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confused thinking , as usual
Mos....... "I'd really like to know, in all these economic threads, what the posters here thinks could be achieved through any sort of policy change"
Nothing much really , it's like a butterfly with the life span of a week , arguing about changing the laws of gravity
most posters do not make the difference between the American supremacy , of fifty years duration
the consumer society , pretty much the same span and the industrial age about two hundreds years
The U.S. is toast as a super power ,
it will remain a great power for what it's worth, mostly because it's a continent wide authority ,
De Tocqueville pointed this out in the 1850ies ,
even if we go back to the steam age there will be a U.S. internal revenue service backed by whatever force is needful
those of you who think a rifle is a weapon don't understand organized firepower
Sooo ... no central government collapse , only a rather more obvious lash
when push come to shove , public servants will show you what keeping order means
all protest will be statistically manageable ,If any blood flow in the street will not be theirs
As Mao could have said , there is two side to a gun the funny one and the one which is not
America has a fine track record of whinging a lot about taxes and not paying too much of them
it should be called the Santa Claus society
There is not so much enthusiasm for fighting their own government and hanging them
except the long defunct and un-mourned militia movement
God's grief even Romanians have done better
the Brits and French at least chopped some in their time
This being said the modern consumer society is bound to collapse simply because there is too many consumers .....period , it's basic arithmetic
...When ??....is an interesting question , not tomorrow morning that's for sure and I doubt if it will last a generation
....How ??... is the fascinating question ,a total collapse is the long odds ,the main chance is a series of crisis with the masses being led down the garden path of instant solutions