The Odor of Desperation

Guest Post by Jim Kunstler

It must be obvious even to nine-year-old casual observers of the scene that the US national election is hacking itself. It doesn’t require hacking assistance from any other entity. The two major parties could not have found worse candidates for president, and the struggle between them has turned into the most sordid public spectacle in US electoral history.

Of course, the Russian hacking blame-game story emanates from the security apparatus controlled by a Democratic Party executive establishment desperate to preserve its perks and privileges . (I write as a still-registered-but-disaffected Democrat). The reams of released emails from Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta, and other figures in HRC’s employ, depict a record of tactical mendacity, a gleeful eagerness to lie to the public, and a disregard for the world’s opinion that are plenty bad enough on their own. And Trump’s own fantastic gift for blunder could hardly be improved on by a meddling foreign power. The US political system is blowing itself to pieces.

I say this with the understanding that political systems are emergent phenomena with the primary goal of maintaining their control on the agencies of power at all costs. That is, it’s natural for a polity to fight for its own survival. But the fact that the US polity now so desperately has to fight for survival shows how frail its legitimacy is. It wouldn’t take much to shove it off a precipice into a new kind of civil war much more confusing and irresolvable than the one we went through in the 1860s.

Events and circumstances are driving the US insane literally. We can’t construct a coherent consensus about what is happening to us and therefore we can’t form a set of coherent plans for doing anything about it. The main event is that our debt has far exceeded our ability to produce enough new wealth to service the debt, and our attempts to work around it with Federal Reserve accounting fraud only make the problem worse day by day and hour by hour. All of it tends to undermine both national morale and living standards, while it shoves us into the crisis I call the long emergency.

It’s hard to see how Russia benefits from America becoming the Mad Bull of a floundering global economy. Rather, the Evil Russia meme seems a projection of our country’s own insecurities and contradictions. For instance, we seem to think that keeping Syria viciously destabilized is preferable to allowing its legitimate government to restore some kind of order there. Russia has been on the scene attempting to prop up the Assad government while we are on the scene there doing everything possible to keep a variety of contestants in a state of incessant war. US policy in Syria has been both incoherent and tragically damaging to the Syrians.

The Russians stood aside while the US smashed up Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya. We demonstrated adequately that shoving sovereign nations into civic failure is not the best way to resolve geopolitical tensions. Why would it be such a bad thing for the US to stand aside in Syria and see if the Russians can rescue that country from failure? Because they might keep a naval base there on the Mediterranean? We have scores of military bases around the region.

It’s actually pretty easy to understand why the Russians might be paranoid about America’s intentions. We use NATO to run threatening military maneuvers near Russia’s borders. We provoked Ukraine — formerly a province of the Soviet state — to become a nearly failed state, and then we complained foolishly about the Russian annexation of Crimea — also a former territory of the Soviet state and of imperial Russia going back centuries. We slapped sanctions on Russia, making it difficult for them to participate in international banking and commerce.

What’s really comical is the idea that Russia is using the Internet to mess with our affairs — as if the USA has no cyber-warfare ambitions or ongoing operations against them (and others, such as hacking Angela Merkel’s personal phone). News flash: every country with access to the Internet is in full hacking mode around the clock against every other country so engaged. Everybody’s doing it. It is perhaps a projection of America’s ongoing rape hysteria that we think we’re special victims of this universal activity.


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19 Comments
unit472
unit472
October 17, 2016 11:49 am

Yes! The United States is being ‘driven insane’ but who is doing it. I’d submit it is the Democratic Party and its propaganda arm, the national media.

Look, I don’t care about Syria. It isn’t a ‘vital interest’ of the US ( or Russia for that matter). Certainly nothing that is going to lead to an exchange of nuclear weapons. The Europeans seem to object more to Moscow’s actions there with Merkel, just today, calling for harsher sanctions against Russia so let’s put that aside and focus on the real problem.

