Amazon re-viewed….

What gets into people when they get in front of a computer keyboard? Talk about power corrupting. …And nothing is more powerful than a review.

In the old days you at least had to show some mastery of the field to make comments on the work of other people. These days you don’t have to show any command – of your field….of the language….even of yourself….you just need to hit a button and there, you’ve trashed a year or two of sweat by some poor sod silly enough to want to display his talents to the public.

By all means destroy a book….with another book. Savage your opponent…. with a sardonic lyric. But press a button?

Amazon “trash” reviews – especially by anonymous posters — are the dirty bombs of criticism.

And no – I am not crying over myself. Political writers are used to becoming the target of cyberfury….especially in an election year.

No, my wrath is on behalf of Cyprien Katsaris (one of the living legends of classical piano, if you’ve had the extreme misfortune never to have heard of him). His monumental performance of the Liszt transcription of the Beethoven symphonies is rated only 4 stars by some Amazon customers.

Four stars, dear reader? What were those reviewers withholding that one star for, I wonder?

That’s mass man for you. Never able to look up to anyone or anything. Always leveling. Never able to see anything bigger than his own miserable limits.

Short of raising the dead and making the blind see, Katsaris’s performance is as close to the divine as clods of clay will ever get. The physical stamina demanded alone is mind-boggling, let alone what’s needed technically, intellectually and emotionally.

I assume these critics actually play some instrument besides a kazoo? Having spent many years at the keyboard let me say that the Liszt transcriptions of the Beethoven symphonies are some of the most excruciatingly difficult piano pieces there are. Hitting seventy-five percent of the notes would qualify you as a very competent pianist. Hitting every one of them with a level of precision, power, beauty, imagination and depth that would make the archangels stop dead in their tracks and take notes is a feat of which few…very few….maybe no more than a score of mortals…. have ever been capable in the life of this sorry planet. Katsaris is one of them.

Amazon does not have enough stars to rate that performance. The proper response to it is not button- pushing but chastened silence.

If you can find words, they had better be the best you can summon up.

Thus, my first Amazon review:

5.0 out of 5 stars One of the finest recordings I have ever heard, February 15, 2008

By Lila Rajiva “Lila” (US) – See all my reviews

Katsaris is simply incredible. He has virtuosity and power to spare – that goes without saying. He plays this extraordinarily difficult score as though he were born doing it; as though he had an orchestra in his ten fingers. I can’t think of many other pianists who could pull out every voice so individually from this complex arrangement and bring to each one such a range of color.

Add to this a majestic singing line, commanding intellectual presence, a tone quality that is sumptuous, relentless rhythmic power, and technical panache that never detracts from the musical depths that open from under his fingers. The slow movements spin out into galactic space, the filigree passages are iridescent, the fast movements are volcanic dithyrambs driven by centaurs.

What a genius. And what a genius Liszt was to make you almost think the unthinkable – that these transcriptions of Beethoven improve on the originals. Music written by one titan, recreated by another, and brought to life by a third.

Encountering this recording was one of the musical high points of my life. I cannot imagine piano playing any better than this. At least not on earth.

The cyber-games people play……

What’s with Amazon? We have been requesting them to put the great blurbs we got onto the webpage of the book – so people can see them.

They put them up in August…..and then took them down just when we needed them up the most. And since then, despite repeated requests, they still aren’t up, after nearly two months!

You begin to wonder……

Update:

Apparently, the blurbs “dropped off” — ours, along with many others.

The way of the web.

However, even if they did, why would they not respond to repeated inquiries? And why would no one follow up, respond, or drop a line?

Why? Because people are not the little angels they are supposed to be according to the mythology of democracy. And what we are today is no longer the hard-working, thrifty, sober people who created the wealth of this country. Today, we are lazy, profligate, and delusional — and we love it. We no longer practice any self-restraint or discipline. We have no laws within ourselves. That’s why we have so many laws outside us. If you cannot rule yourself, someone else must.

And someone else does. The state.

Demo-crass-y: questioning the tyranny of the majority…

“China’s threat to sell its US Treasuries – if actually carried out – will be triggered by the US Congress. This fall, the US Congress will vote on a bill that would impose a 20% across-the-board tariff on all Chinese goods imported into the US. The supporters of the bill describe its passage as “veto-proof” – that they now possess enough votes to override a presidential veto.

