David Aaronovitch
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Call me Lebedev. He is the bemused character in Chekhov's Ivanov who struggles to make sense of the world and the people around him. He doesn't understand his wife, he doesn't understand his daughter, he doesn't understand the depressed Ivanov, who - in Tom Stoppard's version - Lebedev accuses of having turned life into a gallery of modern art.
“I look on and I don't understand anything...” Not a great qualification in a columnist. When I saw the play in London last Friday, the minor references in the text to banks, deposits and credit, drew nervous, disproportionate and strangely unknowing laughter from the audience. Plenty of people out there could do with some certainty, and all I feel is a sense of confusion. I look back at my own columns of a week or two ago and feel they were written in a different decade.
There was a time when I understood things. As a whippersnapper I called the Labour leadership for Kinnock in '83, when Peter Mandelson was predicting Hattersley. I did the same for John Major in '90, when all around me were Hurdites. I got Blair, Hague and Cameron (with a blip over Iain Duncan Smith).
But now? Sarah Palin? It never occurred to me that John McCain would so contaminate his brand of pragmatic conservatism as to run with a tyro far-right ignoramus, however complementary her demographic. Peter Mandelson back in the Cabinet? I didn't see that one coming. I am not so useless that I can't predict that, other things being equal, Obama and Cameron will shake hands at the London Olympics of 2012, yet I do wonder whether other things will ever be equal again.
Take yesterday. I wake up in the morning to the doomy news that Germany has done an Ireland and sabotaged European strategic unity on the credit crisis. By 3pm, it transpires, Germany hasn't done any such thing. On the BBC website Robert Peston (the Rageh Omaar of the Crash of 2008) is telling me that “Alistair Darling and the Treasury can't get any sense out of the German Government about what it is precisely that they are doing. So there's no point in responding to something that's still a touch ephemeral.”
Then I find out that Iceland - a country with a population the size of Leicester - may now be nationalising its biggest three banks, because they (who knew?) “dwarf the rest of the economy”. I've been to Reykjavik. It looks like Bournemouth with mountains. It may be that there are British columnists or broadcasters somewhere who were pointing out, years back, that even Iceland was over-exposed to bad debt. If so, I missed it.
When forecasters and sages fail, the stage is set for prophets instead. One strong strand of crunch prophecy predicts the end of capitalism itself. You can find it on the political right, where the Texan Republican Congressman, Jeb Hensarling, described the Bush rescue package as “the slippery slope to socialism”. You can find it spread across the spectrum in Britain. When I was on Any Questions in Worthing a few weeks ago the audience in this most Tory of seaside seats applauded Tony Benn for advocating the nationalisation of the oil companies. In 1983 they'd probably have voted to hang him.
You can find it on the left. When I was a student in the very pessimistic mid '70s, there was one organisation that - like the man with the “End is Nigh” sandwich boards - perpetually proclaimed the final crisis. The 500 strong Socialist Labour League (the one Vanessa Redgrave belonged to) would pronounce the imminence of a world slump, to be followed by revolutionary conditions ripe for the leadership of... the Socialist Labour League. It took them 20 years of disappointment to drop the prediction.
You get a better class of slump person these days. Any halfway media-friendly academic is to be discovered ushering in, the “new world” of the chastened, weakened America and the ascendant (almost morally ascendant) China. And over in Guardianland there is some relish for the coming Götterdämmerung.
Madeleine Bunting, an interesting writer who combines religiosity with a vague leftism, writes of the collapse of the three-decade long economic orthodoxy of “neoliberal capitalism”. While we were engaged in the “sideshow” of the War on Terror, “the real doomsday scenario that poses a far greater threat to Western civilisation (whatever that is) was gathering pace right next to Ground Zero, in Wall Street.” “Whatever that is?” Democracy. Free press. Freedom of speech and assembly. Not burying women alive.
Another time, Madeleine, for there is my old comrade Bea Campbell, declaring that, within two decades, unrestrained capitalism “in doing its thing, unrestrained, it has brought the world to the brink”, though she doesn't say what of. Then, admitting that “progressives” are disorientated and unorganised, she adds: “And yet, and yet... progressives interested in a dynamic, inventive, co-operative, democratic and egalitarian esprit didn't create this conjuncture, but it is the moment we have been waiting for.”
The moment we have been waiting for to do what? I mean given that the world is supposedly “on the brink”? Bea might have used the word socialist, because at least that connoted a belief in an alternative economic system. But now there is no such belief, and what the “Left” seems to argue for is some kind of odd return to the capitalist settlement as at 1980, before Reagan and Thatcher got their hands on the policy levers.
