Labor Day Assessment

Guest Post by Jim Kunstler

There will be a Great Re-set, of course, but it’s not exactly the one that Western Civ is blabbering about — a mere shuffling of political and financial protocols. It’s happening with or without “Joe Biden,” the EU, and der Hoch Schwabenklaus, though the aggregate stupidity they represent is surely making the entry process worse. The Great Re-set is what happens when the business model goes bust for powering the world with oil and other fossil fuels — even if there is quite a bit of all that stuff left in the ground. Years ago, I called it The Long Emergency.

Everything emanates off of that, including the astonishing bouts of mischief made in attempts to work around it, assign the blame for it, grub money off it, and shift the effects of it from one group of people or one region of the world to another. Steve St. Angelo says it neatly: “Energy drives the economy; finance steers it.” That’s so. When the oil business model broke in 2008, industrial society lost its mojo and, after that, finance steered it into a ditch.

The Great Re-Set is an emergent phenomenon. It unspools naturally out of circumstances that reality presents. It goes its own way and we have to adapt to it, like it or not. Is our climate changing? Maybe. But so what? The climate has changed many times since the Bronze Age. If preventing that is actually out of the question, which it is, then what else are you going to do? The answer is: adapt intelligently to new conditions. When you clear away all the mental resistance to that — which amounts to a titanic struggle to keep things just the way they are — you’re going to have to make changes anyway.

America was, for a time, the greatest industrial society and now that appears to be over. The disorder in all the moving parts of it is probably too gross to arrest at this point. We shoved it into disorder by making some very bad choices, like getting rid of our factories and squandering our wealth on an absurd suburban living arrangement. Shale oil was a financial stunt to keep our set-up going a little longer. It was part of the colossal debt roll-up — the steering function of finance — that was used to compensate for our actual loss of mojo, and now that gambit has hit the wall. You can’t pretend to issue more debt when everyone knows it can never be paid back.

Europe, the old home-base of Western Civ, never got around to shale oil, and its financial structure was such — reckless bond issuance with no fiscal accountability whatsoever — that now it is collapsing faster and worse than America. Europe’s leadership is clearly insane and it will likely be overthrown before long. The foreign minister of Germany, the winsome Annalena Baerbock, promised last week to keep demonizing Russia to support Ukraine’s black hole of racketeering “no matter what my German voters think or how hard their life gets.” Stand by to see how that goes over.

The angst around these circumstances is expressing itself in a generalized political nervous breakdown featuring the sort of tragi-comic behavior previously confined in lunatic asylums. Have you ever seen anything more patently insane than the sexual confusion acted out in American schools? Drag Queen story hours? Litter boxes in the bathrooms for students who identify as “furries”?

That was the funny part. The Covid-19 event is no joke — rather a psychopathic mass murder. Obviously, it was no accident. We have a pretty good idea who made it, and set it loose into the world. And the “vaccine” response looks plainly malevolent at this point. Yet the Covid episode is shot through with mystery. How did all those sedulously trained doctors get so mind-fucked as to persist in saying the “vaccines” were safe-and-effective, when the vaxxes were obviously killing and maiming people? They’re still stuck in that disgraceful posture, busy punishing their colleagues who demur, and dishonoring medicine — not to mention the thousands of public health officials still pushing vaxxes and boosters to this day. We can attribute that to mass formation psychosis, but even that reeks of mystery. Maybe, as the old American hymn goes, farther along we’ll understand why….

Anyway, and in the meantime, we’re obliged to see where all this taking us and what we have to do about it. The survivors of this disorder will be living in a world of generalized contraction, facing much-reduced standards of living. All the giant enterprises will be gone, including probably the federal USA government as we know it, and all the supports it offered. We’ll be gravely disappointed by the failures of advanced technology to mitigate any of this, and much of that technology will disappear, including reliable electric service and the Internet. Whatever you do will have to be much more local and, in one way or another, these activities will revolve around growing food.

