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The Slippery Sliding Scale of Funny Money

The following is a ‘ramble’ of mine from 2014 on the nature of money. Ten years later it seems right on s our new government tries to say that coal, for example, is a source of value. It will be a source of money (‘funny money’), but will be of negative value as it helps takes away our future.

Read more: The Slippery Sliding Scale of Funny Money

“The Quiet New Zealander”

Dr. David Burke

Victoria University Continuing Ed course – Jan/Feb 2014

A Ramble

This “ramble” is not a review of the course.  Rather there were one or two ideas from the course which stimulated these thoughts.  Other sources of inspiration  have come from a documentary on money which I first saw a few years ago, and generously from my observations of the alarming  political developments in the USA and New Zealand (and globally, of course) over the last few decades.

In bringing the course to a conclusion with a consideration of the current need for, or at least use of, intelligence (in the context of security and intelligence agencies) Dr. Burke mentioned money laundering as a key consideration, and in particular described the BCCI bank event. (I will not define the term ‘money laundering’ here or discuss BCCI, just continue to ramble.)   I ask myself, how does money laundering differ from other means of imposing your will, or becoming fabulously rich, by finance means?   And what relationship is there between all these means and intelligence agencies?

A few years ago I saw a documentary on money (“Money is Debt” by Canadian Paul Grignon) which revealed to me my own ignorance of money, what it is and consequently how it is created.   From an early age I had always had a conservative view of how I would use money and how it might affect me.  You earn some money or receive a gift, and if you don’t spend it right way you might put it in the bank.  The bank keeps an account of your credit.  It may pay you a bit of money to keep you interested, and you can reasonably get your deposit out whenever you want.  I knew of course that banks lent money which must be paid back to the bank along with a considerable fee.  I was always cautious about that; never really had a real bank loan in my life.

The documentary said that private banks create money.  This seemed surprizing to me, even bizarre.  Why would a democratic society allow something as important as money to be created by a private company?  And then I learned that the way banks create money is by debt.  The bank makes a loan and voila, the loan is money!  It was a eureka moment to realize that all money is ‘funny money’!  Well, there is some credit money, which is real money, but then how much of your own credit money is derived from someone else’s funny money?

Money is not an element of nature.  It is created by society within a culture.  Since our finance system uses funny money, we should realize that our imaginations can envision many possible uses of this finance.  It could be a slippery subject.  There is room for much discussion on this; it has been going on for thousands of years, and in my time I have not been entirely unaware of this discussion. 

Here I would like to make the observation that it would be expected that at any given point in history some consensus might be reached, or at least attempted, about how money and finance should work.   Various uses might be made illegal.  That ‘money laundering’ is illegal is an example of this.   There have been other outlawed examples ranging from conservative, credit based systems, on to promise based ones such as ponzi schemes.

But at different times in history there might be different consensi on what is the proper use of funny money.  That there is a ‘slippery sliding scale’ of uses should be no surprize to anyone who has experienced the last 15 or 20 years.  The energy company Enron in the nineties, for example, was the first clear sign to me.  Enron executives (‘The smartest guys in the room’) were a joyous lot who essentially justified the stated financial outlook of the company by showing how confident and joyous they were about it.  Rating agencies agreed.  While not every business was this ‘joyous’, this example should give us some insight on where society is moving on the funny money scale.  While Enron collapsed in a heap it has set an example for leading edge capitalists to follow. 

Further along the slippery sliding scale, the 2007-2008 finance crisis was brought about when some large finance companies created toxic packages in the subprime mortgage market, then bet against them.  In short this induced a frenzy of collapses and takeovers.  (When the carnage settled, there were just six megabanks—Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan Stanley.)   That it turned into a global crisis should not be taken as a sign of failure in the larger picture of funny money.  Rather it should be taken as a sign that when you go so far out on the slippery sliding scale of funny money, dangerous, perhaps unexpected, and surely exciting things can happen.  Instant fortunes can be made by companies and individuals, and furthermore, some of these fortunes can be swallowed up into even bigger fortunes.  What could be more exciting than that?  Even better than joyous!  The six megabanks are more firmly “too big to fail” than before the crisis (and as of 2015/03 there still have been no prosecutions for the many unlawful actions which occurred). 

Likely we are only seeing the beginning of that era.  To understand why we have reached this bizarre stage in history one would need to look at how the funny money systems of the dominant human societies deal with the resources of planet Earth, then add the global realization that limits have been reached on the use of available resources to feed this approach.  (But I won’t go there now.)

So the consensus on the proper placement on the sliding scale for the use of funny money has moved significantly away from the cautious end.  What does this have to do with security and intelligence agencies?  The relationship can be glimpsed in the concern about money laundering expressed by Dr. Burke.  It should also be seen in the use of these agencies in spying on businesses and leaders of other countries and the United Nations, as well as ordinary people,  in the name of “economic wellbeing”.  The key factor to understand this is that in the last forty years the global economy has been primarily focused on widening the gap between rich and poor.  (Why? It’s related to the point I raised in the previous paragraph, but I’ll not go there in this case, either.)  The pursuit of ‘economic wellbeing’ refers to preserving the ability of the economy to continue widening that gap.  Espionage is probably not needed to accomplish this.  So-called “free trade” such as the Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) will make heretofore unlawful or unpalatable interference in local democracy and local economies legal for the benefit of large global corporations.  Intelligence agencies will be engaged to spy on opponents of this process.

