The art of deception: Hank Paulson speaks

The key problems that we face are all expressions of the fact that our monetary system is based on debt, and this enforces an exceptionally short-term investing and planning horizon, along with the need for continuous exponential expansion.

Thus our primary ailment today is a failure of our money system. Practically everything else that we read about today – bank failures, foreclosures, rapidly depleting resources, etc – are merely symptoms of this failure.

We are facing a money crisis, not a banking crisis. We are not experiencing a failure of our credit markets, but a failure of our money system. The apparent inability of our policy makers to understand this crucial distinction all but assures that their attempts to “fix things” will do more harm than good.

This OpEd piece by Hank Paulson, published today by the NYT, is a monument to wasteful, off-target thinking.

“Fighting the Financial Crisis, One Challenge at a Time”
By Secretary Henry M. Paulson, Jr.
The New York Times November 18, 2008

We are going through a financial crisis more severe and unpredictable than any in our lifetimes. We have seen the failures, or the equivalent of failures, of Bear Stearns, IndyMac, Lehman Brothers, Washington Mutual, Wachovia, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the American International Group. Each of these failures would be tremendously consequential in its own right. But we faced them in succession, as our financial system seized up and severely damaged the economy.

My Comment: So far so good, but all he’s done here is describe a few symptoms. No recognition of the causes of the problems yet (let alone assigning culpability). But this is just his opening paragraph; perhaps he’ll get to the causes later.

By September, the government faced a systemwide crisis. After months of making the most of the authority we already had, we asked Congress for a comprehensive rescue package so we could stabilize our financial system and minimize further damage to our economy.

My Comment: Actually, the crisis was fully recognized by many observers several years back, but was obvious to everyone in the industry a full year earlier than September 2008, and Hank knows it. The August 17th, 2007 event (a credit dislocation and stock market swoon) was a full-blown systemic crisis that kicked off everything we are seeing today. Astute observers of financial markets know that every warning bell in the engine room went off on that day.

Hank is avoiding raising that uncomfortable fact because it puts the lie to the “emergency” bailout bill, which was rammed through Congress and which has subsequently enriched many of his closest personal associates. So he is trying to reshape history by implying that the crisis erupted in September of 2008. It did not. It had been in the offing long enough that I remain confident that Ben Bernanke was handpicked in 2002 based on his recipes for fighting this exact sort of a battle. If this isn’t true, then I have to believe that one guy in Western MA with an Internet connection was able to diagnose and predict a set of ailments that eluded professionals with access to far better information. It’s possible, but not very likely.

There is no playbook for responding to turmoil we have never faced. We adjusted our strategy to reflect the facts of a severe market crisis, always keeping focused on our goal: to stabilize a financial system that is integral to the everyday lives of all Americans.

My Comment: The goal here, while laudable, is very much directed at the symptoms and offers us no insights as to whether the cause has been identified. After all, is it worth “stabilizing” a system that is inherently unstable? Do we know why it was unstable? Will providing massive funds help, or hurt? How can we know unless we know that the cause of the instability has been identified? What if the cause was “too much debt?” How will going deeper into debt help? These are all valid questions and they are left unasked and unanswered, probably because confidence in our economic system would be eroded by any such introspection.

As we assessed how best to use the remaining money for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, we carefully considered the uncertainties around the deteriorating economic situation in the United States and globally. The latest economic reports underscore the challenges we are facing. The gross domestic product for the third quarter (which ended Sept. 30, three days before the bill passed) shrank by 0.3 percent. The unemployment rate rose in October to a level not seen since the mid-1990s. Home prices in 10 major cities have fallen 18 percent over the previous year. Auto sales numbers plummeted in October and were more than a third lower than one year ago.

My Comment: Here Hank is connecting the bailout money to fixing the economy. He explicitly draws that connection and maintains it throughout the editorial. The application of TARP money, he implies, is the same as aiding the economy. But what this mechanism might be is never stated, and I’ve not yet seen any mention of it anywhere. For the millions out of work, new capital in a big bank is not helpful in the least. For an ailing company addicted to selling to overly indebted consumers, the TARP money provides no relief.

I have always said that the decline in the housing market is at the root of the economic downturn and our financial market stress. And the economy, as it slows further, threatens to prolong this decline, as well as the stress on our financial institutions and financial markets.

My Comment: Um, no, Hank, sorry, this is not true. Here are some recent quotes from you:

April 20, 2007 — “I don’t see (subprime mortgage market troubles) imposing a serious problem. I think it’s going to be largely contained.”

