“Welcome to my world crisis, Mr. Bond!” – Tomorrow Never Dies
That door handle looks like it’s from an 80’s Fiat©, which means it isn’t driving anywhere until it’s dropped all its oil on the garage floor.
The last year has seen more change than the last twenty years, combined. This is to be expected, especially if you give Strauss and Howe’s The Fourth Turning idea any credence. A short version of The Fourth Turning (also known as Kondratieff Wave Theory) is that there is a roughly 80-year cycle of human affairs. Let me use the life of my Dad, Pa Wilder, to describe it:
When Pa Wilder was young he spent most of his childhood in Winter, the first defining experience of his life was the Great Depression. Back then, they had printed versions of the Internet that they would get delivered to their house every day, called newspapers. They also had cell phones that never needed charging, and that you could never lose because they were in the living room and conveniently connected by a cord to the wall.
I’m sure all of the kids on the playground talked with Pa about how obvious it was that the Federal Reserve’s® monetary policy, combined with bankers lending to anyone with a pulse led to near financial collapse. Oh, and how their parents couldn’t afford shoes. Thankfully, Pa lived in a farming community, and every little house in town had a very large garden out back. Food from the grocery store?
Why would you spend money on food when you had to pay for the mortgage?
Al Capone set up this particular location during the Depression. Pa Wilder said I should never go camping with a gangster: he didn’t want me to have a criminal intent.
That’s the sort of lesson that bored itself into Pa Wilder’s mind. As a kid, he saw people lose houses, he saw people lose fortunes. He saw a nation nearing collapse.
Economic collapse led to the second thing that defined Pa Wilder’s youth: World War II. Not long after Japanese planes attacked Pearl Harbor he was in boot camp in Ft. Sill and before long was a 2nd lieutenant in the Army. The next four years he spent on an all-expenses-paid European vacation
The end of the war was the end of Kondratieff Winter. What followed was Spring.
In post-war United States, growth and unrivaled prosperity followed from 1945-1965. Pa Wilder, like the rest of the G.I. generation, came back and built families and factories and farms. They looked out at a world that was shattered, and they made fortunes rebuilding it. They even found Dean Martin’s favorite eel. Don’t remember that? It’s a moray.
Spring was characterized by extreme faith in government institutions – sure the government had fumbled the ball in the Great Depression, but it had unified the country for World War II. It stayed back enough to allow growth, and Eisenhower’s America got out of North Korea and planted the seeds for the Super Science® projects that would provide unmatched weapons systems and the seeds of space exploration.
I wanted to have another space pun, but I didn’t have time to planet.
Spring gives over to Summer. Around 1965, the spiritual awakening was followed in 1975 by the “Me” decade. In Summer, the economy is humming along, the weather is great, and the first questioning of the previous ideas that led to the success of the country begins. It’s probably no coincidence that the disastrous Immigration Act of 1965, the arguably unconstitutional Civil Rights Act of 1964, and Lyndon Johnson’s voter-plantation Great Society acts (1964 and 1965) took place at the start of Summer when Americans were questioning their values, questioning the things that made America great.
Pa Wilder was an established businessman, working as the president of a very conservative farm bank. You could get a loan, but only if you had collateral and a good income stream. Pa Wilder told more people “no” than “yes” for loans. That bothered him, with the exception of the fact that he told me, “I’ve never had to foreclose on a house, son.” To him, it was a moral duty. Thankfully Pa never served in the paratroopers, otherwise, they would have called him “debt from above.”
In society, however, the big splits had started in 1965. The subversion of colleges started and would be nearly complete by the 1980s. Religious decline started, and Nixon got tired of hiding the fiscal shenanigans of the country that gold was exposing. His solution? Get rid of gold.
But Summer was still a good time. Autumn, however, is harvest. Pa Wilder was pretty close to retirement at this point, and the real economic power had moved to the Boomers. Pa’s natural fiscal conservatism led to a strong and stable business. The people that took over from him, however, would “give a loan to anyone with a pickup and a backhoe.” They even loaned out money on haunted houses, places they were sure were going to be repossessed.
An ultra-long radio wave walked into the bar. The bartender said, “Why the long phase?”
