Economic Decay Leads to Social and Political Decay

Guest Post by Charles Hugh Smith

If we want to make real progress, we have to properly diagnose the structural sources of the rot that is spreading quickly into every nook and cranny of the society and culture.

It seems my rant yesterday (Let Me Know When It’s Over) upset a lot of people, many of whom felt I trivialized the differences between the parties and all the reforms that people believe will right wrongs and reduce suffering.

OK, I get it, there are differences, but if the “reform” doesn’t change the source of the suffering and injustice, it’s just window-dressing that makes the supporter feel virtuous. Want an example? Let’s take the the “cruel and unusual punishment” for drug-law offenders, many of whom are African-American males whose lives are effectively hobbled by felony convictions and long sentences in America’s Drug War Gulag.

You want a “reform” that actually gets to the root and solves the source of the injustice? It’s simple: decriminalize all drugs and recognize drug use as a medical and social issue rather than a criminal-justice / Gulag issue. But that won’t happen because too many people are making too much money off the Gulag, which is now a public and private-prison Gulag.

(Other advanced nations have had success with this structural change. Maybe we could learn something from their examples?)

If you’re not ready to demand the full decriminalization of all drugs, then you’re not really interested in solving the problem; you’re just seeking virtue-signaling “reforms” that don’t upset the power structure. And since any real solution necessarily disrupts the power structure benefiting from the status quo, all the painless “reforms” are ineffective.

In other words, either go big and change the power structure or go home and stop promoting your own virtue. This is why the economy is floundering despite all the warm and fuzzy headlines about stocks rising due to the Federal Reserve lowering interest rates: we collectively refuse to consider structural changes in the way “money” is created in our perverse system–perverse because the way “money” is created guarantees soaring inequality.

If you don’t change the way “money” is created and distributed, you change nothing. Did the thousands of pages of financial regulations passed after the 2008-09 debacle reverse wealth and income inequality? The answer is no, wealth inequality is rising even faster after all the feel-good “reforms.” The net result of the “reforms” is the costs of compliance for banks went up substantially, and that regulatory moat simply pushed risky lending outside the banking system.

In other words, the sources of systemic instability and wealth inequality weren’t even touched by the “reforms.” If the financial system were actually stable, why was the Federal Reserve only able to “normalize” interest rates and its bloated balance sheet for a few months after a decade of “growth”? Why is the Fed reverting to “emergency measures” again after a few brief months of “normalizing”?

If all these “reforms” were worth more than a bucket of spit, why isn’t wealth inequality reversing?

Here’s the way our “money” system works: banks borrow trillions of dollars into existence and loan it to debt serfs at high rates of interest. Central banks create “money” out of thin air and distribute it to the very top of the wealth-power pyramid: banks, financiers and corporations.

The only way to change this corrupt, exploitive system that generates inequality as its only possible output is to eliminate central banks and fractional reserve banking, and ban the aggregation of “too big to fail” entities: a system of 1,000 small banks is structurally far less vulnerable than five mega-banks that are tightly bound to virtually every risk-on asset in the entire system.

if you don’t change the way “money” is created and distributed, you change nothing.

Since we’re incapable of changing the sources of financial instability, fragility and inequality (because it would destabilize those benefiting from the status quo), we’re doomed to watch our social and political systems decay and implode.

If we’re honest–an increasingly rare and hazardous condition–we’d admit that the purchasing power of wages has fallen sharply for the bottom 95% in the past 19 years, while the concentration of wealth in the hands of the top .01% has skyrocketed, leaving the bottom 80% with few if any meaningful assets and only the top 5% reaping the gains in our “winner take most” economy.

This systemic decay in social mobility, positive social roles and financial security has eroded the social fabric as the implicit social contract between the powerful and the disenfranchized has unraveled: all the phony “reforms” of the past 19 years simply locked in insiders’ “legal” pillaging.

The failure of the political system to recognize and rectify the broad-based decline of America’s economy as experienced by the bottom 80% has eroded trust in politics as a “solution.” Instead, people see the same powerful corporations buying influence with both parties, and tens of thousands of lobbyists in Washington DC writing the legislation passed by both parties (recall Nancy Pelosi’s brief flash of honesty: “We have to pass the bill to know what’s in it.”). Anyone who believes this manifests the ideals of democracy is delusional.

To those I offended: please pardon my frustration with all the phony “reforms” that change nothing and thus serve to tighten the grip of the self-serving power structure on the throat of the nation.

Here’s the unpalatable reality: The financial rot spread to the “real” economy two decades ago, and now the economic rot is decaying the social and political orders.

