Capitalism with a crony’s face … layered onto a number of intersecting social, financial, and data networks.
This vile paper-money and funding system; this system of Dutch descent, begotten by Bishop Burnet and born in hell; this system has turned everything into a gamble. There are hundreds of men who live by being the agents to carry on gambling... many of the gamblers live in the country; they write up to their gambling agent, whom they call their stockbroker; he gambles according to their order; and they receive the profit or stand to the loss. Is it possible to conceive a viler calling than that of an agent for the carrying on of gambling! And yet the vagabonds call themselves gentlemen.
William Cobbett, Rural Rides 1830
The International Regulation of Money Laundering
Mónica Serrano and Paul Kenny
Global Governance
Vol. 9, No. 4 (Oct.–Dec. 2003), pp. 433-439[/caption]
In keeping with his materialist view of history, Marx expected banking to be subordinated to the needs of industrial capitalism. Equity investment – followed by public ownership of the means of production under socialism – seemed likely to replace the interest-extracting “usury capital” inherited from antiquity and feudal times: debts mounting up at compound interest in excess of the means to pay, culminating in crises marked by bank runs and property foreclosures.
But as matters have turned out, the rentier interests mounted a Counter-Enlightenment to undermine the reforms that promised to liberate society from special privilege.
Instead of promoting capital investment in an alliance with industry and government, financial planners have sponsored a travesty of free markets.
Realizing that income not taxed is free to be capitalized, bought and sold on credit, and paid out as interest, bankers have formed an alliance between finance, insurance and real estate (FIRE) to free land rent and monopoly rent (as well as debt-leveraged “capital” gains) from taxation.
The result is that today’s economy is burdened with property and financial claims that Marx and other critics deemed “fictitious” – a proliferation of financial overhead in the form of interest and dividends, fees and commissions, exorbitant management salaries, bonuses and stock options, and “capital” gains (mainly debt-leveraged land-price gains). And to cap matters, new financial modes of exploiting labor have been innovated, headed by pension-fund capitalism and privatization of Social Security. As economic planning has passed from government to the financial sector, the alternative to public price regulation and progressive taxation is debt peonage.
How often can one think that money laundering has no labor effects because it is the accumulated finance capital surplus being transformed and exploited.
Similarly the machinations of finance capitalism manifest themselves in indulgences like yacht racing, where there is no real relation to the sponsors from vast global neocapitalism selling fossil fuel, upscale automobiles, and computer software.
And yet there are major national elements at work representing North/South and the 1% / 99%. Now one can see how they affect significant geopolitical and demographic change as state capitalism in the post-soviet period has evolved into kleptocratic crony capitalism.
What’s more galling is how US ruling class clowns have paraded exploitation as a mass spectacle complete with security theater, demonizing immigration, the arts, and race/class/gender differences.
Debt peonage arising from the dislocating taxes from land rent and monopoly rents is a key to the current crises of social division.
The President claimed foreign leaders had singled the country out for funding "radical ideology", prompting criticism over his failure to address similar allegations leveled at his Saudi allies.
Ms Smith - who was appointed as the head diplomat in Doha by former President Barack Obama three years ago - has since tweeted that "Qatar is a strong partner in combating terrorist financing", contradicting the US President's public claims that the country is “a funder of terrorism at a very high level”…
Egypt has long thought Qatar’s support of Islamist groups Muslim Brotherhood was dangerous for their country.
Saudi Arabia also re-ignited tensions over Doha’s alleged support for Iran, which they claim could act to destabilise the region.
Qatar
Trump has stakes in four companies that appear to be tied in business in the desert nation. The country’s state-owned carrier, Qatar Airways, has leased an office in Manhattan’s Trump Tower since 2008. Ivanka Trump told Hotelier Middle East in 2015 that the Trump Hotel Collection was eyeing opportunities in Qatar. Back to map.
Saudi Arabia
Shortly after his presidential campaign got underway, according to his financial disclosures, Trump registered eight companies that could be related to a development project in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia’s second-biggest city. "Saudi Arabia, I get along great with all of them. They buy apartments from me," Trump said at a campaign rally. Four of the eight companies have since dissolved. In February 2016, Trump said Saudi Arabia “blew up the World Trade Center.” (Fifteen of the Sept. 11 hijackers were Saudi citizens.) Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal Alsaud reminded Trump on Twitter that he had helped “bail” him out in the past; according to the New York Times, the prince agreed to take majority control of New York’s Plaza Hotel when Trump faced financial upheaval in the 1990s and also bought a Trump yacht when the President-elect’s Atlantic City casinos were struggling. Back to map.
