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金融殖民主义的终结

(2024-08-12 22:42:17) 下一个

金融殖民主义的终结

https://michael-hudson.com/2024/08/the-end-of-financial-colonialism/

作者:Michael 2024年8月7日  访谈 Dialogue Works 永久链接

Nima、Michael Hudson 和 Richard Wolff,“金融殖民主义”,Dialogue Works,2024 年 8 月 1 日。

“金融殖民主义终结背后的惊人真相!”

NIMA:让我们从中东目前的冲突开始。你现在如何看待它?Michael,你认为中东发生了什么?

MICHAEL HUDSON:我认为中东正在成为我们过去两次聚在一起时谈论的催化剂,世界分裂成两半,美国、北约、西方对抗世界其他国家。

我认为美国和近东地区的行为向全球大多数人展示了美国和以色列在那里所做的一切,包括暗杀个人、政权更迭以及右翼利库德集团在美国右翼民主党的支持下试图在世界其他地区实施的暴力行为。

我认为,欧亚大陆得到的信息是,除非我们真正脱离,否则他们对巴勒斯坦人所做的事、欧洲对乌克兰人所做的事,他们也会对我们做同样的事情。

我认为这表明了紧迫性。我认为,自 1955 年万隆会议以来,各国一直在讨论如何脱离并建立一种不那么剥削的世界贸易和投资制度。但当他们看到乌克兰和近东发生的事情时,我认为这会发出紧迫感,告诉我们,我们真的必须团结起来,让盟友加入我们的体系,为每个加入的国家提供足够的支持,让他们值得加入中国、俄罗斯、伊朗、上合组织(上海合作组织)的轨道,而不是保持与西方的联系。西方所能提供的只是贿赂和暴力威胁。

NIMA:理查德?

理查德·沃尔夫:是的,我想接着迈克尔说的话。真正让我印象深刻的是中国崛起的迹象、金砖国家的崛起、我们过去称之为第三世界、欠发达国家或新兴国家的崛起,所有这些委婉的说法。

这种崛起现在很明显。这是显而易见的。迈克尔提出的统计数据、我提出的统计数据、以及我知道您与我们以及节目中的其他人讨论过的统计数据都证明了这一点。

举个小例子,我今天早上读到优步公司,听听这个故事,优步公司今年早些时候与特斯拉进行了谈判,谈判的原因是他们想为全球大约 10 万名优步司机提供廉价电动汽车。

他们在财经媒体上解释了他们的目的。他们的目的是向公众介绍电动汽车,让公众对电动汽车更感兴趣,更适应电动汽车,这是一种标准的交易。

然后交易失败了,今天早上他们宣布他们已经达成了交易,但不是与特斯拉,而是与比亚迪公司,后者是中国领先的电动汽车生产商。

好吧,为什么?因为他们无法与特斯拉达成协议,因为埃隆·马斯克在他的职业生涯中做了或没做什么,怎么说呢,作为商人的起起伏伏,以及与西方的关系等等。

现在你不能继续这样做了,因为你可以看到基本上是一家西方公司,优步,在与另一家西方公司进行交易,让中国占优势。

正是资本家之间的竞争,将转型推到了他们所谓的敌人手中。这是一个老笑话,你知道,资本家们竞相看谁能把绞刑架卖给那些想绞死资本主义的人。你知道,这只是一种奇怪的自我毁灭,它正在开始发生。

让我给你举第二个例子。根据国际记录,伊朗零售加油站每加仑汽油的价格是10美分。这是美分,美国加仑。在法国和德国,每加仑汽油的平均价格超过 7 美元。

好吧,这是能源成本不可持续的差异。我的意思是,可能需要更长的时间,更短的时间,可能朝这个方向发展,也可能朝那个方向发展,但那里的竞争已经结束。任何需要石油的生产都可以在伊朗进行,如果在法国和德国,一加仑汽油的成本是 7 美元,而这两个国家的成本都超过 7 美元,那么伊朗就不可能竞争。

我认为你现在看到的,也是我要支持迈克尔提出的最后一点的地方,让我印象深刻的不是所有这些已经持续了一段时间并且现在正在加速的事情,比如优步和比亚迪等等,而是西方选择了处理这个问题的方式,而不是在你还处于停滞状态时坐下来达成协议

而美元虽然贬值,但仍然是世界第一大货币,等等。

不,他们没有这么做。他们决定以某种方式停止、逆转或减缓这一进程,但他们做不到。历史上没有先例。他们做不到,他们的挫败感和失败正将他们推向令人震惊的暴力程度。

现在,我最后举个例子来说明这一点,中东的暴力事件,迈克尔说得完全正确。这超出了预期。过去几天,以色列就鸡奸监狱中的巴勒斯坦囚犯的合法性展开了辩论。有正反两方的辩论,赞成者很多。

你知道,以色列人怎么了,他们现在变成这个样子了吗?这就像过去问德国人关于大屠杀受害者的问题一样。这是对德国人提出的问题。现在以色列人提出这个问题是正确的。

迈克尔说得对,乌克兰人民遭受的恐怖确实非同寻常。如果你了解历史,我并不是想为普京先生和俄罗斯人开脱。他们入侵了。他们侵犯了边界。我知道这是一个严重的问题。但我们都知道北约在 1989 年之后做了什么。我们都知道。任何关注过这件事并且没有迷失在宣传战中的人都不会明白,这场危机是由北约的计划和俄罗斯的拒绝造成的。

俄罗斯人已经说过很多次了。这是他们的红线。就在那里。你不能这样做。你不能这样做。然后你在二月份开了这些会议,稍后在伊斯坦布尔又开了一次会议,等等。什么都没有结果。乌克兰的苦难本来是可以避免的。无论这场战争的胜负,他们都将花费数十年的时间才能走出灾难。

这种程度的暴力表明了西方人现在有多么绝望,他们愿意做什么,愿意指挥别人做什么。他们还没有准备好。

问题不在于你什么时候和俄罗斯人坐下来谈判。每个人都知道最终会有一次会议,他们会找到解决办法。其他每场类似的战争都是这样结束的。这场战争也会这样结束。每个人都知道,只要有人关注。

以色列人将不得不与巴勒斯坦人达成协议,除非他们真的想消灭他们,但他们无论如何也做不到。

所以,你所看到的是一种绝望的迹象,唯一更奇怪的是看到像拜登先生或特朗普先生这样的领导人说话时,好像他们拥有美国在 20 世纪 60 年代和 70 年代拥有的权力。但这一切都过去了。但他们似乎认为,政治上的必要性是取悦美国人民,让他们天真地以为他们仍处于原地。

我注意到,当我给出这个简单的统计数据时,我也在讨论中给出过,G7 的总 GDP 现在明显低于金砖国家的总 GDP。但事实就是如此。

我注意到,当我向听众解释这一点时,他们用一种悲伤的眼神看着我,好像我刚刚说出了他们真正希望保密的私生活。而我却把这个不愉快的现实公之于众。10 分钟后他们就不会记得了,因为这太不愉快了。

现在暴力程度如此之高。你真的有一种感觉,我从我们各地的文化中都能感受到,我们正处于美国历史上某个非常可怕的转折点。没有人知道它会走向何方。但是,我看到了,感觉到了,听到了无处不在的不祥之感。

迈克尔·哈德森:我想谈谈理查德刚才提到的绝望和沮丧。我们知道美国一直在做什么来缓解这种沮丧。它一直在对中国和俄罗斯实施制裁。

有趣的是,他们实施的几乎每项制裁都适得其反。对另一个国家必需的东西实施制裁的效果是,你迫使该国自己生产这些商品。我们之前在这个节目中谈到过美国如何对俄罗斯实施农业食品制裁。因此,俄罗斯不能再从波罗的海国家进口乳制品和食品。发生了什么?俄罗斯只是将生产转移到自己身上。现在它独立了。

一旦你独立于某件事,并意识到,我们永远不希望各国再次试图通过制裁来中断我们的供应链,你就会永远失去这个市场。

因此,美国为了阻止全球大多数国家(85% 的国家)脱离北约西方而拼命做的事情就是强迫这些国家独立,这样它们就不再需要美国了。他们为阻止这一行为所做的一切都产生了完全相反的效果。

这是因为西方人的心态是欺凌,认为如果

如果你不按我们的意愿做,我们就会伤害你。他们以为制裁会伤害你,却不加思索,那么其他国家会如何回应呢?他们没有考虑到这一点。

如果他们想,好吧,我们要杀鸡儆猴,用他们在乌克兰和巴勒斯坦的所作所为来吓唬猴子,这同样会促使其他国家加速这一事实:我们最好在今年俄罗斯主持的金砖国家会议和明年中国主持的金砖国家会议上迅速采取行动。我们最好能够与所有欧亚邻国达成协议,我们将帮助我们形成临界规模,这样我们就不再需要依赖北约西方了。

北约西方能做什么?它只能加速暴力。它越加速,客人离去的速度就越快。

他们只想独处。而美国正试图阻止他们这样做,迫使他们做出选择,要么独自行动,要么最终成为德国和其他美国保护国。

理查德·沃尔夫:如果可以的话,让我来谈谈迈克尔反复这样做的情况。迈克尔的见解有趣且不同寻常地得到了一篇文章的大力支持。如果你还没有遇到过,请让我敦促你和所有听众和观众。

7 月 25 日,也就是几天前,《华盛顿邮报》刊登了一篇绝对非凡的文章。它讲述了美国前四任总统如何发起和组织了所谓的经济战争的大规模加速。

但它真正意味着制裁,它就是这样说的。它清楚地表明美国是制裁大师。它提到了拜登、特朗普、奥巴马和布什。

当然,制裁可以追溯到很久以前。文章中的一个例子是古巴。我们对古巴制裁了半个多世纪。整个目的和重点就是要除掉菲德尔·卡斯特罗。这真是个失败。

然后,有两件事可以扩展迈克尔的观点。这篇文章,我告诉你的一切都来自那篇文章,7 月 25 日的《华盛顿邮报》。不能错过。

第一个统计数据。美国目前有 15,000 个未决制裁对象。个人、公司、整个国家。15,000 个。华盛顿邮报说,在这个位置上,美国排名第一。

排名第二的制裁对象较少,大约 5,000 个。所以,大约是美国的三分之一,排名第二,你可能会感到惊讶,世界上实施制裁的第二大国家是瑞士。对吧?换句话说,是美国。俄罗斯和中国没有出现在《华盛顿邮报》的名单上。他们不这样做。对吧?

