Thoughts on Coming Apart and the Coming Great Reset

Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer
Kit Webster
Themes and Theses
Why I'm Contemplating Out Loud
(Initially formulated in the early 90s, following decades of reading history, philosophy, religion, psychology and a lot of contemplation, particularly on the subject of cycles. In the end, this is a relatively straightforward story about human nature and of history rhyming.)
The US will enter a period of crisis in the early 2000s. In the late 90s, I incorporated Strauss' and Howe's terminology of the Fourth Turning (without incorporating their generations paradigm) and agreed with Howe that the end stage of the crisis began with the Great Financial Crisis and would last into the early 2030s. We are now at the beginning of the end stage of the crisis.
The crisis will be serious and could be existential.
Internal strife will increase, up to and including secession and civil war.
International conflicts will increase as the vacuum created by the weakening of the US is filled by other players.
There will be many threads to the crisis, but the primary thread will be debt, deficits and entitlements. Other factors include, eg, demographics, a loss of meaning and myth and a loss of self-discipline.
Politics will move leftward as citizens look for some refuge from the chaos. The US will become increasingly susceptible to a (man) on a white horse, who can come from either the left or the right.
Inflation, as the most likely way to address debt since austerity is not politically acceptable, will significantly lower standards of living, exacerbating the civil crises.
Eventually, the dollar will be inflated away and lose its reserve status.
Once the old rot is cleared out, and assuming continuity, there will be the basis for the establishment of a new order.
There will be what Strauss and Howe calls a First Turning . It will be constructed out of the physical infrastructure, wealth, energy sources, thoughts and values in the culture at the time. At this point in time, those components are unknowable. We can anticipate that the next future will be increasingly chaotic. We can anticipate that there will be destruction, and then reconstruction from some level. We cannot yet anticipate the form of the reconstruction or the level from which it will begin.
(Added in the early 00s) While humans are contributing to global warming, policies implemented to address manmade global warming will create a significant energy crisis, probably toward the end of the Fourth Turning.
(Added around 2020) The loss of faith by our youth in our founding principles means that the new order will at least partially be based on new principles. As yet, I have no visibility as to what those principles might be.
(Added in 2023) The lowering / elimination of standards in education, the judiciary, law enforcement, the military and other segments of our society will create a population unable to adequately comprehend, do or respond to the challenges of democracy and culture.
(Added in 2025) China has won - at least for the next 5-10 years. The US is dependent on China for the materials it uses to create defense items. We literally cannot fight China without China's help. China's industrial base is impressive; the US has to rebuild. China is out-innovating the US. China is turning out more engineers and scientists than the US by far. This does not mean that China does not face challenges - demographics perhaps being its primary challenge. The US military remains stronger than China's, but in an age of drone warfare, that statement means less than it has historically. The US still has bargaining chips and will need to use them to maintain any kind of status quo.
(Added in 2025) AI has the potential to profoundly affect human culture. However, AI faces several significant hurdles, including the demand for massive amounts of electricity, which may not be available, and a cultural revolt against its existence. Since it could be existential, and since China is pursuing it, the US has no alternative, at least in the short term.
(Added in 2026) Maneuvering for control of critical materials will be a primary driver of geopolitics for at least the next decade.
The Inexorable Advance of the Left
June 12, 2026
Quotes to Contemplate
Some just think that semis are somehow special. I can assure you they’re not any more special than solar panels were. The Chinese are coming, and the glut will be legendary. - Kuppy
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There were some things that only time could cure. Evil men could be destroyed, but nothing could be done with good men who were deluded. — Arthur C. Clarke
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In economics, the majority is always wrong. - John Kenneth Galbraith
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Those are my principles, and if you don't like them... well, I have others. - maybe Groucho Marx on Platner
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If you think contemporaries knew how WWII would end, they didn't. If you think you know how this crisis will end, you don't. The outcome of WWII reshaped geopolitics & finance for generations but for the first 3.5 yrs, until Stalingrad, Germany appeared to be winning. - Peter Zeihan
Summary of Primary Thoughts To Contemplate In This Issue
Remember your revulsion when Trump said he could shoot someone on 5th Avenue and no one would care? With Platner, the Democrats have decided to go all in in the mud with Trump. There is now not a moral voice in government. Institutions and civil discourse have been eliminated from the process. I thought it would be bad, but this is absurd.
