GlobalCorp.
I
AM NOT A POLITICIAN
THE
FIRE IS NO LONGER ON ITS WAY
IT HAS BEGUN
IT HAS BEGUN
An
Important Announcement
by
Michael
C. Ruppert
http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/ww3/031005_globalcorp.shtml
Sometimes
I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are
putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it. -
Mark Twain
(special thanks to Bill Tamblyn for finding this quote.)
(special thanks to Bill Tamblyn for finding this quote.)
March
10, 2005, PST 0900 (FTW) -- I am
not a politician. I will never be a politician.
With
this article both I and the FTW family
will never again think in terms of whom we might offend or what
bridges we need to build, burn or fireproof. As Don Henley wrote in a
song of profound spiritual gratitude, "Sometimes you get your
best light from a burning bridge." I'm going to burn a few with
this essay.
Peak
Oil is no longer on the way. It is here. Forget for a moment whether
or not global oil production has actually begun (see below) its
hopelessly irreversible decline. We will not know that for certain
until sometime after it happens. The political fact, however, is that
global inertia in response to Peak has driven our species, all of it,
past the point of no return. There is no changing course for us.
We
have committed to a path of bloody destruction that can no longer be
postponed or evaded. Energy investment banker Matthew Simmons - long
a smoke alarm for Peak Oil - has said repeatedly, "The problem
is that the world has no Plan B." Simmons is right.
Seeing
clearly that there is no Plan B, it is now also too late to come up
with a Plan C or Plan D. What I had hoped to accomplish with Crossing
the Rubicon is
now a missed opportunity. Yet the map so many of us drew
in Rubicon remains
astonishingly accurate and unaltered. It may prove to be an
indispensable survival tool in and of itself very shortly.
Politicians
come in varieties. They are in business. They are sometimes
activists. Many pose as journalists. Some are economists and
academics. They work in think tanks and manage the editorial
decisions of major press outlets. Many average citizens behave and
think like politicians because they accept as their primary mantras:
"Don't rock the boat," and "Don't offend anyone."
Politicians are more deadly than any weapon. They see their primary
mission as building consensus to improve outward appearances.
For
a politician the questions are always: "How can I superficially
address an immediate problem without going to its root causes? What
is the least amount of work I have to do to make this go away while
I'm on duty? How can I deal with this problem without burning
bridges?" Lately, economists, business and religious leaders,
and everyday people have been behaving more like politicians than
politicians themselves. Much like the incestuous, sealed-off, fetid
Bush administration, the politicians are going to other politicians
to make policy - when they dare even to do that. Refusing to make
policy is also a policy.
In
fact, most people have become politicians and it may well be that
political correctness (including the fear of speaking out) - to
whatever degree it is observed - will be the sword on which we now
(not tomorrow) impale ourselves.
Bridges
are burning all around us; bridges to responses that might have
mitigated the already brutal (and just beginning) ravages of Peak
Oil; bridges to reduce the likelihood of war and famine; bridges to
avoid our selectively chosen suicide; bridges to change at least a
part of energy infrastructure and consumption; bridges to becoming
something better than we are or have been; bridges to nonviolence.
Those bridges are effectively one.
Stan
Goff was right when he warned activists that "the gun," in
all its forms, would be brought out before this was over. It was
inevitable. False flag terror attacks, a fake war on terrorism,
routine political murders, stolen elections, and Republican traffic
in pedophilia remain causes for outrage and defiance, but they can no
longer be useful avenues to justice: the legal system is broken. It's
broken for reasons far greater than what used to be called
corruption. And it cannot be fixed when a world war and unprecedented
economic and ecological collapse are smashing down every wall between
humanity and the unthinkable.
Politicians
are creatures of economics. Their success has always been measured
first and only by what economic benefits they returned to
constituents or themselves. The victim has been the future. We have
all told the politicians what we really want them to do for us while
speaking platitudes from the other side of our mouths. As I have said
for so many years, we are all prisoners of the way money works. Until
we change that, any solution is only temporal and illusory. No
electoral change is possible now that elections all over the world
have sworn their allegiance to privately owned software programs and
obvious manipulation.
