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05 Chapter4.txt
Chapter 4: Invisible Know-How, Inc:
As mentioned earlier, limited-liability, abstract corporate “beings” needed no passports to travel altogether invisibly across national borders. Soon after World War II, America's five hundred largest corporations became supranational, taking with them (out of the United States) the invisible legal controls over what had been born as American industry with all its "know-how." The knowhow had been paid for initially by the U.S. people through their government's wartime (or "on the brink of wartimes") underwriting of the prime technologies as initially developed only for the U.S. Department of Defense or the Manhattan Project or the space program, developed in wartime at government ("we the people's") expense and turned over gratis for "operational efficiency" in "peacetime" to privately owned corporations.
World War I brought vast munitions-buying on credit by the U.S. government, and the figures ran into multi-millions of dollars as private U.S. industrial corporations acquired postwar operational rights to all the wartime government-financed new-era technology production machinery. Stockholders prospered. World War II saw the same U.S. government credit employed to produce "multi-vaster" new-technology munitions, with the dollar figures running this time into the multi-billions of dollars. World War III's third-of-a-century of "cold-warring" between the U.S.A. and U.S.S.R., waged vicariously through many hot-war puppeted nations, has seen the annual munitions figures running into the multi-trillions of dollars. The U.S.A. 1981 "national" debt is over a trillion dollars, and the U.S. cannot pay even the interest on that debt. We can very properly call World War I the million-dollar war and World War II the billion-dollar war and World War III the trillion-dollar war.
In the meantime, all the industrial research and development as well as its products have become involved with the invisible technologies of atomics, electronics, chemistry, molecular alloying, and information processing. All the research and development of all the products and services that are going to affect all of our forward days are now being conducted in the realm of the electromagnetic spectrum "reality" not directly apprehendible by any of the human senses.
While the North American-situated factories and spectacular city buildings seem to be and are thought of by humans as being American property because they are located on American land, most are no longer U.S.A.people-owned. For instance, though thought of as "American," a majority of the skyscrapers of Honolulu belong to Japanese bankers. Arabian oil billionaires own many U.S. city skyscrapers. Kuwait owns the large South Carolina coastal island of Kiawah.
What was once world-around high credit for American ingenuity and friendliness is no longer existent. On February 1, 1982, the United States ambassador to the United Nations stated to the media that all the “United Nations now hate the U.S.A.” What they hate is Grunch, but Grunch is able to deceive the world into blaming the very innocent people of the United States.
All the continental U.S.A.'s industrial factories and grounds and 90 percent of all that can and does produce physical wealth has already become or is about to become the humanly invisible property of inhumanly operative supranational corporations controlled by the invisible human owners of invisible Swiss bank account code numbers.
A vast new giant of approximately no-risk capitalism is now astride the world. "Earning" over a trillion dollars a year, this supranational giant's monopoly over know-how, wealth, research and development, and production and distribution facilities is worth at least $20 trillion (U.S.A. dollars, September 1981). While the giant now owns and controls four-fifths of the planet Earth's open-market bankable assets, $1 trillion of those giant's assets are in monetary gold bullion. Astride spherical Spaceship Earth, the supranational corporate Grunch of Giants faces a political giant of noncapitalistic forces controlling the lives of two-thirds of humanity.
In making these observations in regard to inanimate corporations we do not infer antisocial attitudes on the part of the corporate officers. A corporation's executives are elected by its board of directors. The directors are elected by the number of shares of stock as voted directly by their holders or as voted by the holders of their share's proxies. This voting is not on a democratic one stockholder/one vote basis but on an as-many-votes-as-sharesowned basis. This being so, the corporations' lawyers have no alternative to reminding any altruistic, socially concerned executives that the corporation is committed by law only to making money for its shareholders, and therefore that any socially concerned, altruistic proclivities of any corporate executive must be realized outside the corporation and at the executive's own expense. For all the same basic reasons, the inanimate, literally soulless and heartless corporations cannot feel and express human sensitivities and thoughts, such as I find printed on desk-top cards in my hotel rooms around the world. I find it specious for a hotel chain to assume the role of moral arbiter by, for instance, printing cards displayed in their hotel rooms which define "love" as being the act of forbearance from stealing the hotel's towels or by exploiting the public concern over energy problems by asserting on their room cards that "love is saving the electric current costs." Since the corporation is only a legal device, the only possible reason for paying those "love" cards' printing costs is to reduce the hotels' operating costs, thus hopefully to increase the corporate dividends. Such operational tricks may well bring about promotion for the "ingenious" executives who conceive them.