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Part of my worldview has been an increasing rise of leftist politics as voters look to the government for protection from the rising chaos. That theme is playing out, with Trump as a respite, representing another of my themes - the rise of authoritarianism.
So, You Say You Want A Revolution?
> You know the settlement between Trump and the IRS that created the $1.7 billion slush fund that may now be going away? Something most people and all of the media miss is that there is also an agreement that Trump's and his family's taxes, from the date of the revealed returns, backward in time, may not be used in actions against them.
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> I was wrong. She has shown me the error of my ways when I say that Congress is doing nothing. TWO! votes cast this very week! Who knew? - Michigan Democrat Debbie Dingell goes off on voter, “You know, I don’t appreciate being told we’re not doing enough when I f*ckin voted on two war resolutions this week...”
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> Did not have the Guardian running a negative race headline on my Bingo card - one off or start of a trend? - "Why are so many Black women dying at the hands of their partners?"
> Historical figures including Winston Churchill were removed from future banknotes after researchers told officials they were "elitist and divisive." The move replaces British legends with wildlife.
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> The Trump administration must restart processing claims of asylum, a federal judge ruled on June 5.
Officials must also resume adjudicating requests for immigration benefits such as work permits from nationals of 39 countries from which President Donald Trump has restricted travel.
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> Another trend? Governor Hochul of New York is moving toward energy pragmatism instead of global warming ideology.
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> Catastrophism with a grain of truth - "there's no event in the history books that combines the current global population with the impending fertilizer shortage and the strength of the coming El Nino. We are about to witness an unprecedented event that will push crops around the globe to their limit."
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> All of a sudden, Hunter Biden is everywhere. He is being cleaned up and reintroduced ... for what?
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> Actions have consequences -
"Europe is done with American Big Tech. Well, sort of. Since the start of President Donald Trump’s chaotic second administration last year, concerned governments and companies across the continent have accelerated plans to end their near-total reliance on technology from US firms.
Alongside political declarations, home-grown European tech development, and millions in additional funding, a WIRED analysis has documented dozens of public instances of companies, governments, NGOs, and education establishments stepping away from US technology companies in favor of open source or local alternatives. It is likely the tip of the iceberg.
“The aggressive policies by the Trump administration, attacking international law, as well as the EU and democratic principles, has led to several wake-up calls,” says Marietje Schaake, a non-resident fellow at Stanford University’s Cyber Policy Center and a former member of the European Parliament."
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> Cognitive dissonance comes with being a Texas Democrat - James Talarico: “We have to protect good paying oil and gas jobs.” As he runs toward the center he also says that there should not be gender reassignment for minors.
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> This is one of my themes - the rot that comes from the threat of charges of racism. From ZeroHedge -
"A House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform report released Monday paints a devastating picture of both Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and state Attorney General Keith Ellison, finding that they both knew about widespread fraud in state social services programs and failed to act.
The report centers on the Feeding Our Future scandal, in which a Minnesota-based nonprofit systematically exploited federal COVID-19 relief funds intended to provide meals to children.
So far, more than 60 people have already been found guilty of fraud in connection with the scheme, the majority of whom are of Somali descent. Some defendants used stolen taxpayer money to buy luxury goods, while others funneled proceeds to a radical Islamic terrorist group operating in Somalia. At least $300 million in federal child nutrition funds were placed at serious risk, and approximately $9 billion in Medicaid losses resulted from the broader fraud environment state officials allowed to fester.
"Fraud warnings were elevated to the most senior levels of the Minnesota state government, meaningful corrective action was delayed or avoided, and payments continued long after credible signs of fraud emerged," the report states.
Senior officials in Walz's office and Ellison's office knew about systemic fraud concerns as early as 2019 within the Minnesota Department of Human Services and, by April 2020, within the state Department of Education, the report says, directly contradicting Walz's and Ellison's public statements.
