Deep State Descending

Guest Post by Jim Kunstler

And so it’s back to the Kardashians for the US of ADD. As of Sunday The New York Times kicked Ukraine off its front page, a sure sign that the establishment (let’s revive that useful word) is sensitive to the growing ridicule over its claims of national interest in that floundering, bedraggled crypto-nation. The Kardashians sound enough like one of the central Asian ethnic groups battling over the Crimea lo these many centuries — Circassians, Meskhetian Turkmen, Tatars, Karachay-Cherkessians — so the sore-beset American public must be content that they’re getting the news-of-the-world. Perhaps one of those groups was once led by a Great Kanye.

Secretary of State John Kerry has shut his pie-hole, too, for the moment, as it becomes more obvious that Ukraine happens to be Russia’s headache (and neighbor). The playbook of great nations is going obsolete in this new era of great nations having, by necessity, to become smaller broken-up nations. It could easily happen in the USA too as our grandiose Deep State descends further into incompetence, irrelevance, buffoonery, and practical bankruptcy.

Theories abound about what drives this crisis and all the credible stories revolve around the question of natural gas. I go a little further, actually, and say that the specter of declining energy sources worldwide is behind this particular eruption of disorder in one sad corner of the globe and that we’re sure to see more symptoms of that same basic problem in one country after another from here on, moving from the political margins to the centers. The world is out of cheap oil and gas and, at the same time, out of capital to produce the non-cheap oil and gas. So what’s going on is a scramble between desperate producers and populations worried about shivering in the dark. The Ukraine is just a threadbare carpet-runner between them.

Contributing to our own country’s excessive vanity in the arena of nations is the mistaken belief that we have so much shale gas of our own that we barely know what to do with it. This is certainly the view, for instance, of Speaker of the House John Boehner, who complained last week about bureaucratic barriers to the building of new natural gas export terminals, with the idea that we could easily take over the European gas market from Russia. Boehner is out of his mind. Does he not know that the early big American shale gas plays (Barnett in Texas, Haynesville in Louisiana, Fayettville in Arkansas) are already winding down after just ten years of production? That’s on top of the growing austerity in available capital for the so-far-unprofitable shale gas industry. That’s on top of the scarcity of capital for building new liquid natural gas terminals and ditto the fleet of specialized refrigerated tanker ships required to haul the stuff across the ocean. File under “not going to happen.”

Even the idea that we will have enough natural gas for our own needs in the USA beyond the short term ought to be viewed with skepticism. What happens, for instance, when we finally realize that it costs more to frack it out of the ground than people can pay for it? I’ll tell you exactly what will happen: the gas will remain underground bound up in its “tight rock,” possibly forever, and a lot of Americans will freeze to death.

The most amazing part of the current story is that US political leaders are so ignorant of the facts. They apparently look only to the public relations officers in the oil-and-gas industries and no further. Does Barack Obama still believe, as he said in 2011, that we have a hundred years of shale gas?” That was just something that a flack from the Chesapeake Corporation told to some White House aide over a bottle of Lalou Bize-Leroy Domaine d’Auvenay Les Bonnes-Mares Grand Cru. Government officials believe similar fairy tales about shale oil from the Bakken in North Dakota — a way overhyped resource play likely to pass its own peak at the end of this year.

If you travel around the upper Hudson Valley, north of Albany, where I live, you would see towns and landscapes every bit as desolate as a former Soviet republic. In fact, our towns look infinitely worse than the street-views of Ukraine’s population centers. Ours were built of glue and vinyl, with most of the work completed thirty years ago so that it’s all delaminating under a yellow-gray patina of auto emissions. Inside these miserable structures, American citizens with no prospects and no hope huddle around electric space heaters. They have no idea how they’re going to pay the bill for that come April. They already spent the money on tattoos and heroin.



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15 Comments
Reverse Engineer
Reverse Engineer
March 10, 2014 10:46 am

If it goes off the Faux Newz Radar, it’s not happening.

