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Oil? America's addicted to everything!
Marketwatch.com ^ | 2/14/06 | Paul B. Farrell

Posted on 02/23/2006 1:24:03 PM PST by kerryusama04

ARROYO GRANDE, Calif. (MarketWatch) -- Addicted to oil? Just oil? You're joking? No, we're a "nation of addicts," doing what addicts do best: Denying reality.

In denial the brain can rationalize anything. The more self-destructive an addict's behavior, the stronger their denial, louder their protests, arrogance, bravado, even optimism: "I'm fine, everything's under control!"

So when a Texas oilman admits 295 million Americans are addicted to oil, as President Bush did in his State of the Union address, that's historic!

I've worked professionally with people in and out of recovery; politicians, doctors, celebrities, rock stars, pro athletes and royalty, some in the Middle East, many from the Betty Ford Center. Addicts will do anything to get the next fix or drink, oblivious of the destruction around them. They create living hells, losing health, family, kids, careers, wealth, and most of all, their freedom.

Nations are no different! This is not news. Two decades ago psychologist Anne Wilson Schaef wrote "When Society Becomes an Addict." Her opening line: "Our society is deteriorating at an alarming rate." The symptoms: Greed, arrogance, ethical deterioration, obsessiveness, rationalism, self-centeredness, tunnel vision. We're out of touch, living with an illusion of control.

Flash forward. New addictions: credit cards, obesity, massive deficits, iPods, plasma HDTV's, McMansions, SUVs, outsourcing to India, buying plastic from China. Go deeper: We have a near-religious addiction to rationality, logic, data, numbers, stock quotes, productivity, interest rates, GDP, etc. Our brains gorge on an endless diet of numbers from cable's talking heads, online breaking news, print reports.

Information is our new mind-numbing drug, worse than cocaine and heroin. Often distracted, in a stupor, narrowly focused on immediate gratification, we lose perspective, integrity, even our identity; we're addicts in a myopic bubble, in denial of the real world.

Paradoxically, America's addiction to rationality and numbers is a major part of our brain's denial mechanism, blinding us to unpredictable risks and irrational dangers that do not fit neatly into our conventional wisdom. Please notice how we've programmed denial into the thinking behind our economic and market forecasting systems:
We are a nation of addicts, in denial, and our mastery over the economy and markets is an illusion, creating a false sense of security. Wall Street, Washington and Corporate America are all addicted to computer models that minimize or eliminate unpredictable threatening variables: Global wars, pandemics, terrorist attacks on American soil, the very things that could do the most damage to the economy and markets are not included. Meanwhile, Main Street is focused narrowly on getting the next "fix."

Denial blinds us to many dangers. Like the coming Iranian Petro-Euro Bourse threatening the American dollar's position as the world's reserve currency, a threat potentially more catastrophic than a nuclear arsenal. We deny it.

And recently, we learned of an even bigger threat: about World War III. Seriously, a war is being provoked by loose cannons in America as well as abroad. Irrational, absurd and unwanted, fanatics on both sides are prophesizing an all-out war in the next couple years.

For years America has heard religious fundamentalists predict the "End of Days," Armageddon, an Apocalypse, The Rapture, Tribulation, a final battle prophesized for the Holy Land. Prominent evangelists believe it's coming soon. Many are so convinced their rhetoric may be a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Until recently this was outside market and economic thinking. That is, until Iranian President Ahmadinejad addressed the United Nations in October. His prophecies mirror those of America's evangelists. Ahmadinejad not only hopes for but is trying to provoke both the free world and Islam into war.

Iran's "End-of-Days:" Ahmadinejad passionately believes that in the next couple years the world will witness the "second coming" of the Mahdi, a messianic "hidden 12th imam" of Shiite Islam, prophesized to appear at the "End of Days." Ahmadinejad even embraces his "divine mission" to "pave the way" for the second coming.

Get it! We have ideological fanatics on both sides, like two alcoholics itching for a bar fight. Both sides want a global war, provoking enemies and allies alike. Both pray for an irrational first blow triggering the "End of Days," a WW III nuclear conflict between the world's greatest cultures. Both expect fulfillment of ancient prophecies. Both want a war to end all wars, and the end of the world as we know it.

