With each passing day, we get closer to the shift in the tide that
will sweep away this self-serving delusion of the ruling elites like a
crumbling sand castle.
Those living in revolutionary times are rarely aware of the tumult
ahead: in
1766, a mere decade before the Declaration of Independence, virtually no one
was calling for American independence. Indeed, in 1771, a mere 5 years before
the rebellion was declared, the voices promoting independence were few and far
between.
The shift from a
pre-revolutionary era to a revolutionary era took less than a year. Perhaps no one
exemplified the rapidity and totality of radicalization more than Benjamin
Franklin, who went from an avowed Loyalist bent on reform to a dedicated,
zealous revolutionary at the tender age of 70. (Old dogs can learn new tricks,
at least in revolutionary eras.)
Recall that
news could only travel as fast as a ship between seaports or a horse on the
colonies' minimalist roads, and it took days to travel between Boston,
Philadelphia and New York, and much longer to reach Williamsburg and Charleston
and points west. Communications were slow and limited, and this makes the rapid
change of the political tide even more extraordinary.
Are we in a pre-revolutionary era? Here's clue #1: politics has failed. When the
political process can no longer fix what's broken, politics has failed. When entire classes
of citizenry no longer feel represented, politics has failed. When the system
delivers a steadily declining standard of living to the bottom 80% of
households, politics has failed.
Clue #2: having failed, the
political machinery passed the baton to the central bank, which attempted to
fix what's broken by creating money out of thin air."Free" money
and low-cost credit has always been viewed as the go-to fix for whatever's
broken, because it's, well, free to the issuing central state and politically
popular (everybody loves free money, free bread and free circuses).
This
political expediency works for a time--hence it's popularity throughout
history-- but eventually the asymmetries, perverse incentives and unintended
consequences pile up and the entire financial system capsizes.
Clue #3: America's monetary
substitute for political process has failed. The failure isn't visible to those
paid not to look at centralized failure, but it's visible to objective
observers. Glance at the chart below: the Federal Reserve has announced it will
end reducing its "emergency response to save the world" balance sheet
in September 2019, leaving it roughly $3 trillion larger than it was a decade
ago in the pre-crisis definition of "normal."
This
exceedingly modest reduction has been called "normalization," and so
the end of "normalization" means we're back to normal, right?
Calling the extraordinarily
abnormal balance sheet "normal" doesn't magically render it normal.
The magic trick of substituting
monetary policy for the political process has failed. Creating credit
and currency out of thin air is not a substitute for the loss of
representation, soaring inequality, the dominance of parasitic elites or for
responding to the changing realities of finance, economics, demographics or
resources.
Central banks only have a few
levers, and when they lower interest rates and buy assets, they're only
temporarily propping up a failing system: they've fixed nothing. Huge swaths
of the populace are still unrepresented; parasitic elites still dominate the financial
and political systems; wealth and income inequality has been greatly
accelerated; the majority of people are still losing ground and their
wealth/income are increasingly precarious.
Revolutions are manifestations of dynamics that have been festering
beneath the surface for decades. Those benefiting
from a failing status quo--the top 5% that dominate finance, government, the
media, think tanks, philanthro-capitalist foundations, higher education and the
national defense/healthcare cartels--all reckon that since the system works great for me, it works great for everyone.
With each passing day, we get closer to the shift
in the tide that will sweep away this self-serving delusion of the ruling
elites like a crumbling sand castle.
Pathfinding our Destiny: Preventing the Final Fall of Our Democratic Republic ($6.95 ebook, $12 print, $13.08 audiobook): Read the first section for free in PDF format.
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