Are You Infuriated Yet?

Authored by Chris Martenson via PeakProsperity.com,

More and more, I’m encountering people who are simply infuriated with how our “leaders” are running (or to put it more accurately, ruining) things right now. And I share that fury.

It’s perfectly normal human response to be infuriated when an outside agent hurts you, especially if the pain seems unnecessary, illogical or random.

Imagine if your neighbor enjoyed setting off loud explosives at all hours of the day and night. Or if he had a habit of tailgating and brake-checking you every time he saw your car on the road. You’d been well within your rights to be infuriated.

Or to use a much more common example from the real world : When your politicians repeatedly pass laws that hurt you in favor of large corporations — that, too, is infuriating. Especially if those actions run directly counter to their campaign promises.

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There’s a lot of be infuriated about in the world today, so go ahead and embrace your rage. By doing so, you’ll be in a better mindset to understand things like Brexit, Catalonia, and Trump, each of which is a reflection of the fury of your fellow citizens, who are finally waking up to the fact that they’ve been victims for too long.

An easy prediction to make is that this simmering anger of the populace is going to start boiling over more violently in the coming years. Welcome to the Age of Fury.

‘Over The Top’ Dumb

Do you ever get the sense that, as a society, we’re being dangerously reckless? Perhaps so dumb that we might not recover from the repercussions of our stupidity for many generations, if ever?

There are economic and financial idiocies in motion that are, by themselves, unsolvable predicaments without a peaceful solution. But when combined with resource depletion and declining net energy, they’re positively intractable.

Take for example the hundreds of trillions of dollars-worth of underfunded entitlement and pension promises. Those promises cannot be kept and they cannot be paid. Everybody with a basic comprehension of math can conclude as such.

Yet we continue to operate as if the opposite were true. We comfort ourselves that, somehow, all the promised future payouts will be made in full — even though the funds are insolvent, their returns are much lower than the actuarial projections require, and payout demand mercilessly rises each year.

Spoiler alert: This isn’t some future disaster lying in wait. It’s unfolding right now.

Take these headlines spanning the past several years:

When it comes to broken retirement promises, the future is now. It will be with us for a very long time.

Why? Because the math simply doesn’t work. It’s broken, it’s been broken for a long time. You can’t put too little in the piggy bank at the start, then raid it over time, and still expect to have enough at the end.

And yet we, as a society, have preferred to pretend as if that weren’t the case. Which, it turns out, was a terrible “strategy.”

But if you think that’s bad, you’re going to positively hate this chart:

S&P 500 chart

The pension liabilities now blowing up are contained within the thin green smear in the middle of this chart. Think on the nation’s inability to handle that single crisis, and now reflect on how overwhelmed it’s going to be by the far larger predicaments that lie elsewhere on the chart.

The Infuriating Plunder-fest That Is Health Care

The Medicare liabilities (the orange and largest band on the above chart) are immense, and will only become more so as our largest demographic, the baby boomers, further ages. But they become especially infuriating when seen in the larger context of the racketeering that drives the health care system in the United States.

Instead of doing anything constructive about the high number of IOUs building up within Medicare, Washington DC politicians are sidestepping the most obvious elements that contribute the most to the problem. Enormously wasteful, the “healthcare” system is entirely out of control and spiraling deeper into an abyss that threatens to literally destroy the most productive segment of the US social structure: the middle and upper middle classes.

That should be a topic of serious discussion in the halls of power. But none is being had.

Literally each day brings worse news on the skyrocketing costs of healthcare. But, as with most topics,  the media mostly focuses on the symptoms (prices) rather than the causes of the issue.

The real culprits here are the insurance cartel and a hospital system that has the most unfair, incomprehensible, and inhumane billing process ever devised. One easy to grasp feature of both the insurance companies and conspire to pay the executives far more than they actually deserve or are truly worth.

Health care premiums for 2018 set to go up by as much as 50 percent

Oct 5, 2017

 

Several states have announced rates for health insurance premiums on the Obamacare exchanges for 2018. Topping the list is Georgia, with rates that are 57 percent higher than last year, while Florida said some premiums will be 45 percent higher.

