everything they create for their over-consumption. They like watching celebrities and saints get crucified. They like administering corporal punishment. They like watching others suffer. And that’s just ‘normal’ people. None of which means a vision of peace isn’t worth aiming for.

Hedonism, narcissism and self-centredness were around long before Cheney rose (or sank) to power. Part of the problem is that there are more hedonists and narcissists and self-centred fucks on this planet than ever before because the human population has exploded.

If we allow sickos to rule and guide us, it’s possibly partly because they feel familiar to us, we grew up around them, we had sick parents or teachers, so it feels like business as usual, and besides, there’s a pay-off, even if we lose dignity and self-respect as a consequence of having sold out, which leads to more and crasser compensating etc.

Peace and oneness are transient states that exist in varying, fluctuating degrees in each individual consciousness (or unconsciousness, as the case may be). A lot of people don’t know any better way than medicating/masturbating (metaphorically or otherwise) to approach these states. In fact, the closest a lot of people will ever get to states of such expanded consciousness is by dying, even if they don’t realise it. Yet.

More than ever before, everybody wants to be a celebrity (except for a few saints, maybe), everybody wants to be heard (‘Twitter’) and seen (‘Facebook’), but how many people still know how to see, listen, feel deeply and intensely, and make full use of all their senses? And as everybody rushes to become celebrities together, maybe they’ll all get crucified collectively?

(Hope that wasn't too ‘depressing’ for you…)

[That's one hell-of-a depressing rant, lilith -- well chosen alias i might add; however, you're incorrect, philosophically, on a number of points, eg 'oneness is transient' -- if I responded fully it would be an essay so I leave you to search your being for answers; there is one critical prerequisite though, jettison cultural artifacts like thought prior to engaging your Self!.

First view the garbage that you imagine are YOUR thoughts and realise that the content and character of thought has been superimposed since childhood; cultural signs, symbols, images and words, none of which are YOU -- but may be the hurt, angry and depressed mannequin culture has created! LET IT GO and PEACE will be your reward, be assured. Much Love, talya. Ed. (Put your powerful writing skills to good use, lilith!)]

How You Finance Goldman Sachs’ Profits
by Nomi Prins via reed - Mother Jones Thursday, Jul 30 2009, 9:16pm

The most important thing I learned over my years working on Wall Street -- including as a managing director at Goldman Sachs -- is [that] NUMBERS LIE!

In a normal time, the fact that the numbers generated by the nation's biggest banks can't be trusted might not matter very much to the rest of us. But since the record bank profits we're now hearing about are essentially created by massive federal funding, perhaps it behooves us to dig beneath their data. On July 27, 10 congressmen, led by Rep. Alan Grayson (D-Fla.), did just that, writing a letter to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke questioning the Fed's role in Goldman's rapid return to the top of Wall Street.

To understand this particular giveaway, look back to September 21, 2008. It was a frenzied night for Goldman Sachs and the only other remaining major investment bank, Morgan Stanley. Their three main competitors were gone. Bear Stearns had been taken over by JPMorgan Chase in March, 2008, Lehman Brothers had just declared bankruptcy due to lack of capital, and Bank of America had been pushed to acquire Merrill Lynch because the firm didn't have enough cash to survive on its own. Anxious to avoid a similar fate, hat in hand, they came to the Fed for access to desperately needed capital. All they had to do was become bank holding companies to get it. So, without so much as clearing the standard five-day antitrust waiting period for such a change, the Fed granted their wish.

Bank holding companies (which all the biggest financial firms now are) come under the regulatory purview of the Fed, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and the FDIC. The capital they keep in reserve in case of emergency (like, say, toxic assets hemorrhaging on their books, or credit derivatives trades not being paid) is supposed to be greater than investment banks'. That's the trade-off. You get access to federal assistance, you pony up more capital, and you take less risk.

Goldman didn't like the last part. It makes most of its money speculating, or trading. So it asked the Fed to be exempt from what's called the Market Risk Rules that bank holding companies adhere to when computing their risk.