RE

Thinker
Thinker
March 10, 2014 10:56 am

Another element of this 4T is that something needs to be done to correct the problem of Federal spending that was started under FDR’s New Deal programs. Entitlements will need to be reformed, but most politicians have no interest in tackling that issue.

Federal spending on infrastructure is another matter, however. It’s not easy to cut, but it’s one of the first to go when pols finally face up to reality. The liberal Brookings Institution just released this little tidbit:

The Hidden Line in Obama’s Budget and What it Means for Cities and Metro Areas

The most important takeaway from President Obama’s just-released 2015 budget is actually the least discussed: Over the next decade, the federal government’s focus will change fundamentally, forcing our cities and metropolitan areas to pick up the slack.

The story of the federal government’s changing role can be found in this chart buried on page 172. (Click link above to view online)

Non-defense discretionary spending—including critical investments in infrastructure, education, and innovation—will continue to drop severely, from 3.1 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2013 to just 2.2 percent in 2024. When compared to an average of 3.8 percent for the last 40 years, it’s clear how dramatic an impact these cuts will have.

Meanwhile, total spending on mandatory programs will rise from 12.6 percent of GDP to 14.1 percent, an increase of almost $1.8 trillion per year.

So, while they recognize that, without reforming entitlements like Social Security and Medicare they will need to spend increasingly more there, they’ve chosen to start pulling back on the “pork” that was omnipresent in the 80s and 90s. Not that it will go away — this is a budget, after all, and that decrease is by no means “severe” no matter how Brookings chooses to position it.

Just one little step in the cog, but worth noting.

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
March 10, 2014 11:32 am

Thinker…I’m aghast….no shovel ready jobs for the cities…..well I guess I’m wrong….the shovels will be used to bury those shit hole/Demorat controlled cities .

Stucky
Stucky
March 10, 2014 11:46 am

” …… you would see towns and landscapes every bit as desolate as a former Soviet republic. In fact, our towns look infinitely worse than the street-views of Ukraine’s population centers. Ours were built of glue and vinyl, with most of the work completed thirty years ago so that it’s all delaminating under a yellow-gray patina of auto emissions” ———- from the article

Absolutely!

I was 18 years old when Da Gooberment sent me to Greece. On “Orientation Day” they informed us how dirt poor Greeks are …. that we GI’s make in two months what the average Greek makes in a year. Maybe so.

A few months later I had a long weekend and I took a cruise. We stopped in Santorini. This is what I saw.
[img]http://hiddeninfrance.typepad.com/.a/6a00d8341fefa353ef01157029c19c970b-pi[/img]

“Fuckme. I should be so poor!!”, I thought to myself. And don’t even get me started on the incredible fresh fish, fresh fruit and vegetables, and mouth-watering souvlaki made from goats who weren’t injected with all kinds of toxic shit. “Poor” …. it’s all relative, isn’t it?

MUCH of Europe is like that. Gorgeous architecture throughout. Even poor folk homes are lovely, like the picture above. Sure beats Sheetrock and vinyl. I bought a simply gorgeous handmade wool sweater for $15 from an older woman with a tiny stall in front of her home. Probably took her a few days to make. I gave her $20. I guess they really are poor.

Thinker
Thinker
March 10, 2014 12:50 pm

Exactly, Buckhed. The cities are already faltering under their own mismanagement, unfunded liabilities and crumbling infrastructure. Add skyrocketing taxes and utility costs (Chicago, for example, had property taxes increase by 12-15% in the past two years, and is facing an 18% increase in electric bills this coming June) and you have great disincentive to stay in the cities, particularly if they’re going to be responsible for covering more of the infrastructure costs.

Good, as far as I’m concerned — taxpayers across the country shouldn’t have to pay more so the Feds can give the money to their cronies in the cities.

AWD
AWD
March 10, 2014 1:44 pm

“….a lot of Americans will freeze to death….American citizens with no prospects and no hope huddle around electric space heaters. They have no idea how they’re going to pay the bill for that come April. They already spent the money on tattoos and heroin.”

