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.
What The Hell Was That All About?
March 6, 2026
Quotes to Contemplate
Rather than choosing their tribe based on shared principles, most people just reprogram their principles around whatever their tribe is doing. - Lyn Alden
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The war against Iran, only a week old, is already shaping up to be one of the most significant geopolitical events of this generation. - Doomberg
Summary of Primary Thoughts To Contemplate In This Issue
The war in Iran is either bonkers or 3-D chess, and I have no idea which.
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Cuba's probably next.
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It is critical to understand the sandpile or avalanche theory of instability.
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Markets
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​Oil may have made a bottom and is on its way to new, all-time highs.
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There could be $4 or $5 gas in your future, and if you are in California, don't ask.
What The Hell Was That All About?
Trump put massive military assets around Iran.
He even gave a deadline of last weekend.
I thought about it for a long time and decided attacking Iran made no sense.
I'm still not sure whether I was right or wrong.
As Aeschylus said, "In war, truth is the first casualty." I don't believe anything I am reading or watching, so I am reading and watching a lot of sources trying to interpolate what is actually going on.
What I see is a plethora of misinformation and stupidity. And the Trump administration has been almost totally incoherent.
Still far from clear, so I will just speculate for a minute - I have very few facts to offer.
As best I can tell, the Iranians were not going to attack anybody. They were playing the negotiating game with the US and did not see any urgency. Nobody in their right mind puts all of their leadership in two locations if they think there is even a remote chance of an attack.
Ironically, there are reports that, in negotiations with the US, Iran had expressed a willingness to give up its stockpile of enriched uranium just prior to the attack. I have no idea how much credence to give to those reports, but that does not seem likely.
Israel and Saudi Arabia were lobbying for an attack. Israel saw the leadership in two locations, could not believe their luck, and could not pass up on the chance. They told Trump that the time to strike was right then. Trump agreed.
Iran's nuclear weapons development is a real, but not an urgent, concern. The previous attack set them back but did not take out the program. A lot of the program and materials are way under ground where even bunker busters won't get them. The choices are a nuclear attack or physically rooting them out.
Regime change is interesting - they are bad guys - but the world is full of bad guys.
Trump has said it is personal since Iran tried to assassinate him in 2024.
Congress is responsible for declaring war, but hasn't declared war on anybody since World War II for arguably the most warlike nation for the last 80 years. The way the game is played, the President notifies Congress something is up and proceeds with basically 60 days with Congress out of the way. Trump did not notify Congress. Democrats in Congress tried to gain control, but the vote failed in both houses.
Trump continues to invite Iranians to rise up, but, at the moment, they seem disinclined. When they have risen up in the past, they were leaderless mobs and not revolutionaries.
This is all either bonkers or we are playing 3-D chess.
Bonkers is always on the table; let's think about 3-D chess.
China has us by the balls.
About 17% of China's oil imports come from Iran and Venezuela.
If we control Iran and Venezuela, we have another card to play in the China game.
In any event, China will be very interested in this war, because about 30% of its LNG imports come from the Middle East. My guess is that China has told Iran to leave energy resources alone.
(China has already ordered its refineries not to export diesel and gasoline.)
The US electorate is largely against the war - the last poll I saw said 60% against, but, in a shocking result, there was a marked separation along party lines.
Iran has closed the Straight of Hormuz, which much of the oil from the Middle East must transit, except for ships bound for China.
The possibility of Iranian sleeper cells in the US is reasonably high. It would be under any circumstances, but our untended border during the Biden administration increased the probability substantially.
There is a complication in that oil just flows and has to go somewhere, unless you shut down the well. Restarting a well takes some effort. All over the Middle East, the sound you hear is that of wells shutting down. Oil supply should suffer for some time to come, regardless of the outcome of the war. Costs are going up, at least in the short term. Secondary effects, like the availability of fertilizer, will begin to pop up.
Repeat after me - energy is the basis for everything.
A very big issue is that Iran has a LOT of missiles and drones. One tactic they may be deploying is to attack the US, Israel and the US's allies until their defensive munitions are depleted and then trounce them. It is imperative that the US and Israel find caches of missiles and drones and destroy them. Otherwise, things could get ugly for the good guys. One intelligence report - "Iran’s rate of ballistic missile launches has significantly declined since Day 1. Analysts say their stockpiles are depleting AND they’re rationing for a longer war."