Inertia is important in an economic system. But in 1985 the financial systems of the United States began to be harvested. “Greed is good” became the motto, and systems were run entirely for near-term economic benefit. Everyone from Pa Wilder’s generation was dead or retired – the new people in charge had no living memory of the national crisis brought on by The Great Depression.
The end of Autumn is the first chill of Winter, and the end result was the Great Recession (right on time!) in 2007-2008.
In the Winter, things fall apart. I’ve been really quite amazed that things have held together so well since that first cold snap. Obama was, well, a disappointment. Trump seemed (in many ways) overwhelmed by the system and couldn’t figure out how to move the levers of power in any significant and lasting ways – which makes sense on a failing system.
That was the starter’s gun on the crisis, the date Winter began. We should have been a long way through it by now, but this Winter is different:
- The United States had a uniquely dominant position at the start of Winter, having both complete military dominance as well as a strong economic dominance of the world.
- The Federal Reserve© decided to just print all the money that it could to spend its way into continued prosperity.
Sure, sometimes government wants to stop a crisis so that the citizens can have a stable country. Sometimes.
But other times, governments are waiting for the crisis, looking forward to it. Planning on it. In one article titled Sometimes the world needs a crisis: Turning challenges into opportunities(LINK), the Brookings Institute lists the things they love about crises. I admit that some of them are positive, but here are a few that I think are a bit more ominous – these descriptions are directly from Brookings:
- Systemic Change: Global crises that crush existing orders and overturn long-held norms, especially extended, large-scale wars, can pave the way for new systems, structures, and values to emerge and take hold. Without such devastation to existing systems and practices, leaders and populations are generally resistant to major changes and to giving up some of their sovereignty to new organizations or rules.
- Dramatic Policy Shifts: Sometimes the fear generated from a crisis and corresponding public outcry enables and even forces leaders to make bold and often difficult policy moves, even in countries not involved in or affected by the crisis.
COVID-19 was the big crisis they were waiting for this Winter. As the economic systems unwind under the unsustainable debt the ‘Rona is the perfect opportunity. Imagine the tapestry of that you see was planned. What end is being sought?
What The Mrs. would have said in the same situation: “It’s over, John, I have the high ground.”
Well, they told us already. Systemic Change. Changes to virtually every system in the United States. Want to have a nice, neat, prosperous, and orderly community? Too bad. That’s not a thing that’s going to happen. The police will be neutered. How badly will communities suffer? Here’s how bad it is now:
- Leftist controlled Chicago: arrests/stops are down 53 percent, murders are up 65 percent.
- Leftist controlled New York City: arrests/stops are down 38 percent, murders are up 58 percent.
- Leftist controlled Louisville: arrests/stops are down 35 percent, murders are up 87 (not a typo) percent.
- Leftist controlled Minneapolis: arrests/stops are down 42 percent, murders are up 64 percent.
- Leftist controlled Los Angeles: arrests/stops are down 33 percent, murders are up 51 percent.
- Leftist controlled St. Louis: in 2020, the murder rate hit “a 50-year high, with 87 out of every 100,000 residents being murdered.”
When there is murder and mayhem there is control. This is their plan. This is the crisis. Remove police – replace with ideological commissars that aren’t bound by law. Now, if they see a “crime” that they feel is wrong, they can punish it however they see fit. Most commonly, this will just be by removing the protection of the law and letting the mob do the rest.
The biggest crimes? The crimes against the Left.
That’s just the first of the planned Systemic Changes. There are more planned.
- Universal basic income.
- Boards to approve hiring at private companies.
- Equity everywhere.
- More rules than you can imagine. All of them will be based on some fear – guns in rural areas will be restricted because people in the city can’t stop killing each other.
- Climate change lunacy: to meet Joe Biden’s climate goals, Americans would be restricted to four pounds (344 milliliters) of meat a year. This will be walked back.
- And your ideas: they probably won’t be as bad as the real plans.
Why do organizations hire female Chief Equity Officers? Because they’re cheaper.
To be clear: Winter is here. The Left has an endless list of Leftist goals to accomplish during the crisis to come. The Winter will be dark.
Where are our goals? The Right cannot just have the goals of “what the Left wants, but less,” or, “the opposite of what those guys want.”
