• 503 days Will The ECB Continue To Hike Rates?
  • 503 days Forbes: Aramco Remains Largest Company In The Middle East
  • 505 days Caltech Scientists Succesfully Beam Back Solar Power From Space
  • 905 days Could Crypto Overtake Traditional Investment?
  • 910 days Americans Still Quitting Jobs At Record Pace
  • 912 days FinTech Startups Tapping VC Money for ‘Immigrant Banking’
  • 915 days Is The Dollar Too Strong?
  • 915 days Big Tech Disappoints Investors on Earnings Calls
  • 916 days Fear And Celebration On Twitter as Musk Takes The Reins
  • 918 days China Is Quietly Trying To Distance Itself From Russia
  • 918 days Tech and Internet Giants’ Earnings In Focus After Netflix’s Stinker
  • 922 days Crypto Investors Won Big In 2021
  • 922 days The ‘Metaverse’ Economy Could be Worth $13 Trillion By 2030
  • 923 days Food Prices Are Skyrocketing As Putin’s War Persists
  • 925 days Pentagon Resignations Illustrate Our ‘Commercial’ Defense Dilemma
  • 926 days US Banks Shrug off Nearly $15 Billion In Russian Write-Offs
  • 929 days Cannabis Stocks in Holding Pattern Despite Positive Momentum
  • 930 days Is Musk A Bastion Of Free Speech Or Will His Absolutist Stance Backfire?
  • 930 days Two ETFs That Could Hedge Against Extreme Market Volatility
  • 932 days Are NFTs About To Take Over Gaming?
What's Behind The Global EV Sales Slowdown?

What's Behind The Global EV Sales Slowdown?

An economic slowdown in many…

Is The Bull Market On Its Last Legs?

Is The Bull Market On Its Last Legs?

This aging bull market may…

How The Ultra-Wealthy Are Using Art To Dodge Taxes

How The Ultra-Wealthy Are Using Art To Dodge Taxes

More freeports open around the…

  1. Home
  2. Markets
  3. Other

The Thin Red White and Blue Line

or

10 Metaphors for a Broken Economy

Second Quarter, 2008

Bill Cosby used to tell an anecdote about driving in San Francisco for the first time, and how he got stuck at a red light atop a steep hill. He figured that by the time he got his foot off the brake and onto the gas he would have rolled backwards into the bay and drowned. On the basis that dying in such a manner would not qualify for entrance into Heaven, his solution to the dilemma was to not move. Instead he hollered to the guy behind him; "Come around idiot, come around!" This didn't work however because the guy behind him was too busy shouting "Come around idiot, come around!" to the guy behind him. And so on.

Bill's conundrum, that the person downstream from you is unable to comply because they are in the same jam as you, is a metaphor for the current state of the US economy, which is a short step away from a recession the likes of which we have not seen in our lifetimes. The trouble with the economy -well, there's actually more than one- but one of the biggies boils down to a single word; leverage. Let me explain.

Leverage Works - Until It Doesn't

To be leveraged, in an economic sense, means you control an asset by putting up fewer dollars than the asset is actually worth. Leverage has existed ever since there were systems of monetary exchange. In modern times a home loan is an example. If you buy a house for 20% down and make payments totaling 25% of your income, you've got leverage. Leverage in this case is a good thing; a tool used to create a thriving economy. However moving into a house you buy for 0% down and make payments totaling 50% of your net income might be a bit too much leverage. Everyone of course is aware of the sub-prime mess. But not everyone is aware that over-leveraged investments have permeated every facet of our economy, from personal credit to commercial credit . . . in the US and across the globe. Leveraged economies get into trouble when the assets being levered lose value. That's happening now.

Most of us understand, either anecdotally or through personal experience, what this means for say, a highly leveraged home loan. The property can suddenly be worth less than you paid for it. Ouch! Try refinancing your way out of that Adjustable Rate Mortgage that just adjusted upward, while the property has just appraised downward. But we have peaked out on leverage across the board, and the process of un-leveraging, if you will, is going to be painful. More so than the mainstream financial press is letting on. It's something you may want to get ready for.

