Let’s
You and Him Fight
James
Howard Kunstler
3
March, 2014
So,
now we are threatening to start World War Three because Russia is
trying to control the chaos in a failed state on its border — a
state that our own government spooks provoked into failure? The last
time I checked, there was a list of countries that the USA had sent
troops, armed ships, and aircraft into recently, and for reasons
similar to Russia’s in Crimea: the former Yugoslavia, Somalia,
Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, none of them even anywhere close to
American soil. I don’t remember Russia threatening confrontations
with the USA over these adventures.
The
phones at the White House and the congressional offices ought to be
ringing off the hook with angry US citizens objecting to the
posturing of our elected officials. There ought to be crowds with
bobbing placards in Farragut Square reminding the occupant of 1400
Pennsylvania Avenue how ridiculous this makes us look.
The
saber-rattlers at The New York Times were sounding like the promoters
of a World Wrestling Federation stunt Monday morning when they said
in a Page One story:
“The
Russian occupation of Crimea has challenged Mr. Obama as has no other
international crisis, and at its heart, the advice seemed to pose the
same question: Is Mr. Obama tough enough to take on the former K.G.B.
colonel in the Kremlin?”
Are
they out of their chicken-hawk minds over there? It sounds like a
ploy out of the old Eric Berne playbook: Let’s You and Him Fight.
What the USA and its European factotums ought to do is mind their own
business and stop issuing idle threats. They set the scene for the
Ukrainian melt-down by trying to tilt the government their way,
financing a pro-Euroland revolt, only to see their sponsored proxy
dissidents give way to a claque of armed neo-Nazis, whose first
official act was to outlaw the use of the Russian language in a
country with millions of long-established Russian-speakers. This is
apart, of course, from the fact Ukraine had been until very recently
a province of Russia’s former Soviet empire.
Secretary
of State John Kerry — a haircut in search of a brain — is winging
to Kiev tomorrow to pretend that the USA has a direct interest in
what happens there. Since US behavior is so patently hypocritical, it
raises the pretty basic question: what are our motives? I don’t
think they amount to anything more than international grandstanding —
based on the delusion that we have the power and the right to control
everything on the planet, which is based, in turn, on our current
mood of extreme insecurity as our own ongoing spate of bad choices
sets the table for a banquet of consequences.
America
can’t even manage its own affairs. We ignore our own gathering
energy crisis, telling ourselves the fairy tale that shale oil will
allow us to keep driving to WalMart forever. We paper over all of our
financial degeneracy and wink at financial criminals. Our
infrastructure is falling apart. We’re constructing an edifice of
surveillance and social control that would make the late Dr. Joseph
Goebbels turn green in his grave with envy while we squander our
dwindling political capital on stupid gender confusion battles.
The
Russians, on the other hand, have every right to protect their
interests along their own border, to protect the persons and property
of Russian-speaking Ukrainians who, not long ago, were citizens of a
greater Russia, to discourage neo-Nazi activity in their back-yard,
and most of all to try to stabilize a region that has little history
and experience with independence. They also have to contend with the
bankruptcy of Ukraine, which may be the principal cause of its
current crack-up. Ukraine is deep in hock to Russia, but also to a
network of Western banks, and it remains to be seen whether the
failure of these linked obligations will lead to contagion throughout
the global financial system. It only takes one additional falling
snowflake to push a snow-field into criticality.
Welcome
to the era of failed states. We’ve already seen plenty of action
around the world and we’re going to see more as resource and
capital scarcities drive down standards of living and lower the trust
horizon. The world is not going in the direction that Tom Friedman
and the globalists thought. Anything organized at the giant scale is
now in trouble, nation-states in particular. The USA is not immune
to this trend, whatever we imagine about ourselves for now.
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