"Take
the infinite callousness and arrogance of the English upper class,
offer them a vast country and endless influx of human material for
exploitation and what you get is the United States of America and its
WASP regime. The US has been an imperialist project right from the
start, because it was founded out of (British) imperialism."
The
days of US dollar hegemony are numbered and we will all be Collateral
Damage.
"I
hate to say it but my money is on a violent collapse and
disintegration of the US hopefully not tearing Canada down with them.
The erratic empire is downfalling, and while that’s a great thing
for humanity in the long run, including for Americans who I believe
will eventually benefit from such catharsis, it will at first turn
out to be extremely ugly."
The
imminent collapse of USdollar hegemony is gonna be very painful
wherever on this dying planet you eek out an existence.
Remember
with the loss of global dimming after collapse of industrial
civilisation we lose habitation.
—-
Kevin Hester
Erratic
Empire Downfalling
By
Sergio Weigel
July
30, 2018 "Information
Clearing House" -
Everybody
understands the importance of the dollar system as the Achilles heel
for the US empire yet oddly, when analysing imperial action of
Warshington of the last decades, the focus is usually on ideologies
like Zionism or American exceptionalism, or on at most partial
aspects such as fossil fuels and pipelines.
Another focus, favored
mainly among Americans, is that America once was great but now has
lost track somehow. I still think that the means of production, or in
case of the US selling dollar annotated debt masked as investment, is
far more paramount for US decision-making than ideology or oil, and
that America hadn’t lost track but instead desperately tries to
hold on to its track.
First,
a few words about America’s track. The imperialists of the US
regime desperately cling to their empire, that’s a classic, that’s
what imperialists do. The Nazis clung to their short-lived empire
until Germany was in ruins, the Romans clung to theirs until
defeated, and the British struggle during WW2 was far
more about preserving theirs than
it was about defeating Nazi Germany. Empires usually don’t
dismantle themselves. But it’s also the American people, serfs to
the empire, who are desperately clinging. That’s what I found so
appalling about the Occupy movement. These millennial brats had no
political agenda but to demand their cheap flat screens back from the
banksters. They didn’t want change, they wanted continuity. The
same is true for the so-called “alt-right” movement who have zero
political agenda for a better future. They lament the present while
dreaming of a past 1950s/1960s America that has never even really
existed. When they say America has lost its track, they might have
Middle Eastern wars in mind, but that’s rubbish because there is
nothing new or different in these wars than in any wars Warshington
had fought before against the Natives, their own Southern brethren,
Mexico, Spain, Philippines, Korea, Vietnam, you name it, and the
meddling on Maidan is in no way different to what they’ve been
doing in Latin American countries since the mid 19th century.
Psychologically, I think, what they mourn is that the mask has fallen
off and that they cannot go back to that cozy,
simple, and ignorant lifestyle they
had been able to enjoy up until 9/11.
To
me the US empire is an historic aberration of humanity. With its
genesis, its unparalleled level of violence, the categorically
insolidary and segregated society and surreal consumer culture it has
created, and the delusional ideology and mythology with which it
justifies itself based on a borderline psychotic Messiah complex
(Manifest
Destiny),
it represents an exceptional oddity among nations. But beyond its
mental problems there is a cold, hard fact – at least within the
realm of capitalism – that explains the actions and reactions of US
imperialism throughout the years, especially in recent decades. It is
both fuel and failure of the empire: the dollar as
the world’s reserve currency, or rather the system behind it which
consists of masquerading and selling debt as investment.
Many
people consider the US to be a proper republic with a valid
constitution, separation of powers, rule of law and all that jazz. I
think that is baloney. In truth the US government is a front for a
criminal enterprise and it has been like that ever since the US
Constitution has been created
and passed by
whom Gore Vidal rightfully dubbed as
“frightened
men of property”.
