Page added on January 2, 2018
Markets
If you take your cues from Consensus Trance Central — the cable news networks, The New York Times, WashPost, and HuffPo — Trump is all that ails this foundering empire. Well, Trump and Russia, since the Golden Golem of Greatness is in league with Vladimir Putin to loot the world, or something like that.
Since I believe that the financial system is at the heart of today’s meta-question (What Could Go Wrong?), it would be perhaps more to the point to ask: what has held this matrix of rackets together so long? After all, rackets are characterized by pervasive lying and fraud, meaning their operations don’t add up. Things that don’t comport with reality are generally prone to failure so sooner or later they have to implode.
Financial markets have been surging supernaturally on “liquidity” since 2009 — and by “liquidity” I mean “money” (digital credit from thin air) supplied by the Federal Reserve, in rotation with the other sovereign central banks, BOE, ECB, BOJ, PBOC, from whence it pings ‘round the world, wherever the lure of the main chance sparkles. Trillions wafted into the stock and bond markets, levitating them as a sort of stage-managed misdirection from the sickening spectacle of wobbling real stuff economies. In 2017, The Dow Jones Industrial Average recorded an astounding 5,000 point year-on-year upzoom, with 12 months of gains and no loser months, and a string of 71 record highs.
America’s central bank, the Federal Reserve, acted as if pumping up the stock markets was the only thing that mattered. The result was a Potemkin economy, a glittering Wall Street false-front with a landscape of “flyover” squalor and desolation behind. The Fed now works at cross-purposes with itself by raising the Fed Funds rate a quarter-point every few months, and supposedly “shrinking” (ha!) their balance sheet — dumping bonds onto the market plus “retiring” termed out bonds, which allows the Fed to disappear the principal paid by the borrowers, namely the US Treasury, or the quasi-governmental werewolf called Freddie Mac (The Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation), which bundles all kinds of janky mortgages into giant bonds the Fed buys in order to artificially pump up the real estate market. Did your eyes glaze over yet? That’s the great thing about finance: it’s bewildering, so that when shit goes wrong, nobody notices until its way too late.
What could go wrong with that program? Well, if you dump billions of bonds on the market, you will change the supply-and-demand equation in the direction of too much supply, and interest rates will have to rise when there isn’t enough bid from the demand side — especially if the US Treasury is creating ever more new bonds to make up for ever-greater deficit spending at the same time the Fed dumps bonds into the market. And if, for instance, the interest rate on the benchmark 10-year US Treasury bond goes up past 3.00 percent, well that may be all she wrote for the US government’s ability to service its monstrous debt. And it may be tits up for the real estate sector, too, because mortgage rates will rise, and fewer people will buy houses. The Fed’s latest actions boil down to a lame attempt to have some maneuvering room to once again lower interest rates and refill their balance sheet via a QE-4 orgy when the economy heads south in a way that even the US Bureau of Labor Statistics can’t obfuscate.
The ECB and the BOJ have already made noises about curtailing their vacuuming up of securities, so the liquidity rotation may end altogether. The new Tax Cuts and Jobs Act has at its centerpiece the lowering of corporate income tax from 35 to 21 percent. The hidden agenda may be to hope this can act as a substitute for the dwindling central bank liquidity injections. The tax cuts and other new gimmicks would increase the federal debt by at least $1 trillion over a ten year period (and, by unofficial estimates, probably much more) paving the road to national bankruptcy with good intentions. But, of course, quite a few wise men in this culture have declared that deficits don’t matter. My own view is that they don’t matter until they do, and then you’re pretty screwed.
In the background of all this is an array of perilous real world events playing out that include especially potential conflict around North Korea and the Middle East. China’s banking system is a fun-house of scams and dodges that don’t add up anymore than ours do. The whole wicked pottage of EU / Brexit issues simmers away, along with the EU’s fatal flaw of lacking any fiscal discipline among member nations, so government spending has no relation to sovereign borrowing. NATO’s aggressive military posturing on Russia’s borders is pointless, stupid, dishonest, and provocative. Nobody knows what kind of gambit Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia will try next. Iran demands to be recognized as the regional hegemon. And our dear exceptional nation, with its restless Deep State black box “assets,” is capable of all sorts of mischief at home and abroad.
Any of these things could shove American markets into criticality, as if they don’t have enough built-in fragility already. Manipulation of the markets by the Fed and its water-carrying Too Big To Fail partners have deprived the markets of their chief function: price discovery, the ability to discern what things are really worth. Markets are therefore functionally useless and their uselessness is a giant hazard. No society that depends on money can work for long if nobody knows the true value of things, including the value of money itself. The price of attempting to live in a culture of pervasive dishonesty is that a re-set is inevitable. When it happens, it will be hugely destabilizing.
I expect the DJIA to move down sharply before the third quarter, rebound a little, and eventually bottom at 14,000 or lower by this time next year. I’ll call the S & P to settle in under 1,000. The NASDAQ may be the weakest, since its FAANG members — Facebook , Amazon, Apple, Netflix, Google (aka Alphabet)— are among the most mis-valued stocks, and the most based on vaporous products and services. Call NASDAQ to land at 2,700. Calling for a US dollar index (DXY) of 79 by December. Calling for gold $2,500 and silver $60 twelve months from now. There it is, like so much meat on the table.