It Ain't Just Housing

The issue with leveraged investments extends well beyond bad loans from the so called sub-prime crisis. It's now the global credit crisis. Everyone is leveraged. Consumer debt is at an all time high . . . savings an all time low. What's more, we consumers are leveraged in ways we are not even aware of. Sub-prime loan risk long ago left the local bank where the mortgage was born, and has leaked into investment vehicles typically considered safe. Even if you personally do not have a troubled sub-prime mortgage, your investments/retirement plans may well be dependent on the returns from such loans, and they stand to sustain a loss if the borrowers default.

How could that happen? You have perhaps heard the terms credit derivatives and credit swaps? These innocent sounding names refer to financial instruments used to redistribute risk. The terms went mainstream earlier this year as the press broke the news on the Bear Sterns debacle and other credit nightmares. When money is as cheap and plentiful as it has been, sub-prime loans were made with great frequency. The banks have always known though that the loans were risky. To deal with that risk they repackaged groups of such loans into a financial vehicle known as a credit derivative. The derivative is sold to a buyer who earns an income stream from a portion of the loan payments contained in the derivative. In return, the buyer of the derivative guarantees that if any loans in the group are defaulted on, the buyer will make good on the loan. It's kind of an insurance policy, wherein the price of each policy is derived by the supposed credit worthiness of the loans as a group. That all sounds good except . . .

The problem with these derivatives over the past few years is that they have been traded around and repackaged so often that the true risk of the underlying loans has become obscured. Such derivatives have often ended up with a higher credit rating than they warranted. And investment in these questionably rated instruments is pervasive. For example they are widely owned by so called hedge funds, which have special dispensation allowing the funds to own highly speculative investments. Hedge funds in turn are widely held by pension plans due to the high return, and when the true value of such funds are accounted for in the books, some people will be receiving shocking balance statements in the mail. Another example of a shocking place derivatives have popped up is discount broker E*Trade, which is teetering on the verge of bankruptcy from trying to increase their bottom line by investing in guess what . . .derivatives. Who knew?

We now return to Bill Cosby's dilemma and how it applies to the current state of affairs concerning bad loans. Banks and other institutions are required to maintain a certain level of equity, or margin, on their loans. If the properties represented by the loans drop in value, the bank must come up with enough cash to reestablish a minimum level of equity. It's called a margin call. What happens is that the phone rings one day and a voice on the other end of the line says something to the effect of "Hey, you idiots have to come up with a pile of $$ to cover these loans!".

( . . . pause . . .)

Shit! They weren't expecting that. Why? Because investments like residential and commercial real estate have been going up in value for so long, everyone pretty much forgot that one day they might go down.

But that's just the first domino to fall. The borrower doesn't have a pile of money lying around. Why? They're over-leveraged. They bet the farm on the premise the investments would continue to rise. But wait. Hold the phone. Although a home mortgage can not generally receive a margin call, the bank may have granted certain loans that do require a minimum amount of equity be maintained. If such loans are in any way tied to real estate they have likely dropped in value as well. So the bank, needing some quick cash, picks up the phone to issue a margin call of its own. We know what will be said when the phone is answered. "Hey, you idiots have to come up with a pile of $$ to cover this loan!". But alas, the line is busy. I Wonder why?

Answer. Everyone is over leveraged. A version of the above scenario played out recently with global investment banking firm Bear Sterns. Bear Sterns was up to its neck in bad derivatives. As the diminished value of the depreciated loans were reflected on the books (a process called mark to market), Sterns came due for the dreaded margin call. It could not produce the required funds however, so the Federal Reserve stepped in to provide the needed liquidity. This was unheard of, but if the 'Fed' had not bailed them out, the dominos would have started falling BIG TIME. Sterns was considered too big to fail.