In the August 3, 1981, issue of Time appeared the following article:
President [Reagan] appointed William Baxter, a Stanford law professor who firmly believes in the virtues of large-scale enterprises unfettered by excessive Government regulation, to be his antitrust chief in the Justice Department. Baxter's boss, Attorney General William French Smith, succinctly stated the new Administration's philosophy in an oft-quoted speech before the District of Columbia Bar. Said Smith: "Bigness in business is not necessarily badness. Efficient firms should not be hobbled under the guise of antitrust enforcement."
Baxter openly accepts some responsibility for the merger phenomenon. Said he last week: "The statements we've made at the Justice Department have allowed people to think about mergers that they really wouldn't have thought about in past Administrations." Mobil's bid for Conoco is a case in point. Such a merger between two of the top ten petroleum companies would never have been seriously considered during Jimmy Carter's term. Baxter insists that his trustbusters will not allow any acquisition that significantly reduces competition within the oil industry or any other. He also maintains that a Mobil-Conoco combination would be subjected to tough scrutiny in Washington. [That is one reason why the subsequent alternative deal which united non-oil Dupont and oil Conoco was countenanced— R.B.F.]
Baxter should be wary if only because the American public has long been apprehensive about excessive corporate power. [Attorney General Smith] admits, "The strains of populist hostility toward large companies are deeply ingrained in the U.S.A. Government trustbusters have enjoyed broad public support as they attacked both concentration within an industry and combinations between corporate giants in unrelated business." Yet the burgeoning growth of corporate America has outpaced all the antitrust efforts. Since World War II, the portion of U.S. industry controlled by the 200 largest manufacturing firms has risen from 45% to 60%. [Socioeconomically, that is from majority to minority control—R.B.F.]
The attorney general chooses his words carefully. What he speaks of as U.S. industry is not the ownership of the corporations conducting the industrial activity; he speaks exclusively of the physical production activity itself taking place under the roofs of factory buildings situated within the geographical borders of the U.S. of North America. The capital title to and productive earnings of these are 60-percent owned and controlled by the entirely unknown majority owners of the escaped-from-America, supranational corporations—the Grunch.
One-third of humanity lives outside the lands controlled by socialism. All unbeknownst to and undetected by the one-fifth of the one-third of humanity residenced within the U.S.A., gradually cross-breeding "worldians," their one-third-of-a-century-ago kudos for realistically articulated generosity to and concern for others, as well as the U.S. peoples' legal ownership and control of their economic assets, have been altogether exploited, usurped, or stolen from them by the invisibly integrated supranational corporate giants. The Grunch has conducted its ruthlessly selfish activity always in the name of the U.S.A. people.
The now majorly literate crossbreeding world humans are now looking askance at both the socialist and capitalist giants as these politically opposed powers multiply their to-anywhere-deliverable, humanity-annihilating bombs.
"Modern weapons are growing so sophisticated and so small [ephemeralization—R.B.F.] that any future armscontrol agreement would be impossible to monitor and enforce," according to a Knight-Ridder News Service dispatch. "What we are going to see ["experience"—R.B.F.] in the next generation of weapons is invisibility, which translates into insecurity," according to William Kincade, a former naval intelligence officer.
Even such an informed source as Admiral Stansfield Turner, former head of the grand-naval-strategy-formulating U.S. Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island, then commander-in-chief of the U.S. Navy's Mediterranean fleet, and then Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, says: "Any hope of limiting total destructiveness is slipping past us."
In the affairs of the supranational corporate giants, real quality of product, consciously sustained, has given way to packaging-allure and advertising-proclaimed "quality" as commensurate only with the best interests of corporate moneymaking. As already mentioned, heads of great corporations are elected by the stockholders' directors, who in turn are chosen by those controlling the majority of voting shares, who make their choices only on the basis of greatest earnings performance. Operating only as abstract, global-magnitude legal entities, all the unknown-owneredand-controlled supranational corporations have no human-community consideration other than as potential customers, consumers, or fighting-force conscriptees.
