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Capitalism, Climate Change, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Consumerism, Corporate State, Eco-Apocalypse, Ecological Overshoot, Environmental Collapse, Financial Elite, Globalization, Gross Inequality, Idiocracy, Inverted Totalitarianism, Jeff Gillette, Mass Die Off, Military Industrial Complex, Police State, Poverty, Privatization, Regulatory Capture, The Elite 1%, Trans-Pacific Partnership, Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, unwashed public, Wall Street Fraud, War for Profit
Capitalism has, throughout its history, built itself off the backs of the weak through dispossession, slavery, colonialism, technology and military power. Protecting the capitalist system into the 21st century, U.S. military served as the all-powerful proxy force of the global corporate elite. In the waning days of modern-day civilization, transnational corporations found even more ways to amass power and squeeze out every last penny from the Earth to the gods of capital. In the name of ‘free trade’, secretive agreements with alphabet soup-acronyms like TTP and TPIP were concocted to protect and expand profits as well as investor returns at the expense of all else, including the sovereignty of nations and the very habitability of the planet. Corporations became the new kings and queens, tsars and tsaritsas, bishops and popes. The last grab for what was left could now be done more swiftly while circumventing the laws of nations.
“…Capitalism has an inbuilt wondrous capacity of resurrection and regeneration; though this is capacity of a kind shared with parasites – organisms that feed on other organisms, belonging to other species. After a complete or near-complete exhaustion of one host organism, a parasite tends and manages to find another, that would supply it with life juices for a successive, albeit also limited, stretch of time.
A hundred years ago Rosa Luxemburg grasped that secret of the eerie, phoenix-like ability of capitalism to rise, repeatedly, from the ashes; an ability that leaves behind a track of devastation – the history of capitalism is marked by the graves of living organisms sucked of their life juices to exhaustion…” ~ Zygmunt Bauman
In a world of finite resources controlled by a tiny capitalist class, there would eventually only be two classes remaining – the über-wealthy or global elite and the vast underclass of disposable workers who eked out a subsistence existence. The wealth of society continued to be funneled upwards to the corporate overlords by way of deregulation, privatization, low or nonexistent tax rates, control of the legal system, and the cutting away of any last scraps of a social safety net.
Preoccupied by their digital screen devices and satiated on mass-produced junk food, the plebs never really noticed they were living in an open-air prison. In the meantime, the walls of a police state rose up to protect the sociopathic elite. As long as the ‘consumers’ were kept in a continual state of ‘amusement madness’ and on the treadmill of work exhaustion, there would be no time for contemplating the reality of climate change, the ever-widening wealth gap, the rise of a corporate fascist state, or the disappearance of the natural world.
“Living in an age of advertisement, we are perpetually disillusioned. The perfect life is spread before us every day, but it changes and withers at a touch.”
~ J. B. Priestley
This Ponzi scheme economy was so entrenched in the psyche of the general populace that essentially none questioned its validity, even in the face of increasingly chaotic weather and rising seas, mountains of toxic waste, lifeless oceans, epidemic industrial disease, and grotesque wealth maldistribution. The right to seek profit trumped the health and safety of humans, the stability of the environment, and the legal recourse of governments on behalf of their citizens. National borders were effectively erased and a global corporatocracy now ruled the planet. Ironically, the one world government feared by so many right-wing conspiracists had become reality without any protest from them.
Acid rain and erratic weather, the unintended consequences of half-baked geoengineering fixes, forced most food production into industrial greenhouses. Due to the chemical pollution levels in the environment, all water had to be treated before it was used for anything, and gas masks became ‘everyday outdoor wear’ like hats and umbrellas. Most stayed indoors to escape such hazards, immersing themselves in the artificial environments of virtual reality software. Zoos became the only sanctuaries for wildlife, their sperm safely kept frozen for the day humans might want to de-extinctify them. National parks were privatized and plastered with corporate logos. The ranks of the homeless and destitute swelled, but most soon found themselves living inside the cell of a private, for-profit prison where they toiled away as cheap labor contracted by the corporations. Such crises were always looked upon as business opportunities, a niche to fill in the profit-seeking mind of homo economicus. Commodification and commercialization of everything became completely normalized.
Taken to the extreme and turned into a rigid belief system, all ideologies can become dangerous. When the ethics of a society bow to laissez-faire capitalism, life in the U$A becomes a cruel joke:
- War for profit (the world’s largest war machine eating up half of every tax dollar)
- Healthcare for profit (the most expensive and least effective healthcare in the industrialized world)
- Imprisonment for profit (most incarcerated individuals per capita in the world)
- Higher education for profit ($1.2 trillion student debt and counting)
- Corporate welfare (one of the lowest effective corporate tax rates in the developed world and subsidies for the giant transnational corporations costing the average American family $6,000 or more per year)
- U.S. Now leading the world into climate chaos with unconventional oil & gas production (expensive extraction of dirty, low EROEI sources)
- Corporate-controlled media (just 6 corporations own 90% of the media)
- Corporate-controlled government (lobbying dollars just keep increasing)
- Permanent quantitative easing (endless money printing did not work)
- Gross wealth disparity (highest income gap of any developed country)
Need I go further? The day that the movie ‘Idiocracy’ is looked upon as genius and prophetic, civilization will have become a parody of itself. I think that day has arrived.
Reblogged this on Damn the Matrix and commented:
XRay Mike at his best……
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New index reveals UK runs biggest part of global secrecy network
TJN’s 2013 Financial Secrecy Index exposes yawning gap between G20 rhetoric and reality
Today the Tax Justice Network launches its 2013 Financial Secrecy Index, the biggest ever survey of global financial secrecy. This unique index combines a secrecy score with a weighting to create a ranking of the countries that most actively and aggressively promote secrecy in global finance.
http://taxjustice.blogspot.co.uk/2013/11/2013-financial-secrecy-index-press_6.html
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My 2 cents worth
We like to push the blame up the ladder of success. We like to blame the so called people in control, the 1-5%. As if they are some kind of devil human, when ‘they’ are no different than every other human on the planet (except maybe me;)?). Humans are no different then all forms of bacteria, in as much as bacteria will eat the next lower life form to survive.
So yeah we place these 5% up there as if the rest of us are some how better?, but we aren’t, as can be seen when we get under stress, currently the law and order situation in the Philippines might show how humane we are, or the many many atrocities committed by the ‘95%’ from exploitation of animals, children, and woman, to just out and out murder.
We were doomed to this inevitable end way back when the first bits of human DNA got together..
There never was a chance for this naked ape to survive, we just have to accept it all because there is 100% nothing we can do about it, and it is going to get a shit load worse. As the say ‘It always gets darker before it goes pitch black’)
Again I will stick to the idea that having children is the most selfish, stupid, myopic, and contemptible action we can do, and not having them is the only way to reduce future suffering.
That is about as philosophical as I can be ) ….. for a 4th form drop out anyway.
Sorry for ripping ya off
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I think you are greatly discounting the fact that most American would like a different way of life if any shred of democracy was left to conduct such alternatives. I understand the biological urges than run through us as in all living organisms, but confining your thinking to such a narrow viewpoint plays right into the hands of those who want to keep things just as they are.
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most American would like a different way of life . I think most want what the 1-5 % have, they want power over each other, they want to keep destroying the environment, as witnessed at the abundant joy of seeing that new born baby.
We are dog eat dog … I think The Road was one of the best movies to reflect this.
Most Americans (well all of us) are just fucking stupid.
With 7 billion of us fuckwits on this rock it wouldn’t matter if Mother Teresa or Jesus H Christ were the world leaders, through our ignorance or whatever it is we have created to many humans …. so we crash and burn …. in a shred of democracy 😉
Voting yeah right?
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As I said,
A self-defeating mindset sows its own demise.
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I have to agree, and I live in a ‘progressive’ ghetto, where we might actually have elected a socialist to the city council in this week’s election; it will be a while yet before we know because it’s very close. But I think there is a ‘liberal/progressive’ version of willful delusion and ignorance, where a kinder/gentler/less unequally divided version of capitalism (even though it claims to be socialism/marxism) is held up as the ideal.
An example: I recently had a friend, a so-called outspoken progressive/marxist, tell me that if it took paving the Sahara to provide clean energy to fuel the socialist future–where more of the world’s billions get to live in hip urban environments, work in high tech/culture/media due to better public education, and drive electric cars or use shiny futuristic mass transit like light rail–that was worth the extinction of ‘a few lizards’. Delusional and hubristic, if still a delusion I find slightly more appealing than the American norm because at least a modicum of justice (for humans) is still counted as important. But a meaningful marxism–adapted to our apocalyptic times–has to be MUCH better than that, right?
However, I don’t agree that the appalling character of most people’s desires at every level of status in this country is due to human nature. Having read Christopher Boehm, I am persuaded that it is because our very long history of a dictatorship of the many over the ambitious/sociopathic few in hunter-gatherer society broke down with the coming of ‘civilization’. We no longer have the option of exiling, shaming or killing those who seek to be in charge of us and create hierarchies that serve their personal interests because of their superior ability or intelligence or just plain ego. Instead, those are the people in charge and the heroes most wish to emulate. This is what we have all learned through living in our culture. And as Derrick Jensen has pointed out, we are all insane living in this insane culture, we can’t fool ourselves otherwise. But that doesn’t make it human nature.
I think our human nature as social obligate mammals includes a long history of natural selection where egalitarian morality and empathic consciousness were very successful. If any humans actually survive the next century, those traits will be what keeps them alive as actual human beings. I suspect lone ranger survivalists in their bunkers and with their weapons won’t be around for all that long.
The essay at The Spiral Staircase http://brutus.wordpress.com/2013/05/21/renouncing-the-future/#comment-8139 really resonated with me. I don’t know a single person in my real life who would read what is written here and be willing to take it seriously and talk about how to lead life in light of the reality it describes, even if that’s just building prison cells that still allow for some sort of meaningful life in a limited way. ALL of my friends and acquaintances in this very ‘liberal’ city seem to have chosen willful ignorance as a coping mechanism, rather than face what is coming. Helped along of course by being hip and enjoying hip culture (pricey), medications (good health plans), walkable neighborhoods and Zipcar, good bookstores, and porn. Thank goodness for porn, so freely available to people of every class, just check out the masses enjoying it at the public libraries in town lol…
I read what’s written here because it helps me maintain a degree of eyes-open insanity in my little prison cell. My goal is to moderate my mental illness as much as possible, cope with it in ways that don’t enslave me to meds, make money for corporate interests (very tough when most of life involves nothing more than consumption), or use coping mechanisms that end up feeding seductive/destructive addictions, despite loving porn as much as the next person lol. Reading is my main addiction, not too bad really in a ghetto where we still haven’t privatized our excellent public library system.
It would be better and more bearable with company in my cell, but I’ve had to recognize that just having what used to be normal friendship/companionship may be utopian itself in these times. Life in hip liberal America is lonely as hell, disillusionment indeed.
Thank you for the blog and the excellent writing and the mental company that it provides. Seriously!
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Sorry for the double post, but I wanted to clarify that I agreed with Robert Atack’s description of the desires of most people in the US. Its easy to get tripped up by format lol and it seemed unclear when my long entry (embarrassment here) was published.
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Thanks for the candid response. So then you agree that the antisocial behavior dominating capitalist society is by way of cultural indoctrination rather than innate human behavior. I think Robert was saying just the opposite. I agree with how you explained everything and this key statement as well:
“I don’t agree that the appalling character of most people’s desires at every level of status in this country is due to human nature.”
Time to go watch some… ‘Breaking Bad’.
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Mother Teresa was a fuckwit, too.
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You have to accept your definition of ‘success’ to validate your argument. Your definition of success is my definition of state-sponsored tyranny. You do the typical right-wing spin tactic: over-simplify the villany, in order to compare it to the majority of people.
Fact is, the 1-3-5% do very little for what they have. And the key to continuiing this is convincing them that the undeserving eilte are ‘successful’ rather than ‘entitled’ – which is the basis of your diatribe, and incorrect.
I wish if people were going to basically palgiarize Orwell from ‘Down and Out in Paris and London’, they do it interestingly
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I partly agree. Most humans are naturally greedy and selfish and yet we do differ from bacteria. The fact that we are having this discussion does prove that. Karl Marx knew this would happen and he was villified by the capitalist “democracies” of the world. Thomas Malthus wrote about it in 19th century. quote “The power of population is indefinitely greater than the power in the earth to produce subsistence for man”. The problem arises when a poltical system is a based on voting in a popularity contest. And when they are voted in they have 3 or 4 years to try and do something before the contest starts again. i.e everything becomes populist. In short the capitalist form of democracy (if you could call it that) does not work. The system should be run by a committee of highly qualified scientists (in the main) and a handful of other proven intellects to add balance. Our economy should be based on energy or more accurately the management of scarce finite resources. Countries should no longer exist. It should be a global collective. Ultimately life boils down to competition for energy. 99% of the decisions made today to produce something would not be made in an energy based economy. That alone should tell you something. I have some good news and some bad news. You are right. We are way passed any salvation point. We already over the Malthusian cliff waiting for reality to catch up. So yes as things stand now there is zero hope. The good news: There is one solution and only one. Massive and quick reduction in human population. I suspect our 1-5% know this. It’s curious how many super rich people are aware of the problem. So the good news is they might just wipe out 80% of the world population using some sort of virus. Sounds crazy until you realise the extent of the problem. Then you realise that this part really is the good news. The alertnative is complete extinction.
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News bites later. I need sleep.
I highly recommend to everyone this site which I just discovered yesterday:
http://systemicdisorder.wordpress.com/
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Big Sugar, still employing the descendants of the slaves as indentured labour, $2 for a 12 hour day, forced to buy their food at exorbitant prices from the company store, etc.
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I had to add this one to my essay, the most obvious one of all:
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Just a tiny quibble, and Michael T Klare should know better. Nations do not produce oil. Companies do not produce oil. Humans do not produce oil (well not much, and not hydrocarbon!). Humans extract oil. Humans deplete oil deposits.
Of course such words as extract and deplete do not sit well with the phony corporate imagery centred on doing great service to humanity by keeping energy slaves fed and facilitating ‘progress’ (whilst making enormous profits for a tiny portion of humanity in the process).
To be fair, Klare does write about the difficulty of extracting oil from unconventional sources. However, he goes on to propose ‘solutions’ to the energy predicament which we know are not scalable and which exacerbate several of the accelerating environmental catastrophes.
.
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Pingback: They still need the useful idiots for just a little longer » Why Aren't You Outraged?
I believe that human nature (behaviour) follows a bell curve that is similar in shape and distribution to many other bell curves; most people are basically honest and cooperative and not especially greedy (though we are definitely genetically programmed to make the most of food when it is available, on the basis that a period of starvation is coming).
