By James Srodes from the February 2010 issue
Are you ready for the Great Recession of 2011–2012? You should be, for it is getting under way even as you read this. Just as the 2009 “greatest economic crisis since the Great Depression” actually began back in 2007, so we are in the early days of the next cycle. Only this recession is going to be a doozy. And the aftershocks will be felt long after President Hillary Clinton leaves the White House in 2024.
The coming crisis should be no surprise, for we all have had plenty of advance warning. If it is a surprise, blame those chat-show economists who have become so politicized that they ignore the truths of their own science in order to acquire celebrity. Nor should we forget those politicians who deliberately suborn national interest for the security of zero-sum pork-barrel politicking. Combine it all with a news media largely made up of self-referential ignoramuses and it is small wonder that most of the world has been diverted as Dorothy was in Oz by the lightning bolts, explosions, and billowing smoke screen being generated by the men behind the curtain. The truth is our wizards dare not admit that the levers they pull are not really connected to the true crisis that confronts America or its place in the global market.
Despite the self-congratulatory assurances from the White House, Congress, and part of Wall Street that we have been saved from a slide into a 1930s depression, our most serious trials still lie ahead of us. We are unlikely to be able to get back to those halcyon days of perpetual prosperity and optimism that Americans (and most of the industrial world) enjoyed for the last 50 years. A tectonic shift is occurring beneath our feet and the world’s economic climate has shifted. We face not just a few abrasive years of getting back to normal, but a generational hard slog of constricted markets, limited resources, and rolling setbacks. And in each episode of crisis, some will prosper, the weak will suffer most, and radical visions propounded by political snake-oil salesmen of all persuasions will make rational discourse nearly impossible to conduct.
This is not to say that the Apocalypse is upon us, as morally satisfying as that might be to some. Nothing so dramatic is going to happen. The future offers no therapeutic collapse of civilization, with roaming bands prowling the rubble for Soylent Green. Folks will try to live just the way they have been but those lives will be more pinched, the opportunities more limited; caution and bitterness will replace the open-handed optimism that made it a wonder to be a 20th-century American, or even a Western European. If the stolid Swiss now quake at the sight of a minaret in Zurich, it is just one of the many new worries for all of us to fret over in the years to come. Civil privileges now considered “rights” will be up for renegotiation.
One has to feel a twinge of sympathy for the people who have chosen careers of service in government—not just in Washington but in all the capitals of the industrial West. Life just is not going to be as uplifting as it once was back when policy innovations were both credible and idealistic. But it must be especially hard for the crowd of wizards in Washington these days. Building consensus is hard when no one will talk to anyone else. Little wonder then that so much of the dramatic rescue being claimed by the White House in reality turns out to be merely putting rouge on the patient’s cheeks and exclaiming how well the poor soul looks.
Underscoring the difficulty in charting a new economic course is the truth that the government’s own statistics have become so distorted by age and the dynamics of change that they really don’t reflect the depth of the crisis that is upon us. So the wizards continue to twiddle the levers of stimulus and regulatory rules changes without realizing that the dials and barometers have long ago broken connection with what is going on. Houston, we have a problem.
CONSIDER JUST A FEW of the economic bellwethers one hears about on the evening news as proof that the crisis has been stabilized and recovery is imminent. Stock prices are up, true. But trading volume is way down and that is because retail investors—citizens making real investment choices— are on the sidelines. The price rises that swell the Dow Jones Industrial and other indices reflect almost pure speculation by Wall Street’s investment houses that are soggy with Washington’s cash injections. Just as Cash for Clunkers inflated Detroit’s hopes last summer, so the share price recovery is more of a sign of a new bubble inflating than it is of real value returning to share market prices.
The same for housing prices, only more so. It was headline news recently that house prices in “some” areas of the country had stopped declining quite as fast, while in some fewer areas there were even tiny increases in prices of houses sold, if not much increase in the volume. Yet there are uncounted hundreds of thousands of vacant houses, condominiums, and commercial office space for which there is no rational prospect of a buyer during 2010 or perhaps ever.
It will get worse. Of the 47.4 million home mortgages in place today, nearly 10.7 million are “underwater,” that is, the money owed on the loan is greater than the value of the house. And that’s not counting the 2.3 million other mortgages that are “near-negative equity.” Most of these latter will face sharply higher upward ratcheting of their interest rates in 2010 and 2011 and that will automatically plunge those debts below the surface.
