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cantbeserious

(13,039 posts)
Sun Sep 7, 2014, 12:58 PM Sep 2014

Nice Fictional Account Of How The American Empire Might Finally End Over Oil - Worth The Read

http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com/2012/10/how-it-could-happen-part-one-hubris.html

How It Could Happen, Part One: Hubris

" The news of the latest Tanzanian deepwater oil discovery broke on an otherwise sleepy Saturday in March. Thirty years before, a find of the same size might have gotten two column inches somewhere in the back pages of a few newspapers of record, but this was not thirty years ago. In a world starved for oil, what might once have been considered a modest find earned banner headlines.

It certainly loomed large in the East Wing of the White House, where the president and his advisers held a hastily called meeting that evening. “The Chinese already have it wrapped up,” said the Secretary of Energy. “Tanzania’s in their pocket, and there are CNOOC people—” CNOOC was the Chinese National Overseas Oil Corporation, the state-owned firm that spearheaded China’s quest for foreign oil. “—all over the place on site and in Dar es Salaam.”

“Is it close enough to Kenyan waters—”

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http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com/2012/10/how-it-could-happen-part-two-nemesis.html

How It Could Happen, Part Two: Nemesis

" The missiles and fighter-bombers launched from the fleet were the second wave of the American assault, not the first. Attack helicopters from Kenyan bases took off a few minutes later, but went in ahead to target Tanzania’s air defenses. Their timing was precise; by the time the first US jets crossed into Tanzanian airspace, the four military radar stations that anchored the northern end of Tanzania’s air defense system were smoking rubble. Real-time satellite images brought news of the successful strike to Admiral Deckmann and his staff aboard the USS George Washington, and to President Weed and his advisers in the situation room in the White House.

Those images were on the screens when the whole US military satellite system suddenly went dark.

In US bases around the world, baffled technicians tried to reconnect with the satellite network, only to find that there was no network with which to reconnect. NORAD reported that all the satellites were still in their orbits and showed every sign of still being operational, but none would respond to signals from ground stations or send data back down. Analysis quickly ruled out a technical failure, which left only one option; the president’s national security adviser glanced up from a hurriedly compiled briefing paper outlining that one option, to find the Secretary of Defense regarding her with a level gaze. She turned away sharply and snapped an order to one of her aides."

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http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com/2012/10/how-it-could-happen-part-three-to-brink.html

How It Could Happen, Part Three: To The Brink

" Back in the United States, few people had any clear sense of how bad the situation had become. The major news media, as they had done for decades, accepted whatever came from the White House and the Pentagon at face value. Internet news sites contradicted the official story in every detail, but the internet’s low signal to noise ratio made an accurate picture hard to assemble. Still, cracks were spreading in the wall of denial. The photo of the USS George Washington wrecked and abandoned on a Kenyan sandbar was an internet sensation; two members of the House of Representatives had called for hearings on the war, though their request was stonewalled by the House leadership; through the sullen air of late summer, a sense was beginning to spread that something had gone very wrong.

In the White House, President Weed did not need to guess. Reports from the US forces in Kenya came in daily via the diplomatic line; when Nairobi fell, after a bitter three-day battle near Konza, a new line was jerry-rigged from Kisumu in the far west of the country. Most of the news was bad. The Chinese had brought in more planes, as well as air-defense systems that were making B-52 raids from Diego Garcia risky—two of the bombers had been shot down by surface-to-air missiles already. Meanwhile, there was no way to get supplies in to the American forces and their Kenyan allies; another fleet could not be sent as long as Chinese cruise missiles might be waiting for them, and the loss of air superiority made airlifts equally problematic.

“We tried to get Predator drones in to hit their air defense radar, but they were spotted and taken out,” the DCI—Director of Central Intelligence, the head of the CIA—was saying. “Chinese technology is, well, as good as ours these days.” What he was not saying, Weed knew, was that Chinese technology was better than its US equivalents these days, and half a dozen other countries had the same advantage. The reason wasn’t a mystery, either; most of the officials in the room, starting with Weed himself, had taken donations now and then in exchange for promoting or approving programs that were far more profitable to their manufacturers than they were useful to the US military."

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http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com/2012/10/how-it-could-happen-part-four-crossing.html

How It Could Happen, Part Four: Crossing the Line

" The church bells rang all night; perfect strangers embraced and kissed each other or fell on their knees and prayed together, depending on inclination; a baby boomlet nine months later revealed how many Americans celebrated the sudden discovery that life would go on. Around the world, crews in missile silos, bomber bases and submarines sagged with relief as they got the order to stand down. In the US, the few police and National Guard units still barricading freeways and guarding government assets melted into the cheering crowds. The threat of nuclear war was past.