所以,你要问自己一个五岁小孩都能想出来的问题。如果在这场所谓的伟大斗争中,一方,即西方,美国,到处实施制裁,而另一方却什么都不实施制裁,那么,如何解释这种奇怪的现象呢?你知道,他们有无人机,我们有无人机,他们有导弹,我们有导弹,他们有制裁,我们没有。我们有制裁,他们没有。

好吧,答案就是迈克尔的观点,我想提出这一点。当你制裁一个国家时,该国的领导人,管理社会的人,几乎总是免疫的。他们不会换衣服,不会吃不同的食物,不会停止开车。制裁可能造成的痛苦,也确实给遭受贫困的广大人民带来了痛苦,或者古巴无法获得医疗、药物和药品等等。

那么,当然,每个受制裁社会的领导人会做什么呢?明确表示,作为该国领导人,这不是你的错,不是你的政党的错,而是美国的错,这是你的首要任务。制裁是动员全球舆论反对美国作为我们这个时代最大的制裁者的一种方式。

这是一个计划,让你把榴弹炮对准你自己的脚。这是一项疯狂的政策。

忘记它的其他所有恐怖之处和它造成的真正痛苦吧。这是一个弄巧成拙的计划,肯定表明,推行它的人可能会在当地政治舞台上获得暂时的优势,但他们正在为社会的未来和在日益孤立的世界中的生存能力付出令人难以置信的代价。

迈克尔·哈德森:我想客观地看待理查德刚才说的话。他谈到制裁正在动员其他国家自力更生,但产生了反弹效应。

制裁,尤其是针对中国的制裁,主要影响的是美国本身,即生产国。现在,理查德和我都相信历史的唯物主义方法,我们的大多数方法一直是

嗯,各国所做的几乎都反映了其商界、金融界或精英阶层的利益。

但让我们看看美国对向中国出售计算机芯片和信息技术实施的制裁。英特尔和其他国家表示,如果他们遵守拜登政府实施的制裁,尤其是如果他们遵守特朗普将要实施的制裁,他们的利润就会消失。

美国商界的利润主要来自出口到这些现在受到美国政府本身实施的制裁的国家。

现在,你如何调和这样一个事实:新保守主义者和新自由主义者实施的美国制裁违背了美国主要行业、信息技术行业、汽车制造商和所有其他行业的利润追求?

你可以说,制裁最终对美国经济的惩罚比其他国家要大得多,因为虽然其他国家的供应在短期内中断,但它们拥有长期的独立性。

对于美国来说,这种长期影响,甚至是短期影响,就是夺走美国出口商、主要工业部门,当然还有股票交易所,夺走这个市场。它已经失去了。

所以美国人正在做的是自我孤立。多年来,我们都认为全球大多数人会以某种方式聚集在一起,制定一种独立并帮助自己实现经济利益的手段。

但具有讽刺意味的是,推动这一进程的是美国,而不是中国、俄罗斯或其他国家。他们对美国的反应本质上是实施经济自杀政策。

理查德·沃尔夫:是的,我也注意到了这一点。例如,如果你读过美国商会定期发布的声明,你就会明白迈克尔在说什么。

他们非常紧张。他们不想与中国发生冲突。他们代表了大量在中国投入大量投资的公司。他们不想失去这些投资。中国是全球最大、增长最快的市场。没有人想被排除在外。每所商学院都教你想赚大钱。你去工资低廉、市场不断增长的地方。你好,这就是世界其他地方。这就是正在发生的事情。迟早会超越西方。

他们这么说,所以迈克尔的问题成立。到底发生了什么?这是我能做的最好的回答。我只是猜测,如果我犯了错误,我希望你或你的听众能纠正我。

他们真的不明白我们在说什么。换句话说,当我之前有点嘲讽地说,他们生活在 20 世纪 60 年代和 70 年代,当时美国占据主导地位。也许这句话比我的嘲讽更真实。

他们确实相信这只是一个暂时的挑战,他们有能力、有意愿、有能力消除这个挑战。他们会去找这些公司说,是的,是的,我们明白,你知道,这种关税对你们不利,这样,那样,再这样。但是,请忍耐一下,因为我们真的会成功。当我们成功时,就在眼前,我们会打败他们。

然后我们会瓜分俄罗斯,俄罗斯会变成 20 个小国,就像东欧其他国家一样,我们所有人都可以轻易操纵。当我们搞定俄罗斯后,我们会对中国做同样的事情。然后,哇,我们会有一个世界吗?因为我们会把俄罗斯和中国纳入我们的从属安排。这是殖民主义和帝国主义长期以来的梦想。这是西方统治下的统一世界经济。

对于那些从小就相信这一点、在二战后度过了一段特殊时光的人来说,他们认为这个项目仍然可以实现,这并不奇怪。这比他们想象的要难一些。但这就是他们要做的。这就是他们要做的。我们都在这里,你知道,浪费时间,迈克尔,你,我,还有所有像我们一样的人,因为我们看不到更大的图景。

这就是他们告诉公司高管的。是的,你会有一两年或三年的时间,但当我们完成时,你会高兴吗?顺便说一句,在我们等待的时候,我们会让你们更轻松。你给人们植入芯片,你正在失去市场,我们会给你补贴,这是你做梦也想不到的。我们会给你这个或那个的优惠。换句话说,我们会像在经济衰退、疫情或其他情况下一样,为你的利润提供支持。这是一个调整过程。

我看了我研究生同学珍妮特·耶伦的演讲。我们同时就读耶鲁大学,有同样的老师,获得了同样的博士学位,

我们读了同样的文章,都是迈克尔非常熟悉的人写的。你知道,我们的宏观老师是詹姆斯·托宾,我们的国际老师是特里芬,等等。

她知道,但她是这个困难时期的热情管理者,因为我们正在为下一个伟大的资本积累阶段重组世界。

NIMA:迈克尔,你想补充一点吗?好的,让我们谈谈冲突,谈谈委内瑞拉的局势。你在美国是怎么发现的?他们试图尽一切努力干涉委内瑞拉的局势。即使是埃隆·马斯克,他也在左右逢源,以帮助委内瑞拉的局势。

理查德·沃尔夫:是的,我能说点什么吗?因为对我来说,这里有幽默,我确实试图在这个黑暗时期找到一些幽默。

当唐纳德·特朗普质疑选举结果、否认选举结果时,美国也有同样的人对他做出回应。他因此威胁到了民主。

委内瑞拉那些质疑和威胁选举结果并否认选举结果的人是在维护民主。你需要一个魔术师来欣赏这种转换,对吧?我们国家这里的选举,我们大概都知道。

选举在千里之外的另一个国家,有着不同的文化和不同的语言,我们都可以原谅自己不知道到底发生了什么。

不,不,不。我们知道,当你质疑这里发生的事情时,这是对民主的威胁,当你拒绝那里的选举时,这是对民主的维护。而且说这句话时很轻松。

你知道,当没有人注意到我刚刚告诉你的讽刺时,当没有人意识到这一点时,这是非常明显的。如果没有人意识到这一点,你就知道这种意识形态的胡言乱语是多么令人绝望,因为它阻碍了那些显然可以也应该更了解情况的人的大脑和视野。

迈克尔·哈德森:理查德之前提到制裁加强了选民对政府的支持,因为他们意识到经济面临的问题是由美国造成的,委内瑞拉就是一个典型例子。

委内瑞拉的问题实际上是因为美国之前对该国实施的独裁者之一,我不记得是佩雷斯还是其他人,他们做了两件事。

他们用委内瑞拉石油工业的外国美元借款作为抵押,包括石油工业伸出援手,用其利润购买美国分销网络,以销售其石油和天然气。

首先,美国人夺走了委内瑞拉在美国持有的所有资产。换句话说,它夺走了委内瑞拉的国际储备。这就是现在所谓的国家储蓄基金。

其次,美国指示英国夺走委内瑞拉的黄金储备,并将其交给美国所描述的总统。美国说,看,我们有两种世界民主模式,乌克兰和以色列。这两个国家都是民主国家。而委内瑞拉,我们想加入其中。我们可以提名谁来担任民主国家的领导人或部署政权更迭反对派。

因此,委内瑞拉的对外协议都包含一条条款,就像阿根廷一样。如果有争议,则由美国法院解决。其他国家正在关注委内瑞拉,他们认为,无论如何,我们永远不会有任何由美国法院解决的国际条款。

事实上,我们需要一个金砖国家法院。我们需要一个替代国际货币基金组织、世界银行和国际法院的法院。这将是我们之间的金砖国家法院。它将不是基于规则的秩序,而是真正的法治。所以你们有这个功能。

我认为,这也表明,如果像委内瑞拉这样的国家成为制裁对象,例如非洲国家和拉丁美洲国家,全球南方债务国受到制裁,这是美元集团为阻止它们赚钱偿还外债而采取的行动。这成为拒绝偿还债务的合法、合乎逻辑和道德借口。这才是最终的突破。去美元化的突破将成为全球成熟度与北约美国西方之间全球断裂的标志。