We have a weak and lazy president who has turned over the operation of the US government to ‘elements’ of the DNC. He doesn’t make policy ( save for race relations ). He isn’t smart enough for that. He just announces what the crowd around him tell him is American ‘policy’. After that the MSM engages in a massive propaganda effort to push that agenda.

We have entire networks devoted to pushing these lies. CNBC trumpets economic data cooked up by Obama’s cabinet and Fed appointees. The GOP candidate, whatever his faults, is smeared and attacked relentlessly and unfairly. It’s not Trump either. If Jeb Bush were the nominee he’d get the same treatment.

You KNOW what the problem is too Mr. Kuntsler. You just are too ashamed to admit it and I’m to polite to say it!

Shinmen Takezo
Shinmen Takezo
  unit472
October 17, 2016 4:45 pm

You’re only partially correct–they’re also being driven insane by factions of the GOP as well. Senator Psycho (McCain) comes to mind here. The Neo-Con’s are pushing this insane policy as well FYI, not just the evil leftists. Their policies and actions blend perfectly.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
  unit472
October 17, 2016 5:01 pm

“The United States is being ‘driven insane’ but who is doing it. I’d submit it is the Democratic Party and its propaganda arm, the national media.”

Nope! Not even close. It’s the central bank creating the one thing that enables it all…..right out of thin air.

wip
wip
  IndenturedServant
October 17, 2016 11:10 pm

Keep singing it loud and clear. The Fed is the #1 problem. PERIOD!!!

Gay Veteran
Gay Veteran
  unit472
October 18, 2016 9:32 am

Don’t pretend it is just the democrats because the republicans support our imperial wars.
And Russia has a vital interest in making sure the Syrian terrorists don’t go into Muslim countries on Russia’s borders.

Rise Up
Rise Up
October 17, 2016 12:32 pm

unit472 says: “Look, I don’t care about Syria. It isn’t a ‘vital interest’ of the US ( or Russia for that matter). ”
———–
Both you and Kuntsler fail to understand that it IS of vital interest to the U.S. AND Russia. There are competing interests in the gas pipelines proposed to traverse Syria. That is the underlying issue of that war.

It’s an energy resource war, not a religious war.

http://www.news.com.au/world/middle-east/is-the-fight-over-a-gas-pipeline-fuelling-the-worlds-bloodiest-conflict/news-story/74efcba9554c10bd35e280b63a9afb74

The Secret Stupid Saudi-US Deal on Syria. Oil Gas Pipeline War

unit472
unit472
  Rise Up
October 17, 2016 2:31 pm

Sheesh. That is about the most stupid comment I have read here. The US and Russia are awash in natural gas. Really the entire world. Pipelines are expensive to build and at current prices it makes little sense to try and pipe gas from the Persian Gulf to Europe. Qatar has LNG facilities already that would be made obsolete if they had a secure pipeline and how you build a secure pipeline in the middle east is a mystery to me!

Rise Up
Rise Up
  unit472
October 17, 2016 3:49 pm

Didn’t read the links, did ya?

Shinmen Takezo
Shinmen Takezo
  unit472
October 17, 2016 4:49 pm

Unit472 is one of those dopes who cannot see the bottom line.
Yes the war in Syria is ALL ABOUT RUNNING A PIPELINE into Europe via the Syria/Turkey route.

IT IS ALL ABOUT A PIPELINE AND THE TRILLIONS UPON TRILLIONS OF DOLLARS that a pipe line would generate for the elite monied interests.

FYI–Russia currently has a pipeline that is just as long as the one envisioned to be run up through Qutar and into Europe.

GET ON THIS PLANET PLEASE!

llpoh
llpoh
  Shinmen Takezo
October 17, 2016 6:02 pm

Shinmen Takezo – one thing about TBP, when you talk total bullshit, someone will call you on it. You are talking bullshit. You are showing yourself to have the brain the size of a peanut.