It has been said that since the end of the cold war intelligence agencies have been looking for a new reason to exist   Given that there has been a significant move in the consensus on the sliding scale of funny money, and the emphasis by the agencies on spying for economic reasons, this should be expected.  Likewise it could also be suggested that analysts of security and intelligence agencies might be looking for a new justification for their traditional approach to understanding these agencies and their roles.  Perhaps that is a fitting observation to make at the conclusion of this ramble inspired by the Cont Ed course “The Quiet New Zealander”.


Where to next for the Aukus ruckus?

Aukus talk is in a political tangle. Nicholas Khoo looks at two key points in the high-stakes foreign policy pact debate – and asks if New Zealand can engage with as little drama as possible.

by Nicholas Khoo

Khoo: ‘The reaction to the pact is so heated because it illuminates the basic assumptions that politicians and commentators hold on international politics. And it’s a decent wager that these views are mirrored in public opinion. ‘

Read more: Where to next for the Aukus ruckus?

Yes. But so often left out about this is that over the last 40 years there has been established a new organizational factor more impactful than left-right or open/closed trade. That is the neo-liberal viewpoint which in the 80s was promoted as TINA (There Is No Alternative). What this amounts to is a recognition that extraction and consumption needs to be organized by a global vertically integrated system which enriches the big and the rich. It was never going to address the future needs of living sustainably on this planet, but nevertheless has effectively become the global way. Even China is neo-liberal. The AUKUS project, likely to bankrupt the participants (especially Australia?), is a denial of the importance of the fundamental need to consume less and generally reduce impacts on ecosystems. In other words, a denial of fundamental priorities. Would we not expect the unexpected to emerge out of this? Best to stay out of AUKUS altogether. AUKUS Raukus? Raukus AUKUS?


Europe will not be able to fight the return of conscription

The post-Cold War generation grew up with the blessings of peace – the freedom to travel and study, and never having to worry about their countries’ security. But that era is over.

Avatar photoby Oliver Hartwich

My response:

Read more: Europe will not be able to fight the return of conscription

A larger context is needed to analyse this, as below:

New Zealand does not need a military fighting force. What A/NZ needs is specialized disaster relief – much cheaper and more directed at the larger threats to our ecospheres and our people. Global nuclear forces are a great threat to A/NZ and the world’s security. There is no such thing as nuclear deterrence and there never has been; it’s just been a figment of a collective insanity.


We have an emergency emergency

The climate may be changing but our response to disaster has remained the same – a hopeless lack of willingness to step up on emergency management

by Tom Kitchin

“We have not been learning, we have not been making the required changes,” Crimp says.

Read more: We have an emergency emergency

To be ‘learning’ about disaster management is tantamount to admitting that such emergencies are now more frequent, or at least there are predictable expectations of increase indicated by the science of climate change. But we are desperate to deny; this is The Post Truth Era where denial has become mainstream (global, not just here in NZ).

And there is one glaring example. The White Island investigation revealed many organizations came up short and were prosecuted. So many, in fact, that it appears that there was one more which came up the shortest of all – Worksafe. Worksafe was inherently unable to do their job in this case because the industry was ‘tourism’, an export industry. Any export industry in this country is sacrosanct, safe from proper regulation. Forestry, dairy. New Zealand has always been viewed primarily as a ‘resource source’ to the world, lesser as a steward of the ecosphere in which we live. Continuing this in the form it has been, and still is, into the longer future is not likely to end well.


You can see in the words of Shane Jones that there is recognition of this and there must be a full-scale attack on our ecosphere in order to desperately try to hold onto that dead past.

Read more: We have an emergency emergency

One aspect of disaster management planning and response is that occurrences are not frequent events. Even if the events are less rare (more frequent) today, it is easy to get complacent or fall out of preparedness. Keeping constant full preparedness can be very expensive unless the system is relevant.
Disaster research at the University of Delaware in the USA a while back suggested that the key was to identify key players and set up formal agreements between them. There is no need for a stand alone organization.


Anne Salmond: NZ is a democracy, not a company – Newsroom

Another excellent piece from Anne Salmond giving an opportunity to examine a larger context.

Read more: Anne Salmond: NZ is a democracy, not a company – Newsroom

It may be that a ‘business’ (especially a corporation) is not the best way to achieve global democratic outcomes. This is especially worrisome when we need fundamental change in the way society is organized in order to deal with the unprecedentedly globalized existential challenges of climate change, nuclear weapons, and generally the massive impact on the planet of the Anthropocene Age. Probably only global democracy could bring about this change.