While the American Revolution in itself was a truly unique and
valuable moment in
human history, the system that resulted from it was and still is
designed by men of wealth for men of wealth to obtain as much wealth
as possible at the expense of everybody else without the tedious
social responsibilities the French republicans came up with. In fact,
this lack of social responsibility is what they mean when they
say freedom. The
American nation never had a chance to develop to its potential,
because it was hijacked early on by networks/cartels of the rich.
What is commonly referred to as the American dream should therefore
rather be named the American deception. In my view, the Pursuit
of Happiness is
the largest middle-finger ever erected in human history. America has
never lost its track, I think it has always been on the same track,
yet it is about to derail hard.
While
Europe has managed (more or less) to develop, kill and struggle
itself into a bunch of societies in which solidarity, social justice
and rule of law remain core cultural and social concepts – to a
certain extent even for the rich (Napoleonic
Code) -,
America has developed into a rat race society based on property,
materialism and a general save-your-own-ass mentality. A smart guy
from New York once described his own country to me as money
talks, bullshit walks. The
fish rots or rather trickles down from the head. America is run by a
bunch of mafia cartels no better than street gangs – Wall St, Big
Oil, Big Pharma, Big Media, Military-Industrial-Complex etc. – with
the Federal Reserve as their giant money laundering corporation, a
bureaucracy of ridiculous proportions as both the mafia’s hitmen
(CIA, Pentagon) and legal front (Congress), and the US president as
the constantly changing promotion mascot. There is very often no love
lost between these cartels or their players, but there are two things
that unite them. First, the US dollar system, the single largest
Ponzi scheme in human history and, second, an extremely elitist
self-concept inherited from English aristocracy asserting that it is
them, and only them, who shall rule the world. Take the infinite
callousness and arrogance of the English upper class, offer them a
vast country and endless influx of human material for exploitation
and what you get is the United States of America and its WASP regime.
The US has been an imperialist project right from the start, because
it was founded out of (British) imperialism.
From
their elitist perspective the American or any other people serve as
human cattle to be duped,
exploited and used.
It is the ultimate Fordist nightmare, which Aldous Huxley could only
vaguely anticipate in his novel A
Brave New World.
The people are made to live under conditions comparable to that of
farm cattle with TV screens flickering in their stables. To the
regime they are nothing
but salary and consume cattle, cynically dubbed as human
resources in
the business world, a euphemism for slaves if
you ask me. Lives, thoughts and views, food, medicine and drug use,
culture, or the fairy tale people are supposed to believe as history
are determined and conditioned by a gigantic propaganda industry that
makes Joseph Goebbels drool in his coffin. Hollywood is the
manifestation of what he could only dream of.
Europeans
suffer from pretty much the same state of shallow and philistine
slave existence, but it’s mostly a post-WW2 imported American thing
for us. We still have a choice and we have all the necessary
cultural, nutritional and intellectual roots to free ourselves from
it. I might be dead wrong in my observations, but I don’t see how
Americans with what I consider as their still prevalent settler
mentality could really do that. I hope they will find a way and if
only after the collapse of the empire. Regardless, you cannot
properly understand US imperialism, let alone the so-called “West”
in general, unless you fully appreciate the manufactured fake that
it really is. Therefore let’s start with the only real thing
about it – at least in a capitalist sense – the dollar system.
Through
their dubious actions and policies of
supporting all sides before
and during WW2
the US cartels managed to weasel their host country’s way from the
world’s number one debtor before the war to the world’s number
one creditor after the war. With this leverage at their disposal the
US entered the Bretton Woods negotiations in 1944. The Bretton Woods
conference was in essence the result of Anglo-American establishments
contemplating on how to rule and dominate the world after WW2.
British imperialists, the other oddballs of human history and well
worth an article of their own, and America’s ruling cartels had
already united their
criminal enterprises, although from different perspectives. While the
British were mostly interested in using American muscle to preserve
their empire which had been struggling especially against Germany’s
rising economic power since the late 19th century, the American
cartels were eager to establish themselves on a global and especially
European stage, an endeavor for which Britain served well as
springboard.