July 26, 2007 — “I don't think it [the subprime mess] poses any threat to the overall economy.”

Perhaps “always” and “root” mean different things to Hank than to me, but when I say “I have always maintained,” I generally mean for a much longer period of time than, say, since last year.

The current $250 billion capital purchase program is strong medicine for our financial institutions. More capital enables banks to take losses as they write down or sell troubled assets. And stronger capitalization is essential to increasing lending, which is vital to economic recovery.

My Comment: This is technically true, but in a very, very slippery way. What Hank is leaving unsaid is that the banks are not really taking losses to anywhere near their true extent, because the Federal Reserve is buying their assets at prices far above fair market value. So you’ve got Hank shoveling taxpayer money into the capital/equity side of banks (at very unfavorable terms to the taxpayers, especially compared to European efforts), while on the other side of the balance sheet you’ve got the Fed lifting damaged assets off their books at above-market rates so that the banks can avoid an honest appraisal of their true condition. So the slippery part was for Hank to mysteriously leave out the Fed's efforts in describing the scope of the bailout help.

Worse, this paragraph displays the pro debt-growth bias that will lead to our eventual ruin as a nation. Hank is parroting a thoroughly unquestioned premise on Wall Street, which is that “stronger capitalization is essential to increasing lending, which is vital to economic recovery,” but you and I might reasonably question whether this is true. Increased lending has brought us to the highest levels of debt ever and is the precise cause of the current mess. So, clearly there is a type of lending that is not good and should be avoided at all costs. Instead we need to actively begin paying down our debts, not increasing them. But as a creature of the banking system, Hank only knows one thing: more debt.

Recently I've been asked two questions. First, Congress gave you the authority you requested, and the economy has only become worse. What went wrong? Second, if housing and mortgages are at the root of our economic difficulties, why aren't you addressing those problems?

My Comment: These straw-man questions are ducking the main issues. The continued espousing of the myth that mortgages are “at the root of” our problems either displays an appalling lack of awareness or a deliberate attempt to deceive. The root of our problems is primarily composed of excess leverage and a reckless disregard for risk by big financial institutions. It was Hank himself who oversaw the dangerous accumulation of leverage during his tenure as the captain at the helm of the flagship Wall Street firm Goldman Sachs. Reckless lending was the cause, mortgage foreclosures are the symptom. This utter failure to distinguish between cause and effect is what worries me most about our chances of pulling through all this with minimal pain.

The answer to the second question is that more access to lower-cost mortgage lending is the No. 1 thing we can do to slow the decline in the housing market and reduce the number of foreclosures. Together with our bank capital program, the moves we have made to stabilize and strengthen Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and through them to increase the flow of mortgage credit, will promote mortgage lending.

My Comment: Given that Hank cannot spot the cause of the disease, it is unsurprising that he’s decided to treat the symptom. Here he advocates “access to lower-cost mortgage lending” as the solution to the housing crisis, delightfully unaware that he is prescribing more of the very toxin that caused the sickness in the first place. No, we do not need more low-cost lending. Yes, we do need to wring out the excesses of the past and have house prices fall back into a lower equilibrium with incomes. With this one statement, Hank Paulson is effectively saying, “We’ve decided to treat the alcoholic with a fifth of scotch.” Perhaps it’s time to get a new doctor?

The rest of the article closes with three paragraphs of gratuitous self-congratulation for operating boldly in an uncertain market environment. There’s nothing to gain from parsing that out, so I’ll stop here.

In summary, these are the things that are not helped, but rather hurt, by the actions of the US government going deeper into debt to repair failed banks:

