charleshughsmith | The possibility that the United States could fragment is no longer a marginalized topic.
Maps displaying various post-U.S. regional configurations accompany
essays exploring how and why a break-up of the U.S. would be a solution
to regional and ideological polarization, for example, Max Borders'
recent article,
Dear America: It's Time to Break Up.
But two forces larger than political polarization may fragment
nation-states across the globe, including the U.S.: inequality and
scarcity. Inequality and corruption go hand in hand, of course, as
the wealthiest few influence the state to protect their monopolies and
backstop their speculative gains.
Inequality also goes hand in hand with the collapse of nation-states, as this seminal paper explains:
Human and nature dynamics (HANDY): Modeling inequality and use of resources in the collapse or sustainability of societies.
The parasitic elite can accumulate the majority of income,
wealth, political power and resources in eras of expanding abundance, as
what's left is enough to support an expanding populace that consumes
more per capita every year, i.e. broad-based prosperity.
But once abundance transitions to scarcity, the economy and society
can no longer sustain the dead weight of its outsized parasitic elite.
The parasitic elite believes its bloated share of resources, wealth and
power is not only sustainable but can be expanded without consequence,
and so it deploys all its formidable power to keep the status quo
unchanged even as scarcity lowers the living standards of the bottom 90%
and hollows out the economy.
In effect, the modern central state, regardless of ideological label, optimizes inequality and growth. Once growth falters while inequality continues increasing, the only possible outcome is fragmentation and/or collapse.
Put another way: the status quo is no longer the solution to inequality and scarcity, it is the problem.
Private-sector and political elites are incapable of recognizing they
are now the problem, and so the rapid unraveling of the status quo will
come as a great shock to their magical-thinking confidence in their
power.
The elite's delusional "solution" is a seamless, painless transition
to a new era of abundance via "green energy." Unfortunately, this vision
is 100% magical thinking, as all these projections ignore the
physical realities of building out a global energy system that generates
energy on the same scale as existing hydrocarbon energy sources. Read
these three reports for reality-based assessments:
The "New Energy Economy": An Exercise in Magical Thinking (manhattan-institute.org)
The Delusion of Infinite Economic Growth: Even "sustainable"
technologies such as electric vehicles and wind turbines face
unbreachable physical limits and exact grave environmental costs.
(scientificamerican.com)
Assessment of the Extra Capacity Required of Alternative Energy Electrical Power Systems to Completely Replace Fossil Fuels (PDF, Simon P. Michaux, Geological Survey of Finland) Read the 3-page abstract.
As explained in the first paper, inequality generates collapse and so does a decline in resources, i.e. scarcity.
Put the two together and the only possible outcome is collapse of all
centralized nation-states that optimize inequality and endless expansion
of consumption.
The issue isn't ideological labels or principles, it's whether the state
solves problems or covers them up with fake fixes that accelerate
collapse.
Nations which want to not just survive but emerge stronger have one path: a revolutionary transformation
from "waste is growth" to degrowth, from an economy and state dominated
by a parasitic elite to a strictly limited parasitic elite and from
abject dependence on fragile supply chains originating in other nations
to decentralized, localized independence for essentials.
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