This possibility calls again into question the very efficacy of democracy, to wit., the belief that the collective will of the people is preferable to the capricious stupidity of a king or queen or any other selected or self-appointed tyrant, or indeed, virtually any government official…..”

Ah yes. Precisely the theme of “Mobs.”

And one no one likes to hear. Masses of ignorant, ill-informed, or passion-driven people are not exactly the ones we should be listening to. Not, of course, that the majority ever wanted to get into this war in the first place. They didn’t. Our elected oligarchs did that. But they can always count on enough mass hysteria to let them get away with it.

Of course, criticizing “the people” is out of the question these days. That would make you, what, an elitist? Well — I am an elitist. When I study something I don’t go to someone just as ignorant as me, I go to some one who knows better. When I want financial advice, I go to people who know how to make money and have more of it than me. Everything revolves around that sort of hierarchy – and acceptance of it. So, this constant talk of egalitarianism moves me about as much as “self-esteem” babble unaccompanied by any effort to improve. People who make better decisions, contribute more, and work harder ought to do better. Nothing wrong with that. The problem is when rewards don’t match the value added and are a result of the system being rigged.

So, when the demagogues jump into protectionism (just as they did with Smoot-Hawley) what is likely to happen?

“China is longer dependent on America to buy its goods. The Eurozone now shares the distinction of being China’s largest market. Additionally, when and if the US Congress votes to impose 20% tariffs on Chinese goods, the damage to China’s economy will be significant.

China will retaliate; and, dumping $1.33 trillion of US Treasuries on the open market will be an all too easy and accessible option. It would destroy the US dollar and deal the US economy a body blow from which it would take years to recover….”

and more fun stuff here.

Frankly, I would rather live under a despot who left me alone most of the time than under an endlessly meddling democracy.

Housing Bubble trouble: Countrywide, Fed rate cut, and Osama as chief policy advisor

“Home loan colossus Countrywide Financial Corp. announced Friday that it would slash as many as 12,000 jobs, or nearly 20% of its workforce, saying the downturn in the housing market and the credit crunch related to sub-prime loans have created the worst conditions ever seen by the modern mortgage industry.

The announcement by Calabasas-based Countrywide came hours after a smaller rival in the mortgage business, Pasadena-based savings and loan IndyMac Bancorp Inc., warned that it probably would record its first loss since 1998 in the third quarter. IndyMac said it would cut 1,000 jobs, 10% of its total.

Countrywide, the No. 1 home lender, funded $284.2 billion in mortgages this year through July 31, up from $255.8 billion in the same period in 2006, but said it expected lending to decline 25% next year….”

More by E. Scott Reckard at the Los Angeles Times.

Is this just a subprime lender problem?

At Thoughts from the Frontline, John Mauldin doesn’t think so:

“Goldman Sachs suggests home values could drop as much as 20%. Gary Shilling has been saying 25%. We don’t have time and space this week to go into housing prices, but many of the mortgages sold in the past two years only made sense in a housing market that was rising by 10-15% a year. A market that is dropping 10-15% a year, as it may do in the next 12 months, is only marginally be helped by a Fed funds cut.

But that does not mean they should not cut. They should, simply because the economy is clearly slowing, and the risks are now to the downside.

I have maintained for a long time that the bursting of the housing bubble would cause a serious slowdown or a recession in the economy. My critics would counter that housing is only 5-7% of the economy and a housing recession would not be enough to drag the whole economy down.

They are wrong for the following reasons. First, rising home values have allowed homeowners to use their homes as an ATM through mortgage equity withdrawals, which have added almost 2% to GDP annually over the last five years. That is now evaporating.

Secondly, falling home construction and lower home sales means fewer jobs not just in the direct home building market, but in the parts of the economy related to the home building markets, like mortgage brokers, real estate agents, hardware and furniture, etc. As an example, Countrywide announced a planned 10-12,000 person lay-off, when just a few weeks ago they were thinking of expansion, as they now think new mortgages may drop 25% in 2008. Fewer jobs mean lower consumer spending.

Consumers are not going to spend as much due to the wealth effect. If you feel your house was going to be a major part of your retirement, and now the value is going down, you are going to be more cautious and actually think about saving. This has been a dangerous prediction for 50 years, but I think consumer spending, some 71% of the US economy, is due to slow down. Year over year growth could drop below inflation later this year.

Further, with all the additional homes coming onto the market due to foreclosures, hone values are going to drop even more, and new home construction, which peaked at an annual run rate of 2,000,000 homes per year, is likely to fall to less than 1,000,000. We are currently at a level of 1,400,000, so we are not yet close to the bottom.

Rising unemployment. A housing market looking at the deepest recession in values since the Great Depression. A consumer under siege. A visibly slowing economy……”

Rate cut or not?

Since he seems to be setting himself up as a foreign policy advisor, maybe we should ask Osama Bin Laden.
“Iraq and Afghanistan and their tragedies; and the reeling of many of you under the burden of interest-related debts, insane taxes and real estate mortgages; global warming and its woes; and the abject poverty and tragic hunger in Africa; all of this is but one side of the grim face of this global system,” he said….”

Mobs in the Market: the crisis is unfolding…..

The sub-prime debacle rolls on:

“American Home Mortgage joins more than 50 lenders in bankruptcy this year.”
~MSNBC – Aug 6, 2007
~Bloomberg, Aug 10, 2007

Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s $8 billion Global Alpha hedge fund has fallen 26 percent so far this year…”

Check out this piece I wrote in Money Week about Goldman Sachs
I kind of jumped the gun on it, but the fact is the big bank is in trouble over the credit crunch, something few people would have once thought possible.

Hedge funds are keeling over all over the place as well:

“Hedge fund operator Sowood Capital Management said Friday it would return $1.4 billion to investors after losing an estimated 60% of their money last month…”
~LA Times, Aug 4, 2007

Hedge funds are taking a hit for 60% in a month.

Home mortgage lenders are going belly up, 50 this year alone.

Meanwhile, the “plunge protection team” at the Federal reserve is on the job with soothing words:

On March 28th, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke told Congress he believed that sub-prime defaults were “likely to be contained.”

On June 20th, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulsonsaid the fallout “will not affect the economy overall.”

On June 27th, Merrill Lynch CEO Stanley O’Neal claimed the defaults were “reasonably well contained.”

    In August, $40 billion in credit had been pumped into the financial system over two days – more than anything the Fed has done since 9/11.

    But can the economy stay on keel?

    Today, Sept. 6, there are announcements of terrorist warnings as dire as any since September 11…

    Are we near a crisis?

    Who knows? The point is when you have a situation this large and this complex, all bets are off.

    Ron Paul and the Empire of Experts

    Lila Rajiva (co-author with Bill Bonner of “Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets,” on being Married to the Mob on The Michael Dresser Show tonight, September 5 at 6:00 p.m. EST)

    What is it about Ron Paul that attracts as many and as diverse a group of people as are repelled by him?

    For a number of people, right and left, it is his consistent opposition
    to the Iraq war.

    It is a good reason. Moral courage allied with wisdom is as much in short supply these days as chastity at a political convention.

    For others, it is Paul’s fiscal responsibility.

    Dr. No has been pursing his lips at every form of political candy offered by the junk food vendors at the Capital. While many of his colleagues are letting out their belts, the wiry obstetrician is running marathons at 71.

    While they keep getting caught in what used to be called “indiscretions,” he has been married for fifty years. We would be foolish to judge people by the externals of their lives, for saints and sinners, puritans and bohemians not only cohabit, they frequently snuggle under the same skin. Nonetheless, it’s a relief to have a few people around in politics to remind us that it’s also perfectly all right to live uneventfully, even stodgily.

    I say this as someone who has spent a large part of her life among musicians, writers, and now, financial newsletter writers – whose professional lives depend on their eccentricity and even contrariness.

    There is however one critical difference between selling financial advice and intellectual nostrums on the one hand and delivering babies on the other – which is what Dr. Paul has done for most of his professional life. The success of obstetrics is pretty easy to verify. Either the child breathes and lives – or it doesn’t.

    One can’t be a good obstetrician on theory alone. The practice is all.
    Check the track record of the average stock tout and you might find nothing but bankruptcy filings and credit card debt. That, of course, will count for little with the tout’s avid customers who would mortgage their four walls and roof for his advice. And toss in their wives as a bonus.

