Battle of the Behemoths

Guest Post by Jim Kunstler

As the empire deliquesces into a fetid slurry of economic failure, we stand ankle deep in the rising swamp waters witnessing the futile battle of the giants, Walmart and Amazon.

Neil Howe, co-author of The Fourth Turning, wrote this week that “[t]he Amazon-Walmart rivalry will determine the future of retail.” Well, it seems that way, perhaps, and I understand why a lot of people would imagine it, but I would draw some different conclusions. What we’re seeing is more like the battle between Godzilla and King Kong, two freaks of nature produced by a toxic culture, fixing to finish each other off.

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The condition that will flavor events going forward is scale. Everything organized at the giant scale is going to fail. We have made all the systems of daily life too large and they will not function in the long emergency (and the fourth turning), an age characterized by universal contraction. This is true of corporations, institutions, schools, hospitals, farms, governments, virtually all organized enterprise. Retail is currently just the most visible example at the moment, since it is a commercial battleground that doesn’t enjoy public subsidies. The organisms on that field are exquisitely sensitive to economic reality, and the salient reality these days is the impoverishment of their customers, the former middle class.

This has been a sensational year for retail failure so far with a record number of brick-and-mortar store closings. But it is hardly due solely to Internet shopping. The nation was vastly over-stored by big chain operations. Their replication was based on a suicidal business model that demanded constant expansion, and was nourished by a regime of ultra-low interest rates promulgated by the Federal Reserve (and its cheerleaders in the academic econ departments). The goal of the business model was to enrich the executives and shareholders as rapidly as possible, not to build sustainable enterprise. As the companies march off the cliff of bankruptcy, these individuals will be left with enormous fortunes — and the American landscape will be left with empty, flat-roofed, throwaway buildings unsuited to adaptive re-use. Eventually, the empty Walmarts will be among them.

Just about everybody yakking in the public arena assumes that commerce will just migrate to the web. Think again. What you’re seeing now is a very short term aberration, the terminal expression of the cheap oil economy that is fumbling to a close. Apart from Amazon’s failure so far to ever show a corporate profit, Internet shopping requires every purchase to make a journey in a truck to the customer. In theory, it might not seem all that different from the Monkey Ward model of a hundred years ago. But things have changed in this land.

We made the unfortunate decision to suburbanize the nation, and now we’re stuck with the results: a living arrangement that can’t be serviced or maintained going forward, a living arrangement with no future. This includes the home delivery of every product under sun to every farflung housing subdivision from Rancho Cucamonga to Hackensack. Of course, the Big Box model, like Walmart, has also recruited every householder in his or her SUV into the company’s distribution network, and that’s going to become a big problem, too, as the beleaguered middle-class finds itself incrementally foreclosed from Happy Motoring and sinking into conditions of overt peonage.

The actual destination of retail in America is to be severely downscaled and reorganized locally. Main Street will be the new mall, and it will be a whole lot less glitzy than the failed gallerias of yore, but it will represent a range of activities that will put a lot of people back to work at the community level. It will necessarily entail the rebuilding of local and regional wholesale networks and means of distribution that don’t require trucking.

If you think we’re just going to switch the trucking industry over to electric vehicles or engines that run on bio-fuels, hydrogen, compressed air, or natural gas, you will be disappointed. Ain’t going to happen. We’re going to have to come up with something else, starting with the basic idea of the walkable community. This implies that we’re going to have to revive the existing towns and small cities that fit that description. And it also implies that a great deal of American suburbia will have to be abandoned. The capital will not be there to reform it. In any case, commerce later on in this century is not going to be anything like the Blue Light Special orgy of recent decades. And the transition will get underway with a speed that will make your head spin.

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22 Comments
kokoda - the most deplorable
kokoda - the most deplorable
August 11, 2017 9:29 am

This comment IS being respectful:
Mr. Kunstler is to be congratulated for his 2nd consecutive Posting on TBP without a severe bashing of Trump.

Card802
Card802
August 11, 2017 10:02 am

My daughter and son in law live in a pretty nice place.

They have a 3 acre farm, raise chickens, pigs, personal garden, and fruit trees. They barter for milk and beef.
They live two miles from small town America with a market full of fresh in season produce only, home made pies at the bakery that also makes bread without the preservatives, one butcher, local thriving shops, three micro breweries.

Local, not urban.

Anonymous
Anonymous
August 11, 2017 10:17 am

The only thing that can be counted on to never change is that everything will continue changing.

Changes may be happening faster now than in past ages, but those ages also changed and eventually became this one. And this one is on the way to changing and becoming the next one, and will continue doing the same for as long as humanity continues to exist.

Vic
Vic
  Anonymous
August 12, 2017 1:10 am

Very philosophical. I liked that.

