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  • Ponzi capitalism

    Ponzi capitalism
    By Frank Scott

    Charles Ponzi was criminalized in the 1920s for a pyramid scheme whereby he duped people into investing in international postal coupons (most of which were non-existent) and promised a 40 percent return on their money in 90 days. The profit some realized resulted from unprincipled capital accumulation. Just like what the market does when it sells what it calls derivatives now, Ponzi’s investors derived value from other investors, until the number of gullible people declined once the ruling class squelched his scheme before their own schemes were seen to be much bolder methods of producing money out of thin air. The credit creation which has supported our consumption binge for many years now is merely an updated, far more vast and dangerous expression of Ponzi’s hustle, carried to global extremes.

    Purists can deny that the present shakeup in the home mortgage sector is anything like a Ponzi Scheme, because an actual product exists: a home. But rare is the buyer in America who sees real estate simply as a procedure to acquire shelter. Rather, it has become a money making proposition in which the commodity, and especially the speculative paper that is its tenuous foundation, changes hands often, sees its value fluctuate, and all with no more than religious faith in a steady stream of new investors to buy the paper.

  • #2
    Re: Ponzi capitalism

    Originally posted by Rajiv View Post
    Ponzi capitalism
    By Frank Scott
    Charles Ponzi, my hero.
    "Men, it has been well said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly, and one by one."
    - Charles Mackay

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    • #3
      Re: Ponzi capitalism

      From "Addicted to Debt"

      ---------------------

      *** "Bank Owned" - the polite way of saying you're homeless…gluttons for debt based punishment…

      *** Roasting on a burning platform…The new capitalist gods must love the poor…

      *** Faith resting on miracle money…is America having an Atlas Shrugged moment?…and more!

      ---------------------

      Welcome to Endrogado Nation…

      West Camille Street in Santa Ana, California, has been 'devastated,' says the local paper.

      House prices rose from an average of $182,000 to over $600,000 in just five years - driven higher and higher by the easiest credit conditions ever to fall on planet earth. Lenders targeted Hispanic families, who saw home ownership as a step towards middle class status.

      Alas, not every step takes you in the right direction.

      Most of the mortgage loans were of the adjustable rate variety and most of the houses they were used to buy had prices that were also adjustable - but in the opposite direction. Now, prices are said to be falling by 10-12% per year…with many of the houses on West Camille in foreclosure. California has 6 of the top 10 foreclosure metropolises - with Stockton, Modesto and Merced particularly hard hit.

      "Bank Owned" is a polite way of describing the new status of the foreclosed houses…while a Spanish word is most often applied to their former owners - endrogado (from 'to drug' oneself).

      Endrogado means, in this context, hooked on debt. It describes the poor homeowners of West Camille Street…and much of the rest of the nation…from the most modest family, to the U.S. federal government itself.

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