Money has no hygienic meaning even though there is dirty/clean money. Money laundering regulation involves banks in competitive cost-benefit strategies
There are regulatory mechanisms that in their political economy distinguish between criminal organizations, terrorist entities, and “normal” finance with a variety of agencies signaling violations.
More interesting in the case of the Gulf states are claims of terrorism and non-terrorism. The Trump Qatar accusations are actually a diversion from examining money laundering for things other than terrorism and other capital gains.
Hooverville NYC
In the #TrumpRussia context, the intersection of financial laundering and demographic data laundering came together in a variety of media applications including the targeting of audiences as well as critical voting districts.
The prosecution of individuals leveraging influence in the #TrumpRussia can be layered over the overt/covert active measures, and layered over the capitalist social networks that laundered data.
Moments later, a second protester ... stood up in the crowd and gestured, screaming: "You are all Goebbels! You are all Nazis like Joseph Goebbels... you are inciting terrorists," likening the audience to the Nazi propaganda minister who aided Adolf Hitler.
The Public Theater's latest production of the Shakespearean classic has prompted social media protests and led to the withdrawal of two corporate sponsors — Bank of America and Delta Airlines.
But defenders of the Public Theater's Julius Caesar have argued that critics are missing the point. They say that it does not incite violence … but rather explores the consequences of using totalitarian methods to protect democracy.
Finally, the role of legal/illegal banking operations especially in tax havens can be layered onto the 2016 election just as one observes the relation between individuals bridging the GOP and Russian actors.
In Trump’s case he had a preexisting relationship with Russians who only coincidentally in the 2007 prosecution of Bayrock, revealed the money laundering that is ubiquitous — in such financial capital transactions.
The strangeness of the relations of fictitious capital as fiction have come in its most epiphenomenal realms, like the withdrawal of corporate sponsorship of NYC’s Public Theater because of the purported costume blasphemy of god-emperor Trump in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar.
Such spectacular noise near the original historical sites of Hoovervilles … the ultimate problem of rentier economies.
Politically exposed and expressed, our reality show Donald ...
Comments
oops
@eState4Column5
Great diary annieli!
Getting Trump on money-laundering charges should be a slam-dunk, except for the fact that it's now so thoroughly widespread, many may have forgotten that it's a crime.
"Obama promised transparency, but Assange is the one who brought it."
There's the rub...
The other side of this is due to the pervasiveness, it would be hard to separate Trump as an isolated "bad apple." I'm willing to bet a real deep investigation would start to look like publishing a high priced Madam's client list and might make a lot of TPTB a bit uncomfortable.
Idolizing a politician is like believing the stripper really likes you.
Tremendous work annile
It's all about moving money.
A great read...Thanks.
I want a Pony!
Tks. But will wait to read
these huge posts when you post them here first.
Why are you cross posting here?
Not enuf ToP luv?
Prof: Nancy! I’m going to Greece!
Nancy: And swim the English Channel?
Prof: No. No. To ancient Greece where burning Sapho stood beside the wine dark sea. Wa de do da! Nancy, I’ve invented a time machine!
Firesign Theater
Stop the War!
Anti-Capitalist Meetup here not there
Actually, most of the Anti-Capitalist Meetup readership is now here and not there.
At this point, I think the posting at Daily Kos (TOP)(DK) is little else besides tradition .....
[video:https://youtu.be/gRdfX7ut8gw]
"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar
"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides
Oh now, we don't mind where else people post,
I'm frankly thrilled to see annieli here, and the more people cross-post here, I think, the better.
"Obama promised transparency, but Assange is the one who brought it."
ACM is usually cross-posted weekly
although some haven't gotten here because no one person is designated to do the cross posting from TOP
@eState4Column5
I am glad to have you and the series here.
GG Tweets you out on Twitter, and I published you on Facebook. We welcome intellectuals and free thought. Why you post at TOP is your business, since few over there read this series anyway. Above their pay grade, and the DNC hasn't directed them to you. If they the bots at TOP aren't bashing white people, males in particular, they are cheering on Wall Street and the invasion of Syria. And, of course, it was Russia, Russia, Russia that interfered with our election - not Hillary and the Democrats.
I keep wishing for the demise of the financial institutions and current American government. I know it will hurt me more than it will hurt them, but I don't know any other way to give this country a chance for a new beginning - one without financiers running the joint.
"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon
Agree, good to see this here.