At the termination of his presidency, Eisenhower expressed his shocked dismay over the exclusively self-concerned military-industrial complex that he had found to be growing inexorably as a malignant economic organism. There is no question of Eisenhower's innocence of such a phenomena as he assumed his great responsibility. In the same way I am confident that Reagan is utterly unaware of the existence, magnitude, and nature of the supranational colossus. He knows he is dealing with rich and business-wise-proven individuals whose organizational management effectiveness is of a high order. Because the colossus is operating an invisible technology, and society is so specialized that each individual is acquainted with only a few of the billions of other specialized invisibilities, and because of the invisibility of who the supranational shareholders may really be and where they are, I am confident that Reagan truly thinks that he is operating strictly within the historic limits of a U.S.A. national government and not as a stooge of an invisible Grunch of literally soulless supranational giants. I don't think David Rockefeller or any of the justices of the U.S. Supreme Court, or Volcker, head of the Federal Reserve Bank, or Margaret Thatcher, or the heads of any of the world's governments think of their problems in the realistic terms of their being governed entirely by the inanimate, socially unconcerned, supranational colossi, as the possibly lethally nonhuman growth could prove to be. However, Grunch could also prove to be an army of benign giants, because it will depend more and more on its complex, world-around computerization integration, and the data entered into that integrated network will continually evidence that the present technology could make the world work for everyone, and at a much more profitable level than realized from weapons production. Nor do I think these present power structure spokespeople see the supranational corporations as the unwittingly benevolent agent of evolution about to close the historical era of separate "nation-states" and to institute in its stead the era of omni-economically successful, omni-integrated planetary society.
For the past thirty years the U.S. government's grand defense strategy has been a puppet of the supranational corporate giants with the strings invisibly manipulated. This policy has concentrated on accumulating greater numbers of atomic bombs than those of the U.S.S.R., while all the while the U.S.S.R. was (only) ostensibly endeavoring to keep pace with the U.S.A. bomb production. In reality the U.S.S.R. was dominantly preoccupied with building an all-oceans, primarily underwater navy from scratch and expanding numerically its conventional-weapons army divisions.
At the time Eisenhower became president of the United States, the military experts of both the U.S.A. and U.S.S.R. had independently concluded that a missiledelivered atomic war would be the first war in history in which both sides would be utterly devastated. In gunmunitioned warfare, whoever shot first and accurately won. The other man's shot never got away. In 14,000miles-per-hour delivery rocketry warfare, the 670,000,000miles-per-hour operating radar vision of both sides gives each side enough advance notice after its respective enemy has fired to let loose all of its arsenal before the enemy's missiles arrive. For the first time in warfare history, both sides utterly lose. For those hotheads in the capitalist world who as yet contemplate pre-emptive firing of the U.S.A. arsenal of atomic warheads, it is importantly relevant that the Russians have accurate, geographically triangulated positioning of their U.S.A. targets, while the U.S.A. does not have accurate geodetic triangulation of the location of most of the U.S.S.R. targets. (See Critical Path, "Triangulation Mapping," pp. 184-188.)
To best understand the present (November 1981) world crisis, it is necessary to turn history back for almost a century, back to when Edison invented the electric lamp and the direct current generator. J. P. Morgan, Sr., the economic power structure giant, was the first to act upon the realization that: whoever developed, manufactured, installed, and controlled the physical-energy generators and the metered-energy distribution and cut-off system could and would control the national economies into which they were physically introduced. The air we breathe was everywhere so plentiful that its availability could not readily be monopolized. There were too many ponds, lakes, rivers, brooks, and wells to make the metered watersupply systems a generally monopolizable business.
When Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone, it had to compete with the post-office conducted mail and required far greater numbers of employees. Morgan saw that the copper mines and the electric equipment manufactured from copper as well as all the power-generating companies involved the least labor participation and the then maximally profitable business.
All of the foregoing required the availability and controllability of an utterly unprecedented magnitude of physical apparatus and installation of otherwise unemployed monetary wealth. The patents of Edison's inventions and an army of astute lawyers and brokerage houses became the pivotal legal-precedent-accepted economic properties and work force in amassing the initial procurement capital of Morgan's power monopoly.
This initial capital-amassing was greatly augmented by selling interest-bearing bonds to widows and trust funds in general, seemingly safely secured by the vast lands given as a "grateful" U.S.A. people's government as a subsidy to the pioneer railway-building and -operating companies. The railroad company bonds were secured by the seemingly highly valuable real estate adjacent to all the railroad, cross-country rights-of-way, their way-station town properties, railway stations, trackage, etc. which railroad company bonds were purchased for widows and trust funds in general by their trustees. This capital amassing initially financed the electric power companies. As we have noted elsewhere, these railroad bonds became worthless in the 1929 economic crash. Nobody wished to buy the old depot buildings, etc.
When the automobiles and the auto-trucks took so much business from the railways as to render the railroad passenger systems profitless, and cross-country, pipeable petroleum replaced coal as a prime fuel, and giant transoceanic tankers were developed, and the Middle East oil lands were explored and developed, the petroleum business rose swiftly to become the maximum economic power giant of the twentieth century, outpowering the Morgan utilities- and banks-based system.
The number of kilowatts of electric energy being generated from each BTU (British Thermal Unit) of fossil fuels burned or foot-pounds per second of water-power-derived turbine-functioning has continually increased since the very beginnings of electric-power generation and distribution. Concurrently, the weight of the production and distribution equipment to produce that power rapidly decreased per each kilowatt or horsepower of energy produced and delivered. As a consequence of this neverceasing technological increase in overall efficiency, the actual overall cosmically predicated costs of energy generation have always and only decreased, and cost increases have been the consequence of those in top power-positions contriving through pricing to be able to pay ever greater dividends to shareholders and thus to increase the stockmarket value of their own shares, thus in turn to increase their power to control the amassed money of others as capital. Such capital power manipulation is intoxicating and seemingly unchallengeable.
However, as with all socioeconomic-political power evolution, the politically appointed "public service" commissions in all the states have consistently granted even higher kilowatt-hour price rates to the privately owned, deceptively named "public service companies" producing the electric power. So unchallengeably powerful are the "public service" commissions that in 1981 and 1982 they have been able to allow great utility companies to abandon some nine hundred million dollars wasted by utility companies as they abandon their partially finished atomicenergy plants on the U.S. West Coast—charging the loss to the consumers by increasing their rates. This results in private enterprise making a $900 million bad gamble and having the capability of passing on their loss to the public.
The constant fundamental operating-cost reductions, combined with constant price increases, have produced so much money that the power-generating businesses are amongst the wealthiest and most invisible of the politically manipulative organizations. After World War II, the electric power industry's three-quarters-of-a-century accumulated wealth successfully combined its political power with that of the oil giants to "take over for nothing" the total atomic-energy program assets. This included all of the know-how and production apparatus of the U.S. government's military atomic-energy program, for which development the U.S. citizens had paid $150 billion.
This amassing of political power coincided with a generally dawning awareness of U.S. youth in general and an ever-increasing percentage of the mature U.S. electorate regarding the corruption of the political representatives of their theretofore-trusted democratic government. This corruptibility is inherent in the fact that the TV electronic campaign costs of U.S.A. elections now amount to $50 million for the presidency, $10 for a senatorship, and $5 million for a congressional seat. This corruptibility is enhanced by the U.S. Supreme Court's hang-fire no-ruling of 1981 which will allow unlimited money to be spent in the next election years.
The now-gone supranational corporate giants have always known that the fossil fuels can and will become exhausted. To meet this contingency, their post-World War II last-third-of-a-century grand strategy has been to force the U.S. government to develop superior atomic-war capability, knowing full well that atomic warfare will terminate human occupancy of planet Earth, which fact would eventually force the government to abandon its war use. First and foremost, however, the power monopoly would have to have accomplished their "public service" atomic energy objective; first, of becoming contractors to operate government atomic facilities; second, of siphoning off from the U.S. government all the latter's atomic scientist personnel and all the invisible know-how to develop world-around atomic-energy plants to feed into their wired and metered energy-monopoly system as the petroleum source diminished and approached depletion. In the meantime, while maintaining their power over the U.S.A and other political systems, their grand strategy found it necessary to have the U.S.A. and Western World population satisfied that the U.S.A. was successfully maintaining its fighting superiority over the U.S.S.R. by producing more atomic bombs than the Russians.