Also, weapons used in Iran are not available for Ukraine.
Russia is providing Iran with the location of US assets.
One bonus is that Russia, which basically gets all of its drones used in the Ukraine War from Iran, will not get any more drones from Iran.
An awkwardness is that if the US depletes itself of defensive weapons, it will be fighting with one hand behind its back in other venues - Taiwan comes to mind. And, of course, we rely on China to supply components of the defensive weapons.
The fact that Iran is still launching missiles and drones indicates that some part of their military is intact.
So, it still beats the hell out of me. My base case is the bonkers case - it almost seems as if Trump was determined to attack Iran, no matter what. But I need to see how things play out.
There are two observations about the state of play going forward, when viewed through the lens of history:
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You cannot get regime change from the air alone. Iran has lots of mullahs.
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Decapitation without an uprising leads to chaos. Iran has many minorities; it is only 60-65% Persian. Civil war would be the way to bet. Second place would be a new strongman. (Iraqi Kurds are discussing a ground invasion of Iran.)
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Other notes:
FWIW, I put the odds of boots on the ground at around 40%.
Trump is digging himself and the world in so deep, is a TACO even possible?
Zelensky confirmed the U.S. directly asked Ukraine for help shooting down Iranian drones.
America’s Gulf allies are running out of interceptors. The UAE faced 941 drones, 189 ballistic missiles, and 8 cruise missiles since Saturday. They intercepted 131 drones on Thursday alone.
Israel struck 80 targets in Lebanon in the last 24 hours.
Asia’s energy crunch is spreading fast as disruption at the Strait of Hormuz ripples across fuel markets. Singapore bunker hubs cut supply, China halts diesel & gasoline exports, S. Korea petrochem declares naphtha force majeure, while Japan (~90% Middle Eastern crude) may tap SPR.

So, You Say You Want A Revolution?
(I use em dashes as part of my writing style. I will explicitly note any use of AI throughout this newsletter. If there is no AI-note, you can assume it is either my writing or a quote from a news source.)
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> One of the most important concepts I ran into decades ago while contemplating how this would all work out was the sandpile or avalanch theory of collapse. John Mauldin in a recent newsletter summarized it, and I have included Mauldin's piece at the bottom of this newsletter. I think this is a foundational concept when thinking about the dynamics of any human system. It led to my foundational "law" that "humans will take all trends to their extreme."​

> Kevin Williamson on Ken Paxton, running against John Cornyn for Senator - and I am in violent agreement - "Attorney General Ken Paxton, a corrupt imbecile and a lowdown scoundrel even by the standards of Texas politics."
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> I think Trump is serious about Cuba becoming part of the US - if not a state, then a Puerto Rico-type of territory.
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> I hold Noem in very low regard, but give her props for this one -
Coons: “Will you rule out the deployment of ICE to polling places this November?”
Noem: “Do you plan on illegals voting in our elections, Senator?!”
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> It begins - Poland has said it will now work on getting its own nuclear weapons, per Bloomberg.
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> Now that Jasmine has lost, she is free to go back to being much more entertaining and outrageous.
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> It's a start, I guess - A new type of nuclear power plant backed by Bill Gates received a federal permit, the first reactor approved in years.
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> Talarico beat Jasmine and is now taking every stage he can find, at times woke and at times weird, but a lot to say about changing basically everything. A Bible-thumping Democrat is a unique species. We Texans really know how to grow em. Best quote from X, "There was no father. It was as though BlueSky birthed him itself."
Serious question - what is it about our culture that values insanity so highly? Dig deep and decide whether you want a lowlife like Paxton or a very strange dude like Talarico. And while you're at it, ask yourself why we give ourselves these choices to make? For all of her performative behavior and outrageous statements, in the end, Jasmine was basically a fairly standard-issue Democrat - a lefty but not extreme left.
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> Noem got fired - I can't believe it - I'm gutted ... not.
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> Just rotten - House votes 357-65 to block release of congressional sexual misconduct and harassment reports.
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> A court has ruled that tariffs affected by the recent Supreme Court ruling must be refunded. Many appeals yet to come.
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> Just asking - what are the latest odds on a Nobel Peace Prize for Trump?