Keep in mind that by virtue of becoming a bank holding company, Goldman received a total of $63.6 billion in federal subsidies (that we know about—probably more if the Fed were ever forced to disclose its $7.6 trillion of borrower details). There was the $10 billion it got from TARP (which it repaid), the $12.9 billion it grabbed from AIG's spoils—even though Goldman had stated beforehand that it was protected from losses incurred by AIG's free fall, and if that were the case, would not have needed that money, let alone deserved it. Then, there's the $29.7 billion it's used so far out of the $35 billion it has available, backed by the FDIC's Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program, and finally, there's the $11 billion available under the Fed's Commercial Paper Funding Facility.

Tactically, after bagging this bounty, Goldman asked the Fed, its new regulator, if it could use its old risk model to determine capital reserves. It wanted to use the model that its old investment bank regulator, the SEC, was fine with, called VaR, or value at risk. VaR pretty much allows banks to plug in their own parameters, and based on these, calculate how much risk they have, and thus how much capital they need to hold against it. VaR was the same lax SEC-approved risk model that investment banks such as Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers used, with the aforementioned results.

On February 5, 2009, the Fed granted Goldman's request. This meant that not only was Goldman getting big federal subsidies, but also that it could keep betting big without saving aside as much capital as the other banks. Using VaR gave Goldman more leeway to, well, accentuate the positive. Yes, Goldman is a more risk-prone firm now than it was before it got to play with our money.

Which brings us back to these recent quarterly earnings. Goldman posted record profits of $3.4 billion on revenues of $13.76 billion. More than 78 precent of those revenues came from its most risky division, the one that requires the most capital to operate, Trading and Principal Investments. Of those, the Fixed Income, Currency and Commodities (FICC) area within that division brought in a record $6.8 billion in revenues. That's the division, by the way, that I worked in and that Lloyd Blankfein managed on his way up the Goldman totem pole. (It's also the division that would stand to gain the most if Waxman's cap-and-trade bill passes.)

Since Goldman is trading big with our money, why not also use it to pay big bonuses? It's not like there are any strings attached. For the first half of 2009, Goldman set aside $11.4 billion for compensation—34 percent more than for the first half of 2008, keeping them on target for a record bonus year—even though they still owe the federal government $53.6 billion, a sum more than four times that bonus amount.

But capital is still key. Capital is the lifeblood that pumps through a financial organization. You can't trade without it. As of June 26, 2009, Goldman's total capital was $254 billion, but that included $191 billion in unsecured long-term borrowing (meaning money it had borrowed without putting up any collateral for it). On November 28, 2008 (4Q 2008), it had only $168 billion in unsecured long-term borrowing. Thus, its long-term unsecured debt jumped 14 percent. Though Goldman doesn't disclose exactly where all this debt comes from, given the $23 billion jump, we can only wonder whether some of it has come from government subsidies or the Fed's secret facilities.

Not only that, by virtue of how it's set up, most of Goldman's unsecured funding comes in through its parent company, Group Inc. (Think the top point of an umbrella with each spoke being a subsidiary.) This parent parcels that money out to Goldman's subsidiaries, some of which are regulated, some of which aren't. This means that even though Goldman is supposed to be regulated by the Fed and other agencies, it has unregulated elements receiving unsecured funding—just like before the crisis, but with more of our money involved.

As for JPMorgan Chase, its profit of $2.7 billion was up 36 percent for the second quarter of 2009 vs. the same quarter last year, but a lot of that also came from trading revenues, meaning its speculative endeavors are driving its profits. Over on the consumer side, the firm had to set aside nearly $30 billion in reserve for credit-related losses. Riding on its trading laurels, when its consumer business is still in deterioration mode, is not a recipe for stability, no matter how much cheering JPMorgan Chase's results got from Wall Street. Betting is betting.

Let's pause for some reflection: The bank "stars" made most of their money on speculation, got nearly $124 billion in government guarantees and subsidies between them over the past year and a half, yet saw continued losses in the credit products most affected by consumer credit problems. Both are setting aside top-dollar bonuses. JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon mentioned that he's concerned about attracting talent, a translation for wanting to pay investment bankers big bucks—because, after all, they suffered so terribly last year, and he needs to stay competitive with his friends at Goldman. This doesn't add up to a really healthy scenario. It's more like bad déjà vu.

As a recent New York Times article (and many other publications in different words) said, "For the most part, the worst of the financial crisis seems to be over." Sure, the crisis may appear to be over because the major banks of Wall Street are speculating well with government subsidies. But that's a dangerous conclusion. It doesn't mean that finance firms could thrive without the artificial, public-funded assistance. And it certainly doesn't mean that consumers are any better off than they were before the crisis emerged. It's just that they didn't get the same generous subsidies.