It
is therefore no surprise that the English speaking imperialists on
both sides of the Pond had different views on how to run future
currency-based world domination. England was represented by British
economist John Maynard Keynes – himself one of the initiators of
the Bretton Woods conference – who put forward the idea of an
international bank called International
Clearing Union which
would issue its own currency – the bancor – as an account
currency between nations. The idea was to have trade surplus or
creditor nations invest in the economies of trade deficit or debtor
nations and so to even out global economic imbalances. Lord Keynes
was one of the few if not the only competent of capitalist
economists.
Keynes
proposed that any country racking up a large trade deficit (equating
to more than half of its bancor overdraft allowance) would be charged
interest on its account. It would also be obliged to reduce the value
of its currency and to prevent the export of capital. But – and
this was the key to his system – he insisted that the nations with
a trade surplus would be subject to similar pressures. Any country
with a bancor credit balance that was more than half the size of its
overdraft facility would be charged interest, at a rate of 10%. It
would also be obliged to increase the value of its currency and to
permit the export of capital. If, by the end of the year, its credit
balance exceeded the total value of its permitted overdraft, the
surplus would be confiscated. The nations with a surplus would have a
powerful incentive to get rid of it. In doing so, they would
automatically clear other nations’ deficits. (source)
This
is – within the realm of capitalism – a pretty neat idea, one
that would have, for example, prevented the flaws of the euro system,
in which the common currency is undervalued for Germany (great for
exports, pretty shit for the domestic market) but overvalued for
pretty much everyone else with the result of German industry and its
retailers Lidl and Aldi literally eating up the rest of Europe. Had
the euro been designed as a common account currency with a proper
multilateral treaty based on Keynes’s ideas while preserving
national currencies, we wouldn’t have had to experience the euro
crisis with all its terrible humanitarian consequences, and Germany
would not have had the chance to abuse its imperialist power within
Europe the way it did. I don’t think that the crappy euro design
was a mistake but rather one deliberately made by German bankers and
industrialists who prevailed over French and others when drafting the
euro – but that’s something others have already written
extensively and are more skilled about. The same flaws we can see in
the euro system persist in the dollar system on a global scale since
Bretton Woods, when one country can dominate the rest using the
leverage of currency.
In
the beginning of the conference everyone was with the ideas of Lord
Keynes for they were as reasonable as it can get within a capitalist
frame. But it was the American imperialists, represented by Harry
Dexter White, who had quite different ideas for their currency-based
world domination. They wanted to seize the opportunity by
establishing an International Stabilization Fund which would put the
whole burden of economic imbalance on the debtor nations. Instead of
a global account currency like the bancor they wanted to establish
their own US dollar as the world’s reserve currency. It is not
documented how many arms the US cartels had to twist in how many
directions at Bretton Woods, but eventually they prevailed and the
notorious Bretton Woods system with the US dollar as sole reserve
currency was implemented with the infamous IMF at its core, an
institution that evidently turns everything it touches into deep shit
as it keeps working along utmost economic illiteracy – even for
capitalists – designed only to withdraw further capital from
already troubled nations.
Having
one country’s currency as the world’s sole reserve currency was
and is so far unique in history. It is often and commonly believed
that the US dollar had just replaced the British pound as the world’s
reserve currency, but this is not quite accurate. British pound,
German mark, French franc or Portuguese escudo had at their
respective times always been reserve currencies alongside each other.
Some were more regionally focused, like the French franc in Africa,
with the British pound playing the major but not singular role
globally. Bretton Woods, however, introduced the US dollar as the
world’s or rather capitalist world’s sole reserve currency with
all other currencies having fixed exchange rates to it. The US
cartels gained tremendous political and economic clout by that,
especially since it later allowed them to run a much larger and
longer state and trade deficit than they could have, had the dollar
been just been one garden variety currency among others. But how did
it go and what does it mean today, when the world appears to be
returning to a “normal” state of affairs again with the rise of
euro and yuan?
