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The Economic Tsunami

Posted: Mon Apr 11, 2005 9:22 pm
by Jim O'Bryan
How does this affect Lakewood, and our future?



By MIKE WHITNEY



"If the world's central bankers accumulate fewer dollars, the result

would be an unrelenting American need to borrow in the face of an

ever weaker dollar - a recipe for higher interest rates and higher

prices. The economic repercussions could unfold gradually, resulting

in a long, slow decline in living standards. Or there could be a

quick unraveling, with the hallmarks of an uncontrolled fiscal crisis."



New York Times editorial 4-2-05



It seems that there are a growing number of people who believe as I do, that the economic tsunami planned by the Bush administration is probably only months away. In just 5 short years the national debt has increased by nearly 3 trillion dollars while the dollar has continued its predictable decline. The dollar has fallen a whopping 38% since Bush took office, due largely to the massive $450 billion per year tax cuts. At the same time, numerous laws have been passed (Patriot Act, Intelligence Reform Bill, Homeland Security Bill, National ID, Passport requirements etc) anticipating the need for greater repression when the economy takes its inevitable nosedive. Regrettably, that nosedive looks to be coming sooner rather than later.



The administration is currently putting as much pressure as possible on OPEC to ratchet up the flow of oil another 1 million barrels per day (well over capacity) to settle down nervous markets and buy time for the planned bombing of Iran in June. Like Fed Chief Alan Greenspan's artificially low interest rates, the manipulation of oil production is a way of concealing how dire the situation really is. Rising prices at the pump signal an upcoming recession, (depression?) so the administration is pulling out all the stops to meet the short term demand and maintain the illusion that things are still okay. (Bush would rather avoid massive popular unrest until his battle-plans for Iran are carried out)



But, of course, things are not okay. The country has been intentionally plundered and will eventually wind up in the hands of its creditors as Bush and his lieutenants planned from the very beginning. Those who don't believe this should note the methodical way that the deficits have been produced at (around) $450 billion per year; a systematic and orderly siphoning off of the nation's future. The value of the dollar and the increasing national debt follow exactly the same (deliberate) downward trajectory.



This same Ponzi scheme has been carried out repeatedly by the IMF and World Bank throughout the world; Argentina being the last dramatic illustration. (Argentina's economic collapse occurred when its trade deficit was running at 4%; right now ours is at an unprecedented 6%.) Bankruptcy is a fairly straight forward way of delivering valuable public assets and resources to collaborative industries, and of annihilating national sovereignty. After a nation is successfully driven to destitution, public policy decisions are made by creditors and not by representatives of the people. (Enter, Paul Wolfowitz)



Did Americans really believe they could avoid a similar fate?



If so, they'd better forget about it, because the hammer is about to come down big-time, and the collateral damage will be huge.



The Bush administration is mainly comprised of internationalists. That doesn't mean that they "hate America"; simply that they are committed to bringing America into line with the "new world order" and an economic regime that has been approved by corporate and financial elites alike. Their patriotism extends no further than the garish tri-colored flag on their lapel. The catastrophe that middle class Americans face is what these elites breezily refer to as "shock therapy"; a sudden jolt, followed by fundamental changes to the system. In the near future we can expect tax reform, fiscal discipline, deregulation, free capital flows, lowered tariffs, reduced public services, and privatization. In other words, a society entirely designed to service the needs of corporations.



There are a number of signs that the economy is close to meltdown-stage. Even with cheap energy, low interest rates and $450 billion in borrowed revenue pumped into the system each year, the economy is still barely treading water. This has a lot to due with the colossal shifting of wealth brought on by the tax cuts. Supply-side, trickle-down theories have been widely discredited and Bush's tax cuts have done nothing to stimulate the economy as promised. Now, with oil tilting towards $60 per barrel, the economic landscape is changing quickly, and shock-waves are already being felt throughout the country.