To initiate his wired and metered electric-energy-power monopoly in the "gay nineties"—1890—which threefourths of a century later became an overwhelming socioeconomic power, the elder J. P. Morgan used the earlier formula of issuing bonds and preferred stocks on each of his enterprises as soon as they were paying dividends. He was thus provided with additional free capital to initiate other branches of the power-structure system: for example, in copper mining (for use in the generation and conduction of electric power), steel manufacture (for the highline masts and structural housings of the electric equipment), etc.
He used his engineering firm of Stone-Webster to design and build his foreign-country power systems operated by Electric Bond and Share Company—EBASCO. His priceincreasing by the power companies was automatically matched by increase in the stock-market sale of his companies' shares. These share values increased with his own equities' advance. Using these equities as capital, he opened his own banks.
Because his enterprising monopolies earned good dividends, shares in his companies became increasingly popular. His own bank and the banks he controlled opened brokerage departments. He backed the opening of many stock-exchange-seat-owning individuals' brokerage houses to cope with the increasing complexity of openmarket selling and buying of his companies' shares or bonds. By the time of the 1929 Crash, Morgan was controlling the boards of directors of General Electric, General Motors, U.S. Steel, the big three copper companies, the telephone and telegraph companies, all the "Edison Electric" public utilities, etc.; and many of the U.S. banks.
At the outset, Morgan's partners gave Harvard University its law and business schools, from whose highly educated, specialized graduates they recruited the army of lawyers and financial experts to service their Wall Street offices. This legal army handled the behind-the-scenes complex contractings and financial paperwork implementing Morgan's and his associates' enterprises. There being no laws against so doing prior to 1929, he used general bank deposits to underwrite his enterprises.
In the early 1920s, the Morgan-dominated banking system pushed farm machinery sales to farmers on timepayment plans secured to the banks by first mortgages on the farm properties as well as on the machinery. As I explained in Critical Path, the bad hog market of 1926 hit farmers financially, causing many to be unable to make their monthly payments on their time-purchased farm machinery. The country banks not only replevined the machinery but foreclosed on the farms, which were mortgaged to guarantee the time payments—the country banks found the farms unsalable, as there were no other U.S.A. individuals eager to go into farming. ("How You Gonna Keep Em Down on the Farm After They've Seen Paree?" —World War I song.) Then the bigger city banks, which had loaned the small banks money based on the "soundness of physical land and machine collateral," foreclosed on the small country banks. The larger city banks also found their foreclosure properties unsalable. No cash funds were available to accommodate their depositors' withdrawals. "Runs" on banks multiplied. There came a crisis moment when over five thousand banks closed in one day. Finally the big Chicago banks closed and only the big New York banks remained open. Then it was discovered that they, too, having loaned their deposits for industrial ventures, now lacked cash monies with which to refund their depositors and the New Deal and FDR declared the "Bank Moratorium," thereby avoiding admitting the bankruptcy of the U.S. banking system and with it the end of U.S.A. capitalism. The U.S. Congress, inquiring exhaustively into the matter, found that those New York banks' brokerage departments had been using deposits for underwriting venture industries. Because this was at the heart of the failure, the Glass-Steagel Banking Act of 1933 was enacted"permanently"—it was hoped—separating venture brokerage-underwriting from the New Deal government's guaranteed bank deposits of the people.
J. P. Morgan, Sr.'s strategy of organization of the financing and control of U.S.A. industrial development was evolved from his close cooperation with the Bank of England's centuries-old, behind-the-scenes laws of accepted precedent of physical property rights and their convertibility into "paper securities" as marketable shares in enterprise. The Bank of England and Morgan nurtured the young Grunch of eighteenth-century giants from their youth into lusty nineteenth-century colonial maturity. J. P. Morgan became the official fiscal agent of the British Empire in World War I. As the "Allies' " purchasing agent from 1914 to 1918, Morgan's amassing in the U.S.A. of the profits of World War I shifted the world capital of the grunch of corporate giants from Europe to America, and until the 1929 crash assured Morgan's dominance of the socioeconomic evolutionary balance of power over human affairs on planet Earth.
• • •
The Russian Revolution brought about the 1917 inception of the U.S.S.R. and its organization of world communism as an evolutionary challenge to capitalism's power.