Many
of America’s grumpy nostalgics who thought that a billionaire with
a terrible hairdo would help them out of their misery by building a
wall consider America to have been great in the past. Of course, it
was never great at all. Those were times of heinous crimes against
humanity by the US regime against the
world and
its own
people,
earlier even inspiring other
villains. On principle it was just like today and how it has always
been. The USAF was carpet bombing Asian countries and everybody was
scared of Russians. Still, the times felt great,
because the country was surfing the big post-war Kondratieff
wave and
enjoyed a Brave
New World of
Fordist pleasure based on hard work and hedonistic obedience to
advertisement. Milkshakes tasted sweet, Rock’n’Roll pounded loud,
and Cadillacs rolled big. Universities were negro-free and retards
were sterilized. America was great and Jesus in love with you. The
share of household consumption to GDP was already around 60%,
but that wasn’t a problem because most of what Americans consumed
was also made in America by Americans. But then the wave turned into
swash and started lapping against the shore of reality. The markets
were saturated. Everyone had a fridge and one or two cars and TVs by
then. No new major technological innovation for further consumer
goods lurked around the corner to drive the economy. The Kondratieff
wave backwashed. Capitalism had once again reached its regular growth
limits and the usual meltdown was looming. Voracious for more profits
corporations started the big outsourcing frenzy in the 1970s to get
their fix by having to share less with their workers in exchange for
cheaper products from cheaper countries. Now, outsourcing as such is
not a problem if the CEOs know what they’re doing and have a
long-term strategy such as using profits generated from saving to
invest in research for new innovation, for example. The problem is
that the US is for the most part a shareholder economy and CEOs and
their corporations are legally obliged to provide profits for them. I
am talking about short-term quarterly or yearly profits, not profits
for long-term visions. Even if the odd business school graduate
working as CEO has a long-term vision, the American cartel model of
economy won’t allow him or her to implement it without providing
for shareholder profits first. Keep that in mind when you wonder
where US industry went compared to German
industry,
apparently a core part of Trumpish penis envy triggering infantile
feelings of unfair.
Over
the course of the 1970s to the 1990s American workers increasingly
turned into burger flippers, janitors and cashiers, while Mexicans,
Filipinos and Chinese started to increasingly sweat in their shops.
The purchasing
power of
American consumers declined and that threatened the colossal GDP.
Reaganomics didn’t trickle down at all, but it made sure that
lumberjack shirts presented something non-existent, and banks and
corporations got another decade-long profit fix. By the late 1990s,
it became obvious that to keep the machine running Americans had to
have their credit cards loaded and their stock markets bloated.
Therefore, Bill “Never-Inhaled-and-Didn’t
Have-Sex”
Clinton deregulated the banks so that they could provide Americans
with cheap mortgage credits for their consumerist pleasure.
Advertisement went on hyperdrive to make Americans buy junk and
sprawl suburbanly. Another profit fix for banks and corporations for
yet another decade had been conjured up. GDP and plebeian excitement
were saved for the day. The result of this policy was the much feared
massive trade deficit, because economies in Europe, Asia and Latin
America managed to replace American manufacturing globally either
with their own products or simply by producing American ones.
In
reality it is all a bit more complex, of course, but I’m
deliberately keeping it simple to highlight America’s economic
failure by design. It’s the sparkler among empires, having burnt so
bright for three decades between 1945 and 1975 yet violently fizzling
out ever since. What is important to understand at this point is that
without Bretton Woods the US cartels would have never been able to
run it this far, almost half a century on debt and delusions by now,
because even when Nixon ditched the gold standard to free the empire
from its shackles to run mile-high deficits, the US dollar remained
the world’s reserve currency, first, in lack of another major
currency to challenge it, and, second, as a result of a dirty deal
made with the Saudi Barbarians: you sell your oil only in
US dollars and make the rest of OPEC follow suit and we build up your
stone or rather sand aged country American style. Goats as the common
garbage disposal system in Riyadh had been replaced by white trucks,
skyscrapers built, American weapons bought, and US debt sold to
European and Asian oil junkies. John Perkins described this dirty
deal perfectly well in his Confessions
of An Economic Hitman.