Additional research by Clark Merrefield.

© 2009 Mother Jones and the Foundation for National Progress

The Rise of Gonzo Porn Is the Latest Sign of America's Cultural Apocalypse
by Chris Hedges via rialator - Nation Books Sunday, Aug 2 2009, 10:28am

I reported in my new book, Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle, from the ringside of professional wrestling bouts at Madison Square Garden, from Las Vegas where I wrote about the pornographic film industry, from academic conferences held by positive psychologists -- who claim to be able to engineer happiness – and from the campuses of universities to chronicle our terrifying flight as a culture into a state of illusion. I looked at the array of mechanisms used to divert us from confronting the economic, political and moral collapse around us. I examined the fantasy that if we draw on our inner resources and strengths, if we realize that we are truly exceptional, we can have everything we desire.

The childish idea that we can always prevail, that reality is never an impediment to what we want, is the central motif of illusion peddled on popular talk shows, by the Christian Right, by Hollywood, in corporate retreats, by the news industry and by self-help gurus. Reality can always be overcome. The future will always be glorious. And held out to keep us amused and entertained are spectacles and celebrities who have become idealized versions of ourselves and who, we are assured, we can all one day become.

The cultural embrace of illusion, and the celebrity culture that has risen up around it, have accompanied the awful hollowing out of the state. We have shifted from a culture of production to a culture of consumption. We have been sold a system of casino capitalism, with its complicated and unregulated deals of turning debt into magical assets, to create fictional wealth for us and vast wealth for our elite. We have internalized the awful ethic of corporatism -- one built around the cult of the self and consumption as an inner compulsion -- to believe that living is about our own advancement and our own happiness at the expense of others. Corporations, behind the smoke screen, have ruthlessly dismantled and destroyed our manufacturing base and impoverished our working class. The free market became our god and government was taken hostage by corporations, the same corporations that entice us daily with illusions though the mass media, the entertainment industry and popular culture.

The more we sever ourselves from a literate, print-based world, a world of complexity and nuance, a world of ideas, for one informed by comforting, reassuring images, fantasies, slogans and a celebration of violence the more we implode. We ask, like the wrestling fans or those who confuse love with pornography, to be fed lies. We demand lies. The skillfully manufactured images and slogans that flood the airwaves and infect our political discourse mask reality. And we do not protest. The lonely Cassandras who speak the truth about our misguided imperial wars, the global economic meltdown and the imminent danger of multiple pollutions that are destroying the eco-system that sustains the human species, are drowned out by arenas full of fans chanting "Slut! Slut! Slut!" or television audiences chanting "Jer-ry! Jer-ry! Jer-ry!" The worse reality becomes, the less a beleaguered population wants to hear about it and the more it distracts itself with squalid pseudo-events of celebrity breakdowns, gossip and trivia.

A culture that cannot distinguish between reality and illusion dies. And we are dying now. We will wake from our state of induced childishness, one where trivia and gossip pass for news and information, one where our goal is not justice by an elusive and unattainable happiness, to confront the stark limitations before us or we will continue our headlong retreat into fantasy. Those who do not grow up in times of despair and turmoil inevitably turn to demagogues and charlatans to entertain and reassure them. And these demagogues, as they have throughout history, lead the crowd, blinded and amused, towards despotism.

The following is an excerpt from Chapter II of Empire of Illusion, where Hedges attends an enormous porn convention in Las Vegas:

The largest users of internet porn, which is slowly draining away profits from magazines and DVD sales because so much of it is free, are between the ages of 12 and 17. And porn producers know their market is increasingly underage. "The age demographic has moved downwards, especially in the UK and Europe," explained Steve Honest, the European director of production for Bluebird Films. "Porn is the new rock and roll. Young people and women are embracing porn and making purchases. Porn targets the mid-teens to the mid-twenties and up."

