A Prescription for Peace and Prosperity

Guest Post by Paul Craig Roberts

The question is often asked: “What can we do?” Here is a prescription for peace and prosperity.

We will begin with prosperity, because prosperity can contribute to peace. Sometimes governments begin wars in order to distract from unpromising economic prospects, and internal political stability can also be dependent on prosperity.

The Road to Prosperity

For the United States to return to a prosperous road, the middle class must be restored and the ladders of upward mobility put back in place. The middle class served domestic political stability by being a buffer between rich and poor. Ladders of upward mobility are a relief valve that permit determined folk to rise from poverty to success. Rising incomes throughout society provide the consumer demand that drives an economy. This is the way the US economy worked in the post-WWII period.

To reestablish the middle class the offshored jobs have to be brought home, monopolies broken up, regulation restored, and the central bank put under accountable control or abolished.

Jobs offshoring enriched owners and managers of capital at the expense of the middle class. Well paid manufacturing and industrial workers lost their livelihoods as did university graduates trained for tradable professional service jobs such as software engineering and information technology. No comparable wages and salaries could be found in the economy where the remaining jobs consist of domestic service employment, such as retail clerks, hospital orderlies, waitresses and bartenders. The current income loss is compounded by the loss of medical benefits and private pensions that supplemented Social Security retirement. Thus, jobs offshoring reduced both current and future consumer income.

America’s middle class jobs can be brought home by changing the way corporations are taxed. Corporate income could be taxed on the basis of whether corporations add value to their product sold in US markets domestically or offshore. Domestic production would have a lower tax rate. Offshored production would be taxed at a higher rate. The tax rate could be set to cancel out the cost savings of producing offshore.

Under long-term attack by free market economists, the Sherman Antitrust Act has become a dead-letter law. Free market economists argue that markets are self-correcting and that anti-monopoly legislation is unnecessary and serves mainly to protect inefficiency. A large array of traditionally small business activities have been monopolized by franchises and “big box” stores. Family owned auto parts stores, hardware stores, restaurants, men’s clothing stores, and dress shops, have been crowded out. Walmart’s destructive impact on Main Street businesses is legendary. National corporations have pushed local businesses into the trash bin.

Monopoly has more than economic effect. When six mega-media companies have control of 90 percent of the American media, a dispersed and independent press no longer exists. Yet, democracy itself relies on media helping to hold government to account. The purpose of the First Amendment is to control the government, but today media serves as a propaganda ministry for government.

Americans received better and less expensive communication services when AT&T was a regulated monopoly. Free trade in communications has resulted in the creation of many unregulated local monopolies with poor service and high charges. AT&T’s stability made the stock a “blue-chip” ideal for “widow and orphan” trust funds, pensions, and wealth preservation. No such risk free stock exists today.

Monopoly was given a huge boost by financial deregulation. Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan’s claim that “markets are self-regulating” and that government regulation is harmful was blown to pieces by the financial crisis of 2007-2008. Deregulation not only allowed banks to escape from prudent behavior but also allowed such concentration that America now has “banks too big to fail.” One of capitalism’s virtues and justifications is that inefficient enterprises fail and go out of business. Instead, we have banks that must be kept afloat with public or Federal Reserve subsidies. Clearly, one result of financial deregulation has been to protect the large banks from the operation of capitalism. The irony that freeing banks from regulation resulted in the destruction of capitalism is lost on free market economists.

The cost of the Federal Reserve’s support for the banks too big to fail with zero and negative real interest rates has been devastating for savers and retirees. Americans have received no interest on their savings for seven years. To make ends meet, they have had to consume their savings. Moreover, the Federal Reserve’s policy has artificially driven up the stock market with the liquidity that the Federal Reserve has created and also caused a similar bubble in the bond market. The high prices of bonds are inconsistent with the buildup in debt and the money printed in order to keep the debt afloat. The dollar’s value itself depends on quantitative easing in Japan and the EU.

In order to restore financial stability, an obvious precondition for prosperity, the large banks must be broken up and the distinction between investment and commercial banks restored.