In Critical Path I have traced these evolutionary events to 1981. In 1981, the supranational invisible moneymaking colossus finds itself faced with the U.S.S.R.'s 1981 superiority in number of conventionally armed divisions and greater all-oceans naval power than that possessed by the U.S.A. and its NATO allies.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger admitted in April 1981 the extraordinary Soviet military buildup, which has left in its wake the U.S. loss of strategic defense advantage which it had maintained in the fifties and sixties. He cites Defense Department data showing the Soviets' four-to-one advantage in tanks, their two-to-one tactical advantage in atomic-powered, atomic-missile launching submarines, and a four-to-one advantage in submarines, and in addition the sizable increase in the weight and accuracy of their nuclear intercontinental strategic missiles. He describes their naval buildup as the fastest in naval history. Weinberger states that, at present, the U.S.S.R. continues to outbuild the U.S. two-to-one in surface vessels and five-to-one in submarines, according to his latest figures. (Jane's annual publications of international armaments have been providing these figures quite accurately over the years with no mention of them by the petro-atomic-power-structure-puppeted U.S. politicians and even less mentioned by the supranational-giants-controlled U.S. press.)
To regain its military edge (detente) over the Soviet Union, if it can be done at all, and assuming that the U.S.S.R. does nothing to offset the attempt, will take ten years and, according to Defense Secretary Weinberger $ 1.6 trillion or approximately $1 billion a day ($365 billion a year) over the next five years, just for starters. The supranational-money colossus needs that time to build its CIA-organized and U.S. people's unknowingly financed fighting power, officered by mercenaries (For example, the aborted Seychelles “invasion” of November 27, 1981, involving mercenaries based in South Africa.) and soldiered, sailored, and piloted by puppeted countries to attain a superior posture over the Soviet Union or any other power—including even a possibly-to-be-catalyzed, supranational, individually thinking and acting, spontaneously cooperating amalgam of now majorly literate, apolitical, world-around citizenry.
Since it takes millions of dollars to win U.S. elections, the vast majority of America's crossbreeding youth and an ever-increasing number of its adults concede politics to be so inherently corrupt as to cause increasing numbers of qualified voters to withhold from voting, lest in doing so their action be misconstrued as constituting their approval or acceptance of the present-day corruptibility of politics and its consequent inability to articulate the will of democracy.
In 1980, of the 227 million persons in the United States (159 million of whom were eligible to vote), only 78 million, or only one-half, of the eligible persons voted in the most negatively momentous presidential election in nearly a third of a century. Of that number who voted, only 40 million voted for the winning candidate, Ronald Reagan. The "overwhelming majority" that President Reagan repeatedly claims legitimizes his "mandate" for sweeping executive and legislative change consists, in fact, of only 14 percent of the people of the United States.
Many youth and many oldsters inspired only by a concern for all Earthians and convinced that their voting cannot stem big money's “will” did not vote. On the other hand, the economically rich, seeking to secure their economic advantage, for example rich widows and retired executives, leave it to their lawyers, stockbrokers, or such organizations as the very minor minority organization (immorally misrepresenting themselves as the "Moral Majority") to make their voting decisions.
Regarding such doing-the-thinking-for-others organizations as the “Moral Majority,” we have Yale University President A. Bartlett Giamatti's statement in August 1981, as quoted from a United Press International dispatch:
He said that the Moral Majority and other “conservative” groups are “shredding the spiritual fabric of our society” and are “intent on destroying diversity of opinion.... They threaten through political pressure or public denunciation whoever dares to disagree with their authoritarian positions....
They would sweep before them anyone who holds a different opinion.” Giamatti further criticized the “peddlers of coercion” for pressing uncompromising attitudes that are “dangerous, malicious nonsense” and as being advocates of “polyester mysticism” with a goal to “divide in the name of patriotism.... They have licensed a new meanness of spirit in our land, a resurgent bigotry that manifests itself in racist and discriminatory postures.”
The supranational-giant-controlled Madison Avenue advertising billions at once replied through the editorial pages of its U.S. newspapers which undertook to vitiate the statement of Yale University's president. It is not likely that the third-oldest and second-richest university in America has a board of trustees and faculty that would select as its president an irresponsible "crackpot," which many media editorials asserted Giamatti to be.
