Your Happening World (21)

The work experience programme set up by the ConDem government is a scam where large companies get free employees at the taxpayer’s expense it turns out, to the surprise of absolutely no-one. Meanwhile the people suckered into it get no experience, take the place of people who’d actually be paid to stack shelves and are threatened by the loss of their unemployment benefits if they back out. It’s like the apprentice only with the offer of a minimum wage job at the end.

Eurozone bond markets suffered a mass sell-off on Tuesday as investor fears spread beyond Italy and Spain to triple A-rated France, Austria, Finland and the Netherlands. Yeah, there’s a surprise. Oddly enoguh throwing first Greece, then Italy to the wolves has not meant the rest of the countries in the EU troika are now safe…

But at least Europe is made safe for Goldman Sachs. The ascension of Mario Monti to the Italian prime ministership is remarkable for more reasons than it is possible to count. By replacing the scandal-surfing Silvio Berlusconi, Italy has dislodged the undislodgeable. By imposing rule by unelected technocrats, it has suspended the normal rules of democracy, and maybe democracy itself. And by putting a senior adviser at Goldman Sachs in charge of a Western nation, it has taken to new heights the political power of an investment bank that you might have thought was prohibitively politically toxic.

Occupy Wall Street: Chaotic Good. We tried to play by the rules and got ignored. Occupy Wall Street has thrown out the rule book.

Serpents: a public service announcement by Jack Crow.

That new Greek government seems kinda fascist

Mark Ames shows were certain of Greece’s new ministers are coming from:

See the guy in the photo there, dangling an ax from his left hand? That’s Greece’s new “Minister of Infrastructure, Transport and Networks” Makis Voridis captured back in the 1980s, when he led a fascist student group called “Student Alternative” at the University of Athens law school. It’s 1985, and Minister Voridis, dressed like some Kajagoogoo Nazi, is caught on camera patrolling the campus with his fellow fascists, hunting for suspected leftist students to bash. Voridis was booted out of law school that year, and sued by Greece’s National Association of Students for taking part in violent attacks on non-fascist law students.

With all the propaganda we’ve been fed about Greece’s new “austerity” government being staffed by non-ideological “technocrats,” it may come as a surprise that fascists are now considered “technocrats” to the mainstream media and Western banking interests. Then again, history shows that fascists have always been favored by the 1-percenters to deliver the austerity medicine.

Because the elected Greek government could not be trusted enough to act against it’s population’s interests, the EU has now installed a new “technocratic” government with added fascists. Poetic, really. As Ames also shows, the Greek military meanwhile is bought off with new toys: tanks and warships beause austerity doesn’t mean having to stop buying unnecessary weaponry.

the Greek revolution will not be televised

Paul Mason is in Athens, doing some great reporting on the Greek crisis:

And I will repeat the point about hostility to the media: it’s not a problem for me and my colleagues to be hounded off demos as “representatives of big capital”, “Zionists”, “scum and police informers” etc. But to get this reaction from almost every demographic – from balaclava kids to pensioners – should be a warning sign to the policymaking elite. The “mainstream” – whether it’s the media, politicians or business people – is beginning to seem illegitimate to large numbers of people.

As one old bloke put it to me, when I said: “Don’t you want us to report what’s happening to you?” – “No.”

He was quite calm and rational as he waved his hand in my face: “It’s too late for that.”

Jamie wonders if /when the counter revolution comes. The Colonels’ dictatorship was not that long ago after all.

Criminal bankers hardly prosecuted in the US — quelle surprise

The New York Times has a big article up on the lack of prosecutions coming out of the financial crisis

“This is not some evil conspiracy of two guys sitting in a room saying we should let people create crony capitalism and steal with impunity,” said William K. Black, a professor of law at University of Missouri, Kansas City, and the federal government’s director of litigation during the savings and loan crisis. “But their policies have created an exceptional criminogenic environment. There were no criminal referrals from the regulators. No fraud working groups. No national task force. There has been no effective punishment of the elites here.”

Largely because an evil conspiracy wasn’t needed, when everybody in government and the regulatory agencies was already convinced prosecuting financial fraud was a Bad Idea because it would frighten the Market, that oh so convenient impersonal historical force which cannot be reasoned with, only appeased. Doesn’t help that much of Obama’s financial people are poachers turned gameskeepers. The whole strategy for dealing with the economic crisis seems to have been to pump money into the very banks who caused it, bail out Wall Street and dump the costs on Main Street, then use the crisis to e.g. bump off social security because it’s now unaffordable.

The real surprise in this is how little real public anger there has been; no bankers have been dangling from trees or gotten their overpriced houses torched — only Fred the Shred’s windows were thrown in.

The Downward Spiral: EU want to restrict wages across Europe

Dutch public news broadcaster has gotten its hands on a joint draft proposal (PDF) by EU bigwigs Herman van Rompuy and José Manuel Barroso on how to strengthen the EU economies in the wake of the bankers’ crisis (they don’t call it that). As The Wall Street Journal sees it their proposals “soften” the stricter German ones that had been put forward a few weeks earlier. For those of us not belonging to their target audience however these proposals, if enacted, will mean further restrictions on our ability to organise ourselves, earn a decent wage for a decent day’s work.

For example, there should be a “review of the wage setting arrangements to enhance decentralization in the bargaining process” and member states should “ensure wage restraint in the public sector”, not to mention “further opening of sheltered sectors by measures taken at national level to identify and remove unjustified restrictions on professional services as quotas and closed shops” and “overhaul of commercial legal systems to reduce red tape”, more “labor market reforms”, “tax reforms” and finally, “aligning the retirement age with life expectancy” and “reducing early retirement schemes” should also be priorities for member states.

In short, we should have less room to organise ourselves to negotiate the price of our labour, if you work for the government or in a public organisation you can expect even less sympathy from the EU than from your own government, less protection against (unfair) competition, less legal oversight of business, less protection against being fired, more money for fat cats and less for us and finally the chance to work until we die as retirement ages keep creeping up.

Welcome to the downward spiral. Not mentioned: tackling the obscene bonuses and salaries the economic wreckers we laughingly call bankers still “earn”.