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When Alan Greenspan predicted three percent economic growth showing up
in the reported figures for the third quarter of 2009, did he mean executive
compensation packages? Maybe the lesson here is: don't ask a crackhead to predict the future supply of crack. Greenspan's
greatest success may be to drive economics into such disrepute that it will
be cut loose from the universities and only be taught by mail order or
internet subscription from the same outfits that offer PhD's in astrology.
That is, before the universities themselves go broke.
The predicament that the USA finds itself will not be
"solved" at the scale of operation that we're accustomed to, and we
should just stop wasting precious time and dwindling resources in the idle
hope that it will be. The failure to recognize this dynamic is the most
impressive part of the meltdown. The only thing that the federal
government is likely to prove in the process is the ineffectiveness of its
actions as applied to any of the raging current problems from the killing
burden of hyper-debt to the brushfires of geopolitics. Congress will only
make the health care system more complex. Both congress and President Obama
will do everything possible to keep housing prices unaffordable -- in a
quixotic effort to protect the collateral of the big banks. Capital will
continue to vanish in the black hole of default.
Something's got to give in the remaining three
months of 2009. My guess is that attention will shift overseas for a
while. This will not be due, as many probably think, to a cynical
effort by the government to divert attention from the financial fiasco, but
because the intrinsic tensions in the Middle East
are reaching the snapping point. Iran is being called out on its
nuclear program. If, from the start, it had just maintained the need
for electric generating power in the face of dwindling fossil fuel reserves,
they might have gone unchallenged. As it happened, though, the elected
leader of Iran made too
many intemperate remarks about wiping other nations off the face of the
earth, and this has only prompted the leaders of other nations to take his
remarks at face value and presume that Iran's nuclear program was
devoted to armaments, not electric power generation.
So, now the USA has picked up the gauntlet.
If Iran doesn't act
to demonstrate the de-activation of its bomb-making capacity, then the USA will try to impose sanctions depriving Iran of
necessary imported supplies. (Iran
actually imports gasoline, due to inadequate refineries.) For sanctions
to be effective, support will be required by other nations, including Iran's chief gasoline supplier, China. What
a delicate calculus this will be! I rather imagine that China would not like to see the Middle East blow up. I'm not so sure about the nations
of the Middle East though, or at least major
parties in certain nations. The rulers of Saudi
Arabia would probably enjoy seeing Iran get into big trouble, since Iran is Saudi Arabia's most active
antagonist, working tirelessly to destabilize the Kingdom. Al Qaeda interests
dispersed in many nations would certainly cheer any mayhem. The Taliban
would love anything that takes the spotlight off them in Afghanistan.
The Russians are conflicted between the wish to enhance their own
leverage in world affairs and their need to discipline Islamic maniacs along
their own borders. Europe is probably
scared to death of anything that might threaten their energy lifeline. Pakistan is
too tormented to have a position, but its radical Islamist factions are
probably on the side of disorder -- as the best remedy for the status quo.
If any of that spills over on India, as in the Mumbai bombing,
then that flashpoint could turn to conflagration very quickly. We
forget about Turkey, which was the hegemonic player in the region for
centuries until its swift decline after 1914, but it has potent military
capability and very mixed feelings about the the
Jihad to ruin the West (since it is partly of the West). And finally
there is Israel, the
object of Iran's
intemperate public statements.
This is a dangerous situation. I'm not so
sure that Israel could
launch an effective attack on Iran's
nuclear infrastructure, but it might try anyway, especially if a US-backed
sanctions effort fails to coalesce quickly. I'm not sure Israel would seek permission from the US to do this, though the US would certainly be tasked with defending
the shipping lanes in the Persian Gulf. Iran might succeed in sinking more than a
couple of US
ships-of-the-line with sunburn missles and other
toys, and this would lead to the bigger danger of oil supplies being choked
off to the rest of the world. The US air response would be
impressive, but possibly not effective against hardened targets. The
leaders of Iran
might exult even if the Iranian people were swept into a maelstrom. I
imagine that what followed would be a very extravagant military frenzy
amounting to World War Three, with European air forces and navies dragged in,
with Hezbollah and Syria
striking back at Israel, India and Pakistan
possibly incinerating each other, and mayhem galore among the bystanders in Iraq, Egypt,
Saudi Arabia, and Afghanistan. There
could easily be internal mischief in the UK,
France, and Germany from angry immigrant populations, and
"sleepers" could work some overdue hoodoo in the USA. I
don't know what Turkey
would do, but it could be the biggest beneficiary of a bad regional meltdown,
providing the only effective governance what remains in the region. China and Japan would probably just gape at
the spectacle in wonder and nausea from the sidelines as they saw their
energy supplies for years-to-come go up in flames.
The G-20 nations would be crippled as global oil
supplies were choked off indefinitely. And if anyone -- Iran, or its
friends inside the Kingdom -- managed to pull off a stunt such as blowing up
the Ras Tanura oil
terminal -- then a darkness will spread across
places that were used to being lighted and they will stay dark a long time.
I don't know if any of this will come to pass, but
as I said, tensions have reached a breaking point, including the greater
tensions of history, which seem to require periodic release no matter how
poignant the Pete Seegar songs are. It is
perhaps, just another prime symptom of "overshoot," the world's way
of shedding some of the toxic organisms that are making it so unhappy -- Gaia
in a really bad mood.
If nothing develops along these lines on the
geopolitical scene, the USA
is still stuck in its predicament of trying desperately to maintain an overscaled living arrangement, with no coherent public
discussion of downscaling, re-scaling, or re-arranging things. My guess
is that this kind of restructuring only occurs when all other options have
been exhausted. The last time the USA found itself in an
intractable economic morass, World War Two came along and it made things all
better here (after considerable sacrifice for us and catastrophe elsewhere). After
World War Two, we ruled the world for a couple of generations. The outcome of
World War Three would not be so favorable for us. At
the very least, it would leave us attempting to run things on about
one-quarter of the oil we're used to. That does not suggest a seamless
transition between how we behave now and how the future will require us to
behave differently.
James Howard Kunstler
www.kunstler.com/
Also
by James Howard Kunstler
My
new novel of the post-oil future, World Made By Hand, is
available at all booksellers.
James
Kunstler has worked as a reporter and feature
writer for a number of newspapers, and finally as a staff writer for Rolling
Stone Magazine. In 1975, he dropped out to write books on a full-time basis.
His
latest nonfiction book, "The Long Emergency," describes the changes
that American society faces in the 21st century. Discerning an imminent
future of protracted socioeconomic crisis, Kunstler
foresees the progressive dilapidation of subdivisions and strip malls, the
depopulation of the American Southwest, and, amid a world at war over oil,
military invasions of the West Coast; when the convulsion subsides, Americans
will live in smaller places and eat locally grown food.
You
can purchase your own copy here : The Long
Emergency . You can get more
from James Howard Kunstler - including his artwork,
information about his other novels, and his blog - at his Web site : http://www.kunstler.com/
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