by Jack » Tue 05 Apr 2005, 17:42:37
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', 'R')ight, Jack. Aren't third world countries geared to the production of cash crops and raw materials to service their debt and support the elites in those countries? Who will be hardest hit by skyrocketing transportation costs? (great analysis of this in Energybulletin) I could see a situation where the old debts and money system become irrelevant. The fact remains that we continue in our quarter share of global energy use without the means to pay for all of it. I think that is definately part of the plan and has been for a generation and will be right up to the point where the old world arrangements are gone and the new ones put into place - whatever they may be. Behind the scenes, nanotech is being worked out furiously by the Pentagon and the American miltary/industrial complex. Any solution to the upcoming crisis will be found in that direction, I think.
Good points on all counts. Plus, the Walmart model follows a course of putting pressure on suppliers - generally, third world suppliers - to manufacture goods at ever lower prices. Factory owners (the affluent you refer to) pass the losses on to their workers.
On your second point, a few people have mentioned a massive U.S. default on debt - truth be told, when we devalue the currency, we conduct a default. Interestingly, this also succeeds in defaulting on social security and various pensions - the payments continue, but they don't buy as much.