Short Takes
> What happens when two protected groups occupy the same space? At the BAFTA awards there was this strange incident where a guy with Tourette's yelled the n-word while some blacks were on stage. The blacks took offense. I'll leave it to you to sort that one out. For what it's worth, I count exactly 42 angels on the head of that pin.
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> Ok, this is really bad, and I hate myself, but I just had to. From the Bee - Bill Clinton Tells Epstein Committee It Depends On What The Definition Of ‘Child Trafficking’ Is.
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> The way I wish I had been educated - and am looking forward to learning now - here.
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> Back to the future - Gen Z males twice as likely as baby boomers to believe wives should obey husbands.
Gallery
Can you say, dysfunctional?



Miscellaneous
Khamenei finds out it's actually "72 Virginians".


Mauldin - Fingers Of Instability
Ubiquity, Complexity Theory, and Sandpiles
With five different views about the coming crisis, which one is right? Do they conflict or reinforce each other? The correct answer is they’re all connected, but not in obvious ways. And in the end, it makes no difference which one is “more” right. The results will be the same. Understanding this below-the-radar connection is key to making sure you, your family, community and country all get through this to what will be the inevitable positive conclusion, even if it is a very bumpy ride.
We are going to start our exploration with excerpts from an important book by Mark Buchanan, called Why Catastrophes Happen. I HIGHLY recommend it to those of you who, like me, are trying to understand the complexity of the markets, economy and politics/society. The book is about chaos theory, complexity theory and critical states. It is written in layman’s terms. There are no equations, just easy-to-grasp, well-written stories and analogies. But it gives us an essential framework to understand the coming storms.
As kids, we all had the fun of going to the beach and playing in the sand. Remember taking your plastic buckets and making sand piles? Slowly pouring the sand into an ever-bigger pile, until one side of the pile started an avalanche?
Imagine, Buchanan says, dropping one grain of sand after another onto a table. A pile soon develops. Eventually, just one grain starts an avalanche. Usually it’s a small one, but sometimes it builds on itself and seems like a side of the pile collapses. Why?
Well, in 1987 three physicists named Per Bak, Chao Tang, and Kurt Weisenfeld began to play the sandpile game in their lab at Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York. Now, piling one grain of sand at a time is a slow process, so they wrote a computer program to do it. Not as much fun, but a whole lot faster. Not that they really cared about sandpiles. They were interested in what are called nonequilibrium systems.
They learned some interesting things. What is the typical size of an avalanche? After a huge number of tests with millions of grains of sand, they found there is no typical size. "Some involved a single grain; others, ten, a hundred or a thousand. Still others were pile-wide cataclysms involving millions that brought nearly the whole mountain down. At any time, literally anything, it seemed, might be just about to occur." The piles were chaotic in their unpredictability.
Now, let’s read this next paragraph from Buchanan slowly. It is important, as it creates a mental image that may help us understand the organization of financial markets, the world economy and society (emphasis mine).
"To find out why (such unpredictability) should show up in their sandpile game, Bak and colleagues next played a trick with their computer. Imagine peering down on the pile from above, and coloring it in according to its steepness. Where it is relatively flat and stable, color it green; where steep and, in avalanche terms, ‘ready to go,’ color it red. What do you see? They found that at the outset the pile looked mostly green, but that, as the pile grew, the green became infiltrated with ever more red. With more grains, the scattering of red danger spots grew until a dense skeleton of instability ran through the pile. Here then was a clue to its peculiar
The Critical State
Something only a math nerd could love? Scientists refer to this as a “critical state.” The term can mean the point at which water goes to ice or steam, or the moment that critical mass induces a nuclear reaction, etc. It is the point at which something triggers a change in the basic nature or character of the object or group. Thus (and very casually for all you physicists), we refer to something being in a critical state (or use the term critical mass) when there is the opportunity for significant change.
"But to physicists, [the critical state] has always been seen as a kind of theoretical freak sideshow, a devilishly unstable and unusual condition that arises only under the most exceptional circumstances [in highly controlled experiments]… In the sandpile game, however, a critical state seemed to arise naturally through the mindless sprinkling of grains."
Thus, they asked themselves, could this phenomenon show up elsewhere? In the earth’s crust, triggering earthquakes, or as wholesale changes in an ecosystem – or as a stock market crash?
