Swamp Fever

Guest Post by Jim Kunstler

Further proof, as if more were needed, that God is rather cross with the world’s number one exceptional nation: Hurricane Irma is tracking for a direct hit on Disney World. In the immortal words of the Talking Heads: This ain’t no party, this ain’t no disco, this ain’t no fooling around.

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Houston is still soggy and punch-drunk, with a fantastic explosion of breeding mosquitoes, and otherwise it’s not even in the news anymore. This week, the cable networks had their scant crews of reporters scuttling around Florida, asking the people here and there about their feelings. “What’s gonna happen is gonna happen….” I think I heard that one about sixty times, and there’s actually no disputing the truth of it.

For the moment, though (Friday morning), it’s a little hard to calculate the effect of a complete scrape-off, wash, and rinse of the state of Florida vis-à-vis the ongoing viability of the US economy. There’s going to be a big hole with dollars rushing into it and that will likely prompt the combined powers of the US Treasury, congress, and the Federal Reserve to materialize tens of billions of new dollars. Overnight the DXY plunged to a new low for the year.

Am I the only observer wondering if Irma may be a fatal blow to the banking system? The mind reels at the insurance implications of what’s about to happen. Urgent obligations triggered by an event of this scale can’t possibly be serviced. Look for it to snap the chain of counterparty leverage that has been propping up the banks, insurers, and pension funds on mere promises for years on end. Finance, both private and public, has been feeding off unreality since well before the tremor of 2008. The destruction of Florida (and whatever else stands in the way up the line) will be as real as it gets.

You’ve heard the old argument, I’m sure, that a natural disaster turns out to be a boon for the economy because so many people are employed fixing the damage. It’s not true, of course. Replacing things of value that have been destroyed with new things is just another version of the old Polish Blanket Gag: guy wants to make his blanket longer, so he cuts a foot off the top and sews it onto the bottom. The capital expended has to come from something and somewhere, and in this case it probably represents the much talked-about necessary infrastructure spending that is badly needed for bridges, roads, water and sewer systems, et cetera, in all the other parts of the USA that haven’t been hit by storms. Instead, these places and the things in them will quietly inch closer to criticality without drawing much notice.

The second major weather disaster this year may not be enough to induce holdouts to reconsider the issue of climate change, but it ought to provoke some questioning about the development pattern known as suburban sprawl, which even in its pristine form can be described as the greatest misallocation of resources in the history of the world. Surely there will be some debate as to whether Florida, or at least parts of it, gets rebuilt at all. The wilderness of strip malls, housing subdivisions, and condo clusters deployed along the seemingly endless six-lane highways that accumulated in the post-war orgy of development was an affront to human nature, if not to a deity, if one exists. There are much better ways to built towns and we know how to do it. Ask the shnooks who paid a hundred bucks to walk down Disney’s Main Street the week before last.

Apart from all that remains the personal tragedy that awaits, the losses of many lifetimes of work invested in things of value, of homes, of meaning, and of life itself. Many people who evacuated will return to… nothing, and perhaps many of them will not want to stay in such a fragile place. But the America they roam into in search of a place to re-settle is going to be a more fragile place, too. A week or so after Irma has gone away, the ill-feeling that heaps this country like a swamp fever will still be there, driving the new American madness into precincts yet unknown.

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15 Comments
DRUD
DRUD
September 8, 2017 10:46 am

The broken window fallacy is, of course, ultimately still fallacious, but in this world where robots and the third world produce more shit than even glutinous ‘Murikans can consume, the sheer size and complexity of our particular Polish Blanket Gag can allow it to go on for a very long time.

It is not money, not financial capital, that rebuilds roads and bridges and homes, it is human effort and energy–money is just the carrot (and often the stick as well). The name of the game is confidence–such has it ever been. There is no limit to fiat “money,” there is–for the time being only–a lot of human capital and diesel fuel on the sidelines–only an erosion of confidence on a massive scale can bring this Tower of Babel down–if the deep state can keep fooling most of the people most of the time and the rest of the world keeps playing along in their own self-interest, then our disastrous, wasteful and ridiculous system can keep going for a very long time.

At best, of course, this is a tight-rope walk over massive chasm, but–and I stress again–for the time being it is almost everybody’s best interest that we do not slip.

Stucky
Stucky
September 8, 2017 10:53 am

Why do we HAVE TO REBUILD?

So that it can be destroyed again?

The article below has global warming bullshit … but also raises legitimate questions re rebuilding.

Chronicle of a Flood Foretold

kokoda - AZEK (Deck Boards) doesn't stand behind its product
kokoda - AZEK (Deck Boards) doesn't stand behind its product
  Stucky
September 8, 2017 11:50 am

Stuck…..that is the way I felt after Katrina; I figured they would tear down a mountain and truck it to Louisiana to put it above sea level.

30 years from now there will be another storm and the damage cost will be 10 times as much.

DRUD
DRUD
  Stucky
September 8, 2017 1:12 pm

First, I like that kind of paradigm-shifting question–let’s at least examine what so many never even consider.

