• Quick note - the problem with Youtube videos not embedding on the forum appears to have been fixed, thanks to ZiprHead. If you do still see problems let me know.

John Perkins: "Economic Hit Man"

boloboffin

Unregistered
Joined
Aug 10, 2006
Messages
4,986
Anybody ever heard of this guy?

In his EHM capacity, John traveled all over the world—to Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East—and was either a direct participant in or witness to some of the most dramatic events in modern history, including the Saudi Arabian Money-laundering Affair, the fall of the Shah of Iran, the assassination of Panama’s President Omar Torrijos, the subsequent invasion of Panama, and events leading up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

In 1980 Perkins founded Independent Power Systems, Inc (IPS), an alternative energy company. Under his leadership as CEO, IPS became an extremely successful firm in a high-risk business where most of his competitors failed. Many “coincidences” and favors from people in powerful positions helped make IPS an industry leader. John also served as a highly paid consultant to some of the corporations whose pockets he had previously helped to line—taking on this role partly in response to a series of not-so-veiled threats and lucrative payoffs.

After selling IPS in 1990, John became a champion for indigenous rights and environmental movements, working especially closely with Amazon tribes to help them preserve their rain forests. He wrote five books, published in many languages, about indigenous cultures, shamanism, ecology, and sustainability; taught at universities and learning centers on four continents; and founded and served on the board of directors of several leading nonprofit organizations.

One of the nonprofit organizations he founded and chaired, Dream Change Coalition (later simply Dream Change, or DC), became a model for inspiring people to attain their personal goals and, at the same time, to be more conscious of the impacts their lives have on others and on the planet, and for empowering them to transform their communities into more balanced and sustainable ones. DC has developed a following around the world and has empowered people to create organizations with similar missions in many countries.

During the 1990s and into the new millennium, John honored his vow of silence about his EHM life and continued to receive lucrative corporate consulting fees. He assuaged his guilt by applying much of the money he earned as a consultant to his nonprofit work. Arts & Entertainment television featured him in a special titled “Headhunters of the Amazon,” narrated by Leonard Nimoy. Italian Cosmopolitan ran a major article on his “Shapeshifting” workshops in Europe. TIME magazine selected Dream Change as one of the thirteen organizations in the world whose Web sites best reflected the ideals and goals of Earth Day.

Then came September 11, 2001. The terrible events of that day convinced John to drop the veil of secrecy around his life as an EHM, to ignore the threats and bribes, and to write Confessions of an Economic Hit Man. He believed he had a responsibility to share his insider knowledge about the role the U.S. government, multinational “aid” organizations, and corporations have played in bringing the world to a place where such an event could occur. He wanted to expose the fact that EHM are more ubiquitous today than ever before. He felt he owed this to his country, to his daughter, to all the people around the world who suffer because of the work he and his peers have done, and to himself. In this book, he describes the dangerous path his country is taking as it moves away from the original ideals of the American republic and into a quest for global empire.

I've put this into Business Skepticism, because his main books are about the operation of the global economy as he sees it, but he could just as easily be in the Paranormal section because of his views on shamanism and spirituality.

I've found a review of his Economic Hit Men over at the Washington Post, but I was wondering if anyone else had had any experience with him or his work.
 
I've put this into Business Skepticism, because his main books are about the operation of the global economy as he sees it, but he could just as easily be in the Paranormal section because of his views on shamanism and spirituality.

I've found a review of his Economic Hit Men over at the Washington Post, but I was wondering if anyone else had had any experience with him or his work.

Yes, I've heard of him. I've read one of his books (Economic Hit Man) but not the other one.

I'm leaving for home in ten minutes, so I don't have time to post an organized account of what I think of his work, but the short of it is that I find many of his assertions highly questionable.

He clearly makes a number of true claims - that developing countries are exploited by corporations and governments, that the US did some really crappy stuff in Latin America, that debt has been used to seize national resources, etc.

However, he also says some stuff that makes absolutely no sense. He misrepresents the complex global economics involved as a case of governments and corporations working together to loot the third world - an overly simplistic assertion, to put it mildly. He makes claims about working for the NSA/at the behest of the NSA/something having to do with the NSA that are apparently false, and nonsensical in any event (the NSA, as the informed reader may note, is a domestic signals intelligence organization, not generally in the business of foreign economic warfare). He claims to have "tricked" various experienced economists at the World Bank after having taken some econometrics courses, which is probably BS.

He generally fails to provide reliable sources for many of his more sensational claims, especially those that hint at organized collusion between the government and various companies (many of which, ironically, are now out of business - including the one Perkins worked for). The whole concept of the "economic hit men" adds a kind of organized, conspiratorial slant to the book, and seems designed to lead the reader to see organized effort where none exist.

It's too bad, because several of the issues raised (such as third world debt and less-than-savory US actions in various South American countries) are serious ones. Unforuntately, it seems like Perkins wants to put a kind of conspiracy theorist-esque spin on everything.

I'll do a rundown tomorrow or when I have time. I have a copy of the book here at work, so I'll glance through it and write up a better organized opinion.
 
There's an article on him in Wikipedia, and I find a lot to question in the facts (trained by a beautiful older woman to be an economic hit man? Rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrreally now, Mr. Bond....)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Perkins

His time at the Chas. T. Main firm is interesting... somehow he apparently managed (so he says) to Influence World Powers while working for a firm that would shortly collapse (in the 1980's) from mismanagement.

And here's an odd review that's just fascinating reading from someone who was one of his victims:
http://www.gregpalast.com/john-perkins-jerk-con-man-shill/

I don't see his "successful alternative energy company" name anywhere. There's a company of the same name in Canada, but the other hits on Independent Power Systems, Inc don't seem to produce wildly successful or viable businesses.

HOWEVER, as a For Real Anthropologist, I can comment on this from his other website:
We have entered a time prophesied by many cultures for shapeshifting into higher consciousness. Polynesian shamans shapeshift through oceans, Amazon warriors transform into anacondas, Andean birdpeople and Tibetan monks bilocate across mountains. These shamans have taught John Perkins that shapeshifting-the ability to alter form at will-can be used to create positive change.

In a word, "bollocks."

If they've been prophesizing this, then it's only in the past 15 years as an artifact of the tourist trade. The real shamans aren't into the tourist trade shamanism... so I suspect that IF he got anything, it's surface and not much else. Amazon warriors didn't shapeshift to anacondas (that was the shamans who did that) and the originalshamans who shifted to birds were from Central America and they didn't do it to fly across mountains (no purpose to doing something like that -- going places where their people couldn't go. The shamans try to address local problems relating to their own tribe.) but to interact with local wildlife.
 
The shapeshifing crap alone would lead me to really,really,question Perkins ' overall credibility.
Although he makes some good points about the US's often unsavoy operations in SOuth America,his obvious hatred for the Free Market system in general,and his advocacy of some vague,mystical form of Socialism (btw in Perkins' viewpoint the political Left can do no wrong) don't help his credibility with me.
 

Back
Top Bottom