I called it a World Made by Hand in the cycle of four novels I churned out between 2008 and 2017. You can look there for a detailed, graphic description of how this new disposition of things might work. The society depicted is still recognizably an American culture, and the people still find joy, purpose, and meaning in being here on this planet, despite the reduction in comfort and convenience. In many ways, it is a world in recovery from the ravages of the super high velocity way-of-life we’re leaving behind, and because of that, it is shot through with grace. That is our destination.

Keep that in mind — if you still have a mind — as you witness the unravelings ahead. This is not the end of the world or the end of the human project in this world. Not everybody will be violent or insane and the number of reality-based people with their emotional equipment intact will, oddly, grow in proportion as the others depart this plane of existence. For some of us, this is a movie with a happy ending. Make some popcorn while there is still some corn, and some electricity to pop it with.

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33 Comments
Marky
Marky
September 5, 2022 10:30 am

For some of us, this is a movie with a happy ending. Make some popcorn while there is still some corn, and some electricity to pop it with.

Unfreakinbelievable! Just sit back pop some corn, smoke a spliff have a beer and enjoy the utter destruction, chaos and mass death. It’ll be a blast. Turn up the rock tunes and party man. This is gonna be super happy fun time.

Iggy
Iggy
  Marky
September 5, 2022 10:53 am

Spliff ? That’s the problem everyone acts like a nigger today.

Ken31
Ken31
  Iggy
September 5, 2022 1:00 pm

I had to look it up.

Marky
Marky
  Iggy
September 5, 2022 1:35 pm

Shows how much you know about the negro. They callem “blunts” bro. I just thought Id use a comical reference but who gives a fuc anyway. So what. Party On Wayne

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Marky
September 5, 2022 11:31 am

A very unfortunate way to end an otherwise decent article.

fujigm
fujigm
  Marky
September 5, 2022 1:39 pm

Depends on your definition of fun.
If snuffing out-of-control dindus and double tapping retarded leftists meet this definition, it’s going to be a blast.
There’s a reason the Army choreographed the Shock and Awe to some good Metal.
Makes for a banging good time.
Skip the spliff, but I’ll crack a cold Pilsner like the good Nordic I am.
Some people have been patiently waiting years for this.

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  fujigm
September 5, 2022 2:29 pm

Careful what you wish for. The unknowns in a SHTF boogaloo would be numerous and not like some fairy tale where the commies and progs are in some old time carnival shooting gallery getting popped with.22 shorts on a conveyor belt. That would be pretty slick FWIW.

fujigm
fujigm
  Harrington Richardson
September 5, 2022 3:28 pm

The known unknowns, and/or the unknown unknowns?
Such is the nature of life, always.
When the disintegration begins, an unpracticed situational awareness will be lethal.
Luck is the intersection of situational awareness, proper planning, and competent execution.
Or something like that…

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
  fujigm
September 5, 2022 10:52 pm

Let’s hope we’re all lucky. Hoping you can’t see your basement floor.

bucknp
bucknp
  Harrington Richardson
September 6, 2022 11:07 pm

I have to comment about .22 shorts although nothing to do with the thread, but…maybe.

I use to squirrel hunt. I’d be sitting next to a sizable tree and leaning back in comfort before sunrise waiting for those rodents to wake up and see the light. They saw light alright, lights out from a Remington High Velocity .22 short hollow point in the head with an inexpensive Simmons 4x scope mounted on a Marlin Model 25 .22 bolt action rifle.

I’ve shot squirrels with .22 LR in solid nose, “solid lead” and , a poor shot, guts came flying out the other side on a body shot. Not good as the rodent might wander off a bit jumping tree limb to tree limb before it died. A friend introduced me to the .22 HP mentioned. IMO , the best .22 round ever developed for squirrel. Even a miss on the head they simply dropped from the shock, no guts flying.

I still have some of those Remington .22 HPs. Never doubt the ability of that round well placed in a squirrel’s eye.

As a bonus, the .22 short is quiet. Out of a rifle it’s very pellet gun quiet. Hunting areas around metropolitan areas, um, maybe “illegal” to discharge a firearm, with the .22 short no concerns about the noise level. The friend pointed that out too, an “old schooler” on squirrel hunting.

