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This is a road to disaster ... I don't see a solution
What is next? If the "Great Depression 2" scenario plays
out, what's after 2011? Recovery? A new bull? How can you protect your
money? Or are we all helpless victims of the raging winds of fate and
Wall Street's self-serving brand of capitalism.
Let's review several scenarios in the bright lens of Akira Kurosawa's
classic 1950 film, "Rashomon," at once an ancient Kabuki morality play,
a tense modern courtroom drama, and a revealing documentary on human
psychology. In "Rashomon" we witness the murder of a Samurai warrior and
a rape through the eyes of several witnesses, each swearing they saw
what "really happened."
This is a road to disaster ... I don't see a solution
We "see" these tragedies in a forest through the eyes of a Woodcutter,
Priest, Samurai's Wife, the accused Bandit, and the Samurai, speaking
through a Medium. But as "the facts" unfold, the lies and contractions
of biased minds are exposed and the truth becomes increasingly blurred.
In the end, we are still wondering: What really happened?
Similarly, today we're asking; "What really happened to America, so
fast?" With Bush, Paulson, Bernanke and their Reaganomics ideology? To
my 401(k), my CDs, my kid's college fund, my retirement nest egg. To the
great American dream? What happened?
Nightmare scenario No. 1: No exit, a never-ending disaster
Remember former Goldman Chairman John Whitehead? He "sees" a tragic
ending: This Reagan Deputy Secretary of State and former New York Fed
chairman "sees" America burning through trillions, over many years:
"Nothing but large increases in the deficit ... worse than the
Depression." See previous Paul B. Farrell.
He worries that "tomorrow is the day Moody's and S&P will announce a
downgrade of U.S. government bonds." Politicians and public are
delusional, promising huge new programs plus tax cutting: "This is a
road to disaster.' Like Sartre's existential tragedy, "No Exit," he
says: "I don't see a solution."
If this dialogue emerged in "Rashomon," deep in the forest, I could
"see" Whitehead pointing a finger at Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson,
accusing him of terrible deeds.
Nightmare scenario No. 2: Washington's unsustainable deficits
True to the "Rashomon" narrative Warren Buffett "sees" America sinking
in a swamp of unsustainable debt to justify our excessive spending --
government, consumer, corporate.
Remember Buffett's famous farmer's story: "We were taught in Economics
101 that countries could not for long sustain large, ever-growing trade
deficits." America "has been behaving like an extraordinarily rich
family that possesses an immense farm. In order to consume 4% more than
they produce, that's the trade deficit, we have, day by day, been both
selling pieces of the farm and increasing the mortgage on what we still
own." See previous Paul B. Farrell.
Like his farmers, we borrowed $700 billion a year to live high on the
hog, selling off American assets. Now foreign sovereign funds own
trillions of our assets. Today Uncle Warren's story is less a children's
fairy tale and more a "Rashomon" tragedy.
Nightmare scenario No. 3: The endless 100-year bear market
Robert Prechter's a brilliant market forecaster and editor of the
Elliott Wave Theorist newsletter. As early as 1978 he predicted the
"raging bull market of the 1980s." Many laughed. Then tech roared and he
became "Guru of the Decade."
In the "Rashomon" cast he's credible. And ahead again: He "saw" the
future in his "At the Crest of the Wave: A Forecast of the Great Bear
Market." Today's darkening markets ride his "wave" theories: Rapidly
unfolding, accelerating and intensifying economic cycles. First the
dot-com crash, then the subprime housing bull, the credit meltdown, now
the coming "Great Depression 2."
This is a road to disaster ... I don't see a solution
In the '90s, Prechter had another vision from deep in the forest. Again
we ignored him. No more. The same wisdom that let him "see" the 1980's
bull years before it took off, may accurately predict the coming
100-year bear market well ahead of time. See previous Paul B. Farrell.
Nightmare scenario No. 4: Pentagon 'warfare defines human life'
In "Rashomon" they see all, we nothing. In courtrooms, lawyers deceive,
suppress the truth. Paulson and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke are masters of
deception in the courtroom of public opinion, as descendents of former
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.
One intentional leak (obviously designed as a tactic to stoke public
fear and create budget support for the DOD's war machine) surfaced in
the early days of the Iraq War. Fortune analyzed a classified military
report, the Pentagon's "Weather Nightmare:" "Climate could change
radically and fast. That would be the mother of all national security
issues ... massive droughts, turning farmland into dust bowls and
forests to ashes ... by 2020 there is little doubt that something
drastic is happening ... an old pattern could emerge; warfare defining
human life." See previous Paul B. Farrell.