Although all this over-leveraging has gone on for several years now, I believe the chickens are now heading home to roost. Meaning, major cracks are appearing in the economy, and its continued functioning is in question. Bear Sterns was not the only bad boy on the block. Other banks are in trouble and we will be hearing from them shortly. And it won't just be investment banks, but rather banks with names you will recognize. Want proof? Are you familiar with the term "Fractional Reserve System" from high school economics? It's the system that allows a bank to keep only a fraction of its deposits in reserve. The rest of the deposits can be lent out. Meaning, not everyone could take their money out of the bank at once; but enough people could so as to prevent a bank run. Kind of an important system. So how are bank reserves doing today? Take a look at the chart below:


The banks have negative reserves! This is not to be taken lightly

The chart is a not-so-pretty picture showing that the amount of bank reserves is actually in the negative. Ouch. That's more leveraging, and just like Cosby's line of stuck cars, all the banks are in the same jam. By the way, this chart was not made by some dufuss with a copy of Photoshop. It's from the Federal Reserve itself. The insurer of these banks, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) is aware of this sad state of reserves and has beefed up its staff, including calling employees out of retirement. Banks of course have failed before, and we have gotten through it. But it must be recognized that due to all the overleveraging, the crisis upon us now could be much worse than any previous one. Put simply, the FDIC can only cover about 1% of all insured deposits.

Can you imagine what would happen if a financial shock took place such that depositors rushed to the bank to become withdrawers? The music is going to stop and not everyone will have a chair. Would you want to be at the end of that line? Have you ever seen the movie It's a Wonderful Life with Jimmy Stewart? Do you now believe that I'm not just being paranoid in sending out this warning?

What we have been living out for the past 20 years -about since the beginning of the [Federal Reserve Chairman] Alan Greenspan era- is a version of one of the oldest con games in the world; the ponzi scheme. The ponzi system works great and makes you money . . . right up until it doesn't. It has to break down at some point. The Dot-com bubble of 2001 gave way to the credit bubble, which gave way to the housing bubble. It's become a bubble economy. But in the end the bubble always pops. The party must end. There is a boom. Then there is a bust. We should have had a more serious bust (recession) after the Dot-com bubble. Instead, interest rates were lowered and a credit/housing bubble was encouraged in order to forestall an economic downturn (yes, the sub-prime mortgage fiasco was no accident, but that's a different article).

Our economy at this point is akin to a forest that has not been allowed to burn for many a year. We know what happens to such forests. All it takes is one single incident, one match, and . . . poof. What should have been a natural, periodic, and predictable process gets totally and completely out of hand. The longer fire is suppressed, the worse the damage when it comes.

Our economic system, i.e. our way of life, is a tinderbox. This is not an exaggeration. The Federal Reserve most certainly knows this, and it's why they did something in March of 2008 that has never been done in their 95 year existence; they provided funds to a non-Federal Reserve bank. The Fed bailed out Bear Sterns. Sterns owed money it couldn't pay and had lied about that fact right up to the end. Its debts were more than its assets to the tune of trillions of dollars of devalued derivatives (that's trillions, with a T). If that size a derivative pool had been defaulted on, one of the most important elements that glue an economy together could have burned to the ground right then; Trust. The only reason institutions are willing to lend money to each other is if they trust the monies will be paid back. Money is not lent if there is no reasonable expectation of it being returned. Without loans the economy is crippled. Capitalism runs on capital.

From the Federal Reserve's point of view, Bear Sterns had to be bailed out. If it hadn't we may well have reached a tipping point that would have commenced the giant, painful process of un-leveraging the economy right then and there. The Fed is pulling out all the stops to forestall that day. So as it stands, the dominos remain upright . . . for the moment. This blessing gives you and me time to take precautions.

So Where Do We Stand?

Funny, things do seem a bit better now, don't they? Bear Sterns was saved. Precautions have been taken. Adjustments have been made. Measures have been put into place. The stock market came back. We're probably out of the woods, right? Wrong. Here is what my research has revealed: There are a whole bunch of Bear Sterns out there. Way, way too many to be saved by the Federal Reserve. And it's not just investment houses. Everyone is leveraged, and asset prices are falling. The math has turned against us. The party has gone on for far too long. The booze (easy money) should have been cut off years ago. But our then bartender at the Federal Reserve, Alan Greenspan, would not hear of it. Let the good times roll, said Greenspan. Make a toast to Uncle Al, the borrowers pal.

You need to know that right now a lot of effort is being made to convince Americans that the worst is over. There are newspaper articles inferring so. There are fewer ugly stories about financial Armageddon. Most importantly, a truly unbelievable amount of money is being spent to convince you, the American consumer (not to mention the world), that the worst is over. The stock market is literally being propped up by these funds. The price of gold is being forcibly manipulated downward by this money (Google 'plunge protection team'). It's a dog and pony show designed to do one thing; make it appear the worst is over. Everything is all right now. It's ok to keep pouring the low interest loans and continue the party. But beware the man behind the curtain. His powers are limited. And there is a steep price to pay for what he is doing.

What we are going to see over the next few months and years are a series of gradual revelations regarding the truth about the economy as events force these truths to the surface. They can be suppressed no longer. Where we stand is that the trends we are seeing in the first half of 2008, higher energy and food prices, shortages, rising unemployment, reductions in our lifestyle, etc. are going to continue. Here's why:

Inflation and The Falling Dollar

The aforementioned issue of trust when lending money now goes a step beyond the question of "Will I get paid back"? The question has been amended to "Will I get paid back with anything of value"? Dollars are worth less and less these days. This is the other shoe dropping, and it will have far reaching consequences which have already begun.

Inflation is back. It's standing on the front porch, and is poised to bust through the door. But like the Shark in the old Chevy Chase/Saturday Night Live skit, it's been disguised to look far more innocent than it truly is. Meaning, the rate of inflation reported in the news vis-à-vis the government sourced Consumer Price Index (CPI), is a deception. Inflation is much higher than reported. To begin with, the cost of food and energy has been removed from the index. Think about that. What if you removed food and energy from your monthly expenditures? Two of the three most important expenses in our daily lives (shelter being the third) are not factored into the cost of living index. Hello? Additionally, there is reason to believe that even the items still remaining in the CPI are being fudged. The true rate of inflation is far higher than stated by the government (try 10-15%). That of course should be no surprise to the person paying the bills in your household.

Where does inflation come from? It's partially due to more and more people worldwide bidding for a finite amount of goods. That's supply and demand 101. But inflation is greatly exacerbated by Federal Reserve policy. The Fed has the power to set short term interest rates, and the artificially low rates we have seen for years now causes the supply of money to rise (due to more loans being made). A basic law of supply and demand states that more $$ chasing the same number goods cause prices to rise. With the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) running only about 1% this year (1% more goods), while the money supply is increasing at 12-25%, the difference will result in more inflation -above and beyond normal supply and demand.

There's more. As most folks know, this country continues to spend money far faster than it takes it in. The war, natural disasters, tax rebates, missing money from the Treasury (4 trillion or so), homeland security, entitlement financing, the bailout of troubled financial firms, and all our other expenses are taking their toll. As a general rule, any debts not paid for by taxes or borrowing is paid for by inflating the currency. (this is known as monetizing the debt or monetary inflation).


The US dollar is in near freefall

Inflation also has an impact on the US dollar overseas, as its value drops further and further. The dollar is the world's 'reserve' currency. This means more trading is done around the world in US dollars than any other currency. Remember that most consumer goods are now purchased from overseas. A falling dollar makes foreign goods more expensive. It keeps taking more and more dollars to buy those foreign goods. The above chart measures the US dollar in relation to a mix of other currencies. It is one of the most widely watched of all economic indicators. Notice the direction of the trend.

Don't forget that most of our oil is imported now. The price of oil rises in lock-step to a falling dollar -again, above and beyond normal market forces. These factors add to the fires of inflation even further because a critical commodity like oil is used in so many products, a rise in its price alone is going to force prices of nearly everything up further. The rocketing price of oil is one of the biggest cracks in the dike.