It seems to me that most of the problems that have arisen since the dawn of civilisation have been generated by the tiny portion of humanity who are far from the norm, i.e. the tiny portion who are especially greedy, who are particularly mendacious and manipulative, who are particularly sociopathic. Sadly, they have set up systems which have increasingly encouraged and rewarded such behaviours. Other, so-called primitive, societies placed taboos and sanctions on such behaviours and thrived as a result.
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Mike, this statement of yours is genius: “. Ironically, the one world government feared by so many right-wing conspiracists had become reality without any protest from them.”
They fear the UN, yet seem oblivious to, or even excited by, the increasing power of international corporations over the will of citizens in sovereign states.
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Another good explanation
The TPP, if Passed, Spells the End of Popular Sovereignty for The United States
Read more at http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2013/11/the-tpp-if-passed-spells-the-end-of-popular-sovereignty-for-the-united-states.html#s0mgIRl03smKDbIS.99
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“I was the security guard on this plantation, but I was promoted to be the manager of the whole plantation because I wiped out the communists here.. I killed 200 members of the Plantation Worker’s Union and the rest were thrown in jail and that pretty much wiped them out… Of course all union members were sympathizing with the communists…”
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Greetings to everybody! Congratulations for another great post x-ray mike! The article and the comments are full of interesting food for thought. Here are my 2 cents on some of the comments:
1) @ ulvfugl
Regarding the ‘blame’ game and who/what has the biggest responsibility for the coming population bottleneck and, a little later down the road, extinction of most higher life forms on our planet. Let’s start with a couple of easy examples: 300 million americans, 250 million cars on american roads; clearly a catastrophy from all points of view: peak oil, one of the most wasteful and inefficient transport method, C02 emissions, JHK’s mentally retarded living arrangement (ie cars, highways, suburbs, big box shopping centres, drive in fast food, etc, etc.)
So, who has the biggest blame for this catastrophy? Who should carry the biggest responsabilities? The 1%? Global political/financial/economic elite? Military industrial complex? Big oil? Detroit big three? American federal govt? HUndreds of millions of ignorant average joes and janes that form 99,9% of the unawashed, ignorant, brainwashed, blind masses of american motorists? It’s a difficult question, right? On the one side, clearly big oil executives, car makers, marketers, government officials and in general all the people who have more decision making power and economical power (politicians, big oil & car maker CEOs, etc, etc.) and in general the whole capitalist system/arrangement have the blame for stimulating, instigating, brainwashing into the masses, and in general ‘promoting’ a way of life and a way of transport that is from all points of view wasteful, inefficient, stupid, damaging to the environment/atmosphere/biosphere, that uses incredibly valuable high energy concentrated nonrenewable resources (oil etc) that could be used much more productively somewhere else and most of which (FFs) which actually would be much better safely buried in the ground and not dissolved in our atmosphere/oceans as CO2 where they will be causing climate chaos for all of humanity and the whole biosphere for thousands of years.
OTOH, clearly the 250 million american ‘average joe’ motorists are guilty, after all, nobody forces you to purchase a car and drive it, nobody puts a gun on your head and says ‘burn as much gasoline as possible’. On the contrary, it’s precisely this ignorant brainwashed masses that make huge efforts to buy cars, buy gasoline, and drive… Most people I know work like crazy most of their life to save money to pay for the suburban house, the car, the fuel and maintainance for that car, the ability to purchase big ag artificial fake food in supermarkets, to have vast supply of natgas, electricity, tap water, etc in their house, to inject copious amounts of drugs and venoms in their bodies from big pharma, to have cable tv and keep the MSM brainwashing going on, etc etc etc, in one word, to be willing, willful slaves of the industrial/capitalist/fossil fuel addicted system most of them say they hate so much and that at least some of them is recognizing that is killing all life in this planet as fast as possible.
2) Regarding the biosphere as a hole, IT IS already GAME OVER, and this is something that I fully agree with the discussion kevin tom & ulvfugl had couple months ago. The game over for planetary biosphere began NOT with industrial revolution/fossil fuel/AGW etc but with AGRICULTURE. That discovery/invention 10.000 years ago was the beginning of the end for most higher life forms on our planet. Paul McCready has a fantastic 20minute TED presentation he gave in 1998. I highly recommend everybody to watch that video. There, he explains how before agriculture/domestication, humans and our animals biomass represented 0,3% of the biomass of land vertebrates (which means fish, invertebrates, etc are not included, only land vertebrates). 10K years later (ie today), thanks to agriculture, humans and our animals (cows, pigs, chickens, goats, horses, etc) represent 97% of land vertebrate biomass, meaning we have replaced the majority of wildlife support systems with crops /animals that happen to support only one species, homo sapiens. What is interesting is that a very large fraction of this transformation/conversion of the natural/wild biosphere happened for thousands of years without fossil fuels, without internal combustion engines, without suburban sprawl, without capitalism (although feudalism and most other human organization systems of the past can be considered proto-capitalist-imperialist-slavekeeper societies), without military industrial complex (romans got pretty close although still a far cry from 20th century america), without AGW, no large scale mining, no large scale cement production, no factory farming, etc etc etc. Nonetheless, take the forests of Europe or China, for example. The vast majority of them were completely destroyed/annihilated in the course of thousands of years for arable land to support an expanding population, for firewood, for wood for construction/shipbuilding, etc. Centruries before Watt/Savory/Newcomen came with their first steam engines, most european forests and all their wild animals and all their biodiversity were already gone. ‘Fortunately’, the ‘discovery’ of the new world and the colonization of most of africa, middle east, asia and oceania by european colonial superpowers allowed the plunderind and destruction of biosphere and local populations alike to continue for another five centuries, to this very day (this time on a planetary level and on much larger scale). Lood at what is happening in Brazil and the amazon rainforest, for example. This HUGE biodiversity treasure of our planetary biosphere is being destroyed today even faster and more effectively as europe’s forests were during thousands of years, so that it can be replaced with millions of cattle ranches (brazil #1 world exporter of beef meat), vast swaths of sugar cane (you know, most people consider ethanol a ‘biofuel’, somehow transforming rainforest into desert, poisoning the land & water with venoms, chemicals, pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers, and driving to extinction thousands of amazing plants and animals only found in that jungle makes those fuels ‘bio’… it makes them ‘sustainable, it makes them ‘renewable’, etc. Sarcasm? Irony? Fascism? I guess the masses must be so brainwashed that you could package feces and as long as the plastic is nice people are going to work like slaves all day to purchase it and EAT IT!
Obviously, all that happened with human population reaching 300 million by 1AD. In the last two millennia, it expanded further to reach almost 1 billion before FF/industrial revolution. Then, of course, the genie’s lamp was found and the genie of fossil fuels was released. He granted all of our wishes, offering billions of real people (not only the elite, but almost everybody, at least living in ‘developed’ countries) the benefits of hundreds of billions of ‘virtual’ fossil fuel slaves. A single barrel of oil contains the embodied energy equivalent to a human adult working nonstop for 10 years… Yet the ignorant, brainwashed masses consider 100 dollars ‘expensive’. Good luck hiring somebody to work for you non-stop for 10 years for 100 bucks… you couldn’t even feed a real human slave… (ie 100 dollars=10years, 10dollars=1year, 1dollar=1month, 3cents=1day…).
In any case, the FF genie has granted all of our wishes but it is now released, and free, and floating out there in the form of 1020 billion tons CO2 we have released since 1880 PLUS the 36 billion tons of CO2 we are now releasing EACH and EVERY year, causing the trillion problems I won’t repeat again because everybody in this blog is fully aware of the effects of AGW, arctic sea ice losing 80% volume, greenland melting, tundra-siberian permafrost melting (a ‘little’ amount of methane trapped there, heh?), melting glaciers, increased heat waves/droughts/floods, desertification/dust-bowlification advancing remorslessly, sea level rise, etc, etc, etc. And I dont even mention the oceans… after couple hours with youtube, jeremy jackson and the state of the oceans…
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All of what you say sounds so reasonable and true, although so very depressing.
What baffles me is why I get it so clearly now at 64, but hardly had a clue at 34, and why almost nobody around the world gets it. It is so clear isn’t it. WAF.
I went to the dump today with my family’s garbage for a week. Piles of crap. We are so disgusting, all of us, including everyone who posts here. Some a bit more than others, but all of us live unsustainably. We are ecohogs. Enviro pigs. Disgusting. We are ALL disgusting.
You go out into nature and see all kinds of critters….some beautiful to our eyes, some slimy weird things, some creepy crawly things, some seem dangerous. But none of them are disgusting like we are. All the rest can live and keep the place decent for the rest of the critters. Only humans ruin it all for everything else.
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I really do wonder sometimes if we are from this planet. Sounds loopy I know but think about it. We are the only species that doesn’t fit. The only creature that couldn’t survive without fire and clothing etc. We have had huge techological spurts thousands of years ago which when looked at today simply don’t make any sense. The Mayans, the Aztecs, Egyptians. We really are freaks.
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…continuation…
3) Regarding NTE, very very unfortunately I fully agree that, no matter what we do now or what we keep doing (BAU etc) it’s already way too late. It’s purely a biophysical problem. All paleoclimatic records point to a temperature increase equivalent associated with 400ppmCO2 of 3°C to 6°C higher than today (‘only’ 0.8°C above preindustrial). In these latest years most scientists have come to the conclusion that the oceans and the cryosphere have absorbed most of the HUGE amounts of CO2 we have emitted as a result of decarbonizing earth’s crust (burning FFs) and carbonizing the atmosphere & oceans. Unfortunately,
most of the climate chaos we have seen as of late (RECORD heatwaves in russia & asia – china, japan, record floodings in russia/china, colorado & alberta flash floods, arctic-greenland-siberia-alaska experiencing deadly record breaking
temperatures, american corn belt & wheat belt now looks like in permanent desert/dust bowl/heat wave, and when the rains do come they do it in epical/biblical floods which are just as damaging for crops, anyway I could go on and on with all the crazy weather in 2013 but I think the idea is clear… just today watching what is Philippines going to look like now that Hayian made a ‘small’ visit… robertscribbler has a couple pretty detailed posts of a huge pacific ocean heat concentration even in deep waters… ).
Anyway, all of this chaos is still a walk in the park compared with what will come in the next 10 to 30 years. Why?
Apparently, up until now, MOST of the heat and carbon released by FF burning doesn’t end in atmosphere. Most of CO2 is absorbed by oceans (which is why ocean acidification is at it’s highest level in 300 million years…) and why most mass extinction events & sudden & dramatic climate change is associated with acidic/anoxic/carbon rich/lifeless oceans). Soon oceans will no longer be able to absorb the massive amounts of CO2 we release to the atmosphere and will transform from carbon sink to carbon source. NTE will then follow shortly… Same goes with heat. Most of the heat we release went on to heat the oceans and melt the arctic and most glaciars. Next on melt list is greenland, west antarctica, siberian permafrost, canada & alaska permafrost, etc (methane clathrathes ‘small gift’ included in the ‘AGW pandora’s box’). And most of the heat has been apparently absorbed by the oceans, once ocean currents/conveyors such as ENSO return to surface after 30 or 40 yearsand we have a ‘el niño’ year, I am sure we will be breaking temperature records worldwide like crazy, specially in southern
hemisphere (the northern part is already in chaos because of thermohaline circulation shutdown, arctic sea ice collapse, mangled jet stream, etc etc etc).
The arctic sea ice is another story, it has lost over 80% volume in only 30 years (geological blimp of a second) and Peter Wadhams and most other arctic experts expect to see an arctic free of ice as soon as 2014/2015/2016… anyone remember IPCC predicting ice free arctic by 2050, 2060, 2080, 2100? Well, seems to me a little ahead of schedule, don’t you think?
Anyway, nobody knows for sure what will happen with gulf current without arctic sea ice to cool it… we could have a mini ice age in europe (despite global average warming)… and 500 million people living there will have ‘interesting times’ growing food under three meters of snow…
I don’t even want to get started with asia, india, china, etc. With record melt of himalayan glaciars and monsoon rain patterns already in chaos because of jet stream blocking patterns… china almost 1.4billion, india 1.2billion + pakistan
200million + bangladesh 200 million people… himalaya without ice + wrecked monsoon + rising sea levels (bangladesh) + falling water tables + heat waves/drought/desertification = billions of ‘climate refugees’… but because the whole world will be in a mess, it’s a little difficult for me to imagine where all these billions are going to ‘migrate’.
As for middle east… well, I am already tired of writing: huge overpopulation, for the most part desertic/arid territories with almost no arable land, almost no freshwater, and now with AGW/CC starting to show full swing, situation can’t go anywhere but worse with each passing year. The only arab countries still surviving and ‘thriving’ are the oil rich petrodollar states, in commercial transactions that amount to petroleum in exchange for absolutely everything else, specially food, most of which is obviously grown elsewhere and later exported to middle east.
4) @ Tom:
Thanks for your kind and well-elaborated answer/essay to my comment some posts ago. Yes, Tom, I indeed expect agriculture to be the weakest link in the industrial civilization chain. AGW-climate change-climate chaos-wrecked climate-increasing temperatures-heatwaves-droughts-floods-desertification-‘dust bowlification’-topsoil loss & erosion- falling freshwater reservoirs & tables-disappearing rivers-soil compactation by agricultural machinery- poisoning of soil & water by truckloads of fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides, insecticides & countless other petrochemicals, venoms, toxins & poisons-changing rainfall patterns, changing & shifting seasons, mangled jet stream… = WRECKED AGRICULTURE = famine, hunger = POPULATION BOTTLENECK. It seems so incredibly clear and obvious to me… yet I can’t understand and can’t imagine how 7.2 billion of my
homo sapien brothers and sisters are completely blind, ignorant, brainwashed willfull slaves of the same industrial/capitalist system that is going to kill us all + most higher life forms in this planet… anyway, sad times to be in this planet. Resumed, it would look like this: climate chaos + industrial agricultural practices = wrecked agriculture = end of human civilization. This simple formula is apparently way too difficult to understand for the vast majority of global population (the 99%) including unfortunately the so-called global financial/economical/political elite (the 1%) who, despite all the power & wealth, also appear to be brainwashed by the same BS they lobotomize to the masses through MSM.
Human civilization always was synonymous with agriculture, and without the incredibly stable climate we experienced in the last 10K years, we would have remained hunter gatherer tribes for another 200K years. But now climate stability is a thing of the past and the corresponding population bottleneck must proceed… billions will die, unfortunately, in the most horrible possible ways: hunger and famine. On top of that, we all know what happens when there is not enough food to go around to feed everybody… wars, civil wars, genocide, resource wars, and in general all forms of human violence that in most cases are ‘hidden’ under political, economic, religious, or any other human artificial construct but that usually hide the biophysical constrains such as lack of food/energy/fresh water/arable land/etc.
