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GliderGuider

(21,088 posts)
Tue Feb 3, 2015, 09:43 PM Feb 2015

The view from north of the border [View all]

The behaviour coming out of the United States these days on every level - political, legal and social - is beginning to exhibit a degree of crazed unhingedness that I couldn't have imagined even a few short years ago. Unfortunately everything I'm seeing fits a pattern - none of it is encouraging but none of it is really a surprise. The following metaphor describes my rather dystopian perceptions.

Imagine a motor that is designed to consume fuel and accelerate spontaneously. So long as there is a limit on the fuel supply or a governor mechanism that limits the top speed, the motor will stop accelerating at some point, run at a constant speed, and remain intact.

The US right now, and to a lesser extent the whole world, is similar to an engine that has an excess fuel supply (i.e. money and energy), and from which some clever but short-sighted engineers (i.e. bankers and politicians) have managed to remove the regulator. Now as it continuously accelerates, spinning ever faster, the stresses on some parts of the system (you, me and large chunks of the social fabric) are becoming too great and they are beginning to break down. Some of us have figured out that the only ways to prevent the whole engine from blowing up is by reducing the fuel supply by cutting consumption, or by replacing the regulator through, um, regulations.

Part of what I'm seeing in the US is the kind of crazy that happens in overstressed rat populations, dysfunctions similar to Hans Selye's General Adaptation Syndrome. The rodents become progressively more separated from reality because they can't deal with the stresses they're experiencing, and their coping systems overload. Their behaviour becomes increasingly aggressive and erratic. So we get things like religious fundamentalism, politicians like Inhofe, Bachmann, Palin, (frankly most of the Republican party and an awful lot of Democrats), talk radio personalities etc. They are all symptoms of a seriously overstressed society.

The other thing I see happening is something like an autoimmune reaction, where the body's self-protective systems begin to attack the body itself. This is mechanism behind the over-the-top police behaviour, the illegal wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the CIA's domestic surveillance activities, the overreaction to illegal immigration, violent anti-Muslim sentiments, the glorification of snipers etc.

The immune system especially attacks people who are trying to cut the motor's fuel supply or reinstall its governor. It views such activities as attacks on the system by pathogens, and works to suppress or eliminate them. Essentially environmental and social-justice activism are reframed as a disease - the disease of terrorism.

This multidimensional breakdown is symptomatic of an accelerating, overstressed system that is nearing its limits of cohesion, with no way of relieving the pressure and no way of slowing itself down. I can't see any way of intervening effectively before some large important piece of the engine - perhaps the banking system - breaks down completely. But at that point the engine itself may not be salvageable.

Canada's on a similar path, but we're 5 or 10 years behind the States (as always). We also don't have the peculiar political and constitutional organization that is making it so easy for the States to self-immolate. Not to mention that america has the critical mass of 300 million people and the world's most energetic economy.

So it goes.

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The view from north of the border [View all] GliderGuider Feb 2015 OP
This message was self-deleted by its author 1000words Feb 2015 #1
Thanks for the reference to chervilant Feb 2015 #2
It's the apparent irreversibility of our course that concerns me most. GliderGuider Feb 2015 #7
Subterfuge. Look no further than THE FAMILY/THE FELLOWSHIP. Their goal is to "reconstruct" the US blkmusclmachine Feb 2015 #3
+1 countmyvote4real Feb 2015 #4
I see The Family more as an effect than as a cause. GliderGuider Feb 2015 #8
Precisely spot on... 2naSalit Feb 2015 #5
Now get back to work! Harder faster longer! lonestarnot Feb 2015 #6
Yup and those that are not prepared are going to be victims when the doodie hits the fan. ChosenUnWisely Feb 2015 #9
DU is getting old enough where we can start pulling doomsday threads from 2002, 2003 LOL snooper2 Feb 2015 #10
I joined in 2004 and I've held this view since the beginning. nt GliderGuider Feb 2015 #11
So, you disagree with GliderGuider? Make your case instead of snark. I've been ChisolmTrailDem Feb 2015 #12
I accept the diagnosis - please prescibe the survival tactics? jwirr Feb 2015 #13
Survival tactics? At what level? Over what time frame? GliderGuider Feb 2015 #14
That in itself is a good answer. Really makes one afraid of the future. I am old enough that I will jwirr Feb 2015 #15
I'm in my mid-sixties. GliderGuider Feb 2015 #16
Sure are. jwirr Feb 2015 #19
Most excellent. K&R n/t OneGrassRoot Feb 2015 #17
I find the view from North of the border is not welcome by a portion of the DU population... SidDithers Feb 2015 #18
I'm pleasantly surprised with the reception of this particular POV. nt GliderGuider Feb 2015 #20
Great post, as usual, GliderGuider. Pooka Fey Feb 2015 #21
Thank you! GliderGuider Feb 2015 #22
Yes, excellent post! tosh Feb 2015 #23
Two years later...you are right on point VigilantG Apr 2017 #24
Thank you! The way you immediately got the smart grid vulnerability was impressive! GliderGuider Apr 2017 #25
One thing I missed in this two year old analysis was the Russian attack during the election GliderGuider Apr 2017 #26
When the OP essay was written Canada was in Conservative Harper's grip. Changed since then. Bernardo de La Paz Apr 2017 #27
I meant "5-10 years behind the US in their slide into the abyss" GliderGuider Apr 2017 #28
Understood. Another perspective is maybe Canada 5 years ahead on climb out of abyss. . . nt Bernardo de La Paz Apr 2017 #29
It would be pleasant to think so. GliderGuider Apr 2017 #30
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