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Page added on September 19, 2016

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Kunstler: Slowly, Then All at Once

The staggering incoherence of the election campaign only mirrors the shocking incapacity of the American public, from top to bottom, to process the tendings of our time. The chief tending is permanent worldwide economic contraction. Having hit the resource wall, especially of affordable oil, the global techno-industrial economy has sucked a valve in its engine.

For sure there are ways for human beings to inhabit this planet, perhaps in a civilized mode, but not at the gigantic scale of the current economic regime. The fate of this order has nothing to do with our wishes or preferences. It’s going down whether we like it or not because it was such a violent anomaly in world history and the salient question is: how do we manage our journey to a new disposition of things. Neither Trump or Clinton show that they have a clue about the situation.

The quandary I describe is often labeled the end of growth. The semantic impact of this phrase tends to paralyze even well-educated minds, most particularly the eminent econ professors, the Yale lawyers-turned-politicos, the Wall Street Journal editors, the corporate poobahs of the “C-Suites,” the hedge fund maverick-geniuses, and the bureaucratic errand boys (and girls) of Washington. In the absence of this “growth,” as defined by the employment and productivity statistics extruded like poisoned bratwursts from the sausage grinders of government agencies, this elite can see only the yawning abyss. The poverty of imagination among our elites is really something to behold.

As is usually the case with troubled, over-ripe societies, these elites have begun to resort to magic to prop up failing living arrangements. This is why the Federal Reserve, once an obscure institution deep in the background of normal life, has come downstage front and center, holding the rest of us literally spellbound with its incantations against the intractable ravages of debt deflation. (For a brilliant gloss on this phenomenon, read Ben Hunt’s essay “Magical thinking” at the Epsilon Theory website.)

One way out of this quandary would be to substitute the word “activity” for “growth.” A society of human beings can choose different activities that would produce different effects than the techno-industrial model of behavior. They can organize ten-acre farms instead of cell phone game app companies. They can do physical labor instead of watching television. They can build compact walkable towns instead of suburban wastelands (probably even out of the salvaged detritus of those wastelands). They can put on plays, concerts, sing-alongs, and puppet shows instead of Super Bowl halftime shows and Internet porn videos. They can make things of quality by hand instead of stamping out a million things guaranteed to fall apart next week. None of these alt-activities would be classifiable as “growth” in the current mode. In fact, they are consistent with the reality of contraction. And they could produce a workable and satisfying living arrangement.

The rackets and swindles unleashed in our futile quest to keep up appearances have disabled the financial operating system that the regime depends on. It’s all an illusion sustained by accounting fraud to conceal promises that won’t be kept. All the mighty efforts of central bank authorities to borrow “wealth” from the future in the form of “money” — to “paper over” the absence of growth — will not conceal the impossibility of paying that borrowed money back. The future’s revenge for these empty promises will be the disclosure that the supposed wealth is not really there — especially as represented in currencies, stock shares, bonds, and other ephemeral “instruments” designed to be storage vehicles for wealth. The stocks are not worth what they pretend. The bonds will never be paid off. The currencies will not store value. How did this happen? Slowly, then all at once.

We’re on a collision course with these stark realities. They are coinciding with the sickening vectors of national politics in a great wave of latent consequences built up by the sheer inertia of the scale at which we have been doing things. Trump, convinced of his own brilliance, knows nothing, and wears his incoherence like a medal of honor. Clinton literally personifies the horror of these coiled consequences waiting to spring — and the pretense that everything will continue to be okay with her in the White House (not). When these two gargoyle combatants meet in the debate arena a week from now, you will hear nothing about the journey we’re on to a different way of life.

But there is a clear synergy between the mismanagement of our money and the mismanagement of our politics. They have the ability to amplify each other’s disorders. The awful vibe from this depraved election might be enough to bring down markets and banks. The markets and banks are unstable enough to affect the election.

In history, elites commonly fail spectacularly. Ask yourself: how could these two ancient institutions, the Democratic and Republican parties, cough up such human hairballs? And having done so, do they deserve to continue to exist? And if they go up in a vapor, along with the public’s incomes and savings, what happens next?

Enter the generals.

Kunstler



53 Comments on "Kunstler: Slowly, Then All at Once"

  1. makati1 on Thu, 22nd Sep 2016 9:07 pm 

    “What if I could prove to every American family their children were being brainwashed at every level of education? What if unwitting mothers and fathers worked the live-long-day to try and provide a better future for their kids, only to see them indoctrinated into an unsustainable system?”

    http://journal-neo.org/2016/09/22/on-america-s-manufactured-ideals/

    Even the mind is not free in America.

  2. Anonymous on Thu, 22nd Sep 2016 9:26 pm 

    Yes, fraud, and deception are rampant here in the anything-goes-free-world order, aren’t they cloggie? An amerikan cant even park his fat, suck down and HFCS ‘beer’ and cheetos, w/o his beloved TV sucking down way more power than that pimply faced teenaged salesman @ best buy told him it would.

    I read the that article, and I was interested to note some manufacturers claimed they would offer updates to warn users when energy saving features were being turned off.

    Two problems with this.

    One, it assumes amerikans will are smart enough, or motivated enough to actually upgrade their TVs firmware. (Which requires either an active hookup to the web, OR a USB flash drive). Remember, well over 50% of the serfs in the empire think the earth is flat, are unsure if the sun that revolves around the earth, or vice-versa, and that many think ghosts are real.

    Even if they do(put warnings in), it of course, is not all certain (most)end users will actually modify their viewing settings in a way that reduces power consumption. Nothing whatsoever says anything like this would necessarily occur at all.

    Two. It would be a trivial matter to put software into TVs, that will simply display power consumption in real time. Computers have temp and power monitoring on things like video cards, motherboards etc. Stick a button on remote, or put in the TVs menu > IE Display Power Consumption.-in real time. (actual consumption, not some ‘guestimate programmed into the software).

    Problem solved right? Well, no. The capitalist system thrives on waste, and abhors efficiency, even though they always claim the opposite. Built in power monitoring would end any ambiguity over-night. Thus, such a thing would only be implemented if forced. And even if were to happen, they would likely just game the power monitor or its software, like VW did LOLOL.

  3. onlooker on Fri, 23rd Sep 2016 4:15 am 

    Just as the Capitalist system thrives on corruption and monopolistic tendencies unlike what they have probably taught many in schools

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