FOR
THOSE WHO CAN READ THE MAP
As
the evidence grows stronger that we are at Peak now (or very close to
it), there is a distinct correlation between oil price hikes and
military budget increases, weapons deployment, warfare and covert
operations around the world. Economists don't consider such things so
they don't report on them. Their orthodoxy scorns any integrated view
of world developments outside their own discipline.
For
long-time readers of FTW I
need do little more than discuss a few recent developments to put
this in perspective. For the rest I will provide you with some of a
great many available dots you can connect if you care to. Most people
find themselves unable to tolerate the sight of the pattern which the
connected dots reveal. After this,FTW will
no longer try to detail the dots of Peak Oil. What we have published
over the last seven years is proof enough. We had it right. I refuse
to go over it again. Those who get it now, get it. Those who do not
may possibly be beyond saving, because their own choices have
deprived them of critical months of preparation for the crisis -
especially since most of this "preparation" is
psychological in nature. It is very hard and very painful to get
one's mind to accept this reality.
Nature
does not grant time out.
THE
CIA
I
recently had a conversation with someone who spent 17 years in the
CIA's Directorate of Operations. Thinking of the purge and power
shift that has - over the course of the last nine months - decimated
the Central Intelligence Agency (long my Bête Noir) and shifted much
of its power to the Pentagon, I asked the following question.
"Look,
the agency does many things in many roles from raw intelligence
gathering, to economic warfare, to satellite recon, to paramilitary
operations requiring cover and deniability, to drug smuggling. But
since its inception it was always focused in large part on medium and
long-term intelligence gathering and covert operations through the
costly, patient, expensive means of placing NOCs (non-official
covers) or assets in missions where it might take five, ten or
fifteen years to bear fruit. These programs were always centered on
"what if" contingencies which inherently implied that
multiple outcomes were possible; that there were alternative futures
to be influenced and shaped.
"Battlefield
intelligence is a different critter. It presupposes that there is
nothing more important than the battle that has been joined at this
moment. If the battle is not won, there are no future choices. Hence
nothing matters other than the war that is being fought today. No
Yaltas or Potsdams; no future deep cover moles will be needed.
"Every
country in the world is betting everything it has on this one hand
knowing that after 2007 or 2008 the game ends. The map of the future
after that is unknowable and, to large extent, irrelevant. That's why
Rumsfeld has won the battle to control American intelligence
operations and why the new National Intelligence Director John
Negroponte is getting the job.
"Is
that right?"
Without
the slightest hesitation the former CIA employee answered, "Yes."
It
is the ultimate testimony to the madness of Donald Rumsfeld, Paul
Wolfowitz and Dick Cheney that there are no more tomorrows left to
fix anything. Since 9/11, and especially since a second presidential
election was stolen four months ago, the setting for a real
Armageddon has been locked in place. It may well have been for years
before that.
GASOLINE
PRICES
A
recent USA
TODAY story,
giving us the new word "Petronoia," warned that gasoline
prices could jump by 25 cents per gallon within the next few days.
That increase, it said, would take $90 million per day out of a
consumer economy that relies on profligate spending to sustain
already bursting bubbles. How are we getting the money to sustain
these bubbles? We are, according to Bill Fleckenstein of MSN,
using our houses as ATMs just to keep up, even as the housing bubble
has already begun to burst.1 Our paychecks certainly aren't
increasing.
OIL
PRICES
Oil
has topped $54 a barrel. It's gone up more than 25% in less than
three months and fifty per cent over the last year; 400% since 1999.
This amid strong signs that global oil production may have already
peaked, as declines around the world are not being offset by new
production. New fields may come online but the respite will be very
short-lived. There may be a few "mega" projects (about a
six-day supply for the planet in each) which may produce momentary
price declines but the trend is irreversible. Official bodies like
the International Energy Administration (IEA) are openly wishing that
demand growth might slow in 2005, when actual figures already prove
this wish utterly fanciful. China's oil demand is expected to grow by
33% this year. Industrialized and developing nations are expanding
their economies as fast as possible to generate cash and liquidity as
a means of securing more oil.