The proposed pipeline has a total capacity of 40 billion cubic meters per year. That is around $12 – 14 billion per year in sales value. It would take 80 years at that rate to reach $1 trillion. Prices range between $200 and $500 dollars per 1000 cubic meters. 40 billion divided by 1000 = 40 million. Times say 350 = $14 billion a year.

Get your shit in one sock and quit being a moron. You destroy your credibility with shit like that.

unit472
unit472
  Shinmen Takezo
October 17, 2016 6:03 pm

Unlike you fools, I actually worked for two natural gas operations so don’t throw some internet links at me and expect me to be impressed.

Right now Dominion Resources and Cheniere Energy will ship all the natural gas Europe wants to buy. The only constraint is Gazprom offering to sell it for even less and for Russia, price is not as important as retaining market share, hard currency earnings and strategic influence.

10 years ago the US price of natural gas at the Henry Hub was 4 times what it is today. Today there is too much of the stuff hence the price collapse. Russia was going to build the Power of Siberia pipeline to supply China. That deal is dead because it makes no economic sense. There may come a time when it makes sense to build a gas pipeline from the Persian Gulf to Europe but that time is not soon. Iran hasn’t even developed its big offshore gas field and no one is going to finance and build a multibillion dollar pipeline through an unstable region in the hope that it will have contracts and customers. That’s not how these things work.

Rise Up
Rise Up
  unit472
October 17, 2016 7:20 pm

Geopolitics is obviously not your forte.

Gay Veteran
Gay Veteran
  unit472
October 18, 2016 9:35 am

And is shipping gas from America cheaper than pipe lines?

Iconoclast421
Iconoclast421
October 17, 2016 1:59 pm

This clown.

“We can’t construct a coherent consensus about what is happening to us and therefore we can’t form a set of coherent plans for doing anything about it. ”

Because we are controlled by a corrupt establishment media! Or, at least enough of us are that no real discussion can occur. When half the country is literally brainwashed there obviously cannot be any plans or even discussions of plans. This half of the country is literally like that King of the Rohan, from LOTR: The Two Towers, under the spell of Saruman, with Wormtongues whispering trash into their ears 24/7. This media IS Wormtongue. You have to get rid of him before you can make any progress at all, on anything. And what is Trump doing? He is savaging the media like no one ever has, at least in my living memory. Unfortunately, even with Wormtongue gone, you’re still left with Saruman, but one thing at a time I guess…

Mark
Mark
October 17, 2016 2:26 pm

Can there ever be anything objective from a Joo about Trump?

diogenes
diogenes
October 17, 2016 3:00 pm

Iconoclast421, I really dug the LOTR analogy. Truth.

Pete
Pete
October 17, 2016 6:20 pm

Which is a bigger problem – a pipsqueek of a war in Yemen or Lybia that costs say $10 billion or an S&P500 company that fails to pay $50 billion in taxes for 10 years in a row ? These wars are distractions; by watching them we fail to look at the real problem.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
October 17, 2016 8:03 pm

“..the fact that the US polity now so desperately has to fight for survival shows how frail its legitimacy is. It wouldn’t take much to shove it off a precipice into a new kind of civil war much more confusing and irresolvable than the one we went through in the 1860s.”

Nailed it.

This, however?

“We can’t construct a coherent consensus about what is happening to us and therefore we can’t form a set of coherent plans for doing anything about it.”

When the plane is going down the last thing the captain and his copilot are looking for is a consensus from the cabin. Most people can’t make basic decisions about the food they eat, fixing a dying civilization seems like it may well be outside of their wheelhouse, so to speak.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
October 17, 2016 9:42 pm

Two days to go. I would like to see the Donald have a meltdown like old Elliot did once. He left everybody speechless when he went around the room cursing at everybody in turn, he sounded like this, fuck you, fuck you, fuck you…

Once he gets the sweet talk out of the way, he can tell them to lawyer up cause they are going on trial.