Bitcoin and other cryptos have a superficial appeal as a wealth safe haven supposedly out-of-reach of avaricious governments — if you don’t consider everything else that’s wrong with it. (Yesterday, Dec 31, Australia’s biggest banks froze the accounts of Bitcoin investors.) I think the safe haven idea will prove fallacious. Governments are already finding ways to interfere, using taxation schemes and shutting down exchanges. Bitcoin’s other claims on “moneyness” look bogus as well. It’s too unstable to be a medium of exchange, and too difficult to even access when need to sell, and you certainly can’t price anything in it as it shoots up and crashes every day. Bitcoin went way up because people — or maybe just algorithms — saw it going way up, so they hitched a ride. The rush to the exits will be brutal. Its final resting place will be zero, but perhaps not without a trip or two to nosebleed levels in 2018, especially as other markets wobble in the first half of the year. Bitcoin $50-K wouldn’t surprise me. But I’m not among the buyers. Enjoy the show.
2018 is the year that fragilities in the shale oil industry challenge the narrative of the “miracle.” The industry hasn’t made a net red-cent since it ramped up ten years ago. It’s been running on debt, a lot of it junk financing (high-yield, high-risk, covenant-lite). The producers have been fracking and pumping all-out for several years to maximize their cash flow to service their loans. But these shale wells deplete by 80 percent on average after the first three years, and have to be replaced by expensive new wells, which require ever more debt financing. The truth is that shale oil and other “unconventional” oils just don’t pencil out economically. Their success in recent years was part-and-parcel with the central bank credit flood. As that credit flow gets choked down in 2018, oil companies will go out of business at an impressive rate. If the price of oil goes up to $80-a-barrel, as a result, it will be very damaging to what remains of the US economy of real stuff.
US Politics
Donald Trump survived in office a whole year. Imagine that! After the 2016 election, I figured that the top military brass would give him the bum’s rush inside of three months, in short a coup d’état. Their action actually has been much more subtle: they just ring-fenced him with generals. Since he seems to regard them as his generals (“my generals”), then he’s apparently okay with that, like a boy in the nursery with his toy soldiers. And apart from the fact that the constitution calls for civilian control of the military and not vice-versa, I’m okay with that… for now. He’s got chaperones, at least. This is admittedly not the ideal disposition of American political power.
I did not vote for the Golden Golem, and I don’t esteem his abilities, but the incessant and rather hysterical attacks on his legitimacy, especially by members of Consensus Trance Central, display a mendacity out of George Orwell’s direst dreams. I never believed in the ludicrous Russian collusion fantasy, and find it difficult to believe that the editors of The New York Times do. So far, Special Counsel Robert Mueller has indicted two high-profile grifters (Manafort and Gates) on financial shenanigans involving business dealings in Russia dating from years before the 2016 election, plus one National Security Advisor (Michael Flynn) for speaking with the Russian Ambassador (who, exactly, are foreign ambassadors supposed to speak to if not government officials? And otherwise what are they here for?), and one entry-level foreign policy wonk (George Papadopoulos) who never even met Trump. I believe the grave and solemn Mueller is on a fishing expedition. Aficionados of DOJ tactics know that prosecutors can always fetch up the proverbial ham sandwich to indict, if there’s nothing else at hand.
Then there is the very troubling behavior of FBI employees (Peter Strzok, Lisa Page, Deputy FBI Director Andrew McCabe), plus some members of Obama’s inner circle (Susan Rice, Samantha powers) in the twilight months of his term. And remember, Robert Mueller has been the erstwhile James Comey’s mentor and true-blue friend going way back. It just looks flat-out like a bunch of Deep State lifers are out to get the Golden Golem. The so-called “optics” are terrible.
Since crashing stock markets are liable to turn Trump into a mad bull, at the same time that Mueller will have to put up or shut up, I predict that long about the vernal equinox Mueller will come up with some Mickey Mouse charges against Trump, or his people, and be promptly fired by the president. General Flynn and the baby foreign policy wonk will be pardoned, and perhaps others. Probably not Manafort and his chum (though their prosecution might fail.) Democrats will go apeshit and batshit both, with talk of impeachment and constitutional crisis, but I don’t think any of that will stick. Congress may have more to worry about with tanking markets and other symptoms of an incipient economic train wreck. The effort to dump Trump would aggravate the tanking markets.
It is also plausible after the disclosures of recent months that the Russian meddling investigation could blow back on Hillary, the Clinton Foundation, Clinton allies, and possibly even some of Obama’s people (maybe even the former president himself). The evidence for Obama-era FBI involvement in the Christopher Steele file is already out there. There is yet to be a satisfactory elucidation of the Loretta Lynch / Bill Clinton Phoenix tarmac meet-up, nor to the circumstances around HRC’s lost emails and private server, nor the Anthony Weiner laptop, nor to the Uranium One matter. The casual observer sees much more circumstantial criminality in these matters so far than any Trump collusion-with-Russia hypothesis provides.
I venture to predict that ex-DNC Chair Debbie Wasserman-Schultz resigns her House seat in disgrace as the case of her Pakistani grifter IT aide, Imran Awan, moves into the courts.
Trump firing Mueller will drive his Dem-Prog adversaries to new heights of hysteria but their wrath may be so ineffectual that they will fall back on their stock-in-trade, ginning up more sexual panic. This calls into question the pathetic state of the Democratic Party leadership. It’s so sclerotic these days that it makes the Whigs of 1856 look dynamic. They have no program for the compound emergencies the nation faces. The party machinery is in the hands of bought-and-paid-for errand boys, gender crybabies, and race hustlers. Their allies at The New York Times and CNN look ever more ridiculous peddling daily paranoid fantasies and styling themselves as advocates for “the Resistance.” Their cadres in the Ivy League outposts have turned into the most shamelessly illiberal gang of intellectual despots since Mao’s Red Guard roamed the earth.