Ben Lurken
Ben Lurken
September 5, 2022 10:30 am

I read at least one book in the World Made by Hand series. It’s not pretty.

On another note I get emails from The Worthy House when a new book review is published. They are usually very good. For quite some time this reviewer was anonymous but started using his real name as his popularity grew and he started appearing on podcasts. Such as with Michael Anton.

The latest review, out today, is of a book titled The Populist Delusion.

I started reading it and thought other TBP readers would be interested in this and many other reviews on the site.

The Populist Delusion (Neema Parvini)

i forget
i forget
  Ben Lurken
September 5, 2022 12:55 pm

Pop(corn)ulism: Orville Redenbacher collectivism’s alright.

Mountainrat
Mountainrat
September 5, 2022 10:40 am

I am no expert and don’t know jack shit but I see no evidence that we are running out of energy resources. Rather, the problem seems to be harmful and stupid energy policies. As far as Europe, putting punitive economic sanctions on your number one energy supplier, well that is just insane.

Also, I realize that it is not stupidity or insanity but deliberate.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Mountainrat
September 5, 2022 11:35 am

I see no evidence that we are running out of energy resources

Agreed. But what does it matter? Most famine is not caused by an absolute lack of food. It’s caused by politics preventing food from reaching the hungry, often intentionally.

bucknp
bucknp
  Anonymous
September 6, 2022 11:22 pm

“What do you think?”

“Does it matter?”

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Mountainrat
September 5, 2022 9:53 pm

There are plenty of fossil fuels remaining. Unfortunately the (energy) cost of extraction continues to rise.

bucknp
bucknp
  Mountainrat
September 6, 2022 11:19 pm

I have no problem scooting around on sun power. Politicized energy issues suck however.

Think back when the horse , wagon and buggy were the modes of transportation. Hum, I bet people against anything new were beside themselves over the internal combustion engine.

Well, darn, I will have to go to town tomorrow for gasoline for the riding mower not to mention the cost of gasoline to get to the station. A solar powered mower might be the ticket if such existed. Oh, no, no, no, no…

Yeah, yeah , yeah, the danged batteries!

Iggy
Iggy
September 5, 2022 10:52 am

Just watched a clip ,state fair in Minnesota on Gateway Pundit.Minnesota is now the Bronx circa 1979. This country is so fucked we have literally committed suicide. When did Minnesota the land of northern Europeans turn into Mogadishu?

mark
mark
  Iggy
September 5, 2022 11:00 am

Gradually…then suddenly…

Just Me
Just Me
  Iggy
September 5, 2022 11:11 am

If you don’t mean that as a rhetorical question, I’ll answer it. It was when 70,000 Somalis were moved in beginning in the 1990’s. In fact, an area of Minneapolis is now referred to as Little Mogadishu. I grew up there in the ’60s and ’70s (left in 1976), and I will no longer return even for a visit after returning for a high-school reunion in 2018. It has gone from being a wonderful city to what you have seen since George Floyd, but it had gone downhill before that…now the toilet-paper roll is spinning as it gets near the perceived end.

Iggy
Iggy
  Just Me
September 5, 2022 11:39 am

Thanks for the insight.

Just Me
Just Me
  Iggy
September 5, 2022 12:59 pm

Minnesota used to be known for “Minnesota Nice,” and the people wore the title proudly. What they did not realize is while they looked at that as virtue, other cultures look at as weakness.

bucknp
bucknp
  Just Me
September 6, 2022 11:37 pm

I can relate! DFW METROPOLITAN AREA reminds me of a zoo out of control anymore. And a dangerous place to be driving.

Marky
Marky
  Iggy
September 5, 2022 1:38 pm

I think it happened during Obamination period but Ill need to check Wickedpidia to be sure..

mark
mark
September 5, 2022 10:58 am

THE WAR ON POPULISM: THE FINAL ACT

(Written September 20th 2020 by C.J. Hopkins)

comment image?w=196

My favorite paragraph:

“That brings us up to speed, I think. The rest of Act III should be pretty exciting, despite the fact that the outcome is certain. One way or another, Trump is history. Or do you seriously believe that GloboCap is going to allow him to serve another four years? Not that Trump is an actual threat to them. As I have said repeatedly over the past four years, Donald Trump is not a populist. Donald Trump is a narcissistic ass clown who is playing president to feed his ego. He is not a threat to global capitalism, but the people who elected him president are. In order to teach these people a lesson, GloboCap needs to make an example of Trump. Odds are, it’s not going to be pretty”.