    As for the pedant, you wish he’d trip over one of his obtuse, meandering sentences and break his scrawny neck before he stuck it into the real world. But does anyone care? No. His pet theories may have driven the nation into premature recession if not down-right impotence, but the expert will be given not only an institute of his very own at some Ivy League, but the whole Earth along with it……. to run as he wishes.

    There, winsome coeds will no doubt ornament every step of his way to a Nobel Prize.

    Theory is easy. Any biped with a larynx and functioning synapses can come up with one.
    It is practice that separates the goats from the sheep.

    And that is the principal reason that the pundits are afraid of that revolution of the people that is the rise of Ron Paul.

    Ron Paul wants to put the practice of citizenry back in the hands of citizens and take it away from the theorists.

    Oh, the critics will tell you differently. They will tell you that Ron Paul is a theorist himself – and a crack-pot theorist as well. A patron of fringe economics. A gentlemanly loon. Or at least, dangerously far out on the right bank of the mainstream.

    Since the mainstream has just finished wrecking a whole country abroad in a manner that Genghis Khan would have been proud of and is busy adding yet another to its sights; and since, in the meantime it’s also managed to find the time to dismantle several centuries worth of legal structure at home, you wonder why anyone would worry about that, anyway.

    But there you have the sad truth about man. He isn’t much concerned about anything besides how other people think of him. That’s all he thinks about all day long. For that he sweats and schleps, roils and toils.

    Status. Image. In groups. Out groups. Pariahs. Brahmins. The sum total of it all is — what does the other fellow think of me?

    Right or wrong counts for far less. His conscience or soul — for nothing at all. If he feels a pang, he swigs gelusil and turns on the hypnotic lights of his TV set.

    And why? Because with no real, concrete practical knowledge anywhere between his ears, his skull rings with the lethal chatter of newspaper headlines and talk shows.

    The patter of Those Who Know Better.

    Hedge-fund managers who promise that all risk can be ironed out of your portfolio and make you pay for the wrinkles that aren’t.

    Political scientists who invade a country from their desktops, but don’t know how to boot it up again when it crashes.

    Hucksters who dream up great stories for their products — and make a punch-line out of the patsies who buy them.

    We live in an empire run by experts.
    But in the empire of experts, the man with horse sense is king.

    And Ron Paul has horse sense.

    The horse sense of mustangs, not geldings.

    The kind of horse sense that bucks and sends you for a toss just when you thought you had everything under control. The horse sense that stops you from thinking about things so far off you couldn’t possibly have spotted them — while tripping over things so close by you shouldn’t ever have missed them.

    The experts would have you believe that they can control your life and the life of entire nations by thinking long enough and hard enough about it. This is a theory so full of holes it puts Swiss cheese to shame.

    Studies have even shown (Philip Tetlock, “Expert Political Judgment – How Good Is It? How Can We Know?”) that canny laymen do as well as experts when it come to predicting the future. In fact, many do even better.

    But it’s the experts who have broken us in.
    The reason is simple. Experts promise us a simple, sharp tool to dissect the complexity of the real world.

    But a dissection that thorough can only be a post-mortem. Cut through the warm body of society that fiercely and you turn it into a cadaver.

    Gray is all theory, says Mephistopheles, in Goethe’s Faust. The golden tree of life is green.

    Here, we will improve on the devil. Between book covers, theory may be gray – but it is an intricate gossamer of gray – like the tracery in a Gothic cathedral or the mysterious depths of an engraving by Gustave Dore


    I have no quarrel with theory. In fact, I have a weakness for it, as I have for all rich, superfluous things.

    But a map is not a road, and a silhouette is not a human being. The trouble begins when experts begin to take their expertise so seriously that they forfeit their own road sense and their readers’. When they are so neutered by their reasoning that they cannot act – or worse yet, cannot stop acting. And the trouble grows into disaster when their credulous followers, junkies of every news and TV show, rush behind them like rats behind the Hamelin piper — into every frippery and fad, every financial folly and military madness.

    And that is what we have today in our empire of experts. Worse than any war – which must at some point end — is the ideology that makes for war.