With the petrodollar established this way the US cartels could
continue their criminal enterprise and it is the only reason why the
Saudis have come as close to US imperialism as airplanes into tall
buildings.
The
US cartels are dependent on the dollar as the world’s sole reserve
currency to be able to run the deficits necessary to fuel their
criminal enterprise of world domination. In order to do that they
need other countries to hoard dollars in the form of US debt, which
they will only do if they believe the US was a thriving economy. But
since the 1980s the US cartels can hold up the illusion of presiding
over an economic powerhouse pretty much only with plebeian
consumption running on debt. Currently about 70% of
the GDP is private household consumption which is nominally not much
more than during America’s self-felt greatness, but it has now
turned into the last, almost lost engine rattling to keep if not
America’s success at least its success story going. Virtually none
of the consumed products are made in America anymore. Industry,
engineering, and manufacturing went down the toilet and despite their
constant attention whoring neither the narcissists
in Hollywood nor Silicon
Valley could
make up for it. The only industry still pumping hard to inflate the
GDP is the bogus financial
sector and
so the American economy hovers from one bubble to the next, each one
inflated with the illusion of a working economy based on a bloated
GDP. The question is: why is it so important for the US cartels to
keep up a colossal GDP even at the cost of its own economic
foundation and what does it have to do with US aggression all around
the world, at least in the past two decades?
As
the ever so astute American philosopher Homer Simpson
once said, “People
can come up with statistics to prove anything […]. Forfty percent
of all people know that.”, so
I will toss some stats at you. Please bear with me. I chose to
compare military spending, trade deficit, household consumption,
household debt, government debt, and GDP – all numbers are in
billion dollars.
The
curves aren’t what is striking, they’re obvious, what strikes are
the correlations between different data:
Correlation
of: |
Military
Spending |
Trade
Balance |
Household
Consumption |
Household
Debt |
Government
Debt |
GDP |
Military
Spending |
1.00 |
0.22 |
0.83 |
0.89 |
0.78 |
0.82 |
Trade
Balance |
0.22 |
1.00 |
0.11 |
0.39 |
-0.12 |
0.12 |
Household
Consumption |
0.83 |
0.11 |
1.00 |
0.91 |
0.97 |
0.99 |
Household
Debt |
0.89 |
0.39 |
0.91 |
1.00 |
0.79 |
0.91 |
Government
Debt |
0.78 |
-0.12 |
0.97 |
0.79 |
1.00 |
0.96 |
GDP |
0.82 |
0.12 |
0.99 |
0.91 |
0.96 |
1.00 |
I’ll
just arrogantly assume that you know what correlation is.
The important thing to note is that it’s about whether two data
sets are related or not. The first thing that strikes the eye is that
US trade deficit is hardly related to any other indicators, except
perhaps for the relation to household debt. Therefore, the question
arises if the Trump administration really is about trade deficit at
all, as Mr Orange likes to claim, since it is mainly debt that
cripples the country and shareholder values dependent on a high GDP
that drive it. I don’t see Trump battling debt at all, but I
modestly assume that there are at least one or maybe even two
staffers in Warshington who read and analyse economic data.
The
strongest correlation exists between household consumption, household
debt, government debt and GDP. They are all above the 0.9 mark, even
reaching almost full correlation between GDP and household
consumption. In other words, the massive GDP of the US goes hand in
hand with household consumption, which goes hand in hand with both
private and public debt. The US appears to produce its GDP colossus
mostly by investors buying dollar annotated debt. The irony – and
eventually system failure – arises from the fact that the
US cartels need to fake high economic productivity and reliability by
financing high consumption of mostly imported goods on credit to show
off a colossal GDP necessary to attract financial investors, both
domestic and foreign, whose investments are then again used to
finance aforementioned credits.
This is what I call a vicious circle and kind of what I imagine to
feel like hugging a pork half.
When
we put military spending into the mix, the actions of US imperialism
become even clearer. It correlates strongly or even very strongly to
the other four indicators, yet military spending is hardly the cause
of high public debt or GDP. After all, military spending amounts only
to about 3.5% of GDP (not counting the totality of national
security spending,
let alone money made by CIA drug trafficking).
