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The Paradise Perspective: Commentary from a Free and Compassionate Alternate Reality 2008 Update by Glen Allport Exclusive to STR June 30, 2008 -
1 - 2008's
First Half So
far, 2008 has been a thrill ride of the worst kind: The Dow has given
back nearly all its gains for the last two years, housing prices and
sales continue dropping with "no sign of a bottom" (per S&P
spokesman David M. Blitzer, quoted in Housing
prices post record declines at CNNMoney.com), prices for food and
other consumables are rising, "legions" of the newly-homeless
are living in their
cars or RVs, and oil is over
$140/barrel, after hitting $100 for the first time on January 3 and
then declining briefly to near $80. Gasoline has now been over $4/gal for
some time, which is killing There
is more: Massive flooding in I
could go on at length, because the past six months have seen a constant
barrage of bad news. For a fuller (yet still brief) recap of the misery,
here's Start
of 2008 is the ugliest in decades by Kathleen Pender at SFGate.com ( -
2 - Preview
for the Second Half Is
the trouble now behind us, or is more on the way? Is the glass half full,
or about to shatter on the floor? Unhappily,
Scenario Number Two appears the more likely. My guess is that trouble has
moved in for an extended stay: what I call the Perma-Depression. The
reasons for this prediction are appallingly clear, even if the Corporatist
Media (especially in the Far
too much damage has been done to America since 1913 for a quick
turnaround, and the policies being pushed by the Corporate Media and the
Old Power Parties (as represented by Obama and McCain in particular) are
just more of the same – war with Iran or Pakistan or some other Target
of the Month; bigger government generally; a takeover of the banks by the
Fed; more restrictions on business and on personal liberty, and so on.
FDR, Johnson, and every other anti-liberty, war-mongering, "guns and
butter"-promising, pseudo-compassionate pol in American history would
be proud. Such policies are guaranteed to make things worse; they always
have. Indeed: such policies are what brought us to where we are today. Below,
an update on the five areas I discussed at the start of 2008 in The
Year Ahead: 1)
Financial/economic problems: In
a word: Yikes. This
past Saturday, June 28, Fortis Bank announced that it expects "a
complete collapse of the US financial markets within a few days to weeks."
This collapse will include bankruptcy for 6,000 Fortis
Bank is not the only major institution sounding an alarm: Barclays
warns of a financial storm as Federal Reserve's credibility crumbles Morgan
Stanley warns of 'catastrophic event' as ECB fights Federal Reserve RBS
issues global stock and credit crash alert
(RBS is the Royal Bank of The
expected response to all this financial carnage includes massive
injections of money from the Fed and other central banks, in a desperate
attempt to save the banking and financial system from collapse. Add the
likely dumping of dollars by institutions and individuals around the world
– a trickle of which has already begun; people increasingly want anything
other than depreciating greenbacks – and it appears that hyperinflation
is on countdown to liftoff. Those previously-sequestered dollars
(trillions of them) will be flooding the market along with the new dollars
created by the Fed, and the combination should be breathtaking. It
isn't possible to know how quickly those sequestered dollars will be spent
back into the system and repatriated, but the music has begun playing
ever-louder for the big U.S. dollar musical-chairs event: no one wants to
be the one left standing (with a hoard of worthless dollars) when the
American fiat dollar reaches parity with the Zimbabwean
dollar, or even just with the Yen. If
the idea of hyperinflation in Inflationary
Recession Is in Place Banking
Solvency Crisis Has Opened First Phase of Monetary Inflation
Hyperinflationary Depression Remains Likely As Early As 2010 This
is a long, detailed look at the situation, with charts and graphs. I
highly recommend reading this report in full. One of the charts tells the
tale in a nutshell:
http://www.shadowstats.com/article/292
Is
that 2010 timeline trigger-point too conservative? Could hyperinflation
begin sooner? Williams says that ". . . the current circumstance will
evolve into a hyperinflationary depression, then great depression.
