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Octafish

(55,745 posts)
Wed Sep 18, 2013, 09:20 AM Sep 2013

Exposing the Financial Core of the Transnational Capitalist Class [View all]

This cartoon, I believe, is 101 years old:



What follows is an analysis of what's new since then that should be of interest to Democrats and those who believe in democracy.



The Following is a Chapter from the Newest Book Project Censored 2014: Fearless Speech in Fateful Times

Exposing the Financial Core of the Transnational Capitalist Class

By Peter Phillips and Brady Osborne

Introduction

In this study, we decided to identify in detail the people on the boards of directors of the top ten asset management firms and the top ten most centralized corporations in the world. Because of overlaps, there is a total of thirteen firms, which collectively have 161 directors on their boards. We think that this group of 161 individuals represents the financial core of the world’s transnational capitalist class. They collectively manage $23.91 trillion in funds and operate in nearly every country in the world. They are the center of the financial capital that powers the global economic system. Western governments and international policy bodies work in the interests of this financial core to protect the free flow of capital investment anywhere in the world.

A Brief History of Research on the
American Power Elite


A long tradition of sociological research documents the existence of a dominant ruling class in the United States, whose members set policy and determine national political priorities. The American ruling class is complex and competitive, and perpetuates itself through interacting families of high social standing with similar lifestyles, corporate affiliations, and memberships in elite social clubs and private schools.1

SNIP...

The Transnational Capitalist Class

Capitalist power elites exist around the world. The globalization of trade and capital brings the world’s elites into increasingly interconnected relationships—to the point that sociologists have begun to theorize the development of a transnational capitalist class (TCC). In one of the pathbreaking works in this field, The Transnational Capitalist Class (2000), Leslie Sklair argued that globalization elevated transnational corporations (TNC) to more influential international roles, with the result that nation-states became less significant than international agreements developed through the World Trade Organization (WTO) and other international institutions.8 Emerging from these multinational corporations was a transnational capitalist class, whose loyalties and interests, while still rooted in their corporations, was increasingly international in scope. Sklair wrote:

The transnational capitalist class can be analytically divided into four main fractions: (i) owners and controllers of TNCs and their local affiliates; (ii) globalizing bureaucrats and politicians; (iii) globalizing professionals; (iv) consumerist elites (merchants and media). . . . It is also important to note, of course, that the TCC and each of its fractions are not always entirely united on every issue. Nevertheless, together, leading personnel in these groups constitute a global power elite, dominant class or inner circle in the sense that these terms have been used to characterize the dominant class structures of specific countries.9

William Robinson followed in 2004 with his book, A Theory of Global Capitalism: Production, Class, and State in a Transnational World.10 Robinson claimed that 500 years of capitalism had led to a global epochal shift in which all human activity is transformed into capital. In this view, the world had become a single market, which privatized social relationships. He saw the TCC as increasingly sharing similar lifestyles, patterns of higher education, and consumption. The global circulation of capital is at the core of an international bourgeoisie, who operate in oligopolist clusters around the world. These clusters of elites form strategic transnational alliances through mergers and acquisitions with the goal of increased concentration of wealth and capital. The process creates a polyarchy of hegemonic elites. The concentration of wealth and power at this level tends to over-accumulate, leading to speculative investments and wars. The TCC makes efforts to correct and protect its interests through global organizations like the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the G20, World Social Forum, Trilateral Commission, Bilderberg Group, Bank for International Settlements, and other transnational associations. Robinson claimed that, within this system, nation-states become little more than population containment zones, and the real power lies with the decision makers who control global capital.11

Deeper inside the transnational capitalist class is what David Rothkopf calls the “superclass.” In his 2008 book, Superclass: The Global Power Elite and the World They Are Making, Rothkopf argued that the superclass constitutes 6,000 to 7,000 people, or 0.0001 percent of the world’s population.12 They are the Davos-attending, Gulfstream/private jet–flying, money-incrusted, megacorporation-interlocked, policy-building elites of the world, people at the absolute peak of the global power pyramid. They are 94 percent male, predominantly white, and mostly from North America and Europe. Rothkopf reported that these are the people setting the agendas at the G8, G20, NATO, the World Bank, and the WTO. They are from the highest levels of finance capital, transnational corporations, the government, the military, the academy, nongovernmental organizations, spiritual leaders, and other shadow elites. (Shadow elites include, for instance, the deep politics of national security organizations in connection with international drug cartels, who extract 8,000 tons of opium from US war zones annually, then launder $500 billion through transnational banks, half of which are US-based.)13

CONTINUED...

http://www.projectcensored.org/exposing-financial-core-transnational-%E2%80%A8capitalist-class/



It's way past time for The New New Deal.
18 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Great toon! K&R nt Zorra Sep 2013 #1
Thanks! Here's Simpson's real teet. Octafish Sep 2013 #2
Table 1: The World’s Top 35 Asset Management Firms, in Billions of Dollars (2012) Octafish Sep 2013 #3
This isn't real money. Is it derivatives exposure? AtheistCrusader Sep 2013 #4
OP source 21. “The Top Asset Management Firms 2012, Banks around the World,” June 30, 2012, Octafish Sep 2013 #6
Yeah, I think this is deriviatives. They don't actually possess that money, it's a swirling morass o AtheistCrusader Sep 2013 #8
Agree, totally. The sad part is, they've got the US taxpayer on the hook for so much of it. Octafish Sep 2013 #10
Got the answer...I think... Octafish Sep 2013 #12
Trickle down DOES work; just ask the paid disruptors! Divernan Sep 2013 #5
Thanks, Divernan! I've got a fave or two. Octafish Sep 2013 #7
They will not allow anyone to change this. Even an armed insurrection will not be successful. L0oniX Sep 2013 #9
That ref blew a call against the Lions. Octafish Sep 2013 #11
More importance and truth in this little thread woo me with science Sep 2013 #13
Thanks, woo me with science. I'd hoped the 1912 cartoon would prove effective... Octafish Sep 2013 #14
Important thread, thanks for posting. Will have to spend more time on this. nm rhett o rick Sep 2013 #15
These are the fellahs who'll make a killing off TPP. Octafish Sep 2013 #17
Kick. woo me with science Sep 2013 #16
Corporate Power is dwarfing Democracy and Justice and Peace... Octafish Sep 2013 #18
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