Anarchists Endorse Wolfowitz for World Bank Prez
Free Soviets
18-03-2005, 09:19
http://www.infoshop.org/inews/article.php?story=200503171617386
ANARCHISTS ENDORSE WOLFOWITZ FOR WORLD BANK PRESIDENT
Choice will galvanize opposition to the World Bank
Washington, DC -- Anarchist economists with the Inter-American Anti-Development Bank today endorsed Paul Wolfowitz as the new president of the World Bank. At a time when the World Bank is enjoying an improved image as a so-called poverty reduction organization, Wolfowitz will help restore the Bank's image as an international purveyor of unrestricted capitalism and predatory imperialism. For too long the World Bank has been restrained by wussy neoliberal policies. Under Wolfowitz's tutelage we can expect to see a pumped-up Neo-World Bank which will rely on state power instead of "free markets" to maintain American economic hegemony around the globe.
Paul Wolfowitz brings an incredible international development resume to the Bank. In his current stint as Assistant Secretary of Defense, Wolfowitz led American development efforts in Iraq. Under Wolfowitz's watch, Iraq moved from a country which had been bombed back to the Stone Age to a country that has been bombed back to the Bronze Age. Wolfowitz also led efforts to wean Iraqis from their dependency on an oil-based economy. Thanks to oil shortages and power blackouts, ordinary Iraqis are moving towards sustainable lifestyles similar to programs promoted by the World Bank. Wolfowitz also helped Iraq develop population control measures via an innovative exchange program with the American military-industrial complex.
Wolfowitz also brings an internationally known sense of fashion and style to the Bank at a time when its image has been improving. Unlike out-of-fashion pop stars such as U2 frontman Bono, Paul Wolfowitz has pioneered new grooming and fashion techniques that will help him put the true face on the World Bank's policies.
IAADB executive president, Karen Elliot, said of Wolfowitz's qualifications, "Who better to represent a pack of wolves than one of the top alpha wolves? We welcome Mr. Wolfowitz's nomination and the future damage that he will inflict on the World Bank."
Inter-American Anti-Development Bank
Contact: Luther Blissetti
1350 New York Ave., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20577 USA
Phone: (202) 623-3900
Fax: (202) 623-2360
http://www.iaadb.org/
Anarchic Conceptions
18-03-2005, 09:31
*phew*
My first thought when I saw the thread title and your name was:
"Oh now, Free Soviets has become an Anarcho-Capitalist."
I have the feeling we have al dodged a bullet ;)
That was the most sensational, venemous article I've seen since what's-his-face's article on the ACLU.
Come'on FS, I know you had a less-biased link you were gonna use. :D
Torching Witches
18-03-2005, 10:10
Sorry to upset the piss-take, but here's a couple of articles I just got emailed:
Bush to Tap Wolfowitz as New World Bank President
Wed Mar 16, 2005 09:39 AM ET
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Bush has decided on Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, one of the main advocates for the Iraq war, as his choice for World Bank president, administration officials said on Wednesday. Wolfowitz would replace outgoing World Bank President James Wolfensohn, who said earlier this month that Wolfowitz was no longer in the running for the post.
Wolfowitz is a deeply controversial figure in Europe because of his role in designing and promoting the Iraq war, and his selection could spark a backlash.
By tradition, the United States selects the World Bank president while Europeans nominate a head of the International Monetary Fund.
The U.S. Treasury Department has said it wants a new president in place before Wolfensohn departs in June after 10 years in the post.
Wolfowitz beat out former Hewlett-Packard Co. chief executive Carly Fiorina, who was also a leading contender for the World Bank presidency.
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This war needs the right general
With a US trusty for president, the World Bank won't fight poverty
Joseph Stiglitz
Tuesday March 15, 2005
The Guardian
James Wolfensohn, the president of the World Bank, has announced his intention to leave, and the search is on for a new head of the world's most important multilateral organisation promoting development. The choice is especially important now, when poverty in developing countries is finally being recognised as our greatest problem and challenge.
The World Bank's designation as a "bank" understates its importance and its multifaceted roles. It does lend money to countries to undertake a variety of projects, and to help them through crises (such as the $10bn it provided to South Korea in 1997-1998). It has been, and is, playing a vital role in global post-conflict reconstruction.
