James Howard Kunstler, author of The Long Emergency (which I am currently reading -- thanks Dad!) has a different, and discomforting vision of the future. Unfortunately it is based in fact. He is definitely a must read for anyone who wants to navigate through the rapids of near-future American life. Here is an excerpt from his most recent blog post:
In the twilight of the Bush days, in the twilight of the twilight season, a consensus has formed that we are headed into a long, dark passage leading we know not where. Even CNBC's Lawrence Kudlow has been reduced to searching for stray "mustard seeds" of hope on hands and knees in a bleak and tortured financial landscape. Half the enterprises in the land are lined up for some kind of relief bailout and a blizzard of pink slips has cut economic visibility to zero.
The broad American public voted for "change" but they thought that meant a "changing of the guard." Out with the feckless Bush; in with the charismatic Obama... and may this American life now continue just as it ever was. The change actually coming will be much more than they bargained for, namely our transition from a wealthy society to a hardship society. The sharp break is a product of our years-long failure to reckon with the energy realities of our time. We're still confused about that, but it's hard, otherwise, to ignore the massive disappearance of capital, asset values, livelihoods, domiciles, comforts, and necessities.
He also has a weekly podcast interview which can be found here, and he appeared on the always zeitgeisty Colbert Report:
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
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