I’m not persuaded that the Dems will necessarily stomp Trump’s Republicans in the 2018 congressional and state races, as seems to be widely assumed for the moment. I’ll predict, rather, that in 2018 we get the first stirrings of a new party forming to battle both tired old clubs. Trump now “owns” the fate of the stock market and the economy it wags, having bragged on it all year. He and the Republicans will be blamed if it falls out of bed. But my gut feeling is that the voters are even more sick of the Democrats and their victim-mongering. Their coffers are empty, despite jumping through every hoop that Wall Street held out for them. (Did all the money disappear into the maw of the Clinton Foundation?) Finally, on a personal note, I blame them for driving a stake through Garrison’s Keillor’s heart with their reckless sexual witch-hunting, and I don’t forgive them for that, no matter how many tits he may have tried to touch backstage.
Elsewhere on This Planet
Economic savant and international man-of-mystery James Rickards says that Trump and his generals are going to whap North Korea upside its big chunky head soon after the winter Olympics are concluded in South Korea on February 25. But as Trump averred in the election campaign, he is not inclined to state in advance exactly what we might do in a military situation. Maybe the rumor is true that we have interesting new weapons capable of turning Little Rocket Man into a Post Toastie without harming the mass of innocent North Koreans. I’d have to give 50 percent odds that whatever we do in Korea turns out to be an epic illustration of Murphy’s Law, since our track record in foreign military adventures since VJ day in 1945 is pretty scant in the “win” column. The Balkan War, maybe… Bush One’s Gulf War sort of… Grenada (for Godsake)… what else…?
Kim Jung-un may not be able yet to deliver an atomic blast to Rodeo Drive, but he can likely lob one into Tokyo on a five minute flight path. Look at the map. The Japanese must be nervous about it. They were once a world-class military power, in case you don’t remember the banzai era. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe wants to revise Japan’s pacifist constitution — engineered by US advisors during the post-war occupation — to allow for a robust military. I wouldn’t be surprised if something lethal jumps out of a lacquered black bento box in the direction of Pyongyang around the same time the US goes for that whap upside NK’s head.
And there’s Seoul, of course, less than 20 miles from the DMZ and within range of a supposedly huge array of North Korean heavy artillery. The theory is we have a slim window of opportunity to deal with this rascal before he equips himself to do some major mischief in the world. I don’t believe this is just a bunch of shuck-and-jive cooked up by the arms merchants and their friends. It’s real and existential and very messy. Something is going to happen there.
China has a pretty firm mutual defense treaty with North Korea, and perhaps reason to want to keep the regime up-and-running as a buffer zone. But do they really want to jump feet first into World War Three defending Kim? I guess we’ll find out. In the meantime, China’s president Xi Jinping has got enough on his plate trying to safely land the high-flying, but wobbling, debt-saturated Chinese economy. Odds are that it’s going to be a rough landing. In which case, maybe war is the answer, as a way of distracting the Chinese public’s attention. But what sort of war? Cyber-sabotage? EMP blackouts? Good old-fashioned mutual nuclear destruction? Grinding old-school land campaigns? Naval battles? It’s a dangerous game and Xi does not look like a risk junkie — more like prudent ole Uncle Xi. So I’ll predict that whatever blows on the Korean Peninsula, China will try to stay out of it, even if it makes faces and jumps up and down a bit.
Russia can only benefit from steering clear of war, though its recent offer to act as an intermediary between Kim and Trump was a smart move. (Maybe they remember how Teddy Roosevelt negotiated a peace settlement in the Russo-Japanese War of 1907.) They have little to lose and prestige to gain. Despite what you hear about the unholy thuggery of Vladimir Putin, it seems to me that what he wants most of all for his country is to attain the condition of a politically and economically normal nation — after the 75-year-long misadventure with communism. I suspect Putin and others in Russia would have liked the country to become more fully Europeanized in tone and style than it has been allowed to be, with NATO playing war games on Russia’s border, and US monkeyshines in Ukraine, and sanctions against it for really no good reason. So, Russia has been shoved back into its cubbyhole as a nation not quite of Europe, with sinister Byzantine overtones and ancient exotic Mongol influences.
This quasi-isolation has some benefits for Russia, for one, the imperative to develop businesses and industries for import-replacement, that is, for becoming more self-sufficient. Russia has a lot to work worth, with the world’s highest oil production, lots of ores and minerals, untold hydropower, and endless timber. It can make its own stuff, and Russian citizens are free to try starting businesses. The country may even benefit from climate change with expanded croplands. Russia is already approaching food self-sufficiency after the long catastrophe of soviet farm collectivization.
Meanwhile, Europe desperately needs Russia’s oil and natural gas, so they must know that using NATO troops and armor to make threats is a hollow gesture. Notice that Russia is stockpiling gold reserves, where the USA is just selling the stuff off. (China is stockpiling, too. Like mad.) When other currencies implode, there is reason to believe the world will be introduced to a gold-backed Ruble and Yuan, “money” backed by money. They’ll be able to buy stuff they need. Will we? Will a gold-backed currency shove aside the US dollar as world reserve currency? The precursor to that will be China’s effort to establish oil trade in its Yuan.