    That tells us that “what is” is also “what must be.” You see, empires are made for experts as experts are made for empires. Without their theories to hold it up, the flimsy scaffold of government would fall of its own feebleness. And without that scaffold, the little men on top would be cut down to the same size as the rest of us.
    And that, my friends, is the real reason why the experts fear Dr. Paul and the people love him.

    Update:

    This article was one of the top 10 articles on LRC. First time I made it. They all look like good pieces too.

    1. The Government-Created Subprime Mortgage Meltdown by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
    2. The Ultimate ‘Success Through Failure’ Manual by Gary North
    3. Phase III of Bush’s War by Patrick J. Buchanan
    4. Ron Paul and the Four Horsemen by James Ostrowski
    5. ‘They’ Hate Our Freedoms by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
    6. What Is Wikipedia, and What Is It Good For? by Dick Clark
    7. A Busy Week for the Front-Runner, Ron Paul by Rick Fisk
    8. The George W. Bush Freedom Institute by Karen Kwiatkowski
    9. Ron Paul and the Empire of Experts by Lila Rajiva
    10. Ron Paul’s Inaugural Address by Johnny Kramer

    Mobs, Messiahs, and Cauliflower…..

    CLEVER CAULIFLOWER – LILA RAJIVA &BILL BONNER

    (from my book with Bill Bonner, Mobs, Messiahs and Markets – technically the copyright is held by both of us, but since his crew promotes the entire book as his, I decided to start putting my own stuff (stuff I wrote entirely) on the net as mine. It’s actually already been published in my name before the book came out in a slightly different form. But what’s sauce for the gander…is sauce for this goose [Since then, they have added the credits so since the message got through, I have added back Bill’s name here as you can see: (the original post had both names – the change was simply to send a message….):

    “What most men don’t understand is that most of our beliefs about the economy – and everything else – are forms of self-medication — “Stocks for the long run,” “Globalization is good,” “Dow 36,000.” We repeat slogans to ourselves because everyone else does. Man is first of all a herd animal and fears nothing more than not being part of the herd.

    In fact, the reason lies even deeper, in the deceptive nature of thought itself, even for instance, in the way we think about risk. Our thinking seems to be skewed only to certain sorts of risk – where what ends up happening depends only on a few stable factors. But often the abnormal event is the one that happens so rarely that it isn’t even reckoned with most of the time.

    What we are talking about here is fat tails AN OUTLIIER – AN EVENT that lieS so far outside the normal course of events THINGS that we tend to push them equally far away in our consciousness, events that are so devastating that when they do occur, they cancel out every other consideration. There may be only a very slim chance that the human race will be wiped off the face of the earth, it is true. But it would probably pay us to take that slim chance very seriously.

    And here we run into the problem with slogans about something like global trade in genetically modified food, for example. Just because a fat-tail disaster might smack us in the face at any moment, does that mean we are in favor of more, say, government regulations on food production?

    Here, we are forced to hem and haw. Government regulation tends to be ineffective, in many cases. And since regulators are frequently drawn from the same industries they are supposed to be regulating, we think they tend to be counterproductive in all the others.

    So, we are neither prescribing policy nor proscribing it. We are merely grumbling in our curmudgeonly way that we liked the old genetically unmodified world better. We have no desire to eat strawberries armed against frostbite with herring genes or cauliflower with an IQ higher than ours. We like our food au naturel, unrefurbished, unhedged, and in default drive. Unless it is communion wine, any transformations of nature need to pass the smell test first. We need to be protected from them, as surely as we need to be protected from bad checks, assault, murder, and another Michael Jackson trial.

    You see our problem, dear reader? We would like the state to stop telling us what to do-whether it is in airports, in our schools, or in our bedrooms — but we dig in our heels equally at efforts by global corporations to improve our water, our potatoes, or our boeuf bourguignon at the expense of our local culture and with subsidies from our tax dollars.

    This is unlikely to win us any popularity contests today when there are only two acceptable positions on globalization: It is A Very Good Thing. Or, it is A Very Bad Thing. But slogans don’t always do the trick. Each problem has to be thought through in its own terms. Not only is globalization neither entirely good nor entirely bad, it is not even one single thing. It is several. It is about free trade and costly subsidies, about gourmet water and junk food, about hard capital and soft drinks — all of which have their own reasons for being and their own consequences, and all of which are mislabeled, poorly understood, and constantly confused. In fact, the only thing you can be sure of about globalization is that it provokes extremes of two emotions in the mob — greed and fear. In other words, the only thing that is certain about it is that it is a public spectacle.

