Thursday, March 17, 2005
Affable crank Jude Wanniski says that the reason Bush picked Wolfowitz to head the World Bank is because of Wolfowitz's connection to the private interests that benefit most from the World Bank's racket:
Wanniski is a funny fellow. He is responsible for movement conservatism's perhaps most important bedtime story, an explication of why lowering rich peoples' taxes is a panacea for all that ails a society, supply-side economics, but was unceremoniously excommunicated from the establishment right. See here for more on the strange case of Jude Wanniski.
Also, on Wolfowitz ... a question I haven't seen anyone pose: Assume Wolfowitz indeed moves over to the World Bank -- Who will become Rumsfeld's deputy secretary?
If you want to know how Professor Wolfowitz got the job, follow the money.
That’s what the World Bank is all about. It was created as an adjunct of the United Nations at the end of World War II, along with its brother institution, the International Monetary Fund. On paper, its function was to lend money to developing countries to help them grow. Its real job has been to serve the interests of the major money-center banks and the multinational corporations who make the big bucks in World Bank development projects. The Bank, which is really a “fund,” persuades a poor country like Ghana, for example, to build a new industrial complex in order make stuff for export. It will lend the money to Ghana -- which it gets from global taxpayers including you and me -- and arrange for the complex to be built by one of the favored corporations in the military-industrial complex. The list always includes Bechtel Corporation, Halliburton, and Kellogg Brown & Root, a division of Halliburton. These outfits go in and build the projects because the locals have no expertise. [ ... ]
The name most associated with Bechtel is George P. Shultz, once its top dog, now a mere director. Shultz was Treasury Secretary under Richard Nixon (helping talk him into floating the U.S. dollar), Secretary of State under Ronald Reagan, and currently a member of the Defense Policy Board, which until last year Richard Perle chaired.
Shultz also introduced Governor George W. Bush to Condoleezza Rice, who in turn introduced Paul Wolfowitz to Governor Bush back in 1999. Shultz of course knew at the time that Wolfie and Perle and their neo-con Cabal were planning a war in Iraq, and we know nice, little “doable” wars (Wolfie’s word), are meat and potatoes for the military-industrial complex. Instead of squeezing nickels and dimes out of the taxpayers to persuade Ghana to build a steel mill it doesn’t need and can’t run, even little wars run into the billions. And everyone gets into the act. The arms makers who produce airplanes, tanks, guns, jeeps and humvees get to blow up a country (like Iraq) and Bechtel and Halliburton come in right behind to rebuild it. In announcing the Wolfowitz appointment today, President Bush said the World Bank is a big organization and Wolfowitz has experience running a big organization, the Pentagon!! As far as the military-industrial complex is concerned, Wolfowitz did a FANTASTIC job. He was only expected to plan for a $30 billion war and he screwed up so badly that it is now a $200 billion war, and counting. Anyone who can screw up that badly deserves a promotion, to the World Bank.
Wanniski is a funny fellow. He is responsible for movement conservatism's perhaps most important bedtime story, an explication of why lowering rich peoples' taxes is a panacea for all that ails a society, supply-side economics, but was unceremoniously excommunicated from the establishment right. See here for more on the strange case of Jude Wanniski.
Also, on Wolfowitz ... a question I haven't seen anyone pose: Assume Wolfowitz indeed moves over to the World Bank -- Who will become Rumsfeld's deputy secretary?