In Nevada already the amount of mortgages outstanding is estimated at $132.6 billion against property worth $116.7 billion, a loan-to-value ratio of 116 percent. Even another slight decline in prices in areas such as California (loan-to-value ratio of 72 percent), Arizona (91 percent), or Florida (87 percent) will swamp Washington’s promised next round of mortgage subsidy relief. The government’s own rescue agencies, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and FHA, are dead in the water, and the government’s bank deposit insurance agency, the FDIC, says it has no more reserves to offset the coming next round of failing banks.
EVEN WHEN WASHINGTON ADMITS to a worrying 10-plus percent unemployment rate the real numbers are so far from reality as to be laughable. The recent headlined dip in the jobless rate turns out to have been caused by more than 50,000 already jobless people simply giving up and dropping out of the workforce. This has the statistically absurd result that the percentage of people deemed to be unsuccessfully seeking work is judged to have improved. When labor data is closely parsed for the measure known as “U-6,” which includes people forced to work part-time, those “discouraged” from seeking jobs, and those “marginally attached,” the rate trends above 17 percent.
But even that fails to accurately gauge the cold reality of the hopelessness facing folks at either end of the workforce demographic—the very young (where unemployment is trending above 60 percent) and those 55 and older who are forced back into job quests because their nest eggs vanished in the storm. Two-thirds of the job losses across the country have happened to the very blue-collar workers the Democratic Party has claimed for its own. For those Americans who still have hourly-wage jobs, their employment week would be the envy of a Frenchman—33 hours, on average. Sectors such as manufacturing, construction, and even retailing continue to shed workers; the only consistent gains over the last two years have been, no surprise, in government employment.
The policy response of all Western governments is to follow the failed Japanese model of trying to inflate one’s way out of a downdraft, pumping up another bubble. The theory is that if interest rates are forced low enough, and the money supply increased enough, and the government ramps up deficit spending to redistribute more wealth from the supposed rich to the supposed poor, a “multiplier effect” of economic growth will be sparked by consumers buying more, businesses investing more, and more jobs being created with prosperity spreading and growing. But if interest rates are already at zero, and the value of the dollar has been halved by doubling the supply of it, and the debt service burden of government spending is already suffocating the capital markets, how can one expect consumers to buy more (to buy more of what?), or businesses to invest more (for a new machine to do what?), much less to hire old workers back when the jobs they used to have are vanished, not to some Third World haven, but just vanished?
No one in Washington can say with a straight face just what the U.S. gross domestic product is except that we have been pushed back at least a decade and will probably be more than a decade in just getting back to where we were in 2006 (when GDP rose by an anemic 2.7 percent) just before the bubble burst the next year. Meanwhile new bubbles are forming all around us, in the commodity markets, in Hong Kong real estate, in the troubling data coming out of China and other Asian economies, all just waiting to buckle. Can you say Dubai? Greece?
FURTHER CONFUSING ANY ATTEMPT at a rational public analysis of the current crisis are the prevailing lies that the fault for the crisis lies in the failed economic theories propounded by the late Ronald Reagan and, more, that what we need is to return to the sound prescriptions of the even later John Maynard Keynes. Reagan, this slander says, set the financial markets off on an orgy of speculation and risk-taking by taking off the restraints of sound government regulation and by insisting on deficitbusting tax cuts. By returning to the true religion that Keynes revealed to Franklin D. Roosevelt in a dream, government, and only government, can return us to prosperity by even grander deficit spending coupled with a massive expansion of liquidity and the lowest interest rates possible. If that sounds confusing, it should; neither man prescribed any such thing.
It is true enough that Reagan, despite having studied economics in college, was singularly immune to economic theories. In the interregnum year of 1979, when he had left the governor’s office but before his 1980 campaign, I traveled with him in northern California on a speaking tour and found him far more concerned about what worked in the real world rather than on speculations about what ought to work. That summer he gathered the cream of conservative economic thought—from Arthur Laffer to Herb Stein—in George Shultz’s offices in San Francisco to consider the stagflation that gripped the nation. After hearing an entire day’s worth of philosophizing by the party’s greatest minds, Reagan closed the meeting with a decision to make tax cuts a policy point for his upcoming run for the White House.