    Naturally, like all public spectacles, globalization is wrapped up in a huge amount of cant. For instance, if you are a poor country, you are supposed to take to the thing as eagerly as a diabetic to insulin.

    Now, if it was just a matter of freeing up trade between countries, we would nod our heads in agreement. The exchange of goods and services between people is, and always has been, a good thing. It is, so far as we can see, a far better way of getting what you want than hitting your fellow man over the head. But for it to really work, trade – like driving – needs a set of rules everyone follows; otherwise you are liable to crash or be run over.

    And this is where it gets complicated. Because it turns out that many of the rules of global trade are set by the very people who are weighing down the market with all sorts of subsidies, sweetheart deals, perks, pork, and privileges, in the first place.

    Take the World Bank, which is in the business of telling countries what they need to do to play the global trade game. In the lumpen imagination, the World Bank is not too different from the local neighborhood savings and loan – a kind of multicultural version of the friendly bank in “It’s a Wonderful Life.” But the real World Bank is headed up not by Jimmy Stewart, but by people like Paul Wolfowitz, a man whom his best friend wouldn’t call a soft touch. Confirmed as the bank’s boss in 2005, Wolfowitz immediately proclaimed he was on a mission of mercy:

    “Helping the poorest of the world to lift themselves out of poverty is a noble mission or, as former Secretary of State George Shultz said, ‘a beautiful mission.’ ”

    But, the Sisters of Charity do not have to worry about the competition. Wolfowitz has been one of Washington’s biggest hawks, ever since the days when he argued for the use of tactical nuclear weapons in Europe. To this day, he likes to praise Indonesia’s Suharto, who in his 32-year reign looted $30 billion from the public treasury and turned his country into one of the most corrupt in the world.

    Of course, on second thought, that might be the perfect resume for the World Bank…..

    *********
    Lila Rajiva is the co-author with Bill Bonner of “Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets”
    (Wiley, August 31, 2007) and the author of the ground-breaking study, “Abu Ghraib and the American Media,” (December, 2005). She blogs at The Mind-Body Politic. She can be reached at lrajiva@hotmail.com.

    and is that most of our beliefs about the economy – and everything else – are forms of self-medication — “Stocks for the long run,” “Globalization is good,” “Dow 36,000.” We repeat slogans to ourselves because everyone else does. Man is first of all a herd animal and fears nothing more than not being part of the herd.

    In fact, the reason lies even deeper, in the deceptive nature of thought itself, even for instance, in the way we think about risk. Our thinking seems to be skewed only to certain sorts of risk – where what ends up happening depends only on a few stable factors. But often the abnormal event is the one that happens so rarely that it isn’t even reckoned with most of the time.

    What we are talking about here is fat tails AN OUTLIIER – AN EVENT that lieS so far outside the normal course of events THINGS that we tend to push them equally far away in our consciousness, events that are so devastating that when they do occur, they cancel out every other consideration. There may be only a very slim chance that the human race will be wiped off the face of the earth, it is true. But it would probably pay us to take that slim chance very seriously.

    And here we run into the problem with slogans about something like global trade in genetically modified food, for example. Just because a fat-tail disaster might smack us in the face at any moment, does that mean we are in favor of more, say, government regulations on food production?

    Here, we are forced to hem and haw. Government regulation tends to be ineffective, in many cases. And since regulators are frequently drawn from the same industries they are supposed to be regulating, we think they tend to be counterproductive in all the others.

    So, we are neither prescribing policy nor proscribing it. We are merely grumbling in our curmudgeonly way that we liked the old genetically unmodified world better. We have no desire to eat strawberries armed against frostbite with herring genes or cauliflower with an IQ higher than ours. We like our food au naturel, unrefurbished, unhedged, and in default drive. Unless it is communion wine, any transformations of nature need to pass the smell test first. We need to be protected from them, as surely as we need to be protected from bad checks, assault, murder, and another Michael Jackson trial.

    You see our problem, dear reader? We would like the state to stop telling us what to do-whether it is in airports, in our schools, or in our bedrooms — but we dig in our heels equally at efforts by global corporations to improve our water, our potatoes, or our boeuf bourguignon at the expense of our local culture and with subsidies from our tax dollars.

