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Re: Empire [message #98764 is a reply to message #98754] |
Fri, 11 July 2025 10:24   |
Rusty
Messages: 1401 Registered: May 2018 Location: Kansas City Missouri
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Illuminati (3rd Degree) |
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Maybe it may just be me on this tiny forum that senses that our country is causing the lion's share of dissension and chronic conflict in this world? Are Americans so isolated and complacent and gullible from what is happening that it would take conflict to reach our shores before we take notice?
Well that seems to be a general view though to how Americans view the world. We only have two rather well behaved countries bordering our sovereign space and two big oceans isolating us. Compare that over time to Europe, Russia and Asia. South America and Africa. Then there's the complacency of being a consumer society with all means of choices and temptation through advertising and the lure of immediate gratification through credit. We've been the center of the universe for a good century or more.
But at this juncture now the public is beset with issues of economic degradation. What's causing that? All the public gets informed with is that there's outside forces that are contributing to this issue. Like "China" and "BRICS". And our problems with debt have been brought on by personal choices that insinuates lack of personal discipline.
So our leadership claims that to deal with these issues we must invest in more commitment in a military deterrent to counter those outside forces. And at home we must cut out the wasteful entitlements that our society expects to make ends meet with the cost of living driven so high. Somehow it's the public's fault by being so lax in being consumer oriented and credit undisciplined. All while being bombarded with enticement ads and easy credit to fulfill their wishes. Never mind that it's our trade debt that is the true danger of default. All debt made in a sovereign nation can be forgiven, wiped out. It's foreign debt that gets tricky. And the faith in our dollar is shrinking internationally. Our banking too, which can collapse from overextension from chronic speculating. Everything can snowball into a deep recession and or depression.
How many might consider that our societal problems and our foreign policy have a similar root in how our economic philosophy is centered around a government which decided decades back to de-industrialize and ship manufacturing abroad to those backward 3rd world countries, "like China". And conversely and purposefully subjugate the government itself out of economic policy making. The market will take care of things. And big banking and Wall Street will call the shots by planning the economy.
You won't find much talk of how this system operates. And why do we keep using it as if there is virtually no other way to do things. Any other way is taboo especially if the word socialism is mentioned. We don't want to wind up like China, a communist country with no personal freedoms and slave labor. Isn't that the crap we're fed? Along with the crap about needing a bigger, deadlier, more expensive than ever military to counter all the threats in the world we imagine or make up.
Meanwhile our country has been virtually and constantly at war or planning for war or instigating war or using proxy military's for war since the 2nd half of the 20th century. All in a narrow minded concept of maintaining a world advantage and dominance that favors our wealthy elite. I'd say something is definitely wrong with that logic. But we deflect that notion with, well there's other countries doing that too. Who? What other country other than ours has been involved in so many international conflicts and regime changes by subversive revolutions? By realizing there is a pattern in all of this should give a clue that the ring leader is the United States of America.
We are not so powerful or omnipotent anymore but don't act it. While we were luxuriating so high with the privileges of high finance making a few people in our society wealthier than Egyptian gods. Other countries were wising up to our game that we play. They've banded together to counter our dishonesty in contrast to international laws and ways. And our leaders and wealthy oligarchy want to throw a wrench in their works.
And who does all this charade serve? Has it made our peoples livelihood more secure? Are we bulging at the seams with a happy, healthy and prosperous public? Maybe the top 10%. But It is definitely serving the interests of the few who call the shots in our economy. Our oil oligarchs, our banking and military complex oligarchs and a host of other influential wealthy elite that feel the world is their oyster that better not be tampered with. Or we'll sic our bad-assed military on you or some proxy military we can supply after all the sanctioning, regime change and financial skullduggery doesn't soften a country up enough to satisfy compliance with our way of keeping our status on top.
It's a matter of time that this charade will eventually bankrupt our society. But our politicians and definitely our wealthy elites want to keep on till that eventuality takes place. They don't care. Extreme wealth warps their minds and they believe they are in their position because they are almost ordained to be. They've "earned it" like the famous old Smith Barney commercial.