Adding it all up

We've reached a critical point in our experiment in democracy. The Achilles Heal of free enterprise is greed, and we are seeing insatiable greed manifested on an unparalleled scale. The price of freedom is eternal vigilance, yet we have unfortunately allowed the fox to guard the hen house. We simply haven't been paying attention. Basic freedoms are slipping away. We're out of money. In the last 15 years America has gone from the world's greatest creditor nation to the world's greatest debtor nation. America now owes more money to more people in more places than anytime in its history. The interest on the nearly 10 trillion dollar national debt is pushing one half trillion dollars a year (third largest federal budget expense item). Yet we have been told for years that deficits don't matter. Oh yeah?

At some point the Chinese (and the rest of the world) will not be willing to buy any more of America's debt. But again, The Federal Reserve has made it crystal clear what it will do when it comes to providing needed liquidity to the economy; they will print money. The Fed will print all the money required to bail out every Bear Sterns that comes out of hibernation to 'fess up' about how much they have lied about all the bad paper on their balance sheets. And, they will print money for anything else related to keeping the economy afloat. The current Fed chairman, Ben Bernanke, wants the same thing Alan Greenspan wanted; keep the party going at all costs. Don't let the forest burn. One thing is almost certain however . . . the forest will eventually burn. I have written this article because I believe we are close to that day, and if precautions are taken you won't get as badly burnt as they guy down the street.

Now it's hard to tell exactly how and when an economic bombshell will manifest itself. The future is always in motion, so the key is to focus on the well founded trends that are likely to continue. What's really interesting by the way, is that the future can be considered as especially unpredictable right now. A lot of the old rules don't apply. We are in unchartered waters, with many changes coming upon the earth. Climate changes, geologic changes, social changes, changes in our solar system, and more. Therefore it's important to factor that in to planning for the future. What I am trying to say is that while the state of the economy alone necessitates precautions be taken, the unpredictability of the near to intermediate future not only does not invalidate the need to take precautions, it underscores the need to do so. For the thinking person, uncertainty begets contingency planning.

COULD THE GREAT DEPRESSION OCCUR AGAIN?

You should also know that a key piece of legislation put in to law by FDR after the Great Depression has been systematically dismantled. The 'Glass-Steagall Act' kept mortgage banking and investment banking separate in order to mitigate the chances of another depression. The law was mostly dismantled under the Clinton administration.

The Trends Tell Us Our Immediate Future

Here is a list of what we can likely expect as the future moves into present time (now through 2012):

• Inflation up
• Long term interest rates up
• Gold and silver up
• Energy prices up
• Unemployment up
• Volatility way up
• Food prices up
• Personal and municipal bankruptcies up
• US dollar down
• Real estate down
• Equity markets down
• Personal freedom down

Inflation will continue to rise, at least for certain sectors of the economy. The action of the Federal Reserve dictates it will likely rise substantially over the next couple of years, starting yesterday. Don't forget that the CPI (Consumer Price Index) is compromised, and does not tell the true story of inflation. Increased demand for resources will drive prices up even further as literally hundreds of millions of people around the world move from poverty to the middle class, and will want the same things we want.

Long term interest rates will rise as lenders become convinced inflation is here to stay. Lenders will not lend money at a loss (although short term rates may be artificially tamped down by the Fed for the moment, the Fed has little control over long term rates).

Precious metals are just that; precious. There is only so much gold and silver, and that is why these metals are such a reliable store of value. Real inflation of our currency was not possible until gold was disconnected from the dollar. A currency not tied to a solid commodity such as gold is doomed to fail. History tells us that. And as high as gold and silver have climbed so far this decade, they are destined to go far higher. Inflation guarantees that.

Energy prices will likely go higher, though probably not in a straight line. Energy pricing is affected by both monetary inflation, a declining dollar, and natural supply and demand. The perceived shortage of crude oil and other raw materials is causing the price of these goods to rise. This perception may or may not be correct, but it's perception that counts.

Unemployment will continue to rise as the economy continues to contract. High food & energy prices and the global credit crisis are two big factors. Unemployment begets more unemployment as out of work Americans buy less. This also increases foreclosures. Leveraged loans go into foreclosure quicker. With a glut of empty houses on the market, the building trades, lumber industry, et al start to recess. More unemployment. It's a house-of-cards. The government can't stop this. They can only make it worse.

