Crisis-O-Rama

Guest Post by Jim Kunstler

All of a sudden, events are looking a bit fluxy out there, as though the world is shuddering through some spooky ch-ch-ch-changes, like a monster waiting to be born, with strange convergences of ecology, politics and economy, and there’s only so much you can do to prepare, really. Criticality is in the air!

The horses are out of the barn on the Wuhan Coronavirus. Air travel was curtailed too late in the game — and still only partially — with asymptomatic-but-infectious human carriers winging to every corner of the world and probably contaminating airports all along the way. There’s plenty of thought and counter-thought on what exactly is going on behind the scenes in China. The ruling party has knocked itself out demonstrating its earnestness in the crisis, performing great feats like the construction of a one-thousand-bed hospital in ten days, shutting down the lunar new year festivities (like cancelling Christmas here), and locking down a hundred million citizens in quarantine. Pretty impressive.

But there’s also a theory that the Coronavirus affords a cover for cascading failures in China’s corrupt and shifty banking system. The country had already stepped across some frontiers in demographics, energy consumption, and industrial growth that were shoving it toward contraction for the first time in two generations. Coronavirus has shut down a lot of production in big things like cars and big-little things like cell phones, and supply lines are shutting down to world markets. This amounts to the first big test of the integrated global economy, as well as the world’s debt-saturated business model.

When a lot of parties and counterparties can’t pay each other because their revenue flows are cut off, the securities, currencies, equities, and other abstract representations of wealth go south. The US and Europe are no better positioned for a crisis in their banking arrangements, and confidence is starting to crack. Both economic mega-regions have relied on central banking hocus-pocus to prop up stock markets and maintain the illusion that the logic of bonds still applies. The first thing to go moneywise in a contracting financial system is the magic of compound interest.

The US Federal Reserve has been massively gaming the Repo markets — overnight lending that uses bonds as collateral — since September, raising suspicions that more than one of its “primary dealer” banks are insolvent. Juicing them with “liquidity” is like painting over sheetrock infested with black mold. Looks good for a week or so, and then you’re in intensive care. Nobody knows yet what the effect of Britain’s escape from the EU will do to the Union’s remainers, but Europe’s bonded debt arrangements are even dodgier than America’s, since there is absolutely no EU central control of each member’s fiscal affairs. Anyway, the meta-trend now is the devolution of governance from giant-and-central to smaller-and-local, so the real question is how much disorder and damage do these nations endure as that happens. It’s been manifesting vividly in France for a year in the yellow vest protests.

Here in the USA, the knock-on effects of converging crises begin to look like a game of four-dimensional eight-ball. The oil markets are getting slammed around the $51 hashmark, making it more difficult for the shale oil producers to meet their onerous debt repayments (in an industry that just doesn’t make a profit). Lower gasoline prices may seem like a boon for US motorists, but it comes at the expense of bankrupting more oil companies and punishing lenders like pension funds that invested in shale securities in the desperate search for “yield.” Shale never was a rational business model despite its fabulous production surge in a very short span of years. Don’t be surprised if there’s an attempt to nationalize it, which will induce new problems of capital allocation and sheer incompetence in a world where central planning of anything is more and more a bad bet.

Looming and converging multiple crises are also behind the gross disorder in US politics, though the connections may not be so discernably visible. President Trump foolishly took credit for financial markets that he had correctly described as being “one big, fat, ugly bubble,” back in the febrile days of the last election. Now it threatens to leave him holding a big fat ugly bag of trouble. That booby trap is surely more hazardous to his reelection chances than the frenetic efforts of pissants like Adam Schiff running Wile E. Coyote ambuscades in the DC Swamp. Mr. Trump spent three years working, jawboning, and bluffing over global trade arrangements that are now suddenly falling apart. How much of that will turn out to be a temporary effect of the Coronavirus, nobody knows. Or maybe it’s an inflection point in the workings of our over-hyper-complexified human ecosystem.

These shifting quandaries leave the Democratic Party between that ol’ rock and a hard place. All of their bad faith ploys against Mr. Trump have failed so far. I speak to supposedly educated people every day upon whom the failure of the Mueller Investigation, the fiasco of impeachment, and the revelations of IG Michael Horowitz have made no impression at all. The Golden Golem of Greatness is still Putin’s Puppet to them. It’s a wonder of the age that they can’t cut their losses. And now Bernie Sanders suddenly looks poised to win the Iowa caucus and inflame the not-quite-so-socialist factions of the party, who appear to be ratcheting up some Wile E. Coyote traps against him. If that works, it’ll blow the party apart, 1860 style, into rump factions. But if Bernie  somehow perseveres and gets the nomination… and the Potemkin financial markets tank… and Coronavirus turns out to be a very big deal for upsetting global trade… then, America may get its first zealous socialist president.

