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-- 04 July 2007 --


HAPPY INDEPENDENCE DAY!

On this July 4th, we celebrate our nation’s forefathers’ declaring their independence from an economically overbearing and unjust British Empire. Two hundred thirty-one years later, In Debt We Trust is a call to arms against unjust and financially crippling conditions for average Americans, as imposed by unregulated lenders. Let’s vow today to create independence from manipulative personal debt devices like credit cards, payday loans and adjustable mortgages. And, now that we’re inspired by men like Jefferson and Hancock to ACT, let’s call our representatives and tell them we demand more oversight of lending practices, and a repeal of the recent bankruptcy law!

Stop The Squeeze
Weekly Tip

How to make them stop calling you? A debt expert asked dozens of creditors and collectors for the best way to make them stop making those menacing phone calls to people with debt. They all pretty much said the same thing - call them back. Be open. Deal with the problem and don't avoid it. If you call them, or call them back, and explain your situation, and work with them - they will work with you.

We know there's a problem and we're looking for solutions

The “Stop The Squeeze” campaign has been running for several months now, successfully raising awareness through its websites, newsletter and dozens of screenings & events around the country.

The most common response we get is: “I get that there’s a problem, so now what? Who can I talk to about my personal situation?”

We are now looking to expand the reach and impact of our campaign. Our goal is to partner with solution providers and refer our audience to them so that these individuals and families in need may get the support they need.

If you are a solution provider, please review our sponsorship opportunities to see if any of them suits you.

View Sponsorship Opportunities

We are inviting organizations to hold screenings, sponsor house parties and otherwise promote the film. Find out more about how to host a screening.

Let us know if you find these newsletters helpful and please pass them on to your email lists. For information on how to get involved, contact us here.

 
STOP THE SQUEEZE NEWSLETTER
In Debt We Trust director Danny Schechter reports on the film and campaign.

DURBAN, SOUTH AFRICA: South Africa has been one epicenter of change in the world. With the overthrow of apartheid and the emergence of its new economy, new problems have emerged. Political and racial apartheid may be gone but economic apartheid of a great gap between rich and poor continues to fester with vast disparities in wealth and growing intractable poverty. Debt is emerging as a leading issue in this country as it is throughout the African continent.

Even as Nelson Mandela and his movement overthrew the shackles of a racist system, they found themselves as a matter of first business forced to pay off the debt of the government they replaced. The all white government had borrowed widely to try to keep the system of racial domination in place, and now its former victims and new victors had to pay off their obligations. What an irony.

Today South Africa is fully integrated into the market system with sprawling suburbs and giant malls. Consumption is a religion here like it is in the United States. Many writers here like MMatshilo Motsei write about the need to reintegrate moral values in a capitalist society driven by a “What do I stand to gain?” mentality as opposed to one that asks “whats at stake for the country?” She quotes several leaders decrying the “growing consumerist and materialist nature” of the culture. In which the ultimate outcome is “a breakdown of moral values fuelled by greed, corruption and criminal activity.”

Sound familiar? I am here to show IN DEBT WE TRUST at the Durban International Film Festival which features independent productions from 77 countries. It was an honor to have my film here since many films document problems caused BY the United States government, not IN the United States.

The first screening was packed and held in a regular movie theater in - of all places - a casino with rows of ATM machines on every wall sucking the money out of the accounts of the endless streams of suckers that come there to get rich. In a way, it is a palace of debt of another kind.

I started the screening by asking the audience if they felt that IN DEBT WE TRUST was relevant there. And guess what? The audience almost unanimously said it was. Afterwards people raised questions and shared their experiences. The comments came from a Zulu woman who had lived in exile in the United States, a Muslim father concerned about materialism in his kids; a white activist who stressed the need for education at the primary level.
I came away feeling that we now need to promote the film internationally. (All ideas are welcome.)

I was told about a new consumer protection law and many organizations concerned about the issue that may want to show the film. What I saw was that this is a global problem and is slowly becoming a global issue. The organizers of the Festival did too, writing “the debt issue is an increasing global problem as more people buy into America’s false dreams.” I wonder: is it America that is to blame or is it our globalized and hyper-charged capitalist system controlled by a small number of financial institutions?

But what to do?

OTHER FILMS ON THE ISSUE

Another film at the festival, “What Would Jesus Buy?” is about the New York based Reverend Billy and his “Church of Stop Shopping” crusading against what they call the “Shopocalypse.”

Another movie about Ghana is called “Damned by Debt Relief” examines the failed promises of Debt Relief. As promoted by Live 8 and Western governments, so-called HIPC countries (Highly Indebted Poor Countries” had their debt canceled after the 2005 G8 Conference in Scotland. It was partly a response to a large march to “make poverty history” in which I took part. Two years later, because of this film by Ceri Dingle, I learned that there were so many strings attached that Ghanians could not decide their own priorities and were being dictated to by financial donors. This is an instructive lesson to those of us on the Stop The Squeeze website crusading for debt relief in America.

