- Iran: Eight Prisoners Hanged on Drug Charges
- Daughter of late Iranian president jailed for ‘spreading lies’ - IRAN: Annual report on the death penalty 2016 - Taheri Facing the Death Penalty Again - Dedicated team seeking return of missing agent in Iran - Iran Arrests 2, Seizes Bibles During Catholic Crackdown
- Trump to welcome Netanyahu as Palestinians fear U.S. shift
- Details of Iran nuclear deal still secret as US-Tehran relations unravel - Will Trump's Next Iran Sanctions Target China's Banks? - Don’t ‘tear up’ the Iran deal. Let it fail on its own. - Iran Has Changed, But For The Worse - Iran nuclear deal ‘on life support,’ Priebus says
- Female Activist Criticizes Rouhani’s Failure to Protect Citizens
- Iran’s 1st female bodybuilder tells her story - Iranian lady becomes a Dollar Millionaire on Valentine’s Day - Two women arrested after being filmed riding motorbike in Iran - 43,000 Cases of Child Marriage in Iran - Woman Investigating Clinton Foundation Child Trafficking KILLED!
- Senior Senators, ex-US officials urge firm policy on Iran
- In backing Syria's Assad, Russia looks to outdo Iran - Six out of 10 People in France ‘Don’t Feel Safe Anywhere’ - The liberal narrative is in denial about Iran - Netanyahu urges Putin to block Iranian power corridor - Iran Poses ‘Greatest Long Term Threat’ To Mid-East Security |
Saturday 20 August 2011The Coming Dim Ages
We have a forest on our hands. Not just here in the US but across the globe. A dark, foreboding, evil-filled forest. Unfortunately it's only the individual trees that get any media attention, even as the forest gobbles more of the globe each day. Without recognizing the forest, the individual trees seem unattached to the spreading forest. By now you're wondering if I've been smoking something. Well, first, none your business. Second, we all may be smoking something, or wishing we were pretty soon. Let me try to explain by listing some of those "trees:" United States of America: After nearly seventy-years of unparalleled fiscal growth and domination, Americans looked down and, like cartoon character Wiley Coyote,discoveriing we'd run right off a cliff. There was nothing under us but air - hot air. Add to that a poisonous political climate that's left us with few if any intelligent, mature and courageous leaders, and, Houston, we have a problem. So far widespread civil unrest has not hit the US. So far. United Kingdom: Austerity is what right-wing doctors prescribe, and the conservative government in Britain decided to take that cure. And so the squeeze is on. Widespread riots last week in London were blamed by one UK commentator as "Britain's growing feral underclass." Imagine that, a feral underclass in 21st Century Britain. Mass Media: The scandal unfolding in the UK and US over widespread criminality within media baron, Rupert Murdoch's media empire has only sharpened the growing distrust and disdain for media. Once the independent voice of the common man, the corporatization of mass media has incrementally turned media into the voice the disease itself. The European Union: The EU was seen, when it was launched, as a kind of United States of Europe. Well, good news/bad news: it kind of reached that goal. The EU is proving to be about as ungovernable as the US as individual nationalistic forces stake out their own positions for their own interests. The EU also opened Europe to cross-border fiscal sharpies who gamed the new system, pocketing hundreds of billions for their companies, banks and selves, leaving member nations like Ireland and Portugal, as broke as church mice. And now they want the to repossess the church too. Lacking a central bank able to simply print euros(issue Euro Bonds) in order to monetize their unsustainable (and un-payble) debts, and to also provide fresh fuel to jump-start it's moribund economies, the EU is really in for it. Whether it survives or not is a question now very much in doubt. And, should the EU fail, the shock wave would cause rumble to bounce on the moon. Libya: You know what's nice about brutal, amoral, disgusting dictators? They're predictable. And as such they offer foreign policy and corporate players something almost as good as stability. Oil companies, for example, had no problem with Qaddafi. He could stay in power forever if it were up to British Petroleum. Oh sure, every now and then he'd cause BP headaches, like when he bombed that 747 full of Americans over Scotland. It took a few years to straighten all that out and get back at that oil. But look now, all that hard work down the drain. And who's to blame? Not Qaddafi, he was playing ball, the oil was flowing again and BP was happy as clam about it. No, it was the Libyan people, who revolted. Now Libya faces instability on steroids. Syria: Here's another example of a dictator who offered stability to global chess players in return for being allowed to run a country like a family business - a Soprano's-type of "family business." Here again it wasn't the US or European governments or western corporations that demanded change, but the Syrian people. No one knows what will come out of this one. Iran, Syria's biggest backer in the region, has been strangely quite about all this. But you can bet Iran is watching, waiting and ready to make more trouble if things don't go to "Shiite." India: Is the largest democracy in the world, or so they say. Riots and protests have suddenly erupted from India's gritty streets as that nation's struggling small business class, as well as average citizens, finally got fed up with institutionalize government corruption. Tired of having to pay bribes for virtual any service offered by government, from education, to traffic court, to fire and police protection, Indians are drawing their own lines in the sand. But reforming the humungous Indian system of governance risks reopening sectarian wounds that have never really healed. Muslim v. Hindu tensions - with Muslims in the role of oppressed minority, could send the world's largest democracy spiraling into Iraq-like sectarian chaos. Pakistan: What can one say about this festering puss-pot? Oh, and remember