    This is unlikely to win us any popularity contests today when there are only two acceptable positions on globalization: It is A Very Good Thing. Or, it is A Very Bad Thing. But slogans don’t always do the trick. Each problem has to be thought through in its own terms. Not only is globalization neither entirely good nor entirely bad, it is not even one single thing. It is several. It is about free trade and costly subsidies, about gourmet water and junk food, about hard capital and soft drinks — all of which have their own reasons for being and their own consequences, and all of which are mislabeled, poorly understood, and constantly confused. In fact, the only thing you can be sure of about globalization is that it provokes extremes of two emotions in the mob — greed and fear. In other words, the only thing that is certain about it is that it is a public spectacle.

    Naturally, like all public spectacles, globalization is wrapped up in a huge amount of cant. For instance, if you are a poor country, you are supposed to take to the thing as eagerly as a diabetic to insulin.

    Now, if it was just a matter of freeing up trade between countries, we would nod our heads in agreement. The exchange of goods and services between people is, and always has been, a good thing. It is, so far as we can see, a far better way of getting what you want than hitting your fellow man over the head. But for it to really work, trade – like driving – needs a set of rules everyone follows; otherwise you are liable to crash or be run over.

    And this is where it gets complicated. Because it turns out that many of the rules of global trade are set by the very people who are weighing down the market with all sorts of subsidies, sweetheart deals, perks, pork, and privileges, in the first place.

    Take the World Bank, which is in the business of telling countries what they need to do to play the global trade game. In the lumpen imagination, the World Bank is not too different from the local neighborhood savings and loan – a kind of multicultural version of the friendly bank in “It’s a Wonderful Life.” But the real World Bank is headed up not by Jimmy Stewart, but by people like Paul Wolfowitz, a man whom his best friend wouldn’t call a soft touch. Confirmed as the bank’s boss in 2005, Wolfowitz immediately proclaimed he was on a mission of mercy:

    “Helping the poorest of the world to lift themselves out of poverty is a noble mission or, as former Secretary of State George Shultz said, ‘a beautiful mission.’ ”

    But, the Sisters of Charity do not have to worry about the competition. Wolfowitz has been one of Washington’s biggest hawks, ever since the days when he argued for the use of tactical nuclear weapons in Europe. To this day, he likes to praise Indonesia’s Suharto, who in his 32-year reign looted $30 billion from the public treasury and turned his country into one of the most corrupt in the world.

    Of course, on second thought, that might be the perfect resume for the World Bank…..

    *********
    Lila Rajiva is the co-author with Bill Bonner of “Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets”
    (Wiley, August 31, 2007) and the author of the ground-breaking study, “Abu Ghraib and the American Media,” (December, 2005). She blogs at The Mind-Body Politic. She can be reached at lrajiva@hotmail.com.

    Another kind of liquidity crisis…

    “Women and children were spotted screaming for help from treetops in Uttar Pradesh. In parts of the state, river levels rose so quickly that villagers had no time to save any belongings.

    “The gush of water was so sudden we did not get the time to react,” Vinod Kumar, a resident of a flooded village in Basti district, told Enadu TV.

    One woman in Uttar Pradesh who identified herself only as Savitra said she had not “eaten anything for the last two days.”

    Health workers were fanning out across parts of Bangladesh and India to try to prevent the spread of waterborne diseases like diarrhea, typhoid and cholera.

    In northwestern Bangladesh, farmer Rahmat Sheikh and his family were among 2,000 people who fled their flooded village for higher ground in the Sirajganj district.

    “The floods have taken away all I had,” said the 40-year-old Sheikh. “Rice paddies in the field, two cows and my house all are gone. I don’t know how we will now survive.”

    Some 14 million people in India and 5 million in Bangladesh have been displaced or marooned by flooding, according to government figures. At least 144 people have died in India and 54 more in Bangladesh.

    India’s Meteorological Department said unusual monsoon patterns this year have led to heavier than normal rains….”

     What do 19 million refugees look like? 

    I wonder if the media would consider this worth covering extensively – not only because of the number of people in distres — but even from sheer intellectual curiosity:

     How do crowds move? How do they survive?

    Amazingly, they will…