When Globalism Runs Its Course ...
The Year America Dissolved
Paul Craig Roberts
Jul 29, 2010
As always, thanks
to Paul, for publication permission :-)
It was 2017. Clans were governing America.
The first clans organized around local police forces. The conservatives'
war on crime during the late 20th century and the Bush/Obama
war on terror during the first decade of the 21st century had
resulted in the police becoming militarized and unaccountable.
As society broke down, the police became warlords. The state
police broke apart, and the officers were subsumed into the local
forces of their communities. The newly formed tribes expanded
to encompass the relatives and friends of the police.
The dollar had collapsed as world reserve currency in 2012 when
the worsening economic depression made it clear to Washington's
creditors that the federal budget deficit was too large to be
financed except by the printing of money.
With the dollar's demise, import prices skyrocketed. As Americans
were unable to afford foreign-made goods, the transnational corporations
that were producing offshore for US markets were bankrupted,
further eroding the government's revenue base.
The government was forced to print money in order to pay its
bills, causing domestic prices to rise rapidly. Faced with hyperinflation,
Washington took recourse in terminating Social Security and Medicare
and followed up by confiscating the remnants of private pensions.
This provided a one-year respite, but with no more resources
to confiscate, money creation and hyperinflation resumed.
Organized food deliveries broke down when the government fought
hyperinflation with fixed prices and the mandate that all purchases
and sales had to be in US paper currency. Unwilling to trade
appreciating goods for depreciating paper, goods disappeared
from stores.
Washington responded as Lenin had done during the "war communism"
period of Soviet history. The government sent troops to confiscate
goods for distribution in kind to the population. This was a
temporary stop-gap until existing stocks were depleted, as future
production was discouraged. Much of the confiscated stocks became
the property of the troops who seized the goods.
Goods reappeared in markets under the protection of local warlords.
Transactions were conducted in barter and in gold, silver, and
copper coins.
Other clans organized around families and individuals who possessed
stocks of food, bullion, guns and ammunition. Uneasy alliances
formed to balance differences in clan strengths. Betrayals quickly
made loyalty a necessary trait for survival.
Large scale food and other production broke down as local militias
taxed distribution as goods moved across local territories. Washington
seized domestic oil production and refineries, but much of the
government's gasoline was paid for safe passage across clan territories.
Most of the troops in Washington's overseas bases were abandoned.
As their resource stocks were drawn down, the abandoned soldiers
were forced into alliances with those with whom they had been
fighting.
Washington found it increasingly difficult to maintain itself.
As it lost control over the country, Washington was less able
to secure supplies from abroad as tribute from those Washington
threatened with nuclear attack. Gradually other nuclear powers
realized that the only target in America was Washington. The
more astute saw the writing on the wall and slipped away from
the former capital city.
When Rome began her empire, Rome's currency consisted of gold
and silver coinage. Rome was well organized with efficient institutions
and the ability to supply troops in the field so that campaigns
could continue indefinitely, a monopoly in the world of Rome's
time.
When hubris sent America in pursuit of overseas empire, the venture
coincided with the offshoring of American manufacturing, industrial,
and professional service jobs and the corresponding erosion of
the government's tax base, with the advent of massive budget
and trade deficits, with the erosion of the fiat paper currency's
value, and with America's dependence on foreign creditors and
puppet rulers.
The Roman Empire lasted for centuries. The American one collapsed
overnight.
Rome's corruption became the strength of her enemies, and the
Western Empire was overrun.
America's collapse occurred when government ceased to represent
the people and became the instrument of a private oligarchy.
Decisions were made in behalf of short-term profits for the few
at the expense of unmanageable liabilities for the many. Overwhelmed
by liabilities, the government collapsed.
Globalism had run its course. Life reformed on a local basis.
###
Jul 27, 2010
Paul Craig Roberts
email: PaulCraigRoberts@yahoo.com
Paul Craig
Roberts
was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration.
He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page
and Contributing Editor of National Review.
With Lawrence
M. Stratton he is coauthor of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
He can be reached
at: PaulCraigRoberts@yahoo.com.
Copyright ©1995-2011
Paul Craig Roberts. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
321gold Ltd
|