Europe has stumbled along economically for several years on Mario Draghi’s promise to “do whatever it takes” to keep the EU’s member nations from falling into the black hole of debt deflation, namely, buying every bond that the sovereign governments and corporations issue. That kept the game going, but the structural imbalances in EU banking are now so extreme that it is hard to see a way out besides an EU crackup. The Merkel-led immigration-and-refugee policy looked like a bad bet from the get-go and is liable to get worse when the whatever-it-takes liquidity dries up and the EU member countries fall into recession (or depression) and there’s no more money to pay for all those refugee settlement centers and the social services that have been provided. There won’t be enough gainful employment for Germans, Belgians, Frenchmen, and Swedes, let alone for immigrants and refugees.
I’ll predict that starting in 2018 we’ll see efforts to ramp up deportations of these newcomers. Racist? That will be the knee-jerk hue-and-cry. But the epithet is losing its punch as the effects of Merkel’s open door policy are felt on-the-ground in the obvious hostility, xenophobia, and aggression, displayed by Islamic settlers. The defeat of ISIS on the Middle East battlefields in 2017 suggests that they will be ramping up terror operations to Europe. European nationalism movements will grow in 2018 and gain intellectual respectability as the defense of European culture is taken seriously. Middle European states such as Hungary and Poland have not given in on the EU’s demand to accept immigrants and refugees from Islamic lands. Their example will be followed. Politicians in the rest of Europe will consider the “Just Say No” option.
The United Kingdom enters 2018 especially vulnerable to economic travail. The estimated cost of Brexit at tens of billions of pounds sterling, and the potential loss of business, especially banking, is one mighty headwind. The other, less talked about, is the dwindling of the UK’s oil and gas reserves. The equation is simple: fewer energy inputs equals lower economic activity. The only way around that is the popular central bank strategy of recent years: money-printing and accounting fraud. You can’t base an economy on that, and the truth will become painfully self-evident this new year in Great Britain.
Suddenly this last week of 2017, anti-regime demonstrations are busting out all over Iran. They are said to be protests over poor economic performance and the regime’s squandering of resources sponsoring mischief in other lands (Yemen, Syria, Lebanon, etc). Folks are getting killed in the streets. The Revolutionary Guard — the zealots who took our diplomatic personnel hostage in 1979 — have promised to squash the protest. Many Iranians must be good and goddam sick of mullahs and ayatollahs running the joint.
Otherwise, it’s beginning to look like Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS) of Saudi Arabia (KSA) would like to rumble with Iran to beat back their influence outside their borders in the region. Iran has had plenty of opportunity to play with its military hardware in recent decades: in the Iran-Iraq War, arming Hezbollah to battle Israel, in support of Bashar al-Assad’s government in Syria, and lately in Yemen’s civil war. KSA, on the other hand, has been buying jet planes and bombs from the US for decades, with nary a chance to put them to use. MBS seems eager to test-drive this schwag.
A real dust-up between the principals would put a lot of the world’s oil supply at risk if oil tanker shipping in the Persian Gulf were interrupted. China and Japan would bear the brunt, but the whole world would feel it. Kicking the clerics out of government in Iran might tone down the unnecessary religious hostilities between Sunni and Shiites that has played such a big part in the creation of failed states throughout the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). Iran has plenty of economic problems inside its own borders.
The disarray in other areas of the vast MENA region will continue in 2018, whether regime change in Iran happens or not. Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan are permanently failed states, with Egypt ever on the verge. Syria will stabilize as a much smaller economy, propped up by payments from Russia for hosting naval and air bases there. This part of the world has suffered ruinous population overshoot in the industrial age, especially the states that produced oil. The desert ecology can’t support all these people as the industry falters and shrinks. Even as the situation worsens, the swollen populations will generate more children. When they can no longer decant themselves into Europe, the real misery starts.
You may have forgotten there is a place called South America. Its many nations have been in a pleasant political coma for a decade or so, except Venezuela, which is in cardiac arrest, organ failure, and brain death. There will be a bloody revolution there this year, and Venezuela’s oil industry will be crippled, adding to the world’s oil supply problems.
The Closing of the American Mind
2017 was a spectacular year for intellectual collapse among the political Left, but especially for its subsidiaries on campus. The trauma of Donald Trump’s election victory put this faction into a fugue state in which no opportunity for coercion and persecution of imagined enemies could be missed. The victim-oppressor politics spawned by the critical-theory-for-lunch-bunch has produced an ideology in which “inclusion” means segregated dorms, racially separate graduation ceremonies, and (at Harvard) closing down age-old men’s and women’s voluntary social associations. And “diversity” means as long as you express the exactly same ideas we do. The presidents, deans, and faculty of colleges around the country have turned into the most obdurate enemies of free thought since the Spanish Inquisition, a gang of cowards and villains who disgrace the meaning and purpose of higher Ed.
Highlights of the year in Social Justice Warrior Land include the violence around Charles Murray’s lecture at Middlebury, the Antifa riots at UC Berkeley, the “Day of Absence” ritual at Evergreen U in Washington State where white people were banished from campus, and the Lindsey Shepherd star chamber tribunal at Laurier University in Toronto (I know, that’s outside the USA). In all of these cases, college presidents, deans, and faculty acted contemptibly, supporting coercion, persecution, antipathy to due process of law, the willful betrayal of common decency, and a folio of shockingly stupid ideas — such as the proposition from the chair of the Purdue University Engineering Department (one Donna Riley) that academic rigor is a symptom of “white male heterosexual privilege.”
