Thursday, August 3, 2023

Bill Bonner, "Bombs Bursting In Air"

Bregenz, Austria and Lake Constance at sunset.
"Bombs Bursting In Air"
Ratings agency downgrades US Government credit, 
cites "expected fiscal deterioration"...
by Bill Bonner

Bregenz, Austria - "We got here just in time for the fireworks. Bregenz is just across the river from Switzerland…and only a stone’s throw from Liechtenstein and Germany too. And on Tuesday night, we crossed the river to visit friends in Switzerland. They live in a castle, perched on a hill overlooking the entire valley down to Lake Constance. At the bottom, down in what is now a wine cellar, is a pediment that was put up in the 10th century. Above it rose the castle – reworked after mischief, fires, and many years of neglect had done their damage. And upon the castle was a circular tower. It was from this vantage point, after dinner, that we waited for the colorful explosions.

As it happened, we expected fireworks on Wall Street too. The rating agency, Fitch, had just downgraded US debt. CNBC: "Nasdaq drops more than 2% in worst day since February as Fitch downgrade ignites selloff." "Fitch Ratings cut the long-term foreign currency issuer default rating for the U.S. to AA+ from AAA Tuesday night, citing “expected fiscal deterioration over the next three years.” The last time the U.S. got a downgrade from a major ratings agency was in 2011 when Standard & Poor’s cut the rating to AA+ from AAA.

Bombs Bursting In Air: As expected, US bonds went down. Yields went up. Bloomberg: "Treasury Yields Hit 2023 Highs." "US 10-year yield climbs as much as 10 basis points to 4.12%." Increasing the cost of loans – in a country with $32.6 trillion in debt already…that needs to borrow $1 trillion per month (in this quarter) – is bound to have consequences. It is those ‘consequences’ that we are waiting for.

In the meantime, Tuesday was the Swiss national holiday, commemorating an event that happened a long time ago. In 1291, three cantons – Uri, Schwyz, and Unterwalden – got together, forming the nucleus of what grew into the Swiss Confederacy. Remarkably, the cantons have been able to hold onto their rights and power. Even today, few people know or care who the president of Switzerland is. It doesn’t matter, because the real power is at the local, cantonal level.

As soon as it began to get dark, the fireworks began. Clusters of white sparkles…great, booming bombs…dazzling displays of shooting red stars and bursting incendiaries – everyone seemed eager to blow up something. “I’m disappointed,” said our host. “It’s usually more dramatic. People compete with their neighbors to put on the biggest show. I guess the Swiss are just feeling more subdued.”

From Whip to Wage: The US also began as a confederacy of independent states, much like the Swiss cantons. But American states lost their independence to their central government in a series of power grabs by Washington. Today, Americans can scarcely recall or imagine that it could be any different. In the recent Supreme Court decision on abortion, for example, most people were surprised when the court decided that reproductive rights were up to the states, not the federal government.

The biggest power grab by the feds came in the mid-19th century. Lincoln sent the US Army to bring the states of the southern confederacy into line. Since then, no state has seriously challenged Washington’s power.

But there was more to that story. Back then, slavery was being made obsolete by the Industrial Revolution; it was just cheaper to drive people with slave wages than to drive them with whips. The whole world was turning against slavery. But not at the same rate. In the Deep South of the USA, on the big plantations, slavery (apparently) still paid. In the North it did not. Was it so surprising that northerners led the opposition to it? They could enjoy the piety of opposing slavery, without the cost of giving something up.

Into the Mud: Ultimately, it was fossil fuel that put slavery out of business in the 1800s…not the high-minded intentions of Yankee abolitionists. The Industrial Revolution made it possible for machines to do far more work than a human slave. After thousands of years, keeping people in bondage became bad business…and then, just bad. Now, the Industrial Revolution has run its course. And today, the abolitionists have coal, oil and gas in their sights. They think they can make the world a better place by trampling down the internal combustion engine and gas-fired power plant.

But wait; they owe their wealth to coal, oil, and gas…don’t they? How could they turn against them? Oh dear reader...we have to sink into the mega political mud a bit further, don’t we? Stay tuned…"

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