Tom, if you are more interested in everything else related to agriculture/food and the coming huge human population die-off, I recommend you reading Lester Brown’s ‘Plan B’ and ‘World on the Edge’ books. He is a cornucopian who thinks we still can change and alter the coming crash course/civilization train wreck if only we adopt this and that measures. As we all know in this blog he is obviously wrong because of all the things we know regarding human predicament (I don’t want to list all the coming catastrophies again, we all read about them daily here thanks to xray mike’s & kevin moore’s newsfeed). Nonetheless, the books are worth a reading just to better understand the scale and scope of the ‘problems’ we face feeding 7 billion people & growing, with a climate worsening by the day and no solution whatsoever because the time for solutions ended four or five decades ago.
Now, as we all know, we have already crossed just way too many tipping points/planetary state shifts in atmosphere, hydrosphere/oceans, cryosphere, biosphere, etc, ect, etc so collapse/extinction/NTE/bottleneck/etc is all but assured. We could evaporate into thin air all 7 billion of us today and stop all CO2 FF emisions and it would still make no difference because the planet has already shifted to a much more jurassic/hothouse carbon rich atmosphere, anoxic acidic oceans, etc etc
etc.
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Epic rundown. I need a drink after that.
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“Paranoia is in bloom,
The PR transmissions will resume,
They’ll try to push drugs that keep us all dumbed down,
And hope that we will never see the truth around…
(So come on)
Another promise, another scene,
Another packaged lie to keep us trapped in greed,
And all the green belts wrapped around our minds,
And endless red tape to keep the truth confined ..”
Today from Truthout…
“Capitalism and the Destruction of Life on Earth: Six Theses on Saving the Humans” by Richard Smith
http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/19872-capitalism-and-the-destruction-of-life-on-earth-six-theses-on-saving-the-humans
Every Damn Day…
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And another…
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The Coming Plague
UXBRIDGE, Canada, Oct 10 2013 (IPS) – A climate plague affecting every living thing will likely start in 2020 in southern Indonesia, scientists warned Wednesday in the journal Nature. A few years later the plague will have spread throughout the world’s tropical regions.
By mid-century no place on the planet will be unaffected, said the authors of the landmark study.
“Within my generation, whatever climate we were used to will be a thing of the past.”
— Nature study lead author Camilo Mora
“We don’t know what the impacts will be. If someone is about to fall off a three-storey building you can’t predict their exact injuries but you know there will be injuries,” said Camilo Mora, an ecologist at University of Hawai‘i in Honolulu and lead author.
“The results shocked us. Regardless of the scenario, changes will be coming soon,” said Mora.
The “climate plague” is a shift to an entirely new climate where the lowest monthly temperatures will be hotter than those in the past 150 years. The shift is already underway due to massive emissions of heat-trapping carbon from burning oil, gas and coal.
Extreme weather will soon be beyond anything ever experienced, and old record high temperatures will be the new low temperatures, Mora told IPS. This will affect billions of people and there is no going back to the way things were.
“Within my generation, whatever climate we were used to will be a thing of the past,” he said.
In less than 10 years, a country like Jamaica will look much like it always has but it will not be the same country. Jamaicans and every living thing on the island and in its coastal waters will be experiencing a new, hotter climate – hotter on average than the previous 150 years.
The story will be same around 2030 in southern Nigeria, much of West Africa, Mexico and Central America without major reductions in the use of fossil fuels, the study reports.
“Some species will adapt, some will move, some will die,” said co-author Ryan Longman also at the University of Hawai‘i.
Tropical regions will shift first because their historical temperature ranges are narrow. Climate change may only shift temperatures by 1.0 degree C but that will be too much for some plants, amphibians, animals and birds that have evolved in a very stable climate, Longman said.
Tropical corals are already in sharp decline due to a combination of warmer ocean temperatures and higher levels of ocean acidity as oceans absorb most the carbon from burning oil, gas and coal.
The Nature study examined 150 years of historical temperature data, more than a million maps, and the combined projections of 39 climate models to create a global index of when and where a region shifts into novel climate. That is to say a local climate that is continuously outside the most extreme records the region has experienced in the past 150 years.
Canada’s climate won’t shift until 2050 under the business as usual emissions scenario the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) calls RCP8.5. The further a region is from the equator, the later the shift occurs. If the world sharply reduces its use of fossil fuels (RCP4.5), then these climate shifts are delayed 10 to 30 years depending on the location, the study shows. (City by city projection here)
Tropical regions are also those with greatest numbers of unique species. Costa Rica is home to nearly 800 species, while Canada, which is nearly 200 times larger in area, has only about 70 unique or endemic species.
Species matter because the abundance and variety of plants, animals, fish, insects and other living things are humanity’s life support system, providing our air, water, food and more.
“It’s an elegant study that shows timing of when climate shifts beyond anything in the recent past,” said Simon Donner, a climate scientist at Canada’s University of British Columbia.
Donner, who wasn’t involved in the study, agrees that the new regional climates in the tropics will have big impacts on many species.
“A number of other studies show corals, birds, and amphibians in the tropics are very sensitive to temperature changes,” Donner told IPS.
The impacts on ecosystems, food production, water availability or cites and towns are not known. However, the results of the study confirm the urgent need to reduce carbon emissions to reduce those future impacts, he said.
Developed countries not only need to make larger reductions in their emissions, they need to increase their “funding of social and conservation programmes in developing countries to minimize the impacts of climate change”, the study concludes.
Amongst the biggest impacts the coming ‘climate plague’ will have is on food production, said Mora.
“In a globalised world, what happens in tropics won’t stay in the tropics,” he said.
Study: http://users.ugent.be/~everleye/Ecosystem%20Dynamics/Mora%20et%20al%20nature%202013.pdf
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Strong quake hits Japan, shakes Fukushima
AFP
Tokyo, November 10, 2013
First Published: 15:26 IST(10/11/2013)
Last Updated: 15:29 IST(10/11/2013)
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A 5.5-magnitude earthquake hit eastern Japan on Sunday, rocking buildings in Tokyo, seismologists said. The quake struck at 7:37am, in Ibaraki prefecture, north of the capital, at a depth of 59 km, the US Geological Survey said. The crippled Fukushima nuclear power plant was
shaken by the quake but there were no abnormalities reported, the plant’s operator said.
The quake lasted about 30 seconds and was felt by many people in Tokyo.
High-speed Shinkansen trains were stopped briefly for a track check, but quickly returned to normal operation.
More than 18,000 people died when a 9.0-magnitude sub-sea earthquake sent a towering tsunami barrelling into Japan’s northeast coast in March 2011 in the country’s worst post-World War II disaster.
Cooling systems at the Fukushima nuclear plant were knocked out, sending reactors into meltdown and forcing tens of thousands of people to flee.
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I see that someone just a stone’s throw away from where I live “liked” my post.
From the ‘About‘ section of her blog:
thetinfoilhatsociety
The title of the blog is in reference to a coworker’s actual EMS call several years ago: a woman walking completely nude down a very busy interstate – other than the tin foil hat she wore. She said it kept the aliens from being able to read her thoughts or tell her anything. It has stuck with me ever since, and since I live near Sedona it seemed appropriate. The blog is actually about my home, garden, chickens, work, sustainability, peak oil, and efforts toward sustainability in a semi rural area. My husband thinks I’m crazy for trying all this, hence the tin foil hat…we might as well start a society because I know there are others out there like me!
I have a similar story to that one. In a sleepy desert town just 45 minutes from where I now live there was a medical technologist, a very proficient one too, who wholeheartedly subscribed to the conspiracy theory that the government was trying to control his thoughts by way of special microwaves. Thus to block the microwaves from entering his head he made hats out of tinfoil and would wear them whenever he could. The administration of the hospital knew about his quirky penchant and tolerated it until the day when he started making tinfoil hats for patients to wear in the hospital. I don’t know where he went after being escorted out of the hospital that day.
Too bad climate change and all the other issues discussed on this blog aren’t just the loony ideas of a conspiracist. Sadly, they’re all too real in a world that won’t face up to them.
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Gerald Celente has a saying that I think applies to financial inequality but I wonder if it couldn’t be applied to the degradation of the global environment.
“When people lose everything & have nothing left to lose,they lose it.”
I’m saving a seat,next to me,on the sidelines for someone that doesn’t want to miss all the excitement.
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Pingback from:
Surviving Capitalism
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Pingback from:
Occuworld
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What grim pleasure, or Schadenfreude, do I get from reading these posts? Not that I am free of the doom foreseen, Weather: these past three days have been very windy, with much rain, more coming. Strong wind is normal for this time of year, but not for days on end. Health: they keep on about Superbugs, but they are simply those that the other stuff did not kill off. Laissez-faire Capitalism: one day they will have to replace it with the Corporate State or an assortment of Houses, each being a slave-owning fiefdom; other options are available, tho greedy fools would none of that.
If someone is holding a knife to your throat, the last thing that he wants is your lack of cooperation: he may have to find out how to feed himself without your assistance.
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And on top of this, the Pakistanis have to deal with drones bombing them.
ISLAMABAD – Pakistan is facing existence of five major risks related to climate change including rise in sea level, glacial retreats, floods, higher average temperature and higher frequency of droughts.
In addition, being a predominantly agricultural economy, climate change is estimated to decrease crop yields in Pakistan not only as a result of flooding, but also as a result of changing temperatures, which in turn will affect livelihoods and food production.
Deterioration of climate is irreversibly harming Pakistan, as the glacier melt in the Himalayas is projected to increase flooding and affect water resources within the next two to three decades.
This will be followed by decreased river flows over time as glaciers recede. The glacial melt will affect fresh water flows with dramatic adverse effects on biodiversity and livelihood with possible long-term implications on regional food security.
More: http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/islamabad/11-Nov-2013/pakistan-facing-climate-change-risks
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qscwsxesz: wow, what a response! Yeah, anyone who thinks that if they’re rich enough they can escape what’s coming is delusional. As Guy McPherson points out – it’s the HABITAT for humanity that will become the big problem going forward. To that we add all the other ills we’ve caused (that you spelled out so eloquently above) – basically pollution of all kinds and too many people cause disease, resource depletion and the rest (like the collapse of infrastructure, economy and civilization).
xraymike: another great post. Thanks for your efforts and sharing. It’s like the few guys at the top are battling for control of the Titanic as it takes on more and more water . . . .
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Unprecedented storm is the shape of things to come… piles of dead bodies and debri:
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Now this takes balls…
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Say a prayer for the Philippine people.
How could climate change affect typhoons?
Typhoons, hurricanes and all tropical storms draw their vast energy from the warmth of the sea. As Prof Will Steffen, at the Australian National University, says: “We know sea-surface temperatures are warming pretty much around the planet, so that’s a pretty direct influence of climate change on the nature of the storm.”
Another key factor is the temperature difference between sea level and the top of the storm, as this gradient is the heat engine that drives storm. Scientists think that climate change is increasing this difference.
Has scientific research made a link between climate change and more severe cyclones?
Yes. Prof Myles Allen, at the University of Oxford, says: “The current consensus is that climate change is not making the risk of hurricanes any greater, but there are physical arguments and evidence that there is a risk of more intense hurricanes.” A Nature Geoscience research paper from 2010 found that global warming will increase the average intensity of the storms while the total number of storms will fall, meaning fewer but more severe cyclones. It also found that rainfall in the heart of the storms will increase by 20%.
A 2013 study by MIT’s Prof Kerry Emmanuel agreed that the most intense cyclones – category 3 to 5 – will increase, but the work suggested smaller cyclones would also increase. It also found that “increases in tropical cyclones are most prominent in the western North Pacific”, ie where typhoon Haiyan struck.
In 2011, a synthesis report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change concluded that the average wind speeds in cyclones are likely to increase, as was the frequency of heavy rainfall, but it noted the difficulty of linking changes in complex events like cyclones to climate change.
What does this mean for the loss of life and damage caused by the storms?
It will get worse. Rising sea levels already means that the storm surges – the huge waves that crash on to coastal areas and are the most deadly feature of cyclones – have a headstart. As climate change intensifies cyclones, the storm surges get bigger. The greater downpours during the cyclones also adds to the risk of flooding.
You said some extreme weather events can be directly linked to climate change. How is that done?
It is called attribution and uses detailed computer modelling to replicate the heatwave, flood or other meteorological disaster. Then the models are run again – often thousands of times, but without the additional heat in the system trapped by the greenhouse gases emitted from fossil fuel burning. The differences between the results shows the effect of climate change.
A study by Allen showed that the severe flooding in the UK in 2000 was made two to three times more likely by global warming. Another study showed the extreme Russian heatwave of 2010, which resulted in 50,000 deaths, was made three times more likely by climate change,
Allen said the influence of climate change on typhoon Haiyan could be calculated. “This is a question we could answer if we diverted the right resources to it,” he said. “If we used the same tools as are used now to make seasonal weather forecasts, there would be a straightforward answer.”
Allen said such attribution studies should be prioritised. “It’s first things first: we should know now how climate change is affecting us rather than how it will affect us in 100 years’ time. It is a common misconception that climate change affects everyone. It affects some people a lot and others not very much – but we don’t know who is who.
– source
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Helen Haldicott on Fukushima. Excellent. WAF.
http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Gqz9qDyZ004&desktop_uri=%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DGqz9qDyZ004
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Mother: Caring for 7 Billion
2011Home » Environment – Documentary
The type of world in which our ancestors lived for hundreds of thousands of years women probably had four to six children in a lifetime. Half of those children would die before they could reproduce. So the only thing we can be sure about in human population studies is that for the last 100,000 years, people on average, had two children to succeed them, or there would have been a population explosion a thousand years ago.
In just the last nanosecond of human history, which began ten thousand years ago with the advent of agriculture, we began to change the way we looked at the earth; something that we separated ourselves from. It is the basis for our civilization today. We have spread notions of proper sanitation as we’ve vaccinated for diseases, as we’ve provided famine relief and basic levels of health care, we see an unintended consequence of our best intentions. By adding fossil fuels to our agriculture, we have allowed population to simply skyrocket.
In the 1960’s, population was growing at an unprecedented rate, the highest in human history; as famine developed in South Asia spreading fear to the rest of the planet. The world started grasping the urgency of the situation. Advocacy groups, such as Zero Population Growth (ZPG), emerged in the US in the 1960s. For the first time, population growth was linked as a major factor responsible for the global environmental crisis, at the first Earth Day in 1970.
40 years later, the environmental message has not changed. Apart from a few persistent groups, population growth is barely being mentioned. It’s as if the issue has been diluted among all the others; Even though population growth and human consumption are the major factors in our on-going environmental crisis. We are adding about 50 Million new middle class each year; modeling their consumption habits from the unsustainable lifestyle of the developed world. A triumph for progress and poverty, but a ticking bomb for our civilization.
Watch the full documentary now – 60 min
http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/mother-caring-for-7-billion/
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“The Philippines government has firmly connected the super typhoon Haiyan with climate change, and urged governments meeting in Poland on Monday to take emergency action to resolve the deadlocked climate talks.