“Nancy and I always believed that if you didn’t want the kids to overspend their allowances, you didn’t give them the money in the first place.” And so it was tax cuts, which did indeed provide the investment capital needed to work the nation’s way out of economic gridlock. If he was wrong in presuming that federal deficits would be reduced, it was because neither he nor any president since has been able to restrain the 535 members of the U.S. Congress from overspending. Please don’t e-mail me about the myth of Bill Clinton’s surpluses; they didn’t happen. The last federal budget to have a genuine surplus of tax revenues over outlays was Lyndon Johnson’s $3 billion budget surplus for fiscal 1969.
For more than 40 years successive U.S. administrations, Republican and Democrat, have failed to rein in a feckless Congress, which has run a giant Ponzi scheme that would make Bernie Madoff blush. Our lawgivers have routinely spent more than they take in, jiggling the tax rates to help constituents, and sucking in imports from abroad by paying off in a currency that has steadily declined in purchasing power to the point that dependent customers like China and Brazil are reduced to barter-style trade transactions with each other because the dollar is of no further use to them as a monetary intermediary. The real sucker is the American wage earner, who by the government’s own accounting has lost one-third of his purchasing power since the 1970s (probably closer to two-thirds if we are honest, and if he still has a job).
Neither Reagan nor Keynes today would approve of the TARPs for banks, the near doubling of the money supply, and the loans to major corporations and other bailouts of institutions deemed “too big to fail.” Indeed, in his 1936 oft-cited but rarely read General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money, Keynes did in fact speak of raising demand in an economy by redistributing income, but only in times when a booming economy is just starting to falter. Once the bust has occurred, however, and industrial capacity and demand are slack, Keynes warned that simply pumping up liquidity and depressing interest rates are of little use; government’s role in such a case, he recommended, was to invest in “public works” that enhanced the economic infrastructure while providing employment. No bailouts, thank you very much.
ANOTHER THING I AM SURE OF is that both Reagan and Keynes would have been acutely aware of the seismic shifting of the underpinnings that support the Western-style global marketplace. As late as 50 years ago America had much of what it needed to prosper, and foreign trade accounted for a nickel of every dollar of gross domestic product. Our prosperity was mostly in our own hands. Now we are fully engaged not only with older, industrially mature trade partners but also with newer emerging powers in the struggle both for world markets and for key ingredients for manufacturing and agriculture—just as they all become in ever shorter supply and ever more expensive to obtain.
During my 1979 trip with Reagan he resolutely refused to talk about policy questions that dealt with the kind of specifics that Washingtonians love to parse. A kindly man, he also sensed my frustration and finally asked me to ask him the broadest economic question on my mind. So I pointed out that America was in the midst of an economic crisis with inflation and interest rates at frightening levels, with OPEC jacking up oil price, and economic activity stuttering. What did he think was going on and what could be done about it?
“Well, I can’t help but notice that while oil prices are going up, so are gold prices. And that tells me the oil producers are fed up with taking dollars that are worth less each day while the industrial world consumes their oil. So we either have to find a way to make our dollar worth more, or to find more oil of our own, or to learn to get more economic lift with the oil we can afford—and probably all three. Things sure can’t go on like this forever,” Reagan said. He did not need the Laffer Curve to see that.
Keynes would have agreed. Indeed, much of his fabled theorizing about the certainty of uncertainty in the marketplace and the awareness of risk came from his having been an early and highly successful hedge fund manager who speculated in both currencies and commodities during the turbulent times following World War I. His fund partnership with a friend known as “Foxy” Falk corralled seed money from chums among the Bloomsbury literati and began in 1920 to go long in U.S. dollars while shorting the mark, franc, and lira in a play that lost more than $300,000 in today’s money before it collapsed. Later, as the linkages between raw materials, trade, and currencies became clearer to him, he not only repaid his friends’ losses but accumulated great wealth for himself and for his college at Cambridge, which made him its trustee.
The new certainty that both men would have recognized, and that we must confront, is that the era of cheap resources is over. The plentiful and extremely profitable supplies of everything—petroleum, metals, minerals, water, yes, and even air—have been exhausted. While we had them in abundance for a period of nearly three centuries the world was an ever-expanding place, a cornucopia that human ingenuity fashioned into ever more wonderful machines and the human spirit used to subsidize the expansion of opportunities and entitlements we call “rights” to all mankind.
