With the US
Presidential Election into its final lap it’s a question of who is the Nice Guy
and we’ll tell you about the real policies later. Believe us we are both the sort of chap to
have at the wheel as we drive you over the fiscal cliff.
In the UK the next
election campaign is beginning with our two leaders contesting to be the Nice
Guy and to hell with any real policies.
As for fiscal cliff’s, don’t believe it, we can keep the property boom
in play long enough for nobody to notice that we are now well and truly in
financial outer space.
In both
cases, but in quite different ways relating to the electoral systems and the
relative state of the economies it will be the question of who might actually
vote, where, why and to what effect. In
both cases this is looking increasingly complicated.
In January
2009 Obama, a Democrat, was sworn in to take over an USA administration running a broken
economy and it remains in that state. He
and his team were not up to dealing with the main issues and not helped by the
financial cultists they appointed to advise them, nor by the elected Congress
they faced.
In 2010
Cameron took over a UK
administration that had been fairly thoroughly subjected to a scorched earth
treatment by the previous Labour government.
It is arguable that their ability to deal with the situation was fatally
compromised by the need for form a coalition with a group of Euro loving big
spenders, Liberal Democrats who wanted to live in the past.
Increasingly,
though, it looks like Cameron and his Conservatives were never really up to it
and far too much in hock to the UK
version of financial cultists that did so much to ruin the nation. To add to the mix, the UK lot have become neck deep in too
many scandals.
With the
radical differences in the electoral systems, probably, direct comparisons
cannot really be made. But there are
particular themes. It is likely that
voter turnout will not be high, especially relative to total population. In other words in both cases victory could go
to the largest minority.
In the UK , because of
the corruption and lack of balance now endemic in the electoral system it is
possible that victory could easily go to what might be the second largest
minority. Either way, in both the USA and UK we might have new governments
that reflect only some of the voters but far from all.
So much all
for all that One Nation claptrap. Also
because of weaknesses and scope for fiddling and manipulation in the voting
systems anything could happen in a number of places which might lead to some
distinctly odd results. This could
damage what might be left of public confidence.
So in both
cases in the foreseeable future both the USA and the UK could finish up with
administrations that do not reflect their publics, under rigorous control by
their financial masters and facing populations that have a almost a majority
who do not believe in the system together with a great many fractious and maybe
violent groups.
The good
news is that the number of millionaires, well paper millionaires is increasing
and we will be told as we frantically economise that this is good for economic
growth.
See the two
minute clip from the wonderful film “High Society” as a sampler.
My big
issue is how to get a payout big enough to join the club. Discounting the lottery perhaps I might try
Home High Frequency Trading to see what happens. With luck I shall be rich.
Without it
I might just crash the Global Economy.
Well, I would certainly like to be a millionaire...I am burning my candles at both ends trying to work it out...
ReplyDeleteThanks for the youtube link...I rather enjoy classic movies...
WAHM Shelley... :)