If that sounds like class warfare on them. Forget that. It's been the opposite forever. Wealth manipulating politics is as old as them thar hills. It permeates human history. And trying to cancel their hold on the electorate is one of the hardest endeavors a society can achieve. But it's necessary if we want to really claim we are a democracy. As it is, it's not. We are closer to the feudalism of old that the notion of capitalism would replace.
The BRICS countries that have formed with its roots in the 1950's Non Aligned Movement at the Bandung conference have the economic power now that the fragile Asian-African countries then didn't have. But the aim is the same. Hedging against the American led colonialist and imperialist countries that exploited that part of the world. And still feel compelled to maintain that hegemony.
The tables have turned on the great American power brokering. But we still have influence through our means of subversive subterfuge using bribes, threats and proxy warmongering to try and keep our hold on this power we have no rights to hold. Thus those outside forces are real and they are pitted against our notions of control. But they are interested in sharing the riches of the world by cooperation, respect of sovereign territory and the ethical international adherence to the laws that were originally the bylaws of the United Nations. That we routinely ignore and break with our rules based order. Our rules, our advantage.
Our country at this point in time, is on the wrong side of history. What say thee?
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Re: Empire [message #98779 is a reply to message #98777] |
Fri, 18 July 2025 06:56  |
Rusty
Messages: 1401 Registered: May 2018 Location: Kansas City Missouri
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Illuminati (3rd Degree) |
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No one speaks so elegantly to the truth of our declining empire as does senior economist Michael Hudson. Now in his mid 80's. His economic philosophy is simple at its root. Classical economics that the early economists of the industrial revolution Adam Smith & David Ricardo championed. They saw the folly of the then feudal system's rentier class as an impediment towards industrial advantage for a nation. Subsidized labor via low cost of living in a society. Taxing the unearned income of the rentier class to keep their influences in government to a minimum.
This philosophy still holds true even today. As with the spectacular rise of China taking only decades to become the powerhouse of economy today. It's no different than what Great Britain and Europe and the United States did in the 19th century. Except for one aspect even better. China made banking a state run monopoly. A "natural monopoly" that eschews the profit motive from investment that a state run banking system does for helping to plan out an economy. State & private interests combined.
Here Dr. Hudson goes through how the current Global Majority. The BRICS nations can take the shackles of finance capitalism off of their backs with the ability to grow and be true sovereign democratic nations following international laws and norms.
Our own nation does not have the wisdom yet to realize this virtue. Here I copied & pasted in full. Minus the diagrams.
Michael Hudson: How the Global Majority can free itself from US financial colonialism
Economist Michael Hudson describes how China created an alternative to the Western neoliberal order, and how the Global South can challenge the rent extraction of US-centered financial colonialism.
Industrial capitalism was revolutionary in its fight to free Europe’s economies and parliaments from the hereditary privileges and vested interests that survived from feudalism. To make their manufactures competitive in world markets, industrialists needed to end the land rent paid to Europe’s landed aristocracies, the economic rents extracted by trade monopolies, and interest paid to bankers who played no role in financing industry. These rentier incomes add to the economy’s price structure, raising the living wage and other business expenses, thus eating into profits.
The 20th century saw the classical aim of clearing away these economic rents rolled back in Europe, the United States, and other Western countries.
However, today, land and natural-resource rents in private hands are still rising and even receiving special tax advantages. Basic infrastructure and other natural monopolies are being privatized by the financial sector — which is largely responsible for carving up and de-industrializing economies on behalf of its real estate and monopoly customers, who pay out most of their rental income as interest to bankers and bondholders.
What has survived from the policies by which Europe’s industrial powers and the United States built up their own manufacturing is free trade. Britain implemented free trade after a 30-year fight on behalf of its industry against the landed aristocracy, aimed at ending the protectionist agricultural tariffs, the Corn Laws, which had been enacted in 1815 to prevent opening the home market to low-priced food imports, which would have reduced farming rents.
After repealing these laws in 1846 to lower the cost of living, Britain offered free-trade agreements to countries seeking access to its market in exchange for these countries not protecting their industry against British exports. The aim was to deter less industrialized countries from working up their own raw materials.
In such countries, Europe’s foreign investors sought to buy rent-yielding natural resources headed by mineral and land rights, and basic infrastructure headed by railroads and canals. This created a diametric contrast between rent-avoidance in the industrial nations and rent-seeking in their colonies and other host countries, while European bankers used debt leverage to gain fiscal control of former colonies who had won independence in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Under pressure to pay the foreign debts that were run up to finance their trade deficits, development attempts, and deepening debt dependency, debtor countries were obliged to relinquish fiscal control of their economies to bondholders, banks, and creditor-nation governments, which pressed them to privatize their basic infrastructure monopolies. The effect was to prevent them from using revenue from their natural endowments to develop a broad economic base for prosperous development.
Just as Britain, France, and Germany aimed to free their economies from feudalism’s legacy of the vested interests with rent extraction privileges, most of today’s Global Majority countries need to free themselves from the rent and debt overhead inherited from European colonialism and creditor control.
By the 1950s these countries were being called “less developed” or, even more patronizingly, “developing.” But the combination of foreign debt and free trade has blocked them from developing along the balanced public/private lines that Western Europe and the United States followed.
The tax policy and other legislation of these countries has been shaped by U.S. and European pressure to observe international trade and investment rules that perpetuate geopolitical domination by Western bankers and rent-extracting investors to control their national patrimony.
The euphemism “host economy” is appropriate for these countries, because the Western economic penetration of them resembles a biological parasite feeding off its host.
Seeking to maintain this relationship, the U.S. and European governments are blocking attempts by these countries to follow the path that Europe’s industrial nations and the United States took for their own economies with their 19th-century political and fiscal reforms that empowered their own takeoff.
Without these countries adopting fiscal and political reforms aimed at developing their own sovereignty and prospects for growth on the basis of their own national patrimony of land, natural resources and basic infrastructure, the world economy will remain bifurcated between Western rentier nations and their Global Majority hosts and held subject to neoliberal orthodoxy.
The success of China’s model poses a threat to the neoliberal order
When U.S. political leaders single out China as an existential enemy of the West, it is not as a military threat but for offering a successful economic alternative to today’s U.S.-sponsored neoliberal world order.
That order was supposed to represent the End of History, succeeding through its logic of free trade, government deregulation, and international investment free of capital controls, while detouring away from industrial capitalism’s anti-rentier policies.
We can now see the absurdity in this self-satisfying evangelical view that had emerged just as Western economies were deindustrializing, as a result of the dynamics of their neoliberal finance capitalism.
The vested financial and other rentier interests are rejecting not only China but the logic of industrial capitalism as described by its own 19th-century classical economists.
Western neoliberal observers have closed their eyes to recognizing the ways in which China’s “socialism with Chinese characteristics” has achieved its success by a logic similar to that of the industrial capitalism advocated by classical economists to minimize rentier income.
Most late 19th-century economic writers expected industrial capitalism to evolve into socialism of one form or another, as the role of public investment and regulation increased. Freeing economies and their governments from control by landowners and creditors was the common denominator of the social-democratic socialism of John Stuart Mill, the libertarian socialism of Henry George focusing on the land tax, and the cooperative mutual-aid socialism of Peter Kropotkin, as well as Marxism.
Where China has gone further than earlier socialist mixed-economy reforms has been in keeping money and credit creation in the hands of government, along with basic infrastructure and natural resources.
Fear that other governments might follow China’s lead has led U.S. and other Western finance-capitalist ideologues to view China as a threat by providing a model for economic reforms that are precisely the opposite of what the 20th century’s pro-rentier, anti-government ideology fought against.
