Top Economist: What Trump Doesn’t Want You to Know About the U.S-Iran War
ProfSteveKeen
0:00 Donald Trump's campaign against Iran is the biggest gamble of his presidency.
0:04 I'm not going to start a war.
0:04 I'm going to stop wars.
0:05 We're not going to let them have nuclear weapons because if they had them,
0:08 they'd use them and we're not going to let that happen.
0:10 Many people were fooled by the confidence
0:12 that Trump appeared to have and now you're
0:14 paying for the price to realize he didn't know what the hell he was doing.
0:17 And you really have to get yourself out of that situation.
0:19 What if the system is already breaking and we just don't see it yet?
0:22 Steve Keane says the combination of war, debt,
0:26 and power could change the global economy forever.
0:29 And given the chaos that Trump is creating on a daily basis,
0:33 I'm not going to gamble that you actually
0:34 make it to November and actually have the midterms.
0:37 So the days of the dominance of the American dollar are over.
0:40 But the damage that's been done over
0:41 the last 40 years can't be reversed overnight.
0:44 A lot of people voted for Trump in America in the belief that Trump would
0:47 be the peace president and he'd be
0:49 somebody who stopped wars rather than creating them.
0:51 He'd be somebody who got away from the incessant
0:54 habit that America has had ever since the end
0:56 of World War II of invading other countries and trying
0:59 to impose its approach to politics on those countries.
1:03 And people thought, I'll vote for Trump.
1:04 He says he's a peace president.
1:06 He's not going to start wars.
1:07 He's going to end them.
1:08 And then literally within 3 days of the start of this year,
1:11 he invades Venezuela and kidnaps the president.
1:13 And then less than 3 months after the beginning of this year,
1:17 he starts a war on Iran.
1:19 The best argument that any of Trump's team have come up with is to say,
1:23 well, we thought Iran was going to attack us.
1:25 Israel thought it was going to attack them, so we attacked them first.
1:28 So, we had a preemptive strike before they attacked us when there
1:32 was absolutely no justification in terms of any imminent threat to America.
1:36 There was nothing imminent.
1:37 November last year, they allegedly knocked out the nuclear facilities
1:40 that they argued Iran was using to create a nuclear weapon.
1:43 They've already got rid of that threat.
1:45 So, what on earth is the threat?
1:46 This is something which people who were accused of suffering
1:49 from Trump derangement syndrome by saying he's a madman.
1:52 He's going to do crazy stuff like this.
1:54 So the people who are suffering from Trump
1:55 derangement syndrome now are people who are Trump supporters.
1:58 Leave the realm of economics and talk about psychology.
2:01 Now obviously I'm not an expert on psychology.
2:03 Psychologists would tell you all the time you shouldn't try
2:05 to diagnose somebody's behavior by observing them just on television or YouTube.
2:10 You have to sit down and do detailed psychiatric tests and so on.
2:14 Somebody who has narcissistic personality disorder almost completely lacks
2:19 empathy and always wants to be the center of attention.
2:22 And it doesn't really matter how they get to be the center of attention.
2:25 They just want people to be talking about them.
2:27 Now, it might seem crazy to think
2:28 that Donald Trump thinks people aren't speaking sufficiently
2:31 about it that virtually every other human being
2:33 on the planet has discussed at some point.
2:35 It's Donald Trump.
2:36 The thing about a narcissist,
2:38 somebody who has narcissistic personality disorder,
2:41 is that externally they're incredibly confident.
2:43 And that's partly what is the appeal they have.
2:46 They seem so confident, so self- assured.
2:49 There's something seductive about that level of self-confidence.
2:52 And that's what gets you sucked in initially to accepting somebody like that.
2:56 The surface confidence they have is absolutely just on the surface.
3:01 There is inside them there's this enormous
3:03 desire to be seen as correct, being right.
3:07 But at the same time,
3:08 they lack the knowledge to be as correct as they pretend to be.
3:11 So there's an incredible fragility inside them
3:14 and if anything comes up to challenge them,
3:16 they fight in a very hostile fashion and they attack the people closest to them.
3:20 The rage with which Trump was talking to Hezg
3:24 and how intimidated he was in this diet tribe, he was coping for Trump,
3:30 that's typical of dealing with somebody with narcissistic personality disorder.
3:35 They they want attention.
3:36 And if you try to make sense of this in any rational way, you're going to fail.
3:39 Uh because you're dealing with somebody whose behavior is not rational.