Volatility will reign supreme. The markets have much to digest as the various economic forces battle it out. For a period of time, perception that the world economy as a whole is slowing will drive the price of raw materials and finished goods down (less demand). At other times real or perceived shortages of the same items, due to demand, weather, war, or politics (a form of war), will send prices through the roof.

Food prices are subject to the statements in the previous paragraph but are a special case for several reasons, not to mention that we need food every day to live. There are a number of forces at work that may make food not only expensive, but many items outright hard to buy at any price. That's scary, but you must understand that we live in a "just-in-time" economy. Costco does not make its products at the warehouse store. Food is not grown in the back yard. It comes from other states, and other countries. There is a complex pipeline that gets food from the field to the grocery store, and there are cracks throughout the system, from the genetically modified seeds planted in the ground to the rising cost of getting products to market. The food supply line is very tight at present. Take wheat. Although a record wheat crop is projected for 2008, we are at the lowest inventory of wheat in the US in 60 years. The entire world has only a 60 day supply.

Personal bankruptcies will rise as a down economy leaves many with no choice. City government bankruptcy filings will go up dramatically as bad investments and a reduced tax base break an already strained system of delivering basic services.

The dollar will continue to fall, again due to the action of the Federal Reserve. It won't be a straight line down, but the overall trend is down, down, down. This means the price of imports -especially oil- go up, up, up.

Real estate may not come back for quite a while. This is one sector that as you know is deflating, not inflating. Rising mortgage rates, a population with less money or no money and maxed out on credit, combined with a serious oversupply of housing means we may not see new highs in residential real estate for the foreseeable future. Commercial real estate is not far behind.

The stock market is due to come down dramatically. Stock prices are ultimately based on a company's earnings, and a slowing economy means lower earnings. Although the market currently seems to be looking ahead to better times (as of the first half of 08), think about all the warnings stated earlier in this article. There is good reason to believe that the equities markets are being propped up with large sums of money, making us believe that investors value these companies higher than they actually do. There is currently a very unusual divergence between consumer confidence numbers (down) and stock indexes (up); further evidence that the stock market might be weaker than it appears.

Personal freedom is likely to become even more restricted. I personally believe that the threat of terrorism has been used as an excuse to abrogate our rights. Keep your eyes open and be prepared to exercise your right to protest. (Hint: Google "RFID human rights" and/or "national ID card" for starters).

Finally, let me underscore one last time that it is the action of the Federal Reserve that sets the biggest trend of all. The Fed can be counted on to bail out failing institution after failing institution and prop up the economy with inflated dollars. That's not good. It could lead to hyper-inflation and/or a total breakdown of the all-important trust factor. But the Fed just refuses to let the party die. To continue the metaphor, the Fed is supposed to be the designated "party-poopers" of the nation. They are supposed to card the people entering the bar, and cut off the booze when lampshades start getting unscrewed. Meaning, they are supposed to crank up short term interest rates when inflation rears its head. Fed Chairman Paul Volker did this in the 70's to kill off what is known as stagflation (a recession with rising prices). It worked. 20% interest rates hurt like Hell, but the economy -just as the proverbial forest allowed to burn- came back. But the current Fed, supposedly a team of professional party-poopers, have turned in to party-promoters, and now it may be too late. Example: The Fed is now swapping US guaranteed securities in exchange for junk loans as a way to get this garbage off the street, thus transferring the burden of this bad paper to the US tax payer!

If the trust in our system fails we will wake up to an economic nightmare. Everyone will head for the exits at once. Meaning, people will try to sell their stock before the other guy does. Folks will try to get their money out of the bank ahead of everyone else. Families will try to buy and hoard food and other commodities, forcing control mechanisms into play as with the rice shortage scare.

What To Do?

All we can do is hope for the best and plan for the worse. As a point of reference I will share with you the best advice I have run across.

