Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on October 16, 2022

Bookmark and Share

A paradigm shift is on the way

Public Policy

Politics is in bad odour, not just here but also in most other parts of the world where more and more people are coming to the conclusion that its practitioners are only interested in their own personal welfare. This may be unfair; many really do want “to make a difference,” by which they mean a positive one, but even if they do enjoy some success, their efforts rarely have much effect on their profession’s collective reputation. For it to improve, living standards in their respective countries would have to keep rising fast enough to satisfy the habitually disgruntled, but this is not happening anywhere.

Even China is fast slowing down, as did Japan after decades of headlong growth that so impressed outsiders that some went so far as to predict that she would soon overtake the United States and become top nation. While China – whose per capita income, according to the available statistics, is less than half that of Japan which, in any case, now lags behind that of many European countries – could soon recover, her current troubles are adding to the worldwide gloom because Westerners have come to rely on her ability to churn out vast quantities of cheap consumer goods. Without them, making ends meet will be much harder than it already is for hundreds of millions of people.

Confronted by the Covid pandemic, much of the planet went into voluntary hibernation and emerged about a year later far weaker than before. Then came Vladimir Putin’s war, which immediately drove up energy prices, made democratic countries send large packets of aid to the embattled Ukrainians and promise to increase military spending back home. To help people get through the pandemic, most governments had indulged in what is euphemistically called “quantitative easing” – the creation of money ex nihilo – and borrowed billions to be repaid sometime in the distant future. They all pretended to be surprised when inflation suddenly reappeared. An annual rate of 10 or even 20 percent may seem miniscule by Argentine standards, but in wealthy counties it is anything but.

To handle what is happening, governments make out that, after a period of belt-tightening that can be blamed on Putin, things will return to normal. Will they, or rather, can they? Perhaps not. Even before the coronavirus went on the attack, there were plenty of signs that an epoch was approaching its end and that the next one would be very different. Talk about a “fourth industrial revolution” powered by computers, the phasing out of old-fashioned petrol-guzzling cars, the rapid replacement of fossil fuels by windmill farms and solar panels, followed by a “great reset” involving just about everything, may have gone down splendidly in places like Davos, but it sounded downright sinister to people who were worried about their own prospects, and those of their children, if they had any. Fertility rates are nose-diving just about everywhere, which is another sign that something has gone badly amiss.

For understandable reasons, politicians, confronted as they are by a wide range of seemingly intractable problems, feel increasingly inclined to leave them in the hands of alleged experts and then, as they are told they should, do their best to “follow the science,” as they dutifully did when the pandemic went on a rampage and, a couple of months before that, when many solemnly promised to refrain from leaving “carbon footprints” behind them. Few seem to have thought much about the costs of reshaping the international economy to make it more eco-friendly, especially for people who are already living on the edge, but as most of these are individuals such as the French gilets jaunes who evidently have yet to grasp that they are morally obliged to do their bit in the struggle against climate change by going hungry, their objections tend to be overlooked.

Since the middle of the last century, North Americans, Western Europeans, Australians and Japanese have been living in what many have called “the age of the common man,” a period in which, for the first time in human history, men and women without inherited wealth, useful contacts or unusual talents, could reasonably aspire to an unprecedented degree of comfort and security. If this by no means trouble-free but by and large satisfying epoch is about to end, to stay in business politicians will have to choose between going rogue by leading a populist revolt and trying to explain to those liable to be sidelined that what is happening is not their fault, that they too are the victims of changes that are not to their liking but which neither they nor anyone else can hope to prevent.

Donald Trump has shown that there are more than enough people out there who feel their part of the world has lost its way and will vote for anyone who says he can make it change course. Arrayed against him are politicians supported mainly by progressive middle-class urbanites and ethnic “minorities” who have elbowed out the working-class whites who once provided democrats with most of the votes they needed to stay in office. Were blacks and “Hispanics” to come to the conclusion that they have more in common with those whites who have lost ground thanks to globalisation, the Democrat coalition would find it even harder to keep at bay the Republican Party, which in its latest incarnation appeals to the traditionalist sentiments which are shared by many who have recently been impoverished or suspect that they soon could be.