  1. Insolvent entitlement programs. Our government is already fully insolvent with regard to the entitlement programs. Going deeper into debt at this time only exacerbates that problem, which is no longer far off into the future, but only a decade away from being a full-blown crisis of its own. Instead, a program of saving and cutting government spending needs to be implemented immediately.
  2. Lack of readiness for a new energy future. We need to make trillions of dollars in investments into preparing for a very different energy future. A smart grid, electric high speed railroads, reforming our ‘exurb’ living/work arrangement, and the complete replacement of our auto fleet are all essential components of arriving at the future gracefully. To use this recent weakness in oil prices to encourage people to borrow more to buy SUVs is about the most cynical and shortsighted policy I can imagine.
  3. A deficit and crumbling infrastructure. To be a first-world nation, you need an elegant and modern infrastructure. Drive from JFK to NYC with this in mind, and you will know the meaning of ‘embarrassing.’ Have you heard about any major bridges falling into rivers in any major country besides the US recently? We have vast investment needs just in rebuilding and maintaining our current infrastructure. Going into debt to bail out Wall Street does nothing to help in this regard, and very likely sabotages our future ability to borrow, should we ever decide that investing in ourselves is a priority.
  4. A national failure to save. Ending our raw-consumptive spending and rebuilding savings (the only way to support true capital formation) is an absolute must if we want a future of prosperity. By showing zero willingness to do anything other than spend whatever it takes to return to a zero-saving society, the federal government is setting a bad example. Instead we should be exploring ways to cut spending where possible and redirect funds to places where some investment could yield a decent return. Green energy comes to mind.

This is a companion discussion topic for the original entry at https://peakprosperity.com/the-art-of-deception-hank-paulson-speaks-2/

Hank is parroting a thoroughly unquestioned premise on Wall Street which is that “stronger capitalization is essential to increasing lending, which is vital to economic recovery” but you and I might reasonably question whether this is true.

Neither Hank or any other conventional economist can accept that this is not true. Even questioning the validity of this sentiment opens the door to the kinds of nightmare scenarios for which they have no response because the questions relate to their fundamental economic model assumptions:

  1. Growth can continue forever (i.e., there is such a thing as "sustainable growth")
  2. Energy, and all other inputs, are unlimited and will be provided to meet demand.

#2 is obviously and patently absurd on a finite planet so, according to the gospel of modern economics, it shall be a given and ye shall talk no more of it. Since they cannot talk about #2 without insulting the intelligence of anything brighter than mold, they must keep the focus on #1.

As you point out, in our economic system growth requires lending/debt. If lending/debt is actually a problem, rather than a positive necessary methodology for achieving #1, then, as they say in Ghostbusters, that "would be bad". Without lending-driven growth, the model collapses and a replacement model would need to be found (and will be, one way or another). There seems to be little or no possibility that the people currently in charge of the economy (or modern economics in general) can provide such an option because it is outside the scope of their reality. For these economists, growth is an article of faith. It cannot be questioned. It is simply to be believed. Everything else flows from there.

It is as if you told somebody that the founding principle of their religion was not true. Without that principle, their religion would have no meaning, and they could not have the faith they have. They could not accept this new information and would surely try to frame it in the context of what they believe. If they could not easily to that, they might well be lost. Similarly, if you cannot increase lending/debt forever in order to generate growth forever, then there is no sustainable growth econonomic model and they cannot be what they claim they are (and have always been). Their whole existance becomes meaningless, perhaps worse, they might actually have to accept being part of the problem.

Asking these people to adopt another economic model, or even to admit that the base assumptions of the current model are, shall we say, "iffy", is akin to asking people to abandon their religion. It is probably simply too great an obstacle for their economic faith.

Short version: if the only tool you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail (and will be treated accordingly ;-). Growth is always the answer, and therefore, debt (somewhere) is pretty much always the tool. Hank et al are simply doing the only thing they can do with the tools their "faith" provides. We need some people with different tools.

Brian

Dr. Ron Paul asked Bernanke yesterday what his thoughts were on the failed dollar and if there were any talks regarding using the treasuries gold reserves toward a gold backed currency.

http://blog.mises.org/archives/008975.asp

Bernanke said that the dollar is strong and see’s no problem with it. The only talks of the treasuries gold reserves is when talking about selling it off.

If Bernanke is telling the truth, this is why I believe we are headed down the road to complete destruction. I believe it was Einstsein that said that you can’t have the same guys solve the problem that they unknowingly created. You need someone else that understands the root cause of the problem in order to fix it.

 

Excellent piece Chris, the standard never varies… It never ceases to amaze me how the people running the world seem so appalingly incompetent…

Anyone who has been reading my numerous posts on debt cancelation will know how strongly I feel about this. If a business or individual reaches the stage of being completely unable to service their debts, they usually file for bankruptcy. After selling off any worthwhile assets to compensate creditors to the fullest possible, the debts are then canceled or forgiven. After all, what else can you do? You can’t get blood out of a stone.

