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OPINION

Corporate Greed a Bigger Problem Than Michael Moore

Arnaud de Borchgrave By Monday, 05 October 2009 12:50 PM EDT Current | Bio | Archive

"The American dream fell apart at the seams," Willie Nelson strummed on CNN as he described the plight of small farmers going bust. Almost everything and everyone is fighting for survival in an economy that continues to defy wallops of government stimulus. Brick-and-mortar bookstore chains are also fighting for survival as the Kindle, evidently named to evoke the crackling ignition of knowledge, with its 240,000 book titles, along with iPod Touch, iPhone, and Amazon.com, keep pushing intellectual and literary life into an electronic cocoon of $9.99 books. Tough economic times are good for book sales.

Google is making its vast online library of more than 1.5 million public domain books available for mobile phones like T-Mobile G1, powered by Google's Android Software. And the bricks-and-mortar bookstores, oozing red ink but still on top of a $24 billion book market, are launching the world's largest online bookstores. E-book sales soared to 29 million, or $9 billion in sales.

Amazon is still expected to generate $35 million profits on revenues of $420 million this year — and more than $700 million on $4 billion in revenues by 2014. Barnes & Noble is expanding its e-book service with an online store that is selling more than 200,000 e-book titles for laptop computers and mobile devices.

This new world is a bonanza for the prophets of doom and gloom that are beginning to read like a chronicle of our current predicament. Vice President Joe Biden sounds delusional when he says all's A-OK with Plan A and there is no need for Plan B. The Afghan War would seem to be ripe for Plan C. While "We are Doomed: Reclaiming Conservative Pessimism" by John Derbyshire is a bit of a stretch, "Culture of Corruption" by Michelle Malkin and "Exploiting Chaos" by Jeremy Gutsche have the ring of authenticity.

"Catastrophe" by Dick Morris, a liberal-turned-conservative icon, gives all away on the cover:

"How Obama, Congress and the special interests are transforming . . . a slump into a crash, freedom into socialism, and a disaster into a catastrophe . . . and how to fight back."

Leftist filmmaker Michael Moore is back in action with another view of the same catastrophe. His latest pitchforks-and-torches movie against what he portrays as corporate fascism in "Capitalism: A Love Story," now packing theaters coast to coast and getting much favorable airtime for Moore on CNN's "Situation Room," ABC's "Nightline" and "GMA", Jay Leno, and the rest of the dominant media culture — and much hostility from Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, and Sean Hannity — savages the post-Cold War capitalist order. No longer fearful of communism, the capitalism of the post-World War II era that Moore says he was in love with gave way to a rigged roulette wheel that enabled 1 percent of the wealthiest Americans to acquire 95 percent of the nation's wealth. A credit card system that encourages people to buy what they can't afford, Moore argues, coupled with predatory subprime mortgage lending, exposed the dark bankrupt side of capitalism.

Moore sees both communism and capitalism as practiced since the 1980s as systemic failures. When late-night comedians see Standard & Poor's as "your life in a nutshell"; a "financial planner" as "the guy whose phone has been disconnected"; and the "P/E ratio as the percentage of investors wetting their pants as the market keeps crashing," Moore is gaining on his right-wing detractors.

Moore's naive nostalgia for the '50s and '60s evokes Hopalong Cassidy, an era when the highest badge of honor was obedience to parents and the virtues of studying hard, with no ambiguity or confusion about heroism and what it stood for. Conservative pundits are spinning the movie as a call to socialism or communism. But that misses the point. These sound bites are more sound than bite. Ignored were an orgy of risky trading and the fraudulent deception of investors that unleashed a global financial meltdown.

The target is what we have allowed capitalism to become since the fall of communism. For those who are not astigmatically impaired, from Enron to Madoff, greed and corruption subverted democratic capitalism. No one said anything when one Wall Street giant put $16.7 billion aside for year-end bonuses in 2006 — for the best performers. One top trader turned down a $70 million bonus and resigned. He said he was insulted. He was worth more. He went out and formed his own hedge fund and made $300 million the first year. And not a peep from conservative talk show hosts, because this was free enterprise at work, not the harbinger of out-of-control greed.

Outlandish compensation packages; the ranks of billionaires from 350 before Sept. 11, 2001, to more than 1,000, propelled by hedge funds and derivatives (once described in congressional testimony as "global time bombs"); predatory, worthless subprime mortgages that were sliced and diced and sold good as gold the world over before they became "toxic assets"; the erosion of the middle classes into the ranks of the poor; six jobless for each available job. But the gravediggers of democratic capitalism aren't done yet.

The $26 trillion life insurance market is ripe for plucking, a la subprime mortgage sleight of hand. For the next big bubble, scam artists are buying, bundling, packaging, securitizing, and selling "stranger-owned" life insurance policies that ill and elderly people sell for cash. Instead of denouncing Moore's indictment of predatory capitalism, it would behoove right-wing talk show hosts to take the lead in exposing large-scale theft masquerading as solid business practice.

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deBorchgrave
"The American dream fell apart at the seams," Willie Nelson strummed on CNN as he described the plight of small farmers going bust. Almost everything and everyone is fighting for survival in an economy that continues to defy wallops of government stimulus. Brick-and-mortar...
moore,capitalism,movie
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2009-50-05
Monday, 05 October 2009 12:50 PM
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