High
Ground
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
When
a rare thing hasn't happened for a while, people begin to think
it never will. But after it has happened, they expect it to happen
everyday.
After
9/11, Americans bought duct tape and plastic to protect themselves
from sleeper cells they believed lurked in Duluth and Farmington.
Now, they keep their eyes on hurricanes and earthquakes.
What
kind of disaster is next, we ask ourselves? Of course, we don't
know, dear reader. But we will take a wild guess anyway: The disaster
people least expect and most deserve, a financial one.
When
you build a city below sea level, between two large bodies of water,
in a hurricane zone, you have to expect that sooner or later you'll
get your feet wet. So too, when you live on borrowed time and borrowed
money, you have to expect that sooner or later you will have to
pay up. That wouldn't qualify as a disaster except for the fact
that so many people have staked their finances on the hope that
tomorrow would never come. It will come as a disagreeable shock
to them when it does.
One
thing leads to another. The 9/11 attacks led to two responses both of which have already weakened the empire. The Feds vastly
increased their own spending at home and undertook a series of expensive,
disastrous wars overseas. In historical terms, the empire needed
to find a way to stay in business. An empire is essentially an international
protection racket. It needs something to protect people from. After
the demise of the Soviet Union, the American empire had no worthy
enemies; it had to create them. As predicted in this space, in those
terms, the war against Iraq has been a success:
"Under
the American and allied assault," says the International Herald
Tribune today, "what had been a relatively small, conspiratorial
organization has mutated into a worldwide political movement, with
thousands of followers eager to adopt its methods and advance its
aims."
That
this cost a lot of money goes without saying. The United States
had little in savings to draw upon, so it drew instead on credit.
The debt surge in America began in earnest after the Nixon administration
made it possible to get away with it, by totally eliminating gold
backing from U.S. currency. Faced with the threat of a post-9/11
slowdown, the Fed made debt even more attractive and encouraged
Americans to take advantage of it. "Buy a new SUV...preferably a
Navigator," urged Fed Governor McTeer.
Pity
the poor man who follows a Fed governor's advice. Gasoline sold
for an average of $3.01 a gallon this weekend. At that price, it
cost $100 to fill up a large SUV. Thank God his house is still going
up; as long as it floats, he can hang onto it.
Now
that the storm in New Orleans has passed, the financial nightmare
is about to begin, says the Financial Times. There is a big
insurance gap, says the paper. Most people had storm insurance,
but no protection against floods. In the Big Easy, it was the floods
that did the damage. Losses are expected to tally as much as $125
billion.
Who's
got that kind of money? Alas, the empire that sets out to save the
entire world has not saved a penny for a rainy day. So, the flood
leads to more debt. "Katrina relief to worsen groaning U.S. deficit,"
says AFP.
All
of this debt private and public builds up behind the levees
like storm water. It rises day and night. We don't know when the
dikes might give way, but readers are urged to stay on high ground...just
in case.
September
13, 2005
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century.
Copyright
© 2005 Bill Bonner
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