ENRON: THE INVERTED WORLD OF SIN AND
DEBT
by Paul Proctor
Well, it seems that many beguiled investors
are finally facing the facts about business as usual in America. Some learned
their lesson the hard way a couple of years ago watching their dot com dreams go
down in double digits on the NASDAQ as it fell from over five thousand to below
two thousand. Why? Because everyone was living large on borrowed money. It was
all debt and no earnings...all show and no go! Others faithfully kept their eyes
on the Dow believing IT was the true measure of all things economic while
dismissing the cold hard truth that the Dow only tracks 30 or so stocks. This
makes it a magnificent tool for manipulation and deceit by elites wishing to
charm small investors into the marketplace with their precious 401Ks. It's no
secret that these industrial blue chips have been artificially propped-up for
years by the federal government's own "plunge protection team" to create an
illusion of prosperity and strength for all the small investors to believe in.
Yet, there it stands in all it's glory past, a moth-ridden symbol of pseudo
success and stability that hangs right where it did three years ago (just below
10,000) like an old suit in a musty closet that we open up and look into
whenever we need to feel prosperous and secure.
Please forgive me if I sound a little bearish on the markets. Frankly, I
actually did quite well in them in the 90's thanks to an honest and gifted money
manager whom I still consider a dear friend. However, I realized around the
middle of 1998 that Wall Street had become a place, not for prudent investors
but for gamblers, addicts and con men. I fortunately managed to get out only
days before the first of many corrections occurred and I haven't been back
since.
I guess it's our gullible human nature that makes us believe what we want to
believe. And when the paid propagandists on CNBC, MSNBC, FOX and CNNfn sit at
their financial desks and tell us to believe the impossible, we do just that
because we love the flashing numbers, the party atmosphere, the dazzling shows,
the sassy lingo and all the smiling faces. It's like going to Las Vegas for a
good time with friends! Even though we know the odds are against us and the
glitz and glamour of it all is just a facade designed to make us look and feel
like winners, we keep coming back for more regardless of the potential for
disaster. Even if we're upside down and looking for credit... HEY, not to
worry...we're still a player! Although I don't consider myself to be
particularly shrewd or gifted when it comes to investing there's one thing I am
certain of. Those TV pitch men who claim to be looking out for your best
interests and mine will say and do whatever it takes to keep us in the game
because that's what they're paid to do. That brings me to Enron.
A friend of mine asked me the other morning what I thought about the Enron mess.
I told him I was convinced more and more with each passing day that it is just
tip of the iceberg...an iceberg that has been threatening Wall Street and the
U.S. economy for years thanks to a growing and unserviceable debt bubble
inflated by corporate greed and government corruption. With little or no
earnings and way too much speculative trading, Wall Street is a disaster waiting
to happen. Debt is a nasty little word you don't hear much about on the networks
even though its dominating presence and effect on our economy is absolutely
chilling. On those rare occasions it does leave the lips of a talking head, debt
is usually presented as if it was an acceptable part of a healthy economy. Enron
and its "creative accounting" practices are obviously not the exception in
today's business world but rather the rule and I believe it to be the first of
many frightening failures to come in 2002. Figuring this out doesn't really take
much savvy...just a little common sense. 2001 saw the greatest number of
bankruptcies filed and jobs lost for any single year in the history of these
United States. Don't expect anyone from the mainstream media or the Bush
administration to make that announcement in coming days. They have a vested
interest in filtering such information from you and me.
In the "Age of Illusion" we've become a nation that revels in our indebtedness.
Our inverted system of morals and values has taught us that saving is bad and
spending is good even when we don't have anything to spend. Therefore, the more
we borrow, the more valuable we are to the economy and society as a whole, all
while feeling better about ourselves. Today we measure a man's potential in the
marketplace not by his stability, discipline, character, prudence, skills and
conservative values but by his credit line and a willingness to gamble it all on
a roll of the dice.
Sadly, these practices are not limited to the business world either. It's hard
to find a church these days that doesn't believe borrowed money is a gift from
God. Faith, it seems, is no longer measured by how much we're willing to
sacrifice what God has blessed us with to help others but rather how much we're
willing to borrow from others to help God bless US. When I see today's churches
readily chain themselves to the world's financial institutions just to carry out
the "will of God", I'm left wondering; Why must the children of the King beg
from the lost to feed the starving? Is that what Jesus taught us to do? Did He
feed the five thousand by sending his disciples into town to borrow what they
needed from the moneychangers with a divine promise that God would help them pay
off the loan in 15 years and bless everyone in the process? The bible says
"without faith it is impossible to please God". (Hebrews 11:6) So I ask you my
brothers and sisters in Christ, how much faith does it take to get a bank loan
to carry out the Great Commission?
In the "Age of Illusion" debt has become as acceptable as sin...even to the
Christian. No longer is it looked-down on by the church as something to avoid or
be ashamed of. On the contrary it is celebrated as a mark of excellence...an act
of faith...something holy and pleasing to God. The church now teaches BY EXAMPLE
that the more debt we incur, the more committed we are to God. If borrowing
money is truly an act of faith then every church in America should apply for as
much money as their banks will lend them, regardless of the interest, terms or
their ability to repay. Now THERE'S real faith in action! In like manner, every
church member should go out and apply for personal loans from THEIR banks on a
regular basis to keep the church's offering plates full each and every Sunday.
But you see my friends borrowing money doesn't take faith, patience, humility or
personal sacrifice. Its only requirements are covetousness, impatience,
faithlessness, selfishness and a driving ambition that says: "I want what I want
when I want it."
Yes, debt is A LOT like sin. There just never seems to be enough in this old
world to cover the cost of accommodating one's insatiable appetite for more and
more.
"Hell and destruction are never full; so the eyes of man are never
satisfied." (Proverbs 27:20)
Paul Proctor, a rural resident of the Volunteer state and
seasoned veteran of the country music industry, retired from showbiz in the late
1990's to dedicate himself to addressing important social issues from a
distinctly biblical perspective. Paul Proctor is a writer for the American Reformation
Project and a regular columnist for
Ether Zone.
Paul can be reached by email at watchman@usa.com