Apparently, and in some magical way, US military action, or at least
military spending, guarantees high consumption and thus a high GDP.
It
is a rather mundane insight, that what one wants and what one can do
to get it are two different things. What the US cartels want is
clear: Full World Domination (FWD), which even if they got it, would
still be a system designed to fail as it cannot survive without a
foe. Regardless, Brzezinski formulated it in 1997 in his pamphlet The
Grand Chessboard,
an American version of Uncle Adolf’s Mein
Kampf.
Like Mein
Kampf was
in many parts bootlegging Henry Ford’s The
International Jew,
Brzezinski hadn’t had one original thought either. His ideas were
almost identical to those that British geostrategist Halford
Mackinder formulated
as Geographical
Pivot of History in
1904. This idée fixe, never to let any land power take control in
Eurasia or let any kind of Eurasian integration happen, seems to be
engraved on the crazed minds of Anglo-American elites since the 19th
century and is guideline to their politics ever since
then. Germany and Russia had
been and still are the main
adversaries and targets,
but also Iran andChina.
The whole history of the 20th century can only be understood under
this premise. This, however, is not part of the official fairy tale
that is bourgeois history. No wonder I didn’t learn about it at
school. Anyway, it is also related to the preservation of the dollar
system.
When
the ever so humble Anglo-American crazies were convinced they had
defeated the Soviet Union they started acting right away. The goal
was to destroy any possible Silk Road and/or cooperation between the
land powers of Germany, France, Russia, China, and Iran. Let me first
briefly summarize the pre-millennial actions:
- They nationally endowed democracy and Russophobia in what today has become the Idiot Belt (Baltics, Poland, Ukraine, Scandinavia) to shape a cordon sanitaire between Germany and Russia.
- They literally ate up Russia economically during the 1990s and meddled with the aim to once and for all get rid of it as a power to reckon with.
- They gave Saddam the green light to invade Kuwait in order to have a pretext to set foot in the Middle East – the first step against Iran after Saddam had screwed up the 1980s Gulf War.
- They broke apart Yugoslavia, the last standing and just too large socialist country in Europe – this time with the help of Germany which had and still has its own imperial ambitions in Europe.
- They bombed Serbia and sliced out Kosovo in order to establish a military base at the historical end of the Silk Road from China – first step in preventing Eurasian integration (and to control heroin trafficking to Europe as a sweet cherry on top).
So
far, so good. But as I already mentioned, by the end of the
millennium the dying horse of US economy had turned into a leaky
horse-shaped balloon that needed to be constantly inflated with loans
and foreign dollar investments, so that they now had to fight two
fronts: inflate the balloon and conquer the world. At the same time
the EU was about to establish the euro, the first currency able to
challenge the dollar as the world’s sole reserve currency. They
must have realized that time is running out. I assume this had let
them to make an extremely filthy deal
with the Zionists and Saudi Barbarians to demolish the World Trade
Center in a staged terrorist attack to have political carte blanche
for the next couple of years. The attack on Afghanistan was surely
still part of the masterplan to encircle Iran, Russia, and China, and
to set foot in Central Asia, and thus to block the historical Silk
Road at the Chinese end. It was crafted two
months before
9/11 after all. However, the following actions became increasingly
erratic and, I believe, they were in part deviating from the original
plan. The aggressions against Iraq, Iran and Libya, be it bombs or
sanctions, all had a monetary background as well. Hussein announced
already in 2000 that he wanted to price oil in euro, Iran announced
in 2006 to open an oil bourse trading in euro, yuan, rial and rubel,
and Libya wanted to introduce a gold backed currency, the dinar, as a
joined currency for the African Union (which also heavily
undermined French
colonial interests in
Africa). This can’t be a coincidence.
