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Campaign
Blues
By
James Howard Kunstler
Kunstler.com
March
4, 2008
While it's gratifying to watch Hillary Clinton melt back into her
senate seat -- in the process foiling the ascent of Emperor Bill the
1st -- one can't help but feel that that the contest for president
is taking place in a different "world-line" (shall we say)
than the melt-down of the US financial sector, and with it, the US
economy.
Whoever wins on November 5 will wake up to preside over a different
America than the schematic one he was debating about during the
primaries and the election. The long campaign will beat a path
straight into the long emergency. The new president will inherit a
wrecked banking system, an economy in freefall, a wobbling world oil
market, and an American public extremely ticked off by its
startling, sudden impoverishment. (This is apart from whatever
melodramas spool out on the geopolitical scene.)
The president-elect will quickly realize
that the number one problem is not that Americans can't afford
health care -- it's that they can't afford anything, because their
income is evaporating in terms of both lost jobs and a dollar that
is racing toward worthlessness. They'll be hard put to pay for food
and gasoline, nevermind Grandma's emphysema treatments. They will be
walking away from home ownership -- or yanked kicking and screaming
by default-and-repo -- and any government scheme devised to abridge
their mortgage contracts will only undermine basic contract law that
has made mortgage lending a credible thing in the first place. And
that too, of course, would redound straight to a real estate sector
already in price free-fall, with no one willing or able to think
about buying a house.
As Obama and McCain go at it through the
next eight months, they will likely focus on our situation in Iraq.
(Calling it a "war" now is imprecise.) As merely one
commentator among thousands, I'm not satisfied that either one of
the contenders has defined his position on this coherently. Obama is
disposed to get the US military out of there as quickly as possible.
He's right that the sheer awful cost of the adventure is one big
factor in wrecking US finances while it erodes our standing in the
world. But with our Iraq garrison shut down, he'd better be prepared
for a further breakdown in Middle East stability and the oil markets
that depend on it -- meaning, the basis of American life for four
generations, dependable oil imports, will sharply end. That would
accelerate the disorderly abandonment of our massive misinvestment
in suburban living, and also ramp up the anger and resentment of the
public grieving over its lost entitlements.
McCain's contrasting hundred-year plan does
not take into account the severe impoverishment and exhaustion of
the military itself, not to mention the overall purpose of the
adventure -- to keep suburban life and all its accessories running
in the homeland -- which is an exercise in futility under any terms.
McCain would have to confront the terrible paradoxes of the war,
namely that thousands of legs have been blown off for the sake of
WalMart, which company will be hemorrhaging customers anyway, as
incomes wilt, at the same time that WalMart's own operating system
-- the "warehouse on wheels" -- surrenders to the reality
of five or six dollar-a-gallon diesel fuel. In any case, the
implosion of the US economy during the next eight months will
overshadow whatever we decide to do in Iraq, and that cratering will
be laid directly at the feet of the Republican party. If the party
survives that, which I doubt, it would a long time before anybody
trusted it again.
Whoever wakes up as the next president on
November 5 will have to preside over the comprehensive
reorganization of American life. The big question is whether he can
persuade the public to let go of its sunk costs, and all the sheer
stuff that represents, and move ahead in a unified way that doesn't
end up tearing the nation apart. The danger is that the public will
want to mount a kind of last stand effort to defend a way of life
that has no future under any circumstances, and they will ask the
president to lead that last stand.
To avoid that deadly outcome, the new
president will have to be equipped with a realistic vision of what
this society can actually do to survive the discontinuities that
circumstances present. This will require him to confront the
prevailing delusion that the US can become "energy
independent" in the sense that we can run WalMart on something
other than oil from foreign lands. The new president would have to
carefully restate American expectations and goals -- for instance,
not to keep all the cars running at all costs, but to get us living
in places where driving is not mandatory. I'm concerned that the
American people will hate the new president if he tells them the
truth: that an old way of life is over and a new one has to begin
now. We're about to find out how much "change" the public
can really stand.
© 2004-2008 Biiwii.com
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