By Alan Caruba
If there is one thing pundits like to
do it is to make predictions. If they turn out to be right you can always look
back and quote them as proof of your prescience and if they are not, you can
always ignore them.
The best ones, of course, are those
filled with doom and I suspect they are the most prevalent. We all live to some
degree in fear of the future. It is, after all, unpredictable and we are
conditioned to believe something awful will happen. That’s what keeps insurance
companies in business. Governments continue to create problems and then promise
to solve them.
For example, at some point there will
be a huge earthquake in California thanks to the San Andreas Fault and in a
comparable fashion the Yellowstone National Park will have an even bigger event
due to a huge volcano that lies beneath it. The loss of life and economic impact
will be historic no matter when they occur.
What is predictable will be natural
events such as hurricanes and tornadoes, but what is largely unreported is that
both have been occurring less in recent years. As Weather.com noted this
year, “the Atlantic
basin, which includes the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean, produced the fewest
tropical cyclones and fewest named storms since 1997.” Worldwide, there are some 40,000 tornadoes
and the U.S. averages some 1,200 a year. So the weather guarantees some unhappy
news for some of us some of the time.
Blaming natural phenomenon on
“global warming” which is not happening or on “climate change” which has been
happening for 4.5 billion years is the way the merchants of fear keep everyone
scared of real and imaginary weather events. The planet has been in a natural
cooling cycle for the past nineteen years because the Sun is in one as
well, producing less radiation.
As for climate, it is
measured in units as small as thirty years and as big as centuries and
millenniums. Nothing mankind does has any impact. The Pope is wrong. The
President is wrong. And lots of others who claim that climate change is an
immediate threat.
What interests most people is
the state of the economy and the good news is that it appears to be improving
although relying on government issued statistics is problematic because they are
often mathematically skewed to show a favorable trend. There is a natural
dynamism to the U.S. economy which would be even greater if the government would
eliminate the hundreds of thousands of regulations that interfere with the
conduct of business and stop issuing more. Less taxation would boost the economy
as well.
I am hopeful people will stop
being taken in by the talk about “income inequality.” If the economy improves
there will be jobs and the marketplace will determine the salaries they will
pay. By contrast, legislating minimum wage increases reduces jobs. We’ve been
watching machines replace humans for a long time
now.
Elsewhere in the world, the
economy is very iffy. The drop in the price of oil will have a dramatic impact
on nations whose economies are dependent on it. The Russian Federation will
likely be less aggressive with neighboring nations. Venezuela is already in a
world of trouble. The Middle East will feel its impact as well. The reason
traces back to the increase in the technology of hydraulic fracturing, otherwise
known as fracking. It had its beginnings in 1947 and today it is unlocking huge
amounts of oil and natural gas. It will make the U.S. energy independent and
that’s a very good thing. It will also continue to generate jobs and revenue.
Will there be wars in the
world? The short answer is that there will always be conflicts because that is
the nature of the world. Wars are very expensive and most nations want to avoid
them. The big problem in 2015 will focus on two nations. North Korea is led by a
mentally unstable dictator, a threat to others in its region thanks to its
nuclear weapons, missiles, and huge army. Iran will be a threat if it is allowed
to acquire the ability to make its own nuclear weapons. When that happens the
threat level to Israel and the U.S. increases, along with every other nation its
missiles can destroy.
What is entirely predictable
will be the horrific attacks of Islam’s “holy war” on all other religions and,
testimony to its lack of internal cohesion, its attacks based on whether Muslims
are Sunni or Shiite.
It would be nice to predict
that science will find cures to many of the ills of mankind and the fact is that
it has been doing that for much of the last century and will continue to do so
in this one. In 1973, life expectancy in the U.S. was 71 years of age and it is
now up to 78. In much of the world people are living longer and that is having
some interesting demographic impacts in nations that are trying to cope with
providing care for a growing older generation.
In the sphere of U.S. politics
the most encouraging trend as seen in the last two midterm elections has been
voters—those who actually show up and vote—toward conservatism. The Republican
Party has regained control of the Senate and expanded its control of the House.
The majority of U.S. states have Republican governors. The Tea Party has played
a significant role in this, but it is a
movement and will continue to take the lead in seeking to reduce the size of
the federal government that is far too large for a society based on the idea of
freedom and liberty. In what is likely to be an increasing bipartisan effort,
the new Congress will work to control as much as possible the damage Obama seeks
to inflict.
It takes no great prescience
to predict that Barack Hussein Obama will spend his remaining two years in
office doing what his Communist roots and ideology has trained him to do; stir
as much racial divisiveness as possible, encourage more illegal immigration,
keep the increasingly unpopular ObamaCare alive, undermine our moral structure,
degrade our military strength, and other such mischief.
Two years sounds like a long
time, but he will be gone by January 20, 2017 when a new President takes the
oath of office that he has ignored. One prediction about him is easy. He will be
judged the worst
President the
nation has had and, in fact, that judgment has already been
rendered.
What is not predictable are
the directions the U.S. Supreme Court will take the nation in 2015. Despite its
august name, it has made some supremely bad decisions in the past. Wouldn’t it
be nice if it undermined ObamaCare after having helped inflict it on a health
system that was the best in the world and is now suffering greatly from it?
If any of my predictions turn
out to be true, I will claim bragging rights, but mostly what I intend to do is
maintain my personal sense of hope, sensing that more people worldwide are
discovering that others share their desire for less corruption and more freedom.
©
Alan Caruba, 2014
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