The Iraq war has contributed considerably to our current dilemma. The conflict has taken nearly one million barrels of Iraqi oil per day off line.(The exact amount that the administration is trying to replace by pressuring OPEC) In other words, the astronomical prices at the pump are the direct result of Bush's war. The media has failed to report on the negative affects the war has had on oil production, just as they have obscured the incredibly successful insurgent strategy of destroying pipelines. This isn't a storyline that plays well to the American public, who expected that Iraq would be paying for its own reconstruction by now. Instead, the resistance is striking back at the empire's Achilles heel (America's need for massive amounts of cheap oil) and its having a damaging affect on the US economy.



Just as the economy cannot float along with sharp increases in oil prices, so too, Bush's profligate deficits threaten the dollar's status as the world's reserve currency. This is much more serious than a simple decline in the value of the dollar. If the major oil producers convert from the dollar to the euro, the American economy will sink almost overnight. If oil is traded in euros then central banks around the world would be compelled to follow and America will be required to pay off its enormous $8 trillion debt. That, of course, would be doomsday for the American economy. But, a recent report indicates that two-thirds of the world's 65 central banks have already "begun to move from dollars to euros." The Bush plan to savage the dollar has been telegraphed around the world and, as the New York Times says, "the greenback has nowhere to go but down". There's only one thing that the administration can do to ensure that energy dealers keep trading in dollars.control the flow of oil. That means that an attack on Iran is nearly a certainty.



The difficulties facing both the dollar and the economy are not insurmountable. The world has been more than willing to compensate for America's wasteful spending as long as America shows itself to be a responsible steward of the global economy. However, the administration's military and economic recklessness suggests that some of the key players on the world stage (particularly Russia, Iran, Venezuela, Germany, France, China, Brazil) are collaborating on an alternate plan; a contingency plan. If Iran is bombed in an unprovoked act of aggression, we will certainly see this plan activated. The most likely scenario would be a quick switch to the euro that would have grave implications for the American economy. (Russia has already indicated that it will do this) For Iran, an attack would justify arming disparate terrorist organizations with the weaponry they need to attack American and Israeli interests wherever they may be. In any event, an unprovoked attack will dispel the remaining illusions about Bush's war against terror and confirm to everyone that we are engaged in a new world war; a conflict for global domination.



The neoliberal chickens have come home to roost. America has become the latest staging ground for the eccentric economic policies of the Washington Consensus. The towering national debt coupled with the staggering trade deficits have put the nation on a precipice and a seismic shift in the fortunes of middle-class Americans is looking more likely all the time. The New York Times summarized the country's prospects like this:



"The economic repercussions could unfold gradually, resulting in a

long, slow decline in living standards. Or there could be a quick

unraveling, with the hallmarks of an uncontrolled fiscal crisis."



"An uncontrolled fiscal crisis"... America's future under George Bush. We are facing years of collective struggle ahead. If there's a quick fix, I have no idea what it might be.



*Mike Whitney* lives in Washington state. He can be reached at: fergiewhitney@msn.com <mailto:fergiewhitney@msn.com>

Posted: Tue Apr 26, 2005 8:59 am
by Stephen Calhoun
The economic repercussions could unfold gradually, resulting in a

long, slow decline in living standards.




This has been unfolding since the mid-seventies and the Viet Nam era overhang in structural deficits melded with the hollowing out of manufacturing lifetime employment. Adjusted for inflation, marked to the purchasing power at median income, household income has been stagnant.



In other words, as the class of affluent lower upper class households has grown, those gains have been offset by the sinking into worse living standards at the level of the so-called middle class.



You can look it up, or, drive around the depopulated Cleveland.



The trick the corporate aristocracy and plutocracy has to manage is how to sustain one-party rule in the aftermath of a severe labor recession. It's hard to imagine the free market evangelical social darwinists holding onto power should actual unemployment (if counted accurately about 9% right now,) for example, double.

Posted: Tue Apr 26, 2005 11:58 am
by Jim O'Bryan
Stephen Calhoun wrote:[i]The trick the corporate aristocracy and plutocracy has to manage is how to sustain one-party rule in the aftermath of a severe labor recession. It's hard to imagine the free market evangelical social darwinists holding onto power should actual unemployment (if counted accurately about 9% right now,) for example, double.