Although such is not likely much before 2010, or after 2018, that
financial end game for the current markets will
tend to come sooner rather than later and will break with surprising speed
when it hits. As discussed later, this likely will not be a
deflationary environment as seen during the Great Depression." (Bold
added) Amidst
all this, TheStreet.com reminds us of the financial destruction that even
"mild" inflation causes: Advice:
Even Mild Inflation Should Scare You. If
we should fear even mild inflation, how should we feel about the actual
"non-mild" inflation we have right now? More importantly, how
should we feel about what's coming? Google
"German
hyperinflation" for some clues. We
have already seen that a number of respected commentators believe a major
financial disaster of some type
will begin sooner than 2010 –
perhaps as soon as this week (see comments from Fortis Bank above). As
I've said before, timing and velocity of such things are never precisely
knowable in advance; there are too many possible unexpected events along
the way. But the current situation does suggest to me that a tipping point
of some sort is very near, and I think real caution is advisable. As
for how to protect yourself and your investments from all this (assuming
that protection is even possible), Doug Casey has a few suggestions – a
very few; see final paragraph – in The
Greater Depression and What You Should Do About It. I'd add that most
dollar-dependent investments (including bonds) and financial or
consumer-oriented stocks seem a poor choice right now. Real goods
(commodities of most types and precious metals in particular) that are
always in demand and which cannot be inflated away to nothing seem a
better bet. But the gambling metaphor is an apt one; plenty of surprises
are likely in the coming months and years, and "sure things"
sometimes aren't. 2)
Politics and government action: Government
help reliably makes things worse. All of history shows this, and any
intelligent political or economic theory (the With
that basic understanding in mind, it is easy to guess what our masters
have in store for us: more of what caused the problems in the first place.
One reason we can count on "more of the same" is that the
disaster most Americans are suffering from is not
a disaster for the power elite: for them it is a huge and very profitable
success. For
example, the 9/11 terror attacks have made billions of dollars for
corporations like Blackwater
and Haliburton and dozens of
others, and have spawned a glorious new era of political repression and
entirely new government empires, including Homeland Security and the The
attacks of September 11, 2001 were a genuine horror, the resulting police
state has been a nuisance at the least (and a terror in and of itself for
those who know some history), and the two wars and occupations falsely
justified by the attacks have killed over a million human beings, wrecked
the infrastructure of both target nations, and put a $3
trillion-and-growing millstone around the neck of the American taxpayer.
But see, that's just how it looks to the little
people. In the Big Picture, as seen by Bush/Cheney and their friends in
the War and Terror industries, the 9/11 attacks were a godsend. Likewise,
those inflation-creating (perhaps hyperinflation-creating)
bank and investment firm bailouts are a huge tax on the future earnings of
ordinary Americans, but – to put it plainly – the bailouts are nothing
short of free money (yipee!) to the corporations on the receiving end.
Here again we see that being an Ordinary Person is not
a good idea, at least not when coercive government is on the job. Adding
to the coming Big Hurt will be even higher taxes, no matter who wins the
White House. Time
Magazine, the mouthpiece for the American oligarchy, is prepping
citizens for the "more money for us,
less money for you" era
soon to come. Historian Gary North summarizes the situation this way in Old
Keynesian Dogs, Old Fiscal Tricks: "We are heading into a great
reversal. We are going to see rising taxes and a falling stock
market." A more certain prediction is difficult to imagine. Yet
another emergency that government plans to save us from is environmental
degradation. Government help on the environment (and the gas crisis) has
so far brought us the wonders of ethanol, in the form of mandates that
have taken about a third of the corn crop out of the food chain and put it
into our gas tanks, with no benefit to the environment whatsoever – some
say, with damage to the
environment. The shortages and higher prices have brought suffering and
starvation to the truly poor around the planet, but hey! -- That's not our
problem. It has also helped raise food prices for ordinary Americans, but
we've already pointed out that being an ordinary person isn't smart, so no
surprise there. And this past week, we learned that those scary solar
projects (the ones on federal land, anyway) have been put
on hold for two years by the feds. At the news, oil- and coal-industry
bigshots were seen weeping in the hallways of Congress. Thanks,
government! I feel much safer now! Americans
want help from their government, and (to paraphrase H.
L. Mencken), the government is planning to give it to them, good and
hard. -
- - - - The
last three areas on my list (oil, metals, and other natural resources;
food shortages; and environmental damage) will be discussed in Part 2 of
this column. Glen
Allport
co-authored The User's Guide to OS/2
and is the author of The
Paradise Paradigm: On Creating a World of Compassion, Freedom, and
Prosperity. He maintains paradise-paradigm.net.
This is one in a series of columns on the human condition. |