So, if the entire system is now bankrupt and unable to service the debts, I believe we should call for a jubilee, and cancel all debts. And I mean ALL debts…

This notion of mine has been met with some derision in these forums, but frankly I see no other solutions. You can say that it’s unfair to those of us who have paid off all their debts (as we have) but as far as I’m concerned it has nothing to do with fairness to this generation and all to do with fairness for my children’s generation. At current prices they could never afford to purchase a house, without getting a sub-prime loan…Wink

Canceling the debts also means we could start again with a blank slate and tackle the huge problems of future sustainability. Continuing with this idiotic money system is simply not possible. We woud need (as Chris says above) to increase growth to such an unsustainable level (as if it wasn’t already!) just to meet the current level of interest repayment that we would kill off the entire planet within 20 years… I know the next 20 years will be nothing like the last 20, but killing off the planet is NOT on MY agenda, thank you very much.

Going back to Albert Bartlett’s test tube of bacteria, I feel the test tube is already (at least) 3/4 full, and we must stop the nonsense.

I haven’t seen Chris comment on any of my posts on debt cancelation. Are you there mate? What do you think? Do you have a better idea?

Mike in Australia. Fuming!

The more you look into this whole economic meltdown the scarier it gets.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GMo7T9t0Gzk

‘Gold for Oil’ international standard, and the Fed constructing a caste based "neo-aristocracy" (http://www.ured.com)

11/18/2008: I have a remotely possible theory about what the Fed is doing with the financial system. Their methods behind the current system are exploited, corrupted, and transparently failing. Creating digital money from nothing and credit-debt economies are becoming extinct, as these are American inventions. America will be forced to resort to outward fascism, or become a 3rd world country; and the people will not tolerate 'war for economy'. Government conspiracies like 911 won't succeed anymore, because of the growing awareness that the government conducts these operations to establish PR support for wars based on economics... under the guise of 'terror attacks'.

To survive, the elites will simply establish a "neo-aristocracy"; just like what has always been done historically. The new middle class will support the upper classes, based on gold possession and self interest. The artificially low prices in monetary metals are designed by the financial elites to establish this new middle class, and to increase gold circulation to their benefit.

Case in Point: For everything that the public has expected to happen regarding the dollar and the fed, the OPPOSITE has occurred. We have gotten deflation and dollar strength, when most intelligent economists called for dollar collapse via hyperinflation. Therefore, I submit that the Fed banks will stealthily acquire more gold, even as they suppress the price. It may come where commodities need to be traded for other commodities and rare items. Gold won't be the traded currency, but it will be the standard of wealth because it will be necessary to acquire key commodities, like oil.

The word is out on the potential 'gold for oil standard', dictated by the middle east, and backed by the international community! Recent major gold acquisitions by Saudi Arabia and Iran suggest a lack of confidence in currencies by these major oil producers. This means the possibility of a 'gold for oil' standard at some time in the future; especially if there is any type of war or further financial based upheaval. An invasion or attack on Iran, for example. Clearly, preparations have been made by other countries for the new standard: 11/15/2008 Iran switches reserves to gold, 11/14/2008 China set to increase gold reserves, 11/13/2008 Saudi buys 3.5 billion gold. Why will this preposterous notion come to pass? 1. Bernake testimony before Ron Paul 11/18/08: denying gold standard and implying central bank gold sales. Leading us to think the system is intact while they plot its controlled collapse. They know only gold will have the legitimacy to continue public support after this fiasco (11/18/2008 Congress/Fed). Additionally, The Investment banker aspects of the economy are set to fail if not bailed out. Bank of America acquisitions of Countrywide and Merrill Lynch will seal their fate (Bank of America = the Titanic: http://www.riverside.info/warning.htm); the stock traded today at 15 bucks per share, down about 68% on the year. 2. The elites have 15% of all the gold ever mined! After this digital system crashes, its back to a commodity based trade system; and they will once again be the financial elites.