Da Nile is not just a river in Africa.



Hunter Thompson has summed it up so nicely with, "Generation of the Swine."



I mean Iraq was going to attack sooner or, er a well they didn't like us. Well maybe that is not a good enough reason, but it will just have to do. I have to run out to Walmart because I can't afford anything else and they are er helping, well maybe ...



It is pitiful.





Jim O'Bryan

THE VALUE OF VIDEO TAPES

Posted: Wed Apr 27, 2005 10:24 am
by Stephen Calhoun
You doubled up on me, man. Two can play that game!



Enantiodromia. Look it up, grab some popcorn, sit in the cosmic bleachers and watch the train wreck.



The so-called right-wing and the so-called left wing, (and me being so far to the left I'm right,) are foils of cosmic tennis.



Jim, the Dems are much much stranger a bird than the Pubs. I expect free marketers to be blind to the true nature of the system while they tactically tilt the board into their hungry maw; I expect true believers in concretized chains of being to not be in training; I expect originalist intentors/interpreters to not know of Lyotard, let alone Wittgenstein; I expect 50-something red staters to lie about their past drug use.



But, I expect most college educated democrats to know who Shakespeare and Freud were, and to -at least- act as if Richard III and The Future of An Illusion are about really important stuff.



Oh, nooo, that would be too hard!



***



So, we have an economic depression. Yoked to the swirl of overnight paper money the system reconfigures. It's too late for the swine Greenspan to jack rates up. The concept, China's war against terrorism is financed by U.S., implodes.



The Asian markets die first, then, given the specialty of the U.S. for cinematic grandeur, the Dow goes from 10,000 to 7,000 in half-a-day. Dow is closed. Banks close the next day. Online banking follows. But, it's too late because the overnight on treasuries gets about a two day swirl before the European Stock Exchanges suspend their operation. Nobody can set a rate on short terms because they've devalued so quickly. U.S.; nobody wants to reopen the banks knowing that the peeps will cash out.



Even Ken Lay has a cow. Literally, has one in a manger.



Central bankers don't know what to do. After all, the Chinese only shifted 200 billion. It's too late anyway. Nominal interest rates to reinflate Treasuries look to be a moving target moving around 20%. If there's a bank run and consumer debt tracks a radical interest hike, (those bastard credit card companies stop calling at dinner time!) the world economy goes into a depression as the US economy throws a rod.



It doesn't matter it throws the rod anyway. It's too late. Bent over.



***



One year out Lakewood has gone through a sharp cycle of depopulation as unemployed renters are evicted, and re-population, as kids come home to live with their older parents. It's not quite a wash, ending up at 40,000.



US unemployment is at 30%. The immediate solution was a military draft in exchange for subsistence. In the aftermath of the necessary declaration of martial law, the US house of representatives is disbanded. The senate enacts military workfare enabling the US to, finally, take over Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, and assert their interest in the Caspian. With a 5,000,000 person army, Special President Bush styles the back-to-work project as a 'make arms to never use them' public works.



It works well too. Al-Quaeda remains mostly quiet. Osama Bin Laden is arrested coaching a mosque's b-ball team in Toronto. When pushed even a little bit the U.S. issues a directive that our mini-nukes will be our certain response. (An empty island off the Aleutians is used to demonstrate what this means.)



***



Lakewood survives this all- as best as can be expected. Community activism feeds a lot of people but eventually gates have to be erected to vet entry.



The library does bang-up business because people have a lot of time on their hands. Because the entertainment industry was one of the first massive implosions in the economic collapse, they don't crank out DVD to any large extent.



The library's video collection turns out to be crucial in all this; most remaining residents have retained their TVs and VHS boxes; and grown fond of John Ford.

Posted: Wed Apr 27, 2005 11:03 am
by Stephen Calhoun
I forgot to add.



Scripp is big time during the big D. Your picture ends up on the tenner. After all, you company is contracted to be the mint.