As a cold gray morning spread over Washington, though, Jameson Weed surveyed what was left of his presidency, and dropped his head into his hands. A negotiation team would soon be its way to Geneva to meet its Chinese and Tanzanian opposite numbers and settle on a peace treaty. No matter how hard the spin doctors worked it, he knew, that treaty would mean a bitter defeat for America, and his solid grasp of the realities of American politics told him exactly who would be blamed for it.

The treaty, as it turned out, was surprisingly generous. No one had to admit fault or pay reparations; the United States simply had to accept the status quo in East Africa and assign its rights over Diego Garcia—which was owned by Great Britain anyway—to the Peoples Republic of China. Since the United States had no effective way to contest either demand, there was clearly no point in quibbling. The treaty was signed at the beginning of October, and ratified by a glum Congress three days later."

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http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com/2012/10/how-it-could-happen-part-five.html

How It Could Happen, Part Five: Dissolution

" Within hours, thanks to news media reporting minute-by-minute from St. Louis, word of the proposal to dissolve the Union circled the globe. The most common reaction was to dismiss it as an edgy joke. One pundit wrote hopefully that the prank might finally bring the convention to its senses. A few articles profiled the two delegates who had written the measure, giving them their first fifteen minutes of fame—they were back in the news two years later, on the occasion of their wedding—and then the media tried to move on to what it considered important news.

Over the days that followed, however, the proposal took on a life of its own. Across the country, in bars and living rooms and grange halls, people talked about little else; public meetings and rallies drew huge crowds, and with each passing day more of them backed the proposal. Meanwhile the online forum set up for comment on the convention’s debates crashed three times in as many hours, flooded by posts about dissolving the Union. By October 4th, the day that the proposal was scheduled for a vote on the convention floor, comments on the forum were running ten to one in favor of dissolution.

Politicians and pundits were discovering to their horror what more perceptive observers had noticed long before—that the United States had long since broken apart culturally, and stayed together only because the power of the federal government put disunion out of reach. Now, though, the unthinkable was an option. Every region saw a chance to get what it wanted without wrestling with the country’s yawning cultural chasms; western states in which up to 90% of the land was owned by the federal government, and thus exempt from state taxes and fees, ran the numbers and saw how easily they could balance their budgets once all that real estate fell into their hands; ambitious politicians on the state level began to dream of leading new nations; and the thought of getting out from under the massive Federal debt, by the simple expedient of dissolving the government that owed it, was on many minds. For them and many other Americans, dissolution seemed to offer dazzling possibilities, and few considered the massive downsides."

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7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Nice Fictional Account Of How The American Empire Might Finally End Over Oil - Worth The Read (Original Post) cantbeserious Sep 2014 OP
K&R for another challenging bit of thought Jackpine Radical Sep 2014 #1
Thanks! Looks very interesting, will be reading later. nt Mnemosyne Sep 2014 #2
k&r rbrnmw Sep 2014 #3
I dunno, Needa Moment Sep 2014 #4
If One Only Read The OP Snippets - Then One Missed The Point Of The Post cantbeserious Sep 2014 #5
Interesting read, thanks for posting Rochester Sep 2014 #6
I'm an Arch Druid too - I worship Christmas Trees. bananas Sep 2014 #7

Needa Moment

(56 posts)
4. I dunno,
Sun Sep 7, 2014, 03:23 PM
Sep 2014

The last paragraph read too much Libertarian, Cliven Bundyish for my personal liking. That could just be me.

The hard work is fixing what is already in place. I feel this has to be done - with all the predation lurking in the midst just waiting to pounce upon the vacuum ruin and destruction leaves in the wake. And those vultures now days are very overladen with power and money moreso than they have ever been. Too damn simple to do the wrong thing and throw every chunk of the baby out with the bath water.

It so sad that an economic model that targets such a small segment of OCD mental sickness of being the chosen prosperous few which disregards all the rest of creation in whole as being the only idyllic construct for civilization to live by.


mmm.... wonder if croutons would make a good addition to that word salad

cantbeserious

(13,039 posts)
5. If One Only Read The OP Snippets - Then One Missed The Point Of The Post
Sun Sep 7, 2014, 03:36 PM
Sep 2014

The set of 5 articles will take one about 1 and 1/2 hours to read.

The author, JMG, writes about the world as it transitions to a Post-Industrial future - our trajectory of Catabolic Collapse.

This fictional account focuses on the demise of American Empire as the world-wide scramble for oil becomes relentless.

In this story, the US finally loses, which leads to the dissolution of the US constitution.

Well worth your time to read.

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