This matters because both men held legal authority to cut off payments to fraudulent operators. Neither exercised it, even though Walz was aware of the suspected fraud in Feeding Our Future by 2020, and the payments continued.
The fraudsters didn't just know how to exploit the system for financial gain; they knew how to blackmail state officials to keep their scheme going. When workers inside the Department of Education tried to audit child care and nutrition programs, providers accused them of racism. The accusation worked. Officials backed down despite holding evidence that funds were being fraudulently diverted. Dozens of human services department staff were warned, explicitly, that raising fraud concerns would get them labeled as racists and damage the government's reputation. Some were pulled into supervisory meetings. Others were excluded from the very internal discussions about the fraud they had flagged.
And the directive to look the other way from the fraud came from the top down. One Minnesota Department of Education official who first contacted the FBI about Feeding Our Future told investigators her supervisors pressured her to stop investigating "at every turn" and that she got her "hand slapped" for continuing to look into it. Staff feared reporting fraud to the Homeland Security Office of Inspector General because that agency would notify the Commissioner or HR, who would then retaliate against them. The internal culture the Walz administration built was one in which accountability was the threat, not the fraud.
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> There is no evidence of major voter fraud in California. They really look bad and have left themselves open to criticism. Their mail-in ballot approach is subject to fraud. Come November and 2028 both the substance and the optics will become increasingly important. They have a bad plan reasonably well executed that looks bad and is open to power plays in November.
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> Grift everywhere - ActBlue CEO Regina Wallace-Jones invoked the Fifth Amendment on Wednesday before the House Administration Committee, surrounding reports that she may have misled Congress about how the platform vets foreign donations.
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> It actually happened some time ago, but #MeToo, while not dead, is definitely seriously wounded. Pendulums, you know?
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> Trump's grip continues to slowly erode - Trump said he would nominate Jay Clayton, the U.S. attorney in Manhattan, as director of national intelligence. Lawmakers revolted over his previous pick, Bill Pulte, a loyalist with no national security experience.
The Inexorable Advance of the Left
One of my key predictions in my 30-year forecast for the US is, "Politics will move leftward as citizens look for some refuge from the chaos."
Trump's presidency may seem to contradict that forecast, but is actually a part of another thread predicting increasing authoritarianism.
These predictions are not value judgements. They arise from my studies of history and human behavior. Whether I like or approve is irrelevant.
We also need to keep in mind that nothing moves in a straight line - there are continual movements in the direction of the trend, followed by retracements /reactions, followed by a continuation of the trend, followed by...
Trump is the reaction bit.
Whatever you think about DEI and woke and environmentalism and identity politics and gender politics and racial politics and socialism and immigration - those are parts of our major trend. Some of you will be ecstatic and some will be apoplectic. Most will simply be bewildered and not a little frightened.
This main trend will come to a perhaps-cataclysmic end at the end of the Fourth Turning, but we still have 5-10 years to go and a lot of change and angst between now and then.
These trends will continue within the contexts of unsustainable debt and deficits, AI and the overreach of our military.
And of the ascent of China.
This will not be fun, even for the left as they crusade against real and imaginary foes of our culture and system.
Every day I read a lot of articles and consume a lot of data.
I see Mamdani elected. I see the progressive leftist win the contest for a spot in the race for mayor of LA. I see the wealth tax proposals. I see AOC everywhere. I see the polls reflecting a loss of faith in our system by the young, Gen Z.
Just as importantly, I do not see anyone giving anything more than lip service to the ideas and institutions that made our country, whatever her flaws, truly historically outstanding.
This is pretty straightforward dot connecting.
Unless the Democrats do something incredibly stupid, they are in pole position.
For now.
The Market
Trends are conflicting. In the short term, the war in Iran is inflationary. In the longer term, the dollar must go down to relieve debt pressure, creating inflation. The debt overhang itself is deflationary as is AI.
A lot of whipsaws in our future.
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The Iran War
> No end in sight - the world continues to grind down.
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> Having said that, Iran is in dire straights (hee, hee) and the blockade continues to squeeze. Both sides have incentive to settle. The primary question is what "win" looks like.