Posted: Wed Apr 27, 2005 4:43 pm
by Dan Slife
And what of the Amish? Might unemployed Lakewoodites have something to offer in return for a meal ticket. We'll finally have to take the West End, level it, and farm it.

Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2005 5:35 am
by Jim O'Bryan
Dan Slife wrote:And what of the Amish? Might unemployed Lakewoodites have something to offer in return for a meal ticket. We'll finally have to take the West End, level it, and farm it.






Dan



It might be better to go with grape vines. In time of financial and other forms of depression bars and alcohol are real winners. But i think the good farm land is closer to the lake.



Jim O'Bryan

Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2005 5:43 am
by Stephen Calhoun
Contest idea.



Think up of brand names for the orders of local beverage necessary in troubled times, from fey grape-based stem glass tinklers to corn-based shine.



Gold Coast Gut Snapper?

Posted: Fri Apr 29, 2005 11:03 pm
by Kenneth Warren
Lakewood Observer and the Impermanent Post



The Lakewood Observer is born on the eye of "The Economic Tsunami."

This is, indeed, a time of incredible flux and transition, not only in Lakewood but all around the globe.



Economic models and structures are changing fast. Look out.



Thus "The Economic Tsunami" is a compelling articulation that calls into question the matrix of instigations that spawn a visionary organ such as the Lakewood Observer into the particular life conditions and cultural traditions of Lakewood and its civic personalities.



Which Lakewood traditions are going "post"-al? Which traditions are to be documented, transmitted and preserved?



How is human knowledge to be leveraged intelligently, locally, in the face of The Economic Tsunami?



Peter Drucker writes in the introduction to Post Capitalist Society.



ìNothing "post" is permanent or even long-lived. Ours is a transition period. What the future society will look like, let alone whether it will indeed be the "knowledge society" some of us dare hope for, depends on how the developed countries respond to the challenges of this transition period, the post-capitalist period - their intellectual leaders, their business leaders, the political leaders, but above all, each of us in our own work and life. Yet surely this is a time to make the future -- precisely because everything is in flux. This is a time for action.î



Thus civic personalities in Lakewood rise into expressive action.



Typically expression replicates and diffuses in virtual space with little actual social effect on community practice. The value of communication is likely subject to deflationary pressure.



Talk is cheap, and getting cheaper with each podcast.



Hence there may be a post-virtual instigation that emerges in the actual space of neighbors in Lakewood, paper in hand, headphones over ears.



Can the Lakewood Observer compel expression in Lakewood to cohere in an effective way, producing meaningful post-capital means of exchange among persons participating in this knowledge building Lakewood experiment?



The Economic Tsunami dictates that revenue from classified ads cannot be a serious consideration for this knowledge building experiment in the Lakewood community.



Technology applies new competitive pressures to advertising models.



In The Great Transition Part I: Giant Popping Sound, M.A. Nystrom observes deflationary factors in the global economy.



Here is one example, with the focus on the classified advertising business:



ìWebsites such as Craigslist are examples of the new ICT that Drucker speaks of that are not only making the world smaller, but chipping away at its current structure by contributing to deflation. The no-nonsense Craigslist does a thriving, grassroots level classified advertising business in cities across the US and around the world for person-to-person transactions. The service itself is deflationary since its ads are completely free. This is great for users but it is costing the traditional suppliers of classified advertising services -- local newspapers -- tens of millions of dollars in potential advertising revenue. News of its existence has spread like wildfire by word of mouth, meaning the big ad agencies on Madison Avenue also missed out on millions in potential revenue as well. This kind of pressure will cause the traditional providers to change their business models or to perish.î See: http://www.bullnotbull.com/bull/Article39.html



What communication forces and regional interests will the grassroots inquiries, instigations, narratives and transmissions of the Lakewood Observer undercut in the struggle for community coherence and local civic brand differentiation?



How long can civic coherence last in a ìpostîÖÖ



Again this is time for intelligent action among neighbors on multiple platforms, nimble enough to navigate The Economic Tsunami of a post-capital snap, crackle and pop.



