*THE AMERICAN SPRING BEGINS IN TWO WEEKS

*
**
*Kevin Zeese sent us the latest on events
<http://nowdc.org/content/american-spring-time-occupy-blossom> starting
in Washington DC on the 30th of March to begin the next phase of the
Occupy Movement.

/Common Dreams/ has a report this morning
<http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2012/03/15-1> on other Occupy events.

/LUV News/ will participate on 30 March in the Occupy the EPA event
<http://nowdc.org/content/occupy-epa-launches-american-spring>.
*
**
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*WAR ON TERRORISM UPDATE


*
**
*Despite the massive propaganda effort of the mass media to demonize
Syria, /The Hill/ reports this morning, 64% oppose going in
<http://thehill.com/blogs/defcon-hill/policy-and-strategy/216331-poll-public-opposes-military-intervention-in-syria>
and bombing the country, with 25% saying we need another war.

Republican Representative Tim Johnson said
<http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/03/15/gop-rep-tim-johnson-blasts-u-s-involvement-in-senseless-silly-wars/>
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan wasted too much money and cost too many
lives in senseless silly wars that kill innocent people and do not make
us safer.  Can Democrats join him?

Republican Senator Chuck Grassley
<http://thehill.com/blogs/defcon-hill/policy-and-strategy/216263-gop-senator-dismisses-holders-cliffs-notes-explanation-for-killing-citizens-abroad>
is demanding that the Obama regime provide a legal rationale for its
policy of targeting Americans for death.  Where are the Democrats?
*
**
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*YOUR ISP MAY BE ABOUT TO START SPYING ON YOU


*
**
*/Raw Story/ has a good piece
<http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/03/15/american-isps-to-launch-massive-copyright-spying-scheme-on-july-12/>
on a story we've followed for awhile, waiting for a concise article like
this one to come along and explain this next major privacy invasion,
titled "American ISP's to launch massive copyright spying scheme on July
12th."

This illustrates how modern capitalists are so cross-invested that
companies are willing to put the screws to their own customers in order
to please other corporations.  Watch your downloads.
*
**
------------------------------------------------------------------------

**With Greg Smith's resignation from Goldman Sachs shaking up Wall
Street, British news this morning has a fun video of other famous
resignations from real life and the movies, here
<http://www.reuters.com/video/2012/03/14/reuters-tv-i-quit-goldman-sachs-and-other-famous-re?videoId=231584655&videoChannel=117849&refresh=true>.
It should not be surprising that one person decides to leave this
massive den of thieves, the shocking part is that so many stay and
pretend not to see the deception and larceny.

The American economic system is a scam, based on a form of capitalism
which is little more than a pyramid scheme, benefiting those who inherit
and invest over those who sweat and produce.  In the myths which justify
it, there is "an invisible hand," that comes in to ensure fairness.  In
reality, there is the iron fist of the Federal Reserve Board, insider
trading (beyond Congress to those who bribe the Congress, the lobbyists
who depend on Members of Congress to give them inside investment tips)
and a subservient mass media, who ever see no evil, hear no evil, and
above all else, speak no evil.

To not see this is to avert one's eyes from a USA having the highest
homeless rate among major industrialized nations, the highest rate of
people without health care among all industrialized nations, and the
world's highest rate of imprisonment, all necessary to distort the
wealth upward to the Few who benefit the most from the corruption --Jack

**

*An Inside Glimpse Into the Nefarious Operations of Goldman Sachs*

*A Toxic System <http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/03/15/a-toxic-system/>
*

*
*

*by DARWIN BOND-GRAHAM*

*Goldman Sachs employee Greg Smith's very public resignation, replete
witha pointed letter
<http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/14/opinion/why-i-am-leaving-goldman-sachs.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all>
published in the New York Times yesterday, has landed upon the
investment bank like a bomb. Slamming a "toxic and destructive
environment" within Goldman Sachs, Smith says the firm's internal
culture has devolved to the point where the entire staff not only
tolerates, but expects workers at all levels, from senior partners to
associates, to pursue nothing but ever-more sophisticated means of
"ripping their clients off."*

*Apologists for the financial sector ---including the editors of the
major business newspapers and television networks--- predictably have
shot back with a flurry columns and reports, mostly designed to
discredit the former vice president by making fun of Smith and his
concerns. If you strip away the ad hominem layers to these responses
though, the core problems raised by Smith remain, and the reaction of
the business press seems all the more absurd, for Goldman's pesky
turncoat isn't saying anything that's news to the public: Goldman Sachs
is characterized by a toxic culture of greed? Stop the presses!*

*There is much more to be said about Goldman Sachs' derivatives
operation, however, and Smith's provocative resignation provides an
opportunity because he was working in the belly of it.*

*At the center of Smith's critique are derivatives, the arcane financial
instruments that transformed the world's splintered national economies
and regional banking systems into a single, if complicated, global
system. Evangelists of derivatives claim they have made new heights of
economic growth, trade, and prosperity possible. Critics have pointed
out since the beginning of the derivatives boom in the 1980s how
perfectly suited they are to fraud and systemic catastrophe via the
greed of the few and the powerful.*