"Could the special organization of the critical state explain why the world at large seems so susceptible to unpredictable upheavals?" Could it help us understand not just earthquakes, but why cartoons in a third-rate paper in Denmark could cause world-wide riots?
Buchanan concludes in his opening chapter:
"There are many subtleties and twists in the story … but the basic message, roughly speaking, is simple: The peculiar and exceptionally unstable organization of the critical state does indeed seem to be ubiquitous in our world. Researchers in the past few years have found its mathematical fingerprints in the workings of all the upheavals I’ve mentioned so far [earthquakes, eco-disasters, market crashes], as well as in the spreading of epidemics, the flaring of traffic jams, the patterns by which instructions trickle down from managers to workers in the office, and in many other things. At the heart of our story, then, lies the discovery that networks of things of all kinds – atoms, molecules, species, people, and even ideas – have a marked tendency to organize themselves along similar lines. On the basis of this insight, scientists are finally beginning to fathom what lies behind tumultuous events of all sorts, and to see patterns at work where they have never seen them before."
Going back to the sandpile game, you find that as you double the number of grains of sand involved in an avalanche, the probability of an avalanche becomes 2.14 times more likely. We find something similar in earthquakes. In terms of energy, the data indicate that earthquakes become four times less likely each time you double the energy they release. Mathematicians refer to this as a "power law," a special mathematical pattern that stands out in contrast to the overall complexity of the earthquake process.
Fingers of Instability
So, what happens in our game?
"…after the pile evolves into a critical state, many grains rest just on the verge of tumbling, and these grains link up into ‘fingers of instability’ of all possible lengths. While many are short, others slice through the pile from one end to the other. The chain reaction triggered by a single grain might lead to an avalanche of any size whatsoever, depending on whether that grain fell on a short, intermediate or long finger of instability."
Now, we come to a critical point in our discussion of the critical state. Again, read this with not just markets but our entire society in mind:
"In this simplified setting of the sandpile, the power law also points to something else: the surprising conclusion that even the greatest of events have no special or exceptional causes. After all, every avalanche, large or small, starts out the same way, when a single grain falls and makes the pile just slightly too steep at one point. What makes one avalanche much larger than another has nothing to do with its original cause, and nothing to do with some special situation in the pile just before it starts. Rather, it has to do with the perpetually unstable organization of the critical state, which makes it always possible for the next grain to trigger an avalanche of any size."
This concept applies to not just financial markets, but to how we organize our political systems, generational differences, geopolitics and war, the over-production of elites and even how information is interpreted. They ALL connect. The Great Recession was a financial crisis. COVID-19 was a health crisis with a financial crisis and added political crises which further divided a fractious world.
We all see pressures building up in many different aspects of society. They each create their own fingers of instability. But in the sandpile of life, they are connected.
Now, let’s couple this idea with a few other concepts. First, Hyman Minsky (who should have been a Nobel laureate) points out that stability leads to instability. The more comfortable we get with a given condition or trend, the longer it will persist and then when the trend fails, the more dramatic the correction.
The problem with long term macroeconomic stability is that it tends to produce unstable financial arrangements. Just as long term geopolitical or social stability will eventually produce a critical state. If we believe that tomorrow and next year will be the same as last week and last year, we are more willing to add debt or postpone savings in favor of current consumption. Or ignore any of a number of societal crises. Thus, says Minsky, the longer the period of stability, the higher the potential risk for even greater instability when market participants or a country’s citizens must change their behavior.
Relating this to our sandpile, the longer a critical state builds up in an economy, or in other words, the more "fingers of instability" are allowed to develop connections to other fingers of instability, the greater the potential for a serious "avalanche."
Therefore (and ironically), the longer a crisis takes to come about, the bigger the repercussions. One of the conclusions at the end of the book will be that we simply don’t know when the avalanche will be triggered. The US is such a large and wealthy country, and many of the rest of the shirts in the global laundry are just as (or even more) dirty, that global money might come to the US as a safe haven, thus prolonging our “stability” as the sandpile grows to an ever more critical state.
We Are Managing Uncertainty
Or, maybe, a series of smaller shocks lessens the long reach of the fingers of instability, giving a paradoxical rise to even more apparent stability. This is the thrust of Nassim Taleb’s book, Antifragility.