Or meth, or oxycodone, but definitely tattoos. They don’t have to pay for food, since they have SNAP cards, and so become morbidly obese. The smart ones have filed for disability. The average ones have squeezed out a few babies and now live on welfare. They make extra cash for cigarettes and booze by selling their SNAP cards or their pain meds and xanax, since they don’t have to pay for either healthcare or their medicine. And it’s bonus time for welfare and disability recipients; it’s when they get their tax return, especially their “earned income tax credit”, which is a misnomer, since they don’t actually earn any money. This, on average, is more than $8,000 for a welfare momma. It’s time to load up the half-breeds and head to sunny Florida and Disney World (in the new car they just purchased with all the free money).

But only people that live in cities and the suburbs will freeze to death. People that live in the country, where trees are plentiful and every house has a fireplace, will do quite well. I wonder how long it will take the 400lb average American to resort to cannibalizing the frozen corpses, a new and wonderful source fat and protein, a new buffet not unlike the old buffets. I’m guessing two days.

AWD
AWD
March 10, 2014 1:46 pm

Stuck

You’ve obviously never been to Greece, or it’s islands. The place reminds me of Mexico. It’s filthy and it stinks. Those homes look nice in pictures, but they are ancient and not particularly nice on the inside. Few have heating or air conditioning, or sewers, so you can imagine the smell. People are always at the beach in Greece, because the dwelling are so filthy and smell so bad.

ss
ss
March 10, 2014 1:55 pm

Mr. Kunstler. Found your book , “The Long Emergency” to be a very compelling connect-the-dots warning about our converging problems. Back in 2008, Jeroen Van Der Veer (then CEO of Royal Dutch Shell a large oil conglomerate) stated in a internal memo to his employees (“scramble or blueprints”) that cheap oil would be depleted sometime in 2015. He stated we would need to develop many kinds of alternatives to try to maintain economic stability.

Many don’t like to touch the subject of peak oil. It’s too large a problem to consider. Most don’t care. Some believe oil supplies are in decline. Some believe we have far more oil supplies than the oil industry claims and that the oil industry simply wants to jack up prices by claiming supplies are depleting.

I don’t trust the oil industry but I also believe that we have finite resources on our planet. To pretend that resources are unlimited or won’t be exhausted for a hundred or more years is foolish. Your book published in 2005 is every bit as relevant now as it was then. More debt, not enough growth of good jobs, resource depletion, climate issues, plus conflict, political mismanagement, and corruption all add up to catastrophe.

Those who believe that because of the federal reserve or some notion that our country is immune to collapse, don’t see the entire picture. “Nero fiddled while Rome burned” could be modified to “US economy sinks while citizens entertained themselves into oblivion”.

Apathy and subservience among citizens never ends well.

Stucky
Stucky
March 10, 2014 2:17 pm

“You’ve obviously never been to Greece, or it’s islands.” ———- AWD

Why are you telling me where I have, or have not, been? I was stationed in Greece for 18 months. I bought a VW microbus from a hippie and toured the country extensively. I have been to the islands.

You are an enigma at times. You criticize America’s opulence and addiction to materialism / consumerism. And then you turn around and criticize Greeks for not having heating or air conditioning or fancy furnishings from Ikea. WTF?? You’re nuts …. the island homes are beautiful. Inland that’s not always the case, but I have never come across a town that “stinks”.

Stop trying to stir shit. That’s llpoh’s job.

AWD
AWD
March 10, 2014 2:21 pm

I’m assistant shit stirrer.

I actually liked Greece, the people especially. The islands were nice. I was there in August, when all of Europe takes the month off and goes to Greece. They (like the Spanish) party like I’ve never seen anyplace else on earth. The clubs don’t open until 11pm, and stay open until after dawn. They enjoy their government checks (like here) and living the good life. I couldn’t keep up with ’em.