These aggressions, while
still more or less in accordance with the original plan yet conducted
hastily and often without much of a detailed plan at all, had the
primary aim to save the petrodollar by preventing any alternative
from emerging. Without the primal petrodollar they wouldn’t be able
to run the massive deficit needed to struggle for Full World
Domination (FWD). The
dollar must remain the world’s primary reserve currency or the
house of cards masquerading as empire masquerading as democracy will
crumble.
It was and still is a rat race against their own demise.
All
this bombing, chaos and destruction launched upon the world since
2001 had less PNAC, let alone “Israel”, in mind, but increasingly
the assurance of further dollar investments in their debt, the most
precious “natural resource” to keep the colossus
colossal. Imagine
a big fat drug-addicted bully who pummels weaker school children to
prove that he is theoretically solvent because he could theoretically
take anyone’s lunch money, so that, therefore, other junkie kids
borrow him money which he then uses to buy more dope to be fit enough
to pummel more kids. This
is how the global economy has been working in the early 21st century
before Russia and China started to collude effectively to ensure
Eurasian integration and a multipolar, post-dollar world.
The
difference between the US regime’s pre- and post-millennial actions
have been that the former had been carried out carefully, quite
successfully and according to plan, while the latter had been
executed extremely sloppily and, except for the case of Libya,
essentially failed (if the mess is on Europe it is a success to US
cartels). Russia “snatched” Crimea, EU and Iran now want to trade
oil in euro, Germany is increasingly free-trading with China, Iraq is
colluding with Iran, which is selling its oil in yuan to China, and
Saudi Barbaria is about to follow suit. The mercenary war against
Syria, last hope for the imperialists, has failed because Russia,
which has resurrected under pesky Putin, has ruined it for them. If
you ask me, ever since the millennium the US regime acts under
increasing panic of losing not only their precious PNAC, but also
their imperial lifeline: the dollar. The fact alone that the empire
is now increasingly relying on mercenaries, be it Academi or ISIS,
shows the desperation. The Anglo-American establishments have for
about five centuries followed Machiavellian principles and the use of
mercenaries is not one
of them. When (not if) the dollar crumbles, the empire will never
resurrect from the rubble that will be left. This was pretty much the
exact situation under which the Hillary Clinton vs. Donald Trump
Punch and Judy show was performed.
Realpolitik in a World of Delusions
I
must admit, I still can’t quite figure out Trump, but I am
convinced that the cartels’ original plan was to install Hillary in
order to blind liberals with her pink
hat the
same way they had before blinded them with O’Bomber’s dark
complexion. To liberals women and minorities are fluffy teddy bears
unable to do evil stuff and if they go to war then it will be nothing
but a humanitarian pillow fight. Rednecks and conservatives, however,
have never caused much trouble for the cartels since they had always
been patriotically following their leaders and happily joined any
mayhem as the cartels’ cannon fodder. However, the latter now were
so discontent with their dire social and economic situation, a
domestic consequence that is inevitable for any empire, that after
generations of patriotic cheering for war they had become a
reliability as well. From the cartels’ view Trump turned out to be
the better choice. The liberals are now too focused on his chauvinist
personality and imagined Russian collusion to notice his disastrous
policies, while the grumpy nostalgics still at large view him as
their big Orange Hero. While the plebs are in this way tamed and
focused, he surely seems to be compliant enough on issues like Syria,
Iran, Korea or Zionist apartheid not to be assassinated. But he also
keeps antagonizing the US cartels’ core allies in Europe, even the
UK now, and that seems rather weird, doesn’t it? I consider it to
be a massive sign of the deep perplexity the cartels are in.
If
the US regime was a proper republic instead of a criminal enterprise
and its deep state as pragmatic as, say, the German deep state, they
would surely do the only right thing there is to do in their very
host country: dismantle the US military empire and invest heavily in
infrastructure at home. The economy would get a boost from such
mundane tasks as repairing bridges and highways, but there is plenty
of more room to invest. The US doesn’t even have high speed trains,
it has a 3rd world power grid, and its family homes still mostly
consist of heat wasting carpet boxes. There are also vast
possibilities for renewable energies in sunny and windy U.S.A. which,
regardless of whether you choose to believe Exxonmobil or science,
offer great economic value. Imagine the number of proper jobs that
could be created by just bringing the domestic US into the 21st
century. That would be realpolitiks. And hopefully will be the future
of the United States.
