Back to the Future
Posted by Harry Stotle on December 8, 2008
In 1992, a very famous book announced the End of History. For the better or for the worse, current events may be pulling us back to the future, i.e. to change under incertitude, the old feature of human condition. One of the foremost economic crises in modern times is not only blurring the vision of a triumphant capitalist market, but is also reopening the possibility of a political eschatology somewhat different from the everlasting parliamentary State.
While governments minimize by a full order of magnitude the quantities of financial medicine they should inject into the arteries of a chocking world trade, entire populations get closer everyday from feeling personally the pains of new poverty. The higher the recent growth their respective countries had reached, the harsher the depression will be for them. The most dependent zones on foreign trade are likely to undergo a severe social turmoil. For once, Western Europe is not the weakest link. Equipped with the strongest social infrastructures and relatively good reserves, the area is also protected by its dominant inner trade, as well as a long habit of bad news and of lagging in economic growth. “Chinamerica” should be the seismic zone, together with Eastern Europe. The United States cannot solve all issues by simply playing with an overwhelming currency, as in the good old days, and the Chinese armed forces are not strong enough to fight a violent resentment against so great lost expectations.
What’s really new is that domination of the State is not as much at stake as the State itself. We are not confronted with the prospect of opposition parties taking over, but with the one of a pervasive distrust for States in general. Tax boycotts could very well appear in America, and riots in many places. Young people raised in false hopes will show their anger. Nihilistic sabotage, rejection of intellectual property may also join the symptoms. Such disorders, not being driven by a structured vision of society, are among the most difficult to fight by anything else than extreme ideologies. Even Islam may prove unable to capture a negative energy essentially indifferent to geopolitics.
You may smile at this kind of doom saying and you may be right in only one case: if we can rebuild the system nearly as fast as we destroyed it, if the economy can take a fresh start on the basis of a fraction only of the assets which were annihilated. If you do not believe this is a real possibility, then better get ready to meet History again.
Bertolt Brecht had a say for the optimist and one for the pessimist. You can now make your choice: ‘The worst is never certain’ and ‘The belly is still fertile from which the foul beast sprang’. Personally, I would pick both.
This is how the world goes.