“We cannot sit and stay helpless staring at this international climate stalemate. It is now time to take action. We need an emergency climate pathway,” said Yeb Sano, head of the government’s delegation to the UN climate talks, in an article for the Guardian, in which he challenged climate sceptics to “get off their ivory towers” to see the impacts of climate change firsthand.
Sano, whose family comes from the devastated town of Tacloban where the typhoon Haiyan made landfall on Friday, said that countries such as the Philippines did not have time to wait for an international climate deal, which countries have agreed to reach in Paris in 2015.
“What my country is going through as a result of this extreme climate event is madness,” he told delagates from 190 countries, as UN climate negotiations get underway for a fortnight today in Warsaw. “The climate crisis is madness. We can stop this madness. Right here in Warsaw. Typhoons such as Haiyan and its impacts represent a sobering reminder to the international community that we cannot afford to procrastinate on climate action..
“Science tells us that simply, climate change will mean more intense tropical storms. As the Earth warms up, that would include the oceans. The energy that is stored in the waters off the Philippines will increase the intensity of typhoons and the trend we now see is that more destructive storms will be the new norm.”.
Sano dared anyone who doubted man-made climate change to visit his country: “To anyone who continues to deny the reality that is climate change, I dare them to go to the islands of the Pacific, the islands of the Caribbean and the islands of the Indian ocean and see the impacts of rising sea levels; to the mountainous regions of the Himalayas and the Andes to see communities confronting glacial floods, to the Arctic where communities grapple with the fast dwindling polar ice caps, to the large deltas of the Mekong, the Ganges, the Amazon, and the Nile where lives and livelihoods are drowned, to the hills of Central America that confronts similar monstrous hurricanes, to the vast savannas of Africa where climate change has likewise become a matter of life and death as food and water becomes scarce.”
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/nov/11/typhoon-haiyan-philippines-climate-talks
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Dec, 2012, DOHA The lead negotiator for the Philippines, Naderev Saño, at the Climate Conference in Doha made an appeal, which was met with resounding silence across the global centers of power and wealth. The message really is clear that these countries, these people, and just about everybody and everything else on earth can just FOAndD.
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Keep up the good work.
Do I detect increased awareness of collapse and increased subjugation of the masses?
(My Internet is currently running at snail’s pace, so I’m almost out of action.)
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Yes, increased subjugation of the masses at the same time that the environment is coming unglued.
I was just watching some videos of police brutality in Russia. I almost vomited. America pales by comparison, really.
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In Asia, I have seen protesters just flat out killed in the streets or on public land without retribution or recourse of any kind. I tried to get people in the states, especially the progressive media, to look, to see, to acknowledge. Nada. Zip. It was like banging my head on concrete. In the 90s, in the states, when I was complaining about police brutality and trying to get community oversight of police, I tried to get melanin free Americans to do something, or at least open their eyes and look. To a person I couldn’t get anyone or any organizations interested. So, no surprise then a decade later when something like the Boston lockdown happens and the guns get turned another way. Oops. The police state has a muzzle down your gullet and now it’s t-o-oo late.
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“And the reason collapse is an unacceptable topic of discussion if it relates to us, in the present or the foreseeable future, is that the moment you mention it, the topic stops being it, or us; the topic becomes you. What is wrong with you, why are you collapsing, and is it contagious? (Actually, just go away anyway, because you are probably bad luck.) This society operates on a combination of conformism and one-upmanship. Collapse as reality is nonconformist—in a society that worships success it is seen as defeatist and unpatriotic. It is also noncompetitive—because who on earth would want to buy it? “After all, who wants to hear that their very identity—the industrially civilized ego they have built throughout their entire lives, the ego that defines who they are—is, well, dying?” (p. 89) (By the way, this explains why my last book hasn’t sold all that well.) In any case, if you keep at it, you come to be seen as a loser. Then you start feeling like an unlucky outcast, and before too long you end up with a psychological problem, and start asking yourself questions such as : “What’s wrong with me?” “Have I gone mad?” and “Should I kill myself?””
http://cluborlov.blogspot.com/b/post-preview?token=aE2-SkIBAAA.ZZDhsVTWMys-y9mfh4IpdA.7SaE37x_wIyFGQcNwZvidw&postId=2214688568832978229&type=POST
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pfgetty quoting Orlov’s blog:
“What’s wrong with me?” “Have I gone mad?” and “Should I kill myself?”
I never ask myself those questions. Instead I ask:
What is wrong with society? Have they gone mad? Should I just spare myself the angst and forget it all, joining the rest of the herd racing headlong over the cliff?
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That’s because you have done the hrd work of looking honestly and objectively at our human situation. Most people don’t.
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Society is clearly mad, at least where I live. There are still parts of the world that I’ve lived where things are quite different, much more human still, much more satisfying on an everyday lived basis. Sadly we don’t really get to have all that much say about where we live or I wouldn’t be where I am, probably true for the vast majority of the world’s humans.
Joining the herd might be an appealing option, except that what they do with their limited time and energy (after slaving away at meaningless jobs) is so fucking dull, tedious, meaningless, unsatisfying, embarrassing, stupid, lonely, etc. The hilarious tragedy of it to me is that they continue to pursue these activities (even lengths of time sitting in front of a screen has to count as an activity lol) and cope with the inevitable disappointment with yet more rounds of the same activities, plus pharmaceuticals that are intended to mask that disappointment. Talk about insanity–doing the same thing over and over and yet expecting the results to be different!
Its not that I’m too morally superior to party as the earth burns, its that the partying going on around me isn’t even close to being as enjoyable as reading a good book, cooking a decent meal, taking a walk in a scruffy neglected park, watching yet another internet documentary on the horrors we are living through, and limiting my social interactions to times when I’m ready to cope with the narcissism, dullness, and fuckwit-ery. Show me some decent end-of-the-world party options and I’ll put on my dancing clothes and jump right in, at least once in a while anyway lol.
It makes me wonder a lot about what the relatively privileged (as opposed to the hungry masses or the elite) Roman, Mayan, Mughul, Khmer etc. citizen did as collapse came on. Was it as pointlessly, exhaustingly, mind numbingly vapid as what goes on now? To be in the global 1% and yet live such pathetic lives, sickening, isn’t it?
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i relate very well to the closing remark about living pathetic lives, as well as the earlier remarks expressing alienation from lamestream partying. as guy mcpherson repeatedly states, being born into empire means being born into captivity. for all it’s material wealth, life in a gilded cage is very unsatisfying.
i tried commenting yesterday to this blog but my comments were rejected, nor could i read any of that day’s comments. i thought it was a blog problem, but now i see comments were posted yesterday (except mine). computer problems? anyway, my comment that didn’t go through was my opinion that xray posts too many links. information overload. i have to scroll by many of them to not fall behind.
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pfgettyy2013 and all:
it may actually be more sinister and devious than the climate. Dutchsinse shows that there were electromagnetic pulses that occurred prior to many of the last typhoons. See here:
http://sincedutch.wordpress.com/2013/11/11/11112013-tropical-storm-zoraida-formed-after-microwave-pulse-heads-for-philippines/
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I just started reading this last night: http://www.amazon.com/Arming-Mother-Nature-Catastrophic-Environmentalism/dp/0199740054/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1384297806&sr=8-1&keywords=arming+mother+nature
Wow, I guess it is still possible for me to be shocked at learning something unexpected, something new to add to the catalog of horrors I’m now aware of. I would not have believed what I’m reading now, especially if I’d just come across this information on a blog or something.
Our destruction of the earth may not just be by way of global warming as a result of the every day industrial machine. It may actually be a much more active and targeted series of attacks, carefully planned and researched and intentionally destructive to the foundations of human life, at least for those humans our corporate oligarchy decides need to be purged for whatever reason. Check the book out if you haven’t already, truly mind blowing and in a serious way, not just some conspiracy-type speculation.
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I read the blurb of the book and my initial impression is that if ‘secret’ geoengineering projects were really carried out in order to gain a military advantage, then such schemes are the ultimate display of human stupidity, greed, and violence. As we can clearly see today, this climate chaos monster is under the control of no nation and strikes indiscriminately.
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“…such schemes are the ultimate display of human stupidity, greed, and violence.” No question whatsoever about that.
its astonishing to me as I’m reading the book that is that some of the very same people who became vocal ‘experts’ in the environment were part of the very overt process of pursuing these schemes after WWII. And the whole system of earth surveillance and monitoring, the very data science uses to establish baselines and to understand human impacts on the earth, all was actually planned and funded and carried out with these military goals from the very beginning. The vast expansion of science into ecology and ecosystems and climate was never neutral science, the agenda was to understand areas of vulnerability and how to use natural systems to win wars. The same impacts of global warming that are now viewed with such alarm were actually studied with the intent to figure out how to trigger them in order to incapacitate the Evil Empire of the other. Sickening, so insane as to be almost unbelievable.
Very much worth reading, it offers a whole new insight into the ongoing conflicts over environmental science today, a genealogy of sorts.
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Scientists “Alarmed”: Hundreds of sea turtles wash up dead on Pacific coast — Dogs “stopped breathing and died almost instantly” when eating them — Biologists looking into possible causes — Females having reproductive problems
http://enenews.com/scientists-alarmed-hundreds-sea-turtles-discovered-dead-pacific-coast-dogs-stopped-breathing-died-almost-instantly-when-eating-biologists-looking-possible-females-having-reproductive-problems
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From the New York Times, a poignant essay on the impending extinction of man:
[excerpt]
“…The challenge the Anthropocene poses is a challenge not just to national security, to food and energy markets, or to our “way of life” — though these challenges are all real, profound, and inescapable. The greatest challenge the Anthropocene poses may be to our sense of what it means to be human. Within 100 years — within three to five generations — we will face average temperatures 7 degrees Fahrenheit higher than today, rising seas at least three to 10 feet higher, and worldwide shifts in crop belts, growing seasons and population centers. Within a thousand years, unless we stop emitting greenhouse gases wholesale right now, humans will be living in a climate the Earth hasn’t seen since the Pliocene, three million years ago, when oceans were 75 feet higher than they are today. We face the imminent collapse of the agricultural, shipping and energy networks upon which the global economy depends, a large-scale die-off in the biosphere that’s already well on its way, and our own possible extinction. If homo sapiens (or some genetically modified variant) survives the next millenniums, it will be survival in a world unrecognizably different from the one we have inhabited.
Geological time scales, civilizational collapse and species extinction give rise to profound problems that humanities scholars and academic philosophers, with their taste for fine-grained analysis, esoteric debates and archival marginalia, might seem remarkably ill suited to address. After all, how will thinking about Kant help us trap carbon dioxide? Can arguments between object-oriented ontology and historical materialism protect honeybees from colony collapse disorder? Are ancient Greek philosophers, medieval theologians, and contemporary metaphysicians going to keep Bangladesh from being inundated by rising oceans?
Of course not. But the biggest problems the Anthropocene poses are precisely those that have always been at the root of humanistic and philosophical questioning: “What does it mean to be human?” and “What does it mean to live?” In the epoch of the Anthropocene, the question of individual mortality — “What does my life mean in the face of death?” — is universalized and framed in scales that boggle the imagination. What does human existence mean against 100,000 years of climate change? What does one life mean in the face of species death or the collapse of global civilization? How do we make meaningful choices in the shadow of our inevitable end?
These questions have no logical or empirical answers. They are philosophical problems par excellence. Many thinkers, including Cicero, Montaigne, Karl Jaspers, and The Stone’s own Simon Critchley, have argued that studying philosophy is learning how to die. If that’s true, then we have entered humanity’s most philosophical age — for this is precisely the problem of the Anthropocene. The rub is that now we have to learn how to die not as individuals, but as a civilization…
…Now, when I look into our future — into the Anthropocene — I see water rising up to wash out lower Manhattan. I see food riots, hurricanes, and climate refugees. I see 82nd Airborne soldiers shooting looters. I see grid failure, wrecked harbors, Fukushima waste, and plagues. I see Baghdad. I see the Rockaways. I see a strange, precarious world.
Our new home.
The human psyche naturally rebels against the idea of its end. Likewise, civilizations have throughout history marched blindly toward disaster, because humans are wired to believe that tomorrow will be much like today — it is unnatural for us to think that this way of life, this present moment, this order of things is not stable and permanent. Across the world today, our actions testify to our belief that we can go on like this forever, burning oil, poisoning the seas, killing off other species, pumping carbon into the air, ignoring the ominous silence of our coal mine canaries in favor of the unending robotic tweets of our new digital imaginarium. Yet the reality of global climate change is going to keep intruding on our fantasies of perpetual growth, permanent innovation and endless energy, just as the reality of mortality shocks our casual faith in permanence.
The biggest problem climate change poses isn’t how the Department of Defense should plan for resource wars, or how we should put up sea walls to protect Alphabet City, or when we should evacuate Hoboken. It won’t be addressed by buying a Prius, signing a treaty, or turning off the air-conditioning. The biggest problem we face is a philosophical one: understanding that this civilization is already dead. The sooner we confront this problem, and the sooner we realize there’s nothing we can do to save ourselves, the sooner we can get down to the hard work of adapting, with mortal humility, to our new reality.
The choice is a clear one. We can continue acting as if tomorrow will be just like yesterday, growing less and less prepared for each new disaster as it comes, and more and more desperately invested in a life we can’t sustain. Or we can learn to see each day as the death of what came before, freeing ourselves to deal with whatever problems the present offers without attachment or fear.
If we want to learn to live in the Anthropocene, we must first learn how to die.”
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If you want a picture of what the future will be like simply look at the photos and articles coming out of the destroyed sections of the Philippines where “officials” are creating shell organizations to accept foreign aid money and then of course stealing it (or at least not using it for the intended victims), people are looting and rioting and starving – and as usual it’s the women and children, the elderly and the infirm that suffer most. It’s so predictable – our selfish survival instinct overrides any concern for others when catastrophe hits.
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Selfish survival instinct, or this:
“The Philippines has one of the world’s most heavily armed civilian populations, few effective gun control regulations and a tradition of violence being used in personal disputes, legacies of being an American possession before World War II.” From the NYTimes article on Tlacoban in reference to the looting. The key phrase is the last one.
http://climatechangepsychology.blogspot.com/2013/11/mayor-of-haiyan-ravaged-tacloban-urges.html
Remember the miners trapped underground in Chile? They survived not by acting like good little american sociopaths, but rather decided to share everything equally, even tiny spoonfuls of their remaining supplies, assigning duties based on individual skills, and voting on everything. Actually pretty amazing considering the rigid hierarchical society they come from.
I totally agree that our future looks likely to be plenty sociopathic in the near term, but not because of our selfish survival instincts, that is propaganda constantly spouted by those who act that way themselves and win big in our sociopathic society. The same oligarchs feed us an endless stream of ‘entertainment’ that is saturated by this propaganda and full of unquestioned assumptions about human nature. Faced with a true survival situation, perhaps our oldest human heritage is what is selected for, rather than qualities we acquire during our modern acculturation into the prison of Spencerian capitalism.