The foreign debt overhead owed to U.S. and other Western creditors, and enabled by the 1945-2025 international geopolitical rules designed by U.S. diplomats at Bretton Woods in 1944, obliges the Global South and other countries to recover their economic sovereignty by freeing themselves from their foreign (mainly dollarized) banking and financial burden.
These countries have the same land-rent problem that Europe’s industrial capitalism faced, but their land and resource rents are mainly owned by multinational companies and other foreign appropriators of their oil and mineral rights, forests, and latifundia plantations, who extract resource rents by emptying out the world’s oil and mineral resources and cutting down its forests.
Taxing economic rent is a precondition for economic sovereignty
A precondition for Global South countries to gain economic autonomy is to follow the advice of the classical economists and tax the largest sources of rental income – land rent, monopoly rent, and financial returns – instead of letting them be sent abroad.
Taxing these rents would help stabilize their balance of payments, while providing their governments with revenue to finance their infrastructure needs and the related social spending needed to subsidize their economic modernization.
That is how Britain, France, Germany and the United States established their own industrial, agricultural, and financial supremacy. This is not a radical socialist policy; it always has been a central element of industrial capitalist development.
Recapturing a country’s land and natural-resource rents as its fiscal base would enable it to avoid taxing labor and industry. A country would not need to formally nationalize its land and natural resources outright; it simply needs to tax the economic rent over and above actual “earned profits,” to cite the principle of Adam Smith and his 19th-century successors that this rent is the natural tax base.
But neoliberal ideology calls such taxation of rent, and the regulation of monopolies or other market phenomena, an intrusive interference into the “free market.”
This defense of rentier income inverts the classical definition of a free market. The classical economists defined a free market as one free from economic rent, not as one free for the extraction of economic rent, let alone as freedom for creditor-nation governments to create a “rules-based order” to facilitate foreign rent extraction and stifle the development of financially and trade-dependent host countries.
Debt remission is a precondition for economic sovereignty
The fight by countries to free themselves from their foreign debt overhead is much harder than Europe’s 19th-century fight to end the privileges of its landed aristocracy (and less successfully, of its bankers), because it is international in scope, and is now confronted by a creditor-nation alliance to maintain the system of financial colonization created two centuries ago, as former colonies sought to finance their independence by borrowing from foreign bankers.
Starting in the 1820s, newly independent countries like Haiti, Mexico, and other Latin America nations, as well as Greece, Tunisia, Egypt, and other former Ottoman colonies, won nominal political freedom from colonialist control. But to build up their own industry they had to take on foreign debt – on which they almost immediately defaulted, which enabled their creditors to establish monetary authorities in charge of their fiscal policy.
The governments of these countries were turned into collection agents for international bankers by the late 19th century. Financial dependency on bankers and bondholders replaced colonial dependency, obliging debtor countries to give fiscal priority to foreign creditors.
World War II enabled many of these countries to accumulate substantial foreign monetary reserves as a result of supplying raw materials to the belligerents. But the post-war order designed by U.S. diplomats, based on free trade and free capital movements, drained these savings, and obliged the Global South and other countries to borrow to cover their trade deficits.
The resulting foreign debts soon came to exceed the ability of these countries to pay – that is, to pay without surrendering to the destructive IMF demands for austerity that blocked the investment needed to raise their productivity and living standards.
There was no way that they could meet their own development needs to invest in basic infrastructure and provide industrial and agricultural subsidies, public education, health care, and other basic social spending that is characterized by the leading industrial nations. This still remains the case.
Their choice today, therefore, is between paying their foreign debts – at the cost of blocking their own development – or claiming that these debts are odious and insisting that they be written off.
At issue is whether debtor countries will gain the sovereignty that is supposed to characterize an international economy of equals, free of foreign post-colonial control over their tax and trade policies, as well as their national patrimony.
Their self-determination can only be achieved by joining together in a collective front.
Donald Trump’s tariff aggression has catalyzed this process by drastically reducing the U.S. market for exports from debtor countries, preventing them from obtaining the dollars to pay their bonds and bank debts, so these won’t be paid in any event.