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> New idea - U.S. will deploy measures to release Iranian assets to Gulf allies for reconstruction and repairs after potential Iran damage. Takes away huge bargaining chip from the peace talks, but threatening to take this kind of action is itself a bargaining chip.
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> The U.S. strikes damaged two reservoirs supplying the Bemani and Kouhestak areas of Sirik town and 20,000 residents of the region have lost access to safe drinking water.
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> See the article, Trump The Accidental Green President, at the bottom of this newsletter.
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Short Takes
> Sainsbury’s is ditching brown eggs because white ones have a 12.7% smaller carbon footprint. They're doing this to hit their net zero targets.
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> Interesting - Sports are beginning to determine whether GLP-1's are performance enhancers.
Gallery





Miscellaneous
Nothing this week.
Trump, the accidental green president - Ian Bremmer - GZero Daily
Donald Trump’s war in Iran has been an unmitigated disaster. The conflict has killed thousands, disrupted the lives of millions more, imposed enormous (and rising) economic costs, and yielded no discernible strategic gains. It is, not surprisingly, deeply unpopular in the United States, in the Middle East, and around the world – by far Trump’s biggest foreign policy mistake of either term.
There is, however, one silver lining to this catastrophe, and it’s a big one. By exposing the dangers of relying on oil and gas imports, Trump’s war may be the single greatest accelerant of the global transition to post-carbon energy. This was not the intention of the most fossil-fuel-friendly president in American history, a man who declared war on the “green new scam,” pulled the United States out of the Paris Agreement (twice), and went all in on “drill, baby, drill.” But that’s exactly what’s happening, and it’s worth celebrating.
For the best part of the last half-century, depending on fossil fuel imports for most of your energy needs was a rational bet. The Carter Doctrine, Washington’s 1980 commitment to defend Gulf energy flows by force, meant that whatever else was going on in the world, you could always count on the US Navy to keep the sea lanes open and the global economy running on Gulf oil and gas. When supply shocks hit, prices spiked and countries scrambled to adjust (by buying more from non-OPEC sources, improving efficiency … or else they just went into recession). But the backstop always held, prices eventually normalized, and demand for fossil fuels proved resilient. After all, there was no compelling alternative.
That backstop is gone now, for good. The Carter Doctrine was a product of a bygone era, when US hegemony was undisputed, Washington was a net energy importer, and America’s core strategic interests ran through the Gulf. Today we live in a G-Zero world, where no country is both willing and able to provide global public goods such as energy security and freedom of navigation. If the two-decade-long “war on terror” sapped American public appetite for spilling blood and treasure in the Middle East, Washington’s strategic incentive to defend Gulf supply chains has been eroding ever since the US became a net energy exporter in 2019.
Technological advances have altered the calculus. Shutting down 15-20% of the global energy supply no longer requires a naval confrontation between nation-state militaries. A small number of committed individuals armed with easy-to-make, $20,000 drones can stop tankers worth hundreds of millions of dollars, and there’s nothing that anyone – not shippers, not Lloyd’s of London, not even the mighty US Navy – can do about it.
Countries can build additional pipelines and diversify trading routes to try to bypass the vulnerability. But that doesn’t solve the chokepoint issue. The Houthis shut down the Bab el-Mandeb Strait in 2023; traffic through that waterway remains nearly two-thirds below pre-campaign averages almost three years later, even though they stopped shooting last year. Today it’s Hormuz, tomorrow it could be Malacca or Good Hope or Gibraltar. In a world of increasingly cheap precision weaponry, any of the dozen maritime chokepoints through which the global fossil-fuel system flows every day will be one asymmetric attack away from a crisis. The question every serious government is now asking is not, “how do we secure this chokepoint?” but, “how do we reduce our dependence on chokepoints altogether?”
The answer, increasingly, is by shifting from molecules to electrons. Unlike during the 1970s shocks, when the alternatives to hydrocarbons were too expensive, unreliable, or slow to deploy, today renewables are the most cost-competitive form of electricity generation in most of the world. Solar plus battery storage now costs less, in most markets, than running a gas-fired plant. Building a utility-scale solar farm takes 18 months versus five to seven years for a gas plant; rooftop solar takes only two weeks to install. Electric vehicles cost about a third as much per mile to operate as gasoline-powered cars – a gap that’s only widened since Hormuz closed.
