domingo, 17 de abril de 2011

Ricupero, a Islândia e Inside Job, abaixo [http://www.limitemagazine.com/2010/10/film-review-inside-job/]

São Paulo, domingo, 17 de abril de 2011



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RUBENS RICUPERO

O silêncio dos cordeiros


A Islândia acaba de dar lição de coragem moral ao mundo ao rejeitar pagar pela cobiça dos bancos

UM PEQUENO POVO, o da Islândia, acaba de dar pela segunda vez uma lição de coragem moral ao mundo. O eleitorado rejeitou de novo pagar pela insanidade e cobiça dos bancos, salvando a honra de milhões de seres humildes sacrificados pela mais iníqua das crises.
Muitas crises financeiras da história tiveram causas complexas, difíceis de individualizar ou controlar. Desta vez, não. Sobra documentação para provar que a crise atual foi provocada pelo comportamento temerário e imoral de financistas inescrupulosos. O que separa esses homens de trapaceiros como Madoff é um fio quase imperceptível e a cumplicidade de governos que faltaram ao dever de proteger o público.

Ler os relatórios do Congresso americano e os livros que esmiuçaram as práticas desses bancos, assistir a um documentário implacável como "Inside Job" são experiências que nos deixam perplexos. Como é possível falta de proporção tão grande entre a enormidade do mal cometido e a ausência de indignação moral, quase resignação, com que são recebidas as revelações?

É como se se tratasse de tsunami moral, de fatalidade da natureza, de um ato de Deus, como se diz em inglês. Contra isso nada haveria a fazer, a não ser obrigar cada um a dar uma cota de sangue para a reconstrução. Do quê? De sistema que já começou a repetir a iniquidade de bônus escandalosos a especuladores que ganham por ano 420 vezes mais que um trabalhador médio!

"O silêncio dos cordeiros: a estranha morte da América progressista" foi um ensaio de Tony Judt poucos anos antes de sua morte. Nele, um dos mais originais e perceptivos historiadores de nosso tempo tentava entender por que os intelectuais progressistas tinham enterrado a cabeça na areia ante a catastrófica política externa de George W. Bush.

Com igual pertinência, no entanto, o título se aplica a outra morte estranha: a da consciência moral ante a injustiça de obrigar vítimas da crise a pagar por seus custos.

O que chama a atenção na Islândia é seu caráter único. Em nenhum outro país devastado pela crise -Grécia, Portugal, Espanha, na Irlanda mesmo, onde o deficit público para cobrir os bancos chegou a 33% do PIB- se teve igual coragem.

A revolta calada e impotente de cordeiros levados ao matadouro pode induzir a comportamentos irracionais e perigosos, como já se começa a ver na ofensiva raivosa da direita americana. Na crise dos anos 30, o presidente Franklin D. Roosevelt conseguiu canalizar para objetivos reformistas e sociais as energias da população vitimada pela Depressão. Os medíocres governos europeus reagiram de modo convencional e acabaram quase todos tragados pela extrema direita.

October 5, 2010

Film Review: ‘Inside Job’

Inside Job is the scariest film I have ever seen. My stomach churned as image after image bounded on the screen explaining that the recent global financial crisis was not simply a result of a few years of rampant sub-prime lending. Actually, there was a 30-plus year long campaign by Wall Street and the U.S. Government officials (from both major parties) to deregulate financial industries and then create or support fraudulent and faulty get-rich-quick schemes that would leave them with fat pockets while Joe Public footed the bill. It felt like hearing that the bullies of old are winning, and BOOM, here’s another punch in the gut while they take your lunch money — oh, and retirement fund.

The film is written and directed by Charles Ferguson, who also directed the Oscar-nominated documentary No End in Sight about the occupation of Iraq. The film is narrated by Oscar winner Matt Damon. The documentary is quite dense, as a film of this nature is bound to be, but it does clearly point out a pattern of deregulation and the appointment of former financial board members or C-level employees to governmental regulatory bodies. Then, it outlines the collusion of banks, insurance agencies, financial ratings organizations and the government in an unstable system where the riskiest investments are rewarded with high payouts and no consequences. These practices are juxtaposed with post-depression policies that kept the U.S. economy solvent for 40 years.

The film does an excellent job of combining and distilling down the basic summary of the major issues that the disparate 24-hour news cycle, financial television networks, book publishers, financial magazines and news media simply cannot do — and, fortunately, it does it in less than two hours, so perhaps the general public will finally get it. The film intelligently outlines the players without condemning either major political party, because at the end of the day, everyone has a hand in it. The only emotional or subjective tones taken surface when interviewees are challenged on issues of conflict of interest or intentionally defrauding their clients.

The film also subtly points out that the crisis of 2008 can happen again. Fresh out of the “financial reforms” and bailouts of 2008 and 2009, the weary populous thirsts to hear that the worst is over. Government officials are providing just that with remarks that the economy is growing again. They point to congressional hearings where major financial leaders receive harsh tongue lashings as reform at work. One major element to ending this problem is educating future economists and stock brokers how not to repeat these mistakes. The opposite is true – our greatest educational institutions are churning out followers of this “rewritten economics.”

Larry Summers (Harvard), John Campbell (Harvard), Glenn Hubbard (Columbia), and Frederic Mishkin (Columbia) are just a few examples of major players in deregulation who teach students their version of economics without conscious; they earn most of their annual income from consultation and speaker’s fees with the world’s largest financial institutions. Couple that with the rising costs of education and the 20 million recently unemployed, underemployed or who’ve lost their savings, and we’ve got a growing legacy where only the richest children will be educated. The cycle begins again.

The major flaw of the film is that after 100 minutes of doom and gloom, a call to action entreats the audience to do something without any direction on what that “something” could be. Images of the Statue of Liberty and logic over the worthiness of the fight is a bold statement, but after showing the last four presidents, including current President Obama, continuing the practices of the status quo, it is unclear how “we the people” can do anything. One carrot the film offers is a call to investigate Wall Street’s use of prostitutes and drugs — often using company funds — being as powerful as convicting Al Capone for tax evasion. Then former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer is all but asked how effective that course of action would be. The irony is palpable. The website www.insidejobfilm.com is offered for those who want to answer that call.

The film is a must see for every living and breathing person who puts her or his money in a bank, borrows money in the form of student loans, mortgage loans, or credit cards, and for investors who are curious about their current and future investments. In short, we all need to see this film. Inside Job is an official selection of the New York Film Festival and will be in limited release in New York on October 8 and in Los Angeles on October 15.

Limité Rating: 5/5

Director: Charles Ferguson

Writer: Charles Ferguson

Cast: Matt Damon (Narrator), Charles Morris, Eliot Spitzer, Andrew Sheng, Raghuram Rajan, Frederic Mishkin, Robert Gnaizda

Genre: Documentary

Runtime: 108 min.

Release Date: 10/8 (New York), 10/15 (Los Angeles) (limited)

posted by: Stephanie Dawson