Wednesday, February 4, 2009

What this really means is "Try and figure out a way to keep spending, but shut up about human rights".

Here's me on Free Exchange:

I think that people are giving too much credence to many of these statements. Most of these politicians/financial types, if you closely scan their CVs, attended, at one time or another, the Ecole Normale of BS. I'm sure that, somewhere on the internet, there's a Bullingdon like photograph of all of them together at ENBS. Anytime I see a G7 of G20 photo op now with the leaders, I see the Bullingdon Club photo. By the way, no offense, but I'd rather have a leader with a mug shot from San Quentin than one who's in that Bullingdon photo. It's nothing against Britain. On the contrary, my grandfather was English. He was from Liverpool. My grandmother's parents are from Taunton. Generally, when I mention that, people ask me if I've read Lorna Doone. What's that all about?

Anyway, take this for example:

"The important reasons for the U.S. financial crisis include excessive consumption and high leverage," Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of China's central bank, said in a statement.

What this really means is "Try and figure out a way to keep spending, but shut up about human rights".

The comic relief of BS has come from the highly comical duo of Steinbruck and Yosano. They both suffer from HaNavi Syndrome. The problem is that a navi is not supposed to welcome this status. HaNavi might even get in a boat, be chucked off, be swallowed by a fish, and end up right back where he began. Steinbruck and Yosano get orgasmic lecturing about overspending. Yet, I believe, Germany and Japan want the Saver-Export Country/ Spender Country Symbiosis to continue, if at all possible.

It's too early to tell what many people actually believe, except in the US it's been determined that we will spare no expense to save the banks and avoid being called socialists for temporary nationalization. That's set in stone.

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