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   | Dollar's 
Fall Collapses American Empire<!--
 
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--> http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18686.htm Super 
model spurns the dollar
 Dollar's Fall Collapses American Empire
 
 By Paul Craig Roberts
 
 11/08/07 "ICH" 
--- - The US dollar is still officially the world's reserve currency, but it 
cannot purchase the services of Brazilian super model Gisele Bundchen. Gisele 
required the $30 million she earned during the first half of this year to be 
paid in euros.
 
 Gisele is not alone in her forecast of the dollar's fate. The First Post (UK) 
reports that Jim Rogers, a former partner of billionaire George Soros, is 
selling his home and all possessions in order to convert all his wealth into 
Chinese yuan.
 
 Meanwhile, American economists continue to preach that offshoring is good for 
the US economy and that Bush's war spending is keeping the economy going. The 
practitioners of supply and demand have yet to figure out that the dollar's 
supply is sinking the dollar's price and along with it American power.
 
 The macho super patriots who support the Bush regime still haven't caught on 
that US superpower status rests on the dollar being the reserve currency, not on 
a military unable to occupy Baghdad. If the dollar were not the world currency, 
the US would have to earn enough foreign currencies to pay for its 737 oversees 
bases, an impossibility considering America's $800 billion trade deficit.
 
 When the dollar ceases to be the reserve currency, foreigners will cease to 
finance the US trade and budget deficits, and the American Empire along with its 
wars will disappear overnight. Perhaps Bush will be able to get a World Bank 
loan, or maybe one from the "Chavez bank," to bring the troops home from Iraq 
and Afghanistan.
 
 Foreign leaders, observing that offshoring and war are accelerating America's 
relative economic decline, no longer treat the US with the deference to which 
Washington is accustomed. Ecuador's president, Rafael Correa, recently refused 
Washington's demand to renew the lease on the Manta air base in Ecuador. He told 
Washington that the US could have a base in Ecuador if Ecuador could have a 
military base in the US.
 
 When Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez addressed the UN, he crossed himself as he 
stood at the podium. Referring to President Bush, Chavez said, "Yesterday the 
devil came here, and it smells of sulfur still today." Bush, said Chavez, was 
standing "right here, talking as if he owned the world."
 
 In his state of the nation message last year, Russian president Vladimir Putin 
said that Bush's blathering about democracy was nothing but a cloak for the 
pursuit of American self-interests at the expense of other peoples. "We are 
aware what is going on in the world. Comrade wolf knows whom to eat, and he eats 
without listening, and he's clearly not going to listen to anyone." In May 2007, 
Putin criticized the neocon regime in Washington for "disrespect for human life" 
and "claims to global exclusiveness, just as it was in the time of the Third 
Reich."
 
 Even America's British allies regard President Bush as a threat to world peace 
and the second most dangerous man alive. Bush is edged out in polls by Osama bin 
Laden, but is regarded as more dangerous than Iran's demonized president and 
North Korea's Kim Jong-il.
 
 President Bush has achieved his dismal world standing despite spending $1.6 
billion of hard-pressed Americans' tax money on public relations between 2003 
and 2006.
 
 Clearly, America's leader and America's currency are poorly regarded. Is there a 
solution?
 
 Perhaps the answer lies in those 737 overseas bases. If those bases were brought 
home and shared among the 50 states, each state would gain 15 new military 
bases.
 
 Imagine what this would mean: The end of the housing slump. A reduction in the 
trade deficit. And the end of the war on terror.
 
 Who would dare attack a country with 15 new military bases in every state in 
addition to the existing ones? Wherever a terrorist turned, he would find 
himself surrounded by soldiers.
 
 All of the dollars currently spent abroad to support 737 overseas bases would be 
spent at home. Income for foreigners would become income for Americans, and the 
trade deficit would shrink.
 
 The impact of the 737 military base payrolls on the US economy would end the 
housing crisis and bring back the 140,000 highly paid financial services jobs, 
the loss of which this year has cost the US $42 billion in consumer income. 
Foreclosures and bankruptcies would plummet.
 
 If this isn't enough to turn the dollar around, President Bush's pledge not to 
appoint an Attorney General if Michael Mukasey is not confirmed offers more 
promise. If the Democrats will defeat Mukasey's nomination, there are other 
superfluous cabinet departments that can be closed down in addition to the US 
Department of Torture and Indefinite Detention.
 
 The American empire is being unwound on the battlefields of Iraq and 
Afghanistan. The year is two months from being over, but already in 2007, 
despite the touted "surge," deaths of US soldiers are the highest of any year of 
the war.
 
 The Taliban are the ones who are surging. They have taken control of a third 
district in Western Afghanistan. Turkey and the Kurds are on the verge of 
turning northern Iraq into a new war zone, another demonstration of American 
impotence.
 
 Bush's wars have endangered America's puppet regimes. Bush's Pakistani puppet, 
Musharraf, is fighting for his life. By resorting to "emergency rule" and 
oppressive measures, Musharraf has intensified his opposition. When Musharraf 
falls, thanks to Bush, the Islamists will have nukes.
 
 American generals used to say that the wars Bush started in the Middle East 
would take 10 years to win. On Oct. 31 General John Abizaid, former commander of 
US forces in the Middle East, put paid to that optimistic forecast. Speaking at 
Carnegie Mellon University, Gen. Abizaid said it would be 50 years before US 
troops can leave the Middle East.
 
 There is no possibility of the US remaining the the Middle East for a half 
century. The dollar and US power are already on their last legs, unbeknownst to 
Democratic leaders Pelosi and Reid who are preparing yet another blank check for 
Bush's latest request for $200 billion in supplementary war funding.
 
 There isn't any money with which to fund Bush's lost war. It will have to be 
borrowed from China.
 
 The Romans brought on their own demise, but it took them centuries. Bush has 
finished America in a mere 7 years.
 
 Even as Gisele throws off the dollar's hegemony, Brazil, Venezuela, Ecuador, 
Bolivia, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Columbia are declaring independence 
of the IMF and World Bank, instruments of US financial hegemony, by creating 
their own development bank, thus bringing to an end US suzerainty over South 
America.
 
 An empire that has lost its backyard is finished.
   
Paul Craig Roberts wrote the Kemp-Roth bill and 
was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was 
Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page and Contributing 
Editor of National Review. He is author or coauthor of eight books, including 
The Supply-Side Revolution (Harvard University Press). He has held numerous 
academic appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair in Political 
Economy, Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University 
and Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He has 
contributed to numerous scholarly journals and testified before Congress on 30 
occasions. He has been awarded the U.S. Treasury's Meritorious Service Award and 
the French Legion of Honor. He was a reviewer for the Journal of Political 
Economy under editor Robert Mundell. He is the co-author of The Tyranny of Good 
Intentions. He is also coauthor with Karen Araujo of Chile: Dos Visiones – La 
Era Allende-Pinochet (Santiago: Universidad Andres Bello, 2000).
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