It Hurts
When Empires Fall
By Pål
Steigan
October 08,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- There is a genre of landscape painting from the
17th and 18th centuries that ought to give us cause
for reflection. They are paintings of Italian
landscapes where goatherds and their flocks wander
amongst the ruins of Roman aqueducts, bridges and
temples. The fascinating thing about them is that
they depict a European society which, more than 1200
years after the fall of the Roman empire, still had
not regained the level of production and
infrastructure that the Roman empire had at it’s
height. It wasn’t until the industrial revolution in
the 18th century that the productivity and
infrastructure in Europe managed to surpass the
Roman empire in its heyday.
Jan Asselyn,
Italian landscape with the ruins of a Roman bridge
and aqueduct. (detail)
The
paintings of goatherds and farm animals amongst the
ruins of infrastructure and temples from classical
Rome are like pictures of people moving among the
remains of a high-tech civilisation that they no
longer have the ability to match. The city of Rome
had at its height a population of a million people.
That required a very advanced infrastructure for
water and food supply, transport, goods delivery,
trade and so on. The city was, at the time, the
foremost example of a building materials industry,
that had the capacity, and level of competency, to
deliver the enormous amount of building materials
that such a city required.
When the
empire collapsed, the infrastructure was no longer
maintained. The aqueducts broke down and towns and
cities lost their water supply. Roads and bridges
deteriorated and were not repaired. Goods transport
and trade was reduced from a surging river to a
quiet brook. 1200 years after its days of glory Rome
was a ruined town with a population of less than
10.000.
The
Etruscans, and later the Romans, had drained swamps
to increase food production. Thereby they also
removed malaria. But when the empire broke down, the
drainage ditches were no longer maintained and
malaria returned. It wasn’t until the 1930’s, after
the fascists came to power, that the swamps were
drained again and malaria disappeared from Italy
again.
The ’empire’ of today is
extremely vulnerable
We, who
live in a a time when another empire shows many of
the same tendencies towards disintegration that the
Roman empire had towards the end, have all reason to
give it some thought.
The Roman
emperors mixed more and more lead in the silver
coinage (denarius), so that eventually there was
almost no silver left. That was the hyperinflation
of the time. Roman citizens no longer wished to
fight in the army, so the army became based on
mercenaries. The word soldier comes from this. A
soldier was someone who received money to fight
(solidus – gold coin). In order to pay the soldiers
more money had to be minted. The empire’s wars were
expensive and the empire was large, so the problem
was solved by minting coins that were ever more
worthless.
The world
is dominated today by the American empire. It
affects everything about global production, the
money system, world trade, agriculture, the energy
system and so on.
Source:
Texas Precious Metals
The empire
passed it’s high watermark around 1971. That is when
USA gave up the gold standard. After that the
empire’s growth was built on printing more and more
paper money, and now digital money. But the empire
is also based on the rest of the world accepting
these symbols as the real thing. US wars in the 21st
century are largely financed by selling American
government securities to China, in other words on
China lending money to the American state.
Growth of
USAs debts.
The
globalized production and trade system is finely
tuned to deliver goods and components just-in-time.
Norwegian meat production for example is dependent
on
a boat arriving at Fredrikstad
with soya from Brasil once a month. If the boat did
not arrive there would be a full-blown crisis in
Norwegian meat production.
When
the so-called
horse-meat scandal
broke in 2013 the
Financial Times
showed how the European trade and transport systems
for meat work.
Slaughterhouses are capital intensive and energy
demanding, and therefore there are fewer and fewer
slaughterhouses delivering to a more and more global
market. The margins are paper thin, so they cut
corners wherever they can.
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The big
supermarket chains want to buy the cheapest food raw
materials available at any one time. Their brokers
are continually on the phone to make best wholesale
purchases. FT quotes professor Karel
Williams at the Manchester Business
School, who explains how refrigerator
trucks queue up in front of the slaughterhouses in
the Netherlands at the end of the week, with the
drivers having no idea where they are going until
the last minute. Each broker has 10-20
slaughterhouses he buys from. One week he buys from
one place and the next week from somewhere else. The
deals are made at the last moment for the driver to
get his delivery orders. “We have a continual
European trade where animal parts are driven around
in 40-ton trailers.”
FAO (Food
and Agriculture Organisation – UN) says that there
are something like a quarter of a million edible
plants that could be cultivated. But humanity has
become dependent on just 3% of them.
The
worlds food supply is dependent on 150 plant
species.
Three quarters of all energy we get from plant food
comes from just 12 of them.
Competition and the need to increase production has
resulted in a drastic reduction in genetic
diversity. The system also demands more and more
energy, minerals and rare raw materials at an
exponentially increasing rate.
This makes
today’s empire extremely vulnerable. Agriculture may
well experience crises similar to the Potato Famine
that hit Ireland in 1847, when a million people died
of starvation. It is easy to imagine how devastating
and dramatic it will be.
In short:
when this system collapses, it will, just as in the
Rome empire, experience the collapse of much of the
critical infrastructure. It will simply not be
possible to feed as many people as before. The
result can be widespread starvation disasters to an
extent that humanity has never seen before. There
are 37 megacities in the world today and the largest
of them have over 30 million inhabitants. If there
is a breakdown in water supply, or energy or food
delivery, then such cities will become
uninhabitable.
Food and
water are fundamental. Without food and water we
cannot live. But many of our systems are also
extremely dependent on oil and rare earth minerals
that there are less and less of. When this system
collapses, it could easily have dramatic
consequences. The example of the Roman empire shows
that it might well take a long time before anything
else takes its place.
It is easy
to show that today’s growth based capitalism is
living on borrowed time. It is a long way from being
robust or sustainable. On the contrary it is very
vulnerable and unstable. This is one of the reasons
that it is necessary to work towards replacing the
system as soon as possible and learning how to run
society in a healthier and more sustainable fashion.
The Fall
of Rome
Globalists of right and left bemoan the fact that
people turning their back on the globalism they have
preached for decades. They are turning instead to
populist politics and are so “reactionary” that they
want to preserve their nation states, local
production and more. But it is the globalists who
are playing Russian roulette. It is their system
that has made us so extremely vulnerable. To ensure
food-security and viable local communities,
to restore the broken metabolism between society and
nature, is what is
truly progressive. That is the future, and we need
to urgently get rid of the empire and it’s economy
of spongers and freeloaders.
If we
don’t then perhaps landscape painters in a few
hundred years time will be painting goat-herders
grazing their animals under the twisted remains of
skyscrapers and motorway bridges.
This
article was originally published by
Steigan
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