Keiser
Report: Debt Crack Banker Babies
In
this episode of the Keiser Report, Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert
discuss crack babies and debt crack banker babies.
In
the second half, Max talks to James Howard Kunstler, author of the
Long Emergency, about the US central bank pushing debt crack on an
unemployed and under-educated population and a media high on frack
crack - a high which makes the user see the oil wealth of Saudi
Arabia in America
Let's
All Go Medieval
James Howard Kunstler
27
May, 2013
That
voice! All a'quiver with the dread of self-knowledge that it is
confabulating a story, much like the "money" that his Open
Market Committee spins out of the increasingly carbonized air. His
words fill the vacuum of the collectively blank American mind, where
hopes and dreams spin like debris in an Oklahoma twister, only to
fall incoherently on a landscape of man-made ruins. If Federal
Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke were hooked up to a polygraph machine
when he made a public statement -- such as last Wednesday's testimony
before congress -- I bet the output graph would look something like a
seismic record of the 9.0 Fukushima megathrust, all fretful spikes
and dips.
When historians of
the future ponder our fate around their campfires, they will marvel
that this society invited such a temporizing little nerd to act as
its Oracle-in-Chief... that he made periodic visits to sit before the
poobahs of the land, and issued prophesies that nobody could really
understand -- and that the fate of the people in this land hung on
his muttered ambiguities. Let's face it: people need oracles when
they don't know what the fuck is going on.
What's going on is as
follows: America's central bank is trying to compensate for a
floundering economy that will never return to its prior state. The
economy is floundering because its scale and mode of operation are no
longer consistent with what reality offers in the way of available
resources at the right price, especially oil. So, rather than change
the scale and mode of operations in this economy -- that is, do
things differently -- we try to keep doing things the same by
flushing more "money" into the system, as though it were a
captive beast receiving nutriment.
One problem with that
is that the "money" is no longer money. That is, it's not
really an effective store of value, or pricing reference. It remains
for the moment a medium of exchange, but the persons exchanging it
grow suspicious of what this "money" purports to represent.
Does it stand for promises of future repayment? Hmmmm. Those promises
are looking sketchy lately, especially since this is an economy that
does not generate enough new real wealth to make the interest
payments, let alone manage to pay back the principal. Is it a claim
on future work? Some are afraid that the future work deliverable will
be less than they expect. Whatever else it is, does it find respect
in other societies where different money is used?
These questions are
making a lot of people nervous these days. Of course, a time will
come when all matters concerning this particular incarnation of money
will be seen as strictly ceremonial. Ben Bernanke, we will
understand, was not stating facts before congress but rather singing
a song, or rather chanting in a low, repetitive, tedious way in the
primal manner of a frightened person trying to comfort himself with
reassuring sound -- that is, prayer. You'd be surprised how well that
goes over in a place like congress, which is stuffed with prayerful
characters, people who exist in a religious delirium. These are not
the people who are nervous, by the way. The nervous tend to be more
secular, and inhabit the margins of life where unconventional
thinking thrives weedlike at a remove from all the mental toxicity at
the center.
These nervous ones
are looking ever more closely these days at the distant nation of
Japan, where an interesting scenario is playing out: the last days of
a giant industrial-technocratic economy. The story there is actually
pretty simple if you peel away the quasi-metaphysical bullshit it
comes wrapped in these days from astrologasters like John Mauldin and
Paul Krugman, viz. Japan has no fossil fuel resources. Zip. You can't
run their kind of economy without the stuff. And they can't. Japan is
crapping out, as they say in Las Vegas. Tilt! Game over. As this
happens, Japan issues a lot of distracting financial noise that
involves evermore "creation" of their own "money,"
and the knock-on effects of that, but it's all just noise. Japan's
only good choice is to go medieval, that is, to give up on the rather
hopeless 150-year-long project of being an industrial-technocratic
modern super-state, and go back to being an island of a beautiful
artistic hand-made culture. I call that "going medieval,"
though you could quibble as to whether that's the best word for it,
since I'm not talking about cathedrals or crusades.
One of Japan's other
choices is to "go mad-dog," something they actually tried
back in the mid-20th century. It didn't work out too well then. The
Japanese leadership is making noises about "re-arming," and
a nice state of conflict is already simmering between them and their
age old rivals-victims next door in China, a country that has lately
enjoyed the upper hand in the industrial-techno racket (though it
will be faced with the same choices as Japan not too many years
hence). Do the Japanese start another world war on their side of the
planet? Let's hope not. Let's hope they lay down their robotics and
their nuclear reactors gently and go back to making netsuke. Just
give it up and do things differently -- after all, that's what all
the human beings on the planet have to do now.
For what it's worth,
Japan's stock market has tanked a hearty 14 percent in the past five
days, if that means anything, and I'm not sure it does considering
the aforesaid "noise," but there you have it. Our own stock
markets are mercifully closed this holiday, having given American
worriers an extra day of anxious reflection on the state of things
out there. My own opinion is that we're all going medieval sooner
rather than later and the big remaining question is how much of a
mess we'll make on the journey to it.
Also, personally, I
don't like these manufactured holidays when the landscape is
cluttered with morons enjoying motorsports. I'll be working today,
and grateful when it blows over.
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