*Derivatives, many close observers have reminded us, were at the center
of the Enron meltdown, the demise of Long Term Capital Management, the
Asian Financial Crisis, and most recently the Great Recession and its
various flares, from the housing bubble that exploded from junked
collateralized debt obligations, to the current Greek debt imbroglio and
the credit default swaps haunting the background. In each case, and many
less-known fiascos, derivatives traders in Wall Street's leading banks
played key roles either as the major villains, or enabling partners in
vast crimes of information, leverage, and risk. Time and again we find
derivatives at the center of scandalous greed. Now we have a
high-profile banker denouncing not just some bad apples in his firm, but
the firm's entire culture.*

*There's a deeper and more disturbing truth still further below the
surface though. To get there it's instructive to know a little more
about Goldman's derivatives operation, and the wider industry of which
Goldman is a small part.*

*Who are the clients on the receiving end of Goldman's "toxic and
destructive" tendencies? Many times the victims have been other
corporations, industrial firms with less sophisticated and perhaps naive
financial officers. Quite often though the victims of Goldman's
derivatives operation have been cities, counties, and local government
agencies. A key client category for derivatives has been large local
governments and agencies that issue hefty sums of long-term debt.*

*Goldman, and the handful of other global banks that dominate the
derivatives industry, sold local governments on the idea that a
particular set of derivative products could provide wondrous solutions
to hedge against the risks inherent in issuing long term debt. The banks
claimed that interest rate swaps could shield counties, cities, and
agencies from possible spikes in floating interest rates attached to
their bonds. Thus many governments agreed to complex, multi-decade deals
involving the swapping of payments on fictive amounts of money
associated with real debt. In no time at all interest rate swaps became
the single largest category of derivatives, dwarfing all others.*

*Today interest rate swaps make up 82% of the total market in
derivatives, measured by total notional amounts. This is partly the
result of governments all over the world entering into interest rate
swaps, agreeing to tie cash flows to trillions of notional dollars.
What's key is that none of this has required duplicity or reckless greed
on the part of bankers at Goldman Sachs or other firms. Let's be clear;
this is a structural transformation of capitalism on a global scale, and
it has sucked up all corporate and government entities into the new
logic of hedging and efficiency. That a few powerful financial
corporations have placed themselves in strategic positions to benefit
from this structural shift should come as no surprise.*

*In California's Bay Area multiple governments have come to find
themselves on the paying end Goldman's derivatives department where
apparently traders referred to clients as "muppets." The most obvious
example is the city of Oakland where a chronic budget crisis has led to
the shuttering of schools and cuts to elder services, housing, and
public safety. Oakland signed an interest rate swap
<http://www.eastbayexpress.com/ebx/oaklands-toxic-deal-with-wall-street/Content?oid=3125660>
with Goldman in 1997. The terms of the deal, revised once in 2003, were
typical of interest rate swaps except that Oakland's financial officers,
based on this author's research and impressions, seem to have agreed to
a somewhat higher fixed rate obligation than most other cities that
signed swap deals for similar amounts of debt with comparable ratings.
Oakland partly did this, I am guessing, to receive upfront payments of
roughly $5 and $10 million from Goldman Sachs, cash that the city wished
to have on hand immediately. The bank seemed eager to do this because
the original terms, and renegotiated terms in 2003, were much to its
favor. It would earn the $15 million back, and then some over the
twenty-four year life of the swap.*

*Across the Bay, Goldman Sachs signed an interest rate swap agreement
with the San Francisco International Airport
<http://www.sfbg.com/2012/02/28/losing-bets?page=0,2> in 2007 to hedge
$143 million in debt. Today this agreement has a negative value to the
Airpot of about $22 million, even though its terms were much better than
those Oakland agreed to. The Airport, like Oakland, must now pay
millions each year to Goldman Sachs until the agreement expires, or
until the floating LIBOR interest rate rises enough to offset the net
balance of payments. Goldman sold derivatives up and down California and
across the United States to cities, counties, and agencies, promising
them a means of reducing debt payments over the long haul.*

*Business press pundits who are now slamming Smith say it's absurd to
expect that Goldman Sachs was doing anything less than trying to make
money off these deals, and that counter-parties to the firm's dealings
knew well what they were signing up for. This mischaracterizes the
entire problem, however, and threatens to steer the conversation into a
narrow, and politically irrelevant one about whether Goldman Sachs is or
isn't a den of fraud.*

*When governments signed up for interest rate swap deals with Goldman
Sachs they certainly did know that the bank would be making money off
the agreement, first in the form of up-front fees, and then off of
savings produced by the pairing of comparative advantages in debt
markets that interest rate swaps are designed to achieve. If you don't
understand that last point, don't worry. What it means simply is that
Goldman Sachs sold interest rate swap products to governments by
promising to both protect a government against interest rate volatility,
and to also likely reduce the overall long-term cost of borrowing money.
It was supposed to be a win-win game.*