While Trump and others like him will in all likelihood fail to halt the technological juggernaut that is threatening their “base,” they will certainly not be the only politicians who manage to win power by exploiting the fears of those who see it bearing down upon them. Though denounced as extreme right-wingers by those who assume they will not be harmed by the changes coming their way, leaders of movements much like Trump’s have in effect replaced leftists as defenders of the immediate interests of those near the bottom of the socioeconomic hierarchy. In many countries, they have enjoyed a considerable degree of electoral success of late and, the way things are shaping up, will in all probability continue to do so in the months and years to come.

batimes



7 Comments on "A paradigm shift is on the way"

  1. Theedrich on Sun, 16th Oct 2022 8:29 pm 

    Dictorship is the aim of the Permanent State. The Leftist elites, media, university academics and bored affluent classes seek the same, imagining that their lives will go on as usual, but without the foul smell of working-class Whites.  That is to say, the influential and moneyed types are megalomaniac and nihilist.  So, let’s destroy all of White culture and Build Back Better with descendants of African slaves, with dark-skinned, low-IQ illegals and “oppressed” criminal types.

    The fantasy motivating this billionaire-funded neo-religion is the promise of a green paradise run by philosopher-kings at the economic top.  Only they will be allowed to fly around in oil-fueled superjets and manipulate world populations, decreeing their sizes and racial compositions (mainly muddy, with at least 50% homosexuals).

    We can hardly wait for this new “democracy.”

  2. Dredd on Mon, 17th Oct 2022 7:51 am 

    It can happen (The New Paradigm: The Physical Universe Is Mostly Machine).

  3. Dredd on Mon, 17th Oct 2022 7:53 am 

    Theedrich, that already happened just before you were born.

  4. Cloggie on Tue, 18th Oct 2022 1:28 pm 

    New solar plant inaugurated in Qatar, produces the cheapest solar electricity to date:

    0.7 dollar cent/kWh

    Too cheap to meter.

    There is no (long term) energy problem.

    https://deepresource.wordpress.com/2022/10/18/al-kharsaah-800-mw-solar-plant-in-qatar/

  5. Theedrich on Tue, 18th Oct 2022 3:19 pm 

    Ukraine, a phantasmagorical theater of the absurd, is the proxy project of the Republicrat hellhounds in Bidentown.  With a demented grinning geezer as their hood ornament, they intend to conquer Russia and exploit its natural resources for themselves, thereby controlling the earth.

    In defense, the Russians are disabling key energy and military installations and arms-supply routes in Proxyland, as well as repelling the NATO-supplied forces, which are greatly assisted by American CIA and Special Operations troops operating under Biden’s “covert action finding” (used to mask America’s war crimes in the area).  The Ukro electrical grid is being weakened severely, but not yet totally, leaving the now overloaded, main electrical power generators intact.  Just before 56-year-old General Surovikin (Серге́й Влади́мирович Сурови́кин) starts his full offensive against the puppet nation, he will destroy those remaining, critical stations, thus plunging the marionettes into total darkness and blindness.

    Tragically, the Ukroids have been able to kill a lot of civilians in the new Russian areas, especially the city of Donetsk (Доне́цьк), because it is much easier to kill defenseless women, children and old people than soldiers.  (That, after all, is an old American trick.)  Meanwhile, the Yankee masters are commanding Ukro-dictator Zelenskyy to order large numbers of his troops to engage in suicide ops against Russian forces in the southern Kherson (Херсо́н) area.  Yup.  Fight to the last Ukrainian.

    As all of this is going on, the European “peace fund” for assistance is running dry.  The U.S. wants Europe to pay more to Zelsky in outright grants, who demands $38 billion.  So far the Europeans have given only about $3 billion in loans, not grants, to the most corrupt country in Europe.  At the same time, many countries are warning any and all of their citizens still in Ukraine to flee that state immediately.  They would not be giving such warnings if they thought that Russia’s armaments and military were exhausted and about to collapse.  They know the facts that the U.S. and Europe are trying to suppress, in the same way that they suppress the fact that the “indispensable nation” blew up the Nord Stream pipelines.  You can fool the masses who swallow media lies, but you cannot fool the highly intelligent leaders of competent nations, even those not so affluent.

    Ukraine’s days are numbered.

  6. Biden’s hairplug on Wed, 19th Oct 2022 4:42 pm 

    The British government is in a state of disintegration.
    Food inflation UK 14.5%

    One thing is predictable from this chaos: in the future people will think twice before putting a woman at the top spot. Truss, von der Leyen, Baerbock, the broads from NZ, Sweden, Finland. Fair weather people.

    Women can’t lead.

  7. color by number on Wed, 7th Dec 2022 8:36 pm 

    Tragically, because it is much simpler to kill defenseless women, children, and elderly people than soldiers, the Ukrainians have been able to kill a lot of civilians in the new Russian areas, especially the city of Donetsk. .

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *