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Exclusive Interview

John Perkins on His Best-Selling Book 'Confessions of an Economic Hit Man' and the Unsustainability of Modern Capitalism

Sunday, February 27, 2011 – with Anthony Wile

John Perkins

The Daily Bell is pleased to present an exclusive interview with John Perkins (left).

Introduction: As Chief Economist at a major international consulting firm, John Perkins advised the World Bank, United Nations, IMF, U.S. Treasury Department, Fortune 500 corporations, and countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East. He worked directly with heads of state and CEOs of major companies. His books on economics and geo-politics have sold more than 1 million copies, spent many months on the New York Times and other bestseller lists, and are published in over 30 languages. John's Confessions of an Economic Hit Man (70 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list) is a startling exposé of international corruption. His The Secret History of the American Empire, also a New York Times bestseller, details the clandestine operations that created the world's first truly global empire. His Hoodwinked is a blueprint for a new form of global economics. The solutions are not "return to normal" ones ... His writings detail specific steps each of us can take to create a sustainable, just, and peaceful world. John is a founder and board member of Dream Change and The Pachamama Alliance, nonprofit organizations devoted to establishing a world our children will want to inherit, has lectured at more than 50 universities around the world, and is the author of books on indigenous cultures and transformation, including Shapeshifting, The World Is As You Dream It, Psychonavigation, Spirit of the Shuar, and The Stress-Free Habit.

Daily Bell: Please treat this interview as if no one knew about you or your bestselling books. Give us some background on where you grew up and how you entered the CIA.

John Perkins: I grew up in New Hampshire and went to business school in Boston. At that time, I was approached by the National Security Agency (NSA), not the CIA, for a series of very sensitive tests including lie detector and personality test. They concluded I would make a good economic hit man, which is essentially a con artist with an economic background. They also said they found several weaknesses in my character that maybe they could use as hooks that would bring me into their game. Primarily, money, sex and power. Being that I was a young man, I was seduced by all of them.

Daily Bell: You were chief economist at a major international consulting firm; how did you gain that position?

John Perkins: After the NSA recruited me, I joined the Peace Corps. When I came out of the Peace Corps, Charles T. Maine hired me. It was a Boston consulting firm and the Sr. VP who hired me had very close ties to the NSA and the intelligence network of the United States in general. What I came to realize was it was all part of the scheme to turn me into an economic hit man. The first economic hit man, guys like Kermit Roosevelt, who overthrew the democratically elected President of Iran actually worked for the CIA.

But the weakness in that system was that if guys like Kermit Roosevelt had been discovered, the US government would have been in deep trouble. So very soon after that experience, they started to use private consultants, instead of actual government employees to do this work. Companies like Charles T. Main were brought in with legitimate contracts, working for the state department or the World Bank or the treasury department or USAID or other organizations and within these organizations were guys like me who did this special field of work.

Daily Bell: Interesting. You advised the World Bank, United Nations, IMF, U.S. Treasury Department, Fortune 500 corporations, and countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East. What is your opinion of the World Bank?

John Perkins: The World Bank is a tool of economic hit men, there is no question about it. It's the tool of big corporations, the IMF and most of what we call intelligence agencies of the United States, CIA and NSA. Essentially the job of all these organizations is to help what used to be just US businesses – now we call them multi-nationals – get themselves established around the world in positions where they can exploit the world's resources, natural resources and human resources. All of these organizations are basically tools of what they call the corporatocracy. The men and a few women who run the biggest and most powerful corporations also run most of the government. Economic hit men help channel the resources of organizations like the World Bank and the IMF, the NSA and the CIA to support the larger agenda.

Daily Bell: The IMF?

John Perkins: It's a servant of the corporatocracy, of economic hit men. One of my jobs as an economic hit man was to identify countries that had resources like oil and arrange huge loans for those countries from the World Bank and sister organizations. But the money would never go to the actual country; instead it would go to our own corporations to build infrastructure projects in that country like power plants and industrial parks; things that would benefit a few very wealthy families.