Check out this great essay on why we love sociopaths by Adam Kotsko, who also writes on the blog An und für sich. An excerpt (but read the whole thing):
“What our cultural fascination with the fantasy sociopath points toward, however, is the fact that the social order doesn’t exist simply to provide comfort and predictability in interpersonal interactions. One would hope that it might also deliver some form of justice or fairness. The failure to deliver on that front is much more serious and consequential than the failure to allay our social anxieties, though the pattern is similar in both cases. In a society that is breaking down, the no-win situation of someone flagrantly cutting in line repeats itself over and over, on an ever grander scale, until the people who destroyed the world economy walk away with hundreds of millions of dollars in “bonuses” and we’re all reduced to the pathetic stance of fuming about how much we hate that asshole—and the asshole also has the help of a worldwide media empire (not to mention an increasingly militarized police force) to shout us down if we gather up the courage to complain.
At that point, the compensation of moral superiority no longer suffices. We recognize our weakness and patheticness and project its opposite onto our conquerors. If we feel very acutely the force of social pressure, they feel nothing. If we are bound by guilt and obligation, they are completely amoral. And if we don’t have any idea what to do about the situation, they always know exactly what to do. If only I didn’t give a fuck about anyone or anything, we think—then I would be powerful and free. Then I would be the one with millions of dollars, with the powerful and prestigious job, with more sexual opportunities than I know what to do with. In short order, it even comes to seem that only such people can get ahead.”
http://thenewinquiry.com/features/why-we-love-sociopaths/
http://itself.wordpress.com/
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Interesting new post on the free trade agreements
Now consider what this means. These companies are not suing for actual expenses or loss of assets; they are suing for loss of potential future profits. They are basically acting as if their profit in a particular market was guaranteed absent government action. And no one else enjoys these rights. Consider highly paid workers in nuclear plants. Will they get payments commensurate with the premium they’ve lost over the balance of their working lives from the phaseout of nuclear power? Will cigarette vendors in Australia get compensated for the decline in their sales? Commerce involves risk, which means exposure to loss, yet foreign investors want, and seem able to get, “heads I win, tails you lose” deals via these trade agreements.
Read more at http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2013/11/house-pushing-back-on-trade-deal-more-detail-on-how-secretive-arbitration-panels-undermine-laws-and-regulations.html#cjKyHJtRlOd84plT.99
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Secret Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP)
https://wikileaks.org/tpp/pressrelease.html
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Peak soil: industrial civilisation is on the verge of eating itself
New research on land, oil, bees and climate change points to imminent global food crisis without urgent action
“Wind causing soil erosion in agricultural fields, Suffolk, on 18 April 2013. Photograph: Alamy
A new report says that the world will need to more than double food production over the next 40 years to feed an expanding global population. But as the world’s food needs are rapidly increasing, the planet’s capacity to produce food confronts increasing constraints from overlapping crises that, if left unchecked, could lead to billions facing hunger.
The UN projects that global population will grow from today’s 7 billion to 9.3 billion by mid-century. According to the report released last week by the World Resources Institute (WRI), “available worldwide food calories will need to increase by about 60 percent from 2006 levels” to ensure an adequate diet for this larger population. At current rates of food loss and waste, by 2050 the gap between average daily dietary requirements and available food would approximate “more than 900 calories (kcal) per person per day.””
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/earth-insight/2013/jun/07/peak-soil-industrial-civilisation-eating-itself
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Eric: I agree with your point that it’s not ALWAYS this way (and great example, by the way – the Chilean miners), but it’s happening as I stated in the devastated island nation right now, and armed gangs are a significant part of the problem.
ulvfugl: yea, if this goes through it’s the end of sovereignty and nationhood. Really scary shit.
Here’s a follow-up to the article/video by Dutchsinse documenting that Yolanda/Haiyan was at least partially man-effected, if not “man-made.” He was taken to task by some Dr. in the Philippines who is an official, but he obviously knows nothing about weather weaponization/warfare by the U.S. military and resorts to ad hominem attack of Dutchsinse. Check it out if you’re interested:
http://sincedutch.wordpress.com/2013/11/12/weather-modification-101-dutchsinse-video-response-to-dr-mahar-lagmay-and-abs-cbn-news/
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Not that this is a surprise, but just so you know:
http://www.cryptogon.com/?p=42045
The Second Operating System Hiding in Every Mobile Phone
November 12th, 2013
The Find:
Back in July 2013, The Washington Post reported that nearly a decade ago, the National Security Agency developed a new technique that allowed spooks to “find cellphones even when they were turned off. JSOC troops called this ‘The Find,’ and it gave them thousands of new targets, including members of a burgeoning al-Qaeda-sponsored insurgency in Iraq, according to members of the unit.”
Many security researchers scratched their heads trying to figure out how this could be so.
Maybe it’s malware.
Maybe it’s a feature.
(links to OSNews, and concludes with)
So, we have a complete operating system, running on an ARM processor, without any exploit mitigation (or only very little of it), which automatically trusts every instruction, piece of code, or data it receives from the base station you’re connected to. What could possibly go wrong?
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sorry, it ACTUALLY concludes with:
It’s kind of a sobering thought that mobile communications, the cornerstone of the modern world in both developed and developing regions, pivots around software that is of dubious quality, poorly understood, entirely proprietary, and wholly insecure by design.
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Lol instead of ‘sobering’ I found it rather comforting, but then I’m coming from a perspective where I sometimes indulge in a little hope/dope that the deep green resistance (does it even exist?) can take advantage of the “dubious quality, poorly understood, entirely proprietary, and wholly insecure by design” state of such an essential part of the corporate octopus. That’s what comes from reading too much Derrick Jensen;)
Some more tentacles:
“A newly report released finds that a number of American writers avoid or are considering avoiding controversial topics for fear of government surveillance. The study was conducted last month by the PEN American Center and the FDR Group and surveyed 528 PEN members. It concludes: “Fully 85% of writers responding to PEN’s survey are worried about government surveillance of Americans, and 73% of writers have never been as worried about privacy rights and freedom of the press as they are today.” Moreover, it finds that 16 percent have avoided writing or speaking on a particular topic and 11 percent have seriously considered it. (PEN is an organization that promotes free speech and whose members may be generally more concerned about censorship issues than other writers.) The report concludes: “Writers are self-censoring their work and their online activity due to their fears that commenting on, researching, or writing about certain issues will cause them harm. Writers reported self-censoring on subjects including military affairs, the Middle East North Africa region, mass incarceration, drug policies, pornography, the Occupy movement, the study of certain languages, and criticism of the U.S. government.” In August, the writer William T. Vollmann brought concerns about government surveillance into the public eye with a Harper’s in which he revealed that he had been watched by the FBI. Vollmann wrote, “I was accused, secretly. I was spied on … I have no redress. To be sure, I am not a victim; my worries are not for me, but for the American Way of Life.” http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/11/12/244744204/book-news-spying-concerns-driving-writers-to-self-censor-study-finds
But on the plus side for me in my little local prison cell, ‘Seattle police deactivate surveillance system after public outrage’ http://rt.com/usa/seattle-mesh-network-disabled-676/
And, the socialist candidate for city council Kshama Sawant I mentioned previously (a friend of mine and a great person) is now ahead, http://www.thestranger.com/seattle/kshama-sawant-pushes-ahead-of-conlin/Content?oid=18201682
“‘Apoplectic,’ a city council staffer told an inside source when describing the atmosphere this evening inside many council offices after news broke that socialist Kshama Sawant has taken a narrow lead over 16-year incumbent Richard Conlin. Conlin losing would not only unravel a knot of plans for the new year, Sawant’s victory would add some unpredictability to City Hall.” http://slog.thestranger.com/slog/archives/2013/11/12/the-mood-at-the-city-council
Bwahahahaha
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I got lucky and signed up to be able to view Robert Greenwald’s film ‘Unmanned: America’s Drone Wars’ last night on Raw Story.
The unlisted youtube site with the full film is still up, give it a watch, its good. It may be/have been viewable previously and on other sites, but this is a good bet at the moment.
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Everyone get your refreshments. The fun’s about to begin.
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2013/11/13-0
If everyone glows in the dark, Hide & Seek won’t be as much fun.
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“From the place of ground zero,
O Lord, deliver us.
From the rain of the cobalt,
O Lord, deliver us.
From the rain of the strontium,
O Lord, deliver us.
From the fall of the cesium,
O Lord, deliver us.
From the curse of the Fallout,
O Lord, deliver us.
From the begetting of monsters,
O Lord, deliver us.
A morte perpetua,
Domine, libera nos.
Peccatores,
te rogamus, audi nos.”
-A Canticle For Liebowitz, Walter M. Miller, Jr.
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and the Lord said:
“Hey, I told ya not to mess with that shit, so now you have to suffer and die because you stubborn, stupid, selfish morons won’t listen! i’m out of it, now, you fix it.”
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Fukushima,Global Warming,NTHE are all topics that can depress but I’ve always had control of my emotions,except when it comes to a good laugh.I don’t know if you meant for your comment to be humorous but I got a damn good laugh out of it.
Thanks
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Robot locates leaks on Fukushima reactor
A robot at the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant has for the first time identified exactly where highly radioactive water is leaking from a reactor.
Plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Company, or TEPCO, on Wednesday succeeded in sending a remote-controlled robot close to the lower part of the No.1 reactor’s containment vessel.
The lower section is filled with contaminated water injected to cool molten nuclear fuel. Extremely high radiation levels have hampered efforts to probe that section.
A camera on the robot captured 2 leaks around the containment vessel in the building housing the reactor.
TEPCO engineers say they’re not sure how much water is leaking. But they say one of the leaks looks as if tap water is gushing out.
Radiation levels in the area were extremely high at 0.9 to 1.8 sieverts an hour.
Engineers suspect that damage to containment vessels at the No. 2 and 3 reactors is also causing similar leaks of highly radioactive water.
They say Wednesday’s finding is important not only in solving water contamination problems but also in carrying out decommissioning. TEPCO will continue to use robots to look for other leaks.
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The FBI Claims MIT PhD Candidate, Ryan Shapiro’s FOIA Research will “Irreparably Damage National Security”
http://www.sparrowmedia.net/2013/11/fbi-designates-mit-foia-ryan-shapiro-national-security/
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WARSAW, Nov 13 (Reuters) – This year is the seventh warmest since records began in 1850 with a trend to weather extremes and the impact of storms such as Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines aggravated by rising sea levels, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said on Wednesday.
A build-up of manmade greenhouse gases in the atmosphere meant a warmer future was now inevitable, WMO Secretary-General Michel Jarraud said in a statement on the sidelines of U.N. climate talks among almost 200 nations in Warsaw.
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Snowden Reveals Monsanto Collusion with Government to Create Chemtrails
By: Christina Sarich, Staff Writer, Waking Times
You already know about Snowden unveiling the secret of heavy government surveillance via the NSA and CIA on its own people, but the whistleblower has released another information bomb that will make chemtrail watchers and suspects of the ‘conspiracy’ of a eugenics program sit up and listen.
According to Snowden, chemtrails are part of a ‘benevolent’ program to stop global warming. By cooperating with jet fuel manufacturers (and though he doesn’t say this, likely branches of the military) the government has been spraying the skies with chemicals in order to keep us from severe draught and other weather patterns which would cause famine in large swaths of the United States. But here’s the biggest shocker – with cooperation from Monsanto, a secret geo-engineering lab was set up, known by insiders as the ‘crown jewel’ or Muad’Dib. This lab has been operating since the 1960s without the knowledge of the people.
Climate change is a big threat to Big Ag, but is this part of another smear campaign to hide deeper truths about what chemtrails are doing to us all? There is no doubt Monsanto is capable of something like this, but is this just a government attempt to address what is becoming exceedingly clear to more people all the time – that our skies are full of poison trails, that aren’t contrails at all?
Snowden has supposedly gone on record to say, “I am only revealing this program because there is no oversight in the scientific community, no public discussion, and little concern for the side-effects which are well known only to a few privileged people interested in continuing the decades-long chemtrail program in secret.”
Snowden also stated that the Maud’Dib program was set to go forward at all costs – even if it meant accelerating desertification in African or spreading carcinogens over countless people in populated areas. Scientists even predicted many of the side effects we are seeing now, including droughts in the Amazon and windstorms throughout the East Coast. Snowden shared documents through The Internet Chronicle, which has also published rumors of his supposed suicide. Names of scientists were not disclosed in order to prevent them from being targeted by our governments or foreign counterintelligence. According to Snowden, if chemtrails were stopped, the scientists behind the program believe that our climate would spiral out of control.
Deciding whether or not you believe Snowden’s story is up to you, but the mere unveiling of a reason behind chemtrails means that someone noticed we are noticing. The ‘additives’ being released by even passenger planes now have been filmed across the world by people in countries as varied as Australia, Europe and Asia. From California to Michigan, we aren’t the only ones being sprayed. The true reasons behind chemtrails and geo-engineering are probably yet to be completely disclosed.
http://www.consciousnewsmedia.blogspot.com/2013/11/snowden-reveals-monsanto-collusion-with.html?m=1#.UoUPSzK9KK2
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I’m suspicious that story is disinfo, I’ve seen it before, someone questioned that Snowden said anything like that, seemed there was no substantive basis.
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Put it in the category: MAYBE
I have lots of stuff in that category, and every once in a while I feel I have enough information to take something out of that category and put it in: FOR SURE.
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Difficult path to tread through all the craziness. There were people saying that Snowden had released secret info re contacts with aliens, but it was disinfo to get headlines for their agenda, knowing that Snowden was never going to make any public statement denying what they were claiming, they just made up whatever they wanted.
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The world’s oceans are becoming acidic at an “unprecedented rate” and may be souring more rapidly than at any time in the past 300 million years.
In their strongest statement yet on this issue, scientists say acidification could increase by 170% by 2100.
They say that some 30% of ocean species are unlikely to survive in these conditions.
The researchers conclude that human emissions of CO2 are clearly to blame.
The study will be presented at global climate talks in Poland next week.
In 2012, over 500 of the world’s leading experts on ocean acidification gathered in California. Led by the International Biosphere-Geosphere Programme, a review of the state of the science has now been published.
Continue reading the main story
“
Start Quote
You don’t find a mollusc at the ph level expected for 2100, this is really quite a stunning fact”
Prof Jean-Pierre Gattuso
CNRS
This Summary for Policymakers states with “very high confidence” that increasing acidification is caused by human activities which are adding 24 million tonnes of CO2 to oceans every day.
Pickled waters
The addition of so much carbon has altered the chemistry of the waters.
Since the start of the industrial revolution, the waters have become 26% more acidic.