It never ceases to amaze me how the people running the world seem so appalingly incompetent..
They reflect the incompetence of the voters who put them in office.

their incompetence is matched only by their arrogance

 

In summary, these are the things that are not helped, but rather hurt, by the actions of the US government going deeper into debt to repair failed banks:

  1. Insolvent entitlement programs. Our government is already fully insolvent with regard to the entitlement programs. Going deeper into debt at this time only exacerbates that problem, which is no longer far off into the future, but only a decade away from being a full-blown crisis of its own. Instead, a program of saving and cutting government spending needs to be implemented immediately.
  2. Lack of readiness for a new energy future. We need to make trillions of dollars in investments into preparing for a very different energy future. A smart grid, electric high speed railroads, reforming our ‘exurb’ living/work arrangement, and the complete replacement of our auto fleet are all essential components of arriving at the future gracefully. To use this recent weakness in oil prices to encourage people to borrow more to buy SUVs is about the most cynical and shortsighted policy I can imagine.
  3. A deficit and crumbling infrastructure. To be a first-world nation, you need an elegant and modern infrastructure. Drive from JFK to NYC with this in mind, and you will know the meaning of ‘embarrassing.’ Have you heard about any major bridges falling into rivers in any major country besides the US recently? We have vast investment needs just in rebuilding and maintaining our current infrastructure. Going into debt to bail out Wall Street does nothing to help in this regard, and very likely sabotages our future ability to borrow, should we ever decide that investing in ourselves is a priority.
  4. A national failure to save. Ending our raw-consumptive spending and rebuilding savings (the only way to support true capital formation) is an absolute must if we want a future of prosperity. By showing zero willingness to do anything other than spend whatever it takes to return to a zero-saving society, the federal government is setting a bad example. Instead we should be exploring ways to cut spending where possible and redirect funds to places where some investment could yield a decent return. Green energy comes to mind.
Entitlement Programs: This may be exactly the result desired Chris. Think back to the earlier years of ‘W’. What was the answer then to keeping these programs in check? That’s right, privatization! The first PR campaign didn’t take hold, so the best way to sell a program that nobody wants is to create a crisis that the sell will make go away. If they form an environment that yields a program’s collapse, then the sale to the private sector will sail through without so much as a wink.
Energy Future: Unless the future of energy involves the exact same people who are running it now (the big oil guys) you can count on NOTHING going forward. Again, with crisis comes unbridled funding. If the energy questions were to be answered in any way by moving forward with development, then government and the oil guys would in effect be acknowledging the petroleum dilemma. Not gonna happen any time soon.
Infrastructure: This is considered the last place to invest. The real trouble here is this - if you think the Wall Street gang sucks at running a business, spend some time with a Department of Transportation ANYWHERE in this country at ANY level! WOW, there’s a lesson on how not to do anything!!!
SAVE?: Are you kidding? If I’m saving I can’t have all the newest, coolest, most up-to-date stuff that nobody else has yet! This is the land of entitlement Chris, get with the program.
Just my opinion - Hey I got to go - I got a WII tennis match to play!
 

[quote=hewittr]


It never ceases to amaze me how the people running the world seem so appalingly incompetent…

They reflect the incompetence of the voters who put them in office.
[/quote]

They are not all elected. The likes of Bernanke Paulson and Greenspan were appointed…

In reality, there are only two ways we can judge the activities of Paulson and Bernanke. One, they are ignorant of the real causes of the problems we face or they are incompetent or both. Two, they are very aware of what is going on and have been part and parcel to a clandestine plan to create another financial paradigm.

I think most people choose the former alternative because it is much easier to rationalize and will not end up getting you labeled a conspiracy theorist. However, I believe that there are some that choose the latter.

If they (Paulson and Bernanke) are of the former ilk then I can only wonder how they arrived at their lofty positions carrying the heavy baggage of such ignorance.

If they are of the latter group then I believe they would rather be considered part of the former group as it is much less dangerous for them to be thought of as ignorant than it would be for them to be thought of as very intelligent, conniving middle men in a larger scheme.

Taking it a step further, it would be to their benefit to be thought of as blundering, well meaning, disconnected and clueless public servants. After all, who would we be angrier with, a fool or a grifter? Against which, theft or loss, would the public more quickly raise its voice?

Have any of you ever known a really good chess player? How many moves ahead do they plan? This also means they anticipate the moves of their adversary. I personally have never known a good chess player that thought any less than three moves ahead.

How ignorant and stupid are we prepared to think these men are? Are they really just pawns? If we can discern the reasons for our economic predicament then are we really willing to think that these men can not?

I really can not answer. However, I think these are some questions we might need to ponder.

 

WOW!
http://nz.youtube.com/wat…

[quote=hewittr]


It never ceases to amaze me how the people running the world seem so appalingly incompetent…

They reflect the incompetence of the voters who put them in office. [/quote]

A public incompetence cultivated by a well designed attack by economic elite on society at large.

[quote=rlee]


Entitlement Programs: This may be exactly the result desired Chris. Think back to the earlier years of ‘W’. What was the answer then to keeping these programs in check? That’s right, privatization!