Yes, history repeats and rhymes and all that, but I don’t see Bernie replicating the triumphs of Franklin D. Roosevelt in Great Depression 2.0. Rather, by attempting to overlay command-and-control policies on a zeitgeist that wants to take us smaller and local, Bernie Sanders will only be bucking reality. The net effect of Bernie Sanders in the White House will be to finish off the economy… and imagine where that will take us.

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19 Comments
Subwo
Subwo
February 3, 2020 11:34 am

cue Country Joe and the Fish…
And it’s five, six, seven,
Open up the pearly gates,
Well there ain’t no time to wonder why,
Whoopee! we’re all gonna die.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Subwo
February 3, 2020 11:47 am

Cued and ready to play

ottomatik
ottomatik
February 3, 2020 12:02 pm

The paradigm is shifting, in expedited fashion, as is the norm for such shifts, slowly and then seemingly all at once.

Everybody's A Critic
Everybody's A Critic
February 3, 2020 12:10 pm

Kunstler use the word, “ambuscade,” which I really liked. But he used Wile E Coyote twice, which I thought was lazy.

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 3, 2020 12:34 pm

“… and imagine where that will take us.” Umm, to a world Made By Hand?

There's solace in spelling (EC)
There's solace in spelling (EC)
February 3, 2020 12:41 pm

So the whole point of the epidemic exercise is to defeat Trump at election time? Wow, sorry I wasted my time reading this crap. I shoulda known when I came across his shucking and jiving in the first paragraph. Whatever happened to sobriety in writing?

ottomatik
ottomatik
  There's solace in spelling (EC)
February 3, 2020 1:01 pm

There is no conventional defeat of Trump at election time, his point, and accurate in my opinion.
We near the point in which cancelation for whatever reason is the only option, also one of his points.

There's solace in celibacy (EC)
There's solace in celibacy (EC)
  ottomatik
February 3, 2020 2:46 pm

Otto, I covered this just a week or two ago in my Trump is the new Trump iteration. Politicos know to gauge the public mood, or they should have an idea of what will sell in Peoria. Newt Gingrich did it in the 90’s and no doubt he advised Trump on his campaign promises regarding immigration and the wall, those issues were already burning in the bosom of many Americans. Once in, though, shit can go against you as it did against Carter with Iran and the public was in a mean mood. Uncle Ronnie took advantage of that mood and asked, are you better off now than you were 4 years ago?

Airman Pangloss said that when you’re dealing with people, you are dealing with variables. That’s the reason we can have elections where a second term is not guaranteed, just ask Poppy Bush. The art of political science (heh) is impartiality but we are no artists, are we? People go full snarling Chihuahua dog when it comes to Trump and I’m almost afraid to opinionate sometimes.

ottomatik
ottomatik
  There's solace in celibacy (EC)
February 3, 2020 3:24 pm

I surely did not mean to snarlly dog you, just thought I would point out obvious momentum. Of which there is ample, even statements of the same from opponents as of late, if we dont impeach he gonna win again, and such.
I also notice how election sanctity has become a “genuine” concern recently, planting the seeds for a desperate harvest.
It’s going to be an awesome spectacle we can share popcorn while enjoying The Greatest Show on Earth.

There's solace in celibacy (EC)
There's solace in celibacy (EC)
  ottomatik
February 3, 2020 3:44 pm

My conclusion last week was that the faces will win over the heels. In Mexican wrestling terms it is ‘tecnicos’ vs ‘rudos’. I like the tecnicos term because the election turns on technical ability very often. Charisma only takes you so far.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
February 3, 2020 1:35 pm

Some advice on coronavirus from another doctor I follow, along with an update from Wuhan.

Dr. Ben Kim’s Newsletter
February 3, 2020

Dear Reader,

Last week, I shared some thoughts on the coronavirus and a few things we can do to lower our risk of picking up a viral infection during cold and flu season.

For those who asked for guidance on proper hand washing technique, please have a look at the following post from this morning:

https://drbenkim.com/how-to-wash-your-hands-germs.htm

The step that is often missed is washing the tips of the fingers, which is partly intended to clean the underside of the ends of our fingernails where pathogens tend to thrive.

All things being equal, it’s best to keep fingernails trimmed, as longer nails pick up and hold more potential pathogens.

In a health care setting or circumstances where there is frequent contact with others, it’s best to minimize jewellery like rings and bracelets.

It’s difficult to know how reliable reported statistics on the coronavirus are. Some organizations are representing the death rate as being far lower than that of the common flu, while others are indicating that the death rate for those who pick up the coronavirus is somewhere around 2 percent compared to about 10 percent for SARS many years ago.