However, there are a couple of points I would make: 1) Who’s we? Nobody knows for certain what they would do if their home and their home-town was flattened until it happens. 2) Re-building is what people do. Period. And what is a better use of their time and energy, their lives? Do they need your (or my) approval to rebuild?

If people want to keep rebuilding houses in hurricane-prone places and insurance companies want to keep insuring them…great. Do it.

As long as the government has nothing at all to do with it….

And there, as always, is the rub.

RiNS
RiNS
September 8, 2017 10:53 am

More words to the Requiem for The Post war dream..

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4b44pzrI_I8

Building of houses, condos and stripmalls on the Dunes of America has never made sense.

[imgcomment image[/img]

Yet people still do.

CCRider
CCRider
  RiNS
September 8, 2017 11:13 am

It makes sense in this regard; the gov’t subsidies it. I heard sen. nelson (who is an asshole even in good weather) was crowing on tv that they’ll be trainloads of ‘relief funds’ (read; lucre) available for the dumshits who lose their houses on a barrier island or a flood plain. It calls to mind seeing 1st hand residents return to what was left of their houses on Captiva Island-which had just been cut in half by a cat 2 storm. They all were joyful that with the insurance money coming their way they could build even bigger palaces-paid for by the poor bastards working 3 jobs to barely get to middle class.

RiNS
RiNS
  CCRider
September 8, 2017 11:52 am

Now with the global warming threat upon us these folks have a bogeyman to blame it all on..

BL
BL
September 8, 2017 11:27 am

Florida was a hostile, reptile infested swamp slightly more than a century ago. The Flaglers got the bright idea to make it into a tourist destination contrary to God’s opinion. The military stated that they have the technology to control the weather and it is said that they have the ability to turn hurricanes in whatever direction needed.

My question is why would they not turn this storm to save lives and property? I agree with JK that this may break the insurers and start a financial meltdown.

Maggie
Maggie
  BL
September 8, 2017 11:42 am

This seems a fun comment, too. Flaglers: that’s a funny word there!

BL
BL
  Maggie
September 8, 2017 12:36 pm

Maggie- That refers to Henry M. Flagler and his missus. Old Henry was the founder of Standard Oil Co. (yes, the Standard Oil Co.) and he decided Florida could be changed from a storm ravaged swamp into a tourist area, and old John D. Rockefeller helped him do just that.

That is to whom I refer to as the Flaglers. So far the score is:

Flaglers – “winning”

God- waiting in the wings with another chapter to this story. Who was right? Stay tuned.

Maggie
Maggie
  BL
September 8, 2017 2:15 pm

Last fall, my cousin bought a retirement condo in the Keys. Said she knew she could not insure it for flooding, but it was kind of HIGH up the embankment and she thought it safe.

I liked her a lot. I’ll miss her.

Jimbo
Jimbo
September 8, 2017 11:51 am

“The second major weather disaster this year may not be enough to induce holdouts to reconsider the issue of climate change…..”

Jimbo, nobody with an ounce of brains disputes climate change, this ol’ earth has been changing since it lumped together 4.5 billion years ago. What we DO dispute is the idea that additional ‘fleecing’ of the middle-class, what’s left of it that is, will change anything one iota. You’re smarter than that, I know, so red herring argument’s such as this are not constructive. But you already know that.

Rise Up
Rise Up
September 8, 2017 12:23 pm

“Am I the only observer wondering if Irma may be a fatal blow to the banking system? The mind reels at the insurance implications of what’s about to happen. Urgent obligations triggered by an event of this scale can’t possibly be serviced. Look for it to snap the chain of counterparty leverage that has been propping up the banks, insurers, and pension funds on mere promises for years on end.”
————-
There won’t be any “fatal blow” to the banking system. They are all-powerful.

Kunstler keeps trying to find a trigger to the economic collapse bomb but comes up empty every time. Sure, a devastating Hurricane Irma would take an already shaky U.S. economy down another notch or two, but it won’t be any fatal blow to either banking or the economy.

Hondo
Hondo
September 8, 2017 10:10 pm

Here in Texas, we pulled together to get through Harvey, but everytime we saw a newspaper or watched tv it was some dildo with ears, that should have been strangled with its own umbilical cord at birth, being splayed on the front page or screen, face covered in crocodile tears, complaining that they do not have a home to return to. It will be the same with Florida, most will work and get through the disaster while the liberal media milks the diaper corps for all it’s worth. They should join the Navy. At least they would get paid to act that way. PS: A young man from Tennessee, sent here to help with the downed powerlines, was killed by electrocution in Bloomington. Our deepest condolences and prayers are with his friends and family. We thank him so much for being here to help, and are deeply saddened by his death. Christ bless all the linemen and thanks for a job well done. It truly was above and beyond the call of duty.

Taylor
Taylor
  Hondo
September 9, 2017 6:55 am

Great point Hondo. Sorry to hear about that fella from TN too. Linemen, like so many of the unsung heroes who make this country great, risking their lives and limbs every day; God save them all.