|
A
Real Freak Out
By
James Howard Kunstler
Kunstler.com
March
18, 2008
Note: This is the official
publication week of my new 'post-oil' novel, "World Made By
Hand," a vivid depiction of life in The Long Emergency.
Visit the book's website:
Things are
getting very weird very fast -- and will probably get even weirder,
faster, as the train wreck of bad debt meets the Saint Paddy's Day
Parade of bacchanalian excess at the grade-crossing of destiny. The
train is carrying America's financial system, but the engine driving
it is peak oil, because declining energy resources necessarily means
declining capital wealth -- and declining value of all the
institutions, instruments, and markers that denote that wealth or
hope to profit by trading in it. The fiasco leads straight to the
necessary reinvention of American life on other terms and by other
means.
I've maintained for a long time that,
even among those who recognize we have a big problem, there are many
impediments to imagining a credible outcome. One thing I've noticed
is that in any given public meeting (or lecture hall) you can divide
participants into two groups: those who believe we will 'high-tech'
our way out of this predicament; and those who believe we'll
organize our way out.
I don't subscribe to either point of view,
strictly speaking. Both POV's assume that there will be an orderly
transition between where we're at now and where we're headed.
They're tainted by the kindergarten ethos of entitled happy endings
and outcomes, which has been the chief operating system for the Baby
Boomers, a therapeutic bias for placing 'good feelings' ahead of
reality -- which also has obliterated the tragic sense of life that
acts as the only brake on humanity's inherent hubris.
Ultimately, in my view, the issue of what
happens next will be settled not by the fantasies of the algae-biodiesel
geeks or the wishful thinking of the sustainable futures organizers,
but by the natural, self-organizing properties of a society
responding 'emergently' to new circumstances. One of the
implications of destiny-as-emergence is the probability that we will
try any damn fool thing besides the right things to keep the old
game going for a while -- even in the face of obvious failure.
I'm sure our political leaders will mount a
campaign to rescue the futureless infrastructure of suburbia. It
will necessarily be an exercise in futility. But it has already
started. That's what the swindle of ethanol has been all about. And
the touting of hybrid cars, and the flimflam of "energy
independence." Even the "environmental" crowd"
squanders most of its attention these days on how to keep all the
cars running on something other than gasoline. They don't question
the assumption that we will remain a car-dependent society.
As much as I loathe the suburbs in
their grotesque late-stage efflorescence, I can understand why those
stuck in them would wish to defend their misinvestments. I just hate
to think of the political consequences when their disappointment
catches up to the reality that the suburbs will not be rescued. And
by that I mean not just the houses but the way-of-life associated
with them and all its accessories, furnishings, and activities.
Bewilderment will soon turn to rage out in the
highway-strip-and-cul-de-sac empire.
Now, apparently, we'll also opt for a
bail-out of all those who tried to become rich by getting something
for nothing at both ends of the Ponzi scheme called the housing
bubble -- the "little guys" who signed mortgage contracts
they could never hope to pay off, and the Wall Street playerz who
bundled these hopeless contracts into fraudulent securities (and
their enablers in the ratings agencies, plus the hedge fund
smoothies who tried to cash in by using recondite algorithms to
dissolve the risk associated with imprudent lending.) The bail-out
is likely to accomplish nothing except the more rapid bankruptcy of
government at all levels and a second Great Depression at ground
level (worse than the first one).
Over the weekend, the Federal Reserve
engineered a $30-billion dollar Saint Paddy's day present for the JP
Morgan bank by handing them the corpse of Bear Stearns. The object
of the game is to prevent the "assets" of Bear Stearns
from going to the auction block, on which they would be discovered
to be nearly worthless, which would instantly render all similar
assets held by the other big banks to be similarly worthless, and
would result in a universal margin call that would pretty much
unwind the hallucinated "wealth" acquired the past ten
years.
Despite the heroics around the fate
of Bear Stearns, it looks like the financial system is tottering
anyway. Perhaps the last trick left in the rescue bag will be the
100-basis-point drop in the Fed rate rumored to be announced
tomorrow. It won't help any of the big banks, since their problem is
holding liabilities in excess of assets. Almost certainly it would
crater the US Dollar.
The next thing in store for America, in my
opinion, will be a rather new surprise: oil-and-gasoline shortages.
While frightened money pours into the oil futures markets, driving
the price up, strange behavior will start brewing in the actual
physical allocation process. Imports of oil and gas to the US may
not be as reliable as it had been when America seemed to be a
solvent nation. The exporters may be changing their terms of doing
business with us -- and that's nearly two-thirds of all the oil we
need. The public would probably suck up oil price increases
indefinitely, but shortages are going to be something else. A real
freak out.
© 2004-2008 Biiwii.com
Views
presented in guest articles are those of the authors and do not
represent those of Biiwii.com.
Biiwii.com
does not recommend that any trading or investment positions be taken
based on views expressed on this site. If you speculate or invest it
is suggested that you consult a financial advisor qualified in your
area of interest. For more detailed information and full terms of
service, see "About & Terms" here. |