THIS IS NOT TO SAY the lights are suddenly going to go out all over the world. Those who use the “peak oil” argument to say we have exhausted the globe’s oil reserves are wrong. It does not really matter whether there are two trillion barrels left or (more likely) 10 trillion barrels of petroleum still lurking under polar ice caps or offshore Brazil or in the South China Sea. We will have petroleum energy supplies aplenty from shale and other high-tech processes too. But it will be expensive and hard to get, and it is that extra expense of the getting that robs us of the subsidy that made so much of the industrial West’s prosperity—and indeed its political culture and civil promises—so possible.
Put another way, oil at $73 per barrel (the price at this writing) can readily be found in any number of offshore deep deposits. Most industrial metals and minerals can still be obtained if the price rises enough. But neither they nor the likely $100 barrel can produce the same economic lift that a barrel of $3 Saudi Arabian oil did in the 1950s. At the historically low costs of both energy and available ingredients it was possible to be intellectually lazy when it came to estimating the true cost of most of our human activities. Those days are over, and old solutions are increasingly disconnected from critical new challenges dressed in familiar terms—the need for new jobs, new products, market regulation, environmental responsibility, and truly global prosperity for all instead of competing regional advantages that disenfranchise entire races of people.
What this means is we must begin to look at public policies and economic choices from a “net energy” framework; that is, to apply hard analysis as to the true cost of everything we undertake. Will the energy and raw materials we invest in any undertaking yield a greater return or a lesser one? As an example, at some point in a coal mine it takes more energy to lift a ton of coal to the surface than that ton of coal will produce. There may be reasons to keep the mine open (to preserve jobs) but there should be recognition that that decision will require some other part of the economy to subsidize that losing operation.
The “net energy” concept explains why, despite the cries for alternative sources to our dependency on petroleum, there has not been a general shift to wind, solar, or other alternatives. This is because even at $100 a barrel, oil (and natural gas) still provides an extraordinary lift to economic activities while most “alternatives,” when fully costed-out for the technology, expensive materials, environmental impact, maintenance, and (in the case of nuclear power) the after-cost of tearing down and waste management, often absorb more energy than they produce over their operating life.
Nor does one have to buy into the suspect environmental warnings of Al Gore and the data fudgers of Copenhagen to realize that we also have subsidized our world by using our water supplies and the very air we breathe as an industrial sewerage system in ways that subsidize a wasteful way of life. That subsidy also cannot continue.
To have a conscious recognition of this truth is just the first step. Like any other addict, the policy prescribers in Washington (or any other capital) cannot be expected to easily acknowledge the new realities. So we see the familiar stages: there is denial that we will never get back to “normal”; Wall Street, insurance companies, drug makers, Rush Limbaugh (seriously) are all such easy targets for anger and the need to blame others. I mean, Rush Limbaugh, really.
DEMANDING NEW RULES to prevent financial excesses puts the bartender in charge of trying to ration the drunks and keep his tip jar filled at the same time. Congressional hacks like Nancy, Harry, and Barney will never admit to any blame for their insistence that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac pressure the home mortgage industry into making home ownership available to people who were in no economic position to carry the burden. And don’t expect the career regulatory agencies that oversee the financial marketplace to acknowledge fault for turning a blind eye when banks bundled up those dodgy mortgages into even more dodgy securities, or when Wall Street took the government guarantees of that paper as being dependable. Nor will Alan Greenspan (or Ben Bernanke) fess up that the devaluing of the dollar caused the world’s key commodity markets to boost prices so sharply that ever more dollars were needed to pay for the same ingredients and that the rush for that liquidity made the dodgy mortgage paper irresistible to buyers from Norway to Beijing.
Yet until there is a general acknowledgement of government’s blame in compounding this upcoming recession on the back of the earlier slump, how can we expect Washington to seek a new approach to the global marketplace?
It would have been a comfort, of course, if there were a viable opposition force in Washington (or elsewhere) to the pervasive government-fix-all philosophy that exists. But a coherent Republican Party led by folks of stature who offer meaningful solutions has vanished from our scene as abruptly as did the Whigs in the 1850s. What’s left is a hologram of a political party, dominated by second-raters who obsess over moral doctrine in an appeal to some hypothetical “base” that will keep them in the few offices they still cling to.
The result, I fear, is more sham solutions that will merely interfere with the harsh corrections that are to be forced on us by a world economy that is losing traction even as the wheels spin faster. What that means is that instead of finding a way to get the 750,000 residents who have fled Detroit’s ghost-suburbs back in their homes and in new jobs, Washington will continue to mandate auto company executive suite changes and offer capital bribes to produce a government-mandated new generation of cars that Americans can scarcely afford to buy. And Wall Street’s bankers will still be able to get ever more funds on demand from their friends in the Treasury, even though most borrowers still can’t afford to borrow.