If we want to make real progress, we have to properly diagnose the structural sources of the rot that is spreading quickly into every nook and cranny of the society and culture. If we’re not willing to disrupt those reaping the outsized benefits from the existing structures of wealth and power, we’re deluding ourselves if we believe we’re solving any problems at the source.

If you’re still pissed off at me, please read the first pages of my new book (the first section is free); maybe you’ll be less pissed off once you see where I’m coming from: Will You Be Richer or Poorer? Profit, Power and A.I. in a Traumatized World.

Click to visit the TBP Store for Great TBP Merchandise

Author: Glock-N-Load

Simply a concerned, freedom loving American.

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23 Comments
gatsby1219
gatsby1219
October 18, 2019 8:17 am

Injustice ? Maybe you should read the FBI crime stats and report back.

flash
flash
October 18, 2019 8:18 am

Capitalism is real .

IRS admits it audits poor people because auditing rich people is too expensive

https://www.truthinaccounting.org/news/detail/irs-admits-it-audits-poor-people-because-auditing-rich-people-is-too-expensive

Vote Harder
Vote Harder
October 18, 2019 8:32 am

In other words, the sources of systemic instability and wealth inequality weren’t even touched by the “reforms.”

Which proves that government cannot and does not solve problems. “Everything government touches turns to shit”. Thank you for pointing that out back in the ’70s Frank Zappa

The only way to change this corrupt, exploitative system that generates inequality as its only possible output is to eliminate central banks and fractional reserve banking, and ban the aggregation of “too big to fail” entities: a system of 1,000 small banks is structurally far less vulnerable than five mega-banks that are tightly bound to virtually every risk-on asset in the entire system.

This is akin to an oil tanker with several vertical bulkheads in it’s holding tank to keep the tanker from capsizing. Instead concentrated centers of financial power are so few that when they collapse they have to get bailed out by the taxpayers in the form of socialism for the rich.

Instead, people see the same powerful corporations buying influence with both parties

So true !! Yesterday I was accused by Mygirl of of saying that “voting is futile”. I stand guilty of the charge!

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flash
flash
  Vote Harder
October 18, 2019 8:43 am

Shut up. Without corporations wisely investing taxpayer money, who would create the jobs?

https://www.goodjobsfirst.org/subsidy-tracker
Discover Where Corporations are Getting Taxpayer Assistance Across the United States

Vote Harder
Vote Harder
  flash
October 18, 2019 9:05 am

Great satire! Good site too!

Articles of Confederation
Articles of Confederation
  Vote Harder
October 18, 2019 8:57 am

Voting isn’t just futile. You should actively be discouraging no taxation without representation, and encouraging Galt. I can only speak for myself, but I am definitely NOT represented by Washington, as is evidenced by Trump’s flaccidity on medical, anti-competitive price fixing. If he held to his campaign promise on this one issue, I’d vote for him again.

No more compromises.

Vote Harder
Vote Harder
  Articles of Confederation
October 18, 2019 9:11 am

Voting isn’t just futile. You should actively be discouraging no taxation without representation, and encouraging Galt.

I do those things too. As I’ve said before, our participation in so-called free elections, i.e. voting is about as relevant to the direction of the state as a hood ornament is to the direction of a car.

Martel's Hammer
Martel's Hammer
  Articles of Confederation
October 18, 2019 12:40 pm

How is that working out for your wife and daughter so far? Your abdication and non-participation has consequences…..

Articles of Confederation
Articles of Confederation
  Martel's Hammer
October 18, 2019 2:29 pm

Indeed it does. I’ve said it for a long time on here that it has been difficult and will only get harder the more I trim it down. It will get much easier once the third child goes to kindergarten. The last time I contributed to Jim’s mortgage, I told him my wife would shoot me if she knew. 🙂

Basically everything I make goes into the land and to mortgage. Goal is to be 100% out of the system within 3 years. Can’t say it will 100% happen, but I am doing my damnedest to get there.

Doing what is right is never easy. In fact, it downright sucks. I want to be able to say that when I meet the Maker, I did everything I could to follow the way. Whatever someone else does is their own Cross to bear.

Steve
Steve
October 18, 2019 8:34 am

Too bad he didnt use a graph showing the increased income of the 1%. That would really get you burning.

The global crash is well under way. There might be a small window during the depths of this global depression to rid the world of Central Banks only if earth’s citizens bring out the pitchforks and lanterns and demand their removal. I give a 1% chance of this happening but I like dreaming.

