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Welcome To The Depression!

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby bratticus » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 11:30:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Aaron', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('manu', 'T')he lemmings are now being shoved over the cliff by the other lemmings.


It's amazing how that Disney film populated the understanding of this arctic rodent in our minds.

Turns out it was all BS & the crew captured Lemmings and literally shoved them off the cliff.

link

Hmmm... maybe they are an apt analogy for this financial collapse?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]Lemming (Wikipedia)

... skip ...

The behavior of lemmings is much the same as that of many other rodents which have periodic population booms and then disperse in all directions, seeking the food and shelter that their natural habitat cannot provide.

... skip ...

Lemmings can and do swim and may choose to cross a body of water in search of a new habitat.[7] On occasion, and particularly in the case of the Norway lemmings in Scandinavia, large migrating groups will reach a cliff overlooking the ocean. They will stop until the urge to press on causes them to jump off the cliff and start swimming, sometimes to exhaustion and death. Lemmings are also often pushed into the sea as more and more lemmings arrive at the shore.[8]

... snip ...

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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby miskatonic » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 11:55:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('IgnoranceIsBliss', '
')20% would be unrest in the streets and pretty much TSHTF. Beggars everywhere and crime such that it is unsafe to go to the stores or drive around.


Things have sure changed since the Great Depression, when even 25% unemployment didn't cause those conditions.


It was another world in the 1930s there is no fair comparison. Look at pictures of the depression and you see people standing in very orderly lines. No way that will happen this time around. The total population was a lot smaller in the 1930s. People could go back to the family farm when times got tough.

A 20% unemployment rate will cause protests. We probably will not see riots in 2009. We will see riots in 2010 if things do not improve. When soup kitchens start overflowing and I we are facing living in a tent it is time to get out of civilization.
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby vision-master » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 12:03:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('miskatonic', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('IgnoranceIsBliss', '
')20% would be unrest in the streets and pretty much TSHTF. Beggars everywhere and crime such that it is unsafe to go to the stores or drive around.


Things have sure changed since the Great Depression, when even 25% unemployment didn't cause those conditions.


It was another world in the 1930s there is no fair comparison. Look at pictures of the depression and you see people standing in very orderly lines. No way that will happen this time around. The total population was a lot smaller in the 1930s. People could go back to the family farm when times got tough.

A 20% unemployment rate will cause protests. We probably will not see riots in 2009. We will see riots in 2010 if things do not improve. When soup kitchens start overflowing and I we are facing living in a tent it is time to get out of civilization.


We 'lost' how to live without. I see violent rage in the streets. Mainly from the losers who never learn notta, except how to suck off the system. Put em young able bodied losers into work camps.
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby Aaron » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 12:17:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bratticus', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Aaron', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('manu', 'T')he lemmings are now being shoved over the cliff by the other lemmings.


It's amazing how that Disney film populated the understanding of this arctic rodent in our minds.

Turns out it was all BS & the crew captured Lemmings and literally shoved them off the cliff.

link

Hmmm... maybe they are an apt analogy for this financial collapse?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]Lemming (Wikipedia)

... skip ...

The behavior of lemmings is much the same as that of many other rodents which have periodic population booms and then disperse in all directions, seeking the food and shelter that their natural habitat cannot provide.

... skip ...

Lemmings can and do swim and may choose to cross a body of water in search of a new habitat.[7] On occasion, and particularly in the case of the Norway lemmings in Scandinavia, large migrating groups will reach a cliff overlooking the ocean. They will stop until the urge to press on causes them to jump off the cliff and start swimming, sometimes to exhaustion and death. Lemmings are also often pushed into the sea as more and more lemmings arrive at the shore.[8]

... snip ...