It will get ugly, make no mistake. How ugly? Wait until those things we consider “rights” start to get squeezed in the interest of what our ruling politicians decree as the national interest. The uproar that greeted the mere suggestion that health care resources for the elderly might be circumscribed was genteel debate by contrast with what’s ahead. The notion that rights can be rescinded as easily as they have been obtained is not a happy thought. Case in point: my mother recalled that she and my father had to marry in secret and she continued to live with her parents throughout 1936 because the New Dealers who controlled the Pennsylvania state legislature had decreed that no married woman could be a public school teacher or hold another state job when a jobless married man could take her place. Try that out on the next dinner table debate you attend and see how many bread rolls get thrown at you by women who are convinced that it can’t happen again; times have changed, they’ve come a long way, baby. Well, yes. Nowadays most women don’t have the option not to work.
HOW LONG WILL THIS DARK AGE LAST? Ask the Japanese, who have been at it for nearly 20 years. Ask the Chinese, who are just making a heroic jump out of a medieval time-warp into a modern industrial urban society only to teeter on the brink for lack of enough food, water, and arable land even as they accumulate piles of American dollars that lose value every day. How long? As a teenager growing up in Tampa in the 1950s I recall traveling south through a ghost town called Sun City on the way to Sarasota. This abandoned village had streets, municipal buildings, sidewalks, even steps up to residential lots, all laid out during the Florida land boom of the 1920s. What it lacked were houses and residents. And so it stayed for nearly 40 years, until Del Webb developed the retirement community and resort nearby and appropriated the name. Now people are fleeing Florida once again, and ghostly, empty high-rise condos dot the landscape.
Now ask yourself, how long will it take to reclaim the empty neighborhoods in Detroit, the empty condos in Las Vegas, or Phoenix, or, for that matter, in the McMansion-style suburbs that surround Washington, D.C.? What new jobs can be created to absorb the millions who have not only lost their jobs but who have stopped looking? What will those jobs make, and who will buy what is being offered?
Buddy, can you spare a dollar? Or maybe a Krugerrand?
Also See:
Gerald Celente : This is a Total Financial Meltdown and it is only going to get worse
Death Of US Dollar: Secret Images of New Proposed Currency Exposed
Be Prepared For The Worst: Breaking Point 2010 – Top Trends
Another U.S. War? Obama Threatens China and Iran
Will Globalists Trigger Yet Another World War?
Highly Important: How To Survive The New World Order
Project 2012: Predictions Coming True? Nuclear War Begins Soon? Updated
Trend Alert: Breaking Point 2010 – Gerald Celente
Video: 2 Million people march on Washington. The Second American Revolution Started!
CAUTION ALERT: Stock Market Crash /Collapse Dead Ahead Say Faber, Rogers, Dent and Celente
No Recovery. It’s a Cover up! Recession To Worsen Revolution To Follow
The History of the Future: Trends 2012
Trend Alert Video: Revolution next for U.S – Gerald Celente
Trend Alert: The ‘Second American Revolution’ Has Begun
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What a refreshing, outstanding piece of analysis. One that places our current economic troubles in a recognisable framework that is not reflected in the majority of European or North American media coverage.
A note to Mrs B. I think that your optimism is encouraging and I truly hope that the current economic narrative reaches a denouement that catalyses a seismic shift in global economics and cultural attitudes — one that is both decentralised and locally led. However, I can’t see it. For, deep down, I feel that the human being neither has the capacity nor the time to make such a leap of faith and, by extension, change.
Our capacity for change is dictated by the fact that we are, and will always be (as the eminent biologist E O Wilson points out) tribal carnivores. In this way, we are programmed by our inheritance to see other living things as mainly something to eat, and we care more about our national tribe than anything else. We will even give our lives for it and are quite ready to kill other humans in the cruellest of ways for the good of our tribe. In this way, we still find alien the concept that we and the rest of life, from bacteria to whales, are parts of the much larger and diverse entity that is the living planet.