3:43 And they're not trying to actually tell you what they think is happening.
3:46 They're trying to tell themselves a story
3:48 that makes themselves correct all the way through.
3:51 So Trump comes in and says he's the peace president.
3:54 Then he tries to justify why he's starting wars.
3:56 I'm starting wars so I can bring about peace.
3:58 And you that doesn't make sense.
4:00 But nothing that a person who has this disorder makes sense at all.
4:05 They're not trying to give an explanation that is realistic.
4:08 They're trying to give an explanation of a mistake
4:10 they've made to show that they haven't made a mistake.
4:13 And this is what Trump is doing now.
4:15 So he went into Iran on the under the claim initially that he
4:19 was trying to stop a war by invading another country when they
4:23 killed the leader of the country and his much of his family
4:27 and huge number of his advisers with a attack on the the leader compound.
4:31 They thought the war would finish.
4:32 Well, it hasn't.
4:33 reality is different to what Trump thinks reality is.
4:36 And now he's coming up with excuse after excuse, alternative reasons,
4:40 which anybody who's been following the history
4:42 of the conflict knows is just completely crazy.
4:45 And say, why is Trump saying that?
4:46 He's not because he's trying to convince you.
4:48 He's trying to convince himself.
4:50 And once he's got an explanation that makes his behavior appear sensible,
4:54 that's the explanation he's going to use.
4:56 And when that falls over, he'll find another explanation.
4:58 He doesn't know what he's doing,
5:00 but every time he comes up with some explanation for what's happened,
5:03 it always has to be to make that he's never made a mistake.
5:06 And that's what we're going through right now.
5:08 Many people were fooled by the confidence that Trump appeared to have.
5:12 And now you're paying for the price to realize
5:13 he didn't know what the hell he was doing.
5:15 And you really have to get yourself out of that situation because
5:18 that type of personality leads to social breakdown for the entire country.
5:22 When you give a a person that amount of power,
5:25 when they have that syndrome, they're going to end up destroying your culture.
5:28 Over the last 15 or 20 years,
5:30 America has developed fracking as an alternative way to getting oil.
5:34 So, they are now an oil exporter,
5:36 whereas in the past, they were a net oil importer.
5:39 And Trump actually said himself recently that whenever the oil price goes up,
5:43 we make a lot of money.
5:44 So, America might well get uh some increase
5:48 in the revenue for its oil companies out of this.
5:50 But of course that revenue is going to come from the pockets of the working
5:53 class and the middle class who have to drive to their jobs everywhere.
5:57 They're going to be paying more.
5:58 So the income for the middle class and the poor is going
6:01 to fall courtesy of the impact of the closure of the Straits of Hormos.
6:06 But the oil companies are going to get an increase in profit.
6:08 And this again comes back to the extent to which
6:11 American democracy is controlled by the financially powerful in that society.
6:17 The financial sector itself, the military, and now the fossil fuel companies.
6:22 They're the ones who are driving the agenda.
6:23 Virtually everything else that has happened in America in the last 50
6:27 years is going to make the wealthy wealthier and the poor poorer.
6:30 American society, I think, is fragmenting on that basis.
6:33 He does have a good gut feeling for what is motivating other people's behavior.
6:37 So many many people who voted for Trump used to vote for the Democrats.
6:40 The reason they don't vote for the Democrats is the Democrats made the decision
6:44 30 or 40 years ago when they adopted neoliberal economic policies that they were
6:48 going to side with the financial sector
6:50 because a the financial sector was funding
6:52 their electoral campaigns and b they believed
6:55 the argument that manufacturing was going to decline,
6:58 the rising system would be services.
7:00 If the Democrats align themselves with the financial sector,
7:03 then they ride that rising tide of the importance of the services sector
7:08 over manufacturing and that will be able to uh develop America in the future.
7:12 In fact, this is a conj job.
7:14 That growth in the services sector which was caused by a growth
7:17 in the level of private debt actually led to the hollowing
7:20 out of America's manufacturing sector and that's what created unemployed people
7:24 or people working in gig economy jobs or lowgrade lowskilled jobs when they
7:29 used their parents had jobs as as skilled workers and all
7:32 this stuff is is the sthing resentment that the working class
7:36 and the lower middle class in America feel towards Washington and that's
7:40 why they fell for Trump saying he's going to clean out the swamp.
7:44 etc., etc.