Ozum
Ozum
  Anonymous
August 12, 2017 2:22 am

“This, too, shall pass away”

Tim
Tim
August 11, 2017 10:25 am

For all Kunstler railing against the south, he used the phrase, “fixing to.” When he begins to phonetically abbreviate that to “fixin’ ta,” we’ll know the transition is complete.

My brother-in-law and sis-in-law are way ahead of the curve on this one, in Kunstler’s view, and they probably aren’t even aware of it. They’ve been champions of Main Street in their hometown of Rural, Oklahoma for many years now. They’ve opened up many storefront businesses, sold some of them, bought some buildings downtown, sold some buildings, championed the cause of bringing living quarters back to the second and third floors of these buildings, and generally been involved in every cause promoting their town that they can be involved in.

I admire them. They have a heart for their hometown that is admirable. My wife left the town with me, 25 years ago, and says, “Not no, but HELL NO” will be ever move there. I get that, too. I’d move there tomorrow, because I think for the most part, it’s Good People who live there and make honest livings. But it’s not in our future, I don’t think.

I don’t know if JHK is correct, or not. From my vantage point in Dallas/Ft. Worth, everything is flying high, with no end in sight. Will it all end with Fire and Fury? Perhaps. Maybe there will be a day when I don’t see tower cranes stretched out across the horizon as far as the eye can see.

I guess the future will show who made the better choice. I wish them the best of luck, and according to JHK’s view, they’ve made the better choice.

kokoda - the most deplorable
kokoda - the most deplorable
August 11, 2017 10:38 am

Nothing beats carrying groceries (or anything else) up to the 2nd or third floor.
I can’t wait to live the urban life; AH, the not so sweet smells and sounds are so inviting, and your neighbors above and below add to the blissful experience.
To top off the pleasure, one gets to be part of the drug and murder scene – does Kunstler recommend we all move to Detroit, Chicago, Baltimore……..

A. R. Wasem
A. R. Wasem
  kokoda - the most deplorable
August 11, 2017 12:44 pm

Kokoda – Kunstler recommends moving to small cities and towns.

kokoda - the most deplorable
kokoda - the most deplorable
  A. R. Wasem
August 11, 2017 12:47 pm

Thanx, I certainly read it differently (which happens),

Robert (QSLV)
Robert (QSLV)
  kokoda - the most deplorable
August 11, 2017 1:03 pm

Stairs keep me young, but clean air in a 1 sq mile small town does that, too. No crime gets me old; no murders in a decade or more. Surrounded by farmland is a nice touch, too. Big box is 30 minutes away.
Robert (QSLV)

Persnickety
Persnickety
August 11, 2017 10:40 am

Kunstler has just one view of the future, and it’s always looming a few years away, inevitable but not yet here. And it’s been that way for 15 years or more. DOOM DOOM DOOM coming soon, but not quite yet.

His older writings about suburbia are interesting critiques. Other than that, his various warnings and prophecies are about what I can get by wandering the sidewalks of London or NY, and don’t seem any more accurate.

Suzanna
Suzanna
August 11, 2017 10:44 am

Oh goodness, JHK, you scored big time, but PLEASE
do not encourage urban to go small town. The
sidewalks are rolled up by dark anyway. No action.

“Better to depopulate the urban centers and spread those viable populations into small communities making the small businesses serving those local markets viable sources of life building again.”

That is precisely what JHK’s sentiment is…rather
disband the bedroom communities/suburbs and
choose small community living!

The “Urbans” = nine danke/no thanks. Frankly
my dear, I don’t give a damn. It has been a huge
change moving to the rural setting, and my only
misgiving is that I didn’t accomplish it sooner.
However, only the up-early crowd need apply.

Suzanna
Suzanna
  Suzanna
August 11, 2017 11:53 am

The above quote = CurtMilr
2) nothing from Maggie granola-wise :(,
(but I did make make my first scratch
cheesecake, including graham crust/distributed
most all to neighbors)
so I am gone. Boys can sigh relief.

Maggie's Granola Secret
Maggie's Granola Secret
  Suzanna
August 11, 2017 5:13 pm
Maggie
Maggie
  Suzanna
August 12, 2017 7:09 am

I snuck the granola recipe into a comment toward the end of Stucky’s QOTD.

[imgcomment image[/img]

