Things Have Changed

Guest Post by Jim Kunstler

At least in wartime, the bars stay open. That’s how you know this is a different thing altogether from whatever else you’ve seen in your lifetime. Even those of us who signed up for this trip — that is, who expected a long emergency — may be a little bit in cosmic awe at just how much shit is flying into the ol’ fan. I know I am. The gods must have glugged down a mighty draft of Dulcolax.

Did you get the feeling, as I did, watching the Sanders-Biden debate last night — the inadequate versus the irrelevant — that the world they were blathering about possibly doesn’t exist anymore? The world of institutions that actually function? Like, the ones that conjure up whatever sum of money you demand to keep all the wheels spinning? Remember that Hemingway line about the guy who went broke? Slowly, then all at once. That’s us. Medicare for all now? Really? More like, a year from now every physician in America may be the equivalent of the old country doc toting a black bag around to home visits. Unfortunately, there aren’t enough horses left in America, and the few buggies we’ve got are all in the museum.

The mega financial bubble-of-bubbles is deflating with frightful velocity precisely because of the efforts since 2008 to artificially inflate it. The Federal Reserve gave it one final blast Sunday night — while everybody else was counting their rolls of toilet paper — and the effect was like blowing hot air into a shredded Zeppelin. Stock futures are “limit down” as I write, before the Wall Street open. Gold is getting pounded into the ground like a grape stake and silver is so low it looks like the hedge fund managers are down to pawning grandma’s table service. (Hint, the PMs will bounce back hard; the rest, probably not so much.)

Nobody really knows how deep and how harsh this gets (and perhaps the ones who have a clue ain’t sayin’). But the situation presents two salient questions: how much disorder is entailed in this ordeal? And what does the world look like when the convulsion phase of this thing is over?

Americans have never been through anything remotely like this. The disorders of the Civil War were sharp and horrendous military operations conducted mostly in cornfields, pastures, and woods (yes, and some small cities like Richmond, pop. 38,000, and Atlanta, pop. 10,000). When the smoke cleared, battered Dixieland emerged to numb civil order. Up in Yankeedom, the New York draft riots ran for a week around the small patch of Manhattan island, but everybody else went along with Mr. Lincoln’s program. After all that, America got on quickly with the lively business of the 19th century: railroads, mines, factories, and all that. The world wars took place in foreign lands, and the home-front scene of the 1940s now looks nostalgically idyllic.

The stresses mounting on the national scene today reflect the extreme fragilities of the way-of-life we constructed since then, and an awful lot of bad choices we made in the process, like suburbanizing the nation and making everybody a hostage to happy motoring. I won’t belabor that point, except to ask how are those vast regions of the country going to manage daily life as the supply chains wobble? I’d say a shortage of toilet paper may only be the beginning of their problems.

The cities — at least, the few that didn’t already implode from the inside out — made assumptions about how big and tall they could grow which don’t jibe with the new circumstances chugging ferociously down the line. Just think what a lockdown of the global economy will do to all those residential skyscraper projects lately hoisted up in New York, San Francisco and Boston? I’ll tell you: They are assets instantly converted into liabilities. And how will these cities even begin to pay for maintaining their complex infrastructures and services when the money for all that no longer exists and there’s no way to pretend that it will ever come back? Answer: They won’t be able to keep borrowing and they won’t manage. These cities will depopulate and there will be battles over who gets to live in the parts that still may have some value, like riverfronts.

I guess just about everybody can now see the idiocy of concentrating the nation’s commercial life in super-gigantic organisms like Big Box stores. It seemed like a good idea at the time, like so many blunders in history, and now that time is over. Any ecology thrives on redundancy — a lot of players doing similar things at the appropriate scale — and America’s chain retail model for a commercial ecology was an obvious fiasco waiting happen. The people who run that, and other people who run other things in our society, must be wondering whether those supply-chains from China will come back. It’s no different than the cargo cults of the Solomon Islanders circa 1947, after the military airplanes stopped landing with all their magical goodies: time to go back to fishing from the dugout canoe.

The foolish, idiotic identity politics ginned up by the Left and their racially-inflamed, sexually-disturbed scribes in the Thinking Class, have successfully destroyed the last shred of an American common culture that held the country together through earlier vicissitudes. So, one concludes that we’ll be left stewing in poisonous tensions, and perhaps some violent conflicts, before those matters head toward some sort of resolution.

