Re: inside job - see it NOW while you can
Great piece DS.
Obviously you would disagree, but I think you are being unnecessarily harsh here.
1) I don't think the film casts Soros or Frank in a particular light one way or the other. They barely appear. I think Frank's only statement was "I don't hear confessions." Soros simply pointed out that the music had already stopped by the time Chuck Prince uttered his famous banker's lament: "We have to keep dancing etc." Frankly and in general I think Soros's commentary on markets is quite valuable and highly-under rated. (E.g., the observation that reciprocity is - conveniently - ignored as a factor in markets.) I still don't understand why he is so hated. In short, I don't think this is a strong point in your argument (and therefore in your review.)
2) I think this analysis is questionable:
To put it mildly, I think this is a very hard thesis to prove. I also think ultimately it's a distraction.
"Rulers"? "Class war"? In terms of the downfall of the middle classes of the industrialised west, I think what people need to learn is how their belief in real estate undid them. There's obviously much more to the story than that, but without this "buy in" the most recent chapter could not have happened. Real estate was what enabled the bait and switch by which a formerly relatively industrial economy could be switched for a financialised "new" economy of financial and derivative "services" and the decline masked. Or, more broadly, what people need to realise is that asset-price Keynsianism was never going to end any other way than badly. In short, I just don't buy that the entire citizenry is faultless and the "rulers" are to blame. It's just not credible.
3) The film does not achieve everything that one might want it to but I really can't see that it could have achieved effectively much more than it took on in a feature documentary format. (What you seem to have in mind is simply a different film.)
4) Great Hussman piece. He's not alone in arguing for this. It is the Swedish model and was championed by Yves Smith and many others.
Great piece DS.
Obviously you would disagree, but I think you are being unnecessarily harsh here.
1) I don't think the film casts Soros or Frank in a particular light one way or the other. They barely appear. I think Frank's only statement was "I don't hear confessions." Soros simply pointed out that the music had already stopped by the time Chuck Prince uttered his famous banker's lament: "We have to keep dancing etc." Frankly and in general I think Soros's commentary on markets is quite valuable and highly-under rated. (E.g., the observation that reciprocity is - conveniently - ignored as a factor in markets.) I still don't understand why he is so hated. In short, I don't think this is a strong point in your argument (and therefore in your review.)
2) I think this analysis is questionable:
The banking collapse was a carefully planned strategic attack on the working people of this country and the world. It was designed to do exactly what it is doing here and in Europe: create a massive crisis to justify "austerity" for the masses. This is what Naomi Klein has styled "disaster capitalism" at its most perverse. The capitalist class--the bankers and corporations and the Super-Rich--planned and encouraged this collapse in a thousand different ways precisely to create a disaster so compelling that they could dismantle every social benefit that ordinary people have achieved in the last century and a half. Tens of thousands of people have lost their homes to the banks and thousands more will. Millions have lost their jobs and may never find work again; the real unemployment rate--that is, if you count people so discouraged that they have given up the job search, and those who can only find part-time work--is a Depression-level 22.5% Thousands of teachers and other government employees are being laid off and many more will be as the disaster unfolds. The voices that are already calling for gutting or cutting Social Security and Medicare will become a swelling chorus as soon as the mid-term elections are over. Throughout Europe governments are gutting the social programs that have been in place in some countries since WWII and in others since the 1880s. The rulers created this crisis to strip the working class of the protections it had gained and to reinforce raw elite power. The disaster is a strategy in the class war.
"Rulers"? "Class war"? In terms of the downfall of the middle classes of the industrialised west, I think what people need to learn is how their belief in real estate undid them. There's obviously much more to the story than that, but without this "buy in" the most recent chapter could not have happened. Real estate was what enabled the bait and switch by which a formerly relatively industrial economy could be switched for a financialised "new" economy of financial and derivative "services" and the decline masked. Or, more broadly, what people need to realise is that asset-price Keynsianism was never going to end any other way than badly. In short, I just don't buy that the entire citizenry is faultless and the "rulers" are to blame. It's just not credible.
3) The film does not achieve everything that one might want it to but I really can't see that it could have achieved effectively much more than it took on in a feature documentary format. (What you seem to have in mind is simply a different film.)
4) Great Hussman piece. He's not alone in arguing for this. It is the Swedish model and was championed by Yves Smith and many others.
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