I have Chinese friends in the greater Toronto area who have family members living in Wuhan, and they tell me that while there is very little activity on the streets with many choosing to stay at home, there isn’t widespread panic and a sense of doom as some media outside of China have been representing.

In my view, frequent hand washing with proper technique, getting adequate rest, and taking in foods rich in a wide spectrum of vitamins and minerals remains a sensible approach to staying well.

Even in the remote chance that we are exposed to the coronavirus, as long as we focus on getting proper rest and nourishment, we are most likely to experience a return to wellness as we would in the case of a common cold or flu, just as the man in Toronto who was in isolation at Sunnybrook hospital with the coronavirus was recently released after recovering from his flu-like symptoms.

Brian Reilly
Brian Reilly
February 3, 2020 1:49 pm

The goal is, as always of late, to keep the rubes (that’d be us citizens and taxpayers) from looking behind the curtain. Coronavirus, impeachment, global warming, Super Bowl, you name it, all designed to keep us distracted and divided. Chinese powers need to effect their scams as well as the Americans, Brits, Europeans, Russians (who changed out their govt. wholesale 2 weeks ago) and anyone else who has stolen and lied their way into power and wealth. All these autocrats hope that, when the smoke clears, we will like the new economic and social neighborhood they moved us in to. We shall see about that.

Bloomie is the one to watch out fr. He is the real deal, an important voting member of the Big Club, as well as a Hebrew. If he gets elected, we might be pretty near the end of voting for a while.

Panzerlied
Panzerlied
  Brian Reilly
February 3, 2020 2:35 pm

He is the real deal, an important voting member of the Big Club, as well as a Hebrew.- A correction is in order, as Jew and Hebrew is not interchangeable. The Israelites of the Christian Bible are descendants of the Hebrews, but Bloomjew’s tribe is that of Esau/Edom, which as God himself stated in Malachi, 1:3; Jacob (Hebrew) that I loved, Esau (Khazarian Edomite) that I hated. There can never be any communion of the light with the darkness. Words have meaning and can be casually misused out of context to infer that something is what it is not.

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 3, 2020 3:25 pm

Kunt-slure finally recycled his catch phrase “the Golden Golem…” which means he is supporting the short one, little mikey.

Little mikey is a totalitarian nightmare.

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 3, 2020 3:34 pm

It’s interesting to hear the “never Bernie” crowd opining that he will never get the nomination. If he does, you can expect them to say he can never win. Shades of 2016, when Trump was totally disregarded until he won the election.

You make a good point about what may happen is by chance Bernie gets elected. Again, let’s go back to Obama’s election, when he was hailed as a “trans-formative” figure who would ensure Democratic dominance for the next 20 years. Not only did that not happen, he actually left his party a smoking ruin. Whoopsie. If you want one to name one figure who was responsible for the rise of Trump, Obama is a good first choice. Obama was, as they say, an answered prayer for which many tears have been shed.

I have no idea how things will work out. But as one who lived through the 1960’s, this all seems very familiar. Things can change so rapidly, and for no apparent reason. In 1964, we had the four lovely lads smiling from the cover of their album, wearing their matching suits with the little velvet collars, and then 3 years later, on a different album cover, they sport long hair, facial hair, and are appareled in Indian robes and beads. It was spontaneous, and the WW II generation had a hard time realizing something had changed, and things were never going back to “normal.” Today, Nancy Pelosi and Joe Biden represent a certain way of thinking that has gone out of style, that no young person buys anymore, and that will not return.

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
February 3, 2020 3:48 pm

Sorry to say, Trump only got rid of a couple government career Criminals and he needs four more years to even get started draining the Deep State Swamp’s NWO minions. If the Useful Idiots manage to “elect” any Democratic Communist, we instantly return to the Carter-Bush-Clinton-Obama Gulag Archipelago Plan for Conservatives.

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  robert h siddell jr
February 3, 2020 5:52 pm

Bernie loses to Trump 70/30. That is why the Dhimmicrat leadership is in hysterics. Nothing left for you to steal if you aren’t in charge of anything after a GOP sweep. Besides national bankruptcy, Bernie means domestic strife like we have never experienced.

Steve
Steve
February 3, 2020 8:33 pm

Why do we always forget the presidential race is between the 2 wings of the same bird? The globalists and MIC could care less who wins. Why should we care?

ottomatik
ottomatik
  Steve
February 3, 2020 10:57 pm

Do you think Tranny protocol was forced on American children in a vacuum? Or is it possible regimented Tranny protocol was foisted high because the last administration had a positive relationship with Tranny lifestyle?
Just a thought…