The American
Way of Life
is Dead…
By Stanislav
Mishin
October 10,
2008 "Information
Clearinghouse"
-- The
American way
of life is
dead and
like a
beheaded
corpse,
still
stumbling
around, it
has yet to
come to that
realization
that should
be obvious
to anyone.
The American
way of life,
a system
unsustainable
by any
stretch of
the
imagination,
was
facilitated
on two
facts: cheap
gas and a
valuable
currency,
the currency
then
morphing
into cheap
credit.
Since the US
signed a
deal with
Saudi Arabia
to value oil
only in US
dollar,
something
that
happened in
1948, the US
dollar has
been a
powerful
currency,
quickly
rising to
the level of
the world
reserve
currency. As
soon as all
nations
needed the
dollar to
purchase
oil, there
seemed to be
no end as to
how many
dollars
could be
printed and
what first
the US
government
and than the
ever down
sized
taxpayer,
could
afford...just
add the
cheap
credit.
Godless
consumerism
never really
took off the
way it did
until Nixon
took the US
off the gold
standard in
1973. From
then to now,
there was no
stopping it.
Add to this,
the cheap
gas,
partially
guaranteed
by that God
forsaken
deal between
America and
the worst of
the worst of
the Islamic
jihadists,
and the far
flung
suburban
life style,
with houses
packed full
of cheap
priced and
even cheaper
quality
Chinese
goods, was
born.
Of course,
anyone with
half an
understanding
of reality
and
economics
knew it
could not go
on forever
and so it
has come to
an end.
However, the
elite
oligarchies
of America,
must be
congratulated
that they
were able to
keep it
going for so
long. Of
course the
estimated
$500 Billion
in plundered
Russian
wealth, from
the early
and mid
1990s, sure
did help.
However, the
era of the
dollar is
over and
with it US
power. The
dollar has
been in a
steady free
fall for the
better of
the past 6
years,
faster than
the steady
decline of
the
preceding 30
years. How
is it, that
with a
prolonged
war, costing
close to $1
trillion, no
new taxes
have been
raised?
Well, that's
what
printing
presses are
for and why
since 2004,
the Fed has
stopped
issuing the
M3 report.
Due
partially to
this dieing
dollar, the
falling US
power that
has stopped
being able
to pressure
Arabs into
pumping
more,
increase in
demand world
wide and the
resurgence
of Russian
industry
drinking up
their own
oil, the
price of oil
has
skyrocketed.
It sure does
not hurt
that the US
idiocy of
having cake
and eating
too is still
fully in the
swing: that
would be the
plan to be
foreign oil
independent
while not
drilling
your own oil
or to build
nuclear
power
plants.
The era of
big
spending,
large
houses, long
commutes and
giant SUVs
and trucks
are over.
Sure, the
contraction
back into
tightly
packed
cities and
small modest
houses,
budgeted
spending and
compact cars
will not
come over
night and it
is equally
sure that
the indebted
and breaking
US consumer
will fight
it every
step of the
way, but it
is over.
The first
thing to
already go
is the big
trucks and
SUVs. Sure
there are
plenty still
on the
roads, but
sales of new
ones are
falling
fast,
actually
collapsing
out right
would be a
more proper
term. Next,
considering
the absolute
lack of
public
transportation
in most US
urban and
suburban
areas and
for that
matter the
very city
centers,
next will
come the car
pooling fad,
as smaller
cars still
eat gas, a
commodity
still
climbing in
price.
Sooner or
later this
will reach a
tipping
point as
well, where
even car
pooling will
no longer
work, as
incomes will
never keep
up with
inflation.
Incomes will
further
degrade as
the cycle of
cut backs by
suppliers
followed by
cut backs
and layoffs
by
businesses
continues.
Fewer hours
and less
real pay
will make
the expense
of far flung
large yards,
expensive to
heat and
cool large
houses and
high
gasoline
bills, seem
rather
infuriating
and
pointless to
support.
A final hit
upon the
suburbanite
will be the
high
increase in
the cost of
goods around
him. Since
rail head
are limited
and diesel
is sailing
far ahead of
gasoline,
the best
prices on
goods will
be those
around the
inner city,
closest to
the rail
heads. Goods
that have to
be trucked
out to the
various far
flung stores
will bare
the price of
the fuel
that
delivers
them. Many
stores will
close
driving not
only jobs
away from
the suburbs
but also the
ability to
live
comfortably.
As more and
more
suburbanites
return to
live in the
city, the
property
they sell
will have
massive
downward
pressure on
their
neighbors'
property
values. This
in turn will
force more
of their
neighbors to
equally move
out. Would
be farmers
should take
note,
perfectly
good farm
land will be
rather cheap
to come
by...just
have to burn
off the ply
wood massive
shacks on
it.
Crime will
also
initially
sky rocket,
especially
in the far
flung
neighborhoods.
The
satellite
cities that
grew up
around the
big cities
will be
hardest hit
and many
will
bankrupt as
their tax
base
continues to
erode. With
bankruptcy
will come
cut backs in
services, to
include the
police
force. Gun
rights
advocates
should take
heart as
more and
more
Americans
will quickly
come to
depend on
self
protection
for their
sole source
of
protection.
Large
quantities
of second
hand goods
will also
come on the
market, as
people move
away from
large
stuffed
houses in
the suburbs
to smaller,
some times
much
smaller,
apartments
and houses
in the
cities.
Craig's
List, Ebay
and garage
sale hunters
will greatly
benefit, at
least in the
short term.
But there
will be
massive
problems in
the cities.
Over
crowding is
the most
obvious one.
But with
little
industry,
little money
and only the
service
economy to
rely on, the
cities will
be poor,
angry and
dangerous,
as well as
over
crowded. The
country side
will become
once again
lonely and
manageable
and small
towns and
villages a
lot more
inviting. A
return to
America cira
1920s is
more likely.
Illegal
aliens take
note: not
only will
American
workers
compete more
directly
with you
over jobs
than any
time in the
past 50
years, but
they will
fully view
you, and
correctly to
boot, as the
usurpers you
are of their
livelihood.
Illegals'
lives are
going to get
very
dangerous
and violent.
Tourism will
of course
suffer, so
all those
far flung,
well
developed
tourist hot
spots, that
also happen
to be in
hurricane
paths, will
become
lonely and
decayed. It
will become
harder and
harder for
the
government
to pay for
their almost
annual
rebuilding
or even to
justify it.
Nature will
be a big
winner in
all this.
But one
final issue
must be
faced, the
one issue
that could
easily
launch those
over packed
cities into
full scale
revolt:
veterans.
Yes, with
bankruptcy
of the great
big world
wide empire,
some one
million well
trained and
often
enough, well
armed,
veterans
will be
returning to
the cities
where their
chances of
jobs are
slim at
best. If
they take
arms, things
in the
America of
the 2010s
will be
rather
interesting
and lively
indeed.
Stanislav
Mishin
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