Thursday, December 17, 2009

Quiet Earth

----------- Letters from the Future ------ Letter 4 of 4 --------------------

If you haven't done so already, please read 
                               first ---- Letter 1 of 4    Birth of a Banana Republic
                               then --- Letter 2 of 4    Client Kings
                               then --- Letter 3 of 4    Apocalypse

We have had a disastrous growing season. The plants had diseases. And not enough water. And no fertilizer. As a result the harvest will be bad. We have survived the Apocalypse but even now, more than 20 years after the catastrophe and although we haven’t had any part in it, we are still suffering the consequences.

A famine amongst the Barbarians is never far away. But in 2106 it was so bad that half the people in our village starved to death. The settlement to the north is much bigger with more people and more soil. In desperation we sent two young people to work with them and asked for some food in return. For two months they would arrive every week pulling behind them a mule loaded with food. On their arrival our settlers would shout with delight, because once a week they could quell their hunger. Those who hadn’t already died were kept alive by this arrangement and it saved our settlement.

We have had sick plants and infertile seeds even before the Apocalypse. More than 100 years earlier big biotechnology companies had started to genetically modify maize, wheat, rice and many other food plants. They said their technology would increase crop yield. And it did. What they didn’t say was that they had modified the plants further to produce infertile seeds (a clever move to protect their patents). Hence, farmers could no longer use some of last year’s harvest to sow in the new year. Instead they had to buy seeds each year from the biotech companies. This was, of course, a brilliant money-making concept. Alas, it disrupted a natural farming habit which had served mankind for thousands of years. What is more, by contaminating non-modified crops it also destroyed much of the agricultural diversity which had been a vital backstop for farming.

With the demise of those companies modified seeds where now no longer available. And farmers had almost nothing to sow or plant. Not many natural, fertile plant varieties were left. And those varieties had a much lesser yield, were susceptible to disease and would easily be suffocated by weeds. I should reiterate for those who can not imagine it: There is no fertilizer available these days, no herbicide, no tractor, no machine at all, none of the trappings of ‘modern agribusiness’. What is left is work. Much work, back-breaking work, from dawn to dusk. For every man, woman and child. In spite of all the work some of our seeds won’t grow. Or come up and die straight away. Or survive, but never produce a harvest. Our barley, sorghum and millet suffer from head blight, the rye from brown rust. In spite of all our work we will have another bad harvest.

Someone came up from the valley today to bring food and have a chat. Elsa followed behind. She used to be very thin. Now she has put on some weight and seems mellower. She waited until the elder and I had finished. Then she came up to me and gave me a broad smile. “I wanted to tell you something.” she said “I am pregnant. The others are being so good to me, they have given me lighter work and some time off. They all want to give me some of their food. I can’t eat it all. Just think how lucky I am. Most people these days are infertile. Or they conceive and then abort within the first few months. I am now in the seventh month ... I have been delaying to tell you until I was absolutely sure. I feel so good and the baby is kicking inside me. I have never been so happy. It will be a beautiful child.” I put my arm around her shoulder: “What wonderful news. I am glad you are so happy. Take good care. I know it will be a beautiful child.”


Quiet Earth
From 2085 to 2110 AD

After the nuclear inferno it is now peaceful. We at Sun have been lucky. Ours is a small and unimportant kingdom and therefore it was never involved in the hostilities. In addition we had the good fortune of not being downwind from the main centres. This meant we didn’t get the fallout that others were exposed to. Those others survived at first, but then started suffering from radiation sickness and dying a slow and miserable death.

A few month later the air had become a little clearer. At first glance things seemed to have stabilised. Even improved. But there were hidden dangers which became gradually apparent.

The surviving Bandits had been scavenging the bombed cities, looting all they could in the ruins of the Lords’ palaces. But they ignored, or didn’t know, the risks of radiation. It was so high in those cities that many died on their way home. The loot they dropped as they were dying was also highly radioactive and would remain so for hundreds of years to come. In the biological warfare preceding the nuclear war many of the Bandits had been infected with the plague. Most perished in the atomic strikes, but a few survived. In their search for booty they raided some Barbarian settlements. All of the settlers in those villages were infected and died.

The pollution after the conflict was enormous. It wasn’t just radiation. It was also biological and chemical pollution. It wasn’t just in the air. It was in the soil and in the water, even underground in the water table. There is no way of telling whether our environment, our bodies, our water is now contaminated and by how much. We don’t have instruments to check the air, the soil, the water for radioactivity or chemicals. We will just have to continue living, hoping for the best. We have been dying early anyway. Now we will be dying even sooner and in more painful ways. And we won’t be able to reproduce. What will become of us ?

The people of Sun had survived the carnage. But now they were starving. All their trading had stopped, their equipment was wearing out, they could no longer produce any goods to trade. Nobody was left anyway to give them food in exchange for their products. The Lords who used to be the masters of trade were desperate. Most of their ‘property’ – mines, plantations, factories, water ways – had been destroyed or was contaminated and inaccessible. The soldiers protecting it had been killed. The Lords found themselves without means. In their anger they would have turned on the King, had they not killed him earlier. This didn’t do much to improve their mood. I was still their official advisor and trade expert. But as all trade had ceased, my job was getting a bit tenuous. To shore up my importance I dangled some ideas in front of them like how they could get back their property by going on an expedition ... But they were scared stiff. They may have been ‘daring entrepreneurs’, but they aren’t courageous by any stretch of imagination. In fact they are terrible weaklings and absolute cowards. Much easier for them to let others do the dangerous work. Which is what they have done for the last few thousands of years.

The Sun soldiers were unsettled. Many of their comrades had died. The Lords could no longer provide food, weapons and fuel. They had lost all ‘their property’ and as a consequence had no means to pay for anything. Some of the hungry soldiers staged an uprising against the Commander which he suppressed ruthlessly. The Lords took that as an opportunity to conspire against him. They spread the rumour he was planning to massacre all of his soldiers. A most unlikely rumour as no Commander in his right mind would kill all his own underlings. There would be no one left to command. But rumours don’t require rational thought. This particular one was all the more credible as he had actually suppressed the earlier uprising by killing many soldiers. In the end the Commander had no choice but to execute all the Lords and their families. They were not contributing, he said as his justification. “In times of hardship” he explained “it is our duty to wipe out the parasites”. And the soldiers believed him. Especially the bit about the ‘parasites’.

So, the Commander became the sole authority and governor of the Sun kingdom. However, his soldiers were still dying from hunger at an alarming rate. So did the slaves, but that wasn’t of much importance. The Commander worried about the future. There were no more external enemies to fight. There were no more Lords nor their property to protect. He was not exactly cheered by the prospect of a future that had no place for him. The remaining soldiers kept demanding to be fed and in the absence of food conspired against him. His new enemies were, of course, also mine, because I was too close to him. So I started worrying about my future, too.

A few days later I introduced the Commander to a revolutionary new idea: The soldiers would have to start growing their own food. This came as a complete surprise for him. How would we do it ? he asked. Well, if you don’t know, you could always ask the Barbarians. They have been doing it for a long time and I think with the right incentive I could get them to share their experience with us.

This is how I got a new job and a new reason to exist. So here I am, the chief negotiator for the great Sun army, asking the humble Barbarians for help, for advice, for sharing their knowledge. So that the mighty army doesn’t have to die from hunger. In my first few dealings with them they were polite, but obviously didn’t believe the Commander was serious about this. Or sincere. Or realistic. Just imagine a soldier using a plow instead of the sword ! To obtain their cooperation we needed to make a gesture, give a token gift, demonstrate our goodwill. I got the soldiers to make a wheelbarrow from some old spare parts and bits of sheet metal with the handles being two sawn-off gun barrels. When I turned up with this contraption at our next meeting, the settlers were delighted. They started to cooperate enthusiastically. In exchange for advice they asked for tools and implements. In the end we agreed on a good deal, although they wouldn’t use a word like that.

