Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Military Space News .




POLITICAL ECONOMY
Commentary: Wall Street Caligula
by Arnaud De Borchgrave
Washington (UPI) Dec 31, 2013


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

It is a brilliant movie and manna from heaven for the United States' enemies and assorted detractors round the globe.

Never mind that "The Wolf On Wall Street" is based on the story of Jordan Belfort, who built a gigantic scam in the late 1990s to dupe investors into buying worthless penny stocks, Wall Street will still be seen and portrayed as the depraved citadel of capitalism where the rich get richer and the poor poorer.

It's not the usual 90 minutes but three riveting hours of financial crime, money grubbing and sexual debauchery (public fornication and male masturbation when hookers aren't immediately at hand) that relegate "La Dolce Vita" and Roman orgy movies to family entertainment.

One reviewer (Matt Zoller Seitz) writes: "It's the world we live in. Men like Belfort represent us even as they're robbing us blind. They're America, and on some level we must be OK with them representing, otherwise would have seen reforms in the late '80s or '90s or '00s that made it harder for men like Belfort to amass a fortune, or at least quickly detected and harshly punished their sins."

After a mere two years in jail, Belfort now makes a living as a motivational speaker; his only regret seems to be getting caught. Following "Wolf" his speaking fees are bound to hit the high end of five figures.

The Cold War's Soviet propagandists in charge of portraying the United States as the fount of all evil never came close to depicting Wall Street as life on the lower circles of Dante's "Inferno." But Wall Street's "Wolf" does just that, dragging hundreds of fawning employees down to Dante's hell hole.

"The Wolf on Wall Street" is brilliantly directed by film legend Martin Scorsese whose star Leonardo DiCaprio delivers the most spectacular performance of a spectacular career.

That it should be released for the Christmas/New Year break ensured maximum attendance for the antithesis of family entertainment. It is bound to give fresh extremist energy to Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood fanatics and to al-Qaida's religious terrorists.

Sayyid Qutb was the second most influential early leader of the Muslim Brotherhood after Hassan Al-Banna, who had memorized the entire Koran at 14 and was assassinated at 43 in 1949.

That same year, Qutb, studying at Colorado State Teachers College in Greeley, Colo., developed a hatred for what he described as "materialistic greed, moral and spiritual degeneracy" of all things American.

Qutb was particularly disgusted by male and female students dancing cheek-to-cheek.

After three years in the United States, Qutb concluded democracy was materialistic greed and spiritual degeneracy -- "barbarian," he wrote.

His book, "The America I Have Seen," rejected democracy, nationalism and secularism.

"Every young man took the hand of a young woman," he said, "and these were the same youngsters who had just been singing hymns. Red and blue lights. With only a few white lamps, illuminated the dance floor. The room became a confusion of feet and legs; arms twisted around hips; lips met lips; chests pressed together."

Qutb became head of the Muslim Brotherhood's propaganda wing in 1952. His second book, "Islam and the Problem of Civilization," pronounced a sentence of death on the "synthetic (Western) civilization."

Today's Muslim Brotherhood fanatics aren't democrats. "One-man-one-vote-one-time" is their idea of obtaining and then keeping dictatorial religious power. They want absolute power to purge Islam of Western civilization.

Wall Street's "Wolf" can only reinforce the take-no-prisoners violence.

Qutb was in prison as a suspect in the plot to assassinate Gamal Abdel Nasser, which triggered outlawing the Muslim Brotherhood. After the third plot to kill him, Nasser ordered the hanging of three Brotherhood leaders, including Qutb.

For Islam, Qutb died a martyr.

The tribal practices of Wall Street's stock fraud gazillionaires merely reinforce the widespread view -- e.g., the new left-wing mayor of New York -- that the rich are getting richer and the poor poorer.

The much ballyhooed ace investors are in reality lowlife hooked on drugs. This will immediately play into the hands of the Muslim Brotherhood and swell the ranks of the United States' detractors the world over. It's not rocket science.

Wall Street's "Wolf" is still fascinating after the three hours it takes to see it. Anti-U.S. propagandists, a global tribe of disappointed former communists and socialists frustrated by democratic capitalism, will have a field day.

Most viewers around the world will assume this is present-day America, Hardly a day goes by without the Wall Street Journal and the Financial Times publishing yet another example of "Street" greed.

Last November, JP Morgan Chase was fined $13 billion (half the bank's annual income) that had been acquired illegally by the sale of palpably shoddy mortgage securities despite a sea of red flags.

It was the largest penalty a single financial institution has ever paid.

For the general public, there isn't much difference between fraudulent mortgages and fraudulent penny stocks.

For DiCaprio, the stunningly brilliant star of "The Wolf of Wall Street," the 3-hour saga is similar to the story of the Roman Emperor Caligula. In just 4 years, from AD 37-41, he bankrupted the empire on lavish sexual orgies.

Caligula had a touch of class.

.


Related Links
The Economy






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








POLITICAL ECONOMY
Hewlett-Packard says 5,000 more job cuts needed
New York (AFP) Dec 31, 2013
Struggling US computer giant Hewlett-Packard plans to slash 5,000 more jobs than previously announced because of a difficult business environment, a regulatory filing shows. HP will eliminate 34,000 positions by the end of its fiscal year next October, up from an earlier estimate of 29,000, said a document dated Monday and filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The California ... read more


POLITICAL ECONOMY
Satellite of Russia's early warning constellation burns down in atmosphere

Raytheon begins building 12th AN/TPY-2 ballistic missile defense radar

SBIRS Geo-2 Missile Defense Early Warning Satellite Certified For Operation

Patriot missiles demonstrate field readiness

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Israel, US carry out missile test during Kerry visit

Raytheon awarded $80.5 million from US Navy for Joint Standoff Weapon

Missiles fired from Lebanon trigger Israel shelling: army

Diehl-Raytheon Missile Systeme GmbH captures $30 million international Sidewinder missile sale

POLITICAL ECONOMY
US names drone testing sites

FAA announces locations for future drone testing sites

US drone strike kills three in northwest Pakistan

Pakistan to raise drone issue at UN Human Rights Council

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Rocket Rokot brings 3 Russian military-purpose satellites on orbit

US Air Force selects Raytheon's high-bandwidth satellite terminal for secure, protected communications

Military Communication Improved as 6th Boeing-built Wideband Satellite Enters Service

Radio Gateway Connects US and Allied Troops to a Common Mobile Network

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Raytheon awarded $12.9 million Cooperative Engagement Capability contract

Boeing Delivers Final Focused Lethality Munition to USAF

US Army Awards Raytheon contract for Excalibur Ib

Russia's Kalashnikov, designer of AK-47, dies

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Greek defence probe brings belated gains

Russia buries Kalashnikov in new 'pantheon' for heroes

Canada cancels Can$2.1 bln armored vehicle purchase

US general went on drunken bender in Russia: officials

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Japan scrambles jets against China plane

US urges Tokyo to improve ties with neighbours after shrine visit

A tale of two leaders in China and Japan

China plans joint military command system: state media

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Discovery at nanoscale has major implications for manufacturers

DNA motor 'walks' along nanotube, transports tiny particle

Cellulose nanocrystals possible 'green' wonder material

Microprinting leads to low-cost artificial cells




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement