The World Falls Apart, and Virginia Gets More Business As Usual

I managed to keep my mouth shut for a year or so, but I can no longer. I now feel compelled to return to blogging, at least for a while. Many thanks to Ed Risse and Peter Galuszka for keeping this forum open during my long absence.

This fall, Virginia will elect one of two men for governor — Bob McDonnell or Creigh Deeds — at a historic inflection point in the U.S. economy and political system. The federal government is careening towards fiscal armageddon, with incalculable consequences for the nation and, of course, the 50 states that will be left to pick up the pieces. Simultaneously, in a trend only temporarily masked by a worldwide recession, global energy supplies grow tighter, threatening to render Virginia’s dysfunctional human settlement patterns even more dysfunctional. Meanwhile, Virginia’s population inexorably grows older, putting pressure on state Medicaid/social service expenditures and tax revenues, straining our health care system, and creating an urgent need to build more senior-friendly communities.

These three inter-related crises will define the politics and economy of Virginia and America for the next generation. Yet both candidates have framed their campaign issues in utterly conventional terms, as if there were nothing at all urgent about the times in which we find ourselves.

True, both men offer “energy” plans but both plans fall far short of the deep structural transformation that is needed to preserve Virginia’s living standards and economic competitiveness. True, both candidates talk about improving “government efficiency,” but their ideas, even if enacted in total, would only tinker on the margins of the restructuring that is needed. Neither candidate touches upon the Age Wave in a meaningful way.

People of Virginia! Our nation, and by extension our state, is in a long-term, multiform crisis, the nature of which most people are only dimly aware. Neither Deeds nor McDonnell show any evidence through their public pronouncements that they comprehend the nature of the challenge facing us.

As I have time, I hope to address these themes — an energy crisis only temporarily in abeyance, the rapid aging of the population, and the foreseeable fiscal insolvency of the federal government — with the goal of holding both gubernatorial candidates to account. It is time get serious, folks. We are running out of time.


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Comments

12 responses to “The World Falls Apart, and Virginia Gets More Business As Usual”

  1. Larry G Avatar

    Welcome Back.. I was starting to get tired of Ed and Peter anyhow.

    ๐Ÿ˜‰

  2. Yes, welcome back.

    Given the current state of the MSM, places like Bacon's Rebellion become more valuable everyday.

    Keep up the good work.

  3. Shaun Kenney Avatar
    Shaun Kenney

    JIM BACON IS BACK!!!

    Outstanding! Boy was the Virginia blogosphere missing a cog when you left — and great post too! It's not safe for either of them to comment on such things, but the question rightly should be raised…

    Welcome back!!!

  4. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Rapid aging?

    Is that like the large quart size?

    RH ๐Ÿ˜‰

  5. J.R.Hoeft Avatar
    J.R.Hoeft

    Fantastic to see you back, Jim! I'm very much looking forward to your ideas on energy.

    I agree that major "transformational" changes need to be made in the energy sector…I also believe Virginia can be a leader throughout the globe in developing energy.

    No need for us to be a net importer when we are blessed with so much.

    Again…welcome back!

  6. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Some of us were getting tired of you too Larry G.

    Welcome back Jim!!

  7. Groveton Avatar

    This is like the day when Michael Jordan decided to re-join the NBA. There were certainly plenty of very talented basketball players who continued to play in Jordan's absence. But Jordan was unique. He obviously raised the play of his own play when he returned. He obviously raised the play of the Bulls when he returned. He raised the play of the Bulls' opponents. But, unlike almost anyone else, he raised the play of the whole league. When the Nets played the Pistons both teams played better after Jordan returned.

    It's the same way with Bacon. Not only are his posts great, not only does BaconsRebellion improve with his return but the whole Virginia blogosphere improves. Not Larry Sabato has to raise his game, Black Velvet Bruce Li has to be sharper. Even blogosphere second stringers like Ole Groveton have to pick up the pace now that JB is back in town. I'll resist the temptation to restart my running feud with Jim Bacon in this comment. However, the smoke from my peace pipe will quickly waft away on the winds of electronic debate.

    Welcome back Jim!

  8. Larry G Avatar

    " Some of us were getting tired of you too Larry G."

    alright …who said that?

    if that came from one of those EMR-lovers I have two words for you – go fish.

  9. Anonymous Avatar

    Fishing beats blogging any day.

    RH

  10. Darrell -- Chesapeake Avatar
    Darrell — Chesapeake

    Next on the hit list. Flyover country catches up with the coasts, as farms sink into the sea of red ink.

  11. James A. Bacon Avatar
    James A. Bacon

    Thank you, gentlemen, it's good to be back. Let me just say that part of the incentive for returning to the B.R. blog is the opportunity to interact with all of you. When I thanked Ed and Peter (in the original post) for keeping the blog alive in my absence, I should have credited you all as well. From what I could tell while lurking in the background, the liveliness of the discussions never diminished.

    Coming up soon: Some red meat for you to tear into.

  12. Gooze Views Avatar
    Gooze Views

    Alleluia!

    Gulliver has returned to us intellectual Lilliputians!

    As for Larry G, I thought we were friends. I am deeply hurt.

    Peter Galuszka

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