Matt Welch | October 18, 2004
George Soros' friends and foes alike should have much to chew on in this quality Jane Mayer profile in last week's New Yorker. Bonus points for the extended Star Chamber intro, and the various evidence points for a creeping and cranky Messianism.
Previous Reason criticism of anti-Soros smears here and here; criticism of Soros' ideas (which, as Mayer poignantly illustrates, is all the old guy really wants to be remembered for) here and here.
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The best New Yorker story on Soros I've seen was a Talk piece on his 99-2000 New Year's Eve party, featuring painted, naked trapeze artists, a chamber orchestra, some unbelievably excessive culinary and artistic displays, and assorted other examples of decadence. I couldn't figure out whether they were sending up or celebrating the wretched excess (and I'm sure the ambiguity was intentional), but from the description I'd say it sure beat the shit out of the lousy Millennium party I ended up at.
I understand the libertarian defense of Soros' speculative attacks against the British pound, but it still seems to me the moral equivalent of yelling "Fire!" in a crowded theater, then taking any money you find in coats and purses that were left behind. There's some irony in this guy now presuming to tell me he knows what's best for society.
Papaya, from my understanding of the situation, I just don't agree at all. The British Central Bank was manipulating the pound's value. This type of centralized manipulation ALWAYS fails eventually... and the longer it takes to fail, the more damaging the result. He just hastened (and probably, thus, mitigated) the inevitable crash.
"Papaya, from my understanding of the situation, I just don't
agree at all. The British Central Bank was manipulating the pound's
value."
The situation was that a group of the european countries had
created a system call the European Currency Exchange Rate Mechanism
that attempted to keep all their currencies trading within certain
boundaries (trading bands) related to each other. At the time, the
German economy was outperforming that of the other nations and that
put a strain on the system. Britian was using it's foreign currency
reserves to buy up British pounds in the international currency
markets in an attempt to prop up the value. Soros entered into
short futures contracts against the pound. His move overwhelmed the
British governent's efforts and the value of the pound fell. Soros
closed out his short positions at a huge profit ($1 billion
dollars).
"This is the most important election of my lifetime. These
aren't normal times. The ends justify every legal means possible."
- Soros
That's OK, I guess, but one can buy a lot of law with that kind of
money - that's somewhat bothersome.
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