You're
Wrong If You Think This Financial Insanity Can Go On Forever
James
Howard Kunstler
19
June, 2012
The
storyline behind the convulsions shaking the money centers of the
world is such a hopeless labyrinth of mathematical metaphysics
because abstraction unto infinity is the last refuge of those seeking
to evade reality. This is why individual human beings faced with
terrible choices go crazy, and it is true of societies and nations,
too.
Reality
is so boringly concrete. The facts just sit there implacably like
dull cement bollards in a roadway, waiting for impact with objects in
motion. These facts are as follows: The world is dead broke.
(By "world" I mean those places where the electricity is on
more than it is off.) The world spent all of its future capital to
stage an orgy of blow-out development and then the future arrived and
there was no money to run everything.
To
make matters worse, there are massive interest payments due on all
that money misspent. Nobody has the means to pay the interest. All
the activity around this fact is an Olympiad of money games that
amount to musical chairs and hot potato, signifying that 1) there is
not enough to go around, and 2) somebody has to end up stuck with a
problem.
The
orgy averred to above coincided with the last years of cheap and
abundant energy supplies to run the development. That's over and done
with, too, despite the strenuous efforts of wishful thinkers,
cornucopia propagandists, and corporate racketeers to pretend that
technological magic can make up for dwindling cheap supplies.
The
net effect of all this is that advanced societies all over the planet
have entered a comprehensive compressive contraction of activity and,
more ominous, of technological progress. The world can't cope with
contraction. For one thing, it wreaks havoc in the mechanisms of
capital formation. Capital can only be formed under conditions where
interest can be paid. That is, loans are only tenable when they can
be paid back with interest. Hence, the current insanity in world
financial markets and banks - the mad scramble to pretend that
interest payments will be made on bailouts tendered to nations that
cannot make interest payments.
The
assumption that this craziness can go on forever without consequence
is now dissolving in an international mood of frantic despair. The
spotlight for the moment is on Europe because that is where the games
of hot potato and musical chairs with the most players are underway.
The mutual entanglements over money tendered and interest owed are so
complex and abstruse that the number of moves needed to complete the
games seems infinite. But trafficking with infinity is itself one of
the universe's most hazardous ventures - it invariably ends in the
death of the adventurer. What's more, the trajectory to that sorry
ending accelerates fastest in the last moments of the venture. Hence,
expect Europe to melt down like an overheated nuclear reactor, with
an aftermath of deadly political goop oozing out to make parts of the
continent unable to support human life at levels we are currently
familiar with, i.e. civilized society.
That
is to say I'd expect a lot of internal disorder in the nations of
Europe in the decade to come, before there is even a chance of
anything that resembles war between nations breaking out - and by the
time war does occur, it may be fought with crude swords and helmets
forged out of the scavenged detritus of a bygone age.
The
current extravaganza across the Atlantic Ocean has taken the
spotlight off doings here in our own colossal floundering
confederation of quasi-sovereign American states. Our situation with
money spent and interest due - and the resulting impairment of
capital operations - only seem less dire in comparison. It's just
that we are playing a different game than hot potato and musical
chairs. Our game is more like the old American schoolyard game called
salugi (suh-looj-gee),
or "keep-away." The "big kids" (the one
percenters) like Jamie Dimon, Jon Corzine, Lloyd Blankfein, et al,
have stolen the baseball mitts of the dweeby little kids (the 99
percenters) so that most of the people in this country feel that they
cannot participate in the national pastime anymore. The big kids have
certain advantages, obviously, but sooner or later they run the risk
of being torn to pieces by the vengeful mob. Of course, that happens
when the game stops being simple keep-away but seems more and more a
matter of larceny -- "they stole our
mitts!"
When
that moment arrives anything might happen politically here in the
North America, from a corn-pone Nazi takeover of central government
to a complete dissolution of the republic into autonomous and even
hostile regions. Similar games and outcomes are possible in China,
Russia, and the nations of the Middle East. In fact, the tendency
world-wide in the face of accelerating compressive contraction will
be to break up large political units into smaller units. The main
question is: how much heat will that process of global fission
generate as we lurch into a world made by hand.
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