Plato_Plubius
Plato_Plubius
  Steve
October 18, 2019 12:38 pm

The “shart” (shit show of a chart) he posted at the end of his rebuttal to those triggered KEEP AMERICA GREAT fanatics sorta points to the NeoFeudal Corporate oligarchy, doesn’t it?
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Martel's Hammer
Martel's Hammer
  Plato_Plubius
October 18, 2019 2:03 pm

What’s wrong with income inequality? Nothing of course in a free market as the Pareto distribution of wealth is not only expected but appropriate. What you should be railing against is the non-market based distribution of wealth…..which is indeed reaching the absurd levels of corruption that always leads to popular revolt and a great reset aka the 4th Turning.

Sadly most of the folks like yourself are no better than the kleptocrats currently running the world….you covet their position and wealth for yourself…..that is usually what happens….meet the new boss same as the old boss. Hard pass……how about we try something truly radical and NO Government At All……no taxation no regulation…….no USA at all!

Plato_Plubius
Plato_Plubius
  Martel's Hammer
October 18, 2019 3:39 pm

Martel,

We haven’t had a free market since before I was born. Even though I was taught like everyone else that we are the Land of the Free and Home of the Brave.

Crony capitalism is not capitalism., rather it is NEO feudalism in disguise.

Martel said,

“how about we try something truly radical and NO Government At All……no taxation no regulation…….no USA at all!”

Mine as well since those in power are above the Rule of Law

Parris Island '69
Parris Island '69
October 18, 2019 9:14 am

Stopped reading after the “hobbled AA male” comment. Another WSJW in denial of biological reality. I haven’t the time to waste on it.

A. R. Wasem
A. R. Wasem
October 18, 2019 11:17 am

Not concerned when the nigger and other gangbangers end up in prison – if “drug” charges are the easiest way to accomplish that goal so be it. Could probably make the argument that the sentences aren’t generally long enough. Otw spot on as to causes of current economic malaise.

Plato_Plubius
Plato_Plubius
  A. R. Wasem
October 18, 2019 12:44 pm

You should care!

It costs anywhere from $31 K to $60 K per YEAR for each prisoner!!

WE have people in prison for selling weed!! C’mon man! Talk about a Police State Prison Planet!

How much does it cost to send someone to prison?

If you’re in the private prison market or the “Just us” dept. You’re being kept busy! Good ol job security
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Two if by sea, Three if from within thee
Two if by sea, Three if from within thee
  Plato_Plubius
October 18, 2019 12:59 pm

Damned scary chart.

javelin
javelin
  Plato_Plubius
October 18, 2019 11:22 pm

It would make an interesting chart overlay— in 1950 there were (rounded) 15 million blacks in the USA… by 1960 it was 18.9 million, by 2018 it was a meteoric lunge to 48 million. And let’s not forget the affects of the welfare act and great society act which essentially destroyed the black family structure and made Big Gov the permanent “baby daddy” of the ghetto rats……

The premise of the article was “getting at the root cause” of a problem, right?

Mad as hell
Mad as hell
  A. R. Wasem
October 19, 2019 8:50 am

Yes, until of course the government considers YOU the nigger…

Two if by sea, Three if from within thee
Two if by sea, Three if from within thee
October 18, 2019 1:03 pm

So Government can`t cure the rot. Well, .Gov was never created to do that. Peoples simply need to start voting with their pocketbooks and starve the beast. Leave the wretched county you live in. There are plenty of other places pining for your tax dollar. Take a loss by leaving if you must to gain in the end.

SlickWilly
SlickWilly
October 18, 2019 8:36 pm

Good article but I would argue the financial rot started more than 2 decades ago. What people fail to understand is simply the ideal of a free lunch is a fairy tale. Politicians are people who seek something for nothing and promise their flock they can get something for nothing as well.

Any currency that has no intrinsic value will lead to the same situation 100% of the time no matter how many times you reset the game. Real easy to control people when you can easily buy them through printing monopoly money.

Somewhere in that old burnt paper called the constitution is something about all debts to be settled with precious metals. Specifically gold and silver. Why? Try printing them.

Mad as hell
Mad as hell
  SlickWilly
October 19, 2019 8:55 am

Been going on for a long time. Milestones to remember – 1913 and 1973. 1913 was the singularity that enabled all of the others, 1973 put it on overdrive.

SlickWilly
SlickWilly
  Mad as hell
October 19, 2019 7:06 pm

Agree 100%. I know people like to say it’s this, that or the other that is the driving force behind the ills of the world we live in. I believe if we had real money that a great deal of the shenanigans we see today would not exist. Think about how many people receive currency who do not actually produce anything useful(think welfare, gov workers). Without the ability to print currency these ‘jobs’ would not exist. Without the ability to print currency gov simply cannot be the bloated over-reaching monster it is today.

Currency is the root of nearly all evil.