- BIG NEWS:
- AIG
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- Financial Crisis
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- Future Fuel
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- Bernard Madoff
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Last year, America spent $700 billion on oil imported from the Middle East. That figure is familiar because that is almost the exact amount of money that the Secretary of the Treasury, Henry Paulson, requested from Congress to buy up securities and bank notes from our leading financial institutions which were on the verge of collapse. Could a comprehensive energy policy, making America significantly less dependent on foreign oil, have saved us from the mess we're in?
Then there's the war! It's no secret that if mushrooms, rather than oil, had been the main export of Iraq, we would never have invaded; and if we hadn't invaded, we wouldn't be spending $250,000 a minute to maintain a military presence there. There's an obvious connection between our economic plight and the billions we spend weekly in our militaristic adventurism. Would independence from foreign oil free us from sending American dollars overseas, thus alleviating some of the pressure we are experiencing in our present economic squeeze?
Since the year 2000, the only sector of the American economy that has expanded has been the housing industry. That is where most of the jobs were created and that is where the financial investments were made. It should come as no surprise, then, that when the housing market went south, so did the rest of the American economy.
What if, instead of investing so heavily in the construction business, we had invested more heavily in the energy business? What if we had done what Denmark did, and what Al Gore proposed during his presidential campaign, and built our economy around the development of alternative forms of energy?
Since the 1970s, Denmark has made great investments in developing electricity from solar, wind and thermal sources. During that time, the Danes not only became 80 percent independent of foreign oil, but also enjoyed a 68 percent increase in their GNP, while creating hundreds of thousands of new jobs. Would America, if it had embraced such energy policies, have escaped our present fiscal crisis, while at the same time diminishing the threat of global warming?
It is popular these days to blame our economic troubles on the greed of corporate CEO's, Wall Street's manipulators, and government irresponsibility. Few, if any, of us are pointing our fingers back at those of us who live on Main Street. Yet we have to face up to the reality that we are ourselves major culprits in the financial fiasco that has befallen the nation and the world.
Seduced by brilliant advertising, we are a people who have bought into affluent lifestyles that have us living beyond our means. We spend almost all that we earn and save very little.
What is worse is that, with our credit cards and ATM machines, we spend money that we don't even have -- borrowing from hoped-for future earnings.
More than 50 years ago, America's most famous economist, Harvard's Kenneth Galbraith, warned us that an economy built on buying on credit would one day collapse. Now that it's happened, we are ready to blame everyone but ourselves.
I need not go into all the Biblical passages that would call us to live simply, if for no other reason than that others might simply live. Facts and figures condemn us. We are 6 percent of the world's population, but consume 42 percent of the world's goods. We all know that we Americans spend more and more money to buy more and more things we don't need in order to impress more and more people we don't know. In short, we have turned away from the lifestyle prescribed by Scripture, failed to be good stewards of God's creation, ignored the needs of the poor, and, in the words of Scripture, "spent our money on that which does not satisfy."
The time is at hand for repentance -- not only for Wall Street tycoons and self-serving politicians -- but for all of us. It is a time for all of us to examine our lifestyles in the light of Scripture and do what we are asked to do in 2 Chronicles 7:14 -- "If my people who are called by my name humble themselves, pray, seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land."
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Yes, we are all guilty but haven't our leaders urge us to go shopping to keep the economy going? Since our wages have been in a general state of stagnation for decades wasn't it implied that this shopping would be done on credit? The first move our government made to stem our economic meltdown was the stimulus package. And wasn't the aim of that package to continue shopping to keep the economy going? And how was this stimulus paid for? We borrowed every cent of that!
We indeed ought to change our wasteful consuming habits but how will that change the erroneous beliefs collectively held by our business, economics and our government? The simple fact is that it is our economic and business philosophy that has created this result. Ideas do resonate and make reality and bad ideas make bad reality. We still have the same people in charge, same economic theories at work and the same business and trade philosophy in place. Very few are suggesting for us to re-examine that side of our meltdown equation which is, after all, ultimately responsible for the current disaster. The prescriptions are limited to fixing our financial system, presumably to once again resume our journey to even greater disaster down the road.
Build a mass transit system.
1. It would put people to work building infrastructure here at home - not sending Wal-Mart dollars to China.
2. It would remove the need to own a car. The cost of financing, insuring, operating and fueling a private vehicle is now beyond the means of most. That money would go back into the economy.
3. The reduction in oil consumption from the abandonment of the automobile will make the middle east irrelevant to our national interest and we can shrink the military accordingly.
you beautifully put what much of the scripture calls for.
none of it is possible until we address monetary policy and the value of our currency. in fact, it is our currency that is the problem and the people that issue it are the culprit.
the bible calls for sound money - gold and silver - a standard. we do not have that and haven't since 1971 (partially)....and only partially since 1913. Please read The Creature from Jekyll Island.
only the people are to issue currency. we haven't had that since 1913 either. we used to be a production/savings based economy. now we're a consumer/debt based economy. the two above statements encouraged that very transition.
our forefathers were true visionaries because they closely studied history and realized that tyranny is born out of a destruction of a peoples currency. the constitution was written to preserve liberty by providing protections to our economic freedom. liberty can only flourish with economic freedom.
we are witnessing a trifecta. death throws of keynesian economics. corporatism trumping true free markets (bad businesses not allowed to fail). and fiat currency - creating debt out of thin air.
pray. but have your sword drawn. this will be the first of Just Wars that we've had in 65 years.
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