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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

The Price

The nearly unprecedented power a handful of monster banks wield over our lives raises a suite of ethical questions. “Nearly unprecedented” only because it mimics the power of the banking sector in America following World War I and through  the decade we refer to as the “Roaring Twenties.” We all know what happened at the end of that period, the Great Depression.

Interestingly, the monster banks of that day played a small role in triggering that horrific event. However, the people and their representatives in the Congress reacted more aggressively than those in that esteemed body have in response to an event almost exclusively the result of reckless behavior by today’s monster banks. Their power is two-fold: their control over members of Congress through massive injections of campaign cash, plus their ability to convince foolish voters that making rich folks richer will somehow benefit those down the food chain.

Add to this snake-oil logic the idea that instead of addressing the Great Recession as we have every other economic downturn since the industrial revolution, we are told that we need to cut investments in education, our crumbling infrastructure, firemen, police, and anything else that might maintain and improve our nation’s well-being. We are told austerity is the answer, a solution embraced by some in the Euro Zone and Great Britain.

Germany has taken the lead in imposing this path to prosperity on its neighbors. However, it’s not been so keen on austerity for Germany itself. The Scandinavian nations have not embraced austerity with enthusiasm either. Our neighbors to the north, Canada, have seen no need, since their banking laws saved them from the carnage our banks inflicted on Americans. By the way, our banks are fine; we bailed them out and guess what they are doing? The same stuff that crashed the world economy in 2007-2008. Why not? They know we will bail them out again.

How’s austerity working for the American people? They took the hit, no bailout for them. It’s been hard. Losing homes, jobs and dreams has been tough. Some folks can’t deal with it. Marriages come apart, and for some folks who just can’t go on, suicide seems the answer. The suicide rate in Europe has soared and it’s climbed in America as well.

As the recession ballooned from 2007 through 2010 experts* estimate suicides exceeded the norm by more than 4,750 across our land. The rate was a lot higher in states with the highest job losses. Unemployed folks are roughly twice as likely to die by their own hand as those who have work. Every one of these nearly 5,000 Americans who committed suicide was killed by the reckless bankers who tanked our economy. The bankers killed them as surely as if they had mowed them down against a wall; they were “Collateral Damage” in the bankers’ scramble for riches. The bankers gambled and everyone lost,,,,, except them. Some lost their lives.


*David Stuckler & Sanjay Basu, The Body Economic: Why Austerity Kills

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