Because many of the invisible supranational corporation's manufacturing facilities are presently located on U.S.A. geography, and the invisible giant's armaments objectives require ten years lead-time, the colossus has now of necessity placed its initial armaments orders in the U.S.A.-situated factories. Capitalism's supranational corporate colossus also finds it most convenient and invisibly expedient to continue doing its business under the name "United States" which is easy for it to do effectively: first quite simply by hoisting the American flag in front of all its factories, and second by pulling the vital strings of the finance-shackled and lobby-locked congressional puppets to make them pass the requisite legislation. Thus, the colossus now (early 1982) has in production the necessary first-things-first of its ultimate ten-year, multi-trillion-dollar procurement, world-published as being "U.S.A. national defense activity."
Throughout its first 127 pre-World War I years, the U.S. government often had no national debt. World War I left the U.S.A. with a national indebtedness of $33 billion. The U.S.A. banking system went truly bankrupt in 1929, but the New Deal's 1933 Bank Moratorium postponed recognition of that fact. Since then the moment of acknowledgment that the U.S. government itself is financially bankrupt has been postponed first by further- and further-ahead postponements of the payoff dates for U.S. notes and bonds and by successive votes of the U.S. Congress to increase the national debt limit. By "money accounting" (in contradistinction to real-wealth accounting), the U.S.A. is now realistically bankrupt. Since Nixon became president, the U.S.A. has been unable to pay even the interest on its national debt, let alone reduce the principal. Before Nixon, Congress assumed tax underwriting of ever greater interest-bearing on ever more postponed and greater national debt limits. For all the Nixon years and all the years of his successors the president has had annually to file a negative budget, meaning the U.S. cannot even pretend to be able to pay the interest on its indebtedness.
The supranational-money-colossus banking experts therefore have ordered its U.S. 1981 president and its congressional puppets to legislate stringent budgetary measures without reducing Grunch's annual earnings, to be accomplished by curtailing old-age medical aid and eliminating schoolchildren's lunches—eyewash measures permitting the U.S. government to "technically" assume that by 1983 it would be balancing its budget as a first requirement of "sound banking practice," warranting the banks loaning their funds to accommodate the most profitable known business, that of armaments. However, by 1982 it became evident that the administration was not going to be able to do so, even within roughly a $100billion deficiency. Balancing the budget would, in fact, be only a "creditability" cosmetic in view of supranationalcontrolled international banking's superabundant monetary capability to pay for the ultimate $6-trillion CIA's (Capitalism's Invisible Army's) rearmament goal. If the supranationals are unable to accomplish a U.S. budget balancing, then a consortium of the supranational, only-logos-identified entities will use its own credit card banking system and comfortably charge off to insurance its $6-trillion armaments-acquisition program. But they don't want to play the game in that profitless manner. They want to do it through U.S. defense orders, which can pay handsome dividends throughout the process, making possible not only the continuance of all the corporation executives but the refunding of their capital expenditures.
Six trillion dollars! Let's try to sense the magnitude of that. Six trillion happens also to be the number of dollars the U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R. have already jointly spent on armaments since the end of World War II, when the United Nations was established. All electromagnetic radiation travels at 186,000 miles per second—that is, a little over seven times around the Earth's equator in one second, over to the Moon and back in four seconds, or over to the Sun in eight minutes. Six and one-half trillion is the number of miles radiation reaches out radially in one year, traveling at 186,000 miles per second. That is the magnitude of the number of dollars the supranational corporations are now intent on spending, and spending exclusively on killingry, at the same time that old people are deprived of their security and children go lunchless.
With control of the "Free World" media, the colossus hopes to postpone world realization of the fact of U.S. bankruptcy for ten years. Those ten years constitute the time needed to complete their program of rearmament procurement through U.S. government machinery.
Having attained its present military superiority, the U.S.S.R. is not going to give the supranationals those ten years to build their new offenses. The U.S.S.R. sought its superiority in order to force disarmament, so that it could turn its vast industrial productivity to the benefit of its own people to prove that socialism can demonstrate a higher standard of living than can capitalism, and knowing that capitalism is intent that the U.S.S.R. shall never have the opportunity. Knowing that capitalism is so intent, the U.S.S.R. is probably going to try to force a conventional warfaring showdown long before that critical ten-years-to-regain-parity opportunity is afforded to capitalism. Capitalism's recourse is to have its leaders move into the Rocky Mountain atomic-bomb-proof apartments, then to “push the button which ends it all for everyone.” (If you are upset by that, don't forget that Critical Path does offer a happy, but only by-the-skin-of-our-teeth to be attained "out" from the dilemma.)
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