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Island
Rover Bulletin
Number
Ten
$4 A
Gallon
By Michael Ventura,
America is over. America is like Wile E. Coyote after he's run out a few paces past the edge of the cliff- he'll take a few more steps in midair before he looks down. Then, when he sees that there's nothing under him, he'll fall. Many Americans suspect that they're running on thin air, but they haven't looked down yet. When they doÉÉ.
Former
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker, a pillar of the Establishment with
access to economic information beyond our reach, wrote recently: "Circumstances
seem to me as dangerous and intractable as any I can remember...What really
concerns me is that there seems to be so little willingness or capacity to do
anything about it."(quoted
in the Economist, April 16, p. 12). Volcker chooses words carefully:
"dangerous and intractable," "willingness or capacity."
He's saying: The situation is probably beyond our powers to remedy. Gas prices
can only go up. Oil production is at or near peak capacity. The U.S must
compete for oil with China, the fastest-growing colossus in history. But the
U.S also must borrow $2 billion a day to remain solvent, nearly half of that
from China and her neighbors, while they supply most of our manufacturing
("Bensons Economic and Market Trends," quoted in Asia Times Online) -
so we have no cards to play with China, even militarily.
(You can't war with bankers who finance
your army and the factories that supply your stores.) China now determines oil
demand, and the U.S. has no long-term way to influence prices. That means $4
dollars a gallon by next spring, and rising -$5, then $6, probably $10 by 2010
or thereabouts. Their economy can afford it; ours canÕt. We may hobble along
with more or less the same way of life for the next dollar or so of hikes, but
at around $4 America changes. Drastically. The "exburbs" and the
rural poor will feel it first and hardest. Exburbians moved to the farthest
reaches of suburbia for cheap real
estate, willing to drive atleast an hour each way to work. Many live marginally
now. What happens when their commute becomes prohibitively expensive, just as
interest rates and inflation rise, while their property values plummet? Urban
real estate will go up- so they won't be able to live near their jobs - and there's nowhere else to go. In
addition, thanks to Congress recent shameless activity, bankruptcy is no longer
an option for many. What happens to these people? Exurb refugees. A modern Dust
Bowl.
For the rural
poor it's even worse. They are the poorest among us, with no assets and few
skills; they earn the lowest nonimmigrant wages in America, and they must
drive. When gas hits $4 , their already below-the-margin life will
unsustainable. They'll have no choice but to be refugees and join in the modern
Dust Bowl migration. So, too, will people who live where people were never
intended to live in such numbers - places like Phoenix and Vegas, unlivable
without air conditioning and water transport (energy prices will rise across
the board, regular brownouts, blackouts, and faucet-drips will be "the new
normal" everywhere.) In the desert cities, real estate will plunge,
thousands will be ruined, most will leave - while all over the country folks
will have to get use to"hot" and "cold" again.
But
where will the new refugees go, and what will they do when they get there? They
will migrate to the more livable cities, where rents are already unreasonable
and social services are already strained, and where the new refugees will
compete with immigrants for the lowest level housing and jobs. Immigration
issues will intensify to hysteria. Native-born Americans will clamor for work
that only legal and illegal aliens do now. In a culture as prone to violence as
ours, that will probably get ugly.
Meanwhile,
suburbs and cities will be in various states of chaos, depending on their
infrastructure. As inflation and interest rates rise, and the real estate
bubble bursts, millions will see their assets plunge precipitously. In five
years, many who are now well-off will live as the marginal live today, while
the marginal sink into poverty. With gas at $4-plus a gallon, real estate
values will depend on nearness to working centers and access to transportation.
As has already happened in Manhattan, the well-off will head for what are now
slums, and the slum-dwellers will go God-knows where. Places with decent rail
service will be prime. Places without rail service will be in deep trouble.
One key
to America's future will be: How quickly can we build or rebuild heavy and
light rail? And where will we get the money to do it? Railroads are the
cheapest transport, the easiest to sustain, and the only solution to a
post-automobile America. (For reasons I haven't space to detail, hybrid cars
and alternative energy won't cut it, if by "cut it" one means retaining anything like the
present standard of living. See James Howard Kunstler's "The Long Emergency" on
Rolling Stones Web site. Also check Mike Rupperts site
www.fromthewilderness.com and the documentary The End of Suburbia.) A massive
investment in railroad infrastructure could offer jobs to the unskilled and
skilled alike, absorb much of the inevitable population displacement, and
create a new social equilibrium 10 or 15 years down the line. Old RR cities
like the Grand Junction, Colo; Amarillo, Texas; and Albuquerque, N.M., could
become vital centers, offering new lives for the displaced. Railroads are key,
but the question is: how to finance them? There's only one section of our economy
that has that kind of money: the military budget. The U.S. now spends more on
it's military than all other nations combined. A sane transit to
post-automobile America will require a massive shift from military to
infrastructure spending. That shift would be supported by our bankers in China
and Europe (that is, they would continue to finance our debt.) because it's in
their interests that we regain economic viability. What's not in their
interests is that we remain a military superpower.
And
that's where things get really interesting. The question becomes: Can America
face reality? If the government responds to the coming changes by attempting to
remain a superpower no matter what, there is no way to underestimate the harm.
The numbers speak for themselves. Soon we'll no longer have the resources to
remain a military superpower and sustain a livable society that is anything
like what we know today. It happened to England; it happened to Russia; it's
about to happen to us. England sustained the transformation more or less
gracefully; it lost its dominance while retaining its essential character.
Russia is still in a period of transformation, but has remained a player thanks
to its oil reserves. Europe in general -France, Germany, Italy, and Spain (all
world powers in the fairly recent past) -is creating a post-national society,
the most experimental form of governance since America's revolution. We have no
appreciable oil, and we no longer have a manufacturing base. So what will the
United States do? Sanely recognize its declining status and act accordingly, or
make one last ignoble stab to retain its position by force?
Half a
century ago James Baldwin wrote: " Confronted with the impossibility of
remaining faithful to one's beliefs, and the equal impossibility of becoming
free of them, one can be driven to the most inhuman excesses." Americans
believe they're "No. 1" destined to lead the world. That is the
America that's over. If we insist on that illusion, then this world is in for
tough times. We will neither hold on to what we have nor create what we might
have, but we will wreak untold harm (if we don't destroy the species
altogether). Or we can face and embrace reality. And that reality is: There is
no such thing as "No. 1" ... there is no such thing as an ideal
destined country that is better than any other... there is only us, doing the
best we can, trying to live freely and sanely, within limits that are about to
become only too clear. Our glory days are done. What's next?
Remember, we're not talking about the
far future. We're talking about the next decade. No country gets two centuries
anymore. The 21st will be China's century. That's what $4-plus a gallon means,
and nothing can stop it. So: How will we change? But the question "How
will we change?" is really the question "How will I change?"
Because history isn't a spectator sport. It's you and me. Everything depends on
whether we side with reality or illusion. Face reality, and we have a chance.
Cling to illusion, and we are lost. The America we've known is over - very
soon. The America we can create is up to us.