bobbythefap1 wrote on Mar 1
st, 2012 at 9:28am:
Globalisation has just quickened the decline.
We were heading in that direction anyway, it’s to do with the monetary system as a whole.
Fractional reserve banking is a scam and almost every country on earth is being destroyed by it.
Exactly. Globalization is not new. It reached its peak in the late 19th century, declined in WWI, and crashed in the Great Depression.
The global economy then atomised into national economies with competing war plans. After the war, an international gold standard was created which put a check on the excesses of the financial system.
It was the international financial system that was seen to be the cause - and the cure - of the problems of the 20th century; namely, two world wars.
In 1971, Nixon pulled out of the gold standard. This created a floating currency system again. Then, in the debt crisis of 1981, the IMF changed tack. It needed to plug holes in the debts of developing economies - debts that would bring down the US banks - and to do this it instituted the Washington Consensus.
This "consensus" marked globalization as we understand it today: free trade, privatisation of state industries, floating currencies and monetary policy.
Without it, we wouldn't have cheap Chinese consumer goods and foreign food products, so it has its advantages.
Equally, we wouldn't have an increasingly polarised world with "failed", or client, states - once attached to the two Cold War powers. The War On Terror is a response to globalization.
The first battle in the War On Terror was between Russia and Chechnya, and was a direct response to the breakup of the Soviet Union and its market liberalisation policies.
The US followed - first into Afghanistan, a former Soviet colony, and then the Middle East, a former Cold War battleground. This was a response to the dawning of the US's slow decline and the 2000 recession.
When the money pulls out of shares and goes into US bonds, it's tempting to start a war. Add the investment pulled out of soft tech stocks and into "hard" technology, and you've got a very itchy trigger finger indeed. Up the ante with a new administration looking for a cause, add September 11, and you've got a new world order.
It's not a new world order, just a mad clutch for order in a period of decline.
You can't hold off globalization, but states will always have a lover's tiff with it. On again, off again, it's just the way things are.
People trade, it's what we do as a species. Nationalism, racialism, protectionism and tribalism are nothing more than blind isms that seek to hold off the inevitable.
But how to deal with the stateless global financial system that creates the disorder in the first place?
Ah.