It's  all about perception management. The media is trying to dig up as much  dirt as they can on Dominique Strauss-Kahn so they can hang the man  before he ever sees the inside of a courthouse. It reminds me of the  Terry Schiavo case, where devoted-husband Michael was pegged as an  insensitive slimeball for carrying out the explicit wishes of his  brain-dead wife. Do you remember how the media conducted their  disgraceful 24 hour-a-day Blitzkrieg with the endless coverage of weepy  Christian fanatics on the front lawn of the hospital while Hannity,  Limbaugh and O' Reilly fired away with their sanctimonious claptrap?
And now you're telling me that that same media is just "doing their job?"
Give me a break.
Whoever  wants to nail IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn has really pulled out  all the stops.  Their agents have been rummaging through diaries, hotel  registries, phone records, yearbooks, yada, yada, yada. The UK Telegraph  even paid a visit to a high-priced DC knocking shop to get a little  dirt from Madame Botox; whatever it takes to make a randy banker look  like the South Hill rapist. And they're doing a pretty good job, too.  The cops have made sure that the "Great Seducer" always appears  handcuffed and dressed in a "pervie" raincoat with 3-days stubble before  they parade him in front of the media.  On Wednesday--more grist for  the mill--they released his mug-shot, an unflattering, deadpan photo  that makes him look like Jack-the-Ripper. Was that the intention?
And,  that's not the half of it.  The Big Money is exhuming every woman he's  ever had contact with for the last 30 years hoping they can glean some  damning tidbit of information that will convince the doubters that  beneath that sophisticated manner and $25,000 suit lurks a closet  Bluebeard ready to snap up your daughters and defile your wives.    Next  thing you know,  they'll be trotting out Paula Jones and Tanya Harding  claiming they spent a torrid night with the Marquis de Kahn in a  trailerpark outside Winamucca.
Where does it stop? Or does it  stop? Are we in for another year-long Clinton-Lewinski feeding frenzy  where everyday we hear more lurid details about the sexploits of people  who don't really interest us at all?
Aren't you at all curious  about who's behind this "lynching by media" scam?  This is an all-out,  no-holds-barred, steel-cage, take-down.  The big boys save that kind of  action for the worst offenders, that is, for the insiders who have  broken "Omerta" or wandered off the reservation.  I mean, they locked  him up on Riker's Island without bail, for Chrissake. What does that  tell you? Even Bernie Madoff was allowed to stay in his $7 million Park  Avenue penthouse while he waited for trial, but not Straus-Kahn. Oh, no.  He get's the royal treatment, even though he has no criminal record and  nothing but the sketchy accusations of a chambermaid against him, he's  carted off to the state slammer where he can mingle with hardened  criminals while dining on corn flakes and Wonder Bread.
You call that justice?
Can  I tell you what this is all about? It's about the dollar. That's right.  Strauss-Kahn was mounting an attack against the dollar and now the  wrath of the Empire has descended on him like ton-of-bricks.  Here's the  scoop from the UK Telegraph:
"Dominique Strauss-Kahn,  managing director of the International Monetary Fund, has called for a  new world currency that would challenge the dominance of the dollar and  protect against future financial instability.....
He suggested  adding emerging market countries' currencies, such as the yuan, to a  basket of currencies that the IMF administers could add stability to the  global system....Strauss-Kahn saw a greater role for the IMF's Special  Drawing Rights, (SDRs) which is currently composed of the dollar,  sterling, euro and yen, over time but said it will take a great deal of  international cooperation to make that work." ("International Monetary  Fund director Dominique Strauss-Kahn calls for new world currency", UK  Telegraph)
So, Strauss-Kahn finds himself in the same crowd as  Saddam Hussein and Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, right? You may recall  that Saddam switched  from dollars to euros about a year before the war.  12 months later Iraq was invaded, Saddam was hanged, and the dollar was  restored to power.  Gaddafi made a similar mistake when "he initiated a  movement to refuse the dollar and the euro, and called on Arab and  African nations to use a new currency instead, the gold dinar." ("Libya:  All About Oil, or All About Central Banking?" Ellen Brown, Op-Ed News)   Libya has since come under attack by US and NATO forces which have  armed a motley group of dissidents, malcontents and terrorists to depose  Gaddafi and reimpose dollar hegemony.
And now it's  Strauss-Kahn's turn to get torn to shreds. And for good reason. After  all, DSK actually poses a much greater threat to the dollar than either  Saddam or Gaddafi because he's in the perfect position to shape policy  and to persuade foreign heads of state that replacing the dollar is in  their best interests. And that is precisely what he was doing;  badmouthing the buck. Only he was too dense to figure out that the  dollar is the US Mafia's mealticket, the main way that shifty banksters  and corporate scalawags extort tribute from the poorest people on earth.  Strauss-Kahn was rocking the boat, and now he's going to pay.
Here's a clip from CNN Money:  
  "The International Monetary Fund issued a report Thursday on a possible  replacement for the dollar as the world's reserve currency.
The  IMF said Special Drawing Rights, or SDRs, could help stabilize the  global financial system....SDRs represent potential claims on the  currencies of IMF members.....The IMF typically lends countries funds  denominated in SDRs. While they are not a tangible currency, some  economists argue that SDRs could be used as a less volatile alternative  to the U.S. dollar.
