Dear Imperial America: the lifestyle you ordered is permanently out of stock.
By Charles Hugh Smith: Our extraordinary misallocation of national treasure and political power has
set a banquet of consequences that few are willing to face, much less address
head-on. If we had to sum up this vast misallocation, we might start by
characterizing it as the result of a multitude of elites playing Empire with
money borrowed from future generations.
We can start the list of extraordinary
misallocations of national treasure with the Neocon's endless wars of
choice. Ten years ago, estimates of the total cost of the Iraq
misadventure were $3 trillion: Cost of Iraq
War: $3 Trillion; Cost of Solar Plants to Power all 105 million U.S Households:
$500 Billion (April 10, 2008)
(Yes, I know solar energy is not "the
solution" due to intermittency, lack of storage, fossil fuels are needed
to build and maintain the solar infrastructure, etc.--but the point is: would
we be better off if we'd invested 20% of the money squandered on the Iraq
misadventure on alternative energy, even with all its limitations?)
But this does not exhaust the list of
extraordinary misallocations of treasure.Universities have found the funds to
build grand edifices on campus (never mind the trillion dollars in student loan
debt that funded the delusions of grandeur) while much of the rest of our
educational infrastructure crumbles as deferred maintenance takes its
inevitable toll.
Public transit systems such as the San
Francisco Bay Area's BART always find the funds to pay for hefty raises and
gold-plated benefits for employees and managers, meanwhile the system's core
has crumbled due to--you guessed it--hundreds of millions of dollars in
long-deferred maintenance.
While employee wages, benefits and pensions
dominate local government outlays, maintenance is funded by selling bonds,
which cost twice as much over the long run due to interest and other
costs.
Where cities and counties once funded
school maintenance and filling potholes out of tax receipts, now many locales
demand taxpayers approve tens of millions of dollars in new bonds to pay for
these basic infrastructure maintenance projects.
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It has reached the point that even
maintaining city parks requires borrowing millions.
Political elites have found that promising
the impossible--lower taxes and increased benefits/entitlements--keeps them in
power, and as long as the credit spigot of new government borrowing is wide
open, there are no limits on how many more trillions of dollars in future
interest payments can be promised to win re-election today.
The fact that this sets a toxic banquet of
consequences for future taxpayers and beneficiaries--no worries, some future
politico will have to sit down at that banquet:
Political and financial elites have lined
their own pockets and insured the continuity of their own power by deferring
boring, unsexy, you-get-no-votes-for-this maintenance. Want to be
"popular" and win re-election? Ram through sexy new projects such as
"affordable" housing (i.e. costly housing subsidized by taxpayers),
extensions in mass transit lines, fancy new stadiums and student-services
buildings--and pay for it all with borrowed money and by slashing boring,
unsexy maintenance work.
The drama of the Oroville Dam is tied
directly to the deferral of rountine maintenance: What You Need
To Know About The Oroville Dam Crisis (interview with a civil
engineering expert and Chris Martenson)
While we must ask cui bono (to
whose benefit?) of scare-mongering estimates of deferred maintenance (one
person's "required infrastructure" could be another person's
pork-barrel project awarded as payback for political contributions), many of us
can see a crumbling empire of deferred maintenance with our own eyes.
I can personally attest to city streets
that were potholed 20 years ago that finally got repaved--but only after
taxpayers agreed to pay double by borrowing millions for routine street
maintenance that was previously paid out of tax revenues.
I see spalling concrete (concrete falling
off due to rusting rebar) at major international airports, university buildings
that are flooded due to poor drainage that should have been addressed decades
ago, water mains that burst, sewer lines that are decades past their
replacement date--the list is truly endless.
Dear Imperial America: the lifestyle you
ordered is permanently out of stock.The banquet of consequences has already
been served, and will only become more distasteful the longer we put off facing
our skyrocketing debt, runaway elites and delusions of grandeur head-on.
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