From your link:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he myth of lemming mass suicide is long-standing and has been popularized by a number of factors. In 1955, Carl Barks drew an Uncle Scrooge adventure comic with the title "The Lemming with the Locket". This comic, which was inspired by a 1954 National Geographic Society article, showed massive numbers of lemmings jumping over Norwegian cliffs.[9] Even more influential was the 1958 Disney film White Wilderness, which won an Academy Award for Documentary Feature, in which footage was shown that seems to show the mass suicide of lemmings.[10] A Canadian Broadcasting Corporation documentary, Cruel Camera, found that the lemmings used for White Wilderness were flown from Hudson Bay to Calgary, Alberta, Canada, where they did not jump off the cliff, but in fact were launched off the cliff using a turntable.[11]
The problem is, of course, that not only is economics bankrupt, but it has always been nothing more than politics in disguise... economics is a form of brain damage.

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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby high5 » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 12:52:48

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('shortonsense', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Armageddon', 'B')y Summer it should be evident we are in a full blown depression. Give it 2 more quarters of horrific news and the sheep will realize.


What horrific news? I haven't seen anything much different than a decent 70's/80's windup yet?


Well, for starters I don't recall 5 Billionaires (or at least $100sM, anyhow) offing themselves at the end of the 70/80s. Nor do I recall nations like Iceland and soon to be Ukraine and Britain going Belly Up. Nor do I recall 20 states or so in debt up to their eyeballs and running out of money to pay unemployment. Nor do I recall seeing For Sale signs on half the houses in any given neighborhood. Nor do I recall the market dropping by near 50% in value from a top around 14,000 to around 8,000 now.

I lived through the 70s, it wasn't anywhere near this bad. Well, with the exception of Nixon, who was as bad as Bush. If its not horrific enough for you yet, give it a few more months. Eventually, you'll be on the Doomer bus also.

Reverse Engineer



Thanks RE, that's exactly what I was thinking.
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby RdSnt » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 13:00:10

The whole notion that we can compare the current state of affairs with any other time in history, particularly the "great depression" is ludicrous.

Let's consider the 30's depression and the state of the world. The US industrial complex was big but still quite primitive compared to Europe, where the majority of technological innovation was still occurring.
The majority of the US population was still rural, and the political orientation was decidedly isolationist. The US contribution to WW1 was minimal (only 18 months worth) and a noticably unpleasant experience which they didn't want to repeat.
The world was still on the gold standard, and the US had lots of money, enormous potential capacity and a burgeoning will to exploit it.
The stock market was small and the domain of the elite, banks were still simply banks and manufacturing corporations did not have financial subsidiaries.

Now, the US industrial base is at the end of its life and has been stripped of its value. Manufacturing jobs are mostly point and click with little in the way of skills, glorified burger flippers mostly.
Rural is a place for distant suburbs with food growth dominated by corporations and giant, machine dependent, farms.
The US is bankrupt, its banks (complex processors of ponzi schemes) are equally underwater. The consumer, who is the driving force of gdp, is busted and rapidly loosing their virtual jobs.
Government is dominated by self-indulgent cowards focused on their next, lobbyest paid, meal and haven't the least interest in either their country or the future.
The will to succeed and advance has been sapped by greed, laziness and cynical denial of action.
The global economy is completely dependent on the US dollar, since everyone bought into the notion that it was equivalent to gold.

What is coming, particularly within the US, is without precedent and will be much harsher and more dangerous than anything before.
We are at the Malthus limit (but certainly not as he originally envisioned it ) and many people will perish.
Gravity is not a force, it is a boundary layer.
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby gnm » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 13:03:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', 'W')ell, just as a hypothetical, if you Nationalized all industries, created an entirely new currency from scratch and created a Make Work project to employ all your Unemployed workers this would resolve your unemployment problem in an instant.

The real bear of course is running this show, state directed economies aren't known for their efficiency of course. However, inefficiency would be better than mass anarchy.

Reverse Engineer


And something I keep wondering is how long are foreign oil producers going to float credit to the US or even take dollars if it gets bad enough. How are you going to run the biggest social welfare program in the history of the world without that constant input of oil - I'm thinking the economy gets bad enough and the spigot gets turned off - either from problems in suppliers countries or because they won't take any more IOU's from the US - then its instant critical shortage time and TSHTF....

At least in the 30's we not only had the ability to fire up our industry but ample domestic fuel to run it!

