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Rich : The Witness Why worry? Aren't you freaking out?

Why worry? Aren't you freaking out?

Posted on Mar 17th, 2008 by Rich : The Witness Rich
Recession

I'm not a blogger. I consider myself to be a terrible writer. When I was in grade school, I was lucky if I could write more than two paragraphs at a time. Words seem to fail me.

 

No one's heard a single word I've said
They don't sound as good outside my head
~Nine Inch Nails

 

I'm worried about where we, human beings, are headed when it comes to living on this planet. We don't have anywhere to "move" to if our "environment" collapses around us. In the past, if we found that our immediate environment was no longer able to provide us with water, food and shelter, we would move to a more hospitable environment. This move may have occured seasonally, annually, generationally, etc. If, in the near future, we find that the entire planet has become inhospitable, where will we go? Where will we move to?

 

But now I'm not only concerned about my environment supplying water, food and shelter, I'm watching civilization as I've known it starting to collapse all around me.

 

Some of my friends tell me that technology will save us. "Just wait until nanotechnology gets going. That will solve all of our problems."

 

Other friends of mine tell me that we will save ourselves. "We will never allow civilization to collapse. That's impossible. Wow, collapse is such an extreme concept. We are too smart to let that happen. We will find plenty of ways to fix everything."


Another group tells me that I'm just paying too much attention to the information that tells me that things are collapsing. They seem to be saying that if I just pay attention to other things, more positive things that everything will be better. WTF?


Must be that LAW OF ATTRACTION thing. ;-)

 

Today I read Jim Kunstler's "Clusterfuck Nation" and I thought, "Here is someone putting what is in my awareness, putting my perspective into clear and concise words."


Words that sound as good outside my head.


Thanks Jim.

 

A REAL FREAK OUT

 

      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.


-----

Read Jim Kunstler's original blog here.

 

Access_public Access: Public 5 Comments Print Send views (148)  
Casey : Conscious Marketer
27 minutes later
Casey said

ah richie,

My only advice would be to take stock of what you have going on and take complete personal responsibility.

Let's assume a worst case scenario.   Gas prices go up to $10 a gallon and the US economy effectively collapses.  What are your assets?  What will you do?

I would say you have a pretty solid community behind you.  You are healthy and intelligent.  You have a home with some land.

If things get bad enough to affect you, things are very bad indeed.

You will be looked to as a leader, one that can help the rest of your community do what it can to survive.   You'll be asked to help solve problems of food, water and shelter shortages.

I'm glad you're on my team.

I personally think of it as an adventure.  Then again, I have no “assets” to lose.  I will also be one of the strong ones should things get to depression level.  I am fully confident that I could be employed in whatever manner rises to meet the changing demand. 

Our country has been through this before, we just hear a whole lot more about it in todays information age.

If I were you, I would do whatever looks appropriate in this moment, and let the future unfold as it will.  if things get as bad as the doomsayers predict, there isn't a damn thing you can do now to make it any better for yourself later.

love,

case

wanderer7 : wanderer7
39 minutes later
wanderer7 said

yep, the world economy is only moving in one direction …. the red arrow.

latch your oars, rough seas ahead.

apart from that, thosevariablesare outside your compass and control.

just sit tight, and enjoy the ride.

love and light

Rich : The Witness
about 4 hours later
Rich said

Thanks for the reminders, Case.

Solid community, health, intelligence, leadership abilities, problem solving and ADVENTURE!

Others have also reminded me that things are cycling. 2012 “end dates” are just a reminder that there is a long cycle that is ending and a new one that is just beginning. Seems like what we are experiencing is the dramatic end of this cycle and hopefully the start of an amazing and beautiful new cycle.

A good friend also reminded me…

“This crisis is the greatest opportunity of a generation to replace defunct economic systems with robust ecological and economic systems that are stable and generative of real wealth.”

I couldn't agree more.

Zazeez : Kosmic Cowboy
3 days later
Zazeez said

Thanks for the blog Rich,
on this last comment, my sentiment exactly,
once this lego building falls apart we can build one that's way sweeter!
Personally I'm trying to cultivate skills that I would like to see incorporated in the society 2.0 model.  Then when the opportunity comes I'll be able to make a nice contribution. 
Peace.

~PrincessTwilite~ : Progress Muse
2 months later
~PrincessTwilite~ said

i like this blog. thanks for bloggin about this topic, as it is important for those of us “feeling it” to make that known. “it's all coming down right now!”- Trent Reznor, NIN Year Zero album (which btw rocks)
a friend of mine who is a principal real estate broker told me that unfortunately the interest rates still haven't trickled down to the housing/car makrts for most middle class amarica, and the cut didn't do any good. i think we r indeed headed for rough seas ahead. in past decades, we have even felt these warning signs, but they have now become loud screams in our heads and hearts that something is not right. in belgium they r paying $8 a gal at pump, and $10 in london (according to news reports), and have began protesting. it' sadly took for prices to get THAT high before people acted as a community (which hasn't done much good from what i've heard). we should as a country and community, by all means NOT WAIT that long. however, i fear we prolly will, unless we get folks to wake up real quick, and start fig out some answers as a people, and actually care. but in kuwait, it's only like .53 cents per gal. so there's no “shortage” there. sadly in this economy most most people can't even save enough for the rough days ahead. we should all be freaking out! u r right about that. msg me if u want =). u seem like an intellegent person. thanks for doing your part to spread the word. high five and
many blessings,
~the princess~
**u might check into getting the Year Zero album (newer one, if u haven't already). kinda diff vibe than previous and more spiritually inpired. he speaks to this and other important issues, and started some online communities for folks to chat about stuff, and made the whole album a really cool puzzle too.

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Rich : The Witness Posted on March 17, 2008
by Rich

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