 

Among the reasons for these increases is the uncertainty about the future of the Affordable Care Act. President Donald Trump has vowed to repeal and replace the health care law, which was passed under his predecessor President Barack Obama.

 

Insurers are raising premiums in the face of repeated threats from President Trump to stop funding so-called cost-sharing reductions, payments to insurers that cover out-of-pocket costs for some low-income consumers. Trump previously referred to these payments as “bailouts” for insurance companies and threatened to stop making the payments so as to “let Obamacare implode”.

(Source)

That’s the story the health insurers are going with: they have to raise rates because they’re uncertain whether they will get AS MUCH LOOT under the new rules being considered as they did under the utterly disastrous Obamacare provisions.

How much loot are we talking about? Look at this chart of the stock price of United Healthcare (UNH) since the passage of the Affordable Care Act (aka Obamacare):

S&P 500 chart

If this chart showing massive near-4x gains in just 5 years, coupled with your steep annual premium increases, doesn’t infuriate you, you are just not getting it.

Even if your employer pays for your health care (somewhat obscuring the true impact of premium increases), the cost to you is fewer and lower pay increases, as well as steady yearly reductions in covered services along with higher co-pays and deductible amounts.

Still not infuriated? Ok, maybe this will do the trick. Here how much executive compensation at the major insurers was last year:

S&P 500 chart

(Source)

The average family health care insurance premium in 2016 was $18,764, meaning that Mark Bertolini from Aetna alone required 100% of the premiums from more than 2,200 families just to pay him in 2016. Of course, the “C-suite” of these health care insurers are loaded with other high-paid parasites who are just as busy gouging the young and old alike.

This is a complete travesty and joke. Congress and the Senate, sitting on their deservedly low approval ratings, pretend they cannot do anything about it. Too complicated they say. Bullshit I say. Go after the obscene pay packages and profits of the insurance industry as a first matter of business. Then make it a crime for hospitals to bill people differently for the exact same services.

That’s a no-brainer. Can you imagine if your mechanic had a secret pricing formula for every customer that was, literally, based on their maximum ability to pay? Nobody would stand for it, it’s disgusting that we tolerate this when it comes to something as vital and necessary as our health and even lives.

Fury, not tolerance, is what’s needed now.

Conclusion (to Part 1)

The future has arrived. The pension losses are here and just getting started and the future will have a lot more of those sorts of broken promises.

The health care insurance crisis has been with us for 20 years or so now and Obamacare just put some extra accelerant on that fire, which is now consuming middle class households by the tens of thousands.

Both the pension and health care crises are infuriating and self-inflicted wounds. We could have avoided them by making wiser choices in the past. We didn’t. We could limit their damage by making better choices today. We almost assuredly won’t.

Current conversations and proposals are thinly disguised sleight-of-hand movements whose purpose is to deflect attention from the thefts underway. Anybody who studies the system and its math comes to the same conclusion: the corporations have all the power and they are misusing it for private gain.

Why there aren’t more politicians willing to call a spade a spade and actually protect their constituents is a real mystery. But the next wave of populist candidates certainly won’t be. People are sick and tired of being asked to give more and more while corporations and wealthy elites keep taking more and more.

It’s simply infuriating.

But that’s not the worst of it. The mistakes we are making right now in terms of energy policy and ecological destruction are far more dangerous to your personal health, liberty and future prospects than a simple market crash.

In Part 2: It’s Time For Action, we uncover the hidden downside risks in today’s financial markets and explain how, as destructive as a coming market crash will be, the longer-term damage to society and risks to your well-being are rooted in the potential breakdown of the systems we depend on to live. As with pensions and health care, we are pursuing similar dangerously misguided policies in our farming & food systems, extraction of industrial resources, and ecological management — to name just a few.  There’s an appropriate time for fury. And that time is now — provided we use the anger to spur us into constructive action. Get your fury on. Click here to read Part 2 of this report (free executive summary, enrollment required for full access)

 

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19 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
October 21, 2017 1:25 pm

“Imagine if your neighbor enjoyed setting off loud explosives at all hours of the day and night. ”

The current fad seems to be car stereos that accomplish the same thing, particularly at 2 am.