7:44 So, he picked up on that sentiment
7:46 that the Democrats had to ignore because they actually
7:49 rode the wave of the increasing level
7:51 of private debt by siding with the financial sector.
7:54 So, Trump picked up on that discontent
7:57 and that's where he got his electoral success.
7:59 There is no way out of this for America easily because the only way you have
8:03 of of getting rid of a president is by invoking
8:06 section 25 of the constitution and having him removed.
8:10 that itself involves decisions by people that Trump himself has appointed.
8:14 It it is incredibly hard to see how
8:16 America gets out of this unless Congress turns
8:19 against Trump and that is relying upon what's
8:22 going to happen in November with the midterms.
8:25 But that is all of 8 months away and given
8:27 the chaos that Trump is creating on a daily basis.
8:30 I'm not going to gamble that you actually
8:32 make it to November and actually have the midterms.
8:35 One of the issues for electorates all around the world is that whichever
8:39 party you vote for, you get one in charge that believes in neoliberal economics.
8:42 So both the Democrats and the Republicans in America end
8:45 up supporting neocclassical ideas of how the economy should be run,
8:49 which is what we call neoliberalism.
8:51 The same thing applies in England.
8:53 There's really no choice for most people.
8:56 It comes down to the electoral systems themselves.
8:58 Will they make it possible for political parties
9:01 that completely break with neoliberalism to become dominant?
9:04 England looks like it's done that because
9:05 England's first passed the post voting system
9:08 and the fact that anybody can stand as a candidate in the UK system.
9:13 The major political parties in the UK,
9:15 the Tories and Labor are both going to lose dramatically at the next election.
9:20 And given the first pass the post system they've got,
9:23 I've seen estimates that say that the Labour Party is going to hold
9:26 to three seats and the Conservatives virtually none and you're going to have
9:30 the whole 600 roughly seats in the UK economy flip to alternative parties
9:35 whether that's reform on the right wing or Greens on the left wing.
9:39 So that's an incredible political inversion.
9:41 It will happen almost without doubt in the UK.
9:45 But in the American system, again,
9:46 you only have two parties can get registered in most electorates,
9:50 Republicans or Democrats.
9:52 It's incredibly hard to get onto the ballot if you're not one of those parties.
9:55 And if you do vote for them,
9:57 then you take away votes that would otherwise go to the Democrats.
10:00 You take them out, the Republicans are more likely to win.
10:03 America, I think, is stuck in a political quagmire of its own making.
10:06 And the irony is that America's
10:07 talked about promoting democracy around the world.
10:10 Believe they're defending democracies when they invade other countries.
10:13 That's the argument they even use for Iran.
10:15 You've got the craziest political system on the planet.
10:17 No other country has this idea of primaries.
10:20 When you vote for a candidate, you don't actually vote for that candidate.
10:23 You vote for somebody else who will go to an assembly
10:26 where they may or may not vote for that candidate.
10:28 And this was all set up in back in the original formation of the American
10:32 Constitution because there was a skepticism about
10:36 the popular vote at the time it was built.
10:38 So you have a system which prevents
10:40 that popular vote coming through and in that sense
10:43 it's anti-democratic and it this is something
10:45 which applies to to many many countries.
10:48 The voting system makes it extremely hard
10:51 for the demos the people to actually have a role
10:54 in how democracy functions and this shows us
10:57 that there's something wrong in how we've defined democracy.
11:00 Now what we've done really is take the mo the post French revolution when you
11:05 had the left and the right sides of the French assembly that's where we get
11:09 the terms left and right from the rear for the right the go for the left
11:13 in France and we've replicated a personal
11:16 popularity contest elections all around the world.
11:19 So you vote for an individual and they try
11:21 to say I'm going to solve all your problems for you.
11:24 Now this almost is like a it's
11:26 a clarion called to narcissists in the first place.
11:29 So people who are going to respond to that are
11:31 people who believe they are the chosen person.
11:33 So you get the wrong type of person being selected for this in the first
11:37 case and you've got the wrongest of the wrong
11:39 people right now with Trump being president.
11:42 So is there an alternative way to select people
11:45 from the demos to give you actual democracy and if
11:49 you take a look at what the Athenians actually had
11:51 that's where the idea of deemos and democracy came from.
11:54 Of course, democracy in Athens didn't apply
11:56 to the slaves and it didn't apply to the women.
11:58 Anybody who was a freeman in Athens could
12:00 take part in the assemblies that they ran.
12:03 But the interesting thing is how they selected the officials
12:06 to carry out functions inside the Athenian political system.
12:10 And they did not have votes.
12:12 They had a system was called sort.
12:14 And the idea of sort was you would ask
12:17 the leading families in Athens who would you nominate?
12:20 Now, rather than getting those people, if if you actually had the leading
12:23 families nominating who they wanted in major positions,
12:26 then of course they'd nominate somebody that benefits them.
12:29 But the Athenian system said,
12:30 "You nominate who you want." So that's the first round.
12:33 And then the second round, the people you've nominated,
12:36 we ask them to nominate somebody.
12:38 And then a fourth round, then a fifth round.
12:40 If the person they selected was not going
12:42 to be the person who had that position, then it biased them in favor of saying,
12:46 who do I think would be a good person to fall for this role?
12:50 Who is likely to make a good decision to choose the next person?
12:53 And that worked all the way through.
12:55 So you ultimately had in effect it was a a random number system in many
12:59 ways a bit like the jury system is now that its result was to choose
13:03 somebody that everybody on this whole chain
13:06 of selection thought would be a good person
13:09 to be making these decisions rather than
13:11 getting people who were in it for themselves.
13:13 They had a sense of empathy.
13:14 So the decisions are made in the Athenian system were
13:17 for the interest of the the freemen of of Athens.
13:21 It was in their interests overall.
13:23 they did have a way that their demos ran the society.
13:27 So that's the sort of system we should have.
13:29 We should never have gone into elections and votes
13:32 and all the the narcissistic type of personality that that attracts.
13:37 We should have developed something which is a bit like what the jury
13:39 system is a random choice of people who then get to make the decisions.
13:44 But you do it in such a way that you get people who
13:46 are not just randomly selected intelligent empathic
13:49 people to make the decisions for you.
13:52 We have to get some sort of system like the Athenians
13:54 used to have to choose people who do not make irresponsible decisions.
13:58 There's a wonderful expression from the English politician George Galloway.
14:02 Whatever you might think about George Galloway,
14:04 you can't deny he's got a wonderful gift of the gab.
14:06 And in describing the Tories versus Labor in the UK,
14:10 he said they are two cheeks with the same boom.
14:14 You get one ass or another ass, you get an ass.
14:16 You don't get somebody you actually want to make those decisions for you.
14:20 So we need a system.
14:21 It means you don't end up with the ass of the system.
14:24 You want people with brains and heart.
14:26 And at the moment we don't have a political system
14:28 anywhere in the world that selects our leaders that way.
14:31 It doesn't help to get the economics right.
14:33 If you give advice to politicians who will
14:36 use that for their own advantage or what they
14:38 think is their own advantage rather than doing
14:40 what the sensible economics would tell them to do.
14:42 I uh was warning of the financial crisis before it happened.
14:46 I became quite prominent in Australian media
14:49 because of that and I was interviewed
14:51 on the leading current affairs program for Australia
14:54 about the consequences of the global financial crisis.
14:58 The prime minister was interviewed on the same show
15:00 and the host I called Kerry O'Brien savaged the prime minister
15:04 Kevin Rudd over my views and saying what the crisis
15:08 could mean 7 days after I was interviewed on the show.
15:10 Kevin Rudd made a set of policy decisions to try
15:13 to avoid the crisis that I was talking about,
15:16 but his policies were to restart the housing bubble.
15:19 So, as just as much as America had a housing bubble in the subprimes,
15:23 Australia had one as well at the same time.
15:25 Rather than seeing that's that is the problem, Rod thought that's the solution.
15:30 So, he doubled the amount of money they gave
15:32 to first home buyers to buy an existing home.
15:34 It went from $7,000 Australian dollars to 14,000.
15:38 They trebled it for buying a new home, $21,000,
15:41 and one of the state governments added another $14,000 to that purchase price.
15:47 So the government gave you $35,000, which was well far more than 10%
15:51 of the purchase price of a house and basically said,
15:54 "Here's the money to take it to a bank as a deposit, get a loan from the bank,
15:58 and buy a house." And that meant the demand from housing stimulated the economy.
16:02 So Australia did not experience the negative credit experience.
16:06 And I then got attacked for saying I got it wrong about the housing bubble.
16:10 I said the house prices are going to fall.
16:12 What happens?
16:12 The politician hears my advice and six days later restarts the housing bubble.