The
vicious cycle is in full swing. And yet, according to economist
Andrew McKillop…
We
then move on to actual declines in production. For the majority of
non-OPEC producers - (in fact nearly all except Russia and some
Central Asian producers) rates of decline are stubbornly high,
despite vaunted technology improvements…
One
of the biggest problems facing the IEA [a
UN sponsored agency], the
EIA [a
US government agency] and
a host of analysts and 'experts' who claim that 'high prices cut
demand', either directly or through damping oil economic growth, is
that this does not happen in the real world. Since early 1999 oil
prices have risen about 400%. Oil demand growth in 2004 at nearly 4%
was the highest in 25 years. In each year since 1999 world oil demand
growth has been higher than the previous year - as prices rise.2
McKillop's
analysis, which essentially says that rising oil prices are either
good or of no consequence, falls way short for two reasons. Energy
investment banker Matt Simmons a year ago in Berlin stated that he
saw the actual point at which price would curb demand at around $180
per barrel. The consumers are bearing most of the costs of these
increases. Is this the consumers' choice, or is it simply the point
beyond which "the American way of life" will become
impossible, regardless of how many incremental cuts people accept?
Go
ahead; try to choose to use less oil of your own volition. What
reductions are available to you are minimal because the world in
which you must make your house payments, feed your family, drive to
work and pay your bills is leaving you little choice but to consume
more and get less for your money. Only at around $180 a barrel will
the consumer no longer be able to subsidize the corporate and
economic superstructure on his/her shoulders. This is essentially
what Simmons was saying.
The
poor will be the first to suffer and they will suffer the most. They
will be the first to die.
Secondly,
McKillop assumes a "trickle down" benefit to consumers from
high prices. International capital flows and your own checkbook
should be enough to dispel this belief. Need I say more? Didn't we
hear enough about trickle-down from Ronald Reagan?
PRODUCTION
Oil
industry guru Jan Lundberg - who seems to be getting a lot less air
time than he used to - recently wrote the following brilliant
assessment for (ironically of all places)Electric
Vehicle (EV) Magazine.
Lundberg got it right.
The
end of abundant, affordable oil is in sight, and the implications are
colossal. About now in our hydrocarbon phase of human history, we
have pulled out of the Earth approximately half of the available
petroleum (crude oil and natural gas). The other half still in the
ground is harder to extract and may not - as assumed - fuel the
global economy or even provide a transition to another phase…
This
means that the next tough oil shortage, even if it is not
acknowledged as a post-peak oil extraction phenomenon of diminishing
supply, will cripple the globalized economy. Understanding of both
the economics and social dynamics of collapse is rare, and even when
it is present there is an absence of taking into account the "market
factor" in ushering in collapse…
Despite
the need to be prepared for imminent, final energy shortage - which
could happen now or in several years at the latest - people persist
in focusing too much on the likely date of the passing of the peak.
It is already clear that the oil industry and OPEC numbers on oil
reserves are suspect.
The
scenario I foresee is that market-based panic will, within a few
days, drive prices up skyward. And as supplies can no longer slake
daily world demand of over 80 million barrels a day, the market will
become paralyzed at prices too high for the wheels of commerce and
even daily living in "advanced" societies. There may be an
event that appears to trigger this final energy crash, but the
overall cause will be the huge consumption on a finite planet.
The
trucks will no longer pull into Wal-Mart. Or Safeway or other food
stores. The freighters bringing packaged techno-toys and whatnot from
China will have no fuel. There will be fuel in many places, but
hoarding and uncertainty will trigger outages, violence and chaos.
For only a short time will the police and military be able to
maintain order, if at all. The damage that several days' oil shortage
and outage will do will soon wreak permanent damage that starts with
companies and consumers not paying their bills and not going to work.