"Over time, there may also be a role for the SDR to contribute to a more stable international monetary system," he said.
The  goal is to have a reserve asset for central banks that better reflects  the global economy since the dollar is vulnerable to swings in the  domestic economy and changes in U.S. policy.
In addition to  serving as a reserve currency, the IMF also proposed creating  SDR-denominated bonds, which could reduce central banks' dependence on  U.S. Treasuries. The Fund also suggested that certain assets, such as  oil and gold, which are traded in U.S. dollars, could be priced using  SDRs." ("IMF discusses dollar alternative", CNN Money)
Wow. So DSK was zeroing in on US Treasuries as well as the dollar? That's the whole shooting match.
So,  what type of progress was he making in converting USDs to SDRs?  According to Reuters: "The IMF general resources credit outstanding  increased to 65.5 billion Special Drawing Rights, or SDRs, ($104  billion) on May 12 from 6.0 billion SDRs at December 2007. The so-called  new arrangement to borrow, which came into effect on April 1, increased  the IMF's available lending resources to 269 billion SDRs on May 12  from 120 billion SDRs on March 31."  (http://in.reuters.com/article/2011/05/17/idINIndia-57083920110517?type=economicNews)
Not  a bad start for such an ambitious project. It looks like DSK's dream of  dethroning the dollar as the de facto "international currency" was  beginning to gain momentum.  But didn't he know that his actions would  anger some very powerful and well-connected people?
Well, if he  did; he never let on. In fact, he started mucking around in other stuff,  too, like when he intervened on behalf of Irish taxpayers, trying to  protect them at the expense of foreign bondholders. That's a big "No no"  in banker's world. They keep a list of "people who count", and  taxpayers are not on that list. Here's an excerpt from the Irish Times:
"Ireland’s  Last Stand began less shambolically than you might expect. The IMF,  which believes that lenders should pay for their stupidity before it has  to reach into its pocket, presented the Irish with a plan to haircut  €30 billion of unguaranteed bonds by two-thirds on average. (Irish  finance minister) Lenihan was overjoyed, according to a source who was  there, telling the IMF team: “You are Ireland’s salvation.”
The  deal was torpedoed from an unexpected direction. At a conference call  with the G7 finance ministers, the haircut was vetoed by US Treasury  Secretary Timothy Geithner who, as his payment of $13 billion from  government-owned AIG to Goldman Sachs showed, believes that bankers take  priority over taxpayers. The only one to speak up for the Irish was UK  chancellor George Osborne, but Geithner, as always, got his way. An  instructive, if painful, lesson in the extent of US soft power, and in  who our friends really are.
The negotiations went downhill from  there. On one side was the European Central Bank, unabashedly  representing Ireland’s creditors and insisting on full repayment of bank  bonds. On the other was the IMF, arguing that Irish taxpayers would be  doing well to balance their government’s books, let alone repay the  losses of private banks." ("Ireland's future depends on breaking free  from bailout", Morgan Kelly, Irish Times)
So, Strauss-Kahn stuck  up for Irish taxpayers over the banks, the bondholders, the ECB, and the  US Treasury. Naturally, that made him persona non grata among the  ruling throng.
And, there's more, too, because Strauss-Kahn's  vision was not limited to currency alone, but involved broad structural  changes to the IMF itself that would have reversed decades of neoliberal  policies.  DSK had settled on a new approach to policymaking; one that  would abandon the worst elements of globalization and put greater  emphasis on social cohesion, cooperation and multilateralism. Here's an  excerpt from the speech titled "Human Development and Wealth  Distribution" he gave in November 2010:
"....Adam Smith—one of  the founders of modern economics—recognized clearly that a poor  distribution of wealth could undermine the free market system, noting  that: “The disposition to admire, and almost to worship, the rich and  the powerful and…neglect persons of poor and mean condition…is the great  and most universal cause of the corruption of our moral sentiments.”
This  was over 250 years ago. In today’s world, these problems are magnified  under the lens of globalization....globalization also had a dark side.  Lurking behind it was a large and growing chasm between rich and  poor—especially within countries. An inequitable distribution of wealth  can wear down the social fabric. More unequal countries have worse  social indicators, a poorer human development record, and higher degrees  of economic insecurity and anxiety. In too many countries, inequality  increased and real wages stagnated—failing to keep up with  productivity—over the past few decades. Ominously, inequality in the  United States was back at its pre-Great Depression levels on the eve of  the crisis....
An immediate task is to end the scourge of  unemployment....Progressive taxation can also promote equity through  redistribution, and this should be encouraged....“Inequality is  corrosive” ....“it rots societies from within…it illustrates and  exacerbates the loss of social cohesion…the pathology of the age and the  greatest threat to the health of any democracy.” ("Human Development  and Wealth Distribution", Dominique Strauss-Kahn, IMF)
Can you  believe it? DSK is lecturing bankers about redistribution? That's not  what they want to hear. What they want to hear is why ripping off poor  people actually makes the world a better place.  DSK's speech just shows  that he wasn't drinking the Koolaid anymore. He was becoming a nuisance  and they needed to get rid of him.
Does that mean he didn't rape the woman who was in his hotel room?
Of course not. In fact, he could be guilty. But he deserves a fair trial, and someone's making damn sure he doesn't get one.