Since the Clinton regime, the majority of the Treasury secretaries have been top executives of the troubled large banks, and they have used their public position to benefit their banks and not the US economy. Additionally, executives of the large banks comprise the board of the New York Fed, the principal operating arm of the Federal Reserve. Consequently, a few large banks control US financial policy. This conspiracy must be broken up and the Federal Reserve made accountable or abolished.

This requires getting money out of politics. The ability of a few powerful private interest groups to control election outcomes with their campaign contributions is anathema to democracy. A year ago the Republican Supreme Court ruled that the rich have a constitutional right to purchase the government with political campaign contributions in order to serve their selfish interests.

These are the same Republican justices who apparently see no constitutional right to habeas corpus and, thus, have not prohibited indefinite detention of US citizens. These are the same Republican justices who apparently see no constitutional prohibition against self-incrimination and, thus, have tolerated torture. These are the same Republican justices who have abandoned due process and permit the US government to assassinate US citizens.

To remove the control of money over political life would likely require a revolution. Unless prosperity is to be only for the One Percent, the Supreme Court’s assault on democracy must be overturned.

The Road to Peace is Difficult

To regain peace is even more difficult than to regain prosperity. As prosperity can be a precondition for peace, peace requires both changes in the economy and in foreign policy.

To regain peace is especially challenging, not because Americans are threatened by Muslim terrorists, domestic extremists, and Russians. These “threats” are hoaxes orchestrated in behalf of special interests. “Security threats” provide more profit and more power for the military/security complex.

The fabricated “war on terror” has been underway for 14 years and has succeeded in creating even more “terror” that must be combated with enormous expenditures of money. Apparently, Republicans intend that monies paid in Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes be redirected to the military/security complex.

The promised three-week “cakewalk” in Iraq has become a 14 year defeat with the radical Islamic State controlling half of Iraq and Syria. Islamist resistance to Western domination has spread into Africa and Yemen, and Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and the oil emirates are ripe fruit ready to fall.

Having let the genie out of the bottle in the Middle East, Washington has turned to conflict with Russia and by extension to China. This is a big bite for a government that has not been able to defeat the Taliban in Afghanistan after 14 years.

Russia is not a country accustomed to defeat. Moreover, Russia has massive nuclear forces and massive territory into which to absorb any US/NATO invasion. Picking a fight with a well-armed country with by far the largest land mass of any country shows a lack of elementary strategic sense. But that is what Washington is doing.

Washington is picking a fight with Russia, because Washington is committed to the neoconservative doctrine that History has chosen Washington to exercise hegemony over the world. The US is the “exceptional and indispensable” country, the Uni-power chosen to impose Washington’s will on the world.

This ideology governs US foreign policy and requires war in its defense. In the 1990s Paul Wolfowitz enshrined the Wolfowitz Doctrine into US military and foreign policy. In its most bold form, the Doctrine states:

“Our first objective is to prevent the re-emergence of a new rival, either on the territory of the former Soviet Union or elsewhere, that poses a threat on the order of that posed formerly by the Soviet Union. This is a dominant consideration underlying the new regional defense strategy and requires that we endeavor to prevent any hostile power from dominating a region whose resources would, under consolidated control, be sufficient to generate global power.”

As a former member of the original Cold War Committee on the Present Danger, I can explain what these words mean. The “threat posed formerly by the Soviet Union” was the ability of the Soviet Union to block unilateral US action in some parts of the world. The Soviet Union was a constraint on US unilateral action, not everywhere but in some places. This constraint on Washington’s will is regarded as a threat.

A “hostile power” is a country with an independent foreign policy, such as the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) have proclaimed. Iran, Bolivia, Ecuador, Venezuela, Argentina, Cuba, and North Korea have also proclaimed an independent foreign policy.

This is too much independence for Washington to stomach. As Russian President Vladimir Putin recently stated, “Washington doesn’t want partners. Washington wants vassals.”