I often wonder about the Barbarians’ language. And mine. They never use words like deal, pay, owe, mine .... Instead they say work, share, help, ours ... It is amazing how very different they are, how completely unlike me or the soldiers or the slaves. The most striking difference is that they have no notion of property or ownership. No one owns anything. What they have in terms of tools or food is ‘owned’ by all, collectively. Even the huts they live in belong to the village, are common ‘property’. They live together in ‘settlements’, small communities of no more than forty families. Anything bigger is not good, they say. You must be able to meet and know everybody in the village. A smaller village is no good either, because there are not enough hands to do all the work. And you don’t get the mix of different talents that are needed. For example, to produce food you start by growing and later harvesting grain, roots, or vegetables. This then goes through numerous steps of manual processing before you can eat it. You need many people for that and a lot of different skills. And everyone, without exception, must make their contribution in exchange for their share. If they contribute, they are entitled to food, to company, “have the right to be here” as one of the elders put it. Compare this to what a soldier does, or a Lord. Do you start to see the difference ? Finally the slaves. They have to work, but they are not entitled to anything. What is more they don’t even have the right to exist. The Barbarians don’t have slaves. Nor soldiers. Nor Lords. The concept itself is alien to their way of life. Those who regard them as primitive, ignorant and uneducated would be shocked to discover how much they can learn from them.

Through my frequent contacts with the Barbarians I got to know them better and I started to like the way they lived. In the end I decided that life as a Barbarian was what I wanted. There was nothing much I had to give up at Sun. I talked to the elders about joining them as a Barbarian. They were polite, but it became clear they didn’t really want me. They said they had too many people already. But I suspect they doubted whether at my age I could contribute much. Also, how would I manage to adapt to the harsh life as a Barbarian. To impress them I extolled my skills as a trade expert and negotiator. They laughed. I explained that I had learned to be an accountant, and a lawyer, too. More laughter. I could even be their economist. They laughed and laughed and could hardly stop. No, no, they gurgled, these strange skills are of no use to us. Is it not amazing how natural and honest they were ? They didn’t mean to offend, they simply spoke their mind. My skills were not what they needed. They required people who could actually do real work. Nevertheless, they recommended I try a remote village in the south, on the outskirts of the realm, which was short of people after frequent raids by the Bandits.

I have been living here for six years now. Because I am old I could not offer to do physical work. But the villagers seemed to value my advice and my early warnings against intruders. Now, however, after the Apocalypse, with no more drones nor Bandits threatening us, my role has disappeared. That worries me. The Barbarian rule “No contribution, no right to be here” worries me. Don’t I have a right to exist, just because I have been born ? I am worrying about other matters, too. You could say old people always worry, often about nothing. But consider this :

Our spring, the sole source of water for the whole village, has less and less water. I noticed it a few weeks ago when it seemed to take much longer to fill my water can. The glaciers up in the mountains where all the main rivers rise had started to retreat in 2005 and had all but vanished some 50 years later. From then on our river, like most others, has been dry except for occasional flash floods. There used to be lakes in our area. They have all dried up. Temperatures have risen and the rains have become infrequent and unreliable. When they come they are violent and destructive, washing away the remaining topsoil. What will we do, if our spring stops flowing ? Or is it a question of when ?

When I look out in the evening across the plain, all I can see is an endless desert of dry, gray dust, gravel, and stone. The hills in the distance are just bare rocks. A desolate landscape. The earth has been stripped naked, raped, made unproductive. In the absence of water and soil the earth has become infertile, dead. The natural capital of the planet - oil, timber, minerals – has been extracted and squandered for products that were either useless or destructive. Our capital has been used up. For nothing in the end. What hasn’t been wasted has been poisoned. Half our continent is a no-go zone for the next thousand years because of radioactive radiation. What remains is very little, hardly enough to sustain life. Humans have destroyed the present. Even worse, they may have destroyed the future, too. We may not be able to live on. We may even be unable to reproduce. What will become of us ?

What have we done to this earth ? A place that was once wonderful, lush, plentiful, generous, a paradise, our beautiful home. Where are the birds, the flowers, the beauty ? Where has it all gone ?

You might ask: Why has it come to this ? Many bad things had been developing over the last few hundred years. But the present disaster began in earnest in 2010. Once it had started all else that has happened since was to be expected. A runaway train, once in motion, can not be stopped. Some subsequent events could have played out differently, but those differences would have been minor. It all led inevitably to a catastrophic end.

You might ask: How did it start ? The financial meltdown caused an economic disaster which caused a political crisis which caused a social catastrophe which caused a human .... and so on. So, the financial problems were to blame ? No. They were just the trigger. There were many other problems, each of which could have started it. Think of religious fanaticism, corporate greed, climate change, capitalist expansionism, lust for world domination, energy shortages, nationalistic arrogance, and more.

You might ask: Where did all these problems come from ? This is wide open to speculation, guesswork, opinion. My personal take is this: Once you introduce money, you create a means of accumulating unbelievable, obscene, overpowering wealth which is not natural. In Mesopotamia thousands of years ago there were wealthy traders. They owned stores full of grain. But they could not finance a standing army, hence could not start a war. Nor could they form an empire and terrorise all nations that dared to resist. Enormous wealth in the hands of a few and grinding poverty for all others is not good. Somebody had predicted what would come out of that in 1848. But people didn’t believe him. Or didn’t want to listen. In addition there is the greed, inertia and plain old stupidity which are so common to humans. It makes for a lethal combination, murderous at first and suicidal in the end. You may have a different opinion. But neither your nor my opinion matters any more.

This is the end of my report.
         It is a summary of the last hundred years of mankind.
         It may well be the very last hundred years of mankind.
If this is the case, then the earth will be quiet for good. Quiet forever.


----o-o-o-o-o-o-o--------------

This letter has taken a long time to write. I started three months ago and I am only now able to finish it. There have been some bad developments.

We had another crop failure. For the last three months I had to work every day to grow sufficient food just for myself. My plants are the sickly offspring of degenerated, manipulated, mutated grain. And they produce very little. What am I going to eat next week ? Next month ?

Then there was Elsa. She had given birth to a healthy child. But there were complications. The villagers called me to try and help. She was bleeding and the bleeding wouldn’t stop. I sat by her bed and could not think of anything to help her. All the women looked at me and cried: Do something! Help! Stop the bleeding! How? I said and looked away to avoid their eyes, I don’t know how.

They put the child on her chest. She couldn’t see it because she was too weak to raise her head. But she felt it and smiled. I held her hand. There was nothing I could do. When she stopped breathing, her smile faded away, slowly, little by little. It was a merciful way of dying, like falling asleep. Her last thought would have been a happy one: To wake up in the morning holding the child in her arms.

It was a healthy child, but none of the women was able to feed it. It was crying all day. The villagers sent a messenger to the settlement in the north asking for help. The women tried to comfort the child. It was growing weaker by the hour. On the third day it stopped crying. By the time a young, breast-feeding mother from the north arrived, the child had died. The young woman said with tears in her eyes: “It was a beautiful child ...”

The whole village was at the funeral, all twentyfive of them. They laid the child in the mother’s arms and buried them together. I looked around during the ceremony. There were very few young faces, most were old, thirty and over. Some of them moved their lips as if praying. Praying to whom, I wondered. Didn’t they know there was nobody listening ? I walked back up the hill. When I arrived at the top, I realised I had been walking all the way with clenched fists.


This is the great contradiction: There used to be too many people for the earth to support. Now there are too few being born to maintain viable communities. Most men are infertile, mothers miscarry or perish in childbirth or give birth to deformed children which die within months. Everyone is dying earlier and earlier. There were too many before, now there are too few.

What will happen in the future ? Will we be able to continue ? What will become of us ?

In moments of despair I think I am the lucky one. I can go and leave behind a miserable life, a life not worth living and a future not worth having. I’m glad I will be gone. Or should I have hope and think, The young ones have never known anything better than what they have now. They’ll make do with the little that is left and will make the best of it. The Now and Here is all they have. They will try and enjoy it and not wait for a better future that may never arrive. Which of the two is the right answer ?

In the evening I collected some hemlock and let it soak in a cup of water. After the night had fallen I sat down with my back against a rock and stared into the darkness. There was no moon. I couldn’t see a thing. Nor hear a sound. The village below is doomed, because it doesn’t have enough people to support itself. The spring will dry up. The few young ones will move north, the old ones will die. There are no more drones, no more Bandits to warn them about. They don’t need a lookout any more.