KaD
KaD
  Anonymous
October 21, 2017 2:04 pm

All my neighbors do this via barking lawn ornaments.

BL
BL
October 21, 2017 2:25 pm

American Healthcare insurers are worse than the mob. The average American family is paying $15,000 to $18,000 per year in premiums for which they receive ZERO, ZIP….NOTHING, due to sky high deductibles. Untold BILLIONS going into the pockets of Big Healthcare and Big Pharma.

These are the top five Mafia groups in the world, they look like small time next to American Healthcare Insurers:

http://www.fortune.com/2014/09/14/biggest-organized-crime-groups-in-the-world/

In the first three month of 2017, the top 5 insurers net profit was $4.5 BILLION, Think about that for a while.

https://www.axios.com/profits-are-booming-at-health-insurance-companies-2418194773.html

Gayle
Gayle
October 21, 2017 2:57 pm

What we have is a health care system in the hands of a corrupt medical establishment having little interest in promoting health, corrupt pharmaceutical companies, corrupt insurers, corrupt hospital corporations, corrupt judicial, legislative, and executive branches, (especially the CDC and DHS). Did I miss anyone?

Good luck to us.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
October 21, 2017 3:45 pm

I passed infuriated a couple of years back and I’ve been speeding towards don’t-give-a-fuck ever since while simultaneously deriving maximum entertainment value from it.

BL
BL
  IndenturedServant
October 21, 2017 5:39 pm

I/S- What happened to your dog moniker?

Rdawg
Rdawg
  BL
October 21, 2017 7:37 pm

Moniker is a name or nickname. I think you mean avatar.

kokoda - AZEK (Deck Boards) doesn't stand behind its product
kokoda - AZEK (Deck Boards) doesn't stand behind its product
  Rdawg
October 21, 2017 9:38 pm

So what happened to the Avatar?

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
  BL
October 22, 2017 2:26 pm

Umm, I didn’t even notice it was missing until now. WP has occasionally dropped my avatar in the past for some unknown reason.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
  IndenturedServant
October 22, 2017 2:38 pm

And it’s back! The dog in my avatar is our oldest at 14.5 years old. She got really sick right out of the blue one day about 1.5-2 years ago and took a long time to recover. She was diagnosed with heart failure but for about the last 4-5 months she has been enjoying a “second puppyhood”.

She bounces around like a pup, runs like a demon and chases tennis balls relentlessly like she did in her youth. Her transformation has been amazing. When I open the door to let her out she jumps from the top step to the ground never touching a step. Thursday I let both dogs out and the older one spent ten minutes chasing the four year old all over the yard.

The four year old is still dying from liver disease but apparently in slow motion. It’s now two years past her predicted expiration date and she’s still going strong. Her weight varies quite a bit and she currently looks like a Nazi death camp survivor. Poor thing, all her ribs, vertebrae and hip bones are sticking out but it hasn’t affected her energy or enthusiasm for life.

Stucky
Stucky
  IndenturedServant
October 22, 2017 3:01 pm

“Her weight varies quite a bit and she currently looks like a Nazi death camp survivor.”

Your dog was no doubt being guarded by some Joo dog … Bark Mitzvah.

Fiatman60
Fiatman60
October 21, 2017 6:23 pm

“There are economic and financial idiocies in motion that are, by themselves, unsolvable predicaments without a peaceful solution. But when combined with resource depletion and declining net energy, they’re positively intractable.”

Amen Brother!!….. this author is not just whistling Dixie…….

Maggie
Maggie
October 21, 2017 7:00 pm

It has been almost ten years since I downloaded Chris’s Crash Course and watched it with Nick, then shared it with others. (Chris encouraged people to download and share the course with others.) Most of the people I shared it with have since told me they didn’t watch it all… they seem to think the U.S. economy is/was just peachy keen and there’s nothing to worry about. Others made a few token gestures to “prepare” for a financial crisis, but buying a few bags of beans and a handgun is hardly worth bragging about. Don’t even try to tell me you are prepared for the upcoming financial implosion if you are continuing to purchase anything with credit cards when you still have a mortgage payment. Don’t tell me you are trying to get healthy to avoid the skyrocketing health care costs if you are still buying foods dripping with the chemical toxins found in most processed foods. And, finally, don’t tell me you are ready for the crash, even HOPING for the crash, when you don’t even know which direction you plan to walk when the streets are jampacked with the dregs of society stopping every car to pillage for food and valuables. Just look around and start paying attention!