“This is the state of the art,” said Prof Jean-Pierre Gattuso, from CNRS, the French national research agency.
“My colleagues have not found in the geological record, rates of change that are faster than the ones we see today.”
What worries the scientists is the potential impact on many ocean species including corals.
Studies carried out at deep sea vents where the waters are naturally acidic thanks to CO2, indicate that around 30% of the ocean’s biodiversity may be lost by the end of this century.
These vents may be a “window on the future” according to the researchers.
Continue reading the main story
ACIDIFYING OCEANS
The oceans are thought to have absorbed up to half of the extra CO2 put into the atmosphere in the industrial age
This has lowered their pH by 0.1
pH is the measure of acidity and alkalinity
It usually ranges from pH 0 (very acidic) to pH 14 (very alkaline); 7 is neutral
Seawater is mildly alkaline with a “natural” pH of about 8.2
“You don’t find a mollusc at the pH level expected for 2100, this is really quite a stunning fact,” said Prof Gattuso.
“It’s an imperfect window, only the ocean’s acidity is increasing at these sites, they don’t reflect the warming we will see this century.
“If you combine the two, it could be even more dramatic than what we see at CO2 vents.”
The effect of acidity is currently being felt most profoundly felt in the Arctic and Antarctic oceans. These chilly waters hold more CO2 and increasing levels of the gas are turning them acidic more rapidly than the rest of the world.
The more acidic they become, the more damaging they are to the shells and skeletons of marine organisms.
The researchers say that by 2020, ten percent of the Arctic will be inhospitable to species that build their shells from calcium carbonate. By 2100 the entire Arctic will be a hostile environment.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-24904143
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TV: Fukushima workers “fear for their own safety” — “The truth is astonishing… I don’t dare wash my hands, even after using toilet” (VIDEO)
http://enenews.com/tv-fukushima-workers-fear-for-their-own-safety-the-truth-is-astonishing-i-dont-dare-wash-my-hands-even-after-using-toilet-video
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Damaged fuel rods are cracked and leaking radioactive gases in Fukushima Unit 4 pool; Wire appears trapped in racks — Another assembly bent when “mishandled during a transfer”
http://enenews.com/damaged-fuel-rods-are-cracked-and-leaking-radioactive-gases-in-fukushima-unit-4-pool-wire-appears-trapped-in-racks-another-assembly-bent-when-mishandled-during-a-transfer
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pfgetty2013: I found that chemtrail story a few days ago and ran it through some people who follow everything Snowden and they said that unless the Guardian printed it in his name it’s bogus info. The Guardian has no record of it apparently. Trouble is almost anything is believable now, it’s hard to distinguish between the lies, misinformation and the honest to god truth. Especially after Sandy Hook, the Boston Marathon bombing and of course 9 -11. It’s all gone to shit.
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The so-called chemtrail program seems to be working great for AGW and ocean acidification! (heavy sarcasm). I’m afraid chemtrails are just another conspiracy theory for the tin foil hat society.
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As long as one is not too gullible it is good to present information that could possibly be true, to be decided upon as time goes on. Years ago I heard about the possibility that the official 9/11 story was a lie, as preposterous as that sounded. I put it in my maybe file, and over time collected lots more information. Finally, after years of listening, reading and thinking it became apparent that, indeed, they are lying about 9/11. Lots of disinformation mixed in, crazy stuff complicating it all, but in the end, if you have seen the evidence, you would have to be brain dead not to realize 9/11 was an inside job…no possibility of being wrong on this. Absolute undeniable proof. And yet the issue is forbidden in almost all media, even alternative media.
So I’ll just keep an open mind, discard ridiculous stuff, look for more information. You guys can do as you like if you are so sure there is no program of spraying. I don’t know, I’m not sure of any of this. But once you realize there are people, considered our leaders, that planned and executed 9/11, it is foolish to not consider other possible actions they may take for purposes I can hardly imagine.
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Ed Snowden has just released startling new NSA documents that prove the planet Ko-Lob is hurtling towards the Earth, The MMU (magic morman underwear) protects you from the Fukushima radiation and Il Papa Franceso is actually the inter galactic warlord Zenu in disguise. AAAHHHH! Joe Bageant, where are you when we need you, The hologram is getting too bizarre.
I think I will settle for this:
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Personally, I have been utterly rendered comatose by Greenwald’s new business plan for franchising the kewl Snowden data. He and Olmydier or whoever that guy is are now going to use crucial data – regarding the foundations of capitalism, privacy of everyone on earth, and the very right and ability to survive – into a kewl media outlet to “take it to the man” – uhm, yeah, right…The man…like…Take it to. Wake me during the commercials. Using Snowden documents to sell advertisement is just about the crassest, most ridiculous move any sentient human could make. What more kewl, edgy data is going to be released this week, month, …uh….year? Like this is so all friggin important that we have to wait … uh…years? Like, pardon me while I visit the latrine. Manning and Wikileaks set the bar. After that, all this just looks like kindergarten play time. Tell me I’m not dreaming.
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Arthur Silber has had a lot to say about this whole project, great stuff, he’s always worth reading in any case. http://powerofnarrative.blogspot.com/
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Thanks for the link, Eric.
Money = power = corruption.
Excerpts:
…To believe in the fantasy of the “good billionaire” in the required manner signifies only that one has decided to abandon facts, logic and reality altogether. (The only fantasy that approaches this in the scope of its self-delusion was the belief, shared by many in 2008, that Barack Obama was profoundly committed to “changing the very nature of politics.” You would think that people would appreciate, certainly by now,how dangerous delusions of this kind can be — and you would be grievously wrong.)…
…this is precisely how State capitalism (or corporatism) works, and how it has always worked. It’s the only way State capitalism can work. This is what State capitalism is designed to do: to advance the interests of very powerful companies and/or individuals closely allied with the State, and to severely damage — and ultimately destroy, if possible — any and all serious competition to those same interests…
…So what are the lessons? Most of them should be self-evident from the above discussion. I will set one lesson off by itself, and state it very simply: Unless you are an oligarch yourself — or unless you are content to be kept by one — oligarchs are not your friends.
I find it considerably more than slightly distressing that this appears to be news to many people, even those on the left side of the political spectrum. I guess we’re all the spawn of Obama (or any Democrat or progressive of your choice) and Romney (or any Republican or conservative of your choice) now. I knew there was a reason I’ve always been vehemently in favor of easily obtained and widely practiced means of birth control.
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Published on Friday, November 15, 2013 by Adbusters
‘Sleepwalking to Extinction’: Capitalism and the Destruction of Life and Earth
by Richard Smith
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/11/15-3
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Excerpt from the above article:
Capitalism is, overwhelmingly, the main driver of planetary ecological collapse
“From climate change to natural resource overconsumption to pollution, the engine that has powered three centuries of accelerating economic development, revolutionizing technology, science, culture and human life itself is, today, a roaring out-of-control locomotive mowing down continents of forests, sweeping oceans of life, clawing out mountains of minerals, pumping out lakes of fuels, devouring the planet’s last accessible natural resources to turn them into “product,” while destroying fragile global ecologies built up over eons of time. Between 1950 and 2000 the global human population more than doubled from 2.5 to 6 billion. But in these same decades, consumption of major natural resources soared more than sixfold on average, some much more. Natural gas consumption grew nearly twelvefold, bauxite (aluminum ore) fifteenfold. And so on. At current rates, Harvard biologist E.O. Wilson says that “half the world’s great forests have already been leveled and half the world’s plant and animal species may be gone by the end of this century.”
Corporations aren’t necessarily evil, though plenty are diabolically evil, but they can’t help themselves. They’re just doing what they’re supposed to do for the benefit of their shareholders. Shell Oil can’t help but loot Nigeria and the Arctic and cook the climate. That’s what shareholders demand. BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto and other mining giants can’t resist mining Australia’s abundant coal and exporting it to China and India. Mining accounts for 19% of Australia’s GDP and substantial employment even as coal combustion is the single worst driver of global warming. IKEA can’t help but level the forests of Siberia and Malaysia to feed the Chinese mills building their flimsy disposable furniture (IKEA is the third largest consumer of lumber in the world). Apple can’t help it if the cost of extracting the “rare earths” it needs to make millions of new iThings each year is the destruction of the eastern Congo — violence, rape, slavery, forced induction of child soldiers, along with poisoning local waterways. Monsanto and DuPont and Syngenta and Bayer Crop Science have no choice but to wipe out bees, butterflies, birds, small farmers and extinguish crop diversity to secure their grip on the world’s food supply while drenching the planet in their Roundups and Atrazines and neonicotinoids.
This is how giant corporations are wiping out life on earth in the course of a routine business day. And the bigger the corporations grow, the worse the problems become.”
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Enjoyed the link & the comments.
Well I’m not a Capitalist, I great at giving free advise.
“Everyone get a grip on your mortality.” lol
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pfgetty2013 said:
‘Years ago I heard about the possibility that the official 9/11 story was a lie, as preposterous as that sounded. I put it in my maybe file, and over time collected lots more information. Finally, after years of listening, reading and thinking it became apparent that, indeed, they are lying about 9/11. Lots of disinformation mixed in, crazy stuff complicating it all, but in the end, if you have seen the evidence, you would have to be brain dead not to realize 9/11 was an inside job…no possibility of being wrong on this. Absolute undeniable proof. And yet the issue is forbidden in almost all media, even alternative media.’
Yes, well, if you were a psychotic sociopath belonging to an elite group whose perks are dependent on keeping the masses dumbed-down and believing nonsense you would make sure that anything that seriously challenges the drivel churned out to keep the masses dumbed-down is squashed, and those who recognise the truth are marginalised. The empire is geared to maintaining status quo hierarchy and keeping the proles uninformed and passive. (And as we here recognise, destroying the life natural systems that make life as we know it possible.)
If you were a dumbed-down slave of the industrial empire who has been carefully trained not to think logically, to accept the utterly ridiculous as factual, you would be incapable of thinking logically and would self-censor to keep at bay anything that challenges the delusion.
In a recent essay Paul Cherfurka noted that he now recognises that everything mainstream is a lie; it always was, but earlier in life he could not see it .
The next few years are going to be particularly challenging for the empire because, as economies fail, as material wealth declines, and as the global environment collapses, it will become impossible to maintain the façade.
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Oh, so true, Kevin. The point is, for many years I believed the fairy tales, about how our leaders were determined to do the right thing. And then one day it becomes apparent that these elite ubermenschen have another agenda.
And so it is difficult sometimes to determine if some information is disinformation or not. We can’t go to our newspapers or tv news to find out what is true. So what I do is peruse many websites, pick up information as it comes, and put lots of stuff into the “maybe” file. If someone tells me some wild information, I don’t insult them and compare it to alien stories and tinfoil hat stuff. I realize that, considering how bizarre the 9/11 real story is, almost anything could be true. I just wait for more information, real proof.
Chem trails for me is in limbo. I don’t like defending it because I really don’t know the truth. I tend to not believe it. But considering the extreme measures the fossil fuel industry has gone to ensure the world’s people are completely confused about global warming, and the power they have over our politicians and media, and how they murdered 3000 on 9/11 and covered it up, and on and on, it doesn’t seem so preposterous that they are spraying some kinds of chemicals to alter, in their favor, the climate. Certainly it is something they think about doing. If they can keep the climate stable via geo-engineering, and continue to produce and sell fossil fuels without restriction, they certainly would be interested. They would, of course, realize that the only way they could pursue something like this is secretly. So it is not fantastical thinking that this could be true. The big thing for me is not that it could not possibly be true, but that I have no proof that it is. And so it remains in the “maybe” file.
Xraymike seemed to say that it is evident they are not using chemtrails to alter the climate because the climate is warming…..obviously they could not be using chemtrails. This is not a logical argument against the possibility that they are using chemtrails. They could be using chemtrails and it is not so effective, or the climate is changing but not as much as it could be changing.
The point is, we have all been looked at like crazies by people who don’t believe the stuff we know is true. To be on this site and have others compare valid, possible ideas to alien stories and tinfoil hats, much like the unaware people would apply to all of us, is insulting.
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‘I’ve been asked why I am so deeply pessimistic and hostile towards the systems of civilization. Call it the anger of trust betrayed.
Growing up, I was taught that the world worked in a particular way: that governments were of the people, for the people; that humans were conscious, rational creatures; that policy was guided by sound science; that human beings learned from their mistakes; that the future would be better than the past.
Now in my 60’s I discover that absolutely none of it is true. Governments are of the rich, for the rich; human beings are largely unconscious and most of our decisions spring from emotion rather than reason; policy is guided by greed for wealth and lust for power; most people want today to be about the same as yesterday, mistakes and all; and the future looks not just dim but bleak.’
http://www.paulchefurka.ca/Denial.html
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And I find the vast majority of humans are simply too busy to understand what is going on in the world, the big stuff, if it is not presented to them is fun, sexy bits of info by the news media. Getting kids off to school, paying bills, doing laundry, cooking and cleaning up meals, socializing, education, careers, sleeping, spending time to look good and well dressed and having hair done stylishly, and on and on…..all of that is essential stuff or the stuff most people enjoy. There simply isn’t time to go beyond the news and search for stuff that most do not even know exists.
And so a few of us see the reality, and are left talking to ourselves.
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I’m not sure I have a clear story yet in my own mind about how I ended up being the outsider that I am, why seeking an awareness of what is real–and identifying what is false–ended up being a stance that became rather permanent.
I do lots of normal things like anyone else, but I enjoy them because I have a sense of a bigger picture and these routine things don’t represent all that matters in the world, a solipsistic prison of tedium and irrelevance. It is this latter sense of things which I suspect is the repressed possibility underneath the lives of many of the more successfully ‘normal’ drones around me. Normal, but only as aided by endless distracting addictions and pharmaceuticals and busy-ness, most of which I avoid. My life is tiny and will be essentially meaningless, but that leaves me feeling rather light, not petrified. Getting to this place didn’t happen by accident, it involved choice and action, so I think it is possible for most people; I don’t think ignorance is innocent.
(Yes, curiosity involves risk, clearly; I’m reading an excellent history of it right now, very thought provoking, check it out. http://www.amazon.com/Curiosity-Science-Became-Interested-Everything/dp/022604579X/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1384623494&sr=8-3&keywords=curiosity)
I also don’t think being ‘normal’ is really working for many people no matter how hard they try, and its not really quiet lives of desperation anymore in this country–loud angry entitled belligerence seems to be the new norm. Berman is right on the money about this. Coming home after travel abroad, it is the everyday public ugliness and anger that is among the most difficult things for me to have to re-adapt to.
Here is a link to a lot of really enjoyable quotes about insanity, just who is and isn’t crazy. Cheers me up to read them occasionally, reaffirms a comfort level with my own weirdness and alienation lol. And in addition to talking to myself, I sometimes ‘talk’ to others like me out there through the intertubes on sites like this. And that means quite a bit actually.
http://www.cancertutor.com/Quotes/Quotes_Insanity.html
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The links/feeds on the left are among the best, as are the links in the comments, I have to time-limit myself following them or I won’t have a real life lol.