There is nothing left for me to do, nothing I could contribute. Maybe its time to go. Nobody asked me whether I wanted to be born. Now, at least, I can make my own decision. I came into the world as a slave. I will leave it as a free man, just like my ancestor a hundred years ago.

I listen to the silence. I am not moving, not speaking. There is no one to talk to and there is no one listening. I am waiting. Waiting for the dawn so I can complete the letter. It is still. My mind is blank, numb, frozen.

A thin gray line appears in the black sky. I get on my feet. It is rapidly expanding across the eastern horizon and growing lighter, brighter. Dawn has arrived, at last. I am gulping down all that is in the cup. I must now finish this last letter to You very quickly. Are You still there ?         ... m sorry bout what we leav bhind ... don’t knw whethr.. is enogh for... poison is workg... nthg mor for me .. to contrb...            I... no... You... can... hav... mayb... a right to... be ...?

Copyright © Rolf Brandt 2009

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Apocalypse

----------- Letters from the Future ------ Letter 3 of 4 --------------------
If you haven't done so already, please read
                                                              first ----  Letter 1 of 4  Birth of a Banana Republic
                                                              then ---  Letter 2 of 4  Client Kings

Dawn came slowly, almost reluctantly. The skies were overcast with a reddish hue. There had been huge explosions overnight in the south, lighting the sky and sending rolling thunder across the land. The few kingdoms remaining after the Apocalypse were still fighting and – hopefully - killing each other. If we get southerly winds, they will bring radioactive fallout, toxic gases, and black rain. There isn’t any shelter to protect from it. I was up on the lookout in the middle of the night. In helpless fury I raised my fists to the sky and screamed into the thunder “No wind... No wind !”. Afterwards I wondered who I had been yelling at. There was nobody up there.

At noon the settlers signalled from the valley and urged me to come down. An important visitor had arrived and they wanted me to meet him. It was a long and difficult walk for an old man like me. Elsa waited for me at the village entrance looking upset and miserable. She asked me to come to her hut after the meeting to see her brother.

The visitor came from a settlement two days to the north. They had been approached by the Commander of the Sun Kingdom. I know the Sun Kingdom, because I came from there six years ago. It was one of the few that didn’t employ Bandits to harass the Barbarians. The Commander was sending greetings to “his old friend Rolf”, the visitor said. I will explain later how it came that we knew each other. The Commander was inviting all Barbarians in the territory to help fight invading Bandits from other kingdoms. The villages should inform the Sun fortress of any sightings of Bandits. The fortress would then send out soldiers to protect them. The King was giving every village a two-way radio to communicate. I wondered why he was doing it, but accepted it with thanks. It might be useful.

I went to see Elsa. Her brother had gone back to work prematurely because he didn’t want to be a burden for the others. The Barbarian rule was simple: No work, no food. Digging and harrowing the parched soil he had overdone and broken his arm again. It got infected and was now much more painful than before. He was feverish, his arm very hot, swollen and dark red. He was a young and strong man, but without medicine he would get blood poisoning and die. I took her aside. This is bad, I said. His body will keep fighting the infection, but he will die in the end. Because he is strong, it will take longer and cause him more pain. Make it easier for him by helping him die sooner, I said. Come with me to the spring, there is some hemlock growing there. No, no! she cried, I will not kill my brother. I started walking towards the hill. She hesitated, then came running to catch up with me. Walking by my side she wept quietly. Up at the spring I picked some hemlock, put it in her hand and folded her fingers around it. I hugged her and said gently: Be strong. Help him.

She turned without a word and walked back to the village.



Apocalypse 
 The terrible years from 2060 to 2085 AD

The King brought order to the realm. And prosperity for a favoured few. Fear, hunger, and back-breaking work for the rest. The large underclass of slaves served a tiny oligarchy which ran a brutal system of exploitation. They called themselves the “Lords” in order to cover the stench surrounding their origins. They owned the land, the slaves, the mines ... everything. They lived in fortified palaces protected by thousands of soldiers. They elected the Council advising the King. The King was the centre of power and the ultimate authority, governing, adjudicating, administering life and death.

Democracy had been lost and forgotten. This was not a big loss. It had been a sham in most countries around the world anyway. A fig leaf to hide the corruption, violence, and fraud underneath. Many a tyrant was meticulously holding regular “democratic” elections. In the western world it degenerated into a farce, a stage-managed pop event, financed by corporates and other parties with vested interests. It was useful, though: It distracted the populace from the real issues, hiding what was going on and giving them the warm feeling to have had their say.

At court King Zhang-Ho would grant audiences to the privileged few, his inner circle, those in the know. He would expect the more important Lords to be in attendance. And my father had to be there, too, because he knew all these flunkeys. He would advise the King discretely about their hidden motives and ambitions. The King’s promotions and demotions could be very quick. Therefore, the Lords courted and hated my father, at the same time. I have learned a lot from him about the dirty games that were being played. And about the hypocrites, the opportunists, the devious and the dangerous. Of course, all kings need skilled administrators because they themselves are often stupid. Drunk and blind with power and greed. King Zhang-Ho was generally a bearable king. He spent most of his time pursuing his pleasures, spending the nights with young boys and the days at elaborate banquets. Therefore, he rarely interfered with the work of his underlings, because they made his life of luxury possible (although he didn’t see it this way). He regarded them as disposable serfs, even the higher ranking ones like my father. This became clear occasionally when he would suddenly fly into a mad rage. On one such occasion he had the palace guards kill all his servants, more than a hundred of them, because someone had painted the word SOW on the palace wall. Everyone knew that he was the son of a whore.


Trade happened without money, through a giant barter system. Once a year the bigger kingdoms would organise a “World Trade Fair”, sometimes even called “Fair Trade Fair”, in one of the cities. They made sure to invite the sponsoring power blocs as they were the most important hidden players. When the fair was in some foreign capital, King Zhang-Ho would head a delegation, consisting of some twenty Lords, assorted servants and sex slaves, and my father. While the upper ranks were having fun at the fair, my father and the administrators of other powers did the haggling. Slaves for water ? Food for weapons ? Sounds easy, but how much and what food and what weapons ? Was the food safe ? Did the weapons work ? For my father it was a question of life and death. Because if anything went wrong after delivery, he would be blamed. And promptly executed. For the King these things were easy. At least in the short term.

Water had become a scarce commodity and was furiously traded. Without it good agricultural land was useless. Lack of rain dried out the ground. Hot winds would then blow away valuable topsoil. Successive droughts led to ever increasing desertification. The scorched wastes of the once fertile Midwest were producing less every year. Hence, the most important ingredient of the King’s giant plantations was water. He ordered rainwater to be collected in reservoirs, ground water to be pumped up for irrigation, and water to be diverted from other kingdom’s rivers. The diversion of rivers destroyed a large swath of nature. And didn’t go down well with the other kings. Everyone was being starved of water. This turned into an ever increasing disaster year after year. Large parts of the earth that were once productive farmland had already turned into arid desert. My father said that three quarters of what was once prime American agricultural land was now barren wasteland..

Devastating wars were to be fought over water. And wars over land would soon follow. For the protection of “our” water and land the King used thousands of soldiers. But the soldiers had to be fed, housed, and equipped. As a consequence only the very big kingdoms could afford this level of protection. Naturally, the smaller ones were soon to be robbed of their share ... after all their soldiers had been killed.


Feeding so many slaves to work on the plantations and in the factories was costly, too. Or so the Lords’ advisors said. The slaves were consuming a lot of soybean bread which could otherwise have been exported. The captains of industry reckoned that, if more automation was applied and less down-stream processing, three quarters of all human labour could be saved. In the case of the Zhang-Ho kingdom alone some ten million slaves could become surplus to requirements. That equates to a lot of saved bread, they would say. In the end everyone (except my father who was not part of the inner circle) agreed: There are just too many slaves. Also, they are not as efficient as a machine. They get sick, they die. And, as a cynic added, a machine “knows how to keep its mouth shut”. So, once we have increased automation and reduced processing, what are we going to do with them ?