So then the people of the country would be left holding this huge debt that they couldn't repay. We would come back and say, "well, since you can't repay your debt, you have to restructure your loan." That's when the IMF comes in. So the World Bank makes the original loan and IMF shows up and says, "We'll help you restructure your loan, but in order to do that you have to meet certain conditionalities. You have to sell your oil or whatever the coveted resource is at a cheap price, to the oil companies without restrictions." Or they would suggest the country sell electric utilities, water and sewage, maybe even your schools and jails to private multi-national corporations. Or maybe allow military bases to be built; these sorts of things.

Daily Bell: The United Nations?

John Perkins: I think the United Nations has an important function that it should be performing. We need an organization like that in the world today. Unfortunately, the United Nations has been rendered basically impotent. The United Nations was very opposed to us going into Iraq, but the Bush administration totally ignored that and went in anyway. I think it's very unfortunate that the United Nations has been emasculated by the United States.

Daily Bell: What do you think of the Bank for International Settlements? Is it true that it has worldwide and absolute immunity? Why does a central bank for central banks need sovereign immunity? How is that even enforceable?

John Perkins: It's enforceable because that's the way the laws are written in all the various countries that we inhabit. As long as the people who are running the banks and corporations also control politicians, which today they do around the world, then they get to write the laws. It's interesting that during a lot of my lifetime in the United States, for example, our laws were written by elected officials, but today that is not the case. Today in the United States lobbyists write the laws; the elected officials are essentially owned by big corporations. That's not true on all issues, but it's true on the big issues that affect big corporations. We've reached a new geopolitical reality that we have never known before. This is a new situation.

Daily Bell: You have been extraordinarily successful as a writer. And you have worked directly with heads of state and CEOs of major companies. What do you think of Western corporations? Aren't they a product of legislative activity? Wouldn't we be better off had the Western legal system not created corporations in the first place?

John Perkins: I can't speculate on what might have happened if corporations were not created but capitalism has been around for about 400 years and has taken many different forms. But in the last years since the 70s, and particularly beginning in 1980 when Ronald Reagan, then President of the United States, many leaders around the world embraced what I call predatory capitalism, which is very well defined by the economist, Milton Friedman, from the Chicago School of Economics.

Friedman said the only goal of business should be to maximize profits regardless of the social or environmental costs. That was a radical statement. When I went to business school in the 60s, we were taught that a good CEO makes a decent rate of return for his investors, but he also has to be a good citizen and the corporation should be a good community citizen. Pay reasonable taxes. Take care of the suppliers, take care of the employees; take care of the customers, not just profits.

So we entered this phase where we have embraced this form of capitalism that says maximize profits regardless of the social or environmental cost. It's a terribly destructive and unsustainable philosophy to have and we must turn that around. My goal or orientation is to try to make corporations become more responsible. The new goal should be go ahead and make a decent rate of return for your investors, but only to do so on a playing field that says we are going to be sustainable and just and peaceful. They are the public servants and they should realize they have a greater obligation than making just maximizing profits.

Daily Bell: Your Confessions of an Economic Hit Man spent 70 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list, and is a startling exposé of international corruption. Tell us more about how you came to write it.

John Perkins: I started writing it in the 80s after I stopped being an economic hit man. I contacted other economic hit men and jackals who destabilize government when hit men fail; I contacted these people to include them in the book. Then I received anonymous phone calls; threats on my daughter's life, and she was very young at the time.

I took the threats very seriously, as I have seen what jackals can do because I failed to corrupt Jaime Roldos, the democratically elected President of Equador and Arias Madreid of Panama; the jackals assassinated both of those leaders.

At the same time I received what you would call, a legal bribe from a big corporation in the United States; they would pay me a very large consulting fee and I wouldn't have to do much work if I would not write this book. So, I didn't write the book; I accepted the consultancy.

On 9/11, I was in the Amazon. I cut short my trip and came back to New York and I stood looking at ground zero looking at the smoldering ruins and I knew I had to write this book. I had to expose the truth about what I had done and what so many others were doing to create a terribly violent, painful, unhappy and unsustainable world. I wrote the whole book in secrecy. It's become my best insurance policy, because any good jackal knows if he assassinated me the book's sales would soar. The book has sold over a million copies in English alone and is now in over 30 languages. If someone shoots me tonight, we'll sell another million.

Daily Bell: Wow. Elaborate on the problems that the CIA, the NSA and American corporations cause.