Irrational? Probably. But remember, these high-risk variables are not programmed into America's economic models and market forecasting systems that Washington, Wall Street and Corporate America throw at you every day. Yet in the hands of fanatics these variables can trigger events that can easily overwhelm entire economies and markets.

Wake up America! Oil's only one minor symptom. We are a nation of addicts, in denial of so many threats external to our bubble world. Mentally we are at greater risk than with the irrational exuberance of 2000. Except this time the threat is global, systemic and potentially catastrophic, far outside the box of our mega-rational economic models and market forecasting systems. Soon your denial system may no longer work, reality will implode.

So please, be prepared for market losses far greater than the $8 trillion we lost between 2000 and 2002. Plan conservatively. See previous Paul B. Farrell.

Remember, when any addict "hits bottom," the big thing they lose is their freedom ... the same holds true for an entire nation of addicts.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Politics; Society
KEYWORDS: bushhater; economy; handwringer
That author assumes one thing that I don't - that there must be something wrong with America. The things this guy lists as problems are our culture. He is a prime candidate for moving to Europe. They aren't bothered by energy usage or keeping up on current events or data or pesky things like an unemployment rate. While we are fighting two wars simultaneously, rescuing millions from the tsunami, rescuing IRANIANS from earthquakes, delivering food and FIREWOOD to Afghanis who are freezing to death in the mountains, recovering from our own natural disasters, and now saving the Philipinos, we manage to keep our unemployment rate under 5% and our economy growing at at 4% clip.
1 posted on 02/23/2006 1:24:07 PM PST by kerryusama04
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To: kerryusama04

He is a jerk, and a long-winded boring jerk to boot. I tried to read it kept falling asleep and hitting my head on the keyboard.

he should get a life


2 posted on 02/23/2006 1:28:30 PM PST by LauraJean (sometimes I win sometimes I donate to the equine benevolent society)
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To: kerryusama04
I think it's worse than that! Part of being a human is to be preoccupied or addicted to something, anything. Without it, We would simply go insane.
3 posted on 02/23/2006 2:21:56 PM PST by wolfcreek
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To: wolfcreek

Some Americans are addicted to exaggeratin, hyperbole, crying wolf, labeling everything a crisis and other annoying addictions. And that applies to all sides of many arguments.

There are problems with energy, the environment, immigration, and many other pet bugaboos of the emotional attention seeking panicstricken.

But guess what. The energy problem is a problem; But not a crisis.

Even the most ardent believer in global warming admits that it will be centuries before the polar ice caps melt and make the Hollyweird movie come true.

Immigrants are not the four horsemen of the apocalypse, nor the anti-Christ.

Get a grip. Problems are best solved when they are faced realistically and truthfully. Our experience has been that when we escalate a problem to a "war on poverty" or "war on whatever" we only make the problem worse.

Save the extreme talk for the modern Hitlers and Stalins. Don't waste it on some Guatemalan cleaning my office as I type this.


4 posted on 02/23/2006 5:25:01 PM PST by spintreebob
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To: spintreebob

I noticed you put your resume as your profile page. Are you addicted to job seeking? LOL!


5 posted on 02/24/2006 4:39:51 AM PST by wolfcreek
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To: wolfcreek

I get into chats with those who blame immigrants for taking all the good jobs and then they take no personal responsibility for their own employment situation.

I go to their home page and it is either blank or they put themselves down so much that it is obvious why their employment situation is the way it is.

So I post the other extreme. Everything you do either assists you, or doesn't, in reaching your goals. That's true of employment. It's true of politics.

I do need to update my resume. And yes. I've been a consultant all my life. Never in the same plae more than 2 years (Except for my current position). Typically less than 1 year... and unemployed only 2 weeks in 50+ years of working. (not counting the period I was intentionally unemployed to hitchhike the country when I was young.)


6 posted on 02/24/2006 7:18:38 AM PST by spintreebob
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