"The
Real Economy Is Somewhere Between The Toilet & A Rat Hole"
James
Howard Kunstler
Submitted
by James
H Kunstler of Kunstler.com,
7
July, 2014
With
lakes, swimming holes, rivers, and pools beckoning, I went to a
sporting goods chain store at the mall — where else? — seeking a
new bathing suit (pardon the quaint locution). The store was
curiously named Dick’s. All they had were clown trunks. By this I
mean a garment designed to hang somewhere around mid-calf, instantly
transforming a normally-proportioned adult male into a stock
slapstick character: the oafish man-child.
This
being a commodious warehouse-style store, there was rack upon rack of
different brands of bathing suits, all cut in the same clown style. I
chanced by one of the sparsely-deployed employees and inquired if
they had any swimming togs in a shorter cut.
“What
you see is alls we got,” he said.
Even
the Speedo brand had gone clown — except for the bikini brief,
which I wore back during 30 years of lap-swimming, but which I deemed
not quite okay for an elderly gentleman on the casual summer swim
scene. So I left Dick’s without a new suit, but not before having a
completely unsatisfying conversation with one of the managers.
“In
the old days,” I explained, “bathing suits were designed to
minimize the amount of cloth one dragged around in the water. These
clown trunks you sell not only make a person look ridiculous, but
they must be an awful drag in the water.”
“That’s
what they send us,” he said. “It’s alls we got.”
The
Fourth of July rolled in just in time to celebrate the disintegration
of Iraq following our eight-year, three trillion dollar campaign to
turn it into a suburb of Las Vegas. Me
and my girl went over to the local fireworks show, held on the
ballfield of a fraternal order lodge on the edge of town. The fire
department had hung up a gigantic American Flag — like, fifty feet
long! — off the erect ladder of their biggest truck, in case
anybody forgot what country they were in. Personally, I was wondering
what planet I was on. It
was a big crowd, and every male in it was dressed in a clown rig.
The
complete outfit, which has (oddly) not changed in quite a few years
(suggesting the tragic trajectory we’re on), includes the ambiguous
long-short pants, giant droopy T- shirt (four-year-olds have
proportionately short legs and long torsos), “Sluggo” style
stubble hair, sideways hat (or worn “cholo” style to the front ),
and boat-like shoes, garments preferably all black, decorated with
death-metal band logos. You
can see, perhaps, how it works against everything that might suggest
the phrase: “competent adult here.” Add a riot of
aggressive-looking tattoos in ninja blade and screaming skull motifs
and you get an additional message: “sociopathic menace, at your
service.” Finally, there is the question: just how much
self-medication is this individual on at the moment? I give you:
America’s young manhood.
Does
it seem crotchety to dwell on appearances? Sorry. The
public is definitely sending itself a message disporting itself as it
does in the raiment of clowning. Here in one of the “fly-over”
zones of America — 200 miles north of New York City — the
financial economy is mythical realm like Shangri-La and the real
economy is somewhere between the toilet and a rat hole. Under the
tyranny of chain stores, there really is no true local commercial
economy. The few jobs here are menial and nearly superfluous to the
automatic workings of the giant companies.
I
don’t have the statistics but I suspect a lot of the males around
here are on federal disability payments, and probably in the
psychological categories including “depression,” “learning
disabilities,” “ADHD, and so on.” In such a situation, wouldn’t
a person benefit from presenting himself as child-like, with a dash
of menace? And wouldn’t it be advantageous to look that way all of
the time, in case one was unexpectedly visited by a government
employee?
Down
in Brooklyn, a world away, the young men go about in their hipster
uniforms: Pee Wee Herman cut casuals. They’re still role-playing
“the smart kid in the class” even though they’ve been out of
class for a decade. Their computer dreams of IPO glory are formulated
with the tunnel-vision of science fair projects. Left out are the
realities of the greater unraveling.
Women
are not at the center of this story. Theirs is another story. Let
some woman tell it before I get to it.
Never
has a society entered an epochal transition with such unpreparedness.
Never
has a society appeared so childishly decadent.
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