To paraphrase James Carville, it's the human post-capital, stupid.



Kenneth Warren

Still Time For Lakewood Grinders

Posted: Thu May 12, 2005 5:53 pm
by Kenneth Warren
In "US begging for dollar devaluation," Jephraim P Gundzik argues that the Bush strategy is actually dollar devaluation, not yuan revaluation. Writing for the Asian Times Online, Gundzik notes:



îThough referred to by the Bush administration as yuan revaluation, what Washington is begging Beijing for is dollar devaluation. Like the 1985 Plaza Accord, Washington is again asking one of its largest trade partners to allow the dollar to depreciate. However, instead of Japan, as was the case in 1985, the US is pushing China to allow the dollar to depreciate against the yuan. The Plaza Accord led to the eventual devaluation of the dollar by about 50% against other major currencies. There is strong reason to believe that what begins as dollar depreciation against the yuan will eventually become another Plaza-style dollar devaluation.î



For more:

http://atimes.com/atimes/China/GE13Ad02.html



Maybe thereís still time for the silver backed Lakewood Grinders.



For more see:

http://www.lkwdpl.org/city/lakewooddollars/



Kenneth Warren

Re: Still Time For Lakewood Grinders

Posted: Thu May 12, 2005 10:18 pm
by Jim O'Bryan
Kenneth Warren wrote:


For more:

http://atimes.com/atimes/China/GE13Ad02.html



Maybe thereís still time for the silver backed Lakewood Grinders.



For more see:

http://www.lkwdpl.org/city/lakewooddollars/



Kenneth Warren




Always time for Grinders, working on art.



Nice link, it is just amazing how this stuff flies under the radar.





Jim O'Bryan

Posted: Tue May 24, 2005 10:09 pm
by Kenneth Warren
Gar Alperovitz, Lionel R. Bauman Professor of Political Economy at the University of Maryland, notes a progressive mix of municipal, community development and co-op strategies are shaping up across America due to the economic stresses wrought by the Neoliberal pressures of "the ownership society. He writes in an article drawn from his recent book, America Beyond Capitalism : Reclaiming Our Wealth, Our Liberty and Our Democracy. (Wiley 2005):

ìThere are also sophisticated and highly developed community-benefitting ownership strategies available at the local level. For instance, some 4,000 to 6,000 nonprofit neighborhood corporations now regularly invest inóand ownóhousing and businesses and provide other services on behalf of communities throughout the United States. In Newark, N.J., one such corporationóNew Communities, Inc.ógenerates $50 million in economic activity each year, employs more than 1,600 people and uses its ownership position to leverage other community services.

Still another strategy operating just below the level of media concern involves cities becoming owners of productive and profitable enterprises which make money, produce new revenues and help the local economy in a variety of other ways. Enterprises range from hotels and large-scale city-owned real estate projects (especially in connection with transit development) to cable television, Internet and other services. And, of course, there are some 2,000 public utilities operating at the local level. Many efforts have proven so effective that even Republican mayors have begun to back new municipal enterprise strategies.

A fully developed approach could also include support for producer and consumer co-operatives and for land trusts (which turn another form of non-profit community ownership into support for low and moderate income housing). A surprisingly large constituency is there for the asking, especially in connection with new applications of the co-op principle. More than 100 million Americans are already members of one or another form of co-op.

For more see:
http://www.tompaine.com/articles/200505 ... ociety.php

Kenneth Warren

Posted: Wed May 25, 2005 6:54 am
by Jim O'Bryan
Ken

Although the city getting involved sounds great I believe there are a couple legitimate hurdles that would have to be erased before this could happen. Also I wonder the wisdom of reducing these hurdles even a little bit.

One, I believe, is restrictions on governments competing with privately owned businesses.

I also think you yourself have found some of these hurdles while preparing for the Inkpen talk on Community Currency at the Library.

It is up to the residents to work together to build the system. I really think cities like Lakewood, Cleveland, even Bay and River are near the end of asking for more public funds for anything. The gravy train is over, the region is failing. Residents need to take as much burden off city hall as possible.

