When historians glance back at 2007 through the haze of their coal-fired stoves, they will mark this year as the onset of the Long Emergency – or whatever they choose to call the unraveling of industrial economies and the complex systems that constituted them. And if they retain any sense of humor – which is very likely since, as wise Sam Beckett once averred, nothing is funnier than unhappiness – they will chuckle at the assumptions that drove the doings and mental operations of those in charge back then (i.e. now).
The price of oil is up 53 percent over a year ago, creeping up now toward the mid-$90-range. The news media is still AWOL on the subject. (The New York Times has nothing about it on today’s front page.) The dollar is losing a penny a week against the Euro. In essence, the American standard of living is dropping like a sash weight. So far, a stunned public is stumbling into impoverishment drunk on Britney Spears video clips. If they ever do sober up, and get to a “…hey, wait a minute…” moment when they recognize the gulf between reality and the story told by leaders in government, business, education, and the media, it is liable to be a very ugly moment in US history.
One of the stupidest assumptions made by the educated salient of adults these days is that we are guaranteed a smooth transition between the cancerous hypertrophy of our current economic environment and the harsher conditions that we are barreling toward. The university profs and the tech sector worker bees are still absolutely confident that some hypothetical “they” will “come up with” magical rescue remedies for running the Happy Motoring system without gasoline. My main message to lecture audiences these days is “…quit putting all your mental energy into propping up car dependency and turn your attention to other tasks such as walkable communities and reviving passenger rail….” Inevitably, someone will then get up and propose that the transition to all-electric cars is nearly upon us, and we should stop worrying. As I said, these are the educated denizens of the colleges. Imagine what the nascar morons believe – that the ghost of Davey Crockett will leave a jug of liquefied “dark matter” under everyone’s Christmas tree this year or next, guaranteed to keep the engines ringing until Elvis ushers in the Rapture.
The educated folks – that is, the ones subject to the
grandiose story-lines of techno-triumphalism taught in the universities
– are sure that we’ll either invent or organize our way out of the
current predicament. A society that put men on the moon in 1969, the
story goes, will ramp up another “Apollo Project” to keep things going
here. One wonders, of course, what they mean by keeping things going.
Even if it were hypothetically possible to keep all the cars running
forever, would it be good thing to make suburban-sprawl-building the
basis of our economy – because that’s the direct consequence of
perpetually cheap energy. Has anyone noticed that the housing bubble
and subsequent implosion is following the peak oil line exactly?
It’s a bit harder to discern what the assumptions really are among
leaders in the finance sector, since so much of their activity the past
ten years has veered into sheer fraud. The story line that everyone is
putting out – from the Fed chairman Bernanke to the CEOs of the Big
Fundz – is that American finance is a python that has swallowed a few
too many pigs, but if we jigger around interest rates a little bit
more, and allow some more money to be lent out cheaply, the python will
eventually digest the pigs and go slithering happily on its way along
the jungle trail with a burp and a fart. From this vantage, one sees a
rather different story: more like a gang of human grifters sweating
through their Prada suits as it becomes increasingly impossible to
conceal massive losses incurred through overt reckless misbehavior. My
own guess is that a lot of these boyz will be in line for criminal
prosecution before too long.
The political assumptions one hears are the most astoundingly naïve and
ridiculous, especially the ones that involve other countries and our
relations with them. NY Times
followers no doubt believe, along with Tom Friedman, that the global
economy is now a permanent fixture of the human condition, and that
soon it will transform itself into a colossal engine of “green” (i.e.
benign) commerce. Friedman and his followers tend to forget the second
law of thermodynamics when spinning their fantasies of a world that can
harmlessly manufacture and market an endless number of plastic salad
shooters from one side of the planet to the other without incurring any
losses to the health of said planet.
My own assumptions are
somewhat different. I think we’re likely to see a lot of nations
scrambling for survival, initially manifesting in a contest for the
world’s dwindling supply of oil (and oil-like substances). For
instance, when viewing the globe, few people consider that Japan
currently imports 95 percent of its fossil fuel. Japan has been a “good
boy” among nations since its episode of “acting out” in the mid-20th
century and has enjoyed a long industrial prosperity since then. But
what happens when there is not enough oil in the world to be allocated
rationally by markets among the powerful nations? Will Japan just roll
over and die? Will they shutter the Toyota factories and happily turn
to placid tea ceremonies. I think Japan will freak out, and it’s hard
to predict exactly who will feel its wrath and how.
Similarly, Europe. Americans view Europe as a kind of theme park full
of elderly café layabouts swaddled in cashmere as they enjoy demitasse
cups in the outdoor cafes of their comfortable art-filled cities (some
of them not long ago rebuilt from rubble). Europe has let America do
its dirty work for it in the Middle East for the past decade while
enjoying tanker-loads of oil coming up through the Suez Canal. Europe
has only had to make a few lame gestures in defense of its oil
supplies. But the North Sea oil fields, which for twenty years have
hedged the leverage of OPEC, are crapping out at a very steep rate.
Sooner or later Europe will freak out over oil, and geo-political
flat-earthers will be shocked to see that all the nations of café
layabouts can mobilize potent military forces. God knows whose side who
will be on, exactly, when that happens, and where America will stand –
if its own military is not so exhausted that it can even stand up.
Personally, I think the world will be growing a lot larger again, and
less flat, and that eventually America will find itself isolated once
again between two oceans – though incursions by desperate foreign
armies in one way or another, is not out of the question as the great
struggle for resource survival gets underway. In time, however, I think
the current Great Nations of the world will lose their ability to
project power in the ways we’ve been conditioned to think about it.
In the meantime, our own nation has become a society incapable of
thinking, and the failure at all levels of rank, education, and
privilege is impressive. If you listen to the people running for
president – many of them overt clowns – you’d think that that all the
comfortable furnishings of everyday life can continue with a few tweaks
of the dials. They are cowards and it is possible that they perfectly
represent a whole nation of cowards who deserve cowardly leadership.
The danger, of course, is that when a non-cowardly leader finally does
step forward in a desperate America, he will not shrink from pushing
around a feckless people, or doing their thinking for them.
If that python farts loud enough, hope remains for us. We can rig our cars to run on methane -- can't we?
Ah, Jim! Yer just an old worrywart.
1
October 31, 2007
Greg: ...
Good article! Most people who see you as a worrywart or a doomer still have an investment in things remaining as they are. They are in for a rude awakening!
2
October 31, 2007
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