理查德·沃尔夫:我不能错过这个机会。再次重申,我希望大家能享受其中的讽刺意味。世界上许多宗教——我不是专家,所以我不能说所有宗教——但世界上许多宗教都有一个与迈克尔刚才所说的非常接近的命题。

在基督教中,它被称为禧年。这是一个非常古老的观念,已经存在了数千年,即当一个社会开始变得如此严重分裂时,维系社区的粘合剂就会消失,社区的生活就会受到过去不平等的威胁,因为拥有一大片土地,而你的同胞却没有土地,等等。

定期采取的做法是,

债务被免除。所有债务都被免除,然后你就可以重新开始了。如果是土地,那么土地就会被从拥有土地的人手中夺走,然后重新分配,也许会使用一种随机系统,你得到这块,你得到那块,另一个人得到另一块,然后我们看看情况如何。如果它产生了太大的不平等,那么,10 年或 20 年后,我们会再次这样做。

这是一种坚持现代语言的方式,美国过去喜欢用这种方式来描述自己是一个庞大的中产阶级。你知道,没有人非常富有,也没有人非常贫穷,每个人都在中间。

嗯,禧年旨在做到这一点。迈克尔告诉我们,禧年也可能不是一项自愿的、宗教认可的、定期的活动,但禧年可能是爆炸性的结局,因为没有其他选择来解决将巨额财富集中在债权人手中,而绝望的生活集中在债务人手中的荒谬制度。

到那时,绝大多数债务人将把禧年看作一个非常幸福的结果,债权人将无法阻止它。他们没有资源,到那时,一切都结束了。这不再是法院的问题。这只是一种承认,社会契约要求结束这种不平等,而债务减免是解决大部分问题的简单直接的办法。

迈克尔·哈德森:理查德所描述的实际上是欧亚文明和西方文明的区别。我的书《……并免除他们的债务》以及我和哈佛大学小组一起完成的有关古代近东的所有书籍都表明,从公元前 2500 年的苏美尔,到巴比??伦,再到近东邻国,所有社会,一直到犹太,都定期取消债务。

他们都有一个国王——教科书称他们为神权,意思是国王向众神许下某些承诺以维持稳定。世界其他所有国家的经济观点与美国人在学校学到的完全相反。

我们有公元前 1800 年巴比伦的数学模型。它们比美国国家经济研究局使用的任何模型都更为复杂。巴比伦人认为,在每个社会中,债务的自然影响是使社会在债权人和债务人之间两极分化。

他们非常清楚,如果不取消债务,就会出现金融寡头。统治者的角色,无论是汉谟拉比还是其他近东统治者,都是要防止金融寡头政权的发展。

正如圣经先知以赛亚和其他人所指出的那样,寡头政权将利用其金融权力让民众负债累累,接管其土地,最终将导致少数人拥有所有土地,他们一地一地、一户一户地地耕种,直到土地上不再有自由人口的空间。

好吧,古典希腊和意大利是西方最早建立西方文明的国家。他们没有神圣的统治者,他们没有取消债务。他们有一个金融寡头政权。

我们都知道罗马在 500 年的时间里发生了什么。发生了革命,最终崩溃了。最终出现了农奴制和封建制度。

当西方转向罗马基督教而不是君士坦丁堡的正统基督教时,出现了伊斯兰教。而伊斯兰教徒,通常情况下,当农作物歉收时,他们会取消所有债务。

例如,在伊斯兰教统治下的印度,数百年来都是这样,直到英国人到来。当英国人接管印度时,他们停止了取消债务的整个想法,经济两极分化一直延续到今天的印度,使其成为世界上最不平等的国家之一。

因此,你可以说,西方文明的决定性特征从一开始就是让金融寡头政治发展。

而其他所有非西方国家,从巴比伦苏美尔到伊朗,再到伊斯兰教,甚至日本,都有这种现象。在中国,也有这种现象。这曾经是欧亚文明和西方文明的显著特征,我预计正在谈判去美元化的金砖国家集团将重新发明轮子,重新发明同样的想法,即任何国家都不应将支付债权人阶级以建立寡头政治置于社会平衡之上,而社会平衡使整个经济增长、提高生产力和生存下去。

为了生存,避免陷入黑暗时代和农奴制,你必须拥有比取消债务的寡头政治更高的权威。

而西方文明没有更高的权威。正如亚里士多德所说,许多国家的宪法都称自己为民主国家。他们实际上是寡头政治。过去 2000 年来,每个西方文明经济体都是寡头政治。

亚洲有着完全不同的

租历史背景。正如俄罗斯总统普京一直强调,看,俄罗斯具有独特的文明特征,我在等待中国和其他亚洲国家以及伊斯兰国家说,是的,我们也有背景,而且不是罗马基督教的背景。我们要把整体利益置于金融阶层的阶级利益之上。我在等待这成为我们真正看到的文明断裂的一个显著特征。

如果可以的话,让我把它翻译成最近的美国历史。它的智慧延伸非常非常深远。

直到 20 世纪 70 年代左右,你可以看到美国的生产力缓慢而稳定地上升,工资或多或少也在缓慢而稳定地上升。没有人应该对此感到困惑。生产力是工人给雇主的,工资是雇主给工人的。它们一起很好地上升。雇主赚取了更多的利润,工人赚了更高的工资。这种状况持续了很长一段时间,使美国实现了显著的增长,帮助人们形成了“每一代人的生活都比前一代更好”的观念,诸如此类。

然后在 20 世纪 70 年代,由于各种原因,实际工资趋于平稳。不再上涨。生产率却不断上升。好吧,用英语来说,很简单,这意味着工人给雇主的钱不断上涨,但雇主给工人的钱却没有上涨。

这就是为什么我们在过去 40 或 50 年里利润暴涨,股市繁荣。??但现在出现了硬币的另一面。如果你用美国梦来打动工人阶级,这就是你成为一名成功工人的原因。你必须有车有房子。你必须送孩子上大学。你必须有几个星期的假期。

如果你要求人们自尊,但却不给他们涨工资来负担得起,你该怎么办?你会让他们负债累累,因为这是他们实现美国梦的唯一途径,通过借贷和陷入债务灾难。

这就是双重讽刺。贷款人从何而来?贷款人是雇主,因为自从生产力上升而工资没有上升以来,他们的利润一直在上升。因此,他们有不断增长的生产力来借钱给工人,因为对他们来说,这是理所当然的。我宁愿给我的工人增加工资,还是给工人固定工资和一笔贷款,他必须偿还?嗯,这很容易。我们知道我们要做什么。所以这就是我们所拥有的。

在过去的 40 年里,我们让美国人民陷入了前所未有的债务水平。抵押贷款债务、学生债务、信用卡债务,我的意思是汽车债务。你把这些都加起来,我们说越来越多的家庭的债务超过了他们的年收入。我的意思是,这是不可能的。

与此同时,顶层的财富不仅是从生产工人身上榨取的剩余,而且当你借钱给他们而不是支付工资时,他们还能获得利息。我的意思是,这个系统注定会产生严重的不平等。

这正是迈克尔一直在告诉你的故事。无论你是回到古代苏美尔,还是你现在在美国,在过去的 50 年里,你看到的是不同的系统,但它们有一个共同点,那就是除非你对它们采取一些根本性的措施,否则它们将产生不断加深和越来越严重的不平等。

几年前,托马斯·皮凯蒂在他的《资本主义》一书中记录了这一点,然后它就爆发了。那么问题是,我们是否正处于爆发点?我们是否正在接近爆发点?

而我怀疑,回到我们开始的时候,你在乌克兰和巴勒斯坦看到的暴力程度,是真正绝望地坚持某种早已失去理智的东西的标志。

迈克尔·哈德森:好吧,理查德描述了资本主义发生了多大的变化。他刚刚提到了工业资本主义如何使美国变得富有,他们意识到高薪、吃得好、受过良好教育、穿得好的劳动力对雇主来说比穷人劳动力更有生产力。这基本上就是工业资本主义的整个经济哲学。

好吧,我们从马克思那里了解到,工业资本主义的独特之处在于雇主会雇佣劳动力,然后他们会以超过他们必须支付的劳动力成本的利润出售劳动力生产的产品。

但是现在,看看理查德和我所描述的,美国工薪阶层欠下的债务——我不想称他们为中产阶级,因为实际上没有中产阶级,他们是工薪阶层——对他们的主要剥削不再只是让工业雇主保留工薪阶层创造的利润,因为毕竟我们正在去工业化。

正在发生的重大剥削

大部分用于偿还债务。最富有的 1%,也许可以说是 10% 的人口背负着 90% 的债务,而支付给最富有的 10% 的人的收入又以偿还债务的形式从这 90% 的人身上抽走。

更重要的是,这 10% 的人用这些钱做什么?他们不会把这些经济租金、利息和金融收益都花在商品和服务上。他们购买股票、债券和房地产,或者将更多的钱借给家庭购买房地产,或者借给企业评级机构接管公司。

因此,你所看到的是,经济精英不是通过雇佣劳动力赚取利润并通过储蓄利润致富来赚钱,而是通过金融工程、资本收益。

理查德刚刚指出了股票市场、债券市场和房地产市场的大幅上涨。你把注意力全部放在资产价格通胀、所有权和债权人权利上,将经济的其余部分变成债务人和租户的公民。

嗯,基本上这就是封建制度下发生的事情。不知何故,欧洲和美国的工业革命认为它们将演变成非常接近社会主义的东西。我们之前谈到过,19 世纪的每个人都支持某种社会主义,许多不同类型的社会主义。

但第一次世界大战后,这一切都发生了变化,地主、银行家和垄断者进行了反击,他们反对政府监管。他们说,没有不劳而获的收入,也没有经济租金。一切都是挣来的,就像利润一样。银行通过收取利息来赚钱,甚至比利息还多的是滞纳金的罚款。所有这些都是劳动收入。

因此,你对财富和经济的观念发生了彻底的转变。它不再是两个世纪前的工业资本主义的观念。这是完全不同的东西。这就是现在许多人称之为新封建主义的金融资本主义。这是一种转变。

这就是其他国家分裂的原因,因为是什么让中国变得富有?当然,是社会主义,但社会主义也遵循了 19 世纪美国、德国和法国致富的模式。这是工业资本主义和社会主义的结合,因为工业家想要一个活跃的公共部门。他们想要活跃的公共基础设施,以保持生活和经商成本低廉,补贴他们的生产。

所有这些补贴现在都被反政府斗争、自由主义所打破。如果你禁止政府行动、政府监管和政府资本投资,因为每个经济体都是计划经济,那么计划就会转移到华尔街。而今天,你有华尔街资本主义,而不是工业资本主义。这是真正的转变,我认为,这是北约西方与欧亚大陆发展最深层次的区别。

理查德·沃尔夫:正是由于这种财富集中,你才会看到财富集中一直表现出的反应。那些通过生产积累财富的顶层人士,在通过金融操纵和重组而财富逐渐减少时,他们意识到,随着他们相对于大众变得越来越富有,他们的财富处于危险之中,他们处于一个脆弱的位置。

他们可能无法克服这种讽刺。他们竭尽全力变得富有和强大,但他们在这种地位上感到比以往任何时候都更不安全。在一个像我们一样重视普选权或类似权利的社会里,这会让你处于一个真正脆弱的位置。

雇主的数量非常少,雇员的数量非常多。普选权,你知道会发生什么。工人们可以随时投票消除资本主义经济造成的不平等。

当人们讨论累进税时,无论他们被如何压制,你都能听到这种说法。当你听到抱怨,我们的资本利得税税率低于劳动收入税,等等。

那么他们做了什么?他们显然已经做了一件不得不做的事情。他们必须中和政治体系,而他们通过购买政治体系来做到这一点。为什么要购买政治体系?因为这是他们拥有的唯一资源。政客们可以变得需要钱。这很容易。现在你借钱给他们,或者你给他们钱,他们会给你比以前更多的特权。

因此,工业军方拥有垄断权,医疗人员也拥有垄断权。现在,芯片制造商正在迅速努力组织他们的垄断。因此,这又变成了一个古老的封建笑话,少数垄断者能够坐在必要的政客的头上,让政客们开发出让这一切看起来自然而然的措辞,成为常态

等等,与技术有关,除了你如何组织工作场所的真正问题之外的任何事情。

当人们说,为什么会朝这个方向发展?让我,你知道,让我当一会儿老师。资本主义制度的组织方式与封建制度和奴隶制度非常奇怪。它把一小群人放在很高的位置。主人、领主和雇主。

这就是为什么我们如此失望,革命废除了奴隶制。它实现了这一点。但它欢迎封建制度,虽然封建制度比奴隶制好,但并没有把人变成牲畜一样的物品。尽管如此,它还是有领主和农奴。

然后我们迎来了法国和美国革命,他们对自由、平等、博爱和其他一切都抱有巨大的希望。但我们所做的是建立了资本主义,它有雇主和雇员,这是顶层极小群体的复制品。

那么,为什么我们会对我们的金融体系,甚至我们的政治体系复制了一小群做决定的人感到惊讶呢?我们都知道,一小群人在任何地方做决定。我们对此表示哀叹,我们批评它,但它是资本主义在基层、在每个工厂、办公室和商店组织方式的内在组成部分。它就是这样做的。

只有一群人拥有工人合作社或其他类型的合作社,这是个奇怪的例外。这些人不想要资本主义,但由于我们的意识形态和教育体系的运作方式,他们往往甚至不能说出这些话。

但如果迈克尔和我说的话有道理的话,那么它就建立在一个经济体系之上,这个经济体系强加了这种奇怪的、完全不民主的安排,好像它是正常的必需品一样。

我记得,在我们废除国王之前,我们生活在这样的社会中:大多数人认为,让早已去世的人的孙子来统治我们是绝对合适的,因为他或她每个月的第三个星期四都会与上帝讨论,如果不下雨,如何管理一切。

你知道吗?我们废除了国王,发现我们不需要他们。你猜怎么着?你可以废除首席执行官,你会发现我们从来不需要他们。

但在美国发展的这个阶段,以及在世界许多地方,这太过分了。我们仍然需要努力打开这个空间,甚至思考这样的想法,更不用说理性地评估替代系统了。

迈克尔·哈德森:所以,让这一切继续下去的是一种幻觉,正如玛格丽特·撒切尔所说,没有其他选择(蒂娜)。

现在,理查德和我,事实上,尼玛,你节目里的所有嘉宾,都有一个共同点。我们都在说,还有另一种选择,这就是为什么你们节目里的嘉宾没有登上《纽约时报》和《华盛顿邮报》,我们也没有上电视脱口秀节目。我们说,还有另一种选择,那就是西方统治阶级的噩梦和恐惧,而这个噩梦又回到了理查德之前所说的恐慌。

人们认为,金砖国家实际上可以拥有一个完全不同的经济体系,这个体系建立在互利和经济增长的基础上。

你不能称之为修昔底德陷阱。中国、俄罗斯和金砖国家并没有试图在他们自己的游戏中胜过美国、英国和欧洲。他们不想玩那个游戏。他们说,我们不会走那条路。我们不是和你们竞争。我们希望你们走你们的路。我们会走我们的路。我们正在创造一种替代文明。它不必是这样的。这是他们对 TINA 的替代方案,我想这也是您节目中的所有嘉宾已经谈论了一段时间的话题。

理查德·沃尔夫:他们一直在遭遇阻力。我同意迈克尔的观点。他们遭遇阻力,因为掌权者在过去一个多世纪里一直掌权,他们很难承认这种情况的存在。

讽刺的是,他们确信俄罗斯和中国想要通过心理学家所说的纯粹投射来统治他们。欧洲殖民主义和帝国主义将任何其他人的崛起视为挑战,因为他们无法想象有人不想对他们做他们知道的他们对世界其他地方做过的事情。

我认为你可以看到这一点。我认为你在乌克兰、以色列和巴勒斯坦都看到了这一点。你在那里看到了那些原本以各种方式文明的人的能力,他们堕落到我们曾希望在 20 世纪中叶不会再犯的行为水平。正如口号所说,再也不会发生这样的事情了,但问题并没有解决,而是角色互换了。

NIMA:迈克尔和理查德,为了结束本次会议,《经济学人》上有一篇文章。文章说,中国正在秘密建立庞大的粮食、原材料和能源储备,以备不时之需。

为未来可能出现的问题做好准备。你认为中国是在为与西方的大战做准备,还是他们这样说是因为他们想在西方人的脑海中描绘出这种画面?

理查德·沃尔夫:好吧,我必须告诉你,我显然不能代表中国人说话,我不明白他们在这种情况下的动机。我没有内幕消息,但我会告诉你这一点。

如果我是中国公民,如果我参与了这些讨论,我会对自己说,考虑到特朗普先生的关税战和贸易战以及拜登先生延续的大部分贸易战对美国的制裁,考虑到整个台湾废话的荒谬性,考虑到舰队在南海的存在,你必须做好准备。否则,你就是一个不称职的领导人。你必须保护自己。

他们可能有侵略意图吗?我不知道这些,但我不知道。我并不是声称知道。但你不需要有侵略意图来证明你刚才说的话。

美国,这又回到迈克尔所说的事情,美国不仅给了中国这样做的理由,更重要的是,全世界其他国家都像我刚才那样推理。观察家们,其他国家,他们看到你刚才说的他们正在储存粮食之类的新闻。他们问自己,这是侵略吗?他们会得出和我一样的答案。他们当然可以从每天的头条新闻中看到联合国每次会议、每次关于乌克兰还是其他国家的辩论中发生的事情。

美国正忙着批准 15,000 项制裁,试图让世界按照它想要的方式行事。这就是制裁的目的。没有其他人有这么大胆的想法。

美国非常愤怒地发现,它可以同时想到这一切。但它做不到。正如《华盛顿邮报》的文章所承认的那样,制裁没有奏效。迈克尔补充道,更糟糕的是,制裁没有奏效,反而让美国的情况更糟。

所以,这再次表明美国社会陷入了困境。

迈克尔·哈德森:正如理查德和我所说,我们不相信从《纽约时报》和《华盛顿邮报》获取信息,但有一件事你确实能得到。如果你是中国人,这是《纽约时报》和《华盛顿邮报》上唯一值得一读的内容,那就是日复一日,中国是我们的敌人。美国外交官去中国说,我们不希望你们为俄罗斯提供任何支持,因为如果你给他们食物,那可以养活士兵。如果你给他们布,他们可以把布织成制服。你不能帮助俄罗斯,因为我们希望俄罗斯失败,这样我们就可以和你作战,对你们做我们对俄罗斯和乌克兰做的事,对你们做以色列对巴勒斯坦人做的事。

他们每天都读到这个。他们能读懂美国的演讲。我不相信美国人会读普京总统或拉夫罗夫国务卿的演讲,中国人不像俄罗斯人那样直言不讳,但他们能读懂美国媒体,他们认为整个美国经济的目标,如果不是战争,至少是为军工联合体赚取高额利润。即使他们的武器不起作用,至少在五角大楼资本主义下,他们也能获得巨大的成本加利润,这是我们还没有谈到的另一种资本主义形式。所以,是的,他们正准备单干。

我不认为他们一定会储存这些原材料,比如稀土和许多其他产品,氦,他们拥有的其他产品,但他们试图利用这些来与他们拥有的其他欧亚邻国交谈,说,看,我们可以帮助你们独立,成为欧亚大陆不断发展的文明的一部分。我们有材料可以支持你们。你不再需要依赖美国、英国和德国能给你什么。

我认为他们有一个地区性的想法,不仅仅是军事防御,还有经济替代方案。他们的防御将是,我们不想打仗。我们想要一个经济替代方案。也许有一天,在一代或两代人之后,西方会想,哎呀,欧亚大陆在前进,而我们没有。也许我们应该接受欧亚文明,意识到西方文明并没有我们被教导的那么成功。

理查德·沃尔夫:你知道,就在几年前,欧洲人聚集在一起,得到政府的支持,派出探险队前往中国,发现他们比欧洲人更懂得如何做纺织,他们的饮食比欧洲人好得多。这不是第一次了。

我的意思是,西方存在一定程度的自欺欺人,这是衰落局面的另一个部分,当你甚至无法敞开心扉面对自己的历史时。

NIMA:非常感谢你们今天与我们在一起,理查德和迈克尔。一如既往的荣幸。

理查德·沃尔夫:是的,而且这正在变得非常有趣,至少

对我来说,我们在这里完成的三人组非常有趣。

迈克尔·哈德森:是的,我喜欢它。

尼玛:非常感谢。再见。

The End of Financial Colonialism

https://michael-hudson.com/2024/08/the-end-of-financial-colonialism/

By    August 7, 2024 ArticlesInterviews    Permalink

 
Nima, Michael Hudson and Richard Wolff, “Financial Colonialism,” Dialogue Works, August 1, 2024.