Where does this all lead? Eventually, to a land and a people who operate their society in a very different way at a much more modest scale. The task of reorganizing our national life is immense. (There will be plenty to do, so don’t worry about that.) You can forget about the grandiose techno-narcissistic visions of electrified motoring and a robotic nirvana of perpetual sex-crazed leisure. Everything we do has to be downscaled, from whatever manufacturing we can cobble back together to rebuilding commercial ecosystems at a finer grain from region to region — in other words, what we now call small business, geared locally.

Expect giant AgriBiz to founder on a shortage of capital, especially, and expect smaller farms to organize emergently, worked by more humans working together. That is, if we want to keep eating. Expect the small towns in the well-watered parts of the country to revive while the groaning metroplexes spiral down into entropic sclerosis. Consider the value of our vast inland waterway system and the opportunities to move goods on them, when the trucking industry unravels. Consider lending a hand at rebuilding the railroad system in this country.

There will be economic roles and social roles for all those willing to step up to some responsibility. Young people may see tremendous opportunity replacing the wounded economic dinosaurs wobbling across the landscape. It’ll be all about going local and regional and making yourself useful in exchange for a livelihood and the esteem of others around you — aka, your community. Government has been working tirelessly to make itself superfluous, if not completely ineffectual, impotent, and rather loathsome in the face of this crisis that has been slowly-but-visibly building for half a century. Something old and played-out is limping offstage, and something new is stepping on. Aren’t you glad you watched all those debates?

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14 Comments
Solutions Are Obvious
Solutions Are Obvious
March 16, 2020 12:11 pm

some sort of resolution

some sort of revolution
FIFY

Jdog
Jdog
March 16, 2020 12:25 pm

Life happens in cycles. Some cycles are short, and some are long. It is the long term cycles that are always the most severe and the most dangerous.
The Great Depression was a convergence of several crisis’s, excessive debt, trade, ecological, and social. There are times when this happens.
Today we have a similar situation with the convergence of a a trade and debt crisis, and the economic impact of mass quarantine, and the disruption of supply chains that all combine to create a chain reaction of events.
These cycles are an outcome of our cultural changes which are a result of the transition between prosperity, and the loss of prosperity. It usually takes 4 generations for this cycle to complete, but it can take more as we see with the current cycle.
We are now in the process of entering a depression in which an enormous amount of prosperity will be lost.

Trapped in Portlandia
Trapped in Portlandia
March 16, 2020 12:45 pm

The first step toward downsizing for most Americans will be to learn how to homeschool their kids. With schools surely not opening again until the fall at the earliest, no more sending your children to Uncle Sam’s building to get an education. Education will need to occur on the dining room table and the home computer. This will be one of the good things that comes out of this mess.

Ruby Worth
Ruby Worth
  Trapped in Portlandia
March 16, 2020 1:02 pm

Oy. The real ignorance out there is staggering. Education? Public libraries are gutted of any substance. Plenty of Stephen King and Danielle Steele and ‘Chicken Soup for the Whatever’ — which are the new ‘classics’ among all the otherwise soft-porn and psychotic perversity on ‘library’ shelves. The kids will be got off parents’ nerves with cartoon videos and computer games.

Pequiste
Pequiste
  Ruby Worth
March 16, 2020 3:37 pm

What will happen to that bedrock of library involvement in engaging the minds of children:
Drag Queen Storytime?

And don’t forget the card catalogue has been consigned to the ash-heap of history.

A librarian friend’s opinion was that elimination of the card catalogue could be considered almost as bad as destruction of the Library of Alexandria.

timinillinois
timinillinois
  Trapped in Portlandia
March 16, 2020 7:11 pm

Not so much an education as being indoctrinated.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Trapped in Portlandia
March 17, 2020 12:26 am

I agree, but as Cuomo said, the education system has become a babysitter.

Montefrío
Montefrío
March 16, 2020 1:25 pm

One of Mr K’s best in a long time. Spot on, I suspect. Like my contemporary Mr K, the scaling-down notion took hold a while back, in my case 25 years ago, in large measure thanks to NAFTA and Robert Prechter, the Cassandra of Wall Street. I don’t envision a chaotic societal collapse, but neither do I rule out the possibility. No, I see a gradual but accelerating erosion of economies worldwide with the USA at an initial disadvantage given the gutting of its industrial economy, the industrialization of monoculture farming and animal “husbandry”, the creation of a new social class I’ve dubbed the “digilumpen”, folks with no skills combined with superficial and shallow thought, folks who will be forced out of their digital cocoon and thrust into the calloused-hand world at which they contemptuously sneer.