Stucky
Stucky
March 10, 2014 2:34 pm

“The clubs don’t open until 11pm, and stay open until after dawn. ” ——– AWD

I assume you made it to that wonderful Athenian suburb with it’s endless all-night bars, Glyfada?

True story. The DAY the C-130 dropped me off was a Sunday … I took a bus to Glyfada, strolled the beach, and a Greek cougar approaches me with an offer for a blowjob for 300 drachma. Well, 300 anything sounded like a lot of money so I said “No”. The next day I found out that 300 drachma was a lousy ten bucks. I went back to the that beach several times, but couldn’t find her.

Scout
Scout
March 10, 2014 6:13 pm

Time to be the adults in the room Gen X.

The founder of this organization is an Genx Prophet type / Cusper.

The national coordinator is Gen X and so am I.

I bet most of the folks helping us so far are Xrs as well, but as you know, we need all generations and it will take effort.

I would venture to guess this is what you have been alluding to on this site.

It has begun.

Rhetoric leads to action and motion.

Press Release

Public Meeting for the Purpose of Constituting for The Reinstatement
Of a Providence County Common Law Grand Jury

“Whenever people are well-informed they can be trusted with their own government”

– Thomas Jefferson

PLEASE BE ADVISED THAT – We the People will be holding a meeting to Constitute for The Reinstatement of a Common Law Grand Jury here in Providence County at the East Providence Public Library 41 Grove Avenue East Providence, RI 02914, on Saturday March 15th at 2:00 PM. There will be a 35 min Presentation starting at 2:00 PM and a vote by showing of hands will be at 2:35 PM.

All participants will then be invited to register for the Common Law Grand Jury.

Weaver Memorial Library

41 Grove Avenue
East Providence, RI 02914
401-434-2453

NEW YORK STATE IS FULLY CONSTITUTED.

Florida is not far behind and will likely be second to be fully constituted.

RI has a shot at being third in the nation due to our small size.

Connecticut is scheduled for next Saturday 3/15 at 10am in Hartford. Rhode Island is scheduled for next Saturday 3/15 at 2pm in East Providence
Locations to be announced tomorrow.

We will first concentrate on the Original 13 Colonies, then —-

The rest of our Nation’s 3142 Counties will be constituted.

http://www.nationallibertyalliance.org/

HONOR * JUSTICE * MERCY

NickelthroweR
NickelthroweR
March 10, 2014 7:24 pm

Kunstler is correct in that the elites are clueless. I was listening to NPR today and it was nothing but talking heads going on and on about how WE are going to fulfill the energy needs of Europe to include the Ukraine. Though I had not read Kunstler’s post yet, we shared many of the same thoughts about it such as the infrastructure needed to produce and transport all that junk across our continent and then across the ocean. Ya know, in the time it took us to replace the buildings lost on 911, China connected all of their major cities with high speed rail. Epic Fail on our part.

These people have never produced anything in their lives yet they believe that we can do these things at the snap of a finger.

Thinker
Thinker
March 11, 2014 11:21 pm

An update to the “hidden items” in the budget I mentioned earlier…

70% Of U.S. Spending Is Writing Checks To Individuals

Buried deep in a section of President Obama’s budget, released this week, is an eye-opening fact: This year, 70% of all the money the federal government spends will be in the form of direct payments to individuals, an all-time high.

In effect, the government has become primarily a massive money-transfer machine, taking $2.6 trillion from some and handing it back out to others. These government transfers now account for 15% of GDP, another all-time high. In 1991, direct payments accounted for less than half the budget and 10% of GDP.

What’s more, the cost of these direct payments is exploding. Even after adjusting for inflation, they’ve shot up 29% under Obama.

The biggest chunk, 38.6%, goes to pay health bills, either through Medicare, Medicaid or ObamaCare. A third goes out in the form of Social Security checks. Only 21% goes toward poverty programs — or “income security” as it’s labeled in the budget — and a mere 5% ends up in the hands of veterans.