A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.
MMT?
False. Governments have gone bankrupt many times before, and some (like Greece) are in the process of doing so now.
Of course, there's the honest question about what "meeting the obligation" means. If just providing the promised currency units when due counts, then perhaps you're correct here. But Weimar Germany and Zimbabwe both did that; and what happened is: the government issued new currency units to meet the obligation; the currency units lost all their value and the creditors ended up with nothing of value, which doesn't sound like "meeting the obligations" to me.
No one has ever simultaneously set the number of currency units in existence and still dictated the real-world value of each one of them. To do either one of these things is also to do the other one; the more units of currency that exist, the less each one will purchase. This is a law of nature, as subject to human sovereignty as is the law of gravity or the universal speed limit (speed of light). And for a government to truly meet its obligations, then it must return, not currency for currency, but value for value.
Matters may be different in a system which is MMT in name as well as in fact (nearly all fiat currency systems now existing are MMT in fact). But while the illusion of asset-backing is being maintained, what I said above remains intact, and there will be more Weimars and Zimbabwes out there.
Point to the MMT side: Greece is going bankrupt largely because the Franks (Germans, French, Belgians, Dutch) are totally willing to sacrifice the Greek nation utterly in order to maintain the complete and total fiction that the Euro is an asset-backed currency. In reality, it's just as MMT as any other fiat currency.
"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar
"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides
And the Greeks are desperate to maintain the fiction
That they are just like their 'fellow' Western/Northern Euros, despite prior and present economic realities.
Kings have fallen for less.
Gëzuar!!
from a reasonably stable genius.
fallen
Republics, too, as I pointed out above.
"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar
"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides
@thanatokephaloides Well, with Greece though
Regarding Weimar Germany, part of the problem was that no one wanted their currency. They had to pay reparations via gold or foreign currency. So of course if no one wants your currency, you got a problem there.
America is just honky dory because of the petrodollar. People want the US dollar. If that were to stop, well, might get some problems down the road there.
no one wanted the old Reichsmark
There's a "chicken/egg" problem here too: was the currency worthless because no one wanted it, or did no one want it because it was already worthless? (Which came first?)
I doubt anyone will ever sort that one out....
But my base statement still remains intact: no one has ever done what MMT suggests can be done, issuing huge quantities of currency while still having each unit of currency retain the same value as beforehand. The relationship between the number of currency units in existence and the net value of each one of them still appears to be pretty ironclad. And the US petrodollar isn't immune, as those of us who lived through the inflation of the 1970s can attest.
Again, mileage may vary considerably if a major currency sovereign decides to adopt MMT openly, honestly, and in name as well as fact. This has never been tried either, nations preferring to maintain the fiction that their currency is asset-backed instead. The worst thing about the petrodollar in this regard is that neither the American Government (the sovereign currency issuer) nor any other American entity or natural person owns the majority of the assets which in fact back the dollar. The assets are almost all somebody else's crude oil!
As the old saying goes, "This cannot end well!"
"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar
"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides
@thanatokephaloidesThe worst thing about
Right, as I mentioned, people want the US dollar because of many reasons, including the petrodollar. But, that can all come crashing down if oil was to be sold in other currencies. Thus, not only do we fight for oil and strategic land, but also do it at the bidding of those who could severely harm or crash our economic systems.
I can think of a couple of countries
"Obama promised transparency, but Assange is the one who brought it."
How cute. Six degrees of separation.
I could be nicely linked into every one of these charts.
But then, so could you.
[In fact, my connections are even better than Trump's. I'm beginning to think Putin hired me to make this comment.]
/intellectual honesty.
Well, by their definition
Flynn is right. "They" being the Ubers and Filthys (As I call them) (the uber rich and filthy rich), aka the oligarchy. "Capitalism" to them is, "any way you can make a buck without doing the work."
the little things you can do are more valuable than the giant things you can't! - @thanatokephaloides. On Twitter @wink1radio. (-2.1) All about building progressive media.
Wow, gohnsit! What a tour de force post! Thank you.
I need to look into money laundering. Seems as though anybody who is anybody has done it. Political campaigns, the Vatican, law firms, banks, the POTUS. Somehow, I feel as though I've been failing to pull my weight. I'm so ashamed!
I just found a quarter
"Obama promised transparency, but Assange is the one who brought it."
A retired nurse told me her doc had required her
to sterilize money before giving it to him. She said it made bills crisp.
thanks
just glad TOP tolerates ACM
@eState4Column5