I don’t think Chris had a Crash Course lesson on personal protection from derelicts. People in our “gardening group” (my son called them the “most boring prepper group ever”) talked about the “horde” of desperate inner city youth that would roam the countryside looking for people with obvious gardens. Some of the do-gooder-wannabes in the group suggested having some extra stores to hand out to them. Perhaps some beans and rice in Ziploc baggies handed out with a little prayer said… to be charitable. One idiotic speech about how the Lord expects those of us with the means to prepare to store enough for those who cannot prepare led to an enlightening discussion/argument amongst the hardliners and the also-attendeds that convinced Nick and I it was time to buy land and start planning to leave Dodge. There were actually people who stood up and declared that they did not want to be part of a group that would not help those in need. And when they were told to feel free to leave and not come to the next meeting, they actually said “Fine. But we know where you live.” That was March 2010. We bought this land later that year and over the course of the next three years, purchased the materials for our log home on a three year same as cash layaway plan. Imagine spending three years not spending any money on anything except necessities. Good Lord, did we have some fights over the scrimping! To be honest? We still do. I think that we should relax a bit and spend the money to get some things done NOW since it is only fiat, but my frugal (cheapo) husband insists we will do a better job doing it ourselves and that a vacation to Alaska just isn’t a good idea right now. In case you are wondering? We don’t plan to be very charitable. If you can convince me you are one of TBP’s STMs, I might give you a small jar of bunny meat and some beans, but you will need to know enough about a few of the regulars here to earn my trust. Nick? He ain’t gonna let you stick around, but he won’t begrudge a small gift to a comrade. But, realistically, we chose a secluded location and expect problems from local riffraff, but not any from distant areas.

I just made a whirlwind trip to Oklahoma and on my return trip, I paid special attention to people during rest stops and forays into towns Route 66. I noticed, on this trip especially, some really creepy people hanging around areas where there is a lot of traffic. There were young people with tats and eyebrow jewelry and cheek jewelry and ewe…what was that sticking out of that girl’s NOSE last night. Does she really think having what appeared to be tiny little testicles hanging over her lips is attractive? Or maybe they used to belong with that scumbag she was sitting with on the bench begging for spare change from travelers stopping for gas. While I was inside NOT getting anything except some ice in a cup, her friend came inside and counted out $14 in coin for the cashier, who gave him fiat bills for the coins he and his sweetie with the noseballs had been begging for when I arrived. (I politely said “sorry, I can’t help” when they asked me. If they don’t have to work for their dimes, nickels and quarters, why should I belabor it here?)

But, they are out there in growing numbers. They are the evidence that the bullshit from the government about the improving economy and growing labor force is beginning to pile up. And like any pile of bullshit, it needs to be buried. Take that as you want, but don’t take the chance of misinterpreting it when I’m in a bad mood. And I truly hope that someone with some real balls starts telling the truth to the Congresscritters in a way that changes the direction of our country. But, I’m not counting on it. I’m fairly certain this will be one of the last trips I make alone. I’m not afraid to travel alone, but I’m also not an idiot. This country’s roads are a danger zone.

There is not any hope for noseball chick and her dirty smelly beau. The scars on their arms and hands tell the world they not only don’t want to work but that they don’t want to feel bad about not working. All the political capital in the world is not going to help them repair the damage done to their bodies, their psyches and their souls. I won’t hand noseball chick a dollar because I think noseball chick has one foot in the grave and zero chance of salvaging a productive life out of the enormous number of bad choices she’s made already. I resent the U.S. Congresscritters buying her support with my dollar while telling her it is okay to sit at a heavily trafficked park near Route 66 to beg for drug money. So, instead of continuing to supply Congresscritters with tax dollars, I’ve opted to excuse myself from paying the vig.