Add to the fact that the emerging economies of Brazil, India, China, etc. aspire to lifestyles that have been taken for granted for decades in the west (levels that would require three earth planets of resources to accommodate) and we have a veritable tinderbox of potential conflicts over ever dwindling resources. Equally worryingly, the combination of aspirational populations, global warming and dwindling resources will further stress expanding populations to breaking point. Against this background, there is simply no chance of an emergent decentralised liberalism breaking over the shores that, in a century’s time, may well be the 22nd century’s Hadrian’s Wall. No, for that would overlook the essential wolf in the human condition. The wolf that lies at the heart of consumerism, that ‘filling our house with crap’ mentality that is the only source of differentiation and separation for more than half of the world’s population (who now live in cities).
As I sit here typing this response in the comfort of my home in a verdant part of London it is easy, for a few moments, to forget that we stand on such a precipitous brink. For as James Srodes pertinently points out:
“The notion that rights can be rescinded as easily as they have been obtained is not a happy thought.”
And sadly, such acts will most probably be at the very tip of the iceberg.
Hey Pak, this is a very thoughtful and complete piece. Thank you for posting it.
However, I take issue with the author’s dismal predictions. They are headed in the wrong direction and if we keep this up they will become self-fulfilling prophecies. Is this really the kind of future we want to see?
Has anyone considered that this economic downturn has the potential to ENRICH us beyond anything we could have arranged? It is forcing unprecedented numbers of people to question their lives, their way of life, who we are and what we are doing to ourselves and the planet.
This downturn is the very welcome death throes of false systems that were put in place by foolish conspiring elitists many hundreds of years ago. The mindset which subdued the world in the 1400s, and created the excesses of the ensuing centuries, is quickly reaching its ultimate fate.
Instead of fearing what will happen to the jobless cities or fretting about a draconian federal government, let us ask instead: Is anyone truly happy with this way of life? If we interviewed several million people in western nations to assess physical and emotional well-being, what would we find?
All negative parameters that I’m aware of– percentage of unhappy marriages, dysfunctional families, anxiety, drug use, murder, suicide, feral street gangs, homelessness, unsafe neighborhoods, stress-related disease, antidepressant use, alcoholism, children abused or in foster care, incarceration– all of these have increased in lock-step with western-based economic growth. It also parallels the dumping of toxic waste in the water and sky as mentioned here.
Whenever the western lifestyle is first introduced to indigenous people, it erodes traditional, sustainable ways of life that stretch back hundreds or thousands of years. These natural lifestyles often produced perfect physical and emotional health, in stark contrast to the westernized populations who lose both physical and emotional health in direct proportion to their uptake of ‘modern’ practices. (Not to say those more primitive lifestyles are easy or safe or even what people might choose if they were given non-coerced options.)
My point is, the core problems of western society cannot end without a realization that the driving forces for such a lifestyle are intrinsically unhealthy. We must understand that unhealthy systems can only produce unhealthy people in an unhealthy environment, exactly what we have today.
When that understanding takes root, when people become aware that their combined thoughts on positive alternatives along with small, localized positive actions, will STOP THE BAD STUFF IN ITS TRACKS and begin creating the good stuff, then clusters of perfect solutions, clusters of happy people, clusters of renewed natural abundance and natural economies will begin to sprout and spread around the world.
I believe this downturn is occurring now because we needed everyone who has been born, all 6.7 billion of us, to come up with the solutions. The shift will take that many minds to think the problems through to healthy solutions. It is the start of a beautiful new existence.
NO rights need to be lost. NO global agendas need to be enacted. Nothing needs to be done by any government on any large scale. That is not how the natural world operates nor how human societies operated before the unnatural western lifestyle took over. Everyone who claims some form of ruling power will find themselves blocked, immobile, questioning their own lives just like the rest of us, because this downturn is that large and has incredible change-force bound up within it.
Let’s be the ones to begin a better process by ‘infecting’ our communities with more helpful ideas. Encourage people to open up and talk about what they’d most like to be doing. Convince them this downturn will enrich us because we get to build anything we want from scratch, just the way we want it. Encourage friends and family to spell out what they really want in their lives with as much detail as possible. Ideas include: safe and supportive neighborhoods; full employment in meaningful jobs for those who need work; fresh nourishing local foods and locally-produced goods; repair and healing of polluted areas; smaller schools that teach skills which encourage human connections; bartering, recycling, energy efficiency, rainwater harvesting, permaculture techniques, passive solar homes and businesses, restoring health with natural methods…. everything. All the dreams need to be on the table, talked about, outlined, envisioned.
