by threadbear » Sun 06 Jan 2008, 12:28:31
Allow me to clarify. The prospect of economic "collapse" gives me that curious feeling of excitement (not environmental collapse or other forms of collapse) This is likely how people felt in East Germany before the iron curtain came down. East Germany, though still a troubled region, is likely vastly better off than it was, pre-Glasnost. Changing political systems was a wrenching miserable experience for many, but they got through it, and it's better. They've gone from totalitarian Communism to Democratic Socialism.
The American system, subject to economic pressure, will change. I don't know how it will change, but almost anything is better than the system they have now, which is neither really Democratic, nor Socialist, and about as far from Libertarian as one could imagine.
Americans are going to be forced to turn to each other and away from the television when things get tough. Ironically, in a series of paradoxes, it's the pursuit of freedom and independence, which will invigorate healthy, voluntary interdependence within communities. Constrained financial situation will force people to quit consuming and curtail their driving, which will be good for the planet and great for them.
The only concern I have is for people who are living in areas occupied by seriously dumb fu**ers, who will select themselves out of the gene pool, by reacting in a predictably retarded way to extreme stress.
Do I feel sorry for these people? Ummm....not really, because many of them are mean, as well as stupid. But I derive no glee from imagining them suffer, though I do think the world will be a better place without them.
A caveat here--I don't actually think that many people meet this criteria. A lot of people are simply dumbed down by popular culture and will be forced to change in an economically constrained environment.
I see poverty and involuntary constraints on spending as the only way out of the mess we're in. It gives me both hope and dread. That's almost dictionary definition of the term, "excitement."