Editor’s Note: once again I’ve found myself tied up working on a rapidly ballooning series of essays over on ninaillingworth.com - my latest one is a non-partisan look at the truly disturbing number of retractions, corrections and walkbacks mainstream corporate media has had to issue in stories that concern Russia in some way or another. Please forgive my absence; somehow, no matter how hard I try, I haven’t been able to figure out how to write two separate articles/posts at the same time.
Back in December of last year, I started a short series examining quotations and expanding on concepts from Rolling Stone writer Matt Taibbi’s truly exceptional 2010 work “Griftopia: A Story of Bankers, Politicians, and the Most Audacious Power Grab in American History“ - you can find parts one, two, three, and four here.
In my opinion, one of the key reasons to study the 2008 worldwide financial meltdown and subsequent fallout events like the US bank bailout, the foreclosure crisis and enforced austerity throughout what is commonly called “the west,” is that it provides a fairly accurate cross section of the globalized greed, libertarian ideology and open criminality plaguing our society - a plague that sits at the root of many of the most important crisis we as both a people and a species face today; things like climate catastrophe, living in a rigged oligarchy and the Pig Empire’s forever wars.
Although most people are at least dimly aware that the 08 meltdown, government bailouts, and the foreclosure crisis involved “some pretty shady sh*t” the reality is that most everyday people aren’t even remotely aware of the vast, cascading web of corruption, complicity and open fraud Taibbi is describing in the above quote. As Michelle Alexander stated, “we know and we don’t know.” It is easier to blame the situation on incompetent regulators and “a few bad apples” on Wall Street than it is to face down the fact that the 2008 Financial Crisis was essentially both caused and magnified by a nesting doll of criminality and greed at the very top levels of our society.
The banks, hedge funds and speculators represented wealthy investors, who used pressure groups, think-tanks and open bribery to get lawmakers and regulators to legalize gambling with other people’s money. This in turn created an urgent demand for bogus mortgages based on rigged FICO scores; mortgages that would immediately be rolled into bullshit toxic securities and given AAA investment ratings by agencies pressured and bribed to hide all this fraud. These toxic securities were rapidly gobbled up by financial institutions because having them would allow investment bankers, hedge funds, and speculators to gamble with even more of other people’s money - and frankly, nobody cared because if it all went pop, the last 30 years of US (and Western) monetary policy pretty much ensured they’d get bailed out from public funds by lapdogs their rich clients paid to put into government.
The whole system was a crooked, closed-circle of malfeasance and f*ckery involving some of the richest, most powerful and most influential people in our establishment; an establishment that knew about, and was fully in on this confidence game while knowing without question that when the music stopped it would be pension funds, retirees and individual homeowners who would pay the final price and be left destitute. This wasn’t an accident, this was a savage con job involving thousands upon thousands of financial industry professionals, hundreds of elected officials or appointed regulators and some of the most respected, powerful and influential investors on earth - and pretty much everyone who has never stepped foot on a yacht was the target of that con.
Once you understand that austerity, the financial crisis and the bailout were all a rigged game designed to make a few people very rich at the expense of society, and once you accept that all of the people who were charged with stopping that kind of criminal behavior, were easily corrupted by capital and willingly participated in the scam - what then becomes impossible? If that complicity, criminality and mutual advancement of elite class interest tracks to other problems in our society (and newsflash, it does) how can we be confused by the nightmare hellscape we find before us? If the financial crisis was a class war heist, couldn’t endless Pig Empire wars be the same type of scam? How about our refusal to regulate carbon emissions and fight climate change? Exactly what are elites going to do when several billion people on this planet become surplus to labor requirements because of automation? Is the opioid crisis a scam to addict and murder poor people for profit and if so, how many people are in on that monstrous scheme? Private prisons? Using corporate media owned ultimately by billionaires and rich investors to destroy unfriendly politicians and class enemies who might threaten elite hegemony?
Is there really anything in a globalized, deregulated capitalism system that isn’t A) about profit and B) a potentially lucrative source of robbery in a fraud economy where criminality is the norm?
- nina illingworth