And then, at the right time, the massive kinetic energy built up within this downturn will break through to animate those ideas and spin off new ones incredibly quickly. They will multiply outward geometrically, changing everything in their path. We will have something so new and exciting growing up around us, it can’t even be described yet. It will be so unlike our previous experience that we will wonder how people ever lived that way.
Why are there not more people such as yourself, who inform the blinded by nonsense-news public, that we need to prepare ourselves for drastic changes in our relationship with the world and one another if we are to safely morph into the twenty first century?
We obviously are leaving the industrial age behind us and need to adapt ourselves as rapidly as possible into the new age of technology, where we can achieve much more with less human effort and fewer natural resources.
It seems to me that the old folk, that is the established power brokers, are holding onto straws by pretending amongst themselves that all is fine because they are getting more powerful as they get richer. They are so blinded by their self-congratulations that they do not realize that their wealth is an illusion because it no longer has much intrinsic value. It is only worth as much as the public consensus allows for. Eventually they will see their riches disappear into the mist as the proper use of technology is installed by the ‘ordinary’ people so that we will flourish in this new age.
You prepared your readers for what will inevitably come our way if we refuse to grow up by accepting that we live in an ever changing world and making the most of that knowledge rather than wasting our time with futile arguments, which will take us nowhere and will threaten the survival of many because their basic needs are being neglected while the powerful and the rich feast themselves at the public trough.
Why are there not more people such as yourself, who inform the blinded by nonsense-news public, that we need to prepare ourselves for drastic changes in our relationship with the world and one another if we are to safely morph into the twenty first century?
W obviously are leaving the industrial age behind us and need to adapt ourselves as rapidly as possible into the new age of technology, where we can do much more with less human effort and fewer natural resources. We therefore need to achieve more with less.
It seems to me that the old folk, that is the established power brokers, are holding onto straws by pretending amongst themselves that all is fine because they are getting more powerful as they get richer. They are so blinded by their self-congratulations that they do not realize that their wealth is an illusion because it no longer has much intrinsic value. It is only worth as much as the public consensus allows for. Eventually they will see their riches disappear into the mist as the proper use of technology is installed by the ‘ordinary’ people so that we will flourish in this new age.
You prepared your readers for what will inevitably come our way if we refuse to grow up by accepting that we live in an ever changing world and making the most of that knowledge rather than wasting our time with futile arguments, which will take us nowhere and will threaten the survival of many because their basic needs are being neglected while the powerful and the rich feast themselves at the public trough.
Why are there not more people such as yourself, who inform the blinded by nonsense- news public, that we need to prepare ourselves for drastic changes in our relationship with the world and one another if we are to safely morph into the twenty first century?
W obviously are leaving the industrial age behind us and need to adapt ourselves as rapidly as possible into the new age of technology, where we can do much more with less human effort and fewer natural resources. We therefore need to achieve more with less.
It seems to me that the old folk, that is the established power brokers, are holding onto straws by pretending amongst themselves that all is fine because they are getting more powerful as they get richer. They are so blinded by their self-congratulations that they do not realize that their wealth is an illusion because it no longer has much intrinsic value. It is only worth as much as the public consensus allows for. Eventually they will see their riches disappear into the mist as the proper use of technology is installed by the ‘ordinary’ people so that we will flourish in this new age.
You prepared your readers for what will inevitably come our way if we refuse to grow up by accepting that we live in an ever changing world and making the most of that knowledge rather than wasting our time with futile arguments, which will take us nowhere and will threaten the survival of many because their basic needs are being neglected while the powerful and the rich feast themselves at the public trough.
I’m not entirely sure the sound economic prescriptions of Keynes are so sound.
I’m no economist; but how can the Keynesian model be valid when it has never taken real estate into account?
Also; with the greatest respect, how could the Keynsian model still be valid when implementing this economic model ensures a continuation of vacuous bubbles followed by devastating corrections and no ‘real’ growth?
How exactly we can recover our economies when the problems that caused it are not addressed? I don’t think the dinosaurs within successive governments who cling to the Keynesian mentality have any answers. Â mad person you may say, hard to argue against Keynesian Economics? But I really don’t agree.
Such dinosaurs linger under the misapprehension of the basic Keynesian premise that demand leads to wealth.
I would really like someone to tell me how we can wish, or demand to be wealthy?