So where does this fantasy - which could easily seduce a section of the Labour Party - take us? Thatcher partly won the legacy battle because, having opposed the privatisation of British Telecom, even the most purblind social democrat could see that she had been right and didn't want the old BT back. They could also see, with the Common Agricultural Policy, where protectionism got us. Don't just say “better regulation” or “taxes on the fat cats”, comrades. That's not a new dawn.
So these gentle mumblings will turn out to be like Monty Python's Boring Prophet from The Life of Brian who predicts merely that things will be put inside other things. We have yet to experience the real consequences of the credit crunch - the joblessness, the spending cuts, the creation of a pessimistic generation. When those hit us we can expect the more exciting prophets, the soft sellers of millenarian brands, the BNPs, the scapegoating anti-capitalists of the near fringes, to begin to affect the mainstream politics of the country.
The boring prophets are just the John the Baptists of the Second Coming. We Lebedevs are going to have to sort ourselves out.

David Aaronovitch is a writer, broadcaster and commentator on international politics and the media. He writes for The Times Comment page on Tuesdays. He has previously written for The Guardian, The Observer and The Independent, winning numerous accolades, including Columnist of the Year 2003 and the 2001 Orwell prize for journalism. He has appeared on the satirical TV current affairs programme Have I Got News For You and made radio broadcasts on historical topics
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When the recession bites, the price of Oil will drop to below $50 dollars a barrel, thats Russia,Venezuela and the Arabs taken care off. The Ping Golf Clubs and the 40" Plasma can wait a year or two, thats China dealt with. Our enemies will come off worse. Go Capitalism.
Graham, glasgow, scotland
Sometimes, anything is difficulty to predict!
Eddy, Nanning, China
If capitalism is finished, we might as well go back to a simple barter system of economy since all other alternatives to capitalism had already failed, with the possible exception of Bin Ladens worldwide caliphate in which all of us will be carrying bottled crude oil as the common currency.
George Snyder, Jacksonville, Florida, USA
Unrestrained companies caused this problem. It will need strong International action to protect against it happening again.
James , Brighton, England
The coming of the current crisis was so obvious that it begs the question whether this was the intended outcome. Intended by whom? Please tell us.
A Doty, London,
Thanks to 24 hour news and rumblings of journalistic opinions, we have been bombarded with left and right political theology, opinion....hearsay, comments... .....Maybe today you have no idea but we all have our biases and our ears shut down when we do not want to listen or hear or agree or like.
Dona, Edinburgh, UK
Capitalism is supposed to mean innovative entrepreneurs raising capital and taking personal business risks. Capitalism today is boardroom managers and non exec directors who risk other people's money, and regardless of performance or a company's financial situation, help themselves to pots of cash
peterfieldman, paris, france
The new BT is a disgrace, as are all the other companies wrested from public control by Thatcherism.
Last I heard Aaronovitch was a cheer-leader for the invasion of Iraq. In other words, you can't believe anything he says.
Chris, chesterfield, uk
......some dismissed Noah's flood as nothing more than a heavy shower.
now david contemplates the strange spectacle of banks with no money and says, "I've 'ad worse. 'its just a flesh wound"
tom watson, seaview, uk
Excellent article. However it is NOT crystal balls that these people need ! The ' crisis, ' Socialist mantra, is a farce and blackmall. The sooner the tax payer says no more money, these ' genius's' will develop self preservation and work to get their money back. This is the Democrats fault.
Desmond Taylor, Houston, USA,TX
New Labour supporters and the Tories alike want to pretend the housing market crash and the credit crunch were not predicted, given their shared assumptions for the last 14 years. But one could read those predictions in The Times over the last few years and not just from extremists.
Andrew G, London , Uk
The real problem is you can't go to war without money. So, Bush lowers interest to 1% to give business a boost to collect more tax. And the rest is easy to predict. That's not capitalism - it's government interference.
bob, cape town, south africa
We Brits seem to love crisis. The media describe every % point drop in share or house prices as 'Plummeting' . There has never been a better example of media and commentators talking the economy down with some kind of relish in their voice. David is right in feeling bemused, he can see through them.
Ken Rodfird, Bedford, UK
"...the moment we have been waiting for..." To do what? Good question.
Trotting out Tony Benn and Michael Meecher tell us all. When we cut though the Guardianspeak 'dynamic, inventive, co-operative, democratic and egalitarian esprit' means good old fashioned nationaisation and state control.
Mark, Berkhamsted,
Free market capitalism is not dead. Very alive actually! Markets do correct after periods of excess. They seem to be functioning quite fine. As for the banks. The current liquidity squeeze is simply the result of the market saying that there is already far too much credit in the economy.
Mark, London, UK
You need to get out a bit more if you missed the coming of the Iceland collapse. It has been predicted for a long time and will have to be rescued by the Scandanavians if a deafulat is to be avoided. It may even be forced to join the EU.
William, Manila, Philippines