16:17 So you give good advice to a politician
16:19 who's venal and you end up with bad policy.
16:22 So it isn't we can't just make the economy
16:24 work better by understanding how the economy operates.
16:27 The the dollar has been the international currency ever
16:30 since the end end of World War II because
16:32 of the conference called Breton Woods at which the allied
16:36 powers got together to talk about the postw war financial situation.
16:40 Canes put forward a proposal at that conference to use
16:43 a newly created unit of account for for international trade rather than
16:48 using a national currency as was the case before World War
16:51 II when the pound was the dominant currency for international trade.
16:55 That got overruled by the Americans.
16:57 They put the American dollar in place instead and that set up a process which
17:02 I think inevitably led to the decline
17:04 of American manufacturing because the American dollar was overvalued.
17:08 It also massively empowered the financial sector because financial
17:12 transactions all around the world now needed the American dollar.
17:15 So that system biased the American economy and society
17:19 in favor of the financial sector and undermined the manufacturing sector.
17:24 And now this was inevitably going to break down because you can't be
17:28 a major power on the planet unless you're also a major manufacturing power.
17:32 Now America is finding that it can't continue to fight these wars components
17:36 that are necessary to make the weapons
17:38 they need to enforce their their power globally.
17:41 The fact that America has abused the power of being
17:44 the international currency for the duration of the post-war period
17:49 had set up lots of pressure to see if we
17:51 can find an alternative system to get around the dollar.
17:54 But because it's so complicated to do
17:56 that, most of those measures were fairly half-hearted.
17:59 there was no real solid attempt to get an alternative to the American dollar.
18:03 With Trump in charge, now we're seeing the the chaos that can be uh implemented
18:08 by that international payment system combined
18:11 with the military chaos of America.
18:13 I think this is going to pretty much say
18:15 that we're now seeing the end of the the Bretonwood
18:18 system as it was put together with the American
18:20 dollar as the necessary currency for international trade.
18:23 We won't necessarily see a proposal as sensible as canes is being put forward.
18:27 But it's obvious many many countries are going to find ways
18:30 to take part in international trade without using the American dollar.
18:34 So the days of the dominance of the American dollar are over.
18:37 But the damage that's been done over
18:38 the last 40 years can't be reversed overnight.
18:40 Recession is almost guaranteed now.
18:42 There are so many factors that are likely to cause a recession in America.
18:46 The increasing oil price coming out of the closure
18:48 of the straight of Hormos and the impact of the war.
18:51 That's yet another factor on top of the AI bubble which
18:55 is bound to burst sometime in the next couple of years.
18:58 And so there's been such a level
18:59 of overinvestment in AI that many of the companies
19:01 that have done that are going to have to fold or to pull out of the industry.
19:05 So there's going to be a slump courtesy of that particular factor
19:08 and the government becomes another factor there
19:11 building up the military capability of America.
19:13 he is going to cause an enormous amount of government
19:16 money to be created to rebuild the supply chain
19:19 of the the military-industrial complex and that spending will
19:22 actually stimulate the economy and go in the opposite direction.
19:25 Ironically, even though again people elected Trump
19:28 because he said he's going to empty
19:30 the swamp and stop the government spending more than it takes back in taxation.
19:34 That is actually a bad idea because spending more than you
19:37 get back in taxation is how you actually create fiat back money.
19:42 But Trump is going to do the exact opposite.
19:44 He's going to give a huge fiat stimulus to the economy.
19:46 So you have two private sector factors
19:49 which are likely to bring the economy down.
19:51 The increase in the oil price and the uh decline in AI,
19:56 but the government spending that Trump is now going
19:58 to authorize to enable the military-industrial complex to rebuild itself.
20:02 That will be a stimulus in the opposite direction.
20:05 Overall, I do expect a recession.
20:06 I'm trying to find more rebel economists.
20:08 And rebel economists are people who
20:10 challenge mainstream economics and want to understand
20:13 how the economy really works rather than
20:15 learning the mythical concepts inside neocclassical textbooks.
20:19 So if you're a rebel economist,
20:20 apply to the rebel economist challenge at steveken.com or scan the QR code.
20:25 And there's a bonus now.
20:27 Anybody who applies gets a free bunk book bundle, including three of my books,
20:31 two cartoon books to make it an easy introduction,
20:34 a detailed book that I wrote originally for Elon Musk.
20:37 He won't read it.
20:38 So maybe you should instead.