After
an almost instant depression seizes the modern industrialized world,
and nation-states break down, the frantic attempts of people to feed
themselves, stay warm and obtain fresh water (pumped presently via
petroleum to a great extent), there will be no rescue. Die-off
begins.
The least petroleum-dependent communities will survive best.
These "backward" nations will be emulated by the scrounging
survivors of the U.S. and the rest of the "developed"
world, as far as local food production will be tried - in a
paved-over, toxic landscape by people who have lost touch with the
land...
The
prospects of mitigating peak oil or avoiding collapse are almost nil.
U.S. petroleum demand in 2004 grew at its strongest rate in five
years. In December the daily consumption of refined oil was 21
million barrels in the U.S, a quarter of world use. The U.S. leads
the industrialized world in population growth, part of a domestic
policy to assure more car and oil sales…
… The
Earth cannot, as of the world oil peak in extraction, give up ever
greater quantities of black gold. Most of the world exporting
companies are now reducing extraction rates due to fewer discoveries
and depleted fields. Oil production in 18 producer countries has
passed its peak and is declining faster than previously thought: at
about 1.14 million barrels a day.
"International
Energy Agency figures put the total spare capacity of all 11
countries in OPEC at just 330,000 bpd (down from 6 million bpd in
2002). Conventional Saudi spare capacity is zero... An IEA report
from August 2004 indicates Saudi Arabia needs up to 800,000 bpd of
newly discovered oil each year just to offset declining fields and
maintain its current production level." [Al-jazeera] - This
can't happen, so watch for the ensuing energy crisis.
The
world needs to produce another 2,723,530.2 barrels per day by the end
of 2005 just in order to stand still…
Petroleum
is the Great Leveler, in the sense of "leveling" or
flattening oil civilization. But petroleum will also be the Great
Leveler in terms of equalizing everyone: People will go through a
final, grasping petroleum grab with whatever funds and connections
they have, before the attempt fails for good. Then all people will
have no choice but to work together or perish. Until then, we have
skewed values: for example, when a kindly old lady drives to a shop
and has her charitable concerns, the use of oil makes her a killer of
the planet and she is not pursuing a sustainable form of
transportation. Meanwhile, a mean old man who scowls at little
children who walks to the shop might be a much more valuable citizen
in a practical fashion that matters to the world.3
THE
MOST EVIL STATEMENT I HAVE EVER HEARD
Detroit
News columnist
Thomas Bray recently described an interview with two "experts";
authors who come from the corporate/industrial/Neocon camp. The
aberration of his thinking is symptomatic of the guilt we all share
and the consequences we all seem to be begging for.
"We
will never stop craving more," say Huber and Mills, "nor
should we ever wish to. Energy is what brings light out of dark,
civilization out of disorder, prosperity out of poverty."4
What
was the title of the book that Bray was so jazzed about? The
Bottomless Well: The Twilight of Fuel, the Virtue of Waste, and Why
We Will Never Run Out of Energy.
Contrast
all of the above with the following February 28 quotation from
China'sXinhuanet news
agency:
Global
demand may average 84 million barrels a day in 2005, while daily
production in January was only 83.6 million barrels, according to the
International Energy Agency. Oil prices have risen 11 per cent in the
past three weeks in New York on growing concern that OPEC and other
exporters will fail to keep up with demand this year.5
That
all of these factors are forming a perfect storm is now clear.
Marshall
Auerback, a brilliant economist (www.prudentbear.com)
who dares to see the world whole, notes:
"At
the time of the 1929 stock market crash, total US credit was 176
percent of Gross Domestic Product. In 1933 with GDP imploding and the
real value of debt rising even faster, total credit rose to 287
percent of what was left of GDP…In 2000 at the top of the late bull
market, total credit was 269 of GDP. An extraordinary statistic to be
sure but dwarfed by today's figure, in which total credit stands at a
whopping 304 percent of GDP, according to a recent study by fund
manager Trey Reik of Clapboard Hill Partners.
The
title of Auerback's essay was, "Last Orders for the US Dollar."6
Auerback
opened his treatise with a recent quote from former Federal Reserve
Chair Paul Volcker that should have sent politicians (all of us)
feverishly to work on a survival plan.
