A young man in a hurry is nearly ineducable: He knows what he wants and where he's headed; when it comes to looking back or entertaining heretical thoughts, he has neither the time nor the inclination. All that counts is that he is going somewhere. Only as ambition wanes does education become a possibility.
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Excerpt from Andrew Bacevich's book, Washington Rules
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Re: Excerpt from Andrew Bacevich's book, Washington Rules
Republicans don't have the answers either
Gridlock will be better than Democratic control, but will the system change?
Even I tire of my pessimism. It wears me down a bit. I wanted to get that up front before indulging in some less than optimistic thoughts about what lies ahead beyond Election Day.
The problems that will confront the new cast of characters in Congress and state houses and legislatures across the nation come January are many and mighty in importance.
We're broke. The economic model that has driven the credit-saturated boom we so enjoyed is busted beyond repair. Almost everyone who has eyes and a brain knows that's the case.
Generations of legislators have given away the store in pension obligations to the public employee unions. The promises will soon be repudiated. Political firestorms will result.
For all his ballyhooed brilliance, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke seems as lost as everyone else when it comes to charting a way out of the mess we're in. Keynesian stimulus, which has grown the government 30 percent (imagine that) in two years, hasn't worked. People are saving and paying down debt. They're stimulus resistant.
MIT economist Simon Johnson put it bluntly: "A financial oligarchy has purchased the government." As we've seen, this partnership has pushed us into an economic disaster. The next Congress, ideally, would begin the painful process of reconstituting the economy. But politicians are averse to inflicting pain on the people on whom they count to vote for them.
The way the polling and prognosticating has it, the Republicans look likely to recapture control of the House and make significant inroads in the Senate. This would likely lead to most GOP initiatives being vetoed by President Barack Obama and the bulk of White House proposals being voted down by the Republicans.
Gridlock is better than being rolled down the left of the path to oblivion by the Obama White House, Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid, but much more than that is needed.
This week, I talked with financial analyst and entrepreneur Eric Janszen, who has written "The Postcatastrophe Economy," a book about rebuilding America and avoiding the next bubble.
He says we have to move away from the credit-fueled financialization of our economy and back to our roots as the "world's leading creative inventor, saver and investor."
The government subsidization of the FIRE (finance, insurance and real estate) economy led us to this dead end, and Mr. Janszen believes this crumbled structure must be replaced with a new one based on a TECI (transportation, energy and communications infrastructure) economy.
Propping up dying industries won't do the trick. What's needed, he says, is a productive economy with investment in high-margin businesses that can afford to pay high wages.
To even begin such a task will require the dismantling of what has been constructed by legions of financial lobbyists and their purchased politicians. Will the newcomers change the system, or will the system swallow them up as it has in the past?
Humanity is at a crisis point. Free-market globalism has been regarded as the permanent state of things, even though it has been made possible only by cheap oil and a historically anomalous period of relative peace.
We have run through approximately half of the ultimate mother lode — the oil deposited beneath the Earth's crust over millions of years — and it will become ever more expensive as the passing of peak oil becomes undeniable.
Nations are retreating into a protectionist mode. The global economy we thought so permanent is unraveling after only a quarter of a century or so. More than a hundred years ago, the psychologist/philosopher William James observed, "The most significant characteristic of modern civilization is the sacrifice of the future for the present, and all the power of science has been perverted to this purpose."
We've travelled a selfish road in the Age of Oil.
Most of the people I talk to seem to have bottomless faith that technology will get us out of the current grim situation. Maybe they're right. Maybe we'll get lucky.
Ron Smith can be heard weekdays, 9 a.m. to noon, on 1090 WBAL-AM and WBAL.com. His column appears Fridays in The Baltimore Sun. His e-mail is rsmith@wbal.com.
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opi...,136818.column
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Re: Excerpt from Andrew Bacevich's book, Washington Rules
The Parties have become terminally craven. The Republican (once my party! Now I have none) has lurched from embracing the Born Again Carnivale (remember them) to the No-Nothings, effortlessly (though with not insignificant $$- Palin is rumored to have pocketed upwards of $12,000,000 since her coming out party) co-opting the Tea Baggers and actually running their candidates, proving it makes no difference who nominally holds office, and that what is paramount to both is first seating on the FIRE gravy train. It has its perks...(lobbyists lavish funds on expected winners....).
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Re: Excerpt from Andrew Bacevich's book, Washington Rules
Minor quibble: that writing seems a little to subtle for its own good. What exactly was the revelation? That the soviet block was revealed to him as a burned out hulk as opposed to the totalitarian behemoth he was expecting? Why not just say that? He seems at pains not to break cover at a couple of points here. Grrr.
That said, it's kind of an interesting exercise:
Set the clock back to 1989 and start the stopwatch. What was the path that lead you to disillusionment with the apparently unassailable, triumphant west?
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