“The Shocking Truth Behind the End of Financial Colonialism!”

NIMA: Let’s start with the conflict right now in the Middle East. How do you find it right now? What’s going on, Michael, in your opinion, in the Middle East?

MICHAEL HUDSON: I think the Middle East is becoming a catalyst for what we’ve been talking about for the last two times we’ve got together, the world splitting into two halves, the US, NATO, West against the rest of the world.

And I think the United States, the Near East, is a kind of demonstration to the global majority that what America and Israel are doing there with their assassination of individuals, their regime change, and the violence with which the right wing Likud party, supported by the right wing Democrats in the United States, are trying to impose in the rest of the world.

And the message, I think, that Eurasia gets is what they’re doing to the Palestinians, and what Europe is doing to the Ukrainians, they can do it to us unless we really break away.

I think this gives a note of urgency. I think countries have been talking ever since 1955 in Bandung about how do we go away and make a kind of a world trade and investment regime that is not so exploitative. But when they see what’s happening in Ukraine and the Near East, I think this gives a note of urgency saying, you know, we really have to get together and get allies to join our system by offering every country that joins enough that it will make them worth joining the China, Russia, Iran, SCO [Shanghai Cooperation Organisation] orbit, instead of keeping their links to the West. All the West has to offer is bribery and the threat of violence.

NIMA: Richard?

RICHARD WOLFF: Yeah, I would like to pick up on what Michael says. And the thing that has really impressed itself on me is the signs of the rise of China, the rise of the BRICS, the rise of so much of what we used to call the third world, or the underdeveloped world, or the newly emerging, all those euphemisms.

That rise is now clear. It’s obvious. The statistics that Michael has put forward, that I’ve put forward, that I know you’ve discussed with us and with others on your programs, all attest to that.

I mean, to give you a small example, I read this morning that the Uber corporation, and listen to this story, that the Uber corporation, which earlier this year was in negotiations with Tesla, and the reason it was in negotiation with Tesla is they want to provide cheap electric vehicles to about 100,000 Uber drivers around the world.

And they explain in the financial press their purpose. It is to introduce the public, to make the public more interested in, more comfortable with electric vehicles, which is a standard kind of deal.

Then the deal falls apart, and this morning they announced they have now made the deal, but not with Tesla, with the BYD corporation, which is China’s leading producer of electric vehicles.

Okay, why? Because they couldn’t reach a deal with Tesla, because of whatever it is Elon Musk did or didn’t do in his, how shall I put it, ups and downs as a business person, and with the West and so on.

You can’t keep doing this now that you can see basically a Western corporation, Uber, making a deal, advantaging China over and against another Western corporation.

It’s the very competition of the capitalists that is driving the transition into the hands of what they call their enemy. It’s the old joke about, you know, capitalists competing to see who gets to sell the hangman’s noose to the people who want to hang capitalism. You know, it’s just a strange self-destruction that’s beginning to take place.

Let me give you a second example. According to the international records, the price of a [gallon] of gasoline at the retail gas station in Iran is 10 cents a gallon. That’s U.S. cents, U.S. gallon. The average price in France and Germany for the same gallon of gas is over seven dollars.

Okay, that’s an unsustainable difference in the cost of energy. I mean, it may take longer, shorter, may go this way, that way, but the competition there is done. Any production that requires oil is able to do that in Iran, and it can’t possibly compete if it costs seven dollars in France and Germany, and it’s more than seven in both of them, to get a gallon of gasoline for the truck that goes back and forth and for everything else.

I think what you’re seeing now, and this is where I would come in to support the last point Michael was making, what strikes me is not all of that which has been going on for a while and is now accelerating, as in Uber and BYD and so forth, but that the West has chosen as its way of dealing with this, not sitting down working out a deal while you’re still strong, while your dollar, while weaker, is still the number one currency in the world, and so on.

No, they’re not doing that. They’ve decided they’re going to somehow either stop or reverse or slow this very process, which they cannot do. There’s no historical precedent to see such a thing. They’re not going to be able to do it, and their frustration and their failure is driving them to levels of violence that are stunning.

Now, my last example to try to drive this home, the violence in the Middle East, Michael is absolutely right. It’s off the chart. There was a debate in Israel over the last few days about the legitimacy of sodomizing Palestinian prisoners in jail. There was a debate, pro and con, with lots of pro.

You know, what has happened to the Israeli people that they are at this point? It’s like the questions that used to be asked of the German people in regard to the victims of the Holocaust. It was rightly asked of the Germans. It’s rightly asked now of the Israelis.

And Michael is also right that the horror visited upon the Ukrainian people is really extraordinary. And if you know the history, and I don’t mean to absolve Mr. Putin and the Russians. They invaded. They violated a border. I understand that’s a serious problem. But we all know what NATO did after 1989. We all do. And nobody who pays any attention and isn’t lost in the propaganda war would not understand that this was a crisis being built by the plans of NATO on the one hand and the refusal of Russia on the other.

The Russians said so enough times. It’s their red line. It’s there. You can’t do this. You can’t do this. And then you had those meetings in February, and again a little bit later in Istanbul, and so on. Nothing came of it. It could have been avoided, the misery of Ukraine. It will take them decades to crawl out of the disaster they’re in, no matter who wins or loses in this war.

This level of violence shows you how desperate the people in the West now are, what they are willing to do, what they are willing to preside over others doing. They’re not ready yet.

And the issue isn’t when do you sit down with the Russians. Everybody knows eventually there’ll be a meeting and they will work something out. That’s how every other war like this ends. That’s how this one will end. And everybody knows that who pays any attention.

And the Israelis are going to have to come to terms with the Palestinians unless they literally mean to exterminate them, which they can’t do anyway.

So, what you’re watching is a sign of such a level of desperation that the only thing more bizarre is watching leaders like Mr. Biden, or for that matter Mr. Trump, talk as if they had the power maybe the U.S. had in the 1960s and 70s. But that’s all gone. But they seem to think that the political necessity is to humor the American people in the naive imagination that they still are where they were.

And I notice when I give this simple statistic, which I’ve given you too on our discussions, that the aggregate GDP of G7 is now significantly less than the aggregate GDP of the BRICS. But there it is.

And I notice that when I explain that to my audience, they look at me with a kind of sad eye, like I had just uttered something about their intimate life that they had really hoped to keep secret. And there I am releasing this unpleasant reality. And they won’t remember it 10 minutes from now because it’s so unpleasant.

And now it’s going with this level of violence. You really have a sense, which I pick up in our culture everywhere, that we are at some very scary inflection point in American history. And no one knows quite what or where it’s going. But a sense of ominousness, I see it, I feel it, I hear about it everywhere.

MICHAEL HUDSON: I want to pick up on the point that Richard just made about desperation and frustration. We know what the US has been doing for frustration. It’s been imposing sanctions on China and Russia.

The interesting thing about this is almost every sanction they have imposed has backfired. The effect of sanctions on something that is necessary for another country is you force that country to produce these goods itself. We’ve spoken on this program before about how the US started with agricultural food sanctions against Russia. So Russia could no longer import dairy products and food from the Baltic states. What happened? Russia simply shifted the production to itself. Now it’s independent.

And once you become independent of something and realize, well, we never want countries to try to interrupt our supply chain again by sanctions, you lose that market forever.

So what the United States is doing in its desperation to try to stop the independence of the global majority, the 85% from the NATO West, is they’re forcing these countries to become independent so that they no longer need the US. Everything they’re doing trying to stop it has the exact opposite effect.

And that’s because the Western mentality is to bully, to think if you don’t do what we want, we’re going to hurt you. And they think that sanctions are going to hurt without thinking, what are the other countries going to do in response? They’re not thinking of that.

And if they’re thinking, well, we’re going to kill the chickens to frighten the monkeys by what they’re doing in Ukraine and in Palestine, that is likewise driving other countries to accelerate the fact that we’d better move quickly in this year’s BRICS meeting under Russia and next year’s BRICS conferences under China’s leadership. We’d better be able to make deals with all of our Eurasian neighbors that we will help us create a critical mass so that we no longer have to depend on the NATO West.

And what can the NATO West do? It can only accelerate its violence. And the more it accelerates it, the more it will speed the parting guests.

All they want to do is to be left alone. And the United States is trying to prevent them from this by forcing them to make the choice between either they go it alone, or they’re going to end up looking like Germany and other US protectorates.

RICHARD WOLFF: Let me pick up, if I can, on Michael doing this back and forth. Michael’s insight, interestingly and unusually, gets an enormous support from an article. If you have not encountered it, let me urge you and everyone listening and watching.