The Wolfowitz doctrine requires Washington to dispense with governments that do not acquiesce to Washington’s will. It is a “first objective.”

The collapse of the Soviet Union resulted in Boris Yeltsin becoming president of a dismembered Russia. Yeltsin was a compliant US puppet. Washington became accustomed to its new vassal and absorbed itself in its Middle Eastern wars, expecting Vladimir Putin to continue Russia’s vassalage.

However at the 43rd Munich Conference on Security Policy, Putin said: “I consider that the unipolar model is not only unacceptable but also impossible in today’s world.”

Putin went on to say: “We are seeing a greater and greater disdain for the basic principles of international law. And independent legal norms are, as a matter of fact, coming increasingly closer to one state’s legal system. One state and, of course, first and foremost the United States, has overstepped its national borders in every way. This is visible in the economic, political, cultural and educational policies it imposes on other nations. Well, who likes this? Who is happy about this?”

When Putin issued this fundamental challenge to US Uni-power, Washington was preoccupied with its lack of success with its invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. Mission was not accomplished.

By 2014 it had entered the thick skulls of our rulers in Washington that while Washington was blowing up weddings, funerals, village elders, and children’s soccer games in the Middle East, Russia had achieved independence from Washington’s control and presented itself as a formidable challenge to Washington’s Uni-power. Putin and Russia have had enough of Washington’s arrogance.

The unmistakable rise of Russia refocused Washington from the Middle East to Russia’s vulnerabilities. Ukraine, long a constituent part of Russia and subsequently the Soviet Union, was split off from Russia in the wake of the Soviet collapse by Washington’s maneuvering. In 2004 Washington had tried to capture Ukraine in the Orange Revolution, which failed to deliver Ukraine into Washington’s hands. Consequently, according to Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland, Washington spent $5 billion over the following decade developing NGOs that could be called into the streets of Kiev and in developing political leaders who represented Washington’s interests.

Washington launched its coup in February 2014 with orchestrated “demonstrations” that with the addition of violence resulted in the overthrow and flight of the elected democratic government of Victor Yanukovych. In other words, Washington destroyed democracy in a new country with a coup before democracy could take root.

Ukrainian democracy meant nothing to Washington intent on seizing Ukraine in order to present Russia with a security problem and also to justify sanctions against “Russian aggression” in order to break up Russia’s growing economic and political relationships with Europe.

Having launched on this reckless and irresponsible attack on a nuclear power, can Washington eat crow and back off? Would the neoconservative-controlled mass media permit that? The Russian government, backed 89% by the Russian people, have made it clear that Russia rejects vassalage status as the price of being part of the West. The implication of the Wolfowitz Doctrine is that Russia must be destroyed.

This implies our own destruction.

What can be done to restore peace? Obviously, the EU must abandon NATO and declare that Washington is a greater threat than Russia. Without NATO Washington has no cover for its aggression and no military bases with which to surround Russia.

It is Washington, not Russia, that has an ideology of “uber alles.” Obama endorsed the neoconservative claim that “America is the exceptional country.” Putin has made no such claim for Russia. Putin’s response to Obama’s claim is that “God created us equal.”

In order to restore peace, the neoconservatives must be removed from foreign policy positions in the government and media. This means that Victoria Nuland must be removed as Assistant Secretary of State, that Susan Rice must be removed as National Security Adviser, that Samantha Power must be removed as US UN ambassador.

The warmonger neoconservatives must be removed from Fox ‘News,’ CNN, the New York Times, Washington Post, and Wall Street Journal, and in their places independent voices must replace propagandists for war.

Clearly, none of this is going to happen, but it must if we are to escape armageddon.

The prescription for peace and prosperity is sound. The question is: Can we implement it?

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31 Comments
starfcker
starfcker
August 5, 2015 7:43 am

Yes, of course this can happen. I predict it will. The Clinton’s will go down in history as the biggest grifters of all time. The scales are falling off peoples eyes as we speak. And bammy ain’t gonna pardon no rednecks. It’s the chicago way.