Here are a couple of sites I’ve found to be worth keeping up with, both coming from a philosophy perspective, which sometimes means doing some background reading in order to get the references, but that in itself is educational and satisfying.
Check out http://syntheticzero.net/, a collaborative project; one of the contributors wrote Archive Fire, a philosophical blog I enjoyed reading. Here’s a clip describing the project:
“Synthetic_Zero is a project designed to explore the challenges and opportunities of being and becoming human after nihilism. The collaborative approach presented here is intended as an experimental response to the various crises, disjunctions and unequally distributed realities of contemporary life.
‘Nihilism’ has never existed as a unified objective condition or psychological mood, but rather as organizing constellation of references expressing a growing awareness of the dissolution of various claims to truth, methodological faiths, social institutions, political regimes and cognitive orientations. A post-nihilist position thus begins from a recognition of the total collapse of intellectual certainty as well the delegitimization of all existing ideologies. “Look at zero and you see nothing”, wrote Robert Kaplan, “but look through it and you will see the world.”
Here you will find original and borrowed content engaging crucial issues circulating through speculative realist philosophies, anthropology, psychiatry, social work, political ecology, art, architecture, urban design, indigenous politics, and various contemporary social movements. Our intention is to seek and build bridges between various knowledges and practices in order to cultivate more flexible and adaptive modes of being, perceiving, becoming and expressing in the world.”
They link to plenty of fascinating things to watch and read.
Here’s one from noir realism http://darkecologies.com/, another great site to browse, entitled ‘Urban Futures?’. An excerpt, but read the whole thing, it made me think of what we see now in Leyte in the aftermath of Haiyan, where entire islands and the province is in ruins.
“The idea that cities have a future is almost quaint in this age of decline and fiscal bankruptcy, yet there are those who ‘keep the aspidistras flying’ – as that indefatigable commentator of the body social, George Orwell, in diaries, letters, essays, novels, stories, etc. so aptly coined that sense of keeping with a positive hope even in the midst of decay and ruin…It always seems that we force our hands into the darkness, to war, famine, disease, chaos before we suddenly realize that there must be another way, a different path to take; yet, have we ever learned from our past mistakes. No. We continuously repeat mistakes over and over and over again. Yet, in the past people could migrate to another locale, find a new home to rebuild their world and lives. Not this time my friends. There is no place to go, no elsewhere, or utopic world of the future to escape into, instead we’re all staring each other in the face with no where to migrate but in the ruins of each others dark cities and rural catastrophes.”
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@ Eric,
Thanks again for the great link. I was reading over all the comments from that article in the New York Times I mentioned earlier, Learning How to Die in the Anthropocene, and found the following comment which I have to share:
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I often wonder if the comments, the excellent ones like this one, aren’t the only times any real ‘truth’ gets into the mainstream press. We certainly aren’t going to hear this kind of bluntness from the Important Grownups or the Talking Heads or too many of the Experts in the main article, are we? Thanks for posting this so I got a chance to read it. The main article itself shocked me for where it was printed, hopefully it reached an enormous audience and got linked all over the webs, which was how I read it myself, as I don’t read much past the headlines on the main page of the NYTimes these days.
One of my top 5 personal fave sites for news and commentary, often the only place I still browse headlines when I’m on one of my mental-health-preserving news and blogs fasts (limit myself to 5 min per day for a few months) is NOT along the left of my screen here, a shocking omission lol! Check it out.
http://warincontext.org/
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@Eric,
It’s been a while since I’ve updated those feeds on the left – on the to-do list in the next month.
I mentioned earlier my fascination with the TV series ‘Breaking Bad’ which I’ve watched up to season 4 thus far. Not much of a TV head, I’ve never had any interest in a TV series, let alone viewed one all the way through, but ‘Breaking Bad’ is a great commentary on capitalism and life in America. It begs to be the subject of a future blog post. However, there’s a whole world out there passing us web junkies by as we whittle away our limited time on Earth. Thanksgiving is coming up and I’m going through my own family problems which need attending to, so I won’t post again for some time.
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This is such a great site, I hope keeping it up is something you enjoy and not just a chore. Bummer about the family problems, hope its nothing too major and the holidays help instead of hinder resolution. And I’m sure I’m not alone in hoping you post again sooner rather than later, the essays are fantastic.
I remember watching Breaking Bad for the first couple of seasons and also thinking much like you in terms of what it says about our culture. However, it got to the point where all I could see was a superimposed mental image of the writers, sitting around thinking up the increasingly improbable actions of the increasingly cartoonish characters, merely to be shocking or hip or controversial, and the show lost me. I also had to ask myself, what does this make me, if I’m allowing myself to be entertained by this? Better production values and more story than old Jerry Springer episodes maybe, but not really different in kind, that sort of ‘its disgusting but I can’t look away’ quality. I have to be in a particular mindset to be comfortable with my own answers.
Yet, I’m about ready to have a weekend marathon where I watch all seasons on Netflix, if I can get through them. I need escape once in a while and quality escape is hard to find, and Breaking Bad is good quality even if its evil. I’m in that mindset at the moment where loathing and shadenfreude plus lots of homemade beer should make it worthwhile lol. And yes, write up an essay about your thoughts on the show, something I can refer to and reflect on after my own immersion.
A series that I loved very much when I first watched it, but left me feeling it too was an excellent if unintentional portrayal of the american sociopathic culture of emptiness and destructive childishness on later viewings was Six Feet Under. As compelling as the characters were, they were repulsive on so many levels as well. I won’t watch it again, but as a study in why this society is doomed because the people in it are insane, it is rather riveting. Mad Men is similar for me, well done but fundamentally about absolutely hideous people and a society that is rotten and sick to its very core. Eventually I turn away, I’d rather watch actual porn porn, more satisfying, less cynical, even innocent compared to much of the sociopathic ugliness that is considered mainstream entertainment. I don’t have tv, I only watch things I download or on Netflix, and even then I often regret that I’ve spent time watching something that left me nauseous and wonder why. Masochism maybe?
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11.14.13 – 10:08 AM
Amazon Destruction Could Cut US Rainfall by 50%
(Photo: John McColgan)
Over 1.4 billion acres of dense forest make up the Amazon basin producing one quarter of the world’s oxygen supply, but new research shows that with the destruction of those forest the negative impact will be global.
As Nilima Choudhury at Responding to Climate Change (RTCC) reports:
The total deforestation of the Amazon may reduce rain and snowfall in the western US, resulting in water and food shortages, and a greater risk of forest fires.
Princeton University-led researchers report that an Amazon stripped bare could mean 20% less rain for the coastal Northwest and a 50% reduction in the Sierra Nevada snowpack, a crucial source of water for cities and farms in California.
http://www.commondreams.org/further/2013/11/14
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From a letter on the Internet:
Consider that if the world’s production, or GDP, was equally divided among the world’s 7 billion people, each would get $10,000.00+ per year to live on. $40,000.00+ for a
family of 4. GDP in 2012 was $72 trillion dollars.
Now tell me that capitalism is fair…
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I’ve been waiting for mine to trickle down but since all the money is a virtual illusion,it might show up in my email.lol
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…Professor Maslin said that scientists were in a Catch 22 situation. They wanted to tell politicians that it was still possible to save the planet and had shown how to do it in the last Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report, released in September. At the same time scientists were aware that there was not the political appetite to deal with the problem.
He said all UN bodies were now being advised to prepare for a rise of 4°C, because there is no evidence to show that the world is prepared to turn away from the present pathway of rising carbon emissions.
Currently the temperature has risen 0.8°C on pre-industrial levels, and with the increase this year to 400 parts per million of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere it will rise further towards the 2°C threshold.
Professor Maslin said: “I think everybody outside the scientific arena has underestimated the size of the problem.” The average American emits 16 tons of carbon dioxide a year, the average UK citizen 8 tons and the average Chinese 5 tons.
Every country, he said, had to reduce their citizens’ emissions to 2 tons per person to avoid dangerous climate change. “That is a big ask, particularly for a country like China which is still growing fast.”
Dr. Liz Hanna, from the Australian National University’s National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, said parts of her country were already reaching the threshold° where it was impossible for normal life to continue because of the heat.
Killing their workers
She said the Australian Government was ignoring climate change and still expecting places like Darwin to expand. But that was unlikely because they would soon become untenable. “If employers ask people to continue to work in temperatures above 37°C, they will be killing them in increasing numbers,” she said.
Dr Hanna said humans were well suited to living in cool conditions and felt comfortable in temperatures between 20°C and 23°C because their muscles produced heat from within.
But in parts of Arizona, Australia and India temperatures were reaching – and for days staying above – the thermal maximum of endurance, which was around 37°C, the core heat of the human body. Above that temperature, and sometimes below, depending on the combination of heat, humidity and air speed, keeping cool put too much strain on the heart and people began to die.
She said that she was studying how human societies could survive such daytime temperatures and continue to work. “There could be some night working, or people could work, rest in cool rooms, and then work again, but their productivity would drop and it would be economically unviable to have factories or farms in such conditions.”
Her researches were focusing on how to keep essential services like farming, police, ambulance, district nurses, construction and mining going in a warming world. “Obviously these people will be risking their lives if they continue to try and work outside when the ambient temperature is above 37°C,” she said. – Climate News Network
– Link
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Global temperature to rise 3.5 degrees C. by 2035: International Energy Agency
Unless governments cut subsidies for fossil fuels and adopt new policies to support renewable energy sources, the Copenhagen Accord to hold global warming to less than a 2-degree increase will not be reached.
http://www.csmonitor.com/layout/set/r14/World/Global-Issues/2010/1111/Global-temperature-to-rise-3.5-degrees-C.-by-2035-International-Energy-Agency
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Fortunately the IEA has a well-documented record of getting things wrong.
However, currently escalating emissions do suggest the atmospheric CO2 concentration in 2035 will be well above 450ppm.
3.5C? We now know that 1C above the long term average is more than the present natural world can stand. Even 0.8C has been pretty devastating.
Although there is much uncertainty, we can be certain that everything that matters will be worse next year. And worse still in 2015. And in 2016 everything will be worse than 2015, ad infinitum. And we can be certain that the policies implemented by our so-called leaders will make everything worse at an accelerating rate.
I still have great difficulty understanding the utter determination of politicians and bureaucrats to destroy their own progeny’s futures, or, in the case of those under the age of 60, their own futures.
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I’m not sure you can isolate the elites from the vast majority of people who cheer them onto more and more growth. It appears a biological determinant of a species in overshoot, as previous growth has hitherto proved successful . However, like every species in overshoot, ours as a whole does not see its situation for what it is and for this reason cannot pull back from the behaviours that caused overshoot in the first place (burning of fossil fuels etc) or the.disaster that eventually awaits it.
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In every country I can think of, the sovereignty and wealth of the Nation, which was once the embodiment of the power and will of the people, is being butchered and sold to the highest bidder. Everywhere, the Nation and the people within it, are under attack. Not from without by terrorists but from within. Because in every country the people who run the State have largely decided they no longer wish to serve the people but prefer instead to serve the interests of a Global Over-Class.
http://www.golemxiv.co.uk/2013/11/the-new-world-order-part-1-the-destruction-of-the-nation/
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WARSAW, 18 November – The leader of China’s climate negotiating team at the talks, Su Wei, says he is “not sure whether we are able to make much progress.”
http://www.climatenewsnetwork.net/2013/11/warsaw-day-8-china-is-unsure-progress-is-possible/
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Sounds like an honest guy. Too bad there aren’t more of them.
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Mercury.
Yes, most ordinary people are greedy and stupid. However, surely the difference between the elites (i.e. politicians, CEOs. money-lenders etc.) and the rest of humanity is that the elites lie and manipulate continuously. The elites deliberately mislead those lower in the hierarchy for their own short-term gain, and in doing so ruin everything they touch. And by lying continuously our so-called leaders keep society on the path of planetary destruction and eventual self-annihilation.
The elites work ceaselessly to ensure that the general populace are provided with misinformation that generates catastrophe. To my mind that makes the global elites, i.e. Tony B Liar, Cameron,, Bush,, Obama, Harper, Howard, Rudd, Abbott, Clark, Key, Merkel, Abe , ….., utterly evil, far more evil than the Nazis who operated the death camps. Most of the so-called leaders have been presented with irrefutable evidence that their actions are destructive of society, destructive of planetary life-support systems, and ultimately destructive of their own progeny’s futures. And they still persist.
I see this manipulation and mendacity at the national level: John Key, NZ PM, is a manipulative liar. I see it local level: Jonathan Young, district MP, is a manipulative liar. Andrew Little, list MP, is a manipulative liar. Indeed, as far as I know all MPs are liars. District council CEO Barbara McKerrow is a manipulative liar. As far as I know, all the council CEOs across the country are manipulative liars. They are professional liars. And it is through their manipulation and lies that they maintain the destruction of their progeny’s futures (or in the case of the younger ones, their own futures).
In the BBC fictional documentary-drama ‘Burn Up’ the elites are portrayed as deliberately sabotaging protection of the environment; they desire the meltdown of the Arctic environment to facilitate extraction of fossil fuels. I believe that is a justified portrayal of the elites: they are absolute maniacs of the worst kind. And since thet cannot be unseated, there is no hope for the future.
Others have noted that particular sociopathic traits are selected for in particular professions, e.g. politicians, economists, bankers, Wall St traders etc. tend to be psychotic sociopaths. Psychotic sociopaths do not respond to reason. Psychotic sociopaths are not swayed by scientific evidence.
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Hello Kevin,
You won’t get any arguments from me regarding politicians, but even though they are the most cunning, ruthless of gutter-snipes they did not spring up in a vacuum. They are products of our culture and ultimately the biological urge in all living things to grow, reproduce and succeed. Married to the availability of cheap and copious energy supplies this has resulted in the ever-quickening disaster we now see. Even if we were to replace them all, waiting to step into their shoes are 1000’s of others – all driven ultimately by these same primitive impulses. Only the peaking of fossil fuels and climate driven disaster will clip our wings, or perhaps even eliminate us, so that we no longer pose a mortal danger to the rest of the species, as we do now. However, humans whatever level of sophistication they retain into the future will remain animals, for as long as the race survives.
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http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/us-household-wealth-leans-over-an-uneven-recovery/2013/11/18/
As H.L. Mencken opined, ‘The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out for himself, without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, and intolerable.’
It is no wonder that, according to a Gallup Poll conducted in early October, a record-low 14% of Americans thought that the country was headed in the right direction, down from 30% in September. That’s the biggest single-month drop in the poll since the shutdown of 1990. Some 78% think the country is on the wrong track.
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More on the Greenwald/Omidyar venture from naked capitalism. Plus, the Ames/Levine article on Omidyar, read it while you can.