The world is now busy de-dollarizing.
The need to create an alternative to the U.S.-centered post-war order was expressed in 1955 at the Bandung Conference in Indonesia, and then later by the Non-Aligned Movement. But these countries lacked a critical mass of self-sufficiency among themselves to act together.
Attempts to create a New International Economic Order in the 1960s faced the same problem. Countries were not industrially, agriculturally, or financially strong enough to “go it alone.”
Today’s Western debt crisis, de-industrialization, and coercive weaponization of foreign trade and financial sanctions under the dollarized international financial system, capped by the “America First” tariff policy, have created an urgent need for countries to collectively seek economic sovereignty, to become independent from U.S. and European control of the international economy.
The collective BRICS+, with Russia and China taking the lead, have just begun talking about making such an attempt.
China’s success has made a global alternative attainable
The great catalyst for countries to take control of their national development has been China. As indicated above, its industrial socialism has largely achieved the classical aim of industrial capitalism of minimizing rentier overhead, above all by publicly creating money to finance tangible growth.
Keeping money and credit creation in government hands, via China’s state-owned banks, prevents financial and other rentier interests from taking over the economy and subjecting it to the financial overhead that has characterized Western economies.
China’s successful alternative for allocating credit avoids making purely financial gains at the expense of tangible capital formation and living standards. That is why it is viewed as an existential threat to the current Western banking model.
Western financial systems are overseen by central banks that have been made independent from the Treasury and government regulatory “interference.” Their role is to provide the commercial banking system’s liquidity as it creates interest-bearing debt, mainly for the purpose of making wealth financially by debt leveraging (asset-price inflation), not for productive capital formation.
Capital gains – rising prices for housing and other real estate, stocks, and bonds – are much larger than GDP growth. They can be made easily and quickly by banks creating more credit to bid up prices for buyers of these assets.
Instead of the financial system being industrialized, Western industrial corporations have become financialized, and that has occurred along lines that have deindustrialized the U.S. and European economies.
Financialized wealth can be made without being part of the production process. Interest, late charges, other financial fees and capital gains are not a “product,” yet are counted as such in today’s GDP statistics.
Carrying charges on the rising debt overhead are transfer payments to the finance sector, by labor and businesses, out of wages and profits earned by actual production. That shrinks the income available for spending on the products produced by labor and capital, leaving economies debt-ridden and deindustrialized.
The strategy of creditor-rentier nations to prevent withdrawal from their global control
The broadest strategy to block countries from avoiding the rentier burden has been to wage an ideological campaign from the educational system to mass media. The aim is to control the narrative in a way that depicts government as an oppressive Leviathan, an inherently bureaucratic autocracy.
Western “democracy” is defined not so much politically as economically, as a free market whose resources are allocated by a banking and financial sector independent of regulatory oversight.
Governments strong enough to limit financial and other rentier wealth in the public interest are demonized as autocracies or “planned economics” — as if shifting credit and resource allocation to the financial centers of Wall Street, London, Paris, and Japan does not result in an economy planned by the financial sector in its own interest, with the aim of creating monetary fortunes. Its aim is not to improve the overall economy and living standards.
Global Majority officials and administrators who have studied economics at U.S. and European universities have been indoctrinated with a value-free (that is, rent-free) pro-rentier ideology to frame the way they think about how economies work.
This narrative excludes consideration of how debt polarizes economies by growing exponentially at compound interest. Also excluded from mainstream economic logic is the classical contrast between productive and unproductive credit and investment, and the related distinction between earned income (wages and profits, the main components of value) and unearned income (economic rent).
Beyond this ideological campaign, neoliberal diplomacy uses military force, regime change, and control of the main international bureaucracies associated with the United Nations, the IMF, and World Bank — and a more covert network of non-government organizations (NGOs) — to prevent countries from withdrawing from today’s pro-rentier fiscal rules and pro-creditor laws.
The United States has taken the lead in using force and regime change against governments that would tax away or otherwise limit rent extraction.
It should be noted that few early socialists (except anarchists) advocated violence in pursuit of their reforms. It has been the vested interests, unwilling to accept loss of the privileges that are the basis of their fortunes, who have not hesitated to use violence to defend their wealth and power against attempts at reform to check their privileges.
To be sovereign, nations must create an alternative that enables them to be in charge of their own economic, monetary, and political development. But American diplomacy views any attempt to enact the necessary political and tax reforms and strong government regulatory authority as posing an existential threat to U.S. control over international finance and trade.
This raises the question of whether it is possible to achieve reforms and a strong public economy without war. It is natural for countries to wonder whether they can achieve economic sovereignty without a revolution, such as the Soviet Union, China, and other countries that fought to end their domination by their foreign-supported landlords and creditors.
The only way to protect economic sovereignty against military threats is to join an alliance for mutual support, since individual countries can be isolated in the way that Cuba, Venezuela, and Iran have been — or destroyed, like Libya.
As Benjamin Franklin put matters, “If we don’t hang together, we will hang separately.”
American writers characterize the attempt of other countries to join together to achieve economic sovereignty as a civilizational war. While this is indeed a civilizational contest, it is the United States and its allies that are waging aggression, against countries trying to withdraw from a system that has provided the United States and Europe with a huge inflow of economic rents and debt service from host countries subject to U.S.-backed diplomacy.
How U.S.-centered financial colonialism replaced European colonial occupation
After World War II, the era of settler-state colonialism gave way to financial colonialism, with the international economy dollarized under U.S. leadership.
The Bretton Woods rules established by 1945 enabled multinational corporations to keep economic rents for land, natural resources and public infrastructure out of domestic fiscal reach. Governments were reduced to the role of acting as collection agents for foreign creditors and as protectors of foreign investors from democratic attempts to tax rentier wealth.
The United States was able to weaponize world trade by monopolizing oil exports through U.S. and allied oil companies (the Seven Sisters), while U.S. and European agricultural protectionism and World Bank “aid” policy steered food-deficit countries to focus on tropical plantation crops instead of grain to feed themselves.
President Bill Clinton’s 1994 NAFTA free-trade agreement swamped Mexico’s market with low-priced U.S. farm exports (highly subsidized by strong government support). Mexican grain production plummeted, leaving it food-dependent.
To block governments from taxing or even fining foreign investors to recover compensation for damages to their countries, today’s rentier powers have created Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) courts requiring governments to compensate foreign investors for increasing taxes or imposing regulations that reduce foreign-owned income. (I provide the details of this in Chapter 7 of my 2022 book The Destiny of Civilization.)
This system blocks national sovereignty, including by preventing host countries from taxing the economic rent of their land and natural resources owned by foreigners. The effect is to make these resources part of the investor-nation economy, not their own. (The Saudi oil company Aramco, for instance, was not a corporately distinct corporate affiliate but a branch of Standard Oil of New York (ESSO). This legal nicety meant that its income and expenses were consolidated into the parent company’s U.S. balance sheet. That enabled it to receive a tax credit for the “depletion allowance” for oil, rendering the company effectively free of U.S. income tax, although it was Saudi oil that was being depleted.)
Other nations permitted the United States to dictate the post-World War II order, with it promising generous aid to support free trade, peace, and post-colonial national sovereignty, as spelled out in the United Nations Charter. But the United States squandered its wealth on military spending abroad and financial wealth addiction at home.
That has left America’s post-industrial power based mainly on its ability to harm other countries with chaos if they do not accept the U.S. “rules-based order” designed to extract tribute from them.
The U.S. imposes protectionist tariffs and import quotas at will, and subsidizes agriculture and key technologies as potential global high-tech monopolies, while forbidding other countries from implementing such “socialist” or “autocratic” policies to become more competitive. The result is a double standard in which the U.S. “rules-based order” (its own rules) replaces adherence to international law.