Anonymous
Anonymous
August 5, 2015 8:10 am

Not gonna happen.

Human nature will intervene before it does.

curtmilr
curtmilr
August 5, 2015 8:29 am

Entirely too partisan a diagnosis. Especially true regarding the Supreme Court, where both coalitions have flogged constitutional logic mercilessly. Some of PCR’s economic prescriptions make good sense, but are politically difficult to achieve. My eyes glazed on his peace musings.

subzero
subzero
August 5, 2015 8:47 am

Well, money talks.Honest people need an organization where honest people have control of where the money gets spent. Then the money can be invested in income producing assets. Honest people are basically supporting dishonest people by not controlling their own money.

Openness makes for honesty. So, the more open the better.

subzero
subzero
August 5, 2015 8:58 am

Just to be clear. By ‘income producing assets’ I mean businesses that are run honestly at a profit.

nmb
nmb
August 5, 2015 9:00 am

The dominant elite ready to break the “social contract”

http://bit.ly/XFjGMQ

Stucky
Stucky
August 5, 2015 9:43 am

A very nice Hopey For Change article.

BUT … every motherfucking day of my life and, in a thousand different places in a thousand different ways, I read stories that take us in the exact opposite direction.

So, pray tell, why should I have hope?

overthecliff
overthecliff
August 5, 2015 10:01 am

Free markets are the engines of prosperity and we have very few of them in USA. Monopolies creating protected classes prevent upward mobility. We have parasitic monopolies everywhere. Doctors and the medical professions,the educational establishment politicians and government employee unions, banks and other corporate welfare queens. They are leeches of society and we won’t be rid of them unless the system dies. I fear that a reset during the 4th Turning is our only hope.

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
August 5, 2015 10:20 am

Subzero….sunshine is the greatest disinfectant ……if you open gooberment to the sunshine it kills the leeches .

Dutchman
Dutchman
August 5, 2015 11:18 am

The article speaks of restoring middle class jobs. Here’s the real deal with the current work place:

The millennials are stuck in a part time / Gig economy – it’s a fraud – the corporations are attempting to turn lack of job security and inferior pay and little or no benefits into something ‘exciting’. These millennials aren’t going to have shit when they turn 40.

The ‘contractor / part time” world is commoditizing and de-professionalizing workers, and depressing wages.

Roberts calls for restoring financial stability – I laugh.

Bea Lever
Bea Lever
August 5, 2015 11:48 am

Would PCR make a good president of the USA!USA!USA! or do you think he is just another elite mouthpiece?

I have always liked the boy.

Methatbe
Methatbe
August 5, 2015 11:51 am

A reset would be better than a nuclear holocaust. I fear the situaton may end in one of these two scenarios.

Steve Hogan
Steve Hogan
August 5, 2015 12:04 pm

The author claims AT&T as a government-sacntioned monopoly was better than the current “unregulated” market, which is a howler. And then in the next paragraph he rails against the near monopoly in the media. Does he want monopolies or not?

I also don’t get his position on the too big to fail banks. If a bank is poorly run or makes bad bets and becomes insolvent, simply LET IT FAIL.

What happens when failure is permitted? The bank in question ceases to exist, the bankers lose their jobs, and the depositors lose their deposits. By short-circuiting this process, bankers know they can gamble, depositors don’t care about the solvency of the institutions they’re entrusting their money with, and taxpayers are left holding the bag. It’s called moral hazard for a reason.

Stupidity and greed can never be rewarded to the extent we’re seeing today without government intervention, but Roberts is looking to the same government idiots who created this mess to solve it. Very muddled thinking on his part.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
August 5, 2015 1:38 pm

“For the United States to return to a prosperous road, the middle class must be restored and the ladders of upward mobility put back in place.”

In order to begin all unicorns must immediately begin to haul Leprechaun treasure to the offices of the budget director.