Mr K’s “world made by hand” is a far-preferable alternative, but its birth pangs will be painful if not in the extreme, well beyond what many would consider tolerable. Tough titty, as we used to say before such expressions were banned by the soon-to-be forcibly retired thought police.

Chubby Bubbles
Chubby Bubbles
  Montefrío
March 16, 2020 9:32 pm

I’d bought the “World Made By Hand” series and started reading it just a few weeks before the virus shock hit the markets (I neglected to get out of due to self-doubt, lack of spousal buy-in, and reassurances from Monte Carlo simulations that we’d be ok even in a Great Depression scenario).

It only takes JHK to page 7 to let us know that depopulation has occurred due to “the recurring sickness and the problems with electricity and everything else”.

He’s had the number of this situation for a good long time.

TS
TS
March 16, 2020 1:45 pm

Unfortunately, there aren’t enough horses left in America, and the few buggies we’ve got are all in the museum.
By the time it gets that far, there will have been about a 90% death rate. Zombie Apocalypse, ya know?

Didius Julianus
Didius Julianus
  TS
March 16, 2020 7:01 pm

As predicted by deagle.com for many years now (the population die off)

Bubbah
Bubbah
March 16, 2020 2:37 pm

The local amish stores still have stuff. I live near alot of Amish and they have a very small store, and a bakery within a couple miles. So I can avoid the store rush, although they don’t sell TP etc, but fresh bread and some other basics are there. Amish don’t get out much, but interact more with the general public then they did awhile back. One thing for sure, they will not close their churches on Sunday. Even if there is an outbreak, they will continue to gather. But they already for the most part do that “world made by hand” stuff. Although they have become far more specialists than anything, and the local ones farm minimally at best or not at all. Most have gone the trades route, and they have hobby farms. My plumber is Amish, and he knows almost nothing about gardening/farming etc. Although they guy can do just about everything else solo and built his own house with help from his brothers.

Its refreshing to see folks that live life simple and don’t tend to view this as the ‘real’ life and that colors their attitudes greatly. They still have some bad apples like any other group, but my experiences the past 20yrs have been nothing but positive. It isn’t easy to find one willing to converse alot, but there are some. The “store” for farm goods and groceries is all run by women, and I swear they are the quietest women I’ve ever seen. They barely speak, even to eachother, at least not publicly. The silence is oddly refreshing to me though.

We aren’t in a known breakout area, but still wipes, cleaners, and TP are gonzo!

Pequiste
Pequiste
March 16, 2020 4:02 pm

In honor of JHK’s most salient missive, I propose a new cocktail: The Covid-19.

In a clean Highball glass add,

1 part vodka (Russian; as Russian involvement in subversion of the ‘Murkan way of life is an easy explanation for everything bad.)

1 part Berry flavored Maximum Strength Cold and Flu Severe liquid. Your favourite name brand or a generic will do nicely.

1 Juice of a fresh squeezed Valencia orange (for the vitamin C).

Add crushed (like the world economy, stock markets, PMs, medical capabilities, retail, travel, housing markets, etc…..) ice.

Wedge of the orange on the side of the glass and add a blood red Maraschino cherry on top.

(Optional little umbrella stuck in the drink to add that relaxed vacation vibe – a bunch of folks will be taking involuntary extended staycations in quarantine. To also celebrate the beloved memory of the cruise ship business.)

Shaken vigorously then stirred together as Mother Nature is currently tending bar at the Planet Earth Café. (She is in one very pissed off mood too.)

Served on a Lysol or Clorox disinfecting wipe coaster for easy cleanup.

Slainte.

(or Salud, bon santé, kanpai, nostroviya, cheers –got to be inclusive in trying times, people.)

For another “bar” take on the situation:

(The New World Order (Evil Fuckers) are just itching to take overt control anytime. Wait for the elimination of cash.)

Chubby Bubbles
Chubby Bubbles
March 16, 2020 9:20 pm

time to go back to fishing from the dugout canoe.

if there were any fish, and you knew how to make a canoe…