Below
the favorable surface [of the economy], there are as dangerous and
intractable circumstances as I can remember…. Nothing in our
experience is comparable… But no one is willing to understand this
and do anything about it… We are consuming… about six per cent
more than we are producing. What holds the world together is a
massive flow of capital from abroad… it's what feeds our
consumption binge… the United States economy is growing on the
savings of the poor… A big adjustment will inevitably become
necessary, long before the social security surpluses disappear and
the deficit explodes… We are skating on increasingly thin ice."7
SOME
DOTS
ENERGY
- The world's network of crude oil pipelines also is now operating at virtually 100% capacity. For almost all of 2004, the world's tanker system operated at full capacity too. This sparked an unprecedented rise in taker rates, which added up to $5 to $6 per barrel to the wellhead price of oil in some key long-haul export routes. - Matthew Simmons. Why are no more tankers being built? Because soon there won't be enough oil to ship to cover what it would cost to build them.
- Also from Simmons: [In the oil industry] A lack of qualified manpower is looming high on the list of capacity problems. In addition, the many layoffs and downsizing events that our industry has endured… As a consequence, we now have an aging workforce at a time when the technical intensity of the industry is increasing each year. - Why? Because the industry knows it is going to collapse and no replacements are being trained to fill short-term, dead-end careers.
- Officials of Mexico's state-owned oil company PEMEX have announced that Mexico's largest oil field, Cantarell, will enter permanent decline this year. -Bloomberg, March 1, 2005.
- ExxonMobil is selling its 19 percent stake in China's Petroleum and Chemical Corporation - Forbes, March 2, 2005. This is a likely move to cut losses in the event of war.
- Ukraine and Georgia have agreed to reverse the flow of oil in a strategic pipeline from the Black Sea thus effectively reducing Russia's control over some Caspian basin exports. - BusinessWeek, Feb. 28, 2005. A Ukrainian alliance with NATO would deprive the Russian Navy of access to its Black Sea ports.
- In a move to bypass US-led efforts to reduce her influence in the world's oil supply chain and access to markets, Russia approved the rush construction of three new oil terminals on the Gulf of Finland to supply Europe. - Moscow News, March 1, 2005. (Three days after the above pipeline decision? Surely these power blocks had been making contingency plans for these events for years).
- Saudi Arabia may have already peaked in production as a result of over-producing its fields. Overproduction by water (and gas) injection destroys a reservoir's geologic structure. It is an undisputed certainty that if Saudi Arabia has peaked, the world has peaked. - Al Jazeera, February 20, 2005.
- Oil has been rising steadily in terms of dollars, but now it has begun to increase in price relative to the Euro - James Turk, GATA.
- Petro Canada has decided to invest $3 billion in the development of Alberta's tar sands in spite of high costs, enormous environmental destruction and dwindling supplies of natural gas needed to make steam to wash the sands. - The Globe and Mail, March 2, 2005.
- Royal Dutch Shell, which has downgraded its reserves four times in the last two years (as a result of fraudulent bookkeeping), has announced it may experience a 5% production decline this year. - Forbes, March 2, 2005. The truth comes out.
- Iran and Mexico have signed an MOU for mutual assistance in developing oil and gas projects. - Tehran Times, Feb. 20, 2005.
MILITARY
AND POLITICAL
- Spain's foreign minister has voiced concerns held in Britain and elsewhere in Europe that the era of the nation-state is coming to an end as regional powers replace national identity. - The Sun, March 2, 2005. Energy-starved Britain will ultimately be forced to join the EU.
- After Canada recently refused to participate in the US Strategic Missile Shield, the US government accused Canada of relinquishing sovereignty over its airspace and prompted a statement from US Ambassador Paul Cellucci that the US would shoot down missiles over Canada whether Canada gave permission or not. - CP, Feb. 24, 2005. [Two years ago I clipped a story from the National Post stating that Canada should not be surprised when US troops occupied the country to protect the US. From Canada?!]
