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Lagging
Recognition
By
James Howard Kunstler
Kunstler.com
June
9, 2009
Through the tangle of green shoots and
sprouting mustard seeds, a certain nervous view persists that the
arc of events is taking us to places unimaginable. The
collapse of General Motors and Chrysler signifies more than the
collapse of US car manufacturing. It spells the end of the
motoring era in America per se and the puerile fantasy of personal
liberation that allowed it to become such a curse to us.
Of course, many Nobel prize-winning economists
would argue that it has only been a blessing for us, but that only
shows how the newspapers are committing suicide-by-irrelevance. And
if other societies, such as China's late-entry industrial start-up,
want to adopt a similar fantasy, they will only find themselves all
the sooner in history's garage with a tailpipe in their mouths.
Here in the USA, we will mount the most
strenuous campaign to keep the motoring system going -- in fact,
we're already doing it -- but it will fail just as surely as two (so
far) of the "big three" automakers have failed. It will
fail because car-making is only one facet of a larger network of
systems that is coming undone, namely a revolving debt cheap energy
economy.
Americans will never again buy as many new
cars as they were able to do before 2008 on the terms that were
normal until then: installment loans. Our credit system
is completely broken. It choked to death on securitized debt
engineered by computer magic and business school hubris. That
complex of frauds and swindles coincided with the background force
of peak oil, which meant, among other things, that economic growth
based on ever-increasing energy resources was over, and along with
it ever-increasing credit. What it boils down to now is that
we can't service our debt at any level, personal, corporate, or
government -- and that translates into comprehensive societal
bankruptcy.
The efforts of our federal government to work
around this now, to cover up the "non-performing" debt and
to generate the new lending necessary to keep the old system going,
is a tragic exercise in futility. I'm not saying this to be a
"pessimistic" grandstanding doomer pain-in-the-ass, but
because I would like to see my country make more intelligent choices
that would permit us to continue being civilized, to move into the
next phase of our history without a horrible self-destructive
convulsion.
Another consequence of the debt problem is
that we won't be able to maintain the network of gold-plated
highways and lesser roads that was as necessary as the cars
themselves to make the motoring system work. The trouble is
you have to keep gold-plating it, year after year. Traffic engineers
refer to this as "level-of-service." They've learned
that if the level-of-service is less than immaculate, the highways
quickly enter a spiral of disintegration. In fact, the American
Society of Civil Engineers reported several years ago that the
condition of many highway bridges and tunnels was at the
"D-minus" level, so we had already fallen far behind on a
highway system that had simply grown too large to fix even when we
thought we were wealthy enough to keep up. Right now, we're
pretending that the "stimulus" program will carry us over
long enough to resume the old method of state-and-federal spending
based largely on bonding (that is, debt).
The political dimension of the collapse of
motoring is the least discussed part of problem: as fewer and
fewer citizens find themselves able to buy and run cars, they will
feel increasingly aggrieved at the system set up to make motoring
virtually mandatory for all the chores of everyday life, and their
resentments will rise against the elite that can still manage to
enjoy it. Because our car-dependency is so extreme, the
reaction of the dis-entitled classes is liable to be extreme and
probably delusional to an extreme, too.
You can already see it being baked in the
cake. Happy Motoring is so entangled in our national identity that
the loss of it is bound to cause a national identity crisis.
In places like the American south, the old Dixie states, motoring
lifted more than half the population out of the dust, and became the
basis of the New South economy. The sons and grandsons of
starving sharecroppers became Chevy dealers and developers of
suburban housing tracts, malls, and strip malls. They don't
have any nostalgia for the historical reality of hookworm and
14-hour-days of serf labor in hundred-degree heat. Theirs is a
nostalgia for the present, for air-conditioned comfort and
convenience and the groaning all-you-can-eat Shoney's breakfast
buffet off the freeway ramp. When it is withdrawn from them by
the mandate of events, they will be furious.
Given the history of the region and the
predilections of its dominant ethnic group, one might imagine that
they will want to take out their gall and grievance on the
half-African politician who presides over the situation. Among the
ever-expanding classes dis-entitled from the so-called American
Dream, the crisis is only marginally different in other regions of
the nation. Mr. Obama faces a range of awful dilemmas, and it is
painful to see them go unrecognized and unacknowledged by his White
House. It's hard to imagine that the president and his elite
advisors are blind to these equations, but as the weeks tick by they
seem stuck in a box of limited perception.
We're in a strange hiatus for now.
"Hope" levitates the legitimacy of the dollar, the stock
markets, and the authority of leadership. In the background,
implosion continues, debt goes unpaid, banks ignore bad loans to
keep them off their books, jobs and incomes vanish, cars and other
things go unsold, and a tragic wishfulness strains to sustain the
unsustainable. Our expectations are inconsistent with what is
happening to us.
It will be very painful for us to walk away
from the car-centered life. Half the population faces the ugly
obstacle of being hopelessly over-invested in a suburban house and
all the life-ways associated with it. There will be no easy way out
for them, whatever they chose to do politically, whatever noise they
make, whomever they scapegoat, whatever fantasies they cultivate
about what the world owes them, or who they think they are.
Mr. Obama should not waste another week
pretending that we can keep this old system going. The public
needs to know that we will be making our livings differently,
inhabiting the landscape differently, and spending our days and
nights differently -- even while we suffer our losses. The
public needs to hear this from more figures than Mr. Obama, too,
from leaders in the state capitals, and the agencies, and business
and education and what remains of the clergy. But somebody has
to set in motion the chain of recognition, or events will soon do it
for us.
____________________________________
My 2008 novel of the post-oil future, World Made By Hand, is
available in paperback at all booksellers.
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