The sentence implies that the task is something that people have simply failed to do, as if there was a sign down along the road to middle class status and upward mobility and everyone who would have had both have somehow gotten lost on the way. What is missing before either of those things are traits le a work ethic, inner drive, long term planning, stable families, a free and open market of skill sets, ideas and labor rather than monopolies installed and protected by the law, competition from slaves in foreign markets, etc.

There is NEVER going to be a middle class lifestyle like that enjoyed by the people of the USA during the post war period through the early 1970’s. It is as over as the Victorian era.

Really enjoy PCR, but he is stuck firmly in the “everyone is just like me” camp of neo-religious belief.

Dutchman
Dutchman
August 5, 2015 2:04 pm

@Hardscrabble: Hip hip! You hit the nail on the head.

KaD
KaD
August 5, 2015 5:38 pm

http://theantimedia.org/iceland-recovering-fastest-in-europe-after-jailing-bankers/

Iceland is on track to become the first European country that suffered in the financial meltdown to “surpass its pre-crisis peak of economic output”—essentially proving to the U.S. that bailing out “too big to fail” banks wasn’t the way to go.

Iceland is beautifully, yet unfortunately, unique in how it chose to handle the disaster. It simply let the banks fail, which resulted in defaults totaling $85 billion—lending ample justification for the prosecution and conviction of bank executives for various fraud-related charges. The decision seemed shocking at the time, but the gamble has obviously paid off.

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
August 5, 2015 5:44 pm

I usually am in agreement with PCR, but this sentence: “Americans received better and less expensive communication services when AT&T was a regulated monopoly” is totally ignorant and wrong.
I was in the independent telephone biz back in the 70’s. This only came about because of the “Carterphone” decision, which basically was about a guy who invented an answering machine (non Western Electric), and wanted users to be able to buy it and connect it to their phone line. Before that decision you could only rent a “Code-a-phone” from the phone company for a couple of hundred dollars a month. Their rationale was outside devices could “damage” their network. That decision opened the door for users to own their own equipment with features not previously available from AT&T and at a much lower cost. Even so, the interconnect business had an uphill battle with the Bell companies doing everything they could to screw up the connection to the phone lines. They required each line to go through an “interface device” which 9 times out of 10 would fail, resulting in the phone company finger-pointing to us independents as the culprit.
According to a former Bell VP, they even had a tap room where they monitored our calls and tried to “head us off at the pass” when a customer called us to express interest. More than once I arrived for an appointment right after a Bell rep had left and either smeared us or offered the customer an under the table deal.
So in essence, PCR doesn’t know what he’s talking about when it comes to the telephone industry.

Pirate Jo
Pirate Jo
August 5, 2015 6:43 pm

What Hardscrabble Farmer said!

Our fault: (lack of) work ethic, inner drive, long term planning, stable families

Not our fault: (lack of) a free and open market of skill sets, ideas and labor rather than monopolies installed and protected by the law, competition from slaves in foreign markets

However, I will say that if every one of us, on an individual basis, made wise decisions and chose the former for ourselves, we would not have been such easy pickins for those who took the latter away from us.

Joseph Constable
Joseph Constable
August 5, 2015 7:16 pm

Burning Platform,

PCR is wacked out. And this comes from someone who is angry that Obama started the war in Ukraine taking a page out of H. Clinton’s playbook. And from someone who studies why prices are so high in the US.

PCR is an old confused leftist. He has nothing new to say. Trite, simplistic old notions is all he’s got and he applies them to any subject.

Stucky
Stucky
August 5, 2015 7:24 pm

PCR is a “leftist”???

#fuckMeDead … learn something new every day.

Muck About
Muck About
August 5, 2015 7:58 pm

What PJ said – especially the part of : “Not our fault: (lack of) a free and open market of skill sets, ideas and labor rather than monopolies installed and protected by the law, competition from slaves in foreign markets”.

That’s why Uber and other entrepreneur startups are getting squashed by vested interests (in the case of Uber, it’s the taxi unions whose ox is getting gored so they want to protect their rice bowl and have the politicians outlaw Uber.. Fuck the Unions..