John Perkins: The problems are pretty self-evident; we have created a world where 5% of us in the United States consume about 30% of the world's resources. The system that we created is a total failure and it causes tremendous misery. People often talk about the prophet of 2012 and Mayan prophecy of doomsday, but I think more than half the people of the world have already met doomsday. They are living in dire poverty and starving to death or on the verge of starvation, so we have created a world that is its own doomsday. This system has been created by organizations like the IMF, the World Bank, the CIA, the NSA and the multinationals.

Daily Bell: It's not just an American system ...

John Perkins: It's a global system; you could say the United States has been the driving force behind it, though. Great Britain has tried in some regards to change it, but the big corporations are really calling the shots around the world. Everything today is pretty much run by the big corporations. Obama is very much under the influence of the corporatocracy.

Daily Bell: What are the solutions?

John Perkins: I think it's very important that we the people of the world come together and realize that we do have power. I want cheap petroleum; if that means destroying the Amazon rain forest, I'll just look the other way. Until we realize that corporations are calling the shots and not the governments and that we are empowering this system, it will continue as is. We have to put pressure on these corporations to become compassionate, good world citizens. In this era of the Internet, I think we have a tremendous opportunity to do that now and make some changes.

Daily Bell: What does the CIA think of your exposure? Are they angry with you?

John Perkins: You will have to ask them because I don't know. I don't know who they are; who would you ask. I can't answer that question.

Daily Bell: Your latest book "Hoodwinked" is a blueprint for a new form of global economics. The solutions are not "return to normal" ones. You are challenging us to "soar to new heights, away from predatory capitalism and into an era more transformative than the Agricultural and Industrial Revolutions." Tell us about the book and the steps we can take to build a better tomorrow. Is it through state and UN and activism, or the private sector or both?

John Perkins: Well, as we discussed, it's through the consumer. We need to realize that people that work for corporations are also consumers. At the very top of so many corporations we may have some extreme sociopaths, but the majority of these people at these corporations are good decent people who want to see good things for their children and grandchildren. They don't want to see countries sink beneath the ocean or the glaciers melt, or holes in the ozone.

But we have been sending a very strong message that says we want cheap goods and services even if it means being socially and environmentally irresponsible. We have to send a new message. We have to send the message that we want a just and peaceful world. Stop the desperation and the exploitation. We have to get rid of these terrible conditions, these wars, these consumerist trinkets. We need to create new technologies. Sustainable energy. Getting rid of poverty and injustice is a must.

Daily Bell: Can we do that through more regulation? Does the private sector generally need more regulation? Is that the point? But who would provide it? The UN? Is it better than to have a strong and effective world government? Would you like to see that fully come about?

John Perkins: I think the global recession has proven we need to have regulations to control these greedy people who run these corporations. We must be protected against them. Corporations are there to serve us, the people. Serving the public. I am not for lots of regulation, but I do think you need to level the playing field. It's like getting on a plane and having the security that the pilot knows the proper rules and regulations and has your safety in mind. You need to have that with the economy. Beyond that you let the pilot fly the plane.

As to who does that, is a very important question. It appears each country determines this at present – so maybe it would be good to have a world body to control this, maybe through stock markets and accounting agencies.

Daily Bell: Hmmm...interesting. So, you believe in a greener world. Are you worried about global warming?

John Perkins: Yes, it's a big concern.

Daily Bell: Are you a proponent of Peak Oil? Are we running out of energy?

John Perkins: I don't think that the concern is so much we are running out of energy as that we cannot afford to continue drilling for oil and sending carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. The bigger problem is how we use oil not whether we are running out of it or not.

Daily Bell: You are a founder and board member of Dream Change and The Pachamama Alliance, nonprofit organizations devoted to establishing a world our children will want to inherit. When did you become involved with these organizations?

John Perkins: In about 1990, I had been back in SA and met with some of the tribes there and said I wanted to help with saving the rain forest; well they told me, if you want to save the rain forest that's great, but don't come here and try to change us; we are not destroying the rain forest, your people are destroying the rain forest. Your oil companies, your lumber companies, your cattle companies. You have a dream of big buildings, lots of cars and heavy industry, and now you have to understand that your dream has become a nightmare; it's been very destructive. If you want to change the world, you must change the dream of your people.