-G 8O
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby coyote » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 13:17:22

Relevant:

Recession or depression? Too early to tell
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')s bad as things are today, conditions are nowhere near as bad as they were during the Great Depression. At least not yet.

The differences are stark. From 1929 and 1933, inflation-adjusted gross domestic product plunged 27 percent, some 10 times worse than any recession since. Today, even the worst forecasts don’t expect GDP to shrink by more than a few percent this year before recovering in 2010.

Unemployment in the 1930s peaked at 25 percent in 1933; most forecasters don't expect unemployment this time around to rise much above 10 percent, compared with the current 7.2 percent.

Other comparisons don’t measure up either. Since the current crisis began unfolding, the number of banks that have failed or been forced to find merger partners can be measured in the dozens; in the 1930s, roughly a third of all banks failed. Even last year's sickening 38 percent drop in stock prices was fairly tame compared to the 90 percent drop during the Great Depression.


I realize that folks here will be a bit more pessimistic, at least publicly, than Helicopter Ben. But these are some of the numbers we have to shoot for to approach parity.
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby vision-master » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 13:18:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')t least in the 30's we not only had the ability to fire up our industry but ample domestic fuel to run it!


Gramps picked up fallen coal from R&R tracks for the space heater during the 30's.
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby AgentR » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 13:28:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('IgnoranceIsBliss', 'H')ow in the heck to you dig out of a 20% unemployed hole? You don't.


Sure you do.

You go to war.
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby patience » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 13:34:08

Because of the proposed US record deficit for '09, and the current National Debt level, I think the crucial thing to watch now is the bond market. Challenge #1 for next year is going to be financing that deficit. If demand for US Treasury debt drops more, as some are forecasting, the result can only be, 1) Interest rates (bond yields) increase, which will drive all interest rates up and kill commercial lending, or 2) If there aren't enough buyers for T's, and the govt won't rein in spending, then the only choice is for the Fed to buy the T's. The Fed then pays for the T"S with fiat. End game.

The end point is bad, or worse. Watch the BONDS. Germany and others already have had bond auction failures, meaning no buyers at the offered interest rate. Govts don't set interest rates, and never did. The market sets interest tates by what it is willing to buy.

I have just about given up watching the DOW, since I have come to believe that it is highly manipulated, and thus not as good an indicator. I watch new unemployment claims, and bond rates now, and both are getting pretty scary.
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby gnm » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 13:34:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('vision-master', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')t least in the 30's we not only had the ability to fire up our industry but ample domestic fuel to run it!


Gramps picked up fallen coal from R&R tracks for the space heater during the 30's.


So are you trying to say we _didn't_ have ample domestic fuel production to run the social programs? I'm sure the CCC had no trouble acquiring fuel. It has nothing to do with whether or not an individual could afford it at that time - Supply will be a problem we certainly face this go round if even the government can't buy oil..

-G
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby vision-master » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 13:39:39

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o are you trying to say we _didn't_ have ample domestic fuel production to run the social programs?


The only social programs I know about in the 30's was CC camps?
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby gnm » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 13:42:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('vision-master', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o are you trying to say we _didn't_ have ample domestic fuel production to run the social programs?


The only social programs I know about in the 30's was CC camps?


I have no idea what you know about - I was just listing one of the various "make work" programs the government ran. Obviously not the only one. What exactly is your point?

-G
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby vision-master » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 13:48:03

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gnm', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('vision-master', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o are you trying to say we _didn't_ have ample domestic fuel production to run the social programs?


The only social programs I know about in the 30's was CC camps?


I have no idea what you know about - I was just listing one of the various "make work" programs the government ran. Obviously not the only one. What exactly is your point?

-G


No:

welfare
food stamps
energy assistance
and so on in the 30's
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby gnm » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 13:58:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('vision-master', '
')
No:

welfare
food stamps
energy assistance
and so on in the 30's


Coming soon to a theater near you! As I understand it as of Feb. 1 CA will be issuing welfare IOU's in lieu of checks...

Also in the 30's we had a MUCH smaller population with a much greater percentage in agrarian communities, and much lower total energy use. I think they were in a much better position to ride out unemployment, power outages, food shortages etc than we are now... I mean, turn off the power in LA for 2 days and all hell will break loose...

