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Here's what I see:
The administration is floating the foreclosure readjustment in order to drive Citigroup and Bank of America toward nationalization. The CNBC Friedmanites understand this, and they're countering with the only thing they have, tedious rhetoric about "paying your neighbors mortgage." Here's how it works:
The admin first talks up a blended solution between the Japanese and Swedish model, with indications that they're leaning toward the Swedish model. But you can't jump right into that. It is a groundshift in policy and society equivalent to Reagan's firing of the air traffic controllers - it signals the end of an entire era. So they have to push Citi and BofA to the point where nationalization becomes broadly accepted (it is already accepted, but they're trying to move a small percentage, maybe 8% of the population, toward the position). The foreclosure readjustment does just that, because these banks are essentially insolvent, with only the illusion of future returns on the overpriced mortgages serving as their mark-to-market fig leaf. This has everything to do with their balance sheets. If their balance sheet magic trick gets stripped away, they have no choice but nationalization. The market understands this; it's why Citi and BofA are down nearly 20% today already.
But the Friedmanites at CNBC and their cronies on the right cannot give up that easily. So they counter with the personal and resentful argument about the neighbor's mortgage. It is the only argument they have left; it remains to be seen whether it will manage to hold on to that 8%. Neither Santelli nor CNBC give a good goddamn about "paying your neighbor's mortgage." What they are trying to salvage is the illusory balance sheets at Citi and BofA, the current valuation of mortgages that will never be paid. But they are trying to salvage that because they are trying to salvage their fundamental principle of deregulation, principles that have been catastrophic and are, essentially as abject a failure as Soviet socialism. They are attempting to salvage an ideology of the dominant class that has led our nation (and the world) into utter disaster. Don't be fooled.
What's really at stake directly is the banks' balance sheets, and with them, the possibility of nationalization. What's at stake philosophically is the whole ideology of deregulation. The debates about the foreclosure readjustments have to be read in this context.
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