There are some 13,000 porn films made in the United States a year. According to the Internet Filter Review, worldwide porn revenues, including in-room movies at hotels, sex clubs and the ever-expanding E-sex world, topped $97 billion in 2006. That's more than the revenues of the leading technology companies combined: Microsoft, Google, Amazon, eBay, Yahoo!, Apple, Netflix and EarthLink. Annual sales in the United States are estimated at $ 10 billion or higher. There is no agency that does precise monitoring of the porn industry. And porn is very lucrative to some of the nation's largest corporations. General Motors, for example, owns DirectTV, which distributes over forty million streams of porn into American homes every month. AT&T Broadband and Comcast Cable are the currently biggest American companies accommodating porn users with The Hot Network, Adult Pay-Per-View and similarly themed services. AT&T and GM rake in approximately 80 percent of all porn dollars spent by consumers.

Ariana Jollee, 21, is sitting in a motel room, beside a particleboard desk and a bare white wall giving a pre-film interview for the DVD 65 Guy Cream Pie, a gangbang film produced in 2004 by Devil's Film. In the film she has sex with 65 men who stand in two lines, their pants unzipped, on either side of her. She is smiling at the camera. Jollee has sleek dark hair with bangs, a tribal armband tattoo around one bicep, and wears jeans and a loose black tank top. She has rounded arms, full cheeks and a slightly heavy chin. Jollee started doing porn in 2003 when she was 20 in a film called Nasty Girls 30. She has done hundreds of films and is one of the industry's premier "gonzo" girls, purportedly enjoying extreme abuse. Jollee tells her audience that she performed in a 21-man gangbang on her 21st birthday. She says she is looking forward to doing the same now with 50 men, although this number climbs to 65 on the set. "Cream pie" refers in the world of porn to men ejaculating on a woman's anus or vagina, rather than ejaculating into her mouth or on her body.

"I'll be banging fifty guys - fifty, fifty, fifty! Maybe more even. That'd be cool. So I'm like really excited."

She laughs and plays with her hair. "And it just so happens that all these guys are going to be coming IN me." She looks coyly at the camera. "In the ass and pussy," she grins, wrinkling her nose. "See I like it in the ass the best. I wanna find the biggest pervert and get him to suck all fifty loads out and spit it in my mouth." She reaches up and fiddles with her bangs. "That'd be so good. That'd be fucking hot. It'd be disgusting." She giggles. "I get off on that." She runs her fingers through her hair, fanning it out behind her.

"It's a big, big fantasy, always been a big fantasy of mine to be with more than one guy at a time. Many women have that fantasy" Her voice drops to a whisper. She wrinkles her nose and narrows her eyes. "You have all these men, and they all wanna fuck you, and they're all there, and it's just like, cock, holy shit. It's so good. So good. Now I'm getting wet," she complains, giggling. Her feet are up on the seat of her chair, and the camera pans down briefly to the exposed crotch of her jeans. She demurely pops her thumb in her mouth, still smiling, gazing at the camera.

"If you're watching this before the scene, you're in for a fucking treat. Each one of those motherfuckers is gonna, you know, it's gonna be the ride of their lives." She nods thoughtfully. "But, who knows," she throws her hands in the air, "maybe they'll fuck me up. Maybe they'll really, like, teach me a lesson." She throws a small smile at the camera. She scratches her knee absently. "We'll just have to wait and see. Maybe I'm not as insatiable as I think I am. We'll see. I'm excited."

She concedes that when it is over she will "look like shit" but will be "well fucked." The interviewer asks what condition her vagina and anus will be after having sex with that many men. She speaks of her body parts in the third person: "They can take it. They want it. They like it. They go back to size after. Pussy's tight. She always goes back to size." The degradation she endures has turned her body into something she no longer consciously recognizes as herself.

She talks briefly about her private life in the interview. She says that before she did gangbangs in films she once had sex with 12 men on a fire truck. She does not say how old she was at the time, but her remarks suggest she was a teenager. "It was so good," he says. "I will thank that man who took me there every day for the rest of my life. I still talk to him; he's a really good friend of mine. He's a pervert but I love perverts. I like free people."

Her enthusiasm, as she relates this story on the fire truck, momentarily fades. There is a brief tremor that crosses her face, an almost imperceptible sign of ambiguity or doubt. The fleeting impression when she falls out of character is that the experience of being taken to a fire house by a friend who is "a pervert" and having sex with 12 men on a truck was not sexy or exciting, that for a teenage girl the experience was perhaps not the result of being free or the product of sexual desire. She quickly snaps back into the pornographic facade. She says "I hope everyone gets off. I plan on cumming."

© 2009 Nation Books


 
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