Today, as a "Great Depression" and a "100-year Bear Market" become more
real than a "Rashomon" sequel, ask yourself: Are there too many people?
Too few resources? Too many competing special interests? In America?
Worldwide? Are we all too greedy to compromise? Are we then left
vulnerable to Paulson's multiple Reaganomics "weapons of financial mass
destruction," land mines surviving his exit in bailout "sleeper cells,"
left to sabotage government budgets, taxpayers and the future of
America?
Nightmare scenario No. 5: Too many people, too few resources
The Earth supports 6.5 billion people. The United Nations predicts there
will be 9.1 billion by 2050, all competing against 400 million Americans
for ever-scarcer resources. The L.A. Times says that a U.N. report
"paints a near-apocalyptic vision of Earth's future: hundreds of
millions of people short of water, extreme food shortages in Africa, a
landscape ravaged by floods and millions of species sentenced to
extinction."
Today's news suggests we may already be there, for the population
explosion is the mother of all bubbles, a "nuclear" bomb that will
explode all other bubbles, ushering onto the "Rashomon" stage a reality
far beyond a 100-year bear, on a desolate, post-apocalyptic WALL-E
planet Earth. See previous Paul B. Farrell.
This is a road to disaster ... I don't see a solution
Nightmare scenario No. 6: Star Trek's bold new 'end of days'
One "Star Trek: The Next Generation" episode haunts me, much like "Rashomon."
In it past and future collide. Set in the 23rd century, "Inner Light"
gives us a brief end-of-days look at the star-crossed future of two
civilizations, one boldly exploring new worlds, the other leaving behind
but a small sad trace of its mysterious disappearance. Two planets,
which is our metaphor? See previous Paul B. Farrell.
This is a road to disaster ... I don't see a solution
The Enterprise encounters a probe floating in space. Suddenly an energy
beam zaps Captain Picard. He wakes up on an alien planet. Recovering
from a fever he is "Kamin," can't recognize his "wife." Friends think
he's delusional, mumbling about being a starship captain. Trapped in
this parallel universe, time passes. Memories of his prior life fade. He
falls in love with his wife, raises a family, kids, grandkids, lives the
peaceful life he only imagined in space.
But his new planet's resources gradually disappear. Temperatures rise.
Water scarcer. Desert lands spread. The Pentagon scenario? Near the end,
he watches a missile soar into space, an intergalactic time capsule, a
final record of a once-great civilization.
Suddenly the probe turns off. Picard awakes on floor of the Enterprise
bridge. Twenty minutes passed. Engine power returns. They continue
boldly going where no one has gone before, left with memories of a
simple life on a dying planet that vanished eons ago. Ask yourself: Are
we boldly going anywhere? Will someone, someday be reading our probe?
Nightmare scenario No. 7: No-Growth Economics vs. Neo-Capitalism
While Goldman former Chairman Whitehead gave up, there is still a
solution, one way to dodge the "Great Depression 2," the "100-Year
Bear." I reviewed this scenario in a recent issue of Adbusters magazine,
where legendary economist Herman Daly was recently named "Man of the
Year."
The Center for the Advancement of the Steady State Economy" says this
new greener economic theory calls for "stabilized population and
consumption. Such stability means that the amount of resource throughput
and waste disposal remains roughly constant." In this theory, all
systems are in balance.
This is a road to disaster ... I don't see a solution
"The key features of a steady state economy are: sustainable scale, in
which economic activities fit within the capacity provided by
ecosystems; fair distribution of wealth; and efficient allocation of
resources."
This new economics may be what sustains the Star Trek culture in the
23rd century, but unfortunately, it is unlikely to get broad support in
today's free market Reaganomics capitalism, let alone support from
America's political parties or any sovereign nations in today's highly
competitive international arena ... at least not until we've gone past
the point of no return, like that mysterious planet recorded on the
probe discovered in the 23rd century by Star Trek's Captain Picard.
As in "Rashomon," we "see" many competing scenarios, "seen" through many
competing "eyes.' Yet, for the victims, the end game is always
tragically irreversible. We may, however, find some comfort in the "wave
theory," for all waves emerge, ripple, oscillate, accelerate until they
inevitably self-destruct and fade.
Earth appears destined to accelerate to 9 billion ... exhausting Earth's
resources ... in a self-destructive Pentagon global warfare scenario ...
driven by another Great Depression ... and 100-year bear market. In the
end Whitehead said it all: "This is a road to disaster ... I don't see a
solution."
Probe dims, fade to black. Or will we finally wake up ... and take
command of our starship?
This is a road to disaster ... I don't see a solution |