But the bank also provides grants and low-interest loans to the poorest countries, particularly for education and health, and advises these countries on development strategies. It has often joined with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in strong-arming countries into accepting this "advice": unless they do, they will not only be cut off by the IMF and the World Bank, but also by other donors, and capital markets will be discouraged from providing funds.
Sometimes - its critics often say - the advice provided by the IMF and the World Bank is misguided. This was certainly true in the 80s and early 90s, when rightwing ideology dominated, producing a
one-size-fits-all prescription entailing privatisation, liberalisation, and macroeconomic stability (price stability), with little attention to employment, equity or the environment.
The term "bank" is a misnomer in a second sense: while the World Bank refers to its members as "shareholders", it is hardly a private bank. The World Bank is a global public institution. But, while the G7 countries, which dominate voting at the bank, all declare their commitment to democracy and good governance there is a yawning gap between what they preach and what they practice.
Indeed, the entire process of choosing these international institutions' leaders is an anachronism that undermines their effectiveness and makes a mockery of the G7 commitment to democracy. This process,
established 60 years ago, is framed by an agreement that an American would lead the World Bank and a European would lead the IMF. The US president would choose the bank's head, and Europe would collectively decide on the IMF leader, with the understanding that the other side would exercise its veto only if a candidate were totally unacceptable.
Within the US, all major presidential appointments must be ratified by the Senate; even if rejections are rare, the vetting process is important, for the president knows that he can go only so far. But the presidency of the World Bank is a rare presidential plum - an appointment that is not subject even to congressional hearings. How can advice on democratic reforms be taken seriously when the institutions that offer it do not subscribe to the same standards of openness, transparency and participation that they advocate? Why should the search for Wolfensohn's successor be limited to an American? Why is the search process going on behind closed doors?
The two names that have been floated so far are particularly disturbing. To put it bluntly, consideration of the US assistant defence secretary Paul Wolfowitz or former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carleton Fiorina has been highly controversial. Even if convention allows the American president to appoint the World Bank's head, the organisation's success depends on the confidence of others. Neither Wolfowitz nor Fiorina has any training or experience in economic development or financial markets.
There are some absolutely first-rate individuals who could step into the job, people with a command of economic development, intellect and personal integrity. Such potential candidates include former
Mexican president Ernesto Zedillo, a Yale PhD who now teaches there and has been strongly supported in an editorial in the Financial Times; Arminio Fraga, a Princeton PhD and former head of Brazil's central bank; and Kemal Dervis, a former World Bank vice-president who has successfully managed one of Turkey's crises as finance minister.
It is time that the G7 countries back up their democratic rhetoric with action. Many stood up to the US as it pushed for the war in Iraq. They were right to be sceptical about US claims of imminent danger from weapons of mass destruction.
What is at stake here is no less important: the lives and wellbeing of billions in developing countries depend on a global war on poverty. Choosing the right general in that war will not assure victory, but choosing the wrong one surely increases the chances of failure.
© Joseph Stiglitz is professor of economics at Columbia University and a Nobel prize winner
Refused Party Program
18-03-2005, 10:17
That was the most sensational, venemous article I've seen since what's-his-face's article on the ACLU.
Come'on FS, I know you had a less-biased link you were gonna use. :D
Pssst. It's satire. Anarchists don't really endorse Wolfowitz. ;)
Pssst. It's satire. Anarchists don't really endorse Wolfowitz. ;)
That was the most sensational, venemous article I've seen since what's-his-face's article on the ACLU.
Come'on FS, I know you had a less-biased link you were gonna use. :p <------------
It's all good.
Free Soviets
18-03-2005, 18:17
My first thought when I saw the thread title and your name was:
"Oh now, Free Soviets has become an Anarcho-Capitalist."
heh, imagine the damage i could inflict if i started calling myself an anarcho-capitalist
Vittos Ordination
18-03-2005, 18:30
Has anyone actually endorsed Wolfowitz outside of the White House?
I mean, even if you like the man, he has no economic experience.
Refused Party Program
18-03-2005, 20:16
Has anyone actually endorsed Wolfowitz outside of the White House?
I mean, even if you like the man, he has no economic experience.
I'm sorry but that's like saying "Does anybody really trust Satan to lead us on the path to salvation? He doesn't have much experience."