But at this point human societies know that the old way (exploitation, including agriculture as we have known it – there are known alternatives, btw) is fundamentally challenged. This is terrifying. The terror is unsurprisingly mainstream. But the thing to note is that this most angry and most desperate government in the history of this country is politically capturing this moment of terror. If it seems that it has gone beyond what a usual National government might have been expected to try to do, perhaps that presents an opportunity to go back and evaluate history and its cultures to find the sources of this exploitation approach.


Security alliances need loftier goals

The new security alliance framework of an NZ-specific Nato partnership agreement and Aukus Pillar Two membership must be more than simply a containment exercise against Russia or China

Avatar photoby Peter Dunne

My take: Aotearoa / New Zealand needs disaster relief capability of its land, air and sea forces. No military fighting unit is necessary.

Read more: Security alliances need loftier goals

It was so astoundingly quiet how easily former PM Jacinda Ardern slid New Zealand back into the old alliance mentality (NATO) in relation to the Russian / Ukraine conflict. Instead of so shallowly looking backward as that we should be looking at the future. A future oriented foreign policy will not include a military fighting force but will be focused on climate change and nuclear disarmament. Given that, it is easy to see how much domestic policy is intimately related to foreign policy. Thie new government is purposely trying to destroy the capability of moving into this new world as they understand and are terrified by the knowledge that their exploitative philosophy is anachronistic in today’s world.


NZ’s foreign policy shift adds to piling flashpoints

As the new Government moves New Zealand more clearly into the American camp, we risk further division as a country – and must challenge efforts to enmesh us in alliances against our interests.

Avatar photoby Rob Campbell

I pick only one point from Rob Campbell’s terrific statement to comment on – Jacinda Ardern (remember her?)

Read more: NZ’s foreign policy shift adds to piling flashpoints

‘while engaging in flirting – if not foreplay – with Nato in Europe.’

Up to now, since the Labour Party with Jacinda Ardern became the previous government, this country’s biggest problem has been that PM’s unthinking instinct to support NATO, a very aggressive militaristic organization. It was based on the PM’s understanding of ‘who we are’ as a people and our history. Remember that the PM’s response to the mosque massacre was ‘this is not who we are’. Fair enough assertion in that circumstance, though over the following weeks and months there was much welcome discussion about the colonialist nature of our history. But undoubtedly ‘who we are’ was fundamentally important to that PM. And when she realized that her understanding was incorrect, she resigned. So I think your description of ‘flirting, or ‘foreplay’, while clever and to a point insightful, is not personal enough to that PM to get at the best description.

Now we have a new government which has a better understanding of the shallow and dangerous nature of that understanding of our history because it reflects its own exploitation ideology. They instinctively understand that that philosophy will not be workable in the future so they know this is their last chance to implement it. And, of course, it is global, not just here and not just in the person of Donald Trump. This leaves a civilization, aware of the need to fundamentally change, rudderless and with weapons available to end it all.

This clear view reveals that it would not be unrealistic to call this a global suicide pact. There is no such thing as ‘nuclear deterrence’ and there never has been – it’s a figment of a collective insanity.


New Wellington tunnel: ‘An astonishing misunderstanding of transport priorities’ – Newsroom

The reason the new government is interested in this proposal (tunnel from city to east) is because it is a ‘road’. 

Read more: New Wellington tunnel: ‘An astonishing misunderstanding of transport priorities’ – Newsroom

Another ‘glorious road’, so to speak.  After all the reasonable talk about ‘mode shift’ over the last few years (few decades, really) these angry desperadoes have become obsessed with trashing rail and any other low carbon transport alternatives.






Air NZ calls for Govt mandates to drive sustainable fuel use – Newsroom

SAF (sustainable aviation fuel) is a fantasy.

Read more: Air NZ calls for Govt mandates to drive sustainable fuel use – Newsroom

The definition of the term will probably adjust over the years but as of now it is clearly GAS (‘grasping at straws’). Yes, thanks to ANZ (Air New Zealand) for suggesting ‘international aviation should be brought into the net zero 2050 commitment’, but that may open up a COW (can of worms) as the desperate hopes of today become increasingly seen as OC (overly challenging).

No, I’m not an aviation fuel scientist, but such sources can be found if one wants to look.


Rod Oram, never bound by orthodoxy

Former NZ Herald editor Gavin Ellis’ decision to hire Rod Oram brought the respected business journalist to NZ where he pushed the boundaries for decades. Ellis remembers his forward-thinking colleague and admired friend. (On Newsroom)

by Gavin Ellis

Read more: Rod Oram, never bound by orthodoxy Read more: Rod Oram, never bound by orthodoxy

Rod was conventional, however, in the sense that his fabulous contributions were based on the expectation (yes, probably more than hope) that rationality and courage to face reality would not only win the argument but induce the needed action. By the end, when he had decided that that expectation was not enough, he would progress into a new phase where he would look deeply into the culture and history of the climate world and bring new insights. That would have been a new phase of his which seriously pushed the boundaries in a way we need, but seem desperate to avoid.