Well, natural attrition was the answer. We will stop feeding them, some suggested. Others thought that it would take too long for them to die. How about a large-scale industrial accident ? For instance, leakage of a deadly gas into the densely packed labour camp. Or a typhoid epidemic. Maybe an explosion of herbicide tanks containing dioxin. Perhaps we don’t need any smoke screen at all as there is no opposition to placate. Why not simply detonate a few medium-sized nuclear bombs. You find that cruel ? Inhumane ? Sure. But it wouldn’t be the first time. Man has always done this to his fellow men. Think of Auschwitz, Hiroshima, My Lai. Other examples stretch back thousands of years.

When my father heard of the plan, he protested violently - in public - at the Court - and was promptly sentenced to death. Inexplicably the King stayed the sentence. However, my father was found a few days later with a knife in his back. He had made too many enemies among the Lords.


----o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o------

I have to interrupt at this point, because the radio is warning of sightings of Bandits. After the Apocalypse the few smaller kingdoms that survived the catastrophe, had lost their trading partners and hence their livelihood. They were starting to go hungry. They sent out Bandits to plunder whatever they could from the Barbarians and from other kingdoms. Some Bandits had just raided a village to the east. The villagers radioed for help, but the Bandits were quick and had left before the Sun soldiers arrived. So I have to be on the lookout around the clock now until further notice.

Late in the morning, after three days on the guard, I saw a dust cloud moving across the plain. It came towards me, so I raised the alarm to give the settlers enough time to hide. The cloud changed directions several times, but came a little closer in the afternoon. It was as I had suspected an armoured truck. After some time it aimed directly for my hill. I got worried and radioed the Sun soldiers for help. They responded promising to dispatch some troops immediately. The truck got closer but seemed to go in circles, as if searching for something. I could see three Bandits behind the windshield. They were studying a map. Suddenly they started going around the foot of the hill to get to the other side. This is where the settlers were hiding. I panicked and jumped up and down and waved my arms to attract their attention. But they didn’t hear nor see me. Desperate to distract them I pushed some rocks down the hill. They grew quickly into a small avalanche. Luck had it that it crashed down only a few hundred yards in front of them. They stopped dead and looked up. I waved and shouted.

It didn’t take long for them to arrive at the top of the hill. They stopped directly in front of me and two of them jumped out, knife in hand, and grabbed my arms: “Where are the settlers that were here two years ago ?” they shouted. Most of them have died, I said, the rest moved up the river towards the northeast. How far, they asked. I shrugged my shoulders. They turned to the truck to discuss with the driver. I heard him talk about fuel and the long way back to their base. The two got back into the truck and the bigger one barked “If we don’t find them, we’ll come back and wring your neck.” He made a descriptive gesture.

The river, like all rivers around here, was dry most of the year. The river bed was better for driving than the rocky slopes. And you could see the truck from miles away. The soldiers coming from the opposite direction would quickly find it. Another remote possibility that I was hoping for was a flash flood. Rain storms up in the mountains could release thousands of tons of water that would come crashing down the valleys. A wall of water would then travel at high speed along the river bed and kill everything in its path. There was no escape. When you saw the water coming, it was too late to flee.

My wishes were not granted. The three were back the following morning. I heard the engine roaring as the truck climbed up the hill. In great haste I switched the radio on to beg for urgent help, but they were too quick. The two Bandits jumped off the truck snarling “you old bastard, trying to con us, eh ?” And with a smirk on his face the bigger one put his hands around my neck.

A shot rang out and two soldiers, emerging from behind the rocks, yelled “Freeze ! Raise your hands ! Turn around !” I could see the Bandit in the truck slumping over the steering wheel. The two soldiers came closer. They both put their handguns away, pulled out a knife and stabbed the Bandits in the chest. “Cheaper than bullets...” said one of them. I went around to the back of the truck. There were five young people in there, chained together, plus plenty of food and water. I told the soldiers to release the prisoners, offload the food and water, then load the dead bodies on the truck. They laughed. You are not calling the shots here. We’ll take it all. And they turned to climb into the truck.

While I was protesting a familiar voice called from the radio behind me “Rolf ! I have heard what is going on. Turn the volume right up and stand back.” With a booming voice he thundered: “Soldiers, this is your Commander speaking.” The soldiers snapped to attention. “Do as the man tells you. Instantly. This is an order. When you are back at base, report to me immediately. Do you hear me ?” “Yes, Sir.”

After they had left, I signalled the settlers asking their elders to come up the hill. The prisoners looked emaciated, so I invited them to eat of the food the soldiers had unloaded. They were from the village to the east, so was the food. The elders asked what the young people were planning to do. Three of them wanted to stay here, the other two preferred to go back home. The elders said their village could only handle two more people. there was not enough land to support more. But the village to the north needed more people and had the land to feed them.

-----o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-------

Here I am back to continue with my letter ...
How to get rid of some superfluous ten million slaves ? That was the big question the Lords thought they had solved. But their plan wasn’t feasible, the technocrats said. It was simplistic because one couldn’t kill them all at once. Think of all the logistical problems: Safe disposal of the cadavers, keeping up production, continuity of service, etc. A phased approach was needed. You must have well-defined stages, a conducive legal environment, proper project management, and so on. For all that to work, you must employ experienced technocrats who are able to plan for, design, and implement, a structured and disciplined regime of death.

Luckily chance created its own solution. Exports of food from Zhang-Ho to the Asia bloc had been going well and were the economic mainstay of the kingdom. The food factory in the Midwest where my father had worked was the biggest producer of this food. The worker slaves there had been a bit sickly in the last few years and had to be replaced in ever increasing numbers. But nobody thought much about it. Until, one day, the Chinese ProConsul in Zhang-Ho City summoned the Council and the King to a meeting. An emergency meeting, he said. In the last few years increasing numbers of Asian consumers had fallen ill after eating soybean based food. The experts found that the food contained some mysterious chemical pollutants. It took a further month to pinpoint the source of the tainted food. It came from the Midwest factory. The ProConsul demanded an immediate investigation into how the contamination had come about and who was responsible. The inquiry found that the ground water used for irrigation and in the manufacture of soybean mash contained toxic chemicals. They came from chemical waste dumped many decades ago. The waste contained phenols, hydrogen sulphide, corrosive caustic soda from petro-chemical processes and heavy metals from weapons manufacture.

The list was long. The result was death. Slow, debilitating, painful death. It could take months. The victims became weak, infertile, and prone to infections. Some developed tumours, many had their immune system fail. They were wasting away. Who was responsible for this ? Some low-level administrators, serfs. Of course. They were executed even before the report had been completed.

The Chinese demanded redress. But how ? The Lords were in a quandary. What could they offer that seemed valuable, but didn’t cost too much ? Almost simultaneously several of them had the same glorious idea: The King. He had been in power for too long. He was too strong. The Lords were jealous of his power, his privileges and his property. So he was impeached. For carelessness in office, for damaging public property, for lewd behaviour unbecoming a king, for endangering the security of the state. He was executed in public and, although deemed a criminal, he was entitled to, and got, a state funeral. His property was divided up fairly and equitably among the Lords. In his place they elected Edward McSantil, a weak and gullible elderly Lord. He was inaugurated in 2076 as King Edward The Saint. The capital was renamed Saint-Edward City. In that same year I was promoted to Junior Administrator in the King’s treasury in charge of landholdings, trade contracts, mines, and water rights.

There had been endless disputes between the kingdoms over borders, land, access to water, etc. These escalated increasingly into squabbles, minor battles and outright wars. Some people saw these as being precursor wars by proxy, instigated by the Asia bloc, the Southern Syndicate, or whoever happened to be the overlord of a particular Client King. These battles were won or lost not so much by the soldiers, but by the availability of equipment, ammunition and fuel. Manufacturing had collapsed some 60 years earlier. Therefore motors, tanks, trucks, almost any mechanical device you can think of, ran out of spare parts. A whole subculture of machine scavengers made a living of taking apart broken-down equipment, collecting spare parts, and trading them on the black market. The same happened with fuel and older types of ammunition. The hi-tech missiles were not affected as the overlords kept those factories going for their own benefit. In the meantime soldiers died because their equipment was wearing out.

It was a classic case of a great power, outwardly invincible, rotting from within. We don’t know and can’t predict when and why empires will collapse. But they will. Inevitably. Nothing lasts forever. The trouble is we don’t know when. It may happen tomorrow or centuries after we have died.