I thought that was very eloquent. I came back to the United States in 1991 and formed a non-profit called Dream Change; its mission was to create a more sustainable environment. The other organization called Pachamama Alliance is now in 40 countries, with 4000 facilitators. We send money to the Amazon to assist with sustaining a more peaceful, just world. We try to help indigenous people sustain their culture.

Daily Bell: Are you a fan of Hugo Chavez?

John Perkins: I don't know that I am a fan. What I do know is that he changed history. When Hugo Chavez stood up to the CIA in the coup of 2002 and survived that, he sent a strong message throughout the world, particularly to South America. It meant that the United States was a paper tiger and a strong President can survive a coup. He has changed history, there is no question. Depending on who you talk to, they love him or hate him; but he has done a very good job for poor people. I would say he will go down in history as having a huge impact on the world.

Daily Bell: How about Barack Obama? How has he been doing?

John Perkins: Barack Obama is in an incredibly tenuous situation. The man really doesn't have a lot of power. The corporations have the power. Presidents of the United States and everywhere else are extremely vulnerable. A guy like Obama understands that if he rocks the boat too much, he's going to go down. It doesn't have to be a bullet; it can be character assassination.

Everyone has a skeleton in his or her closet and even if a guy like Obama didn't have any skeletons, they can be created, just like the rumors that he wasn't an American citizen, all the rumors. But what we can't forget is that Barack Obama never ran under a campaign saying, yes I can. It was, yes WE can. It's we the people. He can't do it. The people have to stand behind him. He just doesn't have the power.

Daily Bell: Food for thought. Any books or articles you want to recommend to us? Closing thoughts?

John Perkins: I would love to have people subscribe to my newsletter, which comes out twice a month - www.johnperkins.org. I am also on Twitter and Face book. I love having people keep in touch with me that way.

Daily Bell: Thank you for your time. Good luck with your book.

John Perkins: Thank you and keep up your great work. You're the final defenders of freedom of the press.

John Perkins has made a great impact with his books, especially Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, and he is obviously a courageous former intel operative. Having looked deep into the ruins of "ground zero," he says he decided destiny was calling him to write his book, which he then wrote secretly. This is an incredibly dramatic story and sounds like a James Bond tale itself.

Thus it is with John Perkins; he has had such an exciting life that one hardly knows where the real-life drama leaves off and the journalism begins. That is often the way it is with creative people, especially those who come from such highly-charged, secretive positions such as ones he apparently held.

Since Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, Perkins has made it his life's cause to argue for solutions that will ameliorate the corruption he says he experienced in the NSA and elsewhere. While he explains he is not pro-regulation – as we learn in the interview – he does believe that regulators can monitor such problematic corruption, corporate and otherwise, and put a stop to some of it.

Perkins as we learn in this interview is pro-UN, pro-world government, pro-"green," pro-sustainable energy and a supporter of various forms of private and public activism to halt global warming. He believes, generally, there are many problems that stem from the way Western civilization has evolved, and the West's generally profligate behavior. He is obviously a spiritual man and one who has somehow come up with the resources to fund an ever-growing array of social causes aligned with his beliefs.

Of course, as anyone who reads this site regularly knows, we have disagreements with some of these perceptions; we do not believe that a more forceful regulatory environment – administered by the state – can solve the problems caused by the state and it corollaries. And what Mr. Perkins defines as capitalism we would tend to define as mercantilism. This is perhaps a deeper issue.

The paradigm we employ points to an intergenerational power elite that USES government and intel agencies to create the kinds of structures that he's exposing. Someone has to create the system, after all, including the IMF, World Bank, etc. These elements, most of them, were deliberately created after the World War II by the Anglosphere elite. History shows us that clearly. They didn't simply evolve; corporatism, in our view is a manifestation of the system not a causality.

Confessions of a Hit Man focuses quite forcefully, then, on these outward manifestations; though that is not to deny its validity, or specific truths. But we would argue there is an inner core of historical manipulation that needs to be plumbed if one wants to truly understand what is going on in the world today. There are riddles within riddles. We have long suggested, for instance, that Julian Assange is not what he seems; one needs to be very careful when it comes to power-elite promotions.