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2013/11/greenwald-rosen-scahill-and-the-price-of-ones-journalistic-soul.html
https://www.nsfwcorp.com/dispatch/extraordinary-pierre-omidyar/1354d77a9f0b78854b2fa4c7ddb93c57fc3cae62/
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As anybody who has paid close attention to the climate debate will know, we have been lied to, consistently, for the last twenty years.
If you doubt that, check out e.g. Kevin Anderson’s youtube lectures for examples, where he cites documented verbatim cases.
We were told that measures would be taken to limit emissions so as to stay below the ‘safe’ 2 deg C limit.
That was never any sort of ‘safe’ limit agreed by scientists or agriculturalists, it was proposed by a neoclassical economist, William Nordhaus, to satisfy the demands of politicians and industrialists so that they could continue polluting.
Now we are told that it is impossible to remain below 2 deg C, so the limit will have to be 4 deg C.
http://www.climatenewsnetwork.net/2013/11/warsaw-day-6-prepare-now-for-4c-rise/
Well, of course, this is another lie, because there is no way to stop now, at 4 deg C, because once we go past 2 deg C we will have triggered more than enough feedbacks to keep on going on and on, with no means of ever stopping until the feedbacks have run their course.
Which means that we get whatever we get, which nobody can say for certain, but will be six degrees and whatever happens after that…
But if you want to know what 4 deg C will look like, then here’s a rough guide.
When will we get there ? Well, quite soon. Depends on the methane, I suppose, as much as anything.
My rough guess would be 15 years to 35 years. Well before that date, the whole world will be in such a mess that it will be impossible to coordinate any organised effective global action of any kind.
(This is an updated version of Lynas’s earlier 6 degrees.)
http://doc-snow.hubpages.com/hub/Mark-Lynass-Six-Degrees-A-Summary-Review
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Yes, well, we [the 0.1% who are awake and informed] now know that EVERYTHING we are told by governments is either an outright lie or is founded on a lie. And most of what goes on is geared to facilitating the looting and polluting of the commons by those who already have far too much, of course.
We now know that 0.85C above the long-term average is not safe. News reports feature a daily toll of death and destruction that is resulting from increasing climate chaos.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/nov/19/sardinia-floods-italy-emergency-cyclone
We also know that nobody in a position to do so will even attempt to implement policies that might reduce the carnage that is to come: everything official is geared to making everything that matters progressively worse. So everything that matters gets progressively worse.
One of the most perverse aspects of the present economic system is that catastrophes are ‘good for the economy’. Rebuilding smashed up infrastructure provides employment and stimulates economic growth. All hail the god of GDP!
I increasingly look upon industrial societies as open-air prisons, with a large portion of the inmates choosing to destroy themselves via all kinds of idiotic behaviours; For instance, whenever I go into town I see increasing numbers of grossly overweight people staggering across car parks with trolleys laden with junk food; I see increasing numbers of adolescents taking up smoking cigarettes. And tattoo parlours are extremely busy these days: clearly people still have a lot of disposable income.
I suppose there is a kind if inevitability in the increase in self-destruction when you consider that the vast majority of the inmates of the prisons are deranged, having been made that way by the system. On the other hand, there are those who walk, run, cycle, go to gymnasiums etc.: most of those are only semi-deranged!
As for time frames, clearly everything is getting progressively worse, so dates for particular thresholds now seem fairly meaningless to me. It’s simply a case of increasing carnage. That said, perhaps the most significant threshold will be the year when more people die of industrial diseases and the various effects of rampant industrialism than are born. There are just too many unpredictable factors to make any proper judgement but I suspect that point will be reached between 2020 and 2030. .
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And a long but thought provoking essay on ‘The Catastrophic and the Post-apocalyptic’, worth reading, but be prepared to wade through some serious philosophical language lol. From the beginning:
“The present is filled with catastrophe and apocalypticism. A certain phrase has been deployed and redeployed in summarising the condition we find ourselves in: it is easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism. While this phrase is typically used to crystallise capitalist realism, the idea that there is no alternative to capitalism, it also distils another truth: the end of the world has become the very air that we breathe.
As compelling as the discourse on apocalypticism might be it makes one fundamental mistake: it colludes with the very sense of impending catastrophe that it is usually trying to critique or to use as a means to mobilise a political movement. In what follows, I want to discussthe relation between catastrophe and apocalypse, and to look at what it would mean to shift the emphasis on the terms. I don’t mean to restate that catastrophe and apocalypse mean different things for its own sake but rather to emphasise that from the perspective of a postnihilist praxis we are neither catastrophic nor apocalyptic but living within the time of catastrophe as post-apocalyptic survivors.”
http://syntheticzero.net/2013/08/21/the-catastrophic-and-the-post-apocalyptic/
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Good essay. Thanks, Eric.
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anybody know what’s going’ on with NBL all of a sudden?
I repeatedly get a 503 routine maintenance message.
reminds me of the last time it was shut down for about 3 days
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Hi Tom,
Perhaps it’s just what it says ? We shall see.
Thought this was interesting :
Yet ironically, the fame of the Yanomami and the interest this book is generating are partly due to anthropologists like Chagnon and their views. Kopenawa condemns the whites who “…continue to lie about us by saying: ‘The Yanomami are fierce. All they think about is warring and stealing women. They are dangerous!’ Such words are our enemies and we detest them.”
The effect whites had on him as a child is more complex, though. “If the white people hadn’t appeared… I would probably also have become a warrior and would have arrowed other Yanomami in anger when I wanted revenge. I have thought to do it. I always contained my evil thoughts… and stayed quiet by thinking of the white people. I would tell myself: ‘If I arrow one of us, those who covet our forest will say I am evil and devoid of wisdom… they are the ones who kill us with their diseases and shotguns. And it is against them… I must direct my anger today!”
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22029430.800-the-shamanseye-view-a-yanomami-verdict-on-us.html?full=true#.Uo012FVX-ph
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Hi Tom.
I am not very active on NBL these days, but this morning did compose a long comment which apparently disappeared into cyberspace, since I got a maintenance message when I attempted to post.
NBL was back a few minutes ago, with just a few comments displayed.
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Civil war coming ?
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“Tornado hits U.S. nuclear facility – Uranium enrichment building damaged — Parts of cooling towers destroyed — Alert declared for ‘emergency condition”
http://enenews.com/tornado-hits-nuclear-facility-damage-uranium-enrichment-building-parts-cooling-tower-destroyed-photos
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Sooo…
Just 90 companies caused two-thirds of man-made global warming emissions
Chevron, Exxon and BP among companies most responsible for climate change since dawn of industrial age, figures show
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/nov/20/90-companies-man-made-global-warming-emissions-climate-change
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Hmph..
Poland’s sacking of Environment Minister Marcin Korolec in a government reshuffle Wednesday sparked ire at the ongoing UN climate talks in Warsaw which he is chairing.
http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/2/9/87070/World/International/Polish-environment-minister-sacked-as-he-chairs-UN.aspx
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Poor countries walk out of UN climate talks as compensation row rumbles on
Bloc of 132 countries exit Warsaw conference after rich nations refuse to discuss climate change recompense until after 2015
http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2013/nov/20/climate-talks-walk-out-compensation-un-warsaw
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Australian ambassador Justin Lee, who is heading Australia’s delegation following its decision not to send a minister to the talks, rejected criticism the country had been obstructive during negotiations, in particular related to possible financial commitments.
“Australia is engaging in negotiations constructively,” Lee said. “Australia wants progress on negotiation of an agreement that sets up effective global action based on broad participation. Major economies and Australia’s key trading partners will need to participate and Australia will move in step with them, protecting our competitiveness.”
Ha ha ha. You’ve got to admire the audacity of these people, and their capacity to present mutually-exclusive concepts without blinking an eye is truly stunning!
Australia is clearly a willing participant in negotiations as long as they are totally ineffectual and any agreements reached will not interfere with the rapid conversion of Australia’s deposits of fossil fuels into the additional carbon dioxide burden that will render Australia largely (or completely) uninhabitable in a few decades.
Most of us here now recognise that the system is mad and the majority of the participants are insane.
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All kinda stuff goin’ on. Heavy shit comin’ down.
NBL is back up and runnin’.
The climate talks are a joke but nobody’s laughing any more – it’s starting to get serious. Just wait. By next year at this time, we’ll be sayin’ that these were the good ol’ days. The rate of decay is increasing and accelerating.
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It does seem to be accelerating at a dizzying, almost frenetic pace…
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http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/nov/21/mass-walk-out-un-climate-talks-warsaw
Maybe it is finally starting to dawn on people that governments have no intention of implementing policies that will interfere with the ‘rights’ of corporations to loot and pollute.
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Ha, ha! It’s really great to see this sort of complement on the internet…
I haven’t stopped blogging. I’m just taking a break.
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Xray, you must not stop! All that are aware understand the truth of your blog and we all find ourselves here!
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Brutus has a post in the works that is nearing completion. I’ll soon jump into my blogger persona.
I appreciate all the pertinent links and videos you all post here.
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Go away ! Give us some peace !
Effing doom all the time.
It’s too effing much. 😉
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I basically had to say that to a particular boss recently. You know the kind – micromanaging, controlling, with OCD(obsessive compulsive disorder), and all eaten up with her rigid policies and procedures. The trail of dead bodies left in her wake tell the tale (unjustly fired employees and those who quit), yet she still remains. Management protects management even in cases of a blatant hostile work environment.
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http://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/11/22-3
Published on Friday, November 22, 2013 by Common Dreams
Learning to Live in the Anthropocene
by Peter Rugh
“We have to adapt to this new reality. But that doesn’t mean we must accept – with “mortal humility” – civilization’s collapse.”
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for the dying oceans
I Could Hear The Water At The Edge Of All Things
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http://hisz.rsoe.hu/alertmap/site/?pageid=event_desc&edis_id=BH-20131121-41712-AUS
Biological Hazard in Australia on Thursday, 21 November, 2013 at 04:10 (04:10 AM) UTC.
Description
Australian Plague Locusts are swarming in parts of Western Australia’s grain growing regions. Bill Cowan farms 300 kilometres east of Perth and says the locust swarms are the worst he’s ever seen. He says locusts have eaten lawns and gardens in his area, and were a concern when he was harvesting his grain, as they were appearing in grain samples. “If you’re walking on the ground, they just about cover the ground,” he said. “They’re always heading one way. Once they get a bit bigger they start to fly. We’ve had whole grilles in cars block up for people who are travelling through.” Mr Cowan says many bowling clubs in the Central Wheatbelt are concerned about the plagues of locusts arriving in towns and eating bowling lawns.
Bowling? They’re worried about BOWLING – it’s teeming locusts!! They eat everything that’s vegetable matter! There won’t be any food!
Bowling. JesusFC!
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Published on Nov 20, 2013
Abby Martin speaks with investigative journalist Dahr Jamail, who has uncovered BP’s online scheme to silence critics of their Gulf of Mexico clean-up, with methods such as bribery and death threats.
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Yes, we have to consume less. Around 100% less as far as fossil fuels are concerned, starting a decade or so ago.
Significantly less consumption = mass unemployment and fairly immediate collapse of the banksters’ Ponzi scheme. I can’t see many people voting for that, even if it provides the only possibility of mitigating the coming mayhem.
Here in North Island NZ we are seeing the first indications of drought. Could be another ‘interesting’ summer.
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http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2013/11/stunning-reasons-americans-afraid-government-terrorists.html
Stupid Government Policy Is More Dangerous than Terrorism
http://www.koin.com/home/most-costly-ore-forest-fire-season-ever
Most costly Ore. forest fire season ever
http://hisz.rsoe.hu/alertmap/site/?pageid=event_desc&edis_id=BH-20131122-41732-NZL
Biological Hazard in New Zealand on Friday, 22 November, 2013 at 08:14 (08:14 AM) UTC.
Thousands of dead fish have been washed up along the edges of Maitai River in Nelson. The Nelson City Council was advised of the situation by a witness this morning. It’s not yet known what caused the deaths, but the council is investigating a possible chemical spill. The council has confirmed it appears the fish got caught up in dirty water, as the fresh water fish in the same area seem to be OK. Fish and Game field officer for the Marlborough region, Lawson Davey says it’s the biggest fish kill he’s seen. “The tide was coming in and gulls were having a field day. The tide’s just coming in and there’s a whole lot of other pilchards and we’ve seen a few eels and other things feeding on the dead fish.” The fish were found near the Trafalgar Street bridge. Fishing has been banned from the lower reaches of the Maitai River in Nelson, after the discovery of thousands of dead fish. The Nelson City Council’s asking residents to avoid fishing in the area, following the unexplained death of pilchards. Samples of fish, water and sediment have been sent for testing, with results expected late next week. Council spokeswoman Angela Ricker says the public health risk is probably low but they’re taking a precautionary approach until more is known.
http://www.cryptogon.com/?p=42162
North Texas Drivers Stopped at Roadblock Asked for Saliva, Blood
can’t find the link, but global volcanic activity is rising steadily (a possible negative feedback?)
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The Warsaw climate talks have produced the ‘required’ result: the can has been kicked down the road for yet another year, business-as-usual prevails, with corporations free to continue looting and polluting.
10 to 15 years ago I followed international climate talks with great interest and enthusiasm, awaiting the breakthrough that would put humanity on the right track: How naïve of me!
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/nov/24/warsaw-climate-talks-greenhouse-gas-emissions
‘Governments around the world have just over a year in which to set out their targets on curbing greenhouse gas emissions from 2020, after marathon overnight climate change talks in Warsaw produced a partial deal.’
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Agreed 100%. Excellent essay. There is some seriously scary “thinking” going on out there. I came across this at the Royal Societies website. (Must be some lunatic capitalist fringe group).
http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/280/1767/20131193.full
The gist of the article goes something like this. Malthus said civilisation would collapse and it hasn’t. Campbell, Duncan et al went on about peak oil and nothing happened. etc. etc. Therefore everything is OK and they were wrong. (keeping in mind these were/are eminent engineers in their field)
Of course the one factor the idiot writer fails to take into account is time. At the time, their predictions were accurate. Because it hasn’t happened yet doesn’t mean it isn’t going to! The problem is exactly the same. Too many people. Too few finite resources. Due to technological advances the only thing that has changed is we have bought a bit more time. The end result will be the same except that we have now made it a lot lot worse.
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You simply gotta read this:
Big Brother’s got that ju-ju, Gaia’s got the blues — hologram, carry me home
By Joe Bageant, Ajijic, Mexico
http://www.thesullenbell.com
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pfgetty2013: Yeah, ol’ Joe, gone to the promised land – I fondly remember reading his blog regularly after reading his book Deer Hunting With Jesus that I happened upon in a library. Sad to see him go, but he was on the right track with his social commentary. Thanks for the reminder.
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Nothing going on today would have surprised him. I miss him.
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