The End of Pretend
If being wealthy was the same as
pretending to be wealthy then people who care about reality would have a
little less to complain about. But pretending is a poor way for a
society to negotiate its way through history. It makes for accumulating
distortions which eventually undermine the society’s ability to
function, especially when the pretending is about money, which is
society’s operating system.
The distortion that even
simple people care about is that the gap between the rich and the poor
is as plain, vast, and grotesque as at any time in our history — except
perhaps during slavery times in Dixieland, when many of the poor did not
even own their existence. We’ve had plenty of reminders of that in pop
culture the last couple of years, including Quentin Tarantino’s fiercely
stupid movie Django Unchained and the more recent melodrama 12 Years a Slave.
But you have to wonder what young adults weighed down by unpayable
college debt think when they go to see them, because without a rebellion
that millennial generation will not own their own lives either. They
must know it, but they must not know what to do about it.
The pretense and
distortions start at the top of American life with a President who
broadcasts the message that some kind of “recovery” has occurred in the
economic affairs of the country. Either he just wants the public feel
better, or he is misled by the people and agencies in his own
government, or perhaps he just lies to keep the lid on. To truly recover
from the dislocations of 2008, we would have to make a consensual
decision to start behaving differently in the process of adapting to the
new circumstances that the arc of history is presenting to us. We’d
have to decide to leave behind the economy of financialization, suburban
sprawl, car dependency, Wal-Mart consumerism, and prepare for a
different way of inhabiting North America.
The dislocations of 2008
when the banking system nearly imploded were Nature’s way of telling us
that dishonesty has consequences. The immediate dishonesty of that day
was the racket in securitizing worthless mortgages — promises to pay
large sums of money over long periods of time. The promises were false
and the collateral was janky. It got so bad and ran so far and deep
that it essentially destroyed the mechanism of credit creation as it had
been known until then, and it has not been repaired.
Since then, we have
pretended to repair the operations of credit by falsely substituting
bank bailouts and Federal Reserve “quantitative easing” (QE) or digital
money-printing for plain dealing in borrowed money between honest
brokers at the local level. The unfortunate consequence is that in the
process we have distorted — and possibly destroyed — the value of our
money and the various things denominated in it, especially securities,
bonds, stocks and other money-like paper.
The crash of the mortgage
racket occurred not just because of swindling and fraud among bankers;
in fact, that was only a nasty symptom of something larger: peak oil. I
know that many people have come to disbelieve in the idea of peak oil,
but that is only another mode of playing pretend. Peak oil, which
essentially arrived in 2006, undermined the basic conditions of credit
creation in an advanced techno-industrial society dependent on
increasing supplies of fossil fuels. Most people, including practically
all credentialed economists, fail to understand this. There is a
fundamental relationship between ever-increasing energy supplies >
economic growth > and credit-based money (or “money,” if you will).
When the energy inputs flatten out or decrease, growth stops, wealth is
no longer generated, old loans can’t be repaid, and new loans can’t be
generated honestly, i.e. with the expectation of repayment. That has
been our predicament since 2008 and nothing has changed. We are
pretending to compensate by issuing new unpayable debt to pay the
interest on our old accumulated debt. This pretense can only go on so
long before our economic relations reflect the basic dishonesty of it.
Reality is a harsh mistress.
In the meantime, we amuse
ourselves with fairy tales about “the shale oil revolution” and “the
manufacturing renaissance.” 2014 could be the year that the forces of
Nature compel our attention and give us a reason to stop all this
pretending. I’ll address this question in next week’s annual yearly
forecast.
http://kunstler.com/clusterfuck-nation/the-end-of-pretend/