Nonetheless, we are always impressed as well when someone is able to generate the kind of success and muster the kind of resources that Perkins has developed. We have seen this before, especially with former intel agents. Many of them go on to write books or set up companies that are extraordinarily successful; some of them in fact may continue to be funded by intel resources and therefore act as disinformation specialists. Even though they apparently leave on bad terms with powerful employers, they are able to perform competently or even superbly away from an intelligence environment.

No one has accused Mr. Perkins of this. There is a simple explanation, in fact. Confessions of an Economic Hit Man revealed a methodology that needed to be explained. And that certainly accounts for its success, and his.




Anthony Wile:   View Bio  l  View Site Contributions
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Effective April 25, 2012, the Daily Bell will discontinue allowing feedback comments. We have left in place the large body of responses posted in the past, as we appreciate the valuable contributions made by some of our readers.
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  Posted by The Daily Bell on 04/25/11 02:07 AM

Posted by JonnyMuffin on 04/24/11 07:43 PM
BIG PROPS to the DailyBell and the commenters.

I have read Confessions, and loved the book. I started reading this interview and thought oh crap, what a shill. In his book he explains how the corpatocracy suckers countries into loans they can't pay back and then owns them (basically) including their UN votes. He knows that, so how can he advocate a UN that he knows is owned! How can he advocate them establishing regulations when he knows the people that need the regulations own the UN.

Then I read the After Thoughts, and some of the comments. You guys are on top of it! Thanks, I'll have to come back here more often, nice to see ppl that see through the bs.

Thanks. We thank Mr. Perkins, again, for providing us the interview.

  Posted by JonnyMuffin on 04/24/11 07:43 PM

BIG PROPS to the DailyBell and the commenters.

I have read Confessions, and loved the book. I started reading this interview and thought oh crap, what a shill. In his book he explains how the corpatocracy suckers countries into loans they can't pay back and then owns them (basically) including their UN votes. He knows that, so how can he advocate a UN that he knows is owned! How can he advocate them establishing regulations when he knows the people that need the regulations own the UN.

Then I read the After Thoughts, and some of the comments. You guys are on top of it! Thanks, I'll have to come back here more often, nice to see ppl that see through the bs.

  Posted by dsteuber on 04/23/11 11:10 AM

Friedman was right; Perkins is naive (at best). Corporations serve primarily an economic purpose. Once you get into questions of what is the "public interest," you are going to get wide differences of opinion. A democratic government, while imperfect, at least provides a mechanism for an orderly determination of the "public interest," and it is subject to change during every election cycle. Far better to have the public interest determined in this way than by the unelected managements of multinational corporations.

None of this is to say that governments can't over-regulate or that corporations can't treat others fairly. But the latter do so because it is in their own long-term economic interests.

Perkins' vision for the global future is likewise muddle-headed.

  Posted by Brett on 03/25/11 02:24 PM

I've been following DB for quite a while now, and I have always felt the talent who've contributed has been some of the most visionary minds on the World Stage, yet to get someone like John Perkins (I've read most of his books) makes me feel that DB is leading the way as an Alternate news source.

I love that Ron Paul and John Perkins can have an outlet for Truth. The term Corporatocracy best explains how both our present state of Government and Corporatism is not really a Free Market at all.

I would love to see this system crumble, even being amidst what ever trouble comes, as it is the inevitable next step of the Melting of the World Ego.

Sadly, the Power Elite will writhe and attempt to take us all down before they fall, but if Katrina, the flooding in OZ, the Quakes in NZ and Japan are any indication of the power of nature and the price tag that comes with it, I feel that Mama Earth will rock the World Economy down to size.

Thanks again for interviewing someone who's had the courage to share the truth with all of us. I think John Perkins novels will chronicle these times, and our grandchildren will laugh as to how foolish, trivial, and unconscious our world was run before they were alive.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Thanks for the kind words and for dropping by.

  Posted by Dwi Karyani on 03/16/11 07:43 PM

Its very informative for all people who need sustainable development ...

Thanks
Dwi karyani
Translator for Confessions of an Economic Hit Man (Indonesian Edition Book) Now I work as Special Producer at Click to view link (The 1st Internet TV in Indonesia)

  Posted by Kaslo on 03/16/11 10:20 AM

Peak oil is real, highly recommend the book the Long Emergency by James Howard Kunstler. We will always be able to find oil, the question is, when does it get to expensive to drill out of the ground.

Look at the Athabasca Oilsands in Alberta, it takes huge amounts of natural gas (also energy) to get oilsand out of the ground and then huge amounts of energy again to clean it. This is a giant strip-mining project, depleting watersheds and poisoning people and all sorts of fish and wildlife.

The world is simply running out of conventional sources of ways to extract oil and yet we still burn over 80 million barrels a day, we are sleepwalking into the future. Time to look to biomimicry sciences and permaculture to get us out of this mess.

  Posted by Puck T. Smith on 03/11/11 03:36 PM

I'm a little late to the game on this one, but I could not leave unremarked the references to "the rule of law." I invite any and all to read "The Myth of the Rule of Law" by John Hasnas.

Click to view link

  Posted by Alan on 03/10/11 03:51 PM

I just saw Jim Rogers on Bloomberg talking about commodities. He said that the reason oil is going up is because we are running out of known resources of oil. i.e. he believes in the peak Oil Promotion. This is a man who has worked with Soros? Apart from this he talked a lot of sense but I wonder where he his really coming from, just like this Perkins character.

Reply from The Daily Bell

When we interviewed him, he sounded startled about the idea of Chinese price inflation. No one's perfect.

  Posted by Felix Guardiola on 03/08/11 08:17 PM

Greetings, John;

I was under the impression you wrote the book while sitting on a hillside in St. Croix, overlooking a former sugar plantation. Please correct me if I am mistaken.

Keep up the good work.

  Posted by Texas Deb on 03/07/11 12:11 PM

Correction: In my previous post, I meant to write "EHM" (economic hit man) not "EMH" (emergency medical/health professional).

IMO, Perkins may have simply morphed into an EHM for the UN and its stealth Agenda 21/ICLEI, for the continuing benefit of the multinational corporatocracy. His story just doesn't pass the smell test on a couple of levels.

  Posted by Texas Deb on 03/07/11 11:26 AM

Is Perkins an EMH for UN Agenda 21's ICLEI Attack on the World's Local Communities?

***
Q. "Daily Bell: The United Nations?"

A. "John Perkins: I think the United Nations has an important function that it should be performing. We need an organization like that in the world today. Unfortunately, the United Nations has been rendered basically impotent. The United Nations was very opposed to us going into Iraq, but the Bush administration totally ignored that and went in anyway. I think it's very unfortunate that the United Nations has been emasculated by the United States..."
***

Red Flags: Perkins' puzzling support of the United Nations now as an "anti-Corporatocracy" antidote, despite the fact that he has always known it's a tool of the Corporatocracy on equal footing with the World Bank and the IMF, keeps raising red flags. He can't be that naive.

As others on this blog state, something about Perkins' story just doesn't smell right.

Suppose Perkins is still an EMH -- for the UN's Agenda 21 and its ICLEI, which attacks local community governance from within.

A Google search indicates the UN's silent, spreading fungus of unelected bureaucratic control is now literally in our own backyards in all countries, including the US. The UN, impotent? We wish. One site claims: "There are over 600 US cities that are members of ICLEI, the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives, now known as Local Governments for Sustainability. ...The UN Convention on Biological Diversity treaty was withdrawn from a vote on the Senate floor in 1994, so the treaty, designed for UN control, is being implemented in America's cities instead."

The UN's Agenda 21/ICLEI have been making taxpayer-funded bureaucratic end-runs around every country's sovereignty (not just the US) through its local communities!

Who benefits? The multinational corporations!

Click to view link

IMO, Perkins and his odd support of the UN bears close, continued scrutiny. Libertarians reject the UN entirely and support truly local support of local community governance.

  Posted by Stephen on 03/06/11 08:11 AM

A new dream is an interesting idea. But at some point don't we have to admit that the human animal has, shall we say, a psychology that would tend to skew whatever "governing" or "regulating" force? That is "skew" as in tend to use this force for ends not originally intended. I don't know. How far can we get when system upon system is created to counterbalance another system? All systems seem to be predicated on ideas that ignore the innate problems of bureaucracy. It ends up serving itself. And then enlayers more bureaucracy in an almost organic way...and at the bottom is that good old reptilian brain stem.

