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Please see the new documentary film by Danny Schector titled In Debt We Trust. This fascinating look into the credit and debit industry shows how the
mall replaced the factory as America's dominant economic engine and how
big banks and credit card companies buy our Congress and drive us into
what a former major bank economist calls modern serfdom. Americans and our government owe trillions in
consumer debt and the national debt, a large amount of it to big banks and
billions to Communist China.
A CALL TO ACTION: Economics is
called "the dismal science," yet this film is anything but; it exposes
practices we can all relate to because they effect us all, adds Schechter.
The film also talks about how we can fight back.
Deeper than the news, fast-paced, musically
charged and deeply informative, In Debt We Trust is a call
to action: film-making with an angry edge and a broad well-reported scope.
Director Danny Schechter's Personal
Statement
IN DEBT WE TRUST started out to be a film about what I thought
were other people's problems. I came to realize how deeply they affect me
as well. The experience of making this film has led me to understand how
many ways policies and practices are tied to a growing national debt
burden and have an impact on my personal finances.
Even as a former network journalist and long-time investigative
reporter, I was shocked and outraged when I started probing the roots of
these issues.
This is a problem involving millions of people and billions of dollars
yet it is downplayed and rarely discussed in all of its disastrous
dimensions. It's about a growing inequality that some experts fear will
lead to a new 21st century serfdom. It's about the transfer of wealth from
working people into the vaults and accounts of a relatively small number
of financial institutions and real estate interests. The lenders are
profiting by charging usurious rates and doing so legally, in part,
because they have mastered the art and science of marketing products and
then manipulating media, politicians, and political institutions.

Most. often, credit card abuses are examined in terms of
individuals and consumer scams like identity theft. My film started with
that approach but evolved into a much deeper look at what's been called
"financialization." This is an institutional problem involving a growing
debt-and- credit complex that threatens the very fabric of our nation, not
just in terms of a possible financial crash in the future but how it is
impinging upon our lives and livelihoods right now.
Over the course of my career, I have made 20 films and won many awards
and some recognition. Most have been shown at top festivals and aired on
television. I am attached to all of them but INDEBT WE TRUST is different
because it doesn't just document suffering, it warns of the implications
of consequences that will affect all of us. Perhaps that's why this issue
cuts across party and partisan lines in a way that can potentially unite a
nation. Perhaps that's why mostly everyone I've told about the film tells
me how they've come to be personally ensnared in the debt trap.
My hope is that this film will spark a national response-a demand for
economic fairness and justice, regulation in the public interest, along
with a heightened sense of personal responsibility by consumers seduced by
the false promise of "free money."
What's been called the "democratization of credit" has led to the
democratization of dependency. It has created an unsustainable society,
trapping millions in a financial hole they can't escape from and often do
not understand.
Over the past 25 years, America has moved from a society based
on production to a nation driven by consumption; from a country that once
shared its resources with the world to one deeply in debt to foreign banks
and countries-to the tune of trillions of dollars. As the growing number
of bankruptcies and foreclosures testifies, our national debt is mirrored
by a skyrocketing consumer debt, with an increasing number of individuals
and families unable to cope.
Says former Georgia Governor Roy Barnes, "It is shocking to me that
intelligent people, educated people, have not taken time to think about
this. We cannot sustain over an extended period of time these high levels
of debt. . . particularly at high rates of interest. Because . . . what
will happen is that whenever it comes to an end . . . and there is an end
to the amount of credit . . . in other words, when it gets so leveraged,
it will create an economic crisis so deep that it will threaten us as a
nation . . . And so we have this . . . this real threat to the way we are
as a people. And nobody seems to be concerned about it."
IN DEBT WE TRUST is concerned about it. My focus is on what to do
"before the bubble bursts." First, we need to put this issue on the
national agenda. That's the hope behind the film.
Working with the country's leading credit card expert and
critic, Dr. Robert Manning, of Rochester Institute of Technology, I intend
to use the film as part of an educational campaign to help individuals
improve their financial planning and encourage organizations to get
involved in a campaign for change.
Over the years, documentaries have helped prompt a national discourse
on many issues. That's my hope for IN DEBT WE TRUST, which we have tried to
make compelling viewing in a spirited style. Many at the TV news networks
whom I have worked with over the years say you can't cover complex issues,
especially on economic questions, because "the dismal science" is boring
and a turn-off.
My film is out to prove them wrong.
The American public needs to know why debt has become "the enemy," in
the words of one of the people we interviewed. All Americans need to know
what we can do about it."
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