The
End Is Near!—Gisele Bundchen Dumps Dollar
By
Paul Craig
Roberts
The
US dollar is still officially the world’s reserve currency, but
it cannot purchase the services of Brazilian super model Gisele
Bundchen. Gisele required the $30 million she earned during
the first half of this year to
be paid in euros.
Gisele
is not alone in her forecast of the dollar’s fate. The First
Post (UK) reports
that Jim Rogers, a former partner of billionaire George Soros, is
selling his home and all possessions in order to
convert all his wealth into Chinese yuan.
Meanwhile,
American economists continue to preach that offshoring
is good for the US economy and that Bush’s war spending is
keeping the economy going. The practitioners of supply and demand
have yet to figure out that the dollar’s supply is sinking the
dollar’s price and along with it American power.
The
macho super patriots who support the Bush regime still haven’t
caught on that US superpower status rests on the dollar being the
reserve currency, not on a military unable to occupy Baghdad.
If
the dollar were not the world currency, the US would have to earn
enough foreign currencies to pay for its 737 oversees bases, an
impossibility considering America’s $800 billion trade deficit.
When
the dollar ceases to be the reserve currency, foreigners will
cease to finance the US trade and budget deficits, and the
American Empire along with its wars will disappear overnight.
Perhaps
Bush will be able to get a World Bank loan, or maybe one from the
"Chavez
bank", to bring the troops home from Iraq and
Afghanistan.
Foreign
leaders, observing that offshoring and war are accelerating
America’s relative economic decline, no longer treat the US with
the deference to which Washington is accustomed. Ecuador’s
president, Rafael Correa, recently refused Washington’s demand
to renew the lease on the
Manta air base in Ecuador. He told Washington that the
US could have a base in Ecuador
if Ecuador could have a military base in the US.
When
Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez addressed the UN, he crossed
himself as he stood at the podium. Referring to President Bush,
Chavez said, "Yesterday
the devil came here, and it smells of sulfur still today." Bush,
said Chavez, was standing "right here, talking as if he owned
the world."
In
his state of the nation message last year, Russian president
Vladimir Putin said
that Bush’s blathering about democracy was nothing but a cloak
for the pursuit of American self-interests at the expense of other
peoples: "We are aware what is going on in the world.
Comrade Wolf knows whom to eat, and he eats without listening, and
he’s clearly not going to listen to anyone." In May
2007, Putin criticized
the neocon
regime in Washington for "disrespect for human life" and
"claims to global exclusiveness, just as it was in the time
of the Third Reich."
Even
America’s British allies regard President Bush as a threat to
world peace and the second most dangerous man alive. Bush is
edged out in polls by Osama bin Laden, but is regarded as more
dangerous than Iran’s demonized president and North Korea’s
Kim Jong-il.
President
Bush has achieved his dismal world standing despite spending $1.6
billion of hard-pressed Americans’ tax money on public relations
between 2003 and 2006.
Clearly,
America’s leader and America’s currency are poorly regarded.
Is there a solution?
Perhaps
the answer lies in those 737 overseas bases. If those bases
were brought home and shared among the 50 states, each state would
gain 15 new military bases.
Imagine
what this would mean: The end of the housing slump. A
reduction in the trade deficit. And the end of the war on terror.
Who
would dare attack a country with 15 new military bases in every
state in addition to the existing ones? Wherever a terrorist
turned, he would find himself surrounded by soldiers.
All
of the dollars currently spent abroad to support 737 overseas
bases would be spent at home. Income for foreigners would become
income for Americans, and the trade deficit would shrink.
The
impact of the 737 military base payrolls on the US economy would
end the housing crisis and bring back the 140,000 highly paid
financial services jobs, the loss of which this year has cost the
US $42 billion in consumer income. Foreclosures and
bankruptcies would plummet.
If
this isn’t enough to turn the dollar around, President Bush’s
pledge not to appoint an Attorney General if Michael Mukasey is
not confirmed offers more promise. If the Democrats will
defeat Mukasey’s nomination, there are other superfluous cabinet
departments that can be closed down in addition to the US
Department of Torture and Indefinite Detention.
The
American empire is being unwound on the battlefields of Iraq and
Afghanistan. The year is two months from being over, but
already in 2007, despite the touted "surge," deaths of
US soldiers are the highest of any year of the war.
The
Taliban are the ones who are surging. They have taken control of a
third district in Western Afghanistan. Turkey and the Kurds are on
the verge of turning northern Iraq into a new war zone, another
demonstration of American impotence.
Bush’s
wars have endangered America’s puppet regimes. Bush’s
Pakistani puppet, Musharraf, is
fighting for his life. By resorting to "emergency
rule" and oppressive measures, Musharraf has intensified his
opposition. When Musharraf falls, thanks to Bush, the
Islamists will have nukes.
American
generals used to say that the wars Bush started in the Middle East
would take 10 years to win. On Oct. 31 General John Abizaid,
former commander of US forces in the Middle East, put paid to that
optimistic forecast. Speaking at Carnegie Mellon University,
Gen. Abizaid said
it would be 50 years before US troops can leave the Middle
East.
There
is no possibility of the US remaining the Middle East for a half
century. The dollar and US power are already on their last
legs, unbeknownst to Democratic leaders Pelosi and Reid who are
preparing yet another blank check for Bush’s latest request for
$200 billion in supplementary war funding.
There
isn’t any money with which to fund Bush’s lost war. It
will have to be borrowed from China.
The
Romans brought on their own demise, but it took them centuries.
Bush has finished America in a mere 7 years.
Even
as Gisele throws off the dollar’s hegemony, Brazil, Venezuela,
Ecuador, Bolivia, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Columbia are
declaring independence of the IMF and World Bank, instruments of
US financial hegemony, by creating their own development bank,
thus bringing to an end US suzerainty over South America.
An
empire that has lost its backyard is finished.