“People often think that the opposite of fragility is durability. If something is fragile, that means it’s easily broken. Therefore, if something isn’t easily broken, logically that should mean it’s the opposite of fragile. However, there’s another step beyond Since there isn’t an established English word for such a thing, [Nassim] calls it antifragility—not just the lack of fragility, but its true opposite.
“We live in an unpredictable world. The models and theories we use to try to predict the future invariably fall apart as unforeseen events prove them wrong and, in turn, destroy the plans we made based on those models. Clearly, systems based on such flawed models are bound to be fragile—easily broken.
“The solution to this problem is antifragility. Instead of a never-ending search for more accurate models and better predictions, all we need to do is make sure that we’re in a position to benefit from uncertainty and volatility instead of being harmed by it.
“This is hardly a new concept; nature exhibits antifragility in almost everything she creates. An organism can strengthen itself through minor damage in the form of exercise. In a similar sense, a species can strengthen itself through minor damage in the form of natural selection, which leads to evolution.
“However, unlike nature, humans try to control the world through models and rules. We think we can perfectly predict the future and avoid any shocks that would cause our fragile systems to fall apart. We think we can outsmart millions of years of evolution and antifragility, and we’re almost invariably wrong.
“Instead of trying to predict the future, we should assume that there will be major events we can’t see coming—because, sooner or later, there will be. If we’re prepared for them, using the methods and practices explained in this book, we can make sure that such events work to our advantage instead of hurting us. By avoiding fragility and embracing antifragility wherever possible, we can set ourselves up to thrive in an uncertain world.”
Another way to think about it is the way Didier Sornette, a French geophysicist, has described financial crashes in his wonderful book, Why Stock Markets Crash (the math, though, was far beyond me!). He wrote:
"[T]he specific manner by which prices collapsed is not the most important problem: a crash occurs because the market has entered an unstable phase and any small disturbance or process may have triggered the instability. Think of a ruler held up vertically on your the instantaneous cause of the collapse is secondary."
When things are unstable, it isn’t the last grain of sand that causes the pile to collapse or the slight breeze that causes the ruler on your fingertip to fall. Those are the "proximate" causes. They’re the closest reasons at hand for the collapse. The real reason, though, is the "remote" cause, the farthest reason. The farthest reason is the underlying instability of the system itself.
This is one reason we get "fat tails" in financial markets. In theory, returns on investment should look like a smooth bell curve, with the ends tapering off into nothing. According to the theoretical distribution, events that deviate from the mean by five or more standard deviations ("5-sigma events") are extremely rare, with 10 or more sigma being practically impossible – at least in theory.
However, under certain circumstances, such events are more common than expected; 15-sigma or even rarer events have happened in the world of investing. Examples include Long Term Capital in the late 1990s and any of a dozen bubbles in history. Because the real-world commonality of high-sigma events is much greater than in theory, the distribution is "fatter" at the extremes ("tails") than one would expect.
This holds true in geopolitics, too. The unthinkable sometimes happens. Before World War I began, no one thought it would come to war. Peace had been the rule for 40 years. Surely, mankind had evolved. Until…
Thus, the build-up of critical states, those fingers of instability, is perpetuated even as, and precisely because, we hedge risks. We try to "stabilize" the risks we see, shoring them up with derivatives, emergency plans, insurance, treaties, alliances, political change and all manner of risk-control procedures. And by doing so, the economic and social systems can absorb body blows that would have been severe only a few decades ago. We distribute the risks, and their effects, throughout the system.
Yet as we reduce the known risks, we sow the seeds for the next 10-sigma event. It is the improbable, unseen risks that will create the next real crisis. It is not that the fingers of instability have been removed from the equation, it is that they lurk in different places, not yet visible.
A Stable Disequilibrium
We end up in a critical state that Paul McCulley calls "stable disequilibrium." It has "players" all over the world, tied inextricably together in a vast dance through investment, debt, derivatives, trade, globalization, international business and finance. Each player works hard to maximize their own personal outcome and reduce their exposure to "fingers of instability."
The longer we go on, asserts Minsky, the more likely and violent any "avalanche" is. The more the fingers of instability can build, the more that state of stable disequilibrium can go critical on us.
It's all connected. We are building an unstable sandpile and it will come crashing down at some point. Then we will have to dig our way out.
The good news is we have seen this movie before. And after the crisis, a new period of stability and growth follows, for at least another 50-80 years. In my upcoming book we will look for ways to get through to that happier future.