After that? Organization. And leadership.
And longjohns. Winter is here.
” took place at the start of Spring ” should be summer?
Good article. Depressing but good. I am not hopeful and I will be 70 by the time spring arrives again. OTOH knowing that spring always arrives after winter helps.
Yes. Fixed. Thank you!
Again, thanks for pointing out the goof.
Also, keep in mind that even during the 20 years of Winter, there are hard times, but that doesn’t mean that they’re always bad times.
Wintermay be longer than most think.
Sure, there’s “Climate Change” going on, only it’s spelled “Maunder Minimum with 8 Billion People and Failing Crops.”
Good times.
If we do get that . . . it won’t be 8 billion people . . .
For the USA, Russia’s 1917 has arrived, but without the White Army pushing back.
yet
Yes. The Right has no cohesion at this point.
But if Winter is followed by a prosperous Spring, then why does it seem out country is melding Winter (crises) into Summer (social changes) with no Spring in between?
The changes are a result of the crisis itself – think to the last Winter – Social Security and all of the FDR government intervention were reactions to the crisis.
There have been leaders who brought their nations back from winter to summer or fall, but I don’t see anyone in our system doing anything but rubbing their hands at the thought of all the spoils they’ll be able to cackle over on their equatorial island waiting for civilization to come back.
Hard men create good times -> good times create soft men -> soft men create hard times -> hard times create hard men…
Violent sports was supposed to ameliorate this, but apparently not enough people played rugby.
And the Moms try to take all of the pain out of loss – even more, to eliminate loss.
I miss rugby. (former prop)
Close on the handle. It’s from an Alfa Spider. Could be from late 60s to early 90s.
Thank you! Pretty close to the one on my old Fiat. Did you know that the antifreeze shouldn’t leak onto passengers?
Fiat didn’t.
4 pounds of hamburger ANNUALLY? Forgot the specific numbers, but of the US ag land, only 50 million acres can grow food people can eat. The other 350-400 million grows stuff the animals eat, and then we eat the animals. This sounds like a plan to destroy the economy right down to the food source. There is a reason the produce dept is only a small section of the total grocery store.
Off topic but got to thinking about covid deaths. Mine is a small circle, but the only deaths I know of personally is OLD people. 80+, an exception being a 78 yo. The fact he didn’t kill himself 20 years ago from drink & smoke was in hindsight a bonus (yes, he stopped.) Widen the circle to the wife: You have a larger circle: Any clients? Nope, only OLD people.
So ask yourself in your world, Do you see much to support the covid deaths claim? Not “I heard about.” Not “my hairdressers cousins neighbor”. Actual “Gosh, there’s a surprise they’re gone.” People you personally knew that were not at the end of normal life expectancy. (medical people can chime in, but you didn’t personally KNOW everybody).
Stats from a state w/ a Dem governor:
https://www.dhs.wisconsin.gov/covid-19/cases.htm#hospitalization
click on ‘death’ button
Yup. Annually. Greenhouse gas, you know.
I do know one person who died of COVID. In this case, it was someone who was pushing 100.
But there are younger folks who have passed on, though the median (half above, half below) age that I saw was 80.
They are already walking back the 4 lbs of beef, claiming it was never part of the plan. Just another trial balloon to get people used to the idea.
I just started reading The Fourth Turning last night/ The big thing that makes this cycle completely different is demographic. In every other cycle the population was almost entirely White European and even with the growing pains of immigration from Ireland and Eastern Europe there was enough continuity to work through it. Now? This isn’t really properly thought of as a European/ Western Civilization society any longer.
Bugs and pods.
Yes – demographics matter. Does someone from Mexico count as a Gen X’r? Probably not.
Spring-Summer-Fall-Winter is essentially another way of categorizing history into a sine wave. Nothing you’ve written contradicts my firm belief that the summit of our civilization was the Apollo program, with Get Smart! a close second. We’ve been riding the apex of that sine wave for a while, but now the down-slope is quickly getting steep.
Peak hydrocarbon use per person was 1973 in the United States.
I was going to post this on the Advice column, but it seems like it fits here, too.
Buy more ammo.
And food.
The darkest winter is nearly upon us.
It is.
I am.
And thank you.