- US forces in Iraq have apparently attempted to murder an Italian journalist who was freed after negotiations with her captors. They succeeded in killing an Italian Secret Service agent and US stories of the account are falling under widespread criticism and rebuttal. Anti-American sentiment in Italy is bubbling over. - Multiple sources.
- China is experiencing massive shortages of coal to power its electrical generation. - Multiple sources.
- China is already buying and hoarding 60% of the world's commodities: (Oil, Cement, Aluminum, Copper, Zinc, Manganese, Steel, Coal, Gold, Silver, etc.). It has bought so much cement that it has caused a slowdown in US construction. Last year it bought 90% of the world's steel output and shipped it to China - Multiple sources. Why? Because soon there won't be enough fuel for the globalized transport of such heavy things, nor, presumably, for their industrial exploitation. The world may also be at war shortly, further endangering international trade and transport.
- China has announced a 12.6% increase in its defense budget for next year, pushing it into an overt arms race with the US. - Reuters, March 4, 2005. This has put the enduring China-Taiwan flash point back on the front burner as China has warned Taiwan against secession and the US, Japan and Taiwan have countered with equally risky rhetoric against China. Taiwan is crucial because of its location the South China Sea and proximity to smaller but accessible oil deposits in the Spratly Islands. Even more, should China incorporate Taiwan into its borders, its claims to territorial waters as far as the continental shelf would effectively deny Japan any future exploration off its western coast. - Multiple sources. Japan, which has no energy resources, is in deep trouble.
- Chinese energy shortages have resulted in what may be selective blackouts of Japanese auto and other firms manufacturing in China. - Asia Times, December 9, 2004.
- As frictions intensify between Japan and China [Knight-Ridder, Feb. 15, 2005], Japan - America's strongest ally in the Pacific - has been forced to sign an oil agreement with Iran [New York Times, Feb. 16, 2005]. This agreement came as a slap in the face to the US which had opposed it.
- Japan has announced a $1.1 billion emergency plan to build liquefied natural gas terminals. - Bloomberg, February 14, 2005. Twelve days later it was announced that Japanese destroyers had driven away Chinese exploration vessels in international waters that were too close to a possible natural gas field (claimed by Japan) in the East China Sea. - The Herald Sun, January 26, 2005.
- China has begun placing nuclear-capable ballistic missiles on some of its submarines for the first time. - The Washington Times, December 3, 2004.
- Last November a Chinese nuclear submarine intruded deep into Japanese territorial waters and was escorted (chased) by Japanese Navy ships back into international waters. - The Asia Times, Jan. 16, 2005
- China and India have agreed to hold first-ever joint naval exercises in the Indian Ocean. - San Francisco Chronicle, Nov. 13, 2004.
- China is beginning a push to control the strategic Straights of Malacca through which 80% of its imported oil passes. This strategic waterway - only 1.5 miles wide at its narrowest point - lies between the countries of Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore. - Asia Times, March 2, 2005. Yes, and 40% of the world's piracy occurs there.
- Indonesia has sent warships in an escalating dispute with Malaysia to an island off its west coast. The subject of the dispute: Malaysian oil exploration. -www.news.com.au, March 6, 2005.
- The following day Indonesia dispatched F16 fighters to the Malaysian border, escalating the oil conflict. - The Standard, Match 7, 2005.
- A number of stories have reported that Japan is secretly considering the abandonment of its pacifist constitution and - if it so chose - could have nuclear weapons in months, if not weeks. - Multiple sources.
- Britain's parliament is in revolt over a proposed "terrifying" house arrest plan which would enable the government to order residents locked up in their own homes without trial. - The Independent, March 2, 2005.
- Venezuela intends to purchase advanced MiG 29s from Russia, capable of downing F16s [and having no software systems that can be compromised by US technology]. - Reuters, Feb. 12, 2005.
- Venezuela (the world's fifth largest oil exporter) has purged its state-owned oil company PdVSA of pro-American managers and is implementing a 17% tax increase on the revenues of foreign oil companies doing business there. - Multiple sources.
- Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has traveled to New Delhi, India where he chose to make a public statement that he would cut off Venezuelan oil supplies to the US in the event of any intervention or a US-directed attempt on his life. The Indian government has thus tacitly endorsed the threat. Meanwhile, the US ambassador to Venezuela has imponderably replied that if that happened the US would just go somewhere else to get its oil. [Where? Iran? Canada (which is signing contracts with China)? West Africa? There is no elasticity anywhere.] - Multiple sources.
- Venezuela has sold its (already in decline) San Cristobal oil field to India. -Times of India, March 6, 2005
- President Bush has given Syria a non-negotiable deadline of May 1 to withdraw its forces from Lebanon. One million Lebanese (almost a quarter of the population) have marched in the streets in protest. - Multiple sources.
ECONOMICS
- Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan told Congress the record U.S. budget deficit is "unsustainable'' and that spending cuts are needed before costs balloon for Social Security and other benefit programs. - Bloomberg, March 2, 2005.
- German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder has stated that high oil prices are threatening the global economy and that those prices will be one of the most important items on the agenda of the coming G-8 summit. - The Daily Star, March 1, 2005.
- The Bank of International Settlements has made it official: the dollar dump is underway. Since 2001 the number of dollars held by Asian central banks has fallen by 13% and the rate of sell-off is increasing. - Reuters, March 6, 2005.
- OPEC has announced that oil prices could reach $80 per barrel within two years. - Agence France Presse, March 3, 2005.
- A research foundation in Dubai has affirmed that western banks have rigged and suppressed gold prices. - Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee,http://www.lemetropolecafe.com/.
THE
NEW WORLD ORDER
The
New World Order is not a monolith; no single group of rich folks sits
together in one room debating our planetary future. It is, quite
literally, a new
order in
which world power aggregates along geographic/geologic lines, forcing
regions to become players against each other and running roughshod
over the nationalist sentiments of their subject populations. The
regions are Europe (including Britain), Asia, South America and North
America. Woe to those nations who are stuck in between. In spite of
Sino-Japanese tension, Japan, China and South Korea have urged the
creation of a Free Trade agreement to cover the Western Pacific.
Geography and money will prove to be the ultimate trump cards because
geography is governing economic decision-making. There may be a war
between China and Japan but ultimately Japan (like the UK vis-a-vis
Europe) will find itself swallowed into regional hegemony, either as
a winner or as a loser.
Take
a look at Orwell's 1984 again.
It is a wonder how he saw so much. Yet behind all of this
realignment, enormous streams of wealth or capital are being expended
and - most importantly - transferred behind
the scenes. The people controlling that money are not seeing their
control dissipate as the nation-states vanish. Money makes its own
rules.
Profits
were made during the cold war by continuing the controlled escalation
of tensions between the superpowers while secretly preventing those
tensions from reaching critically dangerous levels. The major players
included Armand Hammer, the Rothschilds, the Bushes, Averill
Harriman, inter alia.
These
people always find ways to eke profits from a system that is in
meltdown. They make money on the way up. They make money on the way
down. Their appalling justification, their pact with the devil that
makes this all possible, is that "As long as we're making money
then everything must be OK." This is what the real PTB (Powers
That Be) believe. This is the final distilled definition of "the
bottom line".
The
problem lies in the definition of "The Powers That Be."
Most people still think in terms of nation states. I always think in
terms of money, even to the point of looking at money (the way it
functions now) as the PTB
without attachment to a human or national identity.
Not
too long ago I had a dialogue with Catherine Austin Fitts after which
an epiphany struck. As the human race blows itself into extinction,
or destroys the climate, or starves itself to death, the last
corporate merger and acquisition will take place. And at the same
moment as mankind dies, the CFO of "GlobalCorp" will be
shouting, "Hooray! We did it!"
Those
who win in a rigged game get stupid. We have all played this game (to
one degree or another). And compared to the rational, far-sighted
humanitarians that Jefferson and Whitman hoped for and expected, we
are all frightfully stupid.