The fighting was taking a huge toll and signalled the beginning of the end of the reign of the Client Kings. The smaller kingdoms were running out of conventional arms and ammunition. Desperate to survive they bought containers of nerve gas and grenades with the bubonic plague virus on the black market. This type of ammunition had been stolen from army depots and laboratories after the collapse of the federal army some thirty years earlier. These weapons repelled many attempted invasions with devastating consequences.. The surviving attackers, carrying the plague in their bodies, returned home and infected whole cities with the lethal disease. However, the defenders themselves were paying a high price, too. Having been stored underground for so long, many of the gas containers had corroded and started to leak their deadly contents. Overall, this meant the end of many kings, their cities, and their people with death making no difference between attackers and defenders. Which left only the big kingdoms, now fighting over the remains of the smaller ones, but more importantly fighting for their own survival. People saw the ‘end of the world’ coming. Some hoped for a ‘rapture’, others just wanted to go quickly hoping to escape pain and suffering. My father had predicted all that. Before he died, he said to me “Don’t see the end as a bad thing. It is good, it clears the air. It will be terrible and many millions will die, but without it we can not make a new start.” He was predicting the future.


Around this time I was negotiating a new trade contract with Sun, a smaller kingdom in the southeast that was not involved in the battles. Because of my reputation as a trade expert the Sun King invited me to become his Trade Advisor. Fearing that the situation back home would deteriorate I decided to stay. This turned out to be a very good move, because it saved my life. At Sun I got to know the Commander. He was not your usual soldier. He had brains. He was keen to understand what was going on and why. I was able to give him some insight. He seemed to like that. A typical discussion with him would be about the role everyone had in life. He would ask, Why do we need administrators ? I would explain and then ask him, Why do we have soldiers ? Oh, to protect us, he would say. Protect whom, I would ask, me or the slaves or who ? Or what ? A long pause would follow.

The Sun kingdom got into trouble very soon. Some of their main trading partners had been “closed down” as the official language would have it. In reality they and all the people within had been annihilated. The situation at Sun got precarious as the Lords couldn’t get enough trade revenue to sustain their life style and keep the military operating. Their first reaction was, as the fashion goes, to blame it all on the king. He was quickly killed. But that didn’t change anything. So the next scapegoat was the Commander. I had anticipated this and warned him. He put up extra bodyguards who caught several would-be assassins. With a little ‘enhanced interrogation’ they would quickly confess which Lord had sent them. By eliminating these Lords the Commander reduced the size of the problem, but he didn’t remove it completely. Not yet.

Things were getting uncomfortable. My close association with the Commander, while pleasant, was becoming a bit dodgy, because of his enemies. So, I took leave to spend some time with the Barbarians who had a village right outside the fortress walls. They were amazing. They had rules about life like “you must contribute to the common good”. They worked harder than slaves. I asked them about it and they said “If you work, you have a right to live. A slave works, but has no rights.” I couldn’t quite figure what that means.


The war was reaching its final climax. Some kingdoms destroyed each other almost simultaneously. The overseas power blocs got increasingly worried. At a secret meeting in the Bahamas it was agreed that the fighting had to be stopped. The overlords wanted to preserve what little the impoverished American continent was still delivering to them. Envoys were sent out to reign in the kings. The Chinese ProConsul ordered the Lords of Saint-Edward to stop their attacks on other kingdoms. But they didn’t listen and they didn’t stop. They couldn’t. Because each of their actions caused a reaction. Each attack provoked lethal vengeance and each revenge caused a new deadly attack. It had become an unstoppable chain reaction. They and their enemies were sinking into chaos and anarchy.

The Asia bloc decided to take action. The President announced Asia’s taking up arms with these immortal words: “We lead the world in battling .. evils and promoting the ultimate good .. We must lead by .. ensur[ing] the security of our people and advance the security of all people." He had taken these words from a speech by an American president back in 2009. Very similar words had been said by an earlier leader in 1938. And by another one in 1703, by one in 1536, in 1209, and so on, and on.

As a precaution the Asians first obliterated the NavStar Global Positioning System with surgical strikes wiping out its 24 satellites. This crippled all of the Client Kings’ long and medium range missiles and smart bombs while leaving the Asian GPS intact. This way they gained instant “air supremacy” ruling out any chance of retaliation. Then they dropped some small neutron bombs on Saint-Edward city. The radiation of these bombs killed everybody, but left the buildings, factories, plant and equipment undamaged for later use by Asian immigrants. This attack eliminated the Saint-Edward Lords as one of the main sources of the mayhem. Finally, by exploding massive hydrogen bombs above the other capitals, including some of the Southern Syndicate, they forced an end to the warfare, an end to the destruction and slaughter.

They created peace. There was no more fighting, because there was no one left to fight.
There was silence. The silence of the graveyard.
After all the mayhem and turmoil of the last two hundred years the earth had finally become peaceful.

Quiet.

----------  continues with Letter 4 of 4    Quiet Earth            Copyright © Rolf Brandt 2009

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Client Kings

----------- Letters from the Future ------ Letter 2 of 4 --------------------
If you haven't done so already, please read first --- Letter 1 of 4   Birth of a Banana Republic


Just before noon today I heard a dim humming in the air. At least I thought I heard it. Because it was so faint it could have been the blood pulsating in my ears. When there is no wind, it is very quiet these days. No birds, no insects, absolute silence. Which is why you can hear the faintest sound even when it is far away. I shook my head and closed the eyes to concentrate and listen. Then I heard it again.

It was the sound of an engine many miles away. I have heard this sound before. It was them, there is no doubt. Nobody except the Lords have aircraft these days. They use drones to survey the land and search for enemies. And for booty. Often this will be followed by a raid. They send out their Bandits to do the dirty work for them. The last time they came was two years ago. After the raid nothing much of the settlement below was left. Only the women and the old survived. And a couple of young ones who were able to keep out of sight. I told them that in order to stay alive in the future they must disperse and hide when I warn them. I also urged them to disguise their huts and break up their fields into many small patches spread out over a large area. So that from high up nothing is seen but empty, barren land. Being invisible is the best protection.

At noon I stood on the hilltop with my big mirror, waiting for their call. After a while three short bursts of light flickered up from the valley as they do every day at this time. The signal means “Hi there, any news ?”. Usually I would respond with three burst of light from my mirror meaning “All is fine.”. But today my answer was “Be aware, a drone has been heard. Wait for more signals from me.”. This is to prepare for a full alarm when the drone is closing in or the Bandits are approaching in their rumbling armoured trucks.

The hum of the engine became louder. Turning my head slowly from left to right and back again I tried to determine the direction and start looking for it. It is very hard to locate a small drone high up in the bright sky. The eyes hurt after a short while, so I close them for a few minutes every now and then. If the buzz of the drone increases, it is coming this way and sooner or later I will see it. After the third attempt I saw it. In the north west, a mile away. I raised the full alarm. Immediately I heard the foghorn down in the valley warning the settlers where ever they were working. They would grab some food and water and run to hide below rocks, underneath bushes and in the caves. The drone passed overhead and continued towards the south east. This is a good sign. For if it had noticed anything, it would have turned around to take a closer look. The humming waned. I waited for another hour, then gave the all clear. It had worked. However, I will remain on heightened alert for a couple of days in case the Lords found anything on the video record and decided to send the Bandits.

Once a week one of the settlers comes up the hill to bring me some food. What I can grow myself is not enough to keep me alive. Most of the time its one of the elders coming to talk and share news from other settlements. They also discuss their problems with me and want to know where things will be going in the future. Today a young woman, Elsa, came. Her brother had broken his arm and was in pain. I am not a doctor. And there is no medicine. I told her to make a brace from sticks. Then wrap the arm with some fabric and pour water over it. The evaporating water will cool the arm and alleviate the pain. I told her to come back if it got worse. When Elsa left she said how grateful they all were for my warnings and how they appreciated my advice. I felt good that night.