MA

Russia Is Strong
Russia Is Strong
August 5, 2015 8:44 pm

_______________________________________________________________________________
“PCR is an old confused leftist.”

“So in essence, PCR doesn’t know what he’s talking about when it comes to the telephone industry.”

“Roberts calls for restoring financial stability – I laugh.”

“Very muddled thinking on his part.”

“Really enjoy PCR, but he is stuck firmly in the “everyone is just like me” camp of neo-religious belief”
__________________________________________________________________________

And there you have it: Paul Craig Roberts, one of Amerika’s last remaining great public moral voices & outstanding political thinkers, derided and scorned by pathetically insouciant peasants who aren’t even worthy of licking the soles of his boots.

starfcker
starfcker
August 5, 2015 8:46 pm

PJ, great comment. Hit the nail on the head. MA, fuck uber. What a piece of shit you’re defending. Get your head out of your ass.

llpoh
llpoh
August 5, 2015 10:09 pm

KaD – Iceland has about, well, 12 people total. They are too small to be any kind of example for other nations.

PCR lost me at the point HSF rightly points out.

The middle class is never coming back. The necessary work ethic, will, ingenuity, etc., simply do not exist. The horse has bolted. Hope everyone enjoyed all the stuff they had that was bought on credit and made overseas.

Aheinousanus
Aheinousanus
August 6, 2015 5:11 am

PCR is dead wrong about AT&T.
While they had their monopoly the prices were high. It was after AT&T was broken up into regional companies and independent log distance companies have formed, the prices became lower.
Competition results in lower prices and better service.
In those monopoly days the phone company was famous for lousy service.
If you needed a technician to come out they would create an appointment for a given day. No time was given. You had to take a day off from work and sit at home, possibly all day, until the technician showed up. …and sometimes they did not.
This does not happen anymore because we have a choice. With that sort of service customers switch to the competitor. (of course now with mobile phones the business is different anyway).

I can imagine if AT&T was still a monopoly in phone communications they would force people to keep their landlines and not allow a household to be cell phone only customers.

Jackbooted
Jackbooted
August 6, 2015 6:29 am

WoW, I see so many heads stuck in the sand here and so many with “from my personal experience perspective” I wonder why they bother to read anything, let alone between the lines. Guess if you can sum up your life’s experience in two words or less have at it. JP keep up the good work….you give some out there reason to think. Now how do we go about getting the message out to those that need some coxing?

Jackbooted
Jackbooted
August 6, 2015 6:30 am

PC

Jackbooted
Jackbooted
August 6, 2015 6:33 am

Stand up!

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
August 6, 2015 6:43 am

PCR is an intelligent and honorable guy who has been writing about our descent into full blown collapse for a lot longer than most. I have always admired his ability to remain calm and not give way to anger and cynicism. He does have a massive blind spot and that has always been his blank state approach to the human condition- demonstrate or explain something to anyone from any background and genetic makeup and you will be able to turn them into stolid and upright members of the citizenry. This is a falsehood that is not based on any observable reality and the numbers of those who you cannot convince, never mind those who do not possess the raw materials intellectually, emotionally or spiritually to reach another level has far surpassed the numbers that do. Add to this the one who possess greater intelligence, capacity for long term planning, wealth and lack the moral compass to do right by their other gifts that have become opportunists and you have the ingredients for a souped-up, hybridized tyranny/oligarchy- a brand new feudal age.

He has a blind spot and it is his intellectual Achilles heel.

PattyWise
PattyWise
August 6, 2015 7:46 am

The “honest man (or woman) can not compete with the FSA aka those that control the money. There is no honor among thieves. They will lie, cheat, and obfuscate their way into positions of power and they intend it to stay that way.

John Coster
John Coster
August 6, 2015 9:09 am

Roberts nails it as usual. To accept the neoconservative view that other nations must be vassals to the US government is to accept that we the people of the United States must also be its vassals. It even requires that we follow the orders of those within the power structure who have either participated in or capitulated to the greatest act of treason in American history. Follow the money.