-G
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby Heineken » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 14:12:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('RdSnt', 'T')he whole notion that we can compare the current state of affairs with any other time in history, particularly the "great depression" is ludicrous.

Let's consider the 30's depression and the state of the world. The US industrial complex was big but still quite primitive compared to Europe, where the majority of technological innovation was still occurring.
The majority of the US population was still rural, and the political orientation was decidedly isolationist. The US contribution to WW1 was minimal (only 18 months worth) and a noticably unpleasant experience which they didn't want to repeat.
The world was still on the gold standard, and the US had lots of money, enormous potential capacity and a burgeoning will to exploit it.
The stock market was small and the domain of the elite, banks were still simply banks and manufacturing corporations did not have financial subsidiaries.

Now, the US industrial base is at the end of its life and has been stripped of its value. Manufacturing jobs are mostly point and click with little in the way of skills, glorified burger flippers mostly.
Rural is a place for distant suburbs with food growth dominated by corporations and giant, machine dependent, farms.
The US is bankrupt, its banks (complex processors of ponzi schemes) are equally underwater. The consumer, who is the driving force of gdp, is busted and rapidly loosing their virtual jobs.
Government is dominated by self-indulgent cowards focused on their next, lobbyest paid, meal and haven't the least interest in either their country or the future.
The will to succeed and advance has been sapped by greed, laziness and cynical denial of action.
The global economy is completely dependent on the US dollar, since everyone bought into the notion that it was equivalent to gold.

What is coming, particularly within the US, is without precedent and will be much harsher and more dangerous than anything before.
We are at the Malthus limit (but certainly not as he originally envisioned it ) and many people will perish.


Excellent, cogent, frightening comments.
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby Novus » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 14:48:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('vision-master', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('gnm', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('vision-master', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o are you trying to say we _didn't_ have ample domestic fuel production to run the social programs?


The only social programs I know about in the 30's was CC camps?


I have no idea what you know about - I was just listing one of the various "make work" programs the government ran. Obviously not the only one. What exactly is your point?

-G


No:

welfare
food stamps
energy assistance
and so on in the 30's


Actually a lot of the social make work programs centered around energy and engineering or what in the old days was simply called progress. Hoover Dam, Golden Gate Bridge, Tennessee Valley Authority were the big showcase projects of the time but there were tens of thousands of smaller work projects that produced a useful outcome. In my town there was not a single paved road until 1933 when the make work projects paved over the dirt lanes. In 1929 large areas or rural America had not yet been electrified. That had changed by 1939 with the numerous energy and infrastructure make work projects. The end result of the worst decade of depression and hardship was that progress still continued. America was a better place to live in 1939 than it was in 1929.

A lot social programs seem to get demonized as useless welfare and such when that is not really the case. It won't be a total collapse if the fiat money ends up being turned into useful infrastructure such as wind/solar farms that have real value and will continue to produce real value in the future.
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby Tyler_JC » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 15:11:56

(Just to play the Devil's Advocate here)

Wasn't one of the big problems with Peak Oil the weakness of the electric grid to accommodate the new electric transportation infrastructure? And isn't part of Obama's big stimulus push an attempt to "build a smart electric grid"

Consumers will cut back on spending (aka, resource consumption), couples will have fewer children (overpopulation solution) and government will invest in the kind of infrastructure we need to survive in a post oil world. Less economic activity means less pollution and fewer greenhouse gas emissions, giving us more breathing room to deal with climate change while we develop new technologies to produce cleaner energy.

There will be human suffering, no doubt about it. But the nation and the world as a whole will be better for it. We can build a more sustainable future that isn't dependent on financial bubbles but instead on the real economy like energy production.

So, if anything, this Depression might actually be exactly what we need.

Depression? Bring it on.
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Re: Welcome To The Depression!

Unread postby vision-master » Tue 27 Jan 2009, 15:21:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')n 1929 large areas or rural America had not yet been electrified.


Many areas in the USA didn't get electrified until the 50's. Up till then, aladdin lamps were quite popular.
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