As it happens, higher education is approaching its own state of implosion, since college has become, most of all, a money-grubbing racket tuned to the flow of exorbitant student loans for exorbitant college costs. Higher Ed’s fate is tied to the financial sector, especially the bond market, since college loans are lately being bundled into janky bonds just like the NINJA mortgages of 2007 were. The entire US college industry has been in a hypertrophic blow-off for decades, and the gross expansion of facilities, programs, and costs has developedan inverse relationship to the value of a college education. I predict that a shocking number of small four-year colleges will go out of business this year. Students who had not completed their degree requirements will just be shit out of luck.
Concluding Thoughts
2018 will be a tumultuous year of shake-outs and loss. The watchword for the year should be “lean.” Individuals will be shoved into leaner modes of living. Companies will suffer despite the new lower tax. Financial rewards will be lean. Nations will have to seriously start planning to get by on less, to downscale, and jettison programs that don’t jibe with the mandates of reality. 2018 is the year that the world comes un-stuck from the past ten years of pretending that it’s possible to get something for nothing. For 2018, it’s full speed ahead into the long emergency.
76 Comments on "Kunstler: Forecast 2018 — What Could Go Wrong?"
Makati1 on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 6:39 am
“Any of these things could shove American markets into criticality,…The price of attempting to live in a culture of pervasive dishonesty is that a re-set is inevitable. When it happens, it will be hugely destabilizing…”
“2017 was a spectacular year for intellectual collapse …The presidents, deans, and faculty of colleges around the country have turned into the most obdurate enemies of free thought since the Spanish Inquisition, a gang of cowards and villains who disgrace the meaning and purpose of higher Ed. …As it happens, higher education is approaching its own state of implosion, since college has become, most of all, a money-grubbing racket…”
2018 will just see the slide of the US into the 3rd world pick up speed and become even more obvious to the serfs and the rest of the world. It is the freak side show for now.
Davy on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 6:45 am
mad kat one liner regurgitate
“2018 will just see the slide of the US into the 3rd world pick up speed and become even more obvious to the serfs and the rest of the world. It is the freak side show for now.”
Davy on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 6:53 am
“Top Ten Global Weather/Climate Events of 2017: A Year of Landfalls and Firestorms”
https://tinyurl.com/yd9qppzj
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 7:20 am
As M. King Hubbert (1962) shows, Peak Oil is about discovering less oil, and eventually producing less oil due to lack of discovery.
https://imgur.com/a/6dEDt
IEA Chief warns of world oil shortages by 2020 as discoveries fall to record lows
https://www.wsj.com/articles/iea-says-global-oil-discoveries-at-record-low-in-2016-1493244000
Saudi Aramco CEO sees oil supply shortage coming as investments, discoveries drop
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-aramco-oil/aramco-ceo-sees-oil-supply-shortage-as-investments-discoveries-drop-idUSKBN19V0KR
Peak Oil Vindicated by the IEA and Saudi Arabia
Here are seven peer reviewed scientific studies authored by top experts that prove beyond any reasonable doubt that global civilization will collapse within the next decade.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921800914000615
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0016236114010254
https://www.permaculture.org.au/files/Peak%20Oil_Study%20EN.pdf
http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/280/1754/20122845
http://sustainable.unimelb.edu.au/sites/default/files/docs/MSSI-ResearchPaper-4_Turner_2014.pdf
http://www.feasta.org/2012/06/17/trade-off-financial-system-supply-chain-cross-contagion-a-study-in-global-systemic-collapse/
https://www.scribd.com/document/367688629/HSBC-Peak-Oil-Report-2017
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 7:20 am
Here are seven peer reviewed scientific studies authored by top experts that prove beyond any reasonable doubt that global civilization will collapse within the next decade.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921800914000615
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0016236114010254
https://www.permaculture.org.au/files/Peak%20Oil_Study%20EN.pdf
http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/280/1754/20122845
http://sustainable.unimelb.edu.au/sites/default/files/docs/MSSI-ResearchPaper-4_Turner_2014.pdf
http://www.feasta.org/2012/06/17/trade-off-financial-system-supply-chain-cross-contagion-a-study-in-global-systemic-collapse/
https://www.scribd.com/document/367688629/HSBC-Peak-Oil-Report-2017
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 7:22 am
Solar and Wind produced less than one percent of total world energy in 2016 – IEA WEO 2017
https://www.iea.org/publications/freepublications/publication/KeyWorld2017.pdf
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 7:22 am
As M. King Hubbert (1962) shows, Peak Oil is about discovering less oil, and eventually producing less oil due to lack of discovery.
https://imgur.com/a/6dEDt
IEA Chief warns of world oil shortages by 2020 as discoveries fall to record lows
https://www.wsj.com/articles/iea-says-global-oil-discoveries-at-record-low-in-2016-1493244000
Saudi Aramco CEO sees oil supply shortage coming as investments, discoveries drop
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-aramco-oil/aramco-ceo-sees-oil-supply-shortage-as-investments-discoveries-drop-idUSKBN19V0KR
Peak Oil Vindicated by the IEA and Saudi Arabia
Hello on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 8:03 am
>>> Solar and Wind produced less than one percent of total world energy in 2016
wow. I didn’t think it was that bad.
But we can always assume it’s going to growth exponentially. That will make us feel much better.
Davy on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 9:55 am
“North Korea Preparing To Test Largest ICBM Yet, Defector Warns”
https://tinyurl.com/yc4kflgf
“The new rocket will be larger than the Unha-3, which is about 98 feet long and is based on the Soviet Union’s Scud ballistic missile technology. The defector claims that development of the body of the Unha-4 is effectively complete but that scientists will need another six months to have the new weapon ready to launch. It has been suggested that the rocket will be used to place a satellite in orbit to guide and observe future missile launches by the North, although it may also be used to test the ability of a warhead to survive re-entry into the atmosphere. While North Korea has made significant advances in its intercontinental ballistic missile technology, analysts believe that Kim’s scientists have still not full mastered shielding a warhead from the intense heat that builds up during re-entry. The reports coincide with the release of a study by the Sejong Institute of South Korea warning that the North still needs to demonstrate that its ICBMs can fly the full ICBM trajectory while carrying the weight of a warhead to prove that the North does have an effective nuclear deterrent. “The North’s seventh nuclear test could take place not underground but over the Pacific,” Cheong Seong-chang, a senior analyst, said in the report.”
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 10:02 am
Davy
Zero hedge is a fake news site. And the article sites a “CLAIM” made by a defector…Not evidence or reason. The media just wants war because it creates “News” stories for them. And you are falling for obvious propaganda. Learn to fucking vet your sources.
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 10:03 am
Davy
Its shit like you just posted that people like Greg and Madkat mock us and call us brainwashed.
Hello on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 10:08 am
>>> Its shit like you just posted that people like Greg and Madkat mock
No true. Mak & his retard friends use the same source if it fits their anti US agenda.
Davy on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 10:10 am
mm, you claim things all the time so what’s your point?
Why should I care what you, mad kat, or grehg thinks or posts. If you think what I posted above is fake news show some news that shows it is fake.
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 10:27 am
Davy
I can’t disprove something that has never been proven first. That’s called disproving a negative. That is why nobody can disprove God because nobody can first prove god exist. My point is if this defector has no proof of what his saying the news shouldnt write stories about it. or they should title the story “Defector claims (Without Evidence)”…Just try vetting your sources better
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 10:30 am
Davy
My claims I back up with peer reviewed scholarly sources. You will never see me post anything that isn’t from a mainstream or scholarly source. The reason is because I question everything and trust nothing.
Davy on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 11:26 am
“My point is if this defector has no proof of what his saying the news shouldnt write stories about it. or they should title the story “Defector claims (Without Evidence)”…Just try vetting your sources better”
I imagine this is more your point is you don’t like the story. You have no proof the defector is wrong or right and besides intelligent people take what a defector says with a open mind either way. It is information. You can vet my stories all you like. If I had more time I would vet yours but I have enough vetting to do with a few others here. There are people here vetting your stories. If that vetting is unfair or bad vetting I will speak up.
Davy on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 11:29 am
“My claims I back up with peer reviewed scholarly sources.”
All of them mm? Please, you are being mighty righteous. IMA scholarly sources that you choose to make your point so in that sense you are making claims using scholarly sources. You say a lot here and there is no way to back up everything you say.
“You will never see me post anything that isn’t from a mainstream or scholarly source. The reason is because I question everything and trust nothing.”
Wow, you trust mainstream media to be honest?
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 11:38 am
Davy
I don’t have to disprove the defectors claims. He has to prove them first because he is the one making the fucking claims..I back up everything I say with evidence. Name one thing I have said that I couldn’t prove..Or shut the hell up. If if I was you I wouldn’t be worried about north korea nuking us. Just drive through your states city of St Louis. The place looks like its been shelled already. No nuclear bombs needed!
Davy on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 11:56 am
mm, the defector doesn’t have to do shit. You are establishing the criteria and you are a nobody. I am just observing the information. I never said it was true or not just relevant news.
You don’t back everything you say with evidence. This is especially true if you use MSM because MSM is corrupted. I see you referenced CNBC and Forbes earlier as if they are the source of evidence. They are worth a look but both are slanted.
Cloggie on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 12:47 pm
Gaullism-in-action latest:
https://www.wsj.com/articles/france-looks-to-deepen-trade-ties-with-russia-and-china-1514808000
“France Looks to Deepen Trade Ties With Russia and China”
https://www.rt.com/business/414781-france-trade-china-russia/
Translation: US is losing grip over Europe. Soon the situation will be reversed and Europe will get a grip over the US, or what will be left of it, because quite a few Americans can actually count to three:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=954I4Fl0EiA
Here an explicit representative of European-America in discussion with a sort of female millimind antifa clown. Goal: secession and white ethno-state.
Complete idiots like the resident red millimind think in all earnest that Europe will join the US in a war against Russia and China. Forget about it. We will be neutral first and gradually claim to be the protector of European America as WW3 proceeds and as such encourage Euros in America to secede from Washington and escape a certain death in the Asian meat grinder.
GregT on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 1:34 pm
I still maintain my guesstimate of collapse being complete somewhere ~2025.
In the meantime, expect the state of Israel to be defended at all costs. After all, every God fearing Christian (and Jew) understands what is at stake.
For it is written:
“Our Father, Who art in heaven. Hallowed be Thy Name; Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.”
King Solomon’s temple must be rebuilt.
“The “NEW” Temple must once again occupy its place on the Temple Mount before the final major prophesied events of the last days can take place.”
https://prophecyinthenews.com/articles/where-in-jerusalem-will-the-third-temple-of-god-be-built-before-christ-returns/
You just can’t make this stuff up……..
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 1:56 pm
Davy
You think CNBC and Forbes are not trustworthy but Zerohedge articles written by Tyler Durden from Fight Club are? LOL
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 1:57 pm
Greg
I think your 2025 time is perfect. I wouldn’t be surprised though if it even was a few years earlier or later though. That is why I say within the next decade.
GregT on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 2:39 pm
“I wouldn’t be surprised though if it even was a few years earlier or later though. That is why I say within the next decade.”
Completely agree. Expect more of the same in the meantime, and expect things to continue to escalate/deteriorate in the interim.
Davy on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 2:45 pm
mm, none of them are trust worthy. Some are better than others. That is where your intellect gets involved. If you are honest and trustworthy to yourself you can manage through the minefield of lies.
Davy on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 3:23 pm
Anyone guesstimating a collapse is failing to understand collapse. Collapse is a process with events. One big deadly event is always possible. More likely it will be location focused with creeping contagions. It will dovetail with ecological and climate events and processes. It will be sociopolitical and economic. It will be systematic but also local and individual. Putting a date on “it” is missing the point.
When will life change as we know it? In some ways it already has but the frog in the pot on the stove of change is still habituated to life as we know it. Our lives have lost security and stability but we still don’t feel it. In the next few years I believe we will. It is called phase change. The turbulence of a boil is ahead.
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 3:32 pm
Anyone guesstimating a collapse is failing to understand collapse. Collapse is a process with events.
The Soviet Union collapsed due to an oil shortage in two years time. The same thing will happen to the global economy when our oil shortage hits in the next few years..
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 3:33 pm
As M. King Hubbert (1962) shows, Peak Oil is about discovering less oil, and eventually producing less oil due to lack of discovery.
https://imgur.com/a/6dEDt
IEA Chief warns of world oil shortages by 2020 as discoveries fall to record lows
https://www.wsj.com/articles/iea-says-global-oil-discoveries-at-record-low-in-2016-1493244000
Saudi Aramco CEO sees oil supply shortage coming as investments, discoveries drop
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-aramco-oil/aramco-ceo-sees-oil-supply-shortage-as-investments-discoveries-drop-idUSKBN19V0KR
Peak Oil Vindicated by the IEA and Saudi Arabia
Here are seven peer reviewed scientific studies authored by top experts that prove beyond any reasonable doubt that global civilization will collapse within the next decade.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921800914000615
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0016236114010254
https://www.permaculture.org.au/files/Peak%20Oil_Study%20EN.pdf
http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/280/1754/20122845
http://sustainable.unimelb.edu.au/sites/default/files/docs/MSSI-ResearchPaper-4_Turner_2014.pdf
http://www.feasta.org/2012/06/17/trade-off-financial-system-supply-chain-cross-contagion-a-study-in-global-systemic-collapse/
https://www.scribd.com/document/367688629/HSBC-Peak-Oil-Report-2017
The End of the Human Race will be that it will Eventually Die of Civilization –Ralph W Emerson
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 3:34 pm
The Great Depression 1929-1940 Economic Growth GDP (1%)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Depression
The Great Recession 2006-2017 Economic Growth GDP (1.5%)
https://www.statista.com/statistics/188165/annual-gdp-growth-of-the-united-states-since-1990/
The Great Recession 2006-2017 Economic Growth GDP Per Capita (0.4%)
https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.PCAP.KD.ZG?locations=US
Global Economic Growth GDP Per Capita (1.3%)
https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.PCAP.KD.ZG
OCED Economic Growth GDP Per Capita 1970-2015 (0.5%)
https://imgur.com/a/HXBkr#Bv4I4AF
World Governments Gross Debt to GDP
https://imgur.com/a/3usX7
US Non Partisan CBO Office Forecast Less Than 2% Economic Growth GDP Through 2027
https://www.cbo.gov/publication/52801
*Note: 20% GDP Includes (FIRE) finance, insurance and real estate
Hello on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 3:45 pm
>>> when our oil shortage hits in the next few years..
when? or if?
I think I heard that one before. And not much happened. Just a bunch more negros and other assorted 3rd world got imported into the West, so business as usual.
twocats on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 3:51 pm
Or we could have a series of local collapses as bottlenecks and disasters take regions / countries out.
Katrina was a good prelude. Didn’t affect my family in Arkansas or Florida one bit even though they were 1/2 day’s drive away. Houston is a great recent example. But Puerto Rico is the gold standard. Yes, it was very convenient for the US to abandon the vassal island, but this “sectioning off” may become common across the globe as certain areas aren’t necessarily abandoned, but the rebuild might take so long it will effectively clear out the area. Puerto Rico is already the longest blackout in US history – not exactly sure how many people are still without power, but I’m pretty sure its many.
How long would you stay in your current house if it no longer had power? Or if none of your neighbors had power? But your family / friend in the next state had power?
Good time to ask this with the current climate breakdown situation – temps haven’t gone above freezing in my neck of the woods for over 10 days.
Forget two years. Half the country is two weeks away from complete implosion.
Cloggie on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 4:36 pm
“Forget two years. Half the country is two weeks away from complete implosion.”
Not entirely compatible with the “Last Man Standing” lunacy, peddled by some here.
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 4:40 pm
Hello
You didn’t hear it from the Saudi’s ever before…And the IEA has claimed peak oil would happen around 2020 back in 08 and in 10..So they haven’t changed their story….And all those Negros are going to get pay back on Whitey when the oil runs out! They will turn your daughter/sister/wife/girlfriend into their personal fuck toy!
Davy on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 4:56 pm
“Not entirely compatible with the “Last Man Standing” lunacy, peddled by some here.”
Euroland is implied in the equation also neder.
Cloggie on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 5:06 pm
“And all those Negros are going to get pay back on Whitey when the oil runs out! They will turn your daughter/sister/wife/girlfriend into their personal fuck toy!”
Millimind can’t wait to see that happening.
Payback for what… lifting them from the stone age? From being pathetic cannibals?
But ultra-red millimind has a point. He already paints a real picture of the future in the US, where he and his radicalized colored BLM allies, under the leadership of the Soros types, will attempt to wage a neo-bolshevik revolution against stupid brain-washed hen-pecked whitey.
Sissyfuss on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 5:46 pm
There is so much compulsion here in affixing an exact date to the various and sundry collapse events that are approaching but at best all we are capable of discerning are the patterns of the black swans(or vultures) circling overhead. Kuntski is at his most calamitous in his allusions towards alluvion which is die rigueur. When collapse kicks into a higher gear we shall switch our attention from one upping each other on whose prediction is most precise to trying to distract each other from the stultifying and soul numbing,unending disasters.
deadly on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 5:52 pm
The 835 billion dollars for the Defense Department will make everything great, don’t you worry.
Kunstler covers the bases, the whole enchilada is on the plate.
Does the guy ever look out his window or even go outside?
Lots of gloom and doom, hyperbole, the words used tend to take you to a depressed state of mind.
Higher education gets horsewhipped by Kunstler, that’s for sure.
Higher education is like the Catholic Church, it grants indulgences. You can make stuff up and get paid for it.
Enough to drive one to drink, which is good.
Break is over, beer drinking time.
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 6:11 pm
I know the global econony econony will collapse when the oil shortages hit. For three reasons.
1.German Army Leaked Peak Oil study
https://www.permaculture.org.au/files/Peak%20Oil_Study%20EN.pdf
2. Limits to Growth original study and 2014 updated study
http://sustainable.unimelb.edu.au/sites/default/files/docs/MSSI-ResearchPaper-4_Turner_2014.pdf
3. NASA sponsored study done by one of America’s top applied Mathematicians and scientist.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0016236114010254
4. It was an oil shortage that collapsed the Soviet Union in two years time. Based on the Study and Book “Cold War Energy, The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Union”.By Professor Douglas B Reynolds PhD, Oil and Energy Econonics, University of Alaska,Fairbanks.
3.
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 6:15 pm
CLogg
What happened to your boy Richard Spencer? He got his face beat in just like you would in real life if you started spewing your Nazism.. I am pulling your bitch cord clog!
twocats on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 7:10 pm
regional disasters… like maybe a snow-hurricane. what will happen if 100s of 1,000s lose power, and its below freezing, and the roads are white-out conditions? Better have a lot of wood for the fireplace and a gas stove. so i guess forget two weeks, some people on this forum might not have two days.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/weather/topstories/monster-storm-to-blast-east-coast-before-polar-vortex-uncorks-tremendous-cold-late-this-week/ar-BBHNo8d?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartandhp
Makati1 on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 7:24 pm
twocats, I just checked and the below freezing temps reach as far south as northern Florida. It would not take much of a storm to be a disaster.
https://earth.nullschool.net/#current/wind/surface/level/overlay=temp/orthographic=-114.38,16.25,436
A power outage would likely kill thousands.
Kevin Cobley on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 8:08 pm
Sorry, Kunstler, Trump was only voted for by 25% of the population a long way short of a public mandate, similarly, Clinton had even less support.
Attendance at the voting booth and receipt of a ballot paper should be compulsory as it is in Australia (voting is not compulsory)One is still perfectly free to submit a blank ballot or one with the appropriate comment scrawled across.
Kevin Cobley on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 8:26 pm
Since he seems to regard them as his generals (“my generals”), then he’s apparently okay with that, like a boy in the nursery with his toy soldiers.
No Kunstler has misunderstood Trump, he said “My Genitals”.
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 8:48 pm
kevin
Get some freaking help for yourself…If not for yourself for your families sake. And Trump didn’t win the election it was hacked that is why Trump lost the exit polls in several states. And Trump missed his economic goals of 4.5% GDP growth by half..You halfwit!
fmr-paultard on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 8:53 pm
((mast)) i don’t care for President Trump but I enjoyed his defense of the bumpski and declaring Jerusalem capital of Israel. I’m a liberal. I thought I’d never say it but I pray God bless and keep him safe.
DerHundistlos on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 9:17 pm
Hello-
You speak of Black people as if they live in another universe. You do realize your comments are quite hurtful.
Dooma on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 9:57 pm
No mention of Israel at all? How unusual. I guess they are just $itting back minding everyone’s businesses.
MASTERMIND on Tue, 2nd Jan 2018 10:15 pm
Dooma
Kunt is a Jew that is why…
Cloggie on Wed, 3rd Jan 2018 12:49 am
Again a post that descends in the memory hole and I have to post edit not to make it look like the previous one.
>>> Solar and Wind produced less than one percent of total world energy in 2016
wow. I didn’t think it was that bad.
Millimind never presents an accurate link; it is more likely to be 2% of primary energy. But… the share in Europe is the highest and is millimind would be right about peak oil induced collapse (he isn’t) it would simply mean that the Europeans have the most renewable reserves (currently about 20% primary energy and rapidly increasing) and best chances to survive.
more meaningless template text
But millimind isn’t right and European companies are going to make a killing in building renewable infrastructure in the US.
Cloggie on Wed, 3rd Jan 2018 12:51 am
How about this link instead of Google crap:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-age-of-wind-and-solar-is-closer-than-you-think/
The Age of Wind and Solar Is Closer Than You Think