Everyone is talking about the Great Resignation, the fact
that more and more American workers are dropping out of the workforce. Or else,
they are resigning from their jobs in order to find better opportunities.
In New York City, for example, the expectation is that it
will take three more years for employment to reach pre-pandemic levels. Walk
around town and you will see shut down restaurants and shops, to say nothing of
near empty office buildings.
And yet, when it comes to concepts that tell us the current state of America, I prefer David Foster’s concept, The Great Liquidation. And not just because Foster has frequently commented on my posts.
He is quite right to see America in its last
days, selling off its pride, its confidence, its successes and its
achievements. He is quite right to see America failing to educate its children,
failing to prepare them to do tomorrow’s jobs. He is quite right to see America
failing to build, failing to produce, failing to manufacture. America is
squandering its wealth, not putting it to work.
America is selling off its assets, the better to consume its
way to oblivion.
In Foster’s words:
America is hanging by a thread. A great liquidation
is underway, with the many of the structures that support American society..or,
in some cases, any viable society…being kicked away, sold off piecemeal, or
just wantonly destroyed. I’m talking about physical structures, legal
structures, and social structures.
I recommend the essay to your attention. I will summarize
some of the points, to whet your appetite.
If I may summarize some of what Foster sees:
A nation declining. A nation that is selling off its assets.
A nation that is selling down its past glories, squandering its physical and
psychological and social capital. A nation that is pretending that it has no
borders, no structural integrity, America affords no value to citizenship.
Heck, in New York City, non-citizens are now allowed to vote in local
elections.
America is not building, not preparing for the future. It is
running down its line of credit, as though there will never be a tomorrow when
it needs to pay back its loans. It is living on borrowed time, refusing to educate
the next generation, producing useless social justice warriors and expecting
them to compete against their peers who have studied science, math and
engineering.
The great American military is selling its pride in order to
foster diversity and inclusion. The government sits idly by when rioters
destroy America’s past; it punishes those schoolchildren who would declare
their pride in America. Silicon Valley is silencing the voices of patriots,
because Democratic lawmakers told them to do so.
The Biden administration is leading the way. Make America
energy dependent. Go all in for unreliable solar and wind. Shut down nuclear
facilities and hope that the blackouts are not too bad.
As for manufacturing and industry, we can no longer compete
effectively in the world markets. So we are becoming a nation of consumers,
living on credit, buying what others have made.
And our supply chains show us to be incompetent at unloading
container cargo ships. Even when we do so, the scavenger classes around Los
Angeles loot and pillage the containers before they leave the rail yards.
And then there is the massive effort to shut down freedom of
expression, social media censorship that systematically silences conservative
voices.
Just make sure that no one notices that the great
liquidation is underway. And if anyone does notice, deplatform and cancel them.
A nation that has confidence does not suppress dissent. A nation that is declining does.
The remaining companies that still produce in the US will eventually be driven out due to the increase costs of being green and the lack of a workforce.The execs will sell off the tech to the highest bidders and retire to NZ.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the link, Stuart. Good summary. There is indeed a connection between the Great Liquidation and the Great Resignation.
ReplyDeleteI think "As for manufacturing and industry, we can no longer compete effectively in the world markets" is too strong. There are a lot of fields where US products are very competitive. If you are anywhere in the world and you want to buy jet engines, you will do well to put GE at the top of your vendor list. The same for gas turbines and medical imaging equipment. If you want to develop artificial intelligence systems, you will probably want to use Nvidia chips (designed in the US and sold under the Nvidia brand, although the physical fabrication of these chips is done by TSMC in Taiwan...something that will hopefully change soon given the large investments in US-based fabs being made by TSMC and Intel) One industry that doesn't get a lot of attention is chemicals, but the US makes and exports a lot of chemical products, and the balance of trade in this industry is positive.
Main factors that will determine the degree to which US manufacturing thrives or shrinks will be:
--energy costs and reliability
--tax policy, esp re capital investment and R&D
--education
...and finally, culture: as I noted in the post, we have gone through a couple of decades in which manufacturing was viewed by too many as an unimportant industry, staffed by inferior people. I do think there has been significant change in these attitudes in recent years.
I, for one, hope that our current "Going Out of Business" sale is like the one held year after year in the local furniture store. The signs stayed up in the windows while a continuing line of furniture went out the doors. At least, for a decade or so, until the store really did go out of business when the owner died and his kids didn't want anything to do with it.
ReplyDeleteA letter from the Union Pacific Railroad to the LA County district attorney:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.up.com/cs/groups/public/@uprr/@newsinfo/documents/up_pdf_nativedocs/pdf_up_la_district_atty_211221.pdf