I’m not infuriated. I’m resolved.

Fiatman60
Fiatman60
  Maggie
October 21, 2017 11:11 pm

Right on Maggie!! A while back I was traveling on the I5 down to Portland and stopped at the “rest areas” when it was time to use the washrooms. They used to be safe places years ago, but now are infested with people looking for “gas money”. Huh? Where are you going to buy gas around here? Nothing for 10 miles in both directions. Nope! It was for drugs. Dirty and stinking filthy people looking for handouts for their next high.
Always watch your back!!

Maggie
Maggie
  Fiatman60
October 22, 2017 2:58 pm

And carry a big knife. Pistols are useful, but knives are QUIET.

james the deplorable wanderer
james the deplorable wanderer
October 21, 2017 7:37 pm

It’s a mildly schizophrenic existence. On the one hand, you prep, knowing that when the fools and druggies get hungry and run out of convenience and grocery stores to loot, they’ll come looking for you. Range practice is an expensive necessity now. On the other hand, my younger is about to graduate (next spring? hopefully) in IT and look for a job. I hope the nightmares hold off long enough to find him a job somewhere relatively safe, and we can set up a doomstead nearby.
Which will it be? Holding off the zombies while looking for daylight, or just another life towards retirement in a smaller city somewhere? It’s enough to drive you to distraction, but you really have to prepare for both. Hope for peace while arming for resistance; hope for progress while preparing to rebuild after the Crunch, just to keep running water, electricity and sewer from becoming a memory instead of daily life.
The bills will come in, one day, whether you’re ready to pay them or not. Your choices today will dictate whether you have any choices tomorrow.

Maggie
Maggie
  james the deplorable wanderer
October 21, 2017 8:20 pm

My son will also grad next spring and, in spite of all the eye rolling about our choice to exit the military contractor gravy train, he sees there is a real problem with his generation’s work ethic. I do have some hope that his disdain for trends and fads and his obsession with health and hygiene means there will be no tatted noseball chick in his future but I do not delude myself. There will be something.

AC
AC
October 21, 2017 10:49 pm

George W. Bush, treasonous piece of shit, recently gave a speech telling everyone that not sucking multinational corporate cock was un-American (I’m paraphrasing him, of course) – he went on to explain that the utter destruction of America was the right thing to do, because it might prop up corporate profits for a few more years. John McCain, North Korean fighter Ace and media personality, was on hand to affirm his support of this stance.

Why are these bastards not already being eaten by worms?

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
October 22, 2017 9:04 am

I have worked part time as a kid to full time as an adult and am now 63 . I had a defined benefit package from the third largest steel corporation in the world for 11 years 1973 to 1984 . Watched it all go poof in 84 , just young enough and healthy enough to hustle . It took four years to get back to the steel worker wage but never any decent benefit package , it just was not there to get ! So fortunately my wife’s employment balloned as my side deflated . Together we continued to hustle invested wisely and withdrew wisely most of the time . We followed 3 strategies on investing in combination . You cannot catch a falling knife , let the other guy brag making that last 10% before the inevitable “correction”.
Also sell when they are popping champagne corks in the street and buy when there is blood in the streets .
What infuriates us is we paid off the majority of debts and could easily knock out a few credit card bills with a few key strokes . We drive used dependable cars and maintain a modest home and lifestyle that is comfortable . We also maintained a savings nest egg . We did all this it’s ours . Nobody gave us our assets or allowed us to have them we earned them !
Now our local government wonks have announced that our savings and Home are being referred to as untapped sources of revanue . This at a time where age and health concerns have us slowing down . We prepared for us and our situations we took our lumps at times sacrificed and recovered . We lived and conducted ourselves responsibly and now short falls due idiot politicians and personal failures of others think the can fleece us now , Not Without A Fight !
I know whatever the powers that be want from us they will eventually take regardless of right and wrong . They will send the badge wearing minions and their combined excuse to steal from us will be : SORRY JUST DOING MY JOB ! This is America A Free Constitutional Republic and my modest investment in lead and brass may come to good use . Make no mistake I know I cannot win this fight but I could make it real ugly for a short while !