The
military highway has been bloating GDP with a certain success for the
cartels for years, but it’s a dead end now. Even if they had
installed cattish, insane Hillary in Warshington, the US would still
not be able to attack Iran – the Europeans would still not have
followed, and it would still turn out a ruinous endeavor. The US
empire has simply ran out of attackable enemies to pretend to be
powerful. Even Venezuela would be too hard for them to attack as
they’d entangle themselves in an endless guerrilla war in the
jungle, something they’re not exactly brilliant at. Besides, the
times when the American people still “cattled” behind every given
war are over, and I don’t see any significant European nation to
follow. So, what’s left to do? If they went down the road of
realpolitiks, the cartels’ would lose their more than two centuries
old absolute power over the US. For example, if the US brought their
energy regime more closely to the 21st century, the big oil and big
nuke cartels would lose out a lot to the more decentralized
renewables which then belonged to farmers or local communities (a
struggle that is still far from over here in Germany). Large central
investments are as key in corporate capitalism round table style as
they were in state capitalism Soviet style. The empire cannot be
saved, but everything that could save the domestic US from its demise
and collapse would in the end mean the end of the iron grip of power
of Wall St, Big Oil, Big Pharma, Military-Industrial-Complex, etc.
The criminal enterprise that we have known as the U.S.A. is about to
come to an end either way – involuntarily
and violently destroying the country or voluntarily and peacefully
preserving the country.
If you haven’t seen the film Der
Untergang yet,
I assume you should do now by all means.
The
cartels don’t give a rat’s arse over the country. That’s why,
instead of focusing on domestic issues, they are now going for
desperate measures to try to “discipline” Europeans, Chinese, and
even Rwanda with
silly tariffs in order to somehow keep the global dollar regime by
asserting an illusion of power – and with Europeans they’ll
always find pleasurable surrender
monkeys.
But the dollar regime is ending. The greenback will surely remain an
important currency (unless it fully collapses), but only next to
others like the euro and yuan. I think, they’re still trying to
figure out what to do next, not realizing that there is nothing to do
next but to deviate from imperialism. The one thing they can count
on, however, appears to be the infinite asininity of the American
public who now seem to be less divided over Democrat vs Republican
groupthink, over empire vs domestic, but more between the Great
Russia Panic and the Great Jew Panic. This is painfully facepalming
to watch from over here, I can tell you that with all my benevolent
heart.
Collapse,
civil war, disintegration seem to be ahead for the US. The world in
the 2030s might even be a world without the U.S.A., entirely. Instead
there might be several new countries on the North American map. And
why not? Texas, California and Florida could surely do alone
economically, and Hawai’i and their “howdies” don’t even
belong to the US one single bit. The smartest grassroot movements in
America would call for segregation of their respective state or
states such as the Pacific ones. I hate to say it but my money is on
a violent collapse and disintegration of the US hopefully
not tearing Canada down with them.
The erratic empire is downfalling, and while that’s a great thing
for humanity in the long run, including for Americans who I believe
will eventually benefit from such catharsis, it will at first turn
out to be extremely ugly.
Sergio’s
Bio: Born to a Portuguese mother and a German father Sergio was
raised in Northern Germany, just two kilometers away from a
British-German NATO air base. The daily sonic boom and thunder of low
altitude Tornados was the sound of his childhood. They years when
NATO wanted to station Pershing-2 missiles with nuclear warheads at
the air base, were formative for him and he can still vividly
remember the Cold War, Reagan, Thatcher, Chernobyl, the
claustrophobic atmosphere, and the relief when the Berlin Wall
finally fell. He makes his living as a web-programmer and IT
consultant but still avidly studies studies history, geopolitics,
economic theories, monetary theory, Hegel, Nietzsche, Marx and music.
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