The Positive Power of Crisis

by Charles Hugh Smith..

Only in crisis do human beings actually change anything.


If there is any demarcation with profound implications going forward, it isn’t the line between the 1% and the 99% or the line dividing the Status Quo into two safely complicit ideological camps: it is the divide between those who squarely face the burden of knowing the present is unsustainable and those who flee into the comforts of denial. Those who accept the burden of knowing are part of the solution, those who cling to denial are part of the problem.

Those who accept the burden of knowing do not necessarily have answers, but they are alert to alternatives and potential solutions. Those in denial can only hope that reality can be buried for a while longer

.
[img]http://imagesize.financialsense.com/http://www.financialsense.com/sites/default/files/users/u567/images/2012/exponential-crisis.jpg[/img]

Thus we have pronouncements that “the euro is irreversible,” that progress is being made, and so on. Nothing has been fixed, but those clinging to denial are comforted that crisis has been pushed forward once again.

Pushing problems under the rug doesn’t solve them; they only get worse. This is the positive power of crisis: only in crisis do human beings actually change.

As long as “enablers” are around to protect them from the consequences of their actions and choices, addicts are free to pursue their destructive (to themselves and others) ways. The addicts can be sociopaths or they can be “normal;” the unifying characteristic is their terror in facing the end of the Status Quo, even when the Status Quo is patently destructive and unsustainable.

In the Status Quo, the “enablers” include everyone who gains if the Status Quo continues unchanged, as they are hoping to collect their share of the unpayable promises that have been issued to buy political support or silence, i.e. complicity.

The “handlers and enforcers” of the neofeudal Status Quo–the political and financial Elites and their Upper Caste of managers and apparatchiks–are consciously shoving problems under the rug, in the hopes that some sort of unknown magic will restore the elixir of “growth” that has reliably bailed out the corrupt, increasingly fragile skimming operation (the Status Quo).

The Internet boom bailed it out in the 1990s, and the global housing bubble bailed it out in the 2000s. Now the skimming operation has run out of miracles, and its true nature–it is fundamentally a cargo-cult–has been revealed. Central bankers and their political toadies are in effect praying for a miraculous return of prosperity by painting radio dials on rocks and dancing around the campfire late at night.

The process of shoving structural problems under the rug takes two forms: one is to manipulate data and news flow to “manage perceptions” that all is well, that the Elites have the will and power to force the system back to “set point.” The Machine’s visible failure to do so after four years of ceaseless “fixes,” stopgaps, reassurances, pronouncements and increases in complexity suggests not that it has the power to do so, but that it has lost the ability to repair the boilers with policy/intervention duct-tape.

The other is propaganda: announcing that the latest “fix” will do the trick, or more perniciously, that the present crisis is not an “unrecognized Depression” but merely another “business cycle” recession. Human habituate rather quickly to a range of “normal,” and so the substitution of manipulation for accountability becomes “normal” over time.

The “new normal” isn’t just a decline in purchasing power and employment; it is the slow loss of institutional legitimacy as the lies and obfuscations pile up.

But since the underlying dynamics are continuing to expand, masking the problems only increases the fragility and vulnerability of the system as the extremes are pushed ever farther out the curve.

For example: if too much leverage is the problem, the Status Quo solution is to increase leverage and hide the increase in opaque derivatives, offshore banking accounts and “dark pool” trading.

Now that collateral has vanished, the leverage in the system is near-infinite. The Status Quo “solution” is to issue new phantom assets to replace the assets which have become recognized as illusory.

How many iterations of the game can be run before some non-linear second-order effect causes the sandpile to collapse?
Rather than fear the crisis, we should embrace it, for it is only in crisis, when all the lies, half-measures, excuses and backstops have broken down, is positive transformation possible.

End

Author: MuckAbout

Retired Engineer and Scientist (electronic, optics, mechanical) lives in a pleasant retirement community in Central Florida. He is interested in almost everything and comments on most of it. A pragmatic libertarian at heart he welcomes comments on all that he writes.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
6 Comments
DaveL
DaveL
October 7, 2012 6:18 pm

MA: You need to take into consideration all the media that are complicit in this “official” denial. I think they can kick the can farther down the road than we think.

Eddie
Eddie
October 7, 2012 9:02 pm

The problem is….this crisis has a number of possible outcomes, and the best strategy for dealing with one might not work as well as for another.

But I agree with CHS that crisis brings opportunities for positive change.

It’s always better, in my book, to be at cause rather than to be in effect.

If you wait for someone else to figure out what to do this time around, you’re likely to end up trampled.

Novista
Novista
October 7, 2012 9:50 pm

Much

That’s the ~power~ of wordpress for ya.

Yes, what works in comments is, when all is said and done, NOT the real HTML, no idea why.

In the Post editor, you need to be on the HTML tab. There’s an img button to click there, a popup window wants the URL to be pasted in, OK on that, then another popup asks for title, optional, OK.

WP ~should~ apply the correct formatting on its own.

Something like if this line doesn’t FUBAR.

WPES

Novista
Novista
October 7, 2012 9:56 pm

well, no, it did not, fuckit

left corner bracket IMG SRC=”http://www.dot.com/user/image.jpg” right corner bracket

WPGADDDD

Bob
Bob
October 8, 2012 4:42 pm

“some non-linear second-order effect”

But what? I used to think I had a good idea — some sort of outright default blowing up a class of derivatives. Now, I’m not so sure. I also discounted a war, thinking that this will be an implosive crisis, not an explosive one — now, I’m not so sure. I also thought extend and pretend was making things a lot worse — now, I’m not so sure.

There is an old saying in the markets — the markets will behave in a manner that fools the most people most completely. I confess that I am confused right now.

There is an alternate interpretation of the waves which indicates we are going through a very long, deep correction of the excesses of the past 70 years — but this is probably not the ultimate disater in the offing. It’s possible we have all been braced for Armageddon all this time when the risk may be one order of magnitude shy of that. Still damned serious, and fatal for many, but…