A Still Moment
     George W. Bush was  onto something in the fall of 2008 when he remarked apropos of the  Lehman collapse: "...this sucker could go down."
      It's my serene conviction, by the way, that this sucker actually is  going down, right now, even as I clatter away at the keys -- perhaps in  slow motion, so that not many other bystanders have noticed yet, and  the few who have noticed are mostly too crosseyed with nausea to  speak.
     It's perhaps useful to define even what we mean  when we say "this sucker." Everybody knows what a sucker is, of  course -- say, a Midwestern public employees' union pension fund  snookered into buying a fat slice of equity tranche in a Goldman  Sachs-engineered CDO. But "this sucker" is something else: a  rather large cargo of commercial relations, entailed obligations, hopes,  expectations, habits of daily life -- indeed millions of whole lives --  loaded onto the rather creaky vessel we call modern civilization. "This  sucker" was such an apt term coming from someone whose understanding of  civilization was like unto that of a boy who found a PlayStation under  the Christmas tree.
    It's also perhaps useful to define  what we mean by "going down." To my mind it means an awful lot of money  disappears and nobody can pay for anything and an awful of things that  have kept going on promises to pay and to get paid will stop keeping  going. I don't think that the idea of money disappears -- that is, paper  certificates representing claims on future work -- but there will be a  lot less of it to go around.  Eventually the idea of money could go,  too, at least in its current form as Federal Reserve notes. But mostly  for some years it will just be a lot of people, companies, and  governments who are broke.
     "Going down" will mean a  society with no money and an infrastructure for daily life that requires  gobs of money to run, and a populace too dazed, confused, and inflamed  to do anything useful in the way of organizing new infrastructures for  daily life for their new circumstances. In retrospect, the Great  Depression of the 1930s will look like "The Philadelphia Story" compared  to what we wake up to ten years from now.
     President  Obama's speech at Cooper Union last week was a remarkable performance.  It managed to appear forceful and serious without containing any really  serious or forceful proposals to discipline a banking system that is  running a hostage-and-ransom racket on civilization. If this is finally  what the Obama Experience is all about than his detractors have been  right all along: he is a tool. Finance reform aside, there are  still plenty of laws left on the statute books that could be applied to  the frauds and rackets that ran absolutely amok on Wall Street the past  few years. I would still like to know why buying CDS "insurance" against  your own issue of bonds deliberately engineered to default is NOT a  form of insider trading, to put it as simply as possible.
      The SEC action against Goldman Sachs is likely to open a Pandora's box  of troubles for that company, and perhaps all of the Too Big To Fail  banks. But even so, I believe this sucker is going down before 99.9  percent of it is sorted out. Anyway, there was a lot about the SEC  action that seemed curious, to put it mildly, from the timing of it, to  the brevity of the document, to the strange fact that it emerged at all  from an agency whose principal activity the past few years has been the  viewing of internet porn, and which has otherwise behaved so  indifferently in the face of numberless offenses to common decency, not  to mention the public interest, that it might as well have been staffed  by a thousand head of Holstein cows rather than licensed attorneys and  graduates of accredited colleges.
     This sucker is going  down because the train of bankruptcies underway has a remorseless  self-reinforcing power to provoke more and more bankruptcies at every  stop along the line as every promise to pay is welshed on. The mortgages  will not be paid and securities will not pay their investors and the  banks will choke on the bad paper promises in their vaults and the  pension funds will not pay their beneficiaries and the states and  counties and municipalities will go broke and not pay their employees  and creditors, and the federal government will not be able to "print"  new money in sufficient quantities fast enough to compensate for all the  money not being paid up-and-down the line... and one morning we will  wake up and discover that all those promises to pay were sham promises  based on no productive activity whatsoever... and that will be a sad  day. Perhaps the Dow Jones Industrial Average will hit 35,000 on that  day.
     Nothing can stop this chain of bankruptcy. It's  already baked in the cake. There is probably some wish on the part of  those in charge, like Mr. Obama, to try everything possible to postpone  it.  And there is likewise surely a huge effort underway in the banking  sector right now to cream off as much cash as possible so that when this  sucker does go down they will bethink themselves better positioned to  survive the consequences.
    Personally, I believe that the  damage was mostly done during the tenure of poor dim George W. Bush, and  his predecessor Bill Clinton. I suspect that Mr. Obama learned at the  height of 2008 election campaign -- during those days of the Lehman  collapse and the TARP -- just how completely the government -- and the  people of the USA -- were in fact hostage to the banking system, and  that it has been his unfortunate role to pretend that there is some  other fate to bargain for besides this sucker going down. It is probably  why he continues to smoke so much. He must be lighting one Marlboro off  the tip of another, one after another, in whatever inner sanctum he  repairs to when the midnight chimes toll around the White House.  It's  sad to think of this graceful, still rather young man going down in  history as the chump-of-the-century, a reincarnation of Herbert Hoover  on steroids, with sugar on top.
     Animosities brewing as  they are among the white trash elements of the country, I just hope this  sucker doesn't resolve into an ugly bout of attempted ethnic cleansing.  Certainly Obama's racial make-up has inspired a revival of the Ku Klux  spirit around the Nascar ovals. I'm sincerely worried that the misdeeds  of people name Blankfein, Rubin, and Madoff could provoke a  red-white-and-blue pogrom.
     The big mystery for the moment  is how come a few good men of stature in important places have  not stepped forward to say the right thing or do the right deed. How  come no US congressperson challenged the knavish behavior of Republicans  who condone malicious idiocy that they know to be false like the  so-called "birther" activity. How come no putative "progressive" has  called the Democrats on their disingenuous failure to call illegal  immigrants what they are. How come no state attorney general has filed  charges against TBTF bank misconduct even if the US attorney general  lies in state over at the US DOJ. How come no political figure of any  stripe has called for the resignation of Summers, Rubin, Gensler and  other Goldman Sachs "sleepers" infesting high levels of government. How  come Dylan Ratigan is the only visible figure in any major newsroom  willing to identify the precise nature of the meta-swindle.
      When this sucker goes down, our primary task will be reorganizing  American life on a much more local and de-complexified basis. It's a  very big assignment and especially daunting against a possible  background of political disorder. The losses will be epic and the  changes severe, but it doesn't have to mean the end of recognizably  American culture. There will be very little money around, and it may end  up being a certificate backed by gold issued by a bank other than the  Federal Reserve. Or maybe we'll just be swapping stuff for the makings  of dinner.
     So many forces are roiling around 'out there'  now that it's hard to believe that the authorities in government and  banking can keep the illusion of normality going a whole lot longer. The  possible litigation against Goldman Sachs-style frauds by a thousand  aggrieved victims is enough to paralyze the system. Meanwhile, trillions  in credit default swaps are ticking away like dirty bombs. Greece is  going down, with Portugal, Spain, Ireland, and the UK standing by to go  next. Nobody can pay their bills. Before long, the old folks won't get  their checks. Then the poor folks. Lately, I wonder if there will even  be an election six months from now.