On the 25th of July, that’s a few days ago, the Washington Post carried an absolutely extraordinary article. It was about how the last four presidents of the United States initiated and organized a massive acceleration of what it calls economic warfare.

But what it really means is sanctions, and it says so. And it makes it crystal clear that the United States is the sanction master. It mentions Biden, and Trump, and Obama, and Bush.

Now, of course, sanctions go way back. One example in the article is Cuba. We sanctioned Cuba for over half a century. The whole point and purpose was to get rid of Fidel Castro. What a failure that was.

And then, here’s two things that sort of expand on Michael’s point. This article, everything I’m telling you, comes from that article, the 25th of July Washington Post. Cannot miss it.

First statistic. The United States currently has, outstanding, 15,000 sanctioned objects. Individuals, corporations, whole countries. 15,000. And in that position, the United States ranks number one, says the Washington Post.

And the number two is less, is around 5,000. So, about one-third of what the United States is, the number two, and you might be surprised, the number two country imposing sanctions in the world is Switzerland. Right? In other words, it’s the United States. Russia and China don’t appear on the list in the Washington Post. They don’t do this. Right?

So, you ask yourself, you know, a question a five-year-old would figure out. If one side in the so-called great struggle, namely the West, the United States, is imposing sanctions everywhere, and the other side in this great struggle is imposing sanctions nowhere, what might explain this odd, you know, they have drones, we have drones, they have missiles, we have missiles, they have sanctions, we don’t. We have sanctions, they don’t.

Well, the answer is Michael’s point, which I want to bring out. When you sanction a country, the leadership in that country, the people who run the society, are almost always immune. They’re not going to change their clothes, they’re not going to eat a different diet, they’re not going to stop driving their car. The pain that sanctions can and do impose is on the mass of people who suffer, you know, poverty, or Cuba didn’t have access to medical, you know, drugs and medicines and so forth.

Well then, of course, what does every leader of a sanctioned society do? Make crystal clear, as your number one priority, that it’s not your fault as the leader of that country, it’s not your political party’s fault, it’s the fault of the United States. Sanctions are a way of mobilizing global public opinion against the United States as the great sanctioner of our time.

This is a program in which you line up the howitzer so it is aimed directly into your own feet. This is nuts as a policy.

Forget all the other horrors of it and the real suffering it causes. It is a self-defeating program and a sure sign that the people who pursue it may get a temporary advantage in the local political theater, maybe, but they’re paying an unbelievable price in the society’s future and its very survivability in a world where it is becoming more and more isolated every day.

MICHAEL HUDSON: I want to put a sense of perspective on what Richard just said. He’s talked about the fact that the sanctions are mobilizing other countries to support themselves, but there’s been a backlash effect.

The major effect of sanctions, especially against China, have been on the United States itself, the producers. Now, Richard and I both believe in the materialist approach of history, and most of our approach has always been, well, pretty much what countries do reflects the interest of their business community or the financial community or the elites.

But let’s look at what’s happened in America with the sanctions that they’ve put on against selling computer chips and information technology to China. Intel and other countries have said if they obey the sanctions that the Biden administration has put on, and especially if they follow the sanctions that Trump is going to put on, there goes their profits.

The profits of the business community in the United States have largely been exporting to these countries that are now subject to the sanctions that the American government itself has been putting on.

Now, how do you reconcile the fact that the American sanctions that are imposed by the neocons and the neoliberals are against the profit search by the leading American sectors, the information technology sectors, the car manufacturers, all the others?

You could say that the sanctions end up penalizing the U.S. economy much more than other countries, because while other countries have a short-term interruption of their supply, they have long-term independence.

And for America, this long-term effect, and even the short-term effect, is to take away from the American exporters, the leading industrial sectors, certainly on the stock exchange, to take away this market. It’s lost.

So what the Americans are doing is self-isolating themselves. We all thought for years that somehow the global majority was going to get together and draft a means of becoming independent and helping their own economic interests.

But it’s the United States that is driving this, ironically, not China, not Russia, not these other countries. They’re reacting to the U.S. that is essentially committing policies that are economically suicidal.

RICHARD WOLFF: Yeah, well, I’ve noticed that too. If you read, for example, the statements periodically put out by the United States Chamber of Commerce, you get what Michael is talking about.

They’re very nervous. They don’t want this fighting with China. They represent a large number of corporations who have put large amounts of investment inside China. They don’t want to lose those. China is the biggest, fastest-growing market in the world. Nobody wants to be excluded. Every business school teaches you want to make a lot of money. You go to where the wages are cheap and the market is growing. Hello, that’s these other parts of the world. That’s where all that is going on. And that’s going to out-compete the West sooner or later.

They say all of that, so Michael’s question stands. What’s going on? And here’s the best that I can do. I’m guessing and I’m hoping you or your audience sets me straight if I’m making a mistake.

They really don’t see what we’re talking about. In other words, when I said earlier, a bit mockingly, they live in the 1960s and 70s when the dominance of the United States was real. Maybe there’s more truth to that than my mockery would leave anyone to understand.

That they really do believe that this is a temporary, momentary challenge, which they are capable, willing, and able to squash. And that they go to these companies and say, yes, yes, we understand, you know, this kind of tariff is bad for you, this way, that way, and the next way. However, bear with us because we are really going to succeed. And when we do, and it’s just around the corner, we will defeat them.

And then we will carve up Russia, which will become 20 little countries like the rest of Eastern Europe, easily manipulable by all of us. And when we’re done with Russia, we’ll do the same with China. And then, wow, will we have a world? Because we will have integrated Russia and China into our subordination arrangement. It’s the dream of colonialism and imperialism for a long, long time. It’s a unified world economy under the West.

And for them, who are brought up in this, believe in this, had that special time after World War II, it’s not so surprising that they think that that project is still achievable. It’s a little harder than maybe they thought. But that’s what they’re going to do. That’s what they’re going to do. And we are all here, you know, wasting our time, Michael, you, me, and all the others like us, because we don’t see the larger picture.

And that’s what they tell the corporate executives. Yeah, you’ll have a year or two or three, but when we’re done, will you be happy? And by the way, while we’re waiting, we’ll make it easier for you. You chip people, you’re losing your market, we’ll give you a subsidy, the likes of which you had never dreamed of. We’ll give you this break and that. In other words, we’ll give you supports for your profits the way we do when there’s an economic downturn or when there’s a pandemic or anything else. This is an adjustment process.

I watched the speeches of my fellow graduate student, Janet Yellen. We went to Yale at the same time, we had the same teachers, we got the same PhD, we read the same articles, all from people that Michael knows all too well. You know, our teacher for macro was James Tobin, and our teacher for international was Triffin, and on and on.

She knows, and yet she is an enthusiastic manager for this difficult time as we reorganize the world for the next great phase of capital accumulation.

NIMA: Michael, do you want to add something? Okay, let’s go with the conflict, with the situation in Venezuela. How did you find it in the United States? They tried to do everything to interfere the situation in Venezuela. Even Elon Musk, he was putting out right and left in order to help the position in Venezuela.

RICHARD WOLFF: Yeah, can I say something? Because for me there is a humor here, and I do try in these dark times to find some humor.

The same people who here in the United States respond to Donald Trump when he questions the election, when he denies the outcome. He is thereby threatening democracy.

The people in Venezuela who challenge and threaten the election and deny the outcome are upholding democracy. You need a magician to appreciate this kind of switcheroo, right? The election here in our country, presumably, we know it all about.

The election thousands of miles away in a different country, with a different culture, and a different language, we could all be excused for not knowing exactly what’s going on.

No, no, no. We know it’s a threat to democracy when you question what happens here, and it’s an upholding of democracy when you reject an election there. And the comfort and the ease with which this is said.

You know, when no one notes the irony I’ve just told you, when no one catches that, it’s very obvious. If no one catches it, you know how desperate the ideological nonsense must be, because it’s occluding the brains and the vision of people who obviously could and should know better.

MICHAEL HUDSON: What Richard mentioned before about sanctions reinforcing the voter support of the government because they realize that the problems the economy is facing are caused by the United States, Venezuela provides an object lesson.

The problem that is caused for Venezuela is really because one of the dictators that America imposed on that country before, I don’t remember if it was Pérez or someone else, they did two things.

They collateralized their foreign dollar borrowings by the Venezuelan oil industry, including the oil industry had reached out and used its profits to buy the American distribution network for sale of its oil and gas.

Well, the Americans first of all grabbed all of Venezuela’s holdings in the United States. In other words, it grabbed its international reserves. That’s what you could say what is now called a national savings fund.

And secondly, the United States directed Britain to grab Venezuela’s gold supply and give it to a president that the United States described. The United States says, look, we have two models of democracy for the world, Ukraine and Israel. Those are the two democracies. And Venezuela, we want to add it to it. We get to nominate who’s going to be head of the democracies or deploy regime change opposition.

So the Venezuelan foreign agreements all have a clause just like Argentina had. If there’s a dispute, it’s held in the U.S. courts. Other countries are looking at Venezuela and they’re thinking, no matter what, we will never have any international clause that is settled by the United States courts.

In fact, we need a BRICS court. We need an alternative court to the IMF, the World Bank, and the international court. And it’ll be a BRICS court among ourselves. And instead of the rules-based order, it’ll be the real rule of law. So you’re having that function.

And it’s also, I think, showing that if a country like Venezuela is the object of sanctions, such as the African countries and the Latin American countries, the Global South debtor countries are sanctioned, that is an action by the dollar bloc to prevent them from earning the money to pay their foreign dollar debts. This becomes a legal, logical, and moral excuse for repudiating the debts. That is really what is going to be the ultimate break. The de-dollarization break is what’s going to be the sign of this global fracture between the global maturity and the NATO U.S. West.