[/quote]

YES! Economically forced privatization…this has already been achieved throught the Neoliberal agenda all around the world.

 

Yes, actually.

Vietnamese bridge collapse (Apr/07) that killed 54: http://www.chinapost.com.tw/asia/vietnam/2008/07/04/164005/Vietnam-bridge.htm

Bridge under construction in Kashmir collapses (Nov/08) killing 23: http://www.upiasia.com/Top_News/2008/11/16/23_feared_dead_in_Kashmir_bridge_collapse/UPI-82471226837081/

Bridge collapses in Karachi (Jan/08) 10 days after being opened: http://www.dawn.com/2008/01/09/local16.htm

Bridge cables snap on Clyde Arc bridge in Glasgow (2008) just 2 years after it opened: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/glasgow_and_west/7188584.stm

Bridge collapse in China (August/07) kills 22: http://chinadigitaltimes.net/2007/08/chinese-bridge-collapse-kills-22-bbc-news-updated/

(And that’s just the ones I knew about and/or could google for in under 5 minutes.)

Just because the USAian media isn’t reporting it doesn’t mean that it isn’t happening. You of all people, Chris, should know better than that. :slight_smile:

 

Bookrat- you cite 5 incidents of bridge collapse, but 2 were new bridges and 3 were still under construction. These are indications of engineering and construction failures. American bridges are failing because the structures have surpassed their respective design lives and the country has not invested in replacement and rehabilitation, which I believe is Dr. Martenson’s point. ASCE completed a detailed study documenting the severity of the problem.

Now, if we did start fixing all those bridges, we’d still have a bunch of collapses just like those you listed because we America doesn’t produce enough good engineers and we don’t know how to build anything anymore.

 

I found an interesting article by Robert L. Kocher where he compares America today with the movie "The Matrix". A bit off topic but good nonetheless, excerpt…

The Fascist-Socialist Psychological Analog

In our present real world, the incipient Matrix equivalent is liberalism/socialism or industrial fascism. There is no real fully developed Matrix as yet, although the American psychological environment is becoming increasingly dominated by a distorted atmosphere that would have been considered science fiction 45 or 50 years ago. Americans to a great extent no longer interact with each other directly, but instead interact with each other indirectly through TV and other media—through which they develop a filtered artificial mutual experience, wherein each person separately reacts with a third party or presentation instead of directly and exclusively with the person next to him.

http://members.mountain.net/theanalyticpapers/matrix8.htm

Well, I can’t read his mind any more than I can read yours; I just went looking for ‘bridge collapses’ in a quick search because the implication was that they weren’t happening anywhere else. If you’re asking about infrastructure-related bridge failures… how about this one, from Quebec? http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2006/10/02/laval-montreal.html (And again, that’s just from memory: I’m not seeking to make a project out of this.)

Geeze… hyperbole much?

Remember, just because a person is past his prime doesn’t mean he has no skills whatsoever; a 50 year-old NHL player will still skate circles around you. The same applies to countries (and oilfields, and many other things.)

 

Uh…really? You could not tell from the context that the comment was directed at the problem of infrastructure deterioration? Also, Chris askes about "major" contries. While we could have a debate on the definition of "major," in this context he clearly means other most developed countries with comparable levels of development to the US.

The above clarification makes your final comment irrelavent to the discussion of the high level of infrastructure deterioration experienced in the supposedly most powerful economy in the world. However, with this aside, you analogy is overly simplistic. That 50 yr old NHL player can skate circles around me (I don’t play hockey and have only iceskated on rare occassions), but would you not agree the he could no longer perform up to par in the specific arena that counts…the NHL? Maybe he could still perform and make a living in lower level leagues or even some foreign leagues, but he has lost his competitive advantage in the arena of highest competitions. So, as you see, as we extend your original overly simplistic analogy, it actually begins to make sense and indicates that the US infrastructure deterioration hinders its performance in many areas and makes it less competitive overall.

I appreciate the analysis and agree that people in power may not understand the real problem or that they know what it is, and just don’t want to face it but how about some constructive suggestions on what they should do? We apply a lot of good brain power here griping and complaining but if just a portion of that was used to try and come up with solutions, maybe we have a shot at lessening the burden on future generations. If I see some good suggestions, I’d be more than happy to pass it on to as many people as possible hoping that it reaches the ears of those that can change policy.