 Client Kings
 The period from 2035 to 2060 AD

The generals ran a garrison state. This was natural for them. But it was also necessary because they had to govern the country and, at the same time, fight on two fronts: The gangs on the one hand and the rebellious states on the other. In addition they had to produce food for their troops, food to pay for fuel and weapons, and food to deliver as debt repayment to the Chinese overlords. To achieve this they ran gigantic plantations using slave labour. The generals were not good at managing all this. For their structure was hierarchical and rigid and their decision making slow. Fighting wars they had learned, but not managing a business, let alone an economy or a country. For that they had to rely on administrators which the oligarchs were more than happy to provide. So, while the military governed, the oligarchs ruled behind the scenes. The other divide was between central government, represented by the military, and state governments in some of the bigger states like California and Texas. Those states governed their territory using the remnants of the National Guard – and using the help of gangs. Which in the meantime had morphed into small armies headed by warlords.

As a consequence law and order had disappeared. Or more accurately, it had been replaced by the rule of self-appointed state governors, warlords, security services, and the military. You see, when there is no money to pay a lawyer or a judge, justice can not be done. Even if it were, what would you do with those found guilty ? You can’t imprison them, because there are no prison guards. You can’t hang them, because there is no hangman. The new rule, if you can call it that, was simple: Do what those in power tell you to do, otherwise you’ll be dead. On second thought this is not a new rule at all. You always had to do what you where told, except you were not instantly killed for disobeying. The trouble during these years was, nobody was quite sure who was actually “in power”, because it depended on where you were and it seemed to change all the time.

People died from violence and disease, but most died from hunger. For ordinary people there was no food. Valuable agricultural land was being lost through rising sea levels and violent hurricanes which devastated low-lying areas and river deltas. This was the most fertile land you can imagine, supporting billions of people, almost a quarter of mankind. Even where food was still grown, you couldn’t get it because there was no transport, no fuel, no distribution. And ordinary people had no money to buy it. For people to survive there were only three options: Join the army, become a gang member, or get into a labour camp. In practice none of these organisations would let you in, because they all had too many people and all those people had to be fed. My father, then in his mid-twenties, tried all the options many times unsuccessfully until, finally, he was accepted into a big new labour camp in the Midwest. This camp had been built to supply plantations, adjacent food factories and a new military base with cheap labour. The military base, as it turned out, had been quietly established by the Chinese. The base, they said, was to help the generals in their various battles. It was not the only base they created on American soil.

Worldwide economic collapse was followed by the breakdown of political and social systems. This means civil society as we know it was disintegrating. Rapid changes were occurring throughout the world.

In the south the Latin American drug cartels had diversified away from drugs long ago. There was no more money in drugs as people couldn’t pay. But they retained their great paramilitary power base, especially the Colombian and Honduran mercenaries who had once been trained in the US, at the School of the Americas. The drug barons, being guided by their financial advisors, had invested their capital wisely, just before the economy crashed. They emerged as the new owners of large parts of the land, including giant plantations and agribusinesses some of which had earlier belonged to United Fruit and other US companies. The barons practically owned most Latin American governments and their armed forces. They were now looking for new ventures.

In the US a guerilla war had been going on amongst the many warlords and their gangs. Although tens of thousands died every month, those remaining fought with ever increasing resolve, force, and violence. In the end the surviving warlords and gangs merged, becoming bigger and stronger. They were trying to establish themselves as the new ruling class. But they needed someone to help them do that. The Latin Americans seemed to be the right people. It was the ideal time for the two parties to join forces as it was bound to benefit both sides, a true win-win solution. The new body was called the Southern Syndicate, with mutual support and trade being its main aim. And they could see how barter trade would flourish. It would be controlled by the warlords and their southern masters, but administered by the oligarchs who had experience in the barter trade. In the absence of any trustworthy currency they would trade oil for food, water for weapons, slaves for spare parts.

Elsewhere big power blocs were developing. China, Japan and Korea formed the Asia Bloc. India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Iran joined in the Middle Empire. Russia convinced its reluctant former satellites to team up in the Northern Bloc. Having lost the financial and military support of the US, Israel suddenly found itself on its own, facing the Middle Empire plus the Asia and the Northern blocs. These blocs felt threatened by the uncontrolled Israeli war machine. It took a long series of tense negotiations to eventually “persuade” Israel to reduce its nuclear arsenal and give up its medium and long range missiles – to avoid “preemptive annihilation”. This had become common terminology after the US had waged several preemptive wars and thereby started a trend. Israel survived economically by exporting its surveillance and killer drones, its advanced interrogation techniques, and the know-how of the world’s most effective secret service, the Mossad.

In a cruel twist of history expatriate Cubans from Florida invaded their former homeland and overthrew the communist regime – using considerable fire power borrowed from the US army. They duly returned property and landholdings to their former owners and restored everything to pre-Castro conditions including drug dealing, gambling and prostitution. In addition they kept their foothold in Florida, expanding it into a first-class crime centre, offering blackmail, extortion, hit services and the like in competition to the leftovers of the Mafia and the CIA. Warlords and oligarch were both pleased with these services as they offered an easy and discrete way to get rid of unwelcome rivals. The Cubans were so successful that the Southern Syndicate offered them a prominent place at their table.


The factory where my father worked made food from soybeans, artificial bread for humans and animal feed for chicken and pigs. The workers didn’t get any wages, but they got food and shelter. In return they worked 14-hour shifts, seven days a week. They slept in large bunk rooms, each holding 300 men. Effectively they were slaves. There was a lot of fighting amongst them, mostly about food. When they got their piece of soy bread before and after work, they wolfed it down quickly so it couldn’t be taken from them. Yet often a few would gang up on someone, knock him to the ground and take his food. My father would intervene to stop these attacks and calm down the men. It was bad enough as it was, he would say. And if anyone didn’t like it here, they could go. There were thousands outside the gate who would love to take their place, he said. A supervisor overheard this and told my father he liked it. Because it made his life easier. My father was made assistant supervisor and was quickly promoted through the ranks. He became the General Manager of the factory in 2049. This brought great privileges. He was even allowed to have, and keep, a female partner. I was born a year later.

Throughout the world central government authority and democracy, where it had existed, disappeared. This is the inevitable consequence of any large economic disaster. The more successful the economy had been and the higher its associated living standards, the more spectacular the fall into chaos. Fierce battles between roving gangs, self-appointed rulers and remnants of the old order were raging worldwide and they were increasingly won by the gangs. The same, of course, had been happening in the former USA all along. I call it “former” because by now it was on the verge of disintegrating.

The central military command fought in Texas, in California, in Washington state, against many small armies, guerillas, insurgents, saboteurs. This is the type of warfare the military can’t win. They call it “asymmetric” as if complaining how unfair it all is. The mighty “defense” forces are the ones, after all, that have all the shiny new armour, latest high-tech weaponry, expensive laser-guided mega bombs capable of destroying whole cities and small countries in one hit. They ought to win, not this rag-tag crowd of amateurs using decades old AK47s, home-made bombs, and machetes. You could almost hear the generals whining. What an injustice was being done to them ! However, they still managed to annihilate large numbers of enemies, although one can’t be sure who all those dead bodies really were. Because they were pulverised, burnt to ashes, dismembered beyond recognition and beyond count. It is the old problem: If you detonate large bombs in populated areas, you will kill a few dozen “terrorists”, but also hundreds of thousands of civilians. This is collateral damage. And while they claim to regret it, politicians will always say that “it was worth it.”

In spite of the mega-deaths they caused, the military kept losing. In the end the Chinese overlords lost their patience. And their composure. There were shouting matches in the Pentagon, can you believe it. The Chinese are well known for keeping a straight face in adversity. But they could not take the excuses any more. In the end they stopped talking to the generals and instead made deals with some of the rebellious states and their warlords saying “Get your act together, elect a ruling committee and a leader, then in return we’ll drop our support for the army and look after you instead.”