• Lighten up on equity investments (securities)
• Buy gold and silver
• Buy food
• Become a farmer
• Stock up on the basics
• Keep some cash on hand
• Take some security precautions
• Buy a super-high gas mileage vehicle like a motorized bicycle
• Conduct a "disaster preparedness test"

Securities, once a safe bet, are not so secure anymore. A number of things could bring about a bear market, with many reasons listed throughout this article. Many believe we are already in a bear market. Several likely events could cause a sudden, precipitous drop in the markets. The reverse is less likely. The best take on the stock market I have heard is that we will undergo a stair-step drop in prices over the next few years; i.e. a sharp drop in stock prices, a sideways consolidation process, then another stair-step down. So, you may want to think about allocating a portion of funds, including any retirement funds you have direct control over, to alternate investments. There are a couple of thoughts below, but if you have a substantial nest egg I suggest you seek out a financial investment counselor not wearing rose-colored glasses.

When paper money loses its value people turn to real money. This means gold and silver. History teaches us this. Buy gold. In fact, I was speaking with a fellow investor a few weeks ago, and we both agreed that if we could only invest in one single vehicle, it would be gold/silver. Repeat, although a bit contrarian even with today's relatively elevated precious metals prices, gold and silver are probably the safest investments you can make. You will preserve your wealth, and possibly multiply it. So. Did I mention . . . buy gold.

Stock up on food. Fill the pantry with foodstuffs that have at least a 1-3 year life span. Fill the garage if you want. What will it hurt? If it's business as usual over the next few years, your car gets a little oxidized and you have a bunch of food to eat. But seriously, I often hear advice that at least a six month supply is wise.

Plant a victory garden. There's a novel idea. I remember moving into a new house in suburbia as a six year old, and noting that my parents went to great lengths to keep down the various vegetables that would sprout up through the backyard lawn each year - in a prior incarnation the back yard had been a vegetable garden. Everything old is new again.

It would also be wise to stock up on staples in general. Toilet paper, candles, soap, gasoline, propane, medicine, water. The stuff you take camping. Solar panels and solar battery charges are a great idea.

Also think for a moment about the security of your family. If there is an interruption of power and/or food for more than a few days, there are unprepared people who will begin to get desperate. Desperate people do desperate things. In the event of a disaster, the local authorities and rescue centers will be overwhelmed and can't be counted on. And don't assume you can get cash out of the ATM. Keep some on hand.

Finally, think about conducting a disaster preparedness test. Take a weekend home and see what it is like to go without power and transportation. Yeah, turn off the lights. The purpose of the test is to see if you have all the stuff you need to survive off the grid if need be. It's seems weird to talk about power interruptions but the electrical power infrastructure is in a precarious state. The more self-sufficient you become, the better you will weather the coming storm.

Final Thoughts

So what is the thin red white & blue line? It's the distance between having the usual amount of food on the table . . . or going without certain items. It's the space between having the choice to drive your car as far as you choose . . . or gas rationing. It's the difference between having all the freedoms Americans have enjoyed for generations . . . or seeing them evaporate under the guise of government protection. There used to be a wall between these extremes. An impenetrable shield between the thinkable and the unthinkable. But the wall has shrunk to where we can now peer through its transparency.

To be fair, one could certainly point out that the stage has been set in the past for some kind of malady to befall us . . . yet it did not occur. Y2K would be an example. However, the reason I feel the likely is likely to happen this time around is that things are simply different. There is a change in the wind. Many people I talk to feel it. The earth is changing . . . people are changing. We seem to be approaching a zenith. I urge you take precautions even if it appears for a time that we are out of the woods.

I believe also that the future is somewhat malleable. We tend to create our own realities . . . our own futures. Although it seems impossible that we as Americans, as well as a species, cannot avoid some amount of disruption and discomfort over the next few years, regardless we must keep a totally positive attitude. It's important that we all do so. We must envision that the world is going to be OK. It will be. It's just that we have reached an apex of selfishness and greed, and it appears that a cleansing is coming.

The wisest words I heard lately are these: In the next few years it's not going to be about where you live, but about whom you live with. Make friends with your neighbors.

All the best

Feedback to TheThinLine@hottrainingmaterials.com

 

Back to homepage

Leave a comment

Leave a comment