In
spite of all the warning signs that demand and energy use must be
curbed immediately, the only commercial effect of Peak Oil has been
to increase consumption as much as possible - so as to get as much
"money" as possible, as quickly as possible. This before
the instant, possibly only months away, when money - because of a
lack of energy - becomes valueless. Solutions that should enable a
reduction in oil consumption are only functioning as an insane
rationale for using more. The pity of this utterly unnecessary
disaster is matched only by the arrogance that created it.
With
unmistakable desperation, China, the US, Russia, Europe and the
Middle East are fiercely jockeying for a measly 40 billion barrels of
Caspian heavy-sour oil instead of the 350 billion we were promised by
the major oil companies a decade ago. Caspian oil has some of the
highest sulfur content on the planet. It is expensive and
environmentally destructive to refine. The mountains of sulfur around
the Caspian are now so large as to be visible from space. Do you not
see the desperation here?
The
only way to curb demand is to pull the plug on global economies,
starting first with the already partially cannibalized US economy.
Our manufacturing has been stolen or given away for "spare
parts." So have our savings, our Constitution, our resources,
our credit, our credibility, our confidence, our manufacturing base,
our jobs; and soon our houses, our personal bank accounts and
ultimately our hope. The United States is being liquidated after a
fait accompli merger and acquisition.
The bottom
line turns
out to be the suicide of the human race as mergers and acquisitions
lead to the final moment of malignant capitalism: "the last
corporation standing."
GlobalCorp
becomes Global corpse.
Hurray,
we did it!
To
look on the brighter side of this, my brother in arms Matt Savinar
helped me to see the good in Peak Oil. He wrote, "When people
ask me what is 'positive' about Peak Oil, I tell them (only
half-jokingly) that: "well, if there is no collapse, we're all
going to be chipped, tagged, drugged with FOX news being beamed into
our brains while living in slums patrolled by robotic soldiers with
strangely familiar Austrian accents."
The
fire has begun.
FOR
THE RECORD - FTW REORGANIZATION PENDING
I
wake up now on a daily basis knowing that at any moment the story
might break signaling that the collapse has been triggered. It is my
mandate to scan the horizon for signs of this, to help discern where
the blows will fall, how hard, how quickly and where they will have
the most impact. Effective immediately (and taking into account
stories FTW has
already committed to publish), it is imperative that FTW transform
itself into an informational / intelligence lifeboat for those who
are listening.
I
will not be writing for FTW for
a period of approximately two months while I complete a corporate
reorganization that is necessary to adapt to the world as it is, not
as we might wish it or pray for it to be.
FTW now
has tens of thousands of daily readers who understand what is
happening and who are urging me to stop trying to convince the rest
of the world.
They want us instead, try to and help those who are
already convinced. We cannot save everyone. We can only help those
who are asking for it. That is our constituency - our contract. The
doors will always be open for latecomers.
What
you will see in two months or less is a new FTW;
focused, precise, and more useful on a day to day basis. If I lose
support from progressives or activists for this, so be it.
If FTW falls
from grace with some for failing to be politically correct, then all
I can say is "Good luck to you."
We
must all do what we must do and do it now. My conscience is clear
that I have done all that is possible to warn. When a tsunami is
coming there is a point at which one must stop trying to warn the
indifferent and just get out of the way and help others who are also
trying to get out of the way. For those who now see this, FTWhopes
to become at least a partial bridge to your safety. In order to do
that, other bridges must be abandoned.
ENDNOTES
1. Fleckenstein,
Bill; Prerequisite
to current events: Bubble 101;
MSN, Feb. 28, 2005.
3. Lundberg,
Jan; The
Global Nutcracker Called Peak Oil; EV World,
Feb. 20 2005.
4. Detroit
News editorial by Thomas Bray, February 27, 2005 quoting authors (and
Neocon / Bush allies) Peter W. Huber and Mark P. Mills.
5. Crude
oil prices may rise as output trails demand; Xinhuanet,
February 28, 2005;www.chinaview.cn.
7. Ibid.
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