This created, virtually overnight, a number of self-declared “independent” territories, each headed by a council, consisting of oligarchs and warlords, and a president, called Supremo or Leader or even Great Leader. Eventually it became fashionable to call yourself “King”. So it was that King Zhang-Ho ruled in the Northwest territory, King Fernando II in the South, and King Edward The Younger on the East Coast. There were many more kings, running smaller kingdoms. And they all looked for a sponsor, be it the Asia Bloc (the Chinese), the Southern Syndicate, or the Northerners (the Russians). A few prospered and grew. Most shriveled and died and their little empire with them. Their land and “property” changed hands behind closed doors. King Zhang-Ho became the favourite king of the Asia Bloc. He was a Chinese-American, of course, but more importantly he could deliver aircraft, advanced weapons, and computer technology in return for food and oil. His territory comprised, after all, manufacturers of aircraft, missiles, and drones, and the former Silicon Valley. There were regular food transports from the Chinese owned Midwest plantations and factories to Zhang-Ho-City (the former San Francisco). After some of those transports had been intercepted and looted by insurgents from smaller kingdoms, my father was appointed to head a new transport, this time a convoy reinforced and protected by heavily armed soldiers from the Northwest territory. The convoy arrived unharmed and was officially welcomed by King Zhang-Ho. The king took a liking to my father and offered him the position of Logistics Minister of the Kingdom, reporting directly to the Crown, that is to him. After this was approved by the overlords my father and his female partner (and I) moved to Zhang-Ho-City.

By the end of 2060 the US military had finally collapsed. And with it any trace of central authority. And of the USA as a sovereign country. This was the result of the external power blocs nurturing the emerging kingdoms and withdrawing their support from the generals. Some of the troops, smelling the decay, jumped ship and joined the nearest king who would have them. The military arsenals, laboratories, and warehouses, having been looted many times before, were now being cleaned out for good, with some disastrous consequences in later years.

Thus came to an end the era of the much-decorated generals and their Banana Republic. In its place a new type of regime had emerged: That of the Client Kings. A new type of regime ? Not really. There had been very similar kings, thousands of years ago, who were totally dependent on the umbilical cord of some benevolent empire. History does repeat itself.

---------------------------- continues with Letter 3 of 4   Apocalypse          © Rolf Brandt 2009

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Birth of a Banana Republic

--------- Letters from the Future -------- Letter 1 of 4 ---------

These days it is very rare to get old. Being sixty and still alive when most people die before they turn forty makes you feel like a dinosaur. A fossil. There is only one advantage. I have seen a lot over a long period of time and I can see how we have arrived at what we are today. And I can anticipate, from experience, where this will lead. Therefore I feel I should write down what happened over the last few decades and why it happened. I am writing this in the year 2110 AD.

This letter is for You in case you are still there. I’m writing because You may find it useful for your own future. But I must admit: I have learned from history that nobody ever learns from history.

I hope You can still read. For today very few people can read. You see, there is no school. And most parents can’t read. Therefore nobody teaches the kids.

We settlers are called Barbarians by our enemies. That is because in their eyes we are nothing and we have nothing except a little food. When the Bandits come to raid our settlements, they steal the food, kill the men and rape the women. Then they take away our young and sell them to the Lords.

My great-grandfather Rolf died hundred years ago, in 2010. He told his son Jonathan stories about the world and how things had happened. Jonathan lived through the years of the “Banana Republic” and wrote it all down for my father who was a serf under the “Client Kings”. My father did not survive the terrible “Apocalypse”. He called me Rolf in memory of his ancestor. He should not have produced me. However, you can not undo the past. Here I am on the “Quiet Earth”, one hundred years on from the earlier Rolf.

I’ll be writing those letters to You at night. That is because I am on the lookout all day up on the hill. In the evenings I tend to the plants. It is hard work keeping them alive, because I need to fetch the water from a hidden spring and carry it back over rough terrain. Up here where I live there is no water and almost no soil, just rocks and rubble. The settlers in the valley below rely on me for early warnings. But I’ll tell you more about that later. Bear with me if my letters don’t arrive on time. I am living a precarious life and it could well be that my next letter will never be written. Here is the first one:


     Birth Of A Banana Republic        
The Years from 2010 to 2035 AD

The year when General Motors collapsed and went on life support was a turning point in more ways than one.

General Motors produced cars. Today, you wouldn’t understand why this was such a big deal. But then cars were the most important thing in life. After money, of course. Why was it so important ? Because it got you to places very fast without having to walk there. We measure distances in “x days of walking” which is about ten miles per day. They talked about “miles per hour” meaning they could zip to a place in an hour where we would need six days. Why was it so important to get there quickly ? It wasn’t. But they did it anyway. For a hundred years General Motors was a beacon of the American industry - and of the rest of the world. What was good for the firm was good for America – and for the rest of the world. “Freedom for the individual”, i.e. personal mobility, was the slogan. Public transport would have been miles cheaper. But the car industry promoted cars, not public transport. The whole country and the life of the individual were designed and built around the car. As a consequence, of course, with almost no public transport available, the car became an absolute, essential necessity of life. Hence the importance of General Motors and other car makers. Without a car you were a nobody, probably a criminal. People even got arrested for walking. But back to the year 2010.

Most manufacturing had been shipped overseas years ago. To lower-cost countries. Because “they are more cost-effective and that benefits our consumers” they said. It was called “outsourcing” and “globalisation” and “free trade” in a “free market” economy and after all we were the “land of the free”. And the leader of the “free world”. Well, you better delete “free” from all of this because

- In reality “cost-effective” was a euphemism for a race to the bottom, a reverse auction where those got the deal who paid the lowest wages; slave wages for desperate people who would do anything just to survive. Most jobs went to China and other low-wage countries.

- In reality trade and the markets were anything but free. Both were highly regulated, restricted, barricaded by procedures designed to obstruct free trade and protect local and international cartels. Rigged. In case you didn’t know: Real capitalists hate competition. Countries and people weren’t free either: “Freedom”, the most abused word in the dictionary, justified oppression, war, death and carnage. “Freedom” and “capitalism” were the shackles that kept the world in bondage.

- In reality my great-grandfather died that year. His son had been fired, he had lost his life savings, his home had been forcibly auctioned off from under him. He had been looking after his father but now he could not do so any longer. So, my great-grandfather decided to die. He committed suicide.


This year was a turning point for the whole world. The world would no longer accept America as the “sole superpower”, the “beacon of hope ... the leader of the free world...” and similar endlessly repeated humbug. The world had seen what happened when America invaded countries “to bring them our values, our freedom, the rule of law ...”. Not that other governments were much better. They all lied to their people. But a few people didn’t believe it any more. They saw how very different reality was from the propaganda:

- In reality there were unlawful arrests, torture, incarceration without trial and without end. There were murders via remote controlled robots, kidnappings, deportations. The word “freedom” was used to justify oppression, carnage, war. For it helped us to “remain a free country” and to ”preserve our values”. This was just in the western world.

- In reality there were arbitrary executions, human trafficking, killing of dissidents, caning, cutting off of limbs, stoning to death of women and children, organ harvesting. This was in the name of “fighting the oppressor and regaining our freedom” and “preserving our values”.  That was in the rest of the world.

- In reality all this was done not by criminals, but by the state. By all states. In the name of law and order, security, protection of citizens against enemies that didn’t exist. When it got too dirty or some local laws were in the way, victims were deported to countries without laws. Those client countries were only too happy to oblige. They got “development loans” and big bribes for the local tyrant. The famous battle between Capitalism and Communism never happened. They both did the same. Killing opponents, dissidents, revolutionaries, insurgents, terrorists, in short: killing the bastards.

Did the people rise to protest, to object, to demand change ? Very few. They were ignored or wiped out. The rest didn’t. They couldn’t see the reality because they were glued to their TV which flooded them with fake reality shows, beauty contests, gratuitous violence. Don’t ask me why they didn’t see beyond the smoke screen. I don’t know. It was like they didn’t want to see the reality. Like sleep walking towards the cliff, blind and deaf.

You would have thought TV would be a powerful medium to enlighten people, to voice disagreement, to rally support for the good cause. This and much more had been promised when TV was first introduced. Old Rolf remembered how the inventors back in the late 1950s enthused about “the new age were there is free education for all through this wonderful medium which is available everywhere, instantly, at no cost. No one will be missing out. We’ll all be equals.” Well, look at it now. Later on people were equally ecstatic about the potential of computers and the internet. What became of it ? Shoot’em-up games and pornography. They called this progress. Fantastic technologies opening up truly fantastic opportunities only to degenerate into fantastic drivel, uninterrupted entertainment and mental masturbation.

