The
unraveling of America's social order is accelerating, and denial will
not save us from the consequences of the plundering of the social
contract.
What kind of nation boasts a record-high stock
market and an unraveling social order? Answer: a failed nation, a
nation that has substituted artifice for realism for far too long, a
nation that now depends on illusory phantoms of capital, prosperity
and democracy to prop up a crumbling facade of "wealth"
that the populace now understands is largely in the hands of a few
families and corporations, most of which pay little to support the
citizenry they dominate politically and financially.
The
social order sounds abstract, but it is all too real. The social
order has two primary components: social cohesion, the glue of common
purpose and shared sacrifice binding the social order, and the social
contract, the implicit contract between the ruling elite, the state
(government) and commoners (the middle class, the working poor and
state dependents) that their labor, taxes and sacrifices will nourish
a society with a level playing field, broad-based opportunity and
security.
America's social cohesion has been lost, ground
under the heel of soaring inequality, a two-tiered economic/political
order, systemic unfairness and the elite's divide-and-conquer
manipulation of the political and cultural orders.
Historian
Peter Turchin characterized this social unraveling as disintegrative:
people no longer find reasons to cooperate and share sacrifices to
work towards a common national purpose. Rather, they find a multitude
of reasons to offload sacrifices onto others, hoard their own wealth
and seek to expand their power by accelerating the disintegrative
forces.
There is no debate about the collapse of America's
social contract, there are only varying levels of self-serving
denial. Commoners have awakened to the emptiness of the conventional
promise to get a college degree, work hard and you'll be rewarded
with security and prosperity. Huge swaths of America are a ransacked,
decaying shell of a society reminiscent of developing nations
suffering under the jackboot of kleptocrats.
America's
fast-expanding class of billionaires are doing their best to mimic
the clueless French nobility just before France's convulsive
revolution in 1789: America's billionaires bleat that they should pay
more taxes while their lobbying bulldozes gigantic loopholes in the
tax code, enabling Apple and other global giants to escape U.S.
taxes.
America's billionaires are busy building $500 million
private yachts and private spaceships while proclaiming their
globally distributed sweatshops are raising all boats in a tide of
money conjured out of thin air by the billionaires' central bankers.
America's ruling elite has rewritten the social contract to
benefit itself at the expense of the bottom 99.9%. Studies have
confirmed that the bottom 99.9% hold virtually no political power,
and the bottom 90% collect a pitiful 3% of all income generated by
capital and hold an inconsequentially thin slice of the nation's
wealth.
Actions have consequences and cultural revolutions
result from the suppression of legitimate political expression and
the failure of the regime to meet its lofty idealistic goals.
When
there is no relief valve in a collapsing social order, the explosive
pressure is eventually released in a Cultural Revolution that
unleashes all the bottled-up frustrations on elites. These
frustrations have no outlet politically because they're threatening
to the status quo and therefore suppressed at every turn.
Put
another way, if the pendulum is pushed to an extreme of exploitation,
suppression and inequality, when it's released, it will reach an
equivalent extreme (minus a bit of friction) at the opposite end.
That could be an unexpected but entirely foreseeable Cultural
Revolution.
Those who claim that can't happen in America are
safely outside the pressure cooker, protected by a delusional
confidence that since I'm doing great, everyone is doing great. Since
real political agency is no longer allowed, the pressure will find
release outside the political system. The lobbyists will still be
haunting the hallways of governance, but no one will care, for The
falcon will no longer hear the falconer.
By Charles Hugh Smith, June 25, 2021
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