The world was already moving in this direction before the war. As I wrote when Trump returned to office last year, technological innovation, learning curves, and falling costs have made the energy transition self-sustaining, reaching escape velocity regardless of the policy environment. Renewables accounted for 86% of new power capacity added globally last year, EVs made up a quarter of new car sales (up from 1% when Trump first took office in 2017), and last month solar overtook coal in US power generation for the first time despite the Trump administration’s efforts to slow it down.
What the Iran war has done is turn an economic argument into a strategic imperative, making fossil fuel dependency feel not just expensive but dangerous – and the alternative not just cheaper but safer. As Bill McKibben put it, sunlight travels 93 million miles to reach the Earth but none of them go through the Strait of Hormuz. Once you’ve deployed the clean energy infrastructure, no erratic hegemon or rogue with a drone can cut off your power. This also means the shift is likely to be permanent: the marginal cost of electricity from an existing solar farm or wind turbine is effectively zero, so once the infrastructure is in place, no future collapse in oil prices makes reverting to fossil fuels economically rational.
Even Gulf producers are reading the writing on the wall. The UAE’s decision to leave OPEC in the middle of the war – at the precise moment it couldn’t produce or export much of anything – was a signal that Abu Dhabi knows it’s sitting on a stranded asset. A producer cartel only functions if its members believe the underlying commodity has a future worth managing collectively. The Emiratis want to get out as much oil as they can, as fast as they can, and get on with building a modern economy that doesn’t depend on it. As others follow, OPEC’s ability to manage prices will collapse – bad news for producers, good news for everyone else.
None of this means the transition away from fossil fuels will be smooth or even. Countries with existing renewable momentum will accelerate; others will move more piecemeal, constrained by fiscal space, grid infrastructure, or politics. Yet some will even double down on fossil fuels in the near term. China will maintain excess coal capacity to buffer against future import shocks, even as it accelerates electrification. India, the world’s fastest-growing consumer of imported fossil fuels, is electrifying fast but may burn more domestic coal as it’s the cheapest short-term option available. However, no major government is betting on coal as the terminal source for power generation at scale – only as a bridge to hedge their immediate import exposure. After Europe lost access to Russian gas following the 2022 invasion of Ukraine, many predicted the continent would reverse its decarbonization trajectory; instead, renewables grew faster.
As we said in Eurasia Group’s Top Risks this year, China is better positioned to take advantage of this shift than the United States. Not only is China by far the largest consumer of clean power, but it dominates global production of every component of the “electric stack”: solar panels, wind turbines, EVs, batteries, next-generation nuclear, grid equipment, magnets, motors, and critical minerals supply chains. The Trump administration, meanwhile, has doubled down on hydrocarbons at home and abroad, tilting the playing field against renewables domestically while pushing 20th-century energy on the world as Beijing offers 21st-century infrastructure.
China’s exports of clean energy technology had already surpassed US exports of oil and gas last year. That gap is now set to widen faster still. While the Gulf supply disruptions and related price spikes may be temporarily boosting US exports, the Iran war has turbocharged structural demand for products in which China leads. True, depending on Beijing for your solar panels and batteries carries its own risks, from supply chain concentration and cybersecurity vulnerabilities to new forms of strategic leverage (did anyone say rare earths?). But if the choice is between relying on infrastructure that gets cheaper every year, needs no daily resupply, and is yours to keep once installed … or relying on daily deliveries of volatile fuels that must transit chokepoints any adversary can close, from a government that has shown it will weaponize energy access on a whim … well, it doesn’t take Greta Thunberg to pick the former.
China will reap a commercial and geopolitical windfall in a world increasingly powered by electrons, with implications for economic growth, AI dominance, and national security. By the time Washington tries to compete seriously, they'll have those second-order consequences to account for as well.
As for our still-warming planet? In five years’ time, I believe we’ll look back and conclude that no American president did more to ramp up the energy transition than Trump. Maybe he deserves his Nobel Peace Prize after all.