lefty guardian exposed as fraud, page-5

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    Note, this comes from a US mainstream newspaper...

    Journal Inquirer
    Manchester, Connecticut
    Saturday, January 8, 2005


    http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?
    newsid=13709916&BRD=985&PAG=461&dept_id=161559&rfi=6


    Whether the United States is doing enough financially to
    help the victims of the Asian earthquake and tidal wave
    is the subject of much debate around the world and at
    home.

    President Bush's initial pledge of $15 million from the
    U.S. government was recognized as puny, and he
    quickly raised it to $350 million while asking his
    father, the former president, and former President Bill
    Clinton to help raise relief money from the public. This
    week relief money being raised by U.S. charities was
    estimated to be nearing $200 million. And then there
    is the enormous contribution of the U.S. military ships,
    helicopters, transport planes, and soldiers sent to the
    disaster area to rescue survivors and deliver relief.
    That will bring U.S. contributions to more than a
    billion dollars.


    While this might seem pretty respectable and while
    the empathy of Americans cannot be doubted, U.S.
    financial efforts in Asian disaster relief are an
    illusion.


    For the United States has been for years now the
    biggest international debtor, borrowing for mere
    consumption, rather than capital growth, what is
    estimated at 80 percent of the world's annual savings.
    Indeed, just during the week of the Asian disaster,
    the Federal Reserve reported that foreign central
    banks purchased another $5.6 billion of U.S.
    government debt.


    That is, in just one week the United States took from
    the rest of the world more than five times as much as
    the country is likely to provide for Asian disaster
    relief.


    It might be different if this debt was going to be
    repaid soon, but it will not be. U.S. debt has risen
    beyond any chance of repayment because the U.S.
    government and Americans generally have discovered
    that the world's reliance on the U.S. dollar as the only
    international reserve currency -- the currency in which
    most trade is conducted -- allows the United States to
    levy a huge tribute on the world. Foreign central banks
    have been buying U.S. government debt only to keep
    trade going and to avoid devaluation of their dollar
    reserves.


    Even so, the rest of the world seems to be realizing
    that it may be possible to conduct international trade
    without paying such a heavy tax to the Americans. The
    European Union has issued its own currency, the euro,
    whose role in international trade is increasing, while
    there is talk of creating Asian and Islamic currency
    blocs. As the rest of the world starts moving away
    from the dollar, Americans will have to start pulling
    their own weight again.


    In any case, the only mathematically correct answer
    to how much the United States is contributing to
    Asian disaster relief is: nothing, really. For
    everything the United States is giving has been
    borrowed from foreigners.


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