The year 2010 was a turning point for the economy and for democracy. In America and the rest of the world. The experts claimed that the current depression would soon be over, that economic recovery was just around the corner. Share prices, profits, sales and consumption would rebound. The good old days would return they said. “Our Way of Life” will prevail.

- In reality there was rising unemployment, soaring credit defaults, repossessions, home foreclosures, destitution, tent cities. Bankruptcies mushroomed producing yet more redundancies, more foreclosures, more misery. Yet economists boasted that “ we have now become more effective, more productive, more profitable” quoting as example big-box hyper markets growing from four acres to twenty acres. They didn’t mention that all the smaller ones died and that distances to get to the new ones had quadrupled. They didn’t mention that to take advantage of the “cheaper” prices people had to spend more on petrol (gasoline in US speak). They didn’t mention that those new hyper markets employed fewer people working longer hours for less money. Which is why they were more profitable.

- In reality the super-rich 0.03 percent of the population made heaps of additional money at the expense of taxpayers. Taxes are always paid by the lower classes. The rich don’t pay taxes. They get “incentives”. Trillions of dollars were spent to bail out moribund industries (banks, insurance companies, car manufacturers) at taxpayers’ expense. Good money thrown after bad. Why ? Because the speculators wanted some reward for the terrible risks they had taken. Because industry tycoons and their friends in government said so. Because the rich demanded to get richer.

- In reality bankruptcy specialists were burying dead or dying firms. Understandably, they were not popular. Understandably, they didn’t like being called “vultures”. But somebody had to do it. It is “an essential part of capitalism. The weak die. The strong feast on their carcasses. Little is wasted.” This is what a leading economist said at the time. My great-grandfather wasn’t weak. He died rather than being plowed under. And my grandfather was doomed to live in squalor.

- In reality trillions of dollars, not available for health or education, were spent on the armed forces and their various invasions and wars of aggression. Funny isn’t it that they call themselves Department of “Defense”, while attacking other countries. This is because they are actually defending us there, so we don’t have to do it here. Geez, all this money being spent on our protection ! Don’t we feel a lot safer when so many others are being killed on our behalf ? The money spent on “protection” fed our only remaining industry, the weapons manufacturers. If they weren’t too hot to outsource we would have done it. Which leads us to the last of the “realities”.


The American Empire was in terminal decline. Printing money to pay for all above is a surefire recipe for undermining your own currency. And boy, did they print. Their biggest creditor, the Chinese, got very worried about the value of the US Treasury bonds they held. After all the Chinese had bought these bonds with the money America paid them for their cheap products. It was their reward for years of relentless exploitation of their own people. They couldn’t dump those bonds on the world market, because that would have crashed the US dollar straight away. So instead they sold them little by little and they refused to buy more at auction. The dollar value sank. Slowly at first, but when some of the creditors started talking about a new world currency to replace the Dollar, the speed of the sinking increased. The creditors got together in Russia, in a place called Yekaterinburg. It was the same place where some hundred years earlier the last rulers of Imperial Russia had been killed. This time it was about breaking the dollar, but implicitly of course about breaking America’s military world domination. What the world saw, and Americans didn’t, was that their military spending could not be sustained without endless heavy borrowing. Finally, the speculators caught on. They did what all speculators do when they smell a dying corpse. They sold the Dollar short. This is a piece of financial trickery which boils down to a bet. Those bets, when placed in large numbers and with big sums, become a self-fulfilling prophecy. It was the last nail in the coffin of the US dollar and the whole financial industry. It was the end of the age of paper money which had allegedly been the “basis of all economic activity”.

The US dollar went into free fall. Imports became dearer. Exports got cheaper but there wasn’t much to export (apart from weapons). So, prices increased. As did interest rates. Because the creditworthiness of government debt was downgraded, Treasury found it almost impossible to sell US bonds on the world market. People preferred to buy other countries’ bonds, in more trustworthy currencies. Ordinary Americans carried plastic bags full of dollars just to pay for their groceries. To cut a long story short:

The US of A became insolvent in 2013. Couldn’t pay the interest on bonds to overseas holders, couldn’t repay debts falling due, couldn’t pay for imports. Couldn’t pay teachers, prison wardens, nurses, security staff, congressmen, doctors, CIA agents, pensioners, judges, senators, secretaries, policemen. In 2014 some still got paid a little. But over the next couple of years fewer and fewer saw any money. Staff at the more than 600 overseas bases - the military cornerstones of the Empire - were left high and dry. Didn’t get any money from home. Couldn’t pay the bills of their host countries. Had plenty of firepower to destroy the world hundred times over, but had no money to buy a hamburger. Some were flown home. Others had to trade in their rockets, guns and ammunition to pay for a ticket home. A few got jobs as security contractors with the host country to help protect the citizens of those countries. Against unspecified “terrorists”.

Throughout the following years there were riots almost everywhere in the world. People were going hungry and demanded help. They looted warehouses and stores. Anarchy broke out. Governments went into hiding. The army declared a state of emergency and martial law. California, Texas, and a few other American states used the National Guard to control the riots and to put the protesters, now called terrorists, into detention camps. They defied the Federal Government and the army saying they would not tolerate interference in their internal affairs. This was to become the root cause of some massive problems later on, leading to the “Client Kings” and the “Apocalypse”.

People couldn’t get to the supermarket because they had no petrol and there was no public transport. Which didn’t matter in the end because the supermarket shelves were empty anyway. The fast-food outlets were all closed. Initially the churches provided some food but the soup kitchens soon ran out of supplies. People died from hunger. Others died from not getting medical care or the medication they depended on. Pills were still available, but people didn’t have the money to buy them. So they died.

Armed gangs roamed the inner cities robbing, looting, killing. There was no police to confront them. The army didn’t interfere hoping the gangsters would exterminate each other. The gangs fought for control of streets, then suburbs, then whole cities. An inexhaustible supply of weapons made them almost unbeatable. Where did all the guns come from ? Arms manufacturers had for decades lobbied government to dismantle all controls on arms sales, in the name of – you guessed it - freedom. The result was an enormous glut of weapons. Many gang members were massacred and many gangs disappeared. However, the remaining ones became bigger and more powerful. In all of this innocent citizens were the main victims, being killed by the hundreds of thousands. There was no law, no justice system, no prisons. The military, being judge, jury and executioner, put to death “offenders” or, if they were young, put them in labour camps to be worked to death. The death penalty became known as the “soft option”.

Winters became harder to survive. There was little shelter and no energy for heating. Firewood, furniture, fence posts, anything that would give warmth, had been burnt long ago. The winter of 2033 was particularly harsh. People had been without heating for years and had toughened up. But now many froze to death, first the old and sick, then the very young. Nobody counted the dead. My grandfather survived and he thought that around a third of all people had died by 2034. Not just in the US but everywhere.


Meantime the creditors had moved in. The Chinese were first. They came to meet their debtors in Washington and on Wall Street. This turned out to be fruitless. With no hope of getting their money back, they looked at the leftovers and pondered how to get redress. Remember “the weak die, the strong feast on their carcasses“ ? Nobody dared to call the Chinese “vultures”. They were in fact quite reasonable. As there was nothing of any value to take away, they decided to empower some US generals to “govern” the population in order to make Americans work and pay off their debt over time. They left a few advisors behind to assist the generals. And to oversee the weapons manufacturers.

Those generals were highly decorated of course, having fought America’s wars against many foreign countries for decades. Evidence of their past successes was the battery of medals on their chests. However, this was the first time the enemy was within. It appears my grandfather Jonathan was one of them - that is, an enemy. By 2035 he found himself in an internment camp, sentenced to lifelong hard labour. He was not alone. There were tens of thousands of “undesirables” in the camp, half of which died every year. They were quickly replaced in order to fill the work quota imposed by the Chinese advisors.

Before he died my grandfather told his son the story of how America, the Land of the Free, the shining City on the Hill, became a slave to her creditors. How America, the Exceptional, the world’s number one arms dealer, once the most dangerous rogue state ever, became the world’s biggest debtor.

How it was. Why it happened. When America became a Banana Republic.


----------------------------------------------  continues with Letter 2 of 4 : Client Kings
© Rolf Brandt 2009