that, even though most of it's people still live in ways more 12th century than 21st, they possess fully functional nuclear weapons? Pakistan is little more than one giant slow-motion train wreck. It began that way and it will end that way. That wreck will continue, heading straight for the day when a major nation, or nations, with the means and interest to do so, force Pakistan to relinquish its nukes - from cold dead fingers if necessary. Afghanistan: Oh really? Do I have to explain why this black hole is now and will always be just that, a black hole. Anything "western" that goes in there, rarely comes back out. It's either stolen, kidnapped or killed. Afghanistan is a Venus Fly Trap for those lured into it for whatever reason. If you can get out, do so immediately. The longer you stay, the longer you're gonna stay --like the Roach Motel. Egypt: Mubarak wasn't the worst stability-dictator we supported in the region, but he was the biggest. And when he fell in the forest of middle east dictators, the earth shook. Now everyone is nervously watching as the Egyptian military tries to figure out if it trusts civilians enough to turn the keys over to them. And, if they do, who will get to drive, secularists or the Muslim Brotherhood? All outside observers know is that secularists are like Obama - they talk a lot. When they don't get what they want, they talk about that too. But when Muslim fundamentalist groups in that region don't get what they want, they stop talking and start shooting. Nothing less than the Suez Canal, one of the world's most mission-critical pieces of infrastructure, is up for grabs. Israel: With many of it's enemies in the midst of uncertain transition, Israel, a nation already not prone to making quick concessions for peace, will likely become even more reticent and cautious. Meanwhile whatever emerges from Arab Spring revolutions around them, those who eventually take charge of those countries will be paying close attention to how Israel treats their Palestinian cousins. The conclusions they reach in the months ahead will shape their country's political and military positions towards Israel for decades ahead. Meanwhile, within Israel, average citizens have recently taken to the streets as well over rising housing costs and other very pedestrian economic and social issues long ignored by a government pathologically fixated on national security. That fixation causes Israel to do things in the name of national security that only require it to worry more their security. Palestine: It seems that the time has come for a formal designation of a state for the Palestinians. If the US is smart it would just keep its mouth shout when this comes up for a vote at the UN in September. They don't have to vote for it, just don't vote against it. Abstain. Of course that is unlikely to happen, for all the domestic political reasons we've come to understand. Without clear leadership from those who hold sway over both sides, the Palestinians-Israelis dysfunctional relationship will continue its role as the gas-soaked rags of the region; you just never know when they will spontaneously erupt into flames. Somalia: If this sandbox of a nation were anywhere else on the planet no one would give a fig about what's afoot there. But it sits right there on the gulf where the world's lifeblood flows by on ships. So there it is, an ungoverned hunk of the planet, not ungoverned for lack of will, but because it is inherently ungovernable. The reasons are many, but the bottom line is that, even before climate change, Somalia did not have the resources to provide even the most basic food and services to its people. Now they're starving - again. Their "feral underclass" has either fled, died or are in the process of dying. Those left are the alfa-male minority, who are now busy killing each other. Pay attention to Somalia because, as the world's climate changes there will be others. Yemen: Ditto. Sending food to arid countries like Somalia and Yemen and the others sure to emerge in the decades ahead, without also imposing the strictest of population control (birth control) regimes is a path to hell paved with good intentions. Mexico: If you think the gap between the rich and everyone else is large here, just look south. A growing number of average Mexicans seem to have given up on trying to legislate a narrowing of that gap. Instead they are increasingly turning to crime as a shorter and surer path to personal solvency. The Mexican government's so-called "war on drugs," is too little and decades too late. Drugs don't kill large numbers of people..failed governance kill large numbers of people. Now it's too late. A new Pentagon study "concludes that Mexico is at risk of becoming a failed state,,thanks to its ongoing vicious drug war. The violence and corruption are so bad that Mexico, like Pakistan, could see a "wholesale collapse of civil government." Also, as the one-time buffer of cross-border jobs in the US disappears, due to a combination of American xenophobia, pandering right wing politicians and our incredibly shrinking economy, even fewer income-generating options will present themselves to average working class Mexicans. Armed Mexican gangs are becoming, not only the only alternative to poverty but a substitute for failed central government, at least on their ever-shifting "turf." See, those are some of the trees I'm talking about. There are more, but that's enough for my purposes. Now stand back and see the forest the produce when viewed together. I have been saying for four years now that this one is different... that this time there are way too many "disturbances in the Force," all at once. That viewed all together they paint a very, VERY, disturbing picture. Add to that the inevitable rise of a clearly neo-fascist right across the globe, in response to all this, and you don't have to wonder any longer why the world's financial markets are in growing turmoil. But, because our leaders and media insist on treating these as individual trees, they are not seeing, or dealing with, the forest of troubles where the roots of this crisis feed. Source: OpEdNews |