U.S. agricultural price support policy initiated under Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1930s provides a good example of double standards. It made farming the most heavily subsidized and protected sector. It became the model for the European Economic Community’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) introduced in 1962.
However, U.S. diplomacy opposes the attempts of other countries, especially Global South countries, to impose their own protectionist subsidies and import quotas aimed at achieving self-sufficiency in basic food production — while U.S. “aid lending” and the World Bank have (as indicated above) supported the exportation of tropical plantation crops by Global South countries by lending for transportation and port development. U.S. policy has consistently opposed family-owned farming and land reform throughout Latin America and other Global South countries, often with violence.
Moves toward a multipolar world order
It is not surprising that, inasmuch as Russia has long been the United States’ main military adversary, it has taken the lead in protesting against the unipolar U.S. order.
Advocating a multipolar alternative to the U.S. neoliberal order in June 2025, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov described the post-colonial economic subjugation of the countries that achieved political independence from colonialist rule in the 19th and 20th centuries but which are now facing the next task needed to complete their liberation:
Our African friends are paying more and more attention to the fact that their entire economies are still largely based on siphoning off natural resources from these countries. In fact, all value added is produced and pocketed by the former Western metropoles and other European Union and NATO members.
…
The West is using illegal unilateral sanctions, which increasingly become the harbinger of a military attack, as this has happened in Yugoslavia, Iraq and Libya and is now happening in Iran, as well as the instruments of unfair competition, initiating tariff wars, seizing other countries’ sovereign assets and taking advantage of the role of their currencies and payment systems. The West itself has actually buried the globalization model, which it developed after the Cold War to promote its interests.
Marco Rubio made the same point in the U.S. Senate hearings to confirm him as Donald Trump’s Secretary of State, explaining that the “postwar global order is not just obsolete; it is now a weapon being used against us.”
Violating the rules of foreign trade and investment that the United States itself dictated in 1945, and yet another instance of Washington resorting to the “rules-based order” of its own rules, President Trump’s unilateral tariffs aimed both at shifting the New Cold War’s military costs onto other countries, which are expected to buy American arms and provide proxy armies, and at reviving the U.S.’s lost industrial power by forcing countries to relocate industries to the United States and to permit U.S. companies to extract monopoly rents by controlling the leading emerging technologies.
The United States aims to impose monopoly rights and related rentier privileges uniquely favorable to itself on the entire world’s trade and investment. Trump’s “America First” diplomacy demands that other countries conduct their trade, payments and debt relationships in U.S. dollars, instead of their own currencies.
The U.S. “rule of law” is one that permits unilateral U.S. demands to impose trade and financial sanctions dictating how and with whom foreign countries can trade and invest. They are threatened with economic chaos and confiscation of their dollar reserves if they do not boycott trade and investment relations with Russia, China, and other countries refusing to submit to U.S. control.
The United States’ leverage to obtain these foreign concessions is no longer industrial leadership and financial strength, but its ability to cause chaos for other countries. Claiming to be the indispensable nation, the U.S.’s ability to disrupt trade is ending its former international monetary and diplomatic power.
That power originally was based on U.S. holdings of the world’s largest monetary gold reserves in 1945, its status as the largest creditor nation and industrial economy, and, after 1971, its dollar hegemony, arising in large part as a result of its financial market being the safest for other nations to hold their official monetary reserves.
The diplomatic inertia created by these former advantages no longer reflects the realities of 2025. What U.S. officials do have is the ability to disrupt the world’s trade, supply chains, and financial arrangements, including the SWIFT system for international payments.
The U.S. and European confiscation of $300 billion of Russia’s monetary deposits has darkened America’s reputation for financial safety, while its chronic trade and balance-of-payments deficits threaten to disrupt the international monetary system and free trade that made it the major beneficiary of the 1945-2025 world order.
In keeping with the principle of national sovereignty and non-interference in other countries’ internal affairs that underlay the creation of the United Nations (the basic principle of international law grounded in the 1648 Peace of Westphalia), Russia’s Foreign Minister Lavrov described (in his speech cited above) the need “to establish foreign trade mechanisms [that] the West will be unable to control, such as transport corridors, alternative payment systems and supply chains.”
