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Looking back at 2012 – how accurate were my predictions?

Summary:  Year-end is a time to look back at one’s forecasts, and look forward to what might happen next year.  Today we do the former, looking at the predictions for 2012 made here last December.

We use only the finest forecasting tools

“Always in motion is the future.”
— Yoda, Jedi-Knight

Here are the predictions for 2012 made in December 2011.  How do they look in hindsight?   The predictions about the US were very accurate.  But these were easy, predictions of continued powerful trends — although trends still unseen by many Americans.  As for the rest of the world, the predictions were largely inaccurate — for the opposite reason.  Existing trends continued, but without the effects I anticipated. Perhaps in 2013?

Here is a copy of the 20 December 2011 post, with today’s verdicts in red.

USA

To put 2012 in context, historians might see 2011 as the tipping point for the Republic.  The climax of the rapid decay since 9-11, when our ruling elites realized our weakness — and exploited it.  Now comes the consolidation of their quiet coup, and the attempts at a counter-revolution (probably unsuccessful).

  1. The Constitution will continue to die, sliding ever-faster into the grave.  The American people will continue to slumber while our ruling elites increase their power.  Correct, easy.
  2. Obama will continue to govern with a center-right policy mix, continuing what is in effect Bush Jr’s third term. Correct, but easy.
  3. The GOP will continue to describe Obama as a radical leftist (with their unaffiliated action groups describing him as a illegitimate President, perhaps even Moslem).  Correct, but easy.
  4. The 2012 Presidential election will be decided on two axises:  the economy and the GOP’s ability to select a strong candidate — or one that can be sold to the  American people as such.  Correct, but easy.
  5. The GOP will continue their “the worse, the better” tactics to prevent any effective public policy action by the US government in 2012.  So 2013 will be the year of decision for America, out next opportunity for major reforms.  Correct, but easy.
  6. The US will continue its mad crusade against fundamentalist Islam — bombing people across the globe– its public support driven by information operations run against the American people by the US government.  Correct, but easy.
  7. Our foreign wars (Iraq and Af-Pak) will continue to wind down. As the adrenalin high of the wars fade, we’ll see the damage they’ve inflicted on the US military (see here for details).  Correct, but easy.
  8. The craft of the Navy and Air Force will continue to age, as the Services are unable to convince Congress of the necessity to buy replacements.  Correct, but easy.
  9. The Marine Corps will continue to search for its next life, torn between the nation’s need for a 4GW-savvy mobile striking force and its institutional fantasy to be a second Army.  Correct (epitomized by the cancellation of their Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle).

Europe

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China

Global

Some of the unknowns for 2012

The effect of slow solar cycle 24 on Earth’s climate?  Solar scientists will learn much from this cycle.  Correct that solar cycle 24 continues to surprise, and that scientists learn much. But not conclusions yet.

Will the ENSO continue to cool the Pacific (with more and stronger La Nina than El Nino cycles)?  More cooling might disrupt crops, boost food prices, and destabilized less-developed nations in East Asia and Latin America.   Wrong; we had ENSO neutral conditions.

Will Obama (desperate for re-election) or Israel (desperate, seeing the ranks of its friends dwindle and its enemies gain power) attack Iran? Often history turns on illogical decisions.  Not a prediction; no attack.

For More Information

Last year’s review:  How accurately did the FM website forecast events in 2011?

See these FM Reference Pages for more posts on these topics:

  1. Predictions – how do they look now?
  2. Forecasts – possible futures for America and the World
  3. Speculation about the future by western military and intelligence agencies, section 6 on Intelligence agencies – how they work, how they don’t

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