Historian
Warns That Obama And Bush Policies Has
Brought
About Real Threat Of Sudden Collapse
Of
American ‘Empire’

Harvard
professor
and prolific author Niall Ferguson
opened the
2010 Aspen Ideas Festival Monday with a
stark
warning about the increasing prospect
of the
American “empire” suddenly collapsing
due
to the country’s rising debt level. “I
think this is a problem that is going
to go
live really soon,” Ferguson said. “In
that
sense, I mean within the next two
years.
Because the whole thing, fiscally and
other
ways, is very near the edge of chaos.
And
we’ve seen already in Greece what
happens
when the bond market loses faith in
your
fiscal policy.” Ferguson said empires —
such as the former Soviet Union and
the Roman
empire — can collapse quite quickly
and the
tipping point is often when the cost
of
servicing an empire’s debt is larger
than
the cost of its defense budget. “That
has
not been the case I think at any point
in U.S.
history,” Ferguson said. “It will be
the
case in the next five years.” Ferguson
was
conscious of opening the Ideas
Festival on
such a stark note. “Walter Isaacson,
the
leader of this great institution said,
‘Don’t be too dark!,’” Ferguson said.
The affable British scholar tried to
keep it
light. He used a stage whisper to tell
the
Aspen Institute audience, “I know
you’re
not comfortable with the word
‘empire,’
especially just after the Fourth of
July, but
you are the Redcoats now.” He said the
U.S.
is now deeply in the red as a country
because
of a combination of the Great
Recession,
Obama's federal stimulus and financial
bailout
programs, two wars, the Bush tax cuts,
and a
growth in social entitlement programs.