Elizabeth Kuebler-Ross a Swiss physician did what many believe is pioneering work with dying people. She wrote a book called "On Death and Dying," describing the emotional states people go through when confronted with a terminal illness. It has been said that these states also apply to other significant life events. I am not sure if anyone has ever postulated that these states also apply to entire populations. The Western world, and especially America is one such population that is now faced with a terminal event.
The five key states are denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and finally acceptance. It appears America is largely in denial. This isn't happening, there must be a mistake, the turn-around will come, we "may be" in a recession, we have bounced back before, it will be short-lived, etc, are all statements typical of this state. Some of our more "advanced" citizens have already made it to the anger, "why us and not them?" stage.
Soon-to-be-ex President Bush is clearly in denial. As a matter of fact, Mr. Bush's middle name is denial. He for one, never seems capable of progressing. Although he did show some signs of minor anger -or at least annoyance- at some questions that were repeated too often, he is a rock of stability when it comes to denial. The lone cowboy.
The financial system is also in deep denial. So are many policy makers trying to bail them out. Although the government already owns the worthless banks, nobody wants to say we nationalized them. That would be admitting death of our fabled economic system. The right word for such behavior is denial. A denial so profound that Mr. Paulson and Mr. Bernanke, without admitting the error in their way, finally agreed to purchase shares in these undead banks. Earlier these geniuses -maybe they too were bewitched by W?- had proposed a simple handout to their former colleagues.
However, even when they bought shares, they had to forgo buying common stock and getting a board seat. That would be admitting failure. It is also the only reasonable thing to do. The symbolic gesture is of great importance, because it sets the stage for further mayhem. A denial akin to alcoholics with liver cirrhosis who can't stop drinking.
Some Republicans have expressed anger, but they are angry at the bail-out and having to pay for it, not so much angry at the demise of American style capitalism. When it comes to that, those very same Republicans are in very strong denial. These are the type of believers who will go to their grave without ever leaving phase one.
Many in the Obama administration forgot about denial and blew through their brief anger periods. They are now trying their hand at bargaining. Bargaining as in bargaining with fate. Please dear god, if you cure me of this illness, I will rebuild the bridges and highways and make America great again.
If anything, we need to dismantle America's infrastructure and rebuild it in a more sensible way. A way that favors public transportation. A way away from cars. Depression comes next in case you wonder.
Here is some quick arithmetic to cure your current denial. Most financial institutions in the country are undead. They are lifeless but they keep wandering around sucking away our savings. The sooner they drop dead the better, because until they do, we are wasting our hard earned tax dollars trying to keep them afoot. They need a stake through the heart, and have their heads cut off too.
Half of the American households have zero net worth. You can give them rebate checks and tax cuts all you want, but they won't start spending again. They are done, period. The best you can do is give them a reasonable job so you won't end up paying for their retirement. Most of them promise to be around for another 15-20 years for sure.
The more jobs we cut, the worse it will get. Another quarter of the American public is teetering on the brink of zero net worth. Keeping these people employed should be priority number one. Forget about corporate profits for now. Forget about what you learned in economics 101. It does no longer apply.
An economy driven by consumer spending is no longer an option. The consumers are done spending. The sooner we realize that, the better.
Rather than revamping America's infrastructure, we need to redo it. The current layout is problematic. It depends on cheap energy and is unsustainable in the long run. It is also environmentally destructive. We need to dismantle it before it does us in.