The astounding hubris of central bankers is comical, but the consequences of their actions are playing out as needless tragedy.
By Charles Hugh Smith
Central bankers present
themselves as Masters of the Universe. They are, but only in their own little
Theater of the Absurd. In the real world, they are as clueless as any other mortals about
the unintended consequences of their actions and the speed with which the
corrupted, unsustainable financial Status Quo will decay and die.
The only attribute they
possess in abundance is hubris. Their claims to godhood are comical when viewed
in their little Theater of the Absurd, but they become tragic when the consequences
of their actions play out in the real world.
Their job, such as it is, is
to deflate a tottering system based on phantom assets slowly enough that it
doesn't implode. Stripped of mumbo-jumbo, their strategy to accomplish this is to
inflate other phantom assets to replace the phantom assets that are falling to
zero.
All their promises, preening
and posturing boil down to patting their breast pocketand speaking vaguely about a
"secret plan" to end the crisis without bringing down the system that
spawned the crisis as a consequence of its very nature.
There is no secret plan, of course, and no secret
financial weapons; all they really have is artifice and the hubris to present
artifice as reality.
To admit the usustainable is not sustainable would bring
the entire rotten edifice crashing down, so the central bankers invite us into
their little Theater of the Absurd and evince a phantom confidence in their
phantom solutions that depend on phantom assets.
A swollen cloud of doom hangs
over the central banker's little Theater of the Absurd; all their chest-pounding
hubris and empty confidence is artifice, as phantom as the assets they claim
will replace the phantom assets that have been destroyed by exposure to
reality.
On their absurd little stage, they claim the Emperor's
robes are thick and fine; and we laugh, bitterly, for these threadbare lies are
all they have to "save" a parasitic, predatory, anti-democratic
financial Status Quo.
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