MEET THE CENSORED: C.J. HOPKINS, CRITIC OF THE “NEW NORMAL”

Internet platforms have had a sense of humor failure about the Germany-based playwright, author, and satirist, one of many zapped for criticism of pandemic policies

comment image

https://taibbi.substack.com/p/meet-the-censored-cj-hopkins-critic

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
September 5, 2022 11:16 am

“Whatever you do will have to be much more local and, in one way or another, these activities will revolve around growing food.”

Concur.

mark
mark
  hardscrabble farmer
September 5, 2022 3:37 pm

Every day I am gently pulling up a mound of Sweet Potatoes (40 mounds)…rotating them through the green house for curing, wrap them individually in newspaper, put them in boxes with an apple in the center of the loosely closed cardboard box. Stash them in the root cellar.

The gas from the decaying apples stops them from budding. Last year some lasted a little over 8 months.

Should have in-between 200 to 250 good ones, so far minimal insect damage and our best crop in 10 years.

Oldtoad of Green Acres
Oldtoad of Green Acres
  mark
September 6, 2022 5:33 am

$0.99/lb here, just sliced some up and ran them through the air fryer spritzed with olive oil. Yummy!
Enjoy your harvest.

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 5, 2022 11:47 am

“The oil business model broke in 2008”? In which country, here it was piss poor financial business models in my memory.

bucknp
bucknp
  Anonymous
September 6, 2022 12:39 am

I think this is what happened:

The backstory was that, in the 1930s, wildcatter John Ross “Jock” Ewing (Jim Davis) had allegedly cheated his one-time partner, Willard “Digger” Barnes (David Wayne/Keenan Wynn), out of his share of their company Ewing Oil, and married Digger’s only love, Eleanor “Miss Ellie” Southworth (Barbara Bel Geddes/Donna Reed). In contrast to Jock, Miss Ellie came from a long line of ranchers with great love for the land and the cattle. Following their marriage, the Southworth family ranch, Southfork, became the Ewings’ home, where Jock and Miss Ellie raised three sons: J.R. (Larry Hagman), Gary (David Ackroyd/Ted Shackelford) and Bobby.

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 5, 2022 12:24 pm

How did all those sedulously trained doctors get so mind-fucked as to persist in saying the “vaccines” were safe-and-effective, when the vaxxes were obviously killing and maiming people?

A) State medical licensing
B) Training of generations of “doctors” who place their personal income and career ahead of the health, and even life, of their patients.

i forget
i forget
September 5, 2022 1:00 pm

“Energy drives the economy; finance steers it.”

Pecu-people are the contact patch. Ain’t no driving or steering w/o wheels spinnin’ round∞ in circles.

Gimme yore tireds, yore pourous poor-us, yore befuddled masses yearning to breathe in free lunches. The stretched refuse of all the other teeming shores. We’ll leave the light on for ‘em because we got the Midas lock, key, & five Touch discount on the waste management/recycling biz. It’s a goldmine. The only real gold … & its mine all mine, this We•akonomy.

Oldtoad of Green Acres
Oldtoad of Green Acres
September 5, 2022 4:35 pm

Suburbia is where the food is grown or used to be grown.
Covid was the red flag, the vaxx is a bioweapon.
Porcupines are a bellwether, an analogy, they have to be dispatched, the dog will not let them go away, they cause real damage, like the soon to appear marauders, hungry grasshoppers. Guns work great but they are not always at hand. A metal stake works well but messy. Back when we were producing more food we killed about 20 over about a month. That is the way I view what is coming. Might die in an accident, the way the vaxxes are causing driving deaths, but a hungry neighbor is like a porcupine, but more dangerous.