  Posted by TexasDeb on 03/03/11 03:01 PM

If the HTML link (previous post) to Friedman's 1970 essay is inaccessible or corrupted, here's a PDF link that should be helpful:

Click to view link~thecore/doc/Friedman.pdf

The full quote would be, "The social responsibility of business is to increase its profits '...by engaging in open and free competition without deception or fraud.'" --Milton Friedman, "The Social Responsibility of Business is to Increase its Profits," The New York Times Magazine, Sept. 13, 1970.

Here's Friedman's final paragraph, split into separate sentences for clarity:

"..But the doctrine of 'social responsibility' taken seriously would extend the scope of the political mechanism to every human activity.

"It does not differ in philosophy from the most explicitly collective doctrine. It differs only by professing to believe that collectivist ends can be attained without collectivist means.

"That is why, in my book Capitalism and Freedom, I have called it a 'fundamentally subversive doctrine' in a free society, and have said that in such a society, 'there is one and only one social responsibility of business -- to use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits so long as it stays within the rules of the game, which is to say, engages in open and free competition without deception or fraud.'"

Perkins excuses his evil EHM career and continues to perpetuate fraud and deceit as he lazily blames Friedman personally for the existence of The Corporatocracy and "predatory capitalism" (old world mercantilism/modern fascism). Unfortunately Friedman is no longer around to defend himself.

  Posted by V on 03/03/11 11:50 AM

Hmmmmm, link won't work from here.
Google "Will The Real Economic Hitmen Please Stand Up"
by Catherine Austin Fitts

  Posted by V on 03/03/11 11:48 AM

I would think the DB (and LRC) would have referenced this:

Click to view link

She refers to an article that is gone but a stub can be found via Google.

  Posted by Bluebird on 03/02/11 09:46 PM

No, Geopark, they are not. Two different Bill's.

  Posted by Geopark on 03/02/11 09:34 PM

@ . . Posted by Bill on 2/27/2011 9:23:35 AM
&/or @ . . Posted by Bill Ross on 2/27/2011 9:38:39 AM

Are you one and the same . . JUST ASKING . . ?

Reply from The Daily Bell

No.

  Posted by Geopark on 03/02/11 08:21 PM

@TexasDeb (RE: 3/2/2011 5:52:11 PM)

Appreciate the link and am attempting to broaden my horizons therewith. However; I am distracted by the (not equal to?) symbol (e.g. en?terprise) which appears repeatedly (~5 times) in the first paragraph. I will continue reading but hope you or someone can provide some insight into this issue.

  Posted by TexasDeb on 03/02/11 05:52 PM

"Open and free competition without deception or fraud" " Milton Friedman, 1970

Thank you, DB, for fostering the free exchange of ideas whether or not you completely agree with them. While reading Perkins' The Secret History of the American Empire last week, I had high hopes that the truth was finally coming out and that it would provide a solid foundation for each of us to help set things right with this mixed-up world.

Perkins' books and interviews really make a lot of sense at first. His American Empire is in the continuing tradition of Maj. Gen. Smedley Butler's War is a Racket; Naomi Klein's article, Baghdad Year Zero; Perkins' own first book, Confessions; etc. But after vilifying The Corporatocracy throughout American Empire, Perkins' prescription at the very end is (besides somehow dreaming a better world): the UN, ACORN, MoveOn, fighting global warming, etc. In other words, More Corporatocracy. WTF? How lame. Perkins' credibility suddenly fell with a resounding thud. I wish I had just checked this book out from the library for entertainment purposes only, instead of purchasing it as a resource.

And either Perkins can't read, or he willfully misquotes Milton Friedman's famous 1970 essay [Click to view link] which concludes, "...there is one and only one social responsibility of business ' to use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits so long as it stays within the rules of the game, which is to say, engages in open and free competition without deception or fraud."

Perkins' EHM career admittedly relied on high-level deception, fraud, and blocking open and free competition; perhaps his current career somehow still does.]

  Posted by Acudoc on 03/02/11 01:31 AM

The interview leaves me with a renewed (dis)respect for the fiat, debt-based monetary system which enables and empowers the corporatocracy and political structures presently threatening the planet. What a monster the politicians have created by legalizing a model of central banking based on leverage of so-called reserves (debt), a monster that has nothing whatsoever to do with the concept of true capitalism and authentic free markets.

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