by MonteQuest » Sun 31 Oct 2004, 12:49:31
[quote="trespam
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') am familiar with everything you point out. Yet I take issue with articles that discuss "economic collapse" without even defining what they mean by "collapse" and "explode." The question that must be answered: how will the correction take place.
I think it goes without saying what is meant by collapse, but how about a massive transfer of wealth from the poor and middle class to the rich? Homes lost, jobs losts, no capital for investment, loss of savings, no rebound ability, etc. How will the corrections take place? No one knows anymore. It is all guess work. The FED actions of stimulus and correction no longer work. My guess is everyone is just waiting to see how it will play out.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '1'). What level of adjustment in the dollar, over time, will reduce the current account deficit?
This assumes adjustment is possible, I think it is not, so does the FED. Can't let the dollar down, investors will flee. Dollar is going down anyway as the FED raises rates.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '2'). What decrease in spending by US consumers will do the same?
Consumerism drives our economy. Can't shut that down. Raise interest rates to attract investors busts the housing bubble.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '3'). What increase in taxes and reduction in government programs will rectify the budget deficit?
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."
by bart » Sun 31 Oct 2004, 16:28:28
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BastardSquad', '
')I find it laughable when people start saying "we need to get Bush out of office,Kerry will save the day!"As if one would truely be any better than the other.
I wouldn't say that Kerry will save the day, but he does have the distinct advantage over Bush of being sane. He listens to his advisers and does not rely solely on "gut feelings" and prayer to make world-changing decisions. If I were Republican and conservative (as I used to be), I would vote for Kerry in a miinute.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('trespam', 'Y')et I take issue with articles that discuss "economic collapse" without even defining what they mean by "collapse" and "explode." The question that must be answered: how will the correction take place.
I agree with trespam's approach. Other societies have faced similar problems and dealt with them. Some solutions have been horrible (Easter Island, Haiti, 1930s Germany) and some have been productive (Cuba, Kerala, many W. European countries). We need to keep thinking, discussing and making choices.
The problem with apocalyptic thinking is that it is black and white. Either things continue as they have been, or we will suffer some horrible unimaginable fate. Our brains turn off and we jump into rigid, fearful solutions. We become primed for stupid choices like a fascist dictator, Stalinist socialism, or Max Max survivalism.
by Jenab » Sun 31 Oct 2004, 18:43:43
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('trespam', 'Y')et I take issue with articles that discuss "economic collapse" without even defining what they mean by "collapse" and "explode." The question that must be answered: how will the correction take place.
The price of artificial fertilizer and fuel for farm machinery will rise too high for mechanized farming to remain profitable, even with government subsidies. At that point, agribusiness will go out of business. The government
might buy up the abandoned farmland and distribute it to people who want to try farming, but such people will be largely unsuccessful because previous use of the land has made it unresponsible to hand-tool farming without artificial fertilizers.
The ratio of supply to demand in food will be around 10%, and there will be the aggravating factor of inadequate transportation of foodstuffs. The correction, then, is the deaths by starvation, or by violence, of about 95% of the population. There is no other correction possible.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bart', 'I') agree with trespam's approach. Other societies have faced similar problems and dealt with them. Some solutions have been horrible (Easter Island, Haiti, 1930s Germany) and some have been productive (Cuba, Kerala, many W. European countries). We need to keep thinking, discussing and making choices.
I'm thinking that discussion has accomplished just about all that it's going to, and that my choice is to quit advertizing the extent to which I am prepared. My earlier loose talking has cost me about one-third of my food supply, which I will have to poison as a deterrent to confiscation.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bart', 'T')he problem with apocalyptic thinking is that it is black and white. Either things continue as they have been, or we will suffer some horrible unimaginable fate. Our brains turn off and we jump into rigid, fearful solutions. We become primed for stupid choices like a fascist dictator, Stalinist socialism, or Max Max survivalism.
First of all, the opportunity for fascism is past. We'd have been fortunate if we'd had the wisdom to adopt a fascist system when we had the chance. Many people show their ignorance when they equate fascism with tyranny: fascism is a confederation based on the idea that many tribes acting together are stronger than they would be severally.
The idea originated with the German folk of ancient times; according to legend, one tribal leader called others for a demonstration of principle. He took an axe handle and broke it over his knee. The other chiefs said things like, "Oh that was nothing, any of us could do that." Then the host chief tied a bundle of sticks around another axe handle and asked which of the others could break all of them at once. None of them could. Then he made the obvious political analogy: "Rome could not break us, if we all stood together."
That's fascism.
Fascism does not preclude tyranny, of course. But it's not the same thing as tyranny, either. And as some people talk, it's clear that they don't realize the difference.
Do you think that the fasces at the Supreme Court and in the US Capitol is meant to advertise tyranny? No. The fact that the US FedGov is tyrannical is beside the point. FedGov is a hypocritical tyranny: They don't like to display symbols that have tyrannical meaning, and the fasces has none such.
Socialism isn't automatically tyrannical, either. It just so happens that you can't impose socialism on people without using strong measures to enforce a socialist distribution of goods. Without a tyrannical state police agency, people would be inclined to keep what they made, or, if they could not keep it, not to do the making.
The only kind of socialism that can do without tyranny is the kind in which people discover within themselves, absent coercion, a reason for sharing their produce with others. Maybe you can think of such reasons: a father going hungry so his children can eat. The same man would not endure the same sacrifice for non-relatives. A man going into an inferno to save his brother - he would not go in there to save you. So familial socialism works while "random cohort" or class-based socialism does not work.
I never heard the phrase "Mad Max" before I joined this forum. I'm still not completely certain about what it means. Survivalism will be necessary for survival, and those who did not prepare will die.
By reading some of the posts here, I've gained the impression that a group of posters is making a concerted effort to trivialize the threat of fossil fuel depletion with false assurances and mockery. The superficiality of their posts is characteristic of other kinds of agit-prop that I've seen in other forums.
Jerry Abbott
by trespam » Sun 31 Oct 2004, 20:08:29
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jenab', 'T')he price of artificial fertilizer and fuel for farm machinery will rise too high for mechanized farming to remain profitable, even with government subsidies. At that point, agribusiness will go out of business.
Wrong. The basic foods become more expensive. People will then spend less money on non-essentials. In particular, I'm talking about the next ten years.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jenab', '
')The ratio of supply to demand in food will be around 10%, and there will be the aggravating factor of inadequate transportation of foodstuffs. The correction, then, is the deaths by starvation, or by violence, of about 95% of the population. There is no other correction possible.
Read Beyond Oil, a much more sound analysis of depletion using real models. Where did you get the above numbers?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jenab', 'B')y reading some of the posts here, I've gained the impression that a group of posters is making a concerted effort to trivialize the threat of fossil fuel depletion with false assurances and mockery. The superficiality of their posts is characteristic of other kinds of agit-prop that I've seen in other forums.
Wrong. There many posters who have backgrounds or interest in both physics and physical systems and economics. That does not trivialize depletion. We are trying to understand it. What is your background? To you, survivalism and racism is the only answer. You've already decided. That your choice. But it doesn't make it true.
BTW: Facism is define as a form of corporatism. Musolini came up with the idea or term. Need to do your homework. You keep making up mythological stuff that pulls in the Germans. What is this German fetish?