Jim O'Bryan

Posted: Thu May 26, 2005 3:27 pm
by Kenneth Warren
Jim:

I am not so sure we have done the necessary inquiry, assessed citizen DIY capacity or even registered the level of experience in Lakewood to dismiss the idea of municipal enterprise out of the box.

I know that I have not.

The scale of undertaking and capital requirements for the transformative matters (from Lake recon aquaculture and sustainable energy to broadband and Cafe U) being dreamed aloud may be what divides our thinking right now.

Perhaps such a big ticket undertaking is not feasible. I apologize if these first seeds of municipal enterprise bore you.

I will press on, nonetheless, respectful of your level of suspicion about think tanks, academics and the state apparatus. I will voice my own about how fee-based municipal enterprise models can undermine support for traditional public goods, including public libraries. So your point about Inkpen's libertarian value set and general hostility to the needy dependent on social welfare arrangements is well taken.

Allow me, however, to submit for your scrutiny a brief summary on “Municipal Enterpriseâ€Â

Posted: Fri May 27, 2005 10:25 am
by Stephen Calhoun
It would be interesting to fill out a map of the different orders through which a SWOT analysis could be run on all this; a multivarious assessment of strategic factors would result.

By the way, the dream is now and the question of magnitude of its components can be considered in any number of ways. We might first appreciate the differences between modern 'old school' (i.e. engineering, materialistic, behavioral, etc.) forms of consideration; post-modern (i.e. dynamic, processual, discoursive, language complicating, etc.) forms of consideration, and, various soteric forms of consideration, (i.e. energetics, magical, spiritual, depth-psychological, integral, spiral-dynamical, etc.). These are just three different modes.

For example, the bugaboo of funding is perspected differently in each mode of consideration. Politics is perspected differently. Etc.

To leap: one way of visioning BIG is to implicate what BIG requires in each order it is entangled, vital, to. Tis true a certain rigor is required!

BIG visions are cheap, yet BIG visions with BIG energetics behind them achieve gravity in distinctive ways.

I don't think there is any reason anymore to use 10% of our cognitive capabilities. In amplifying capability, through doing it, through forming this into a practice, into practices, through surrendering our resistences and prejudices, we can begin to look at municipal projects anew aknew!. ...even: askew! 'ask-you'.

***

Plug in the conventional devil's advocacy. Sure. Let's find some new devils too.

I harp on the problem of the medical model. There's a ton more I could add to this critique. For now, in the form of a question:

"How do we richly reconsider and re-cognize the problems of justification? Self-justification? Activist justification? Institutional justification? Civic justification? Project justification? etc.?"

Still another strategy operating just below the level of media concern involves cities becoming owners of productive and profitable enterprises which make money, produce new revenues and help the local economy in a variety of other ways.


There are a lot of types of enterprises. Hard-nosed investors are adept at asking questions about what is 'justifiable,' justifies their investment.

Tie together the modes of analysis and modes of justification.

***

However, what's the BIGGEST PRODUCT? What kinds of products do you find in the concrete hierarchy of product 'offerings'?

I'll name one: Windows OS.

Here's another: LINUX.

Two different models.

What if Lakewood's Municipal Product was expertise? Cognitive tools? Interdisciplinary chops?

What if its product lines were chalk full of "how to" materials?

What if its web site drew 500,000+ hits a day?

What's its advertising model in a global economy?

What if it cost outsiders real smolians to discover how it is the bar was set HIGH, the vision was BIG, and the SUCCESS RATE was exceptional, (ha! was the exception to the damn 'rules)?

What if it made for good cinema?

Good books?

Good zines?

So, ponder the magnitude of the economy underpinning the open source LINUX.

Consider too the justification of civic alchemy in a particular locale and time in the frame of reference where it is possible others outside of Lakewood might wish to get a bit of whatLakewood has got.

One way to look at it: it should cost 'em.

Muny software. BIG APPLICATION.

HUGE