We have to try to avoid the manipulation that the people of many African countries are now suffering under. At the same time, Americans need to realize that people in other countries are experiencing economic pain too, often much worse than our own.

THE LATEST DEBT BLUES NEWS

Since I am traveling, I haven’t had a chance to follow all the financial news but this story from London’s Telegraph:

The United States faces a severe credit crunch as mounting losses on risky forms of debt catch up with the banks and force them to curb lending and call in existing loans, according to a report by Lombard Street Research.

The group said the fast-moving crisis at two Bear Stearns hedge funds had exposed the underlying rot in the US sub-prime mortgage market, and the vast nexus of collateralised debt obligations known as CDOs. "Excess liquidity in the global system will be slashed," it said.

"Banks' capital is about to be decimated, which will require calling in a swathe of loans. This is going to aggravate the US hard landing." Charles Dumas, the group's global strategist, said the failed auction
of assets seized from one of the Bear Stearns funds by Merrill Lynch had revealed the dark secret of the CDO debt market. The sale had to be called off after buyers took just $200m of the $850m mix.

""We don't know what the value of this debt is because the investment banks shut down the market in a cover-up so that nobody would know. There is $750bn of dubious paper out there in the form of CDOs held by banks that have a total capitalisation of $850bn."

“SUBPRIME CHERNOBYL”

US property writer Paul Muolo described the Bearn Stearns crisis as the “subprime Chernobyl”, saying the bank had created a “cone of silence”.

…“There isn’t a recovery about to happen,” said Ara Hovanian, head of the building group Hovanian Enterprise.

…Lombard Street said the Bear Stearns fiasco was the tip of the iceberg. The greatest risk lies in the “toxic tranches” of lower grade securities held by the banks.

MORE PAIN ON THE WAY

… The worst of the US property crisis has yet to hit since there is an overhang of $2,000bn of mortgages with adjustable rates which have yet to be reset. Many borrowers could see payments jump by half, or even
double.”

Imagine that, mortgage payments doubling. That means more foreclosures and economic troubles. Bear in mind that IN DEBT WE TRUST is subtitled “America Before The Bubble Bursts.”

What I realize here in South Africa is that it is not just America that is being affected. The IMF has warned of a global recession. What went up is coming down.

Brace Yourselves. But also join with us in promoting more public awareness of this problem. Help us get In Debt We Trust seen and discussed. We can’t say we weren’t warned. Now it's time to act.

Share your comments and ideas for spreading the word to: dissector@mediachannel.org


* * *

We are also looking for some donors to support our not-for-profit outreach and educational campaign with tax-deductible donations to:

The Global Center
575 8th Avenue, suite 2200
New York, New York 10018

If you have comments or suggestions, share them with me at dissector@mediachannel.org.

Danny Schechter
Editor Mediachannel.org
Director IN DEBT WE TRUST
InDebtWeTrust.com
212 246-0202x3006


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SPONSORED ARTICLE
suggest your own

Shane Buchanan writes about an interesting and innovative approach to dealing with the massive amount of pre-qualified credit card offers we all get in the mail:

It seems everyone these days has had to deal with all those credit card offers that clog our mailboxes and inevitably find their way to our desks, only to sit there for weeks or months until they finally meet their doom…The paper shredder.

Personally, I’m no longer interested in the “privileges” of being in debt, so this disposal ritual of their trash they keep sending me had always been a bit annoying to me.

One day I received one of these mailings very cleverly disguised as a bill. A large, overdue one at that. I had to actually open it and read the fine print to figure out it was just another bank eager to charge me money for money. At this point, I decided I’d had enough of this type of trickery but yet, I would be fair and resolve this conflict on even ground.

If they were going to send me their trash to dispose of, I would do the same.

Ever since then, when I receive their offerings, I mail them a little of my trash to dispose of as well. It just so happens that every envelope I open from these corporations, there’s another included inside, and it’s marked “postage-paid”. The ‘ole SASE. Heck, I can get rid of my unwanted trash for FREE!
I find them great for getting rid of my old coffee grounds, ashtray contents, apple cores, etc. I’ve even managed a full banana peel in one of the large ones once. A proud moment. Most of the time I do include a quick note of some kind, in case they need direction: “Please dispose of…” or “You have been pre-approved to discard this for me…”

Now, I never planned on this course of action to be some sort of experiment or to see if I could change the way billion dollar corporations run their advertising campaigns. It was just me being me.

As I look back now, I would have to say that the overall volume I now receive is probably half of what it once was, which is a bit peculiar. Of course it could just mean my credit score is now lower than my cats IQ. I don’t mind though, I found that it just costs too much money to buy that big number.

As I sit here writing this, another thought just crossed my mind.

I wonder what would happen if 20 million people did that same thing?

Could you imagine what that postage bill would be for a bunch of old banana peels?

-- Shane Buchanan