As an example of how the United States had paralyzed the World Trade Organization, which it had created on the basis of free trade at a time when America was the world’s leading export power, he explained:
When the Americans realized that the globalized system they had created – one built on fair competition, inviolable property rights, the presumption of innocence, and similar principles, and which had allowed them to dominate for decades – had also begun benefiting their rivals, primarily China, they took drastic action.
As China started outplaying them on their own turf and by their own rules, Washington simply blocked the WTO’s Appellate Body. By artificially stripping it of a quorum, they rendered this key dispute settlement mechanism inactive – and it remains so to this day.
The United States has been able to block foreign opposition to its nationalist policies by having veto power in the United Nations, IMF, and World Bank. Even without such power, U.S. diplomats have been able to block United Nations organizations from acting independently of U.S. wishes by refusing to appoint leaders or judges not primarily loyal to U.S. foreign policy.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), charged with keeping nuclear proliferation in check is the most recent notorious case in point. Iran published documents showing that the agency’s leader Rafael Grossi provided U.S. and Israeli intelligence with the names of Iranian scientists who were killed, and details of the Iranian nuclear refinement sites that were bombed.
The U.S. veto has prevented the UN Security Council from condemning Israeli attacks on the Palestinian population. And when the International Criminal Court (ICC) brought charges against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for committing war crimes and crimes against humanity in a genocide against the Palestinians, U.S. officials imposed sanctions on the ICC and demanded the removal of the prosecutor.
The world no longer is to be governed by international law, but by unilateral U.S. rules, subject to abrupt change depending on the vicissitudes of American economic or military power (or loss thereof).
As Russia’s President Vladimir Putin described this new state of affairs in 2022, “Western countries have been saying for centuries that they bring freedom and democracy to other nations,” yet the “unipolar world is inherently anti-democratic and unfree; it is false and hypocritical through and through.”
The United States’ self-image depicts its long dominant world position as reflecting its democracy, free market, and equality of opportunity that has enabled its power elite, in their view, to acquire their status by being the economy’s most productive members, through their management and allocation of savings and credit.
The reality is that the United States has become a rentier oligarchy, one that is increasingly hereditary. Its members’ fortunes are made mainly by acquiring rent-yielding assets (land, natural resources, and monopolies) on which they make capital gains, while paying most of their rent as interest to their bankers, who end up with much of these rents and have become the new oligarchy’s leading managerial class.
Summary
The real conflict over what kind of economic and political system the Global Majority will have is just gaining momentum.
Global South countries and others have been driven so deeply into debt that they have been obliged to sell off their public infrastructure to pay its carrying charges. Recovering control of their natural resources and basic infrastructure requires the fiscal right to impose an economic-rent tax on their land, natural resources and monopolies, as well as the legal right to recover environmental cleanup costs caused by foreign oil and mining firms, and to implement financial cleanup costs (i.e., write offs and cancellation) of the foreign debt burden imposed by creditors who have not taken responsibility to ensure that their loans can be paid under existing conditions.
U.S. evangelistic rhetoric describes the imminent political and economic fracture of the world economy as a “Clash of Civilizations” between democracies (i.e., countries that support U.S. policy) and autocracies (i.e., nations acting independently).
It would be more accurate to describe this fracture as a fight by the United States and its European and other Western allies against civilization — assuming civilization entails, as it seems it must, the sovereign right of countries to enact their own laws and tax systems for the benefit of their own populations within an international system that has a common set of basic rules and values.
What Western ideologues call democracy and free markets has turned out to be an aggressive rentier-financial imperialism. And what they call autocracy is a government strong enough to prevent economic polarization between a super-rich rentier class and an impoverished population at large, such as is occurring within the Western oligarchies themselves.
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Current Time: Fri Jul 18 15:29:58 CDT 2025
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