In my opinion, if you get down to the nitty gritty, blow away all chaff, the basic Keynesian premise suggests that we can vote ourselves rich. Sorry but demand does not necessarily create ‘real’ wealth, which is why the US and UK are now two of the most indebted countries in the western world; with the majority of our citizens hopelessly in debt and as such a country that produces nothing.
I believe that until we bring about radical change regarding land ownership and the ever tightening noose it places around the neck of any citizen/company wishing to manufacture ‘real’ wealth, we cannot rebuild and sustain our economies.
In my personal opinion we are destined to remain countries that produce nothing.
We historically have land/real estate being ‘owned’ purely to make money this not only leads to a shortage of land under the Keynsian model, which, artificially raises the price of land/real estate (as we have seen) and it also means land,/real estate ultimately, cannot be used in a productive manner.
The only people making money are the ‘owners’; this indicates quite clearly that what is created is a two headed monster and a vicious circle. Already, the company/person who wishes to manufacture is shackled.
Anyone who decides that they want to manufacture ‘something’ needs land on which to do so and are crippled immediately by the high cost of just renting/buying premises in which to produce. This means they are already in a position where they cannot possibly compete.
On top of that, the over-inflated price of residential real estate; along with the destructive personal debt, created and encouraged by Keynesian Economics shackles the people that companies, or person(s) wish to employ with crippling financial commitments. The high costs incurred employing said people by having to pay a wage that enables them to financially survive within this economic system also adds greatly to their inability to compete.
So; not only do we have little manufacturing in our countries and have for a long time, had to rely on the so called ‘wealth’ generated via a service industry; said service industry completely relies on the population having money in their pockets to spend on such services.
The high cost of residential real estate (even now radically overpriced in comparision to earnings) means that any disposable income the population might be expected to spend via the service industry dissipates; along with fewer, or no job prospects, as not only does the manufacturing base disappear, but much of the service industry too.
This wealth the Keynsian model implies and presumably most people still support even though our countries have almost reached the echelons of third world status now, is not real; and never was because it does not take the above into account and I believe this is why we are now in the position we are in; and will remain in, unless properly addressed.
This article has been written when US economy is struggling hard to come out of its present recession. However, the author has just ignored the fact that it is quite easy to fell down a deep ditch but it takes quite a lot of efforts and time to come out of the pit. The economic recovery does not happen overnight. President Obama was the pick of American people on three beautiful slogans: “Yes We Can”, “Hope” and “Change”. At least give him a chance to prove his worth. To drive away the menace of recession is a long fight. The recession has already inflicted a great damage. Banks have liquidated, leasing tycoons as well, business houses and manufacturing companies have either closed down or shrank miserably – track back looks like an upheaval task. Obama has started with his Stimulus Plan and we wait and see if it clicks or not. Stimulus plan is not part of anti-recession drive. It is just to lessen the hardship of American people and restore their purchasing power. As you all would appreciate that recession is the natural outcome of imbalance between supply and demand. Demand of consumers is only good when their purse permits them. In my humble opinion, one of the major factors for American recession was the slogan that every man must have their own house. Loans and Leaseholds were advanced like a Real Estate Mania and Real Estate business was No.1 in the Stock Market. When recession hit the country, and common man was compelled to think “first stomach then other things”, the whole economic system crumbled down like a powder. Demands fell to almost Nil and supplies remained in factories and business houses rusting to junks tearing apart the whole banks money flow.
My point is totally different. Economic prosperity is always interwoven with foreign policy. The blunders of Bush Administration should be done away. Leave Iraq, leave Afghanistan, make or break is their fate. Trillions of dollar so saved should be spent on other budget heads. One tenth of the saved money, if spent on Homeland Security Strategy it would cement the country safe from inner/outer agression. This is not a suggestion, this is the only option left for USA.
AOA
their should be ratings,
so that we can rate ur articles or articles and videos u post.
nice work u do– keep it up…
The US acted like a child. It had one toy, it wants another one; it had two toys, it wants four.
It became greedy.
It started terror wars for some profits. It turned out to be a huge fiasco in Iraq.
The huge losses in lives and material were so enormous that the US army had to throw his death soldiers in the sea to hide the real death toll.
The US is strucked in Vietnamistan/Pipelineistan and Iraq for years to come. It will eventually sink into the Afghan quagmire, graveyard of empires.
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Perhaps it would have been better if the author had elaborated more on what he wrote about Hillary by adding facts.
Believing it just because he wrote so would be absurd.