UndercoverElephant wrote:
And anyway...the financial problems do have solutions. The problem is that all of those solutions look like Christmas to the turkeys who run the political/economic system, and turkeys don't vote for Christmas. The solution for the US, for example, is a massive programme of austerity, where they (shock!, horror!) seriously cut back on military and other spending and (shock!, horror!) raise taxes.
But how much of a solution is that? The kinds of cuts required would essentially mean the Government disappearing completely. Do you think American society would organise itself for a peaceful decline? I'm afraid I don't. It's too individualistic, too greedy, and in some places too violent.
The reasons the US won't do this are primarily political, not economic.
I don't think that's really true. Where are jobs going to come from?
I don't think the most stringent spending cuts could really make a dent in the US financial mess. In fact, spending has been if anything more reckless in the run-up to PO, since TPTB recognised that they were screwed whatever happened, and they might as well milk the system for all it was worth in the time it had left.
Sooner or later, somehow or other, a lot of people are going to lose a lot of money and nearly everybody is going to find their standard of living deteriorating. But we knew that anyway, didn't we?
That's true but the word "deteriorating" I feel does little justice to the scale of the changes that would ensue.
We often use the term "getting poorer". It sounds fairly harmless - as though it's just a question of everybody making do with a little less. In practice, "getting poorer" is the process whereby, one by one, people get pushed off the table of employment and relative affluence, onto the floor of unemployment, poverty and despair.
From 30000 feet up, the process looks fairly gradual, but for each individual it is sudden and traumatic.
"We're just waiting, looking skyward as the days go down / Someone promised there'd be answers if we stayed around."