john perkins

Saudi Arabian Money-laundering Affair

antarchi's picture

The condition was that Saudi Arabia would use its petrodollars to purchase US government securities; in turn, the interest earned by these securities would be spent by the US Department of the Treasury in ways that enabled Saudi Arabia to emerge from a medieval society into the modern, industrialised world. In other words, the interest compounding on billions of dollars of the kingdom's oil income would be used to pay US companies to fulfil the vision I had come up with... Our own US Department of the Treasury would hire us, at Saudi expense, to build infrastructure projects and even entire cities throughout the Arabian Peninsula.

kermit roosevelt

antarchi's picture

Instead of sending in the Marines [to Iran], Washington dispatched CIA agent, Kermit Roosevelt (Theodore's grandson). He performed brilliantly, winning people over through payoffs and threats. He then enlisted them to organise a series of street riots and violent demonstrations, which created the impression that Mossadegh was both unpopular and inept. In the end, Mossadegh went down ... the pro-American Mohammad Reza Shah became the unchallenged dictator.

loans that will never be repaid

antarchi's picture

The ability to print money gives us immense power. It means, among other things, that we can continue to make loans that will never be repaid ... By the beginning of 2003, the US national debt exceeded a staggering $6 trillion and was projected to reach $7 trillion before the end of the year - roughly $24,000 for each US citizen.

official poverty grew from 50% - 70%

antarchi's picture

My contemporaries and I, and our modern corporate equivalents, had managed to bring [Ecuador] to virtual bankruptcy. We loaned it billions of dollars so it could hire our engineering and construction firms to build projects that would help its richest families. As a result, in those 3 decades, the official poverty level grew from 50 - 70%... and the share of national resources allocated to the poorest citizens declined from 20% to 6%. Today Ecuador must devote nearly 50% of its national budget simply to paying off its debts...

we still have slave traders

antarchi's picture

Today, we still have slave traders. They no longer find it necessary to march into the forests of Africa looking for prime specimens who will bring top dollar on the auction blocks in Charleston. Cartagena, and Havana. They simply recruit desperate people and build a factory to produce the jackets, blue jeans, tennis shoes, automobile parts, computer components, and thousands of other items they can sell in the markets of their choosing...

fanning out across the planet

antarchi's picture

These executives fanned out across the planet. They sought the cheapest labour pools, the most accessible resources, and the largest markets. They were ruthless in their approach. ... Like us, they ensnared communities and countries. They promised affluence, a way for countries to use the private sector to dig themselves out of debt. ... In the end, however, if they found cheaper workers or more accessible resources elsewhere, they left. When they abandoned a community whose hopes they had raised, the consequences were often devastating...

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