*The truly impressive thing about the whole derivatives market is that
it is supposed to ratchet up the efficiency of the entire global
economy, making dollars go much further, protecting all parties from
volatility, transcending previous market barriers and smoothening flows
of cash... at least in theory. The theory seemed to be working in the
1990s and through most of the 2000s. Goldman didn't have to convince
anyone of this for the results were plain to see.*

*That is hasn't panned out in practice, that the whole derivatives-based
economy nearly collapsed in 2008 and continues to falter, isn't so much
the result of Goldman's toxic culture of greed as it is the outcome of a
much more troubling feature of our economic system. While I agree with
Smith's observation ---which is important because it's based on insider
knowledge--- that Goldman Sachs is an especially predatory corporation,
I see a larger pattern of power relations embodied in the new economy,
structured as it is by derivatives, that isn't based on any specific
firm's internal culture or corruption, or the supposed naivety and
stupidity of financial officers in government and less profitable
sectors of the economy.*

*Consider the fact that Goldman Sachs isn't even the biggest fish in the
pond, nor is it profiting the most from the blizzard of derivative
products that structure the capitalist economy today. Of the five
financial corporations that "dominate in derivatives," as the U.S.
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency puts it, Goldman Sachs ranks
fourth, behind by Bank of America, Citibank, and far behind the absolute
king of derivatives, JP Morgan Chase.*

*In February JP Morgan Chase let slip that it cleared $1.4 billion in
revenue on trading interest rate swaps in 2011, making these instruments
one of the bank's biggest sources of profit
<http://news.businessweek.com/article.asp?documentKey=1376-M03WEK6VDKHT01-29F4KV2G380QA6JNHG2TDCJLRF>.
According to some reports, JP Morgan Chase made billions more in 2008
and 2009 when the financial crisis and federal response combined to make
floating-to-fixed interest rate swaps into extremely profitable assets
for the banks on the floating side of the deal. Similar things can be
said for Mogan Stanley, HSBC, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, Bank of New
York, and the dozens of smaller interest rate swap peddlers currently
profiting from direct transfers of public dollars.*

*Are all these banks poisoned by toxic cultures of greed? Surely there
are similarities in the internal cultures of large banks, and greed and
a little sociopathic ability to profit from another's loss is a
professional asset in these sorts of organizations. In contemporary
corporate culture the euphemism for this is "competition."*

*Toxic culture and greed, or "competitiveness" if you prefer, in the
investment banks isn't a sufficient answer to why derivatives have
become the foundation of today's global economy, however. The criminal
activities of some bankers driven by these more pervasive cultures can't
explain the economic crisis and the vast injustices that are being
perpetrated still in the name of "economic recovery." The interest rate
swap crisis stinging local governments and enriching the banks is a case
in point.*

*The windfall of revenue accruing to JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, and their
peers from interest rate swap derivatives is due to nothing other than
political decisions that have been made at the federal level to allow
these deals to run their course, even while benchmark interest rates,
influenced by the Federal Reserve's rate setting, and determined many of
these same banks (the London Interbank Offered Rate, LIBOR) linger close
to zero. These political decisions have determined that virtually all
interest rate swaps between local and state governments and the largest
banks have turned into perverse contracts whereby cities, counties,
school districts, water agencies, airports, transit authorities, and
hospitals pay millions yearly to the few elite banks that run the global
financial system, for nothing meaningful in return. These perfectly
legal cash flows measuring globally in the hundreds of billions, from
the public to the banks, dwarf anything that is the result to fraud.*

*Back when the economy was in a "normal" stasis of growth, the early and
mid-2000s, interest rate swaps and other derivatives promised security
against risk, and a new vista for capitalism and public finance.
Tellingly, when the crisis struck, swaps were allowed to become a one
way flow of funds from the public to the banks. This shadow bailout for
the banks has done considerable damage to already cash-strapped local
governments suffering from declines in tax revenues and federal aid.*

*Whether Goldman Sachs is or isn't an organization gripped by a toxic
culture isn't all that important when one considers the destructive
impact that derivatives have had, and continue to have upon society.
Capitalism as it functions today is completely dependent upon
derivatives. Interest rates swaps are the single largest type of
derivative, measured by notional amount, because they achieve an
integration of different national, regional, and sectoral financial
markets into one global financial system. It's in the genetics of the
project of financial globalization, fueled by derivatives, that the real
problem lies, not in the internal culture of Goldman Sachs, or the
illegal behaviors of some bankers across many firms. The real crime lies
in perfectly legal and legitimated activities whereby a few powerful
corporations design a system that puts the welfare of the world's vast
majority at grave risk. It's the system that's toxic. Goldman Sachs
merely operates well within the toxicity.*

*Nevertheless, Greg Smith's effort to pull back the curtain on one of
the most nefarious and powerful corporations in history is most
welcomed, especially for the deeper conversations it can stoke about the
origins of the current crisis.
*

*http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/03/15/a-toxic-system/
*

*/*Darwin Bond-Graham* is a sociologist and author who lives and works
in Oakland, CA. He is a contributor to /Hopeless: Barack Obama and the
Politics of Illusion
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1849351104/counterpunchmaga>,
forthcoming from AK Press.//*


------------------------------------------------------------------------
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**
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