1 cup coconut oil softened… get virgin coconut oil. Nobody wants the slutty kind.
2 eggs and YES, get GOOD eggs. It makes a damn difference.
½ cup Maple Syrup (HSF’s is preferred over Vermont brand, but that is because of a consistency question: Vermont syrup seems suspiciously thicker, as if something was added, but HSF assured me it is because of the soil difference. Some might like it thicker, like Vermont trees might squirt out in the early spring, but I think the purer flavor in HSF’s tree drippings make a nicer crunch in the granola. Read that last sentence again. Have I gone pure HICK or what?)
Use a fork to blend the oils, eggs and syrup/sweetener. (I use stevia since I actually can GROW stevia. I did grow it one year, but don’t need to do that to KNOW it can be done.
NEXT set of ingredients:
1 cup dehydrated apple chips (I use the kind the Mormons use… or USED to use when the Federal Government hadn’t shut them down from letting people can food for long term storage!)
1 cup dehydrated banana chips (Best if freeze-dried or at least “no sugar added” during processing. A good freeze dryer, which I’m looking into getting because it makes stuff so VERSATILE, doesn’t need added ingredients other than air. I am afraid to look at pricing.
1 cup freeze dried cranberries (I order them in giant cans from Saratoga Farms).
Add dried apples, banana chips, cranberries or other dried fruit to wet ingredients and blend evenly. Let stand for 1 hour at least, covered. (What this does is partially rehydrate the fruits so that the baking process will release the flavor of the fruit into the blend. For some of us, Baking IS Chemistry.)
NEXT set of ingredients…
In a blender or food processor…
2 cups nuts and berry trail mix (I buy the almond, walnut, pecan, cranberry, raisin blend… I think it is the “Nantucket Blend”)
½ cup sunflower seeds (buy in bulk at Health store)
½ cup pumpkin seeds (and/or sesame seeds and/or soy nuts if you like them)
¼ cup ground cinnamon (or more!)
I chop the nuts and fruit together with the cinnamon to infuse the cinnamon flavor into the ground up mix. If don’t know that it makes it that much better, but I think it does.
Toss the dry crumbly cinnamon blend into the sticky fruit and turn until the mix is moistened and everything is a bit sticky looking. I put plastic gloves on and mix it all together. Let it sit for a half hour to allow the apples and bananas to get cinnamon flavor absorbed.
Toss in 3 cups oats and mix it well.
Oil or spray the bottom and sides of a 9 x 13 baking dish and press the mixture into the bottom of the pan. I use a quart jar to press the mixture down into the pan by rolling it and pressing hard. I have used the heel of my hand, but it is sticky.
Bake at 375 F for about 30 minutes. Turn oven off and let sit in oven for 10 minutes to let it dry a bit more if you like it crunchy. I personally turn the oven to 400 for the last ten minutes. Then cut/break into chunks after it COOLS. I usually cover it for hours to let it cool and get firm. My husband likes it kind of moist and chewy. I do aim to please, which is why the basic recipe is for HIM.

Maggie
Maggie
  Suzanna
August 12, 2017 7:22 am

I corresponded with the former “leader” of our family of families yesterday… of the hundred or so “families” that started talking trash about getting out on land somewhere, about 25% have done so. A dozen folks have thrown in with him on his well defended compound. I have two families that will join us here someday, perhaps.

BUCKHED
BUCKHED
August 11, 2017 12:38 pm

JK…don’t worry. When the petro crash happens I have your transportation at the ready. Her name is Clara and she”s 15.5 hands tall . You can stop on the side of the road and re-fill anytime yah’ want. Her poop will help yah’ make great ‘Maters .

Maybe we need some of that community closeness and spirit again . When out West hunting I marvel at how the ranchers there do things for one another. They truly are dependent on each others help in order to defray costs .

rhs jr
rhs jr
August 11, 2017 2:04 pm

Sacrifice “UN 2020 sustainable” (urban condos) for some common sense survival (rural farm).

Bob
Bob
August 11, 2017 5:02 pm

Ol’ Kuntsler is fully unhinged at this point! Perhaps he hasn’t noticed that we are now farther away from ‘running out of oil’ than we supposedly were two-plus decades ago…

The only people in the suburbs in any danger of being marooned are the fools buying electric cars.

i forget
i forget
August 11, 2017 6:58 pm

Artificially inseminated low i-rates max reproduces the malinvestments musical chairs. Money for nuthin & chicks for free, that’s the way you do it…until it does you.

But…linear rumors of two fathom depth is death have been exaggerated. Always have been. Tumescence sells. Horse-hung headlines terrify & attract. Come hither- go away. Opioids got nuthin’ on Malthus milk addiction. Pain is so close to pleasure. Maybe cuz:

“…If, as our sexually selecting lovers, the physics of non-locality as well as ecology teach us, everything *really is connected,* this interconnection is not necessarily tolerated for long by egoic consciousness. The hologram has to compete with the other broadcasts of the psyche, become perceived against the complex background of reality, & thus requires a focusing of attention. Hence the agony-ecstasy continuum – both extreme pain & bliss – require a letting go of the ego, an opening that, if resisted, creates a node of subjective experience where agony & ecstasy are not experientially distinct. Perceiving the One through linkage to All That Is can suggest to the subject of perception – whoever that is! – not only that “I have become God,” but that “I have become the only God!” …” ~ Darwin’s Pharmacy, Richard Doyle

lose your head, get lost in your head, it’s over
no matter what it looks like. recall that dead snappin’ turtle in cool hand luke.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ho3aL5pxprY