RICHARD WOLFF: I can’t miss the opportunity. And again, I hope folks enjoy the irony. Many of the world’s religions — I’m no expert, so I can’t say all of them — but many of the world’s religions have in them a proposition very close to what Michael just said.

In the Christian religion, it’s called the Jubilee. It’s a very old idea, been around for thousands of years, that when a society begins to become so bitterly divided, that the glue holding the community together dissolves, and the life of the community is threatened by inequality in the old days, by having a large piece of land when your fellow citizens had no land at all, etc., etc.

What was periodically done was that all debts were erased. All debts were erased, and you kind of start over. If it was land, then the land was taken away from whoever had it, and re-divided, perhaps using a random system of you get this piece, and you get that piece, and the other one gets the other piece, and then we see how that goes. And if it produces too great an inequality, well then, in 10 years or 20 years, we’re going to do it again.

And it was a way of holding on to what, in modern language, would be the way the United States used to enjoy describing itself as a vast middle class. You know, nobody very rich, nobody very poor, everybody in the middle.

Well, Jubilee was aimed at doing that. What Michael is telling us is that Jubilee can also be not a voluntarily, religiously sanctioned, regular activity, but Jubilee can be the explosive end when there’s no other alternative to resolve the absurdity of a system that concentrates vast amounts of wealth in the hands of the creditor, and desperate life in the hands of the debtor.

At that point, the overwhelming majority, who are debtors, will see in the Jubilee a very happy outcome, and that the creditors will be unable to stop it. They won’t have the resources, and at that point, it’s over. It’s not a question of courts anymore. It’s just a recognition that the social contract requires the end of this inequality, and debt forgiveness is a simple, direct stroke to deal with most of it.

MICHAEL HUDSON: What Richard has described is really the distinction between Eurasian civilization and Western civilization. My book, “… and Forgive Them Their Debts”, and all of the books that I’ve done with my Harvard group on the Ancient Near East, shows that from 2500 BC in Sumer, down through Babylonia, to their Near Eastern neighbors, all societies, all the way to Judea, cancel the debts regularly.

They all had a king— The textbooks call them divine kingship, meaning a king that had certain promises to the gods to maintain stability. All the rest of the world has an economic view that is the opposite of what Americans are taught in school.

We have the Babylonian mathematical models that they had in 1800 BC. They are more sophisticated than any model used by the National Bureau of Economic Research here. The Babylonians saw that every society, the natural effect of debt is to polarize society between creditors and debtors.

They were very aware that if you do not cancel the debts, then you’re going to have a financial oligarchy emerge. The role of the ruler, whether it’s Hammurabi or other Near Eastern rulers, was to prevent a financial oligarchy from developing.

As the biblical prophets Isaiah and the others all pointed out, the oligarchy is going to use its financial power to get the population in debt, to take over its land, and you’ll end up with a few people owning all of the land, who set plot to plot and house to house until there’s no room for the free population in the land anymore.

Well, classical Greece and Italy were the first countries in the West to found Western civilization. They didn’t have divine rulers, and they didn’t cancel debts. They had a financial oligarchy.

We all know what happened to Rome over a period of 500 years. There were revolutions, and you ended up with the collapse. You ended up with serfdom and the feudalism.

While the West was going Roman Christian, not the orthodox Christianity in Constantinople, you had Islam. And Islam, normally, when there was a crop failure, they would cancel, annul all of the debts.

So, for instance, this is what happened in India for hundreds of years under Islam, until the English came over. When the English took over India, they stopped the whole idea of debt cancellation, and you had an economic polarization that has gone down to India today, making it one of the most unequal countries in the world.

So, you could say the defining characteristic of Western civilization is, from the beginning, to let a financial oligarchy develop.

And all of the rest of the non-Western world, from the Babylonian Sumer, through Iran, through Islam, all the way, even in Japan, you had it. In China, you had it. This used to be the distinguishing feature between Eurasian and Western civilization, and I would expect that the BRICS groups that are negotiating de-dollarization are going to reinvent the wheel and reinvent the same idea of no country should put paying a creditor class to create an oligarchy above the idea of social balance that is enabling the entire economy to grow and become more productive and survive.

In order to survive and avoid falling into a dark age and serfdom, you have to have a higher authority than the oligarchy who is going to cancel the debts.

And Western civilization doesn’t have a higher authority. We have, as Aristotle said, many countries’ constitutions call themselves democracy. They’re really oligarchies. Every Western civilization economy for the last 2,000 years has been an oligarchy.

Asia has an entirely different historical background. And just as President Putin in Russia is pushing to say, look, Russia has a distinct civilizational characteristic, I’m waiting for China and other Asian countries and for the Islamic countries to say, yes, we have a background too, and it’s not that of Roman Christianity. We’re going to put the overall interests before the class interest of a financial class. I’m sort of waiting for that to be a distinguishing feature of what we’re really seeing as a civilizational break.

If I could, let me translate that into very recent American history. The wisdom of it extends very, very far.

Up until around the 1970s, roughly, you could see the productivity of the United States rising slowly and steadily, and the wages rising slowly and steadily, more or less. No one should be mystified by this. Productivity is what the worker gives the employer, and the wage is what the employer gives the worker. And they were going up nicely together. The employers were making more profits, the workers were making higher wages. It went on for a long time and gave the United States its remarkable growth, helped to develop the idea every generation lives better than the one before, and all of that.

Then in the 1970s, for a whole host of reasons, the real wages flattened out. They don’t go up anymore. The productivity keeps going up. Well, in English, simple, that means what workers give employers kept going up and up and up, but what employers gave workers didn’t.

And that’s why we’ve had a profit boom for the last 40 or 50 years, and a stock market boom. But now comes the other side of the coin. If you hammer the working class with the American dream, this is what makes you a successful worker. You must have a car and a home. You must send your kid to college. You must have a vacation for several weeks.

If you’re demanding of the self-esteem of people wrapped up, but you’re not giving them the rising wage to afford it, what are you going to do? You’re going to throw them into debt, because that’s the only way they can have the American dream, by borrowing and going into the debt disaster.

And here’s the double irony. Where are the lenders coming from? The lenders are the employers, because their profits have been rising since productivity rises and wages don’t. So they have the growing productivity to lend to the workers, because for them it’s a no-brainer. Would I rather give my worker a rising wage or a flat wage and a loan, which he has to pay back? Well, that’s easy. We know what we’re going to do. So that’s what we have.

And over the last 40 years, we have plunged the American people into a level of debt that nobody else has ever seen. Mortgage debt, student debt, credit card debt, I mean auto debt. You add it all up and we’re talking more and more families have a bigger debt than they have an annual income. I mean, this is impossible.

Meanwhile, the wealth at the top is a wealth not only of getting the surplus out of the worker in production, but getting the interest payment when you’ve lent them the money instead of paying them a wage. I mean, this is a system guaranteed to produce grotesque inequality.

And that’s exactly the story that Michael has been telling you. Whether you go back to ancient Sumer or you’re right here in the United States in the last 50 years, what you’re watching are different systems, but they have in common that unless you do something fundamental about them, they will produce an inequality deepening and getting worse and worse.

Thomas Piketty, a few years ago, documents it for Capitalism in his book, and then it blows up. And then the question is, are we at the blow-up point? Are we getting near the blow-up point?

And my suspicion is, to go back to how we began, that the level of violence that you see in Ukraine, in Palestine, is a sign of really desperate holding on to something whose rationale has long gone.

MICHAEL HUDSON: Well, what Richard has described is how much Capitalism has been transformed. He just mentioned how Industrial Capitalism made America rich, and they realized that highly paid, well-fed, well-educated, well-clothed labor was more productive for its employers than pauper labor. And this was essentially what the whole economic philosophy of Industrial Capitalism was.

Well, then we learned from Marx that what distinguishes Industrial Capitalism is the employers will hire labor, and they will then sell the products that labor produces at a profit over and above what they have to pay for the cost of labor.

But now, look at what Richard’s described, and what I’ve described, in debt that the American wage earners—I don’t want to call them a middle class, because there really wasn’t a middle class, they’re wage earners—and the major exploitation of them is no longer primarily just by having industrial employers keep the profits on what the wage earners create, because after all, we’re de-industrializing.

The major exploitation that is occurring is largely in debt service. The wealthiest 1%, maybe you could say 10%, of the population hold the 90% majority in debt, and the income that’s paid to the top 10% is sucked out of the 90% in the form of debt service.

And even more important, what do these 10% do with the money? They don’t spend all of this economic rent, interest, and financial gains on goods and services. They buy stocks, and bonds, and real estate, or they lend yet more money to families to buy real estate, or to corporate raters to take over companies.

And so, what you have is the economic elite not making their money by employing labor to make profits and get wealthy out of saving the profits, but by financial engineering, by capital gains.

And Richard just pointed out the immense rise in the stock market, bond market, real estate market. You have a whole focus on asset price inflation, on ownership rights, and creditor rights to turn the rest of the economy into a citizenry of debtors and renters instead.

Well, that’s just what happened under feudalism, basically. Somehow, the industrial revolution of Europe and the United States had this idea that they were going to evolve into something very close to socialism. And we talked before about everybody in the 19th century was in favor of socialism of one kind or another, many different kinds of socialism.

But all of that changed after World War I, and the landlords, and the bankers, and the monopolists fought back, and they fought against government regulation. They said, there’s no such thing as unearned income, no such thing as economic rent. Everything is earned just like profits. The banks earned money by charging interest and even more than interest, the penalty fees for late fees. All of that is earned income.

And so you have a whole transformation in the idea of what wealth is all about and what the economy is all about. And it’s no longer the idea that industrial capitalism had two centuries ago. It’s something entirely different. It’s finance capitalism that many people now are calling neo-feudalism. It’s a transformation.

That’s what is driving other countries apart because what has made China get rich? Of course, it’s socialism, but it’s also socialism that is following exactly the same pattern that made America, Germany, and France get rich in the 19th century. It’s industrial capitalism and socialism together because the industrialists wanted an active public sector. They wanted active public infrastructure in order to keep the cost of living and doing business low, to subsidize their production.

All of this subsidy has now been broken up by the fight against government, by libertarianism. If you disable government action, government regulation, and government capital investment, since every economy is planned, the planning shifts to Wall Street. And today, you have Wall Street capitalism, not industrial capitalism. That’s the real transformation that is on the deepest level separating the NATO West now from, I think, what we’re seeing evolve in Eurasia.

RICHARD WOLFF: Precisely because of this concentration of wealth, you have the reaction which concentrated wealth has always exhibited. The people at the top that are gathering all this wealth through production, and then when that fades through financial manipulation and reorganization, they realize as they become richer and richer relative to the mass of the population, that their wealth is at stake, that they are in a vulnerable position.

They probably can’t get over the irony. They’ve done everything to become rich and powerful and feel less secure in that position than they ever have. And in a society which values, as we still do, universal suffrage or something close to it, that puts you in a genuinely vulnerable position.

The number of employers is very small, and the number of employees is very large. Universal suffrage, you know where that can go. The workers could at any time vote to undo the inequality created by the capitalist economy.

You can hear it when there’s discussion, however repressed, of progressive taxation. When you hear the complaints, gee we tax capital gains at a lower rate than we tax labor income, and so forth and so on.

So what have they done? They’ve done the one thing that obviously they had to do. They have to neutralize the political system, which they do by buying it. Why buying it? Because that’s the one resource they have. And the politicians can be made to need money. That was easy. And now you lend them the money, or you give them the money, and they give you back even more privileges than you had before.

So the industrial military have their monopoly, and the medical people have their monopoly. Now the chip makers are quickly working to get their monopoly organized. So it becomes then the old, again, feudal joke of a handful of monopolists being able to sit on top by the requisite politicians, have the politicians develop the verbiage to make all of this seem natural, normal, having to do with technology, anything other than the real question of how have you organized the workplace.

And when people say, well why is it going in this direction? Let me, you know, let me be a teacher for a moment. The capitalist system organizes in the way the feudal system did, and the slave system did, in a very odd way. It takes a very small group of people and puts them in a very high position. The masters, the lords, and the employers.

That’s why we’ve been so disappointed that the revolution to get rid of slavery did it. It achieved it. But it welcomed in feudalism, which while being better than slavery, didn’t make people objects like cattle. Nonetheless, it had the lord and the serf.

And then we had the French and American revolutions with all their great hopes for liberty, equality, fraternity, and all the rest. But what we did was we built capitalism, which has the employer and the employee, which is a replication of the tiny group at the top.

So why are we surprised that our financial system, and indeed our political system, replicates a small group of people who make the decision? We all know that a small group makes the decisions everywhere. We bemoan it, we criticize it, but it’s built in to the way capitalism organizes at the base, in every factory, office, and store. That’s how it’s done.

It’s only the odd exception of a group of people who have a worker co-op, or some other kind of. And those are people who don’t want the capitalism, but yet can often not even say those words because of the way our ideology and our education system works.

But if anything that Michael and I have been saying has validity, then it is grounded in an economic system that imposes that odd, totally undemocratic arrangement as if it were the normal necessary.

I’m reminded that before we got rid of kings, we lived in societies where most people thought it was absolutely appropriate that the grandson of somebody who’s long dead should be in ruling over me because he or she discusses with God every third Thursday, if it doesn’t rain, how to run everything.

You know, what? We got rid of the kings and discovered we didn’t need them. Guess what? You can get rid of the CEO and you will discover we never needed them.

But that’s too much at this point in American development and in much of the world. We still have to push to open this space to even think such thoughts, let alone rationally evaluate alternative systems.

MICHAEL HUDSON: So, what keeps all this going is the illusion, as Margaret Thatcher said, there is no alternative (TINA).

Now, Richard and I, and in fact all of the guests you’ve been having, Nima, on your show, have a common denominator. We’re all saying there is an alternative, and that’s why the guests you have on your show are not featured in the New York Times and the Washington Post, and we’re not on the television talk shows. We’re saying there is an alternative, and that is the nightmare, the horror that the ruling class in the West has, and it’s that nightmare that gets back to what Richard said earlier, the panic.

It’s the thought that the BRICS can actually have a different economic system that is on a completely different basis of mutual gain and economic growth.

You can’t call this a Thucydides trap. China, Russia, and the BRICS are not trying to out-compete the United States and England and Europe at their own game. They don’t want to play that game. They’re saying, we’re not going to go down that road. We’re not competing with you. We want you to go your way. We’ll go our way. We’re creating an alternative civilization. It doesn’t have to be this way. That’s their alternative to TINA, and that’s what I guess all the guests on your shows have been talking about for quite a while now.

RICHARD WOLFF: They’ve been meeting the resistance. I agree with Michael. They meet the resistance that it is very difficult for the people in charge, who have been in charge for the last century or more, to admit that this could exist.

The irony, they are convinced that Russia and China want to dominate them in what psychologists call pure projection. It’s European colonialism and imperialism that looks upon anybody else’s emergence as a challenge because they can’t imagine anybody not wanting to do to them what they know somewhere they’ve been doing to the rest of the world.

I think you can see it. I think you’re seeing it in Ukraine and Israel and again in Palestine. You’re seeing there the capability of people who have otherwise been civilized in all kinds of ways, descending into levels of behavior that we had hoped to the middle of the 20th century would make us never do again. As in the slogan, never again, and yet here it is with only the roles reversed rather than the problem solved.

NIMA: Just to wrap up this session, Michael and Richard, there is an article in Economist. It says that China is building up huge secret reserves of food, raw materials and energy resources in preparation for possible future problems. Do you think that China is preparing for a big war with the West or they’re talking this way because they want to picture this in the mind of Westerners?

RICHARD WOLFF: Well, I must tell you, I can’t speak for obviously for the Chinese and I don’t understand their motivation in this situation. I have no inside information, but I would tell you this.

If I were a Chinese citizen and if I were involved in these discussions, I would say to myself, given the sanctions of the United States from Mr. Trump’s tariff wars and trade wars on through Mr. Biden’s continuation of most of them, given the absurdity of the whole Taiwan nonsense, given the presence of the fleet in the South China Sea, you have to make preparations. Otherwise, you are an incompetent leader. You have to protect yourself.

Might they have aggressive intentions? I’m not aware of those, but I don’t know. I’m not claiming to know. But you don’t need an aggressive intention to justify what you just said.

The United States, and that goes back to something Michael said, the United States is giving not just China the reason to do it, but here’s more important. The whole rest of the world reasons the way I just did. The observers, the other countries, they look at the news you just gave that they are storing food and whatever. And they ask themselves, is that for aggressive? And they’re going to come up with the same answer I am. They can certainly see in every day’s headline what’s going on in every session of the UN, in every debate over whether it’s Ukraine or anybody else.

The United States is busily sanctioning 15,000 sanctions to try to get the world to behave the way it wants. That’s what the sanctions are for. Nobody else has the sheer audacity to think like that.

And what the United States is discovering with great rage is that it can think it all at once. It just can’t do it. The sanctions, as the article in the Washington Post admits, do not work. And as Michael added, worse than that they don’t work, they make matters for the US worse.

So again, that’s a sign of a society in very deep trouble.

MICHAEL HUDSON: Well, as Richard and I say, we don’t believe in getting information from the New York Times and the Washington Post, but there’s one thing you do get. And if you’re Chinese, it’s the only thing worth reading about in the Times and the Post, and that day after day, China is our enemy. The American diplomats go to China and say, we don’t want you to give any support for Russia, because if you give them food, that can feed soldiers. If you give them cloth, they can weave that into uniforms. You can’t help Russia because we want Russia to lose, so then we can fight you and do to you what we did to Russia and Ukraine and do to you what Israel’s done to the Palestinians.

Well, they read this every day. They can read the American speeches. I don’t believe that the Americans read the speeches of President Putin or Secretary of State Lavrov, and the Chinese are not quite as explicit as the Russians are, but they can read the U.S. press and they think the whole U.S. economy is aimed, if not at war, at least for making high profits for the military-industrial complex. Even if their weapons don’t work, at least they’re huge cost-plus profits under Pentagon capitalism, yet another form of capitalism we haven’t talked about. And so, yes, they’re preparing to go it alone.

I don’t think they’re necessarily stockpiling these raw materials such as rare earths and so many other products, helium, other products they’re having for themselves, but they’re trying to use the possession of these to talk to the other Eurasian neighbors that they have and saying, look, we can help you become independent and part of a growing civilization in Eurasia. We have the material to support you. You don’t need to depend on what the United States, England, and Germany can give you anymore.

I think they have a region-wide idea, not simply a military defense, but an economic alternative. Their defense is going to be, we don’t want to go to war. We want an economic alternative. And maybe someday, in a generation or two, the West will think, gee, Eurasia’s going ahead and we’re not. Maybe we should adopt Eurasian civilization and realize that Western civilization has not been as successful as we’ve been taught.

RICHARD WOLFF: You know, it’s not that many years ago that Europeans gathered themselves together and got some support from governments and sent expeditions to China and discovered that they knew how to do textiles better than Europeans, that their diet was much better than, you know. It’s not the first time.

I mean, there’s a level of self-delusion on the West that is yet another part of a declining situation when you can’t open yourself even to your own history.

NIMA: Thank you so much for being with us today, Richard and Michael. Great pleasure as always.

RICHARD WOLFF: Yes, and it’s becoming a very interesting, at